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Lifespan Physician Profile:
Richard Noto, MD
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Nuclear
Medicine
Special Section
About
PET
A clinically proven, non-invasive way to diagnose cancers,
heart disease and neurological disorders.
Nuclear
Medicine
Rhode Island Hospital's department is state-of-the-art.
Cancer
Care
PET is one of the many services at the Comprehensive
Cancer Center.
Plus: Visit
the radiology department online for more information
about diagnostic testing, instructions for
patients and specific contact information.
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Richard B. Noto, MD, the medical director of Rhode Island Hospital’s
PET services, is the director of the Division of Nuclear Medicine at Rhode
Island Hospital, the medical director of the School of Nuclear Medicine
Technology at Rhode Island Hospital, and a staff radiologist at Rhode
IslandHospital, TheMiriam Hospital, andWomen and Infants’Hospital.
In addition, he is an associate professor (clinical) in the Department of
Diagnostic Imaging at theWarren Alpert Medical School of Brown University.
PET, or positron emission tomography, is a state-of-the-art,
non-invasive, nuclear medicine procedure that is able to detect
certain disease before other types of scans, such as CT or MRI.
Noto is experienced in interpreting PET images and is board certified
in nuclear medicine, diagnostic radiology and nuclear cardiology.
Noto has been affiliated with Rhode Island Hospital since 1988.
He received his medical degree from the University of Rochester
School of Medicine in New York. He completed an internship at
North Shore University Hospital/Memorial Sloan Kettering, a residency
in diagnostic radiology at New York University Medical Center
and a two-year fellowship in nuclear medicine at the Hospital of the University
of Pennsylvania.
Learn more about diagnostic imaging:
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