IN MEMORIAM: Prof. Dr. A. De SchepperIn memoriam Prof. Dr. Emeritus Arthur M. DE SCHEPPER °30 November 1937 – 04 October 2013

Our first meeting with professor De Schepper was a memorable one. He was a dashing, young assistant professor of radiology at the University of Antwerp, full of energy and new ideas, and he was teaching an introductory radiology course to medical students. All of us were fascinated by the inner worl...

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Main Authors: Paul M Parizel, Jan ML Bosmans
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2013-09-01
Series:Journal of the Belgian Society of Radiology
Online Access:https://www.jbsr.be/articles/450
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spelling doaj-344c11d0844e475ca2bb61b7c1d4e57b2020-11-24T22:21:04ZengUbiquity PressJournal of the Belgian Society of Radiology2514-82812013-09-0196532933010.5334/jbr-btr.450450IN MEMORIAM: Prof. Dr. A. De SchepperIn memoriam Prof. Dr. Emeritus Arthur M. DE SCHEPPER °30 November 1937 – 04 October 2013Paul M Parizel0Jan ML Bosmans1M.D., Ph.D., Professor and Chair, Department of Radiology, Antwerp University Hospital & University of Antwerp, BelgiumM.D., Ph.D., Staff Radiologist, Ghent University Hospital, BelgiumOur first meeting with professor De Schepper was a memorable one. He was a dashing, young assistant professor of radiology at the University of Antwerp, full of energy and new ideas, and he was teaching an introductory radiology course to medical students. All of us were fascinated by the inner world of the human body, which became visible through radiological techniques. The year was 1978. Radiology was completely different from what it is now. Computed tomography was still in its infancy, and in Belgium there were at that time only two CT units. Ultrasonography was a cumbersome technique, producing grainy images, and MRI was non-existent. So the course focused mainly on conventional radiological techniques. But, Arthur De Schepper introduced a clinical symptom-based approach to radiology, an algorithmic approach 'avant la lettre'. In this way, we had lessons about: the patient with right lower quadrant pain, the woman with a lump in the breast, a man with low back pain, etc. As medical students we loved his classes, and – unlike those of some of his colleagues – they were very well attended.https://www.jbsr.be/articles/450
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language English
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author Paul M Parizel
Jan ML Bosmans
spellingShingle Paul M Parizel
Jan ML Bosmans
IN MEMORIAM: Prof. Dr. A. De SchepperIn memoriam Prof. Dr. Emeritus Arthur M. DE SCHEPPER °30 November 1937 – 04 October 2013
Journal of the Belgian Society of Radiology
author_facet Paul M Parizel
Jan ML Bosmans
author_sort Paul M Parizel
title IN MEMORIAM: Prof. Dr. A. De SchepperIn memoriam Prof. Dr. Emeritus Arthur M. DE SCHEPPER °30 November 1937 – 04 October 2013
title_short IN MEMORIAM: Prof. Dr. A. De SchepperIn memoriam Prof. Dr. Emeritus Arthur M. DE SCHEPPER °30 November 1937 – 04 October 2013
title_full IN MEMORIAM: Prof. Dr. A. De SchepperIn memoriam Prof. Dr. Emeritus Arthur M. DE SCHEPPER °30 November 1937 – 04 October 2013
title_fullStr IN MEMORIAM: Prof. Dr. A. De SchepperIn memoriam Prof. Dr. Emeritus Arthur M. DE SCHEPPER °30 November 1937 – 04 October 2013
title_full_unstemmed IN MEMORIAM: Prof. Dr. A. De SchepperIn memoriam Prof. Dr. Emeritus Arthur M. DE SCHEPPER °30 November 1937 – 04 October 2013
title_sort in memoriam: prof. dr. a. de schepperin memoriam prof. dr. emeritus arthur m. de schepper °30 november 1937 – 04 october 2013
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Journal of the Belgian Society of Radiology
issn 2514-8281
publishDate 2013-09-01
description Our first meeting with professor De Schepper was a memorable one. He was a dashing, young assistant professor of radiology at the University of Antwerp, full of energy and new ideas, and he was teaching an introductory radiology course to medical students. All of us were fascinated by the inner world of the human body, which became visible through radiological techniques. The year was 1978. Radiology was completely different from what it is now. Computed tomography was still in its infancy, and in Belgium there were at that time only two CT units. Ultrasonography was a cumbersome technique, producing grainy images, and MRI was non-existent. So the course focused mainly on conventional radiological techniques. But, Arthur De Schepper introduced a clinical symptom-based approach to radiology, an algorithmic approach 'avant la lettre'. In this way, we had lessons about: the patient with right lower quadrant pain, the woman with a lump in the breast, a man with low back pain, etc. As medical students we loved his classes, and – unlike those of some of his colleagues – they were very well attended.
url https://www.jbsr.be/articles/450
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