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Pediatric Radiology Update

The Society of Pediatric Radiology
Pediatric Radiology Update provides pediatric and general radiologists with the breadth and depth of pediatric radiology as it is practiced today.
 
CREDITS Up to 37 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)™
CE RELEASE June 1, 2007
CE EXPIRE June 1, 2010
 
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Special pricing for clinic-wide orders or for group subscriptions/purchases. Minimum order quantities apply for eligible discounts. For further information and pricing estimates, contact Jack O´ Toole at 1-800-952-0690 x3034. For all other sales inquiries, call 1-800-633-4743.
 

Topics & Speakers


SESSION I: Cardiovascular Imaging


Pediatric Cardiovascular MRA/MRV: Technique
Taylor Chung, MD
Head, Edward B. Singleton Department of Diagnostic
Imaging, Texas Children’s Hospital; Associate
Professor of Radiology and Pediatrics
Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX


Pediatric Cardiovascular MRA/MRV: Applications
Robert J. Fleck, Jr, MD
Assistant Professor of Radiology and Pediatrics
Department of Radiology
Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center
Cincinnati, OH


Pediatric Cardiovascular CTA: Technique
Donald P. Frush, MD
Division of Pediatric Radiology
Department of Radiology
Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC


Pediatric Cardiovascular CTA: Applications
Frandics P. Chan, MD, PhD
Assistant Professor of Radiology
Department of Radiology
Stanford University Medical Center
Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital, Stanford, CA


CardiacManifestation of Systemic Disease
in Children

Beverley P. Newman, MBBCh, FACR
Associate Professor of Pediatric Radiology
Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital
Department of Radiology
Stanford University School of Medicine
Stanford, CA


The Role of Radiography
in Congenital Heart Disease

Cynthia K. Rigsby, MD
Attending Radiologist
Department of Medical Imaging
Children's Memorial Hospital
Assistant Professor of Radiology
Northwestern University Feinberg
School of Medicine
Chicago, IL


Vascular Sonography: Technique and Applications
Harriet J. Paltiel, MD
Radiologist, Children’s Hospital, Boston
Associate Professor of Radiology
Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA

Panel Discussion: The Radiologist and
Contemporary Cardiac Imaging: Can We Adapt?

Panelists: Cardiovascular Imaging Speakers

Difficult Cases in Chest: Learn from
the Experts’Mistakes (Part 1 & 2)

Eric L. Effmann, MD
Children's Hospital & Regional Medical Center
Department of Radiology, Seattle,WA

Beverley P. Newman, MBBCh, FACR

How I Do It: CardiacMRI
Shi-Joon Yoo, MD
Section Head, Cardiac Imaging, Department of
Diagnostic Imaging, Hospital for Sick Children;
Professor of Medical Imaging and Pediatrics,
Department of Medical Imaging and
Department of Pediatrics, University of Toronto
Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Laureen M. Sena, MD
Staff Radiologist, Department of Radiology
Children’s Hospital, Boston,MA


How I Do It: PET/CT/NuclearMedicine
(Part 1 & 2)

Sue C. Kaste, DO
Member, Diagnostic Imaging
Department of Radiological Sciences,
St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Memphis, TN

Marguerite T. Parisi, MD
Associate Professor of Radiology and Pediatrics,
University ofWashington School of Medicine;
Attending Radiologist and Division Head Ultrasound,
Department of Radiology, Children’s Hospital and
Regional Medical Center, Seattle,WA

VascularMalformation on US and MR:
Imaging and Intervention (Part 1 & 2)

Janet R. Reid, MD
Department of Pediatric Radiology
Cleveland Clinic Children’s Hospital, Cleveland, OH

Josée Dubois, MD
Head of the Interventional Radiology Section,
Department of Medical Imaging, Hôpital Ste-Justine;
Professor of Radiology, Residency Program Director,
Diagnostic Radiology Department of Radiology,
Universite de Montreal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

How I Do It: HRCT/CT Angiography
(Part 1 & 2)

R. Paul Guillerman, MD, FAAP
Staff Radiologist, Texas Children’s Hospital;
Assistant Professor of Radiology, Department of
Radiology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX

Marilyn J. Siegel, MD
Department of Radiology
Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology, St. Louis, MO

SESSION II: Pediatric Neuroradiology


Neonatal Imaging:What Does the
Radiologist Contribute?

