ACR statement on final USPSTF breast cancer screening recommendations

Start Annual Screening at age 40.  Learn more »

We Can’t Succeed Without You

Explore the new ACR®️ Volunteer Link platform and find opportunities that best fit your expertise and availability.

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2024 Thorwarth Award Announced

ACR® Announces William T. Thorwarth Jr., MD, Award

William Donovan, MD, MPH, FACR receives the William T. Thorwarth Jr., MD, Award at ACR 2024. Read about this honor »
New Officers Announced

ACR®️ Announces New Officers at Annual Meeting

College names Alan H. Matsumoto, MD, FACR, Board of Chancellors Chair and Christoph Wald, MD, PhD, MBA, FACR, Vice Chair.

Learn about the new officers »
ACR 2024 Global Humanitarian Award

ACR®️ Foundation Announces Global Humanitarian Award

Boyd N. Hatton, MD receives the ACR Foundation Global Humanitarian Award.

Learn about his impact »

Accreditation

Accreditation gold seal

The ACR has accredited more than 39,000 facilities in 10 imaging modalities. We offer accreditation programs in Mammography, CT, MRI, Breast MRI, Nuclear Medicine and PET, Ultrasound, Breast Ultrasound and Stereotactic Breast Biopsy.

November Bulletin

Publications

The JACR and ACR Bulletin provide topics relevant to the practice of radiology and information about the College's services and members. Readers receive in-depth information about the profession including research, advocacy efforts, the latest technology, and education courses.

 Read the Bulletin »      Read the JACR  

ACR Case In Point


Test your clinical knowledge with the daily Case in Point program, which gives you the opportunity each weekday to work through a subspecialty case.

CASE OF THE DAY

A 64-year-old man presents with a 6-month history of difficulty urinating despite taking an alpha-1a adrenoreceptor antagonist. He had normal prostate-specific antigen of 3.0 ng/mL. Ultrasound (US) by urologist estimated a normal gland size of 30 cc. The patient underwent a surgical procedure in an attempt to relieve his urinary symptoms, but his symptoms worsened in the next months, requiring self-catheterization. Follow-up digital rectal examination 2 months later revealed an enlarged, nodular prostate. Prostate-specific antigen remained normal at 2.0 ng/mL. Prostate magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was ordered.

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