“…Artronix used their computer expertise to introduce a number of features: concurrent scanning, reconstruction and display, thinner (3 mm) slice capability, and volumetric reformatting. 35,36 At around the same time, GE developed a scanner for breast imaging (CT/M), the first of which was installed at the Mayo Clinic in 1975. The patient was prone on the table with the breast immersed in a water bath; the system used a xenon ionization chamber with 127 channels and a 360-deg rotation time of 10 s. Among the clinical findings from the CT/M was the observation that the sensitivity for detecting breast malignancies was much higher after administration of contrast agents, 37,38 setting the stage for much more recent experience with MRI and other modalities.…”