Terrie E. Inder, MD
Associate Professor
Department of Pediatrics, Neurology and Radiology
St Louis Children’s Hospital
Washington University
St. Louis, MO


Advances in Preterm and Neonatal Neuroimaging
Marvin D. Nelson, Jr., MD
Chairman, Department of Radiology
Children’s Hospital Los Angeles
Professor of Radiology
USC Keck School of Medicine
Los Angeles, CA

Diffusion Tensor Imaging:
What Has This Taught Us in Children?

P. Ellen Grant, MD, MSc
Chief, Division of Pediatric Radiology
Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston, MA


Advances in Cranial Sonography
Dorothy I. Bulas, MD
Professor of Pediatrics and Radiology
Children’s National Medical Center
The George Washington University
School of Medicine and Health Sciences
Washington, District of Columbia

Imaging Evaluation of Pediatric Stroke
Richard L. Robertson, MD
Director of Neuroradiology
Department of Radiology
Associate Professor of Radiology
Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA

CT Evaluation of Cerebrovascular
Disorders in Children

Blaise V. Jones, MD
Chief, Neuroradiology Section
Department of Radiology
Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center
Associate Professor of Radiology and Pediatrics
University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH


Closed Head Injury:What We See
and What It Means

John D. Strain, MD, FACR
Chairman, Department of Radiology
The Children’s Hospital, Denver, CO

Difficult Cases in Neuro:
Learn from the Experts’Mistakes (Part 1 & 2)

Nolan R. Altman, MD
Department of Radiology
Miami Children‘s Hospital, Miami, FL

Kevin R. Moore, MD
Department of Radiology
Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA

SESSION III: MR and Sports Medicine


Evaluation of the Shoulder,
Elbow, Hip, and Knee (Part1 & 2)

Clyde A. Helms, MD
Chief, Musculoskeletal Division
Professor of Radiology and Surgery
Department of Radiology
Duke University Medical Center
Durham, NC

Nancy M. Major, MD
Associate Professor Radiology and Surgery, Biology,
Anthropology and Anatomy
Musculoskeletal Division
Duke University Medical Center
Durham, NC


Pediatric Football Injuries
Daniel J. Podberesky, MD
Chief, Pediatric Radiology
Wilford Hall Medical Center, Lackland AFB, TX
Assistant Professor of Radiology
and Radiological Sciences
Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences
Bethesda, MD

Pediatric Soccer Injuries
Anne Paterson, MB, BS, MRCP, FRCR
Consultant Paediatric Radiologist
Department of Radiology
Royal Belfast Hospital for Sick Children
Belfast, United Kingdom


Imaging of Gymnastic Injuries
Marc S. Keller, MD
Chairman, Department of Medical Imaging
Alfred I. DuPont Hospital for Children
Professor of Radiology and Pediatrics
Jefferson Medical College
Wilmington, DE


Pediatric Basketball Injuries
Ana Maria Gaca, MD
Clinical Associate
Division of Pediatric Radiology
Department of Radiology
Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC

Session IV: Pediatric MR Symposium


Applied Basic MR Principles

The Path to Better Images:
How to Maximize Your
Signal Wealth and Invest It Wisely

Tal Laor, MD
Department of Radiology
Children's Hospital Medical Center
Cincinnati, OH

The Need for Speed:
New Sequences, New Tools

Kathleen H. Emery, MD
Department of Radiology
Children's Hospital Medical Center
Cincinnati, OH


Clinical MR Imaging

Contrast Enhanced Imaging:
Vascular and Dynamic Applications

Jeffrey C. Hellinger, MD
Director of Cardiovascular and 3D Imaging
Department of Radiology
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia
Philadelphia, PA


Basic Tips for Protocol Optimization:
Body Applications

Kirsten Ecklund, MD
Section Head, Body MR, Department of
Radiology, Children’s Hospital, Boston;
Assistant Professor of Radiology,
Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA


Difficult Cases in Musculoskeletal:
Learn from the Experts’Mistakes

Diego Jaramillo, MD
Radiologist-in-Chief and Van Alen Chair of Radiology,
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia; Professor of
Radiology, University of Pennsylvania School of
Medicine, Philadelphia, PA

Marc S. Keller, MD

How I Do It: Fetal MRI (Part 1 & 2)
Carol E. Barnewolt, MD
Department of Radiology
Children’s Hospital, Boston, MA

