Advanced veterinary imaging, standardized at scale.
Consistency tends to disappear somewhere between the protocol and the console. I'm Roland, a certified veterinary technician specializing in CT and MRI. I find where, and I fix it.
Most of imaging is decisions a tech makes in seconds and a radiologist lives with for years. I audit acquisition protocols, sit with techs virtually through software, positioning, and the reasoning behind each step, and standardize imaging across hospitals and networks so every study reads the same regardless of scanner, shift, or skill level.
Fifteen years quietly raising the standard.
Active worldwide
Neurology Imaging Tech RSO
Good imaging doesn't announce itself. It shows up in the consistency a radiologist stops noticing. That consistency has to be designed.
I'm a certified veterinary technician specializing in CT and MRI with nine years on the scanner and fifteen years in the field, split between emergency floors, specialty neurology, and MRI suites. I started in primary care as a certified veterinary technician, moved to emergency, then specialty neurology. Eventually, I was managing Neurology, Radiology, Sports Medicine & Rehab, and Ophthalmology. That stretch taught me great imaging is as much about people and process as it is about pulse sequences.
As a Radiation Safety Officer, I oversee X-ray, CT, fluoroscopy, and MRI safety across the hospital, minimizing exposure risk and building the kind of confidence that makes techs better at their jobs. As a Neurology Imaging Tech, I still run the console daily. As a CT Applications Specialist at Parallax Teleradiology, I audit CT protocols virtually across a growing multi-hospital network, standardizing acquisition practices one 1:1 at a time. Beyond audits, I build educational resources that make complex imaging concepts easily digestible, and I'm consistently reachable by email for questions, troubleshooting, and support.
Consistency doesn't happen by accident. It's designed, documented, and defended scan after scan.
I'm currently pursuing a VTS in Diagnostic Imaging through AVTDI, with a pre-application target of 2027, and working toward ARMRIT certification.
Three ways I make imaging teams better.
CT & MRI protocol design
Your acquisition protocols get audited against what techs actually do at the console. Documentation and practice align. Every study reads the same regardless of scanner, site, or who ran the shift.
Tech-level coaching
Your techs get walked through positioning, parameter selection, and the clinical reasoning behind each decision, virtually, at the console. Not a lecture. A working session that sticks.
Protocol documentation and resources
Your team gets reference material built for how imaging actually works, written for the console, not a textbook. The kind of resource that answers the question before anyone has to ask it.
Opening the playbook.
MRI neuro library
12 vendor-agnostic protocols across 4 neuro regions and 3 size tiers. Sequence stacks, timing ranges, and plane-planning guidance. Written for the magnet.
CT acquisition recipes
24 vendor-agnostic protocols across 8 regions and 3 size tiers. Dose, contrast, kernels, and positioning. Written for the console.
Let's raise the standard together.
Whether you run one hospital or a network of them, your studies should hold up scan after scan. Let's make sure they do.