Canon Medical Systems highlighted the latest developments in its CT lineup at RSNA 2025, including new motion correction and image reconstruction software.
The company unveiled Clear Motion Cardiac, motion correction software for its flagship Aquilion One/Insight Edition CT scanner. The AI software is fully integrated into the scanner and can be applied directly to a single phase of the cardiac cycle, Canon said.
The company also displayed its Precise IQ Engine (PIQE) Super Resolution deep-learning reconstruction technology and noted it will be expanding deployment of the software from the Aquilion One/Insight Edition system to its multislice Aquilion Serve SP system.
Canon exhibited two work-in-progress technologies in a research-focused section of its booth. For the first time, attendees had a chance to interact with the company’s photon counting CT (PCCT) scanner in person and learned about the company’s approach to PCCT. Canon also featured a new multiposition CT scanner, a joint development led by a team at Keio University in Tokyo. Already launched in Japan, the system is the first that can support scanning in the standing, sitting, and supine positions, according to the firm. The system is capable of switching between these positions in under 60 seconds and enables detection of abnormal lesions that may not be visible in conventional examinations, it said.
Finally, Canon noted that its Canon Medical Academy hosted 14 hands-on customer-led workshops at RSNA 2025, including four CT-specific sessions.




