Beth M. Kline-Fath, MD
Chief, Fetal Imaging, Department of Radiology,
Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center;
Assistant Professor of Radiology, University of
Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH


Clinical MR Imaging and Evolving Applications
Basic Tips for Protocol Optimization:
Musculoskeletal Applications

Herman J. Kan, MD
Department of Diagnostic Imaging
Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital, Nashville, TN


Targeted Contrast Imaging
Raymond W. Sze, MD
Chair, Department of Radiology
Children's National Medical Center
Washington, DC


Tissue Characterization:
Fat,Water, Cartilage, Iron

Diego Jaramillo, MD, MPH

SESSION V: Practice Issues

The Modern Pediatric Radiology Department

Enhancing Professionalism and
Effective Communication

Janet L. Strife, MD
Professor of Radiology and Pediatrics, Department of
Radiology, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical
Center; Professor of Radiology and Pediatrics,
Department of Radiology, University of Cincinnati,
Cincinnati, OH


Advanced Radiology Informatics
Neil D. Johnson, MD
Department of Radiology
Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH


Destressing ”The Workplace”
William E. Shiels II, DO
Department of Radiology
Children's Hospital, Columbus, OH


Improving Radiology Journalism
How to Review: Critical Evaluation
of Scientific Literature

Thomas L. Slovis, MD
Department of Radiology
Children's Hospital of Michigan, Detroit, MI


How toWrite: Tips for a StrongerManuscript
Donald P. Frush, MD

Improving the Business Side of Your
Radiology Practice (Part 1, 2 & 3)

(Presented by SCORCH)
John D. Strain, MD, FACR
James S. Donaldson, MD

Department of Radiology
Children’s Memorial Hospital, Chicago, IL

New Initiatives in Resident and
Fellow Education (Part 1, 2 & 3)

Mark J. Halsted, MD
Department of Radiology
Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH

George S. Bisset III, MD
Department of Radiology
Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC

Edward Weinberger, MD
Department of Radiology
Children’s Hospital & Medical Center, Seattle,WA


SESSION VI: Pediatric Uroradiology


Difficult Cases: Urinary Tract and Female
Pelvis/Soft Tissues/Chest (Part 1 & 2)

(Presented by the Sociedad Latino Americana
de Radiologia Pediatrica)

Antônio Souza, MD
Instituto Radiodiagnostico Rio Preto
Sao Jose Rio Preto, SP, Brazil

Cristián Garcia Bruce, MD
Department of Radiology
Hospital Clinico Universidad Catolica
Santiago, Chile

Pedro A. N. Daltro, MD
Instituto Fernandes Figueira and Clínica de
Diagnóstico por Imagem
Rio De Janeiro, RJ, Brazil


Difficult Cases in Uro-Nephrology
(Presented by the European Society of
Paediatric Radiology)

Fred E. Avni, MD
Department of Medical Imaging
Erasme Hospital, Brussels, Belgium


How I Do It: MR Urography and Nuclear
(Part 1 & 2)

J. Damien Grattan-Smith, MBBS
Scottish Rite Children’sMedical Center, Atlanta,GA
Frederick D. Grant, MD
Division of Nuclear Medicine
Children’s Hospital Boston, Boston, MA


 
 

Learning Objectives


After viewing this program, participants should be able to:

  • Summarize the present state of pediatric imaging and the practice of pediatric radiology.
  • Scrutinize technologies being commonly used in children to determine what has been proved effective and what has not.
  • Review common problems facing pediatric radiologists and their possible solutions.
  • Optimize safety, including attention to radiation exposure, for children undergoing imaging evaluation.
  • Review the latest approaches to imaging and correlate with clinical outcomes.
  • Describe new advances in research and imaging.
  • Review the broad scope of pediatric radiology as it relates to everyday practice.

 
 

Accreditation Statement


This activity has been planned and implemented in accordance with the Essential Areas and Policies of the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education through the joint sponsorship of the American College of Radiology and The Society for Pediatric Radiology.

The American College of Radiology is accredited by the ACCME to provide continuing medical education for physicians.
 
 

Credit Designation


The American College of Radiology designates this educational activity for a maximum of 37 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)™. Physicians should claim only credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.


 
 

Disclosure


As a joint sponsor of this CME activity, The Society for Pediatric Radiology must ensure balance, independence, objectivity, and scientific rigor in its program. Full disclosure of the Postgraduate Course and Workshop presenters is listed in the syllabus.