- Osteoporosis
- Internal Medicine
- Prostate CancerZero – The End of Prostate Cancer has committed themselves not only to reduce prostate cancer or alleviate the pain from the disease but to end it.
- Lung Cancer
- Multiple SclerosisWe have performed over 10,000 imaging exams with a wide range of research sponsors for diseases such as Alzheimer’s, multiple sclerosis, osteoporosis, arthritis, and hepatitis.
- UltrasoundUltrasound: Also known as sonography or ultrasonography, is an imaging method that uses high-frequency sound waves to produce images of structures within the body.
- MRIMagnetic resonance imaging (MRI): Powerful magnets, radio waves, and a computer work in tandem to produce detailed pictures of organs, soft tissues, bones, and other internal body structures.
- RadiologyRadiology Ltd. understands that patients might have questions or concerns about imaging examinations and procedures that they have scheduled with us. We have created the following videos to help educate you on many of these exams and procedures. If you still have questions after watching the videos, rest assured that our kind and caring technologists will be happy to answer any questions that you have to put your mind at ease.
- X-Rays
- Nuclear MedicineFellowship: Nuclear Medicine, Los Angeles County/UCLA Center for Health Sciences/Harbor General Hospital (Torrance, California), 1974-1975
- MammographyThe 2000s brought expansion to Radiology Ltd. In 2003, our Rancho Vistoso center opened in Oro Valley. We also began to offer full-field digital mammography to Tucson. In 2004, the Wilmot office opens as the nation’s largest fully digital imaging center, and we also opened the doors to our La Cholla center. In 2006, our Camp Lowell Imaging Center opens and offers CT/PET services.
- Computed TomographyComputed tomography (CT): X-ray pictures are taken from multiple different angles around the body to create cross-sectional images that appear as “slices” of the body and organs.
- Interventional RadiologyIn the early 1960s, with the construction of the new St. Joseph’s Hospital, the group further expanded their service to the Tucson medical community. As the 1960’s progressed, the specialty of radiology was rapidly expanding beyond mere X-rays, and it was necessary for the group to recruit younger physicians who had been trained in what were then referred to as “special procedures,” now known as Interventional Radiology. The partnership, then called the Hayden-Present Group, continued to grow throughout the decade, adding Drs. Robert Johnson, Robert Broome, Lee Taylor, Newell Richardson, and Norman Komar.
- General Surgery
- Skin Cancer