Roentgen in Wurzburg
Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen produced the first documented X ray images in his laboratory in Wurzburg Germany in late 1895 and his experiments revealed that invisible rays could traverse soft tissue and render bone and dense objects on photographic plates which immediately captured the attention of clinicians and the public and led to rapid clinical adoption for fracture localization foreign body detection and surgical planning and the discovery also prompted early recognition of radiation hazards and the first protective practices that evolved into modern radiation safety and medical physics
Early Clinical Uses and Diffusion
Within months of Roentgen’s announcement hospitals and surgeons began to incorporate radiography into routine care and dedicated imaging rooms and trained operators emerged and the new capability reduced exploratory surgery improved trauma care and created new professional roles such as radiographers and radiologists and the rapid diffusion of X ray technology set the pattern for how subsequent imaging innovations would be evaluated adopted and regulated
Legacy and Safety Evolution
Roentgen’s discovery established diagnostic radiology as a clinical discipline and catalyzed a century of modality innovation while also teaching early lessons about occupational and patient safety and the balance between innovation and protection that continues to guide imaging practice and policy