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Neuro and Musculoskeletal Imaging
University of California, San Francisco, Department of Radiology
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Course Directors: William P. Dillon, MD and Thomas M. Link, MD
Learning the various fundamentals of neuro and
musculoskeletal imaging, this program focuses on an
array of imaging techniques emphasizing on magnetic
resonance imaging, multi-detector CT applications,
and PET/CT applications to head and neck oncology.
Participants should gain familiarity of up-to-date
imaging protocols, as well as, imaging pitfalls.
| CREDITS |
Up to 19.5 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)™ |
| CE RELEASE |
April 1, 2007 |
| CE EXPIRE |
March 31, 2010 |
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| Item No |
Media (Can't decide on a format?) |
Price |
Purchase |
| 576DD |
Video - DVD: Includes 13 full-color DVDs with carrying case, a comprehensive program syllabus on CD-ROM, and program evaluation |
$995.00 |
| 576AUP |
Additional User Package: Comprehensive program syllabus, self-assessment examination (initial video purchase required.) |
$250.00 |
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Topics & Speakers
- MRI of the Wrist
- MRI of the Elbow
- MRI of the Ankle
- MRI of the Shoulder
Lynne S. Steinbach, MD
- MRI of the Digits
- MRI of the Postoperative Shoulder
- MRI of the Knee
- MRI of the Knee: Case-Based
John F. Feller, MD
- MRI of the Hip
- Hip and Ankle: Case-Based
- MRI of Bone and Soft-Tissue Tumors
- MRI of the Bone Marrow
- MRI of Cartilage, Osteochondral Disease and Cartilage Repair
Thomas M. Link, MD
- New Developments in Musculoskeletal MRI: High-Field Open MRI at 1T and MRI at 3T
John F. Feller, MD and Thomas M. Link, MD
- Headache: Imaging Issues
- Neurodegenerative Diseases
- Brain: Interesting Cases
- Spine Pain and Procedures
- Vascular Lesions of the Brain
William P. Dillon, MD
- Imaging of Parotid Masses
- CT/PET in the Head & Neck
- Head & Neck: Interesting Cases
- Cranial Neuropathy 1: 1–6
- Cranial Neuropathy 2: 7–12
Christine M. Glastonbury, MBBS
- Modern Stroke Imaging
- Vascular Imaging: Pearls and Pitfalls
- Head Trauma Imaging
- Imaging of Carotid Atherosclerotic Disease
- Optimizing Imaging Protocols for Multidetector CT Scanners
Max Wintermark, MD
Musculoskeletal Faculty
Thomas M. Link, MD
Course Co-Director
Associate Professor of Radiology
Clinical Director, Musculoskeletal and
Quantitative Imaging Research
John F. Feller, MD
Medical Director, Desert Medical Imaging
Indian Wells, California
Assistant Clinical Professor of Radiology
Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, California
Lynne S. Steinbach, MD
Professor of Clinical Radiology and Orthopaedic Surgery
Chief, Musculoskeletal Imaging
Neuroradiology Faculty
William P. Dillon, MD
Course Co-Director
Elizabeth Guillaumin Professor of Radiology
Chief, Neuroradiology; Vice-Chair of Research, Radiology
Christine M. Glastonbury, MBBS
Assistant Professor of Radiology
Max Wintermark, MD
Assistant Professor of Radiology
Learning Objectives
At the completion of this program, participants will be able to:
- Apply methods to optimize imaging of the musculoskeletal system
- Describe normal anatomy and pathology related to:
- MRI of the knee (including menisci and ligaments)
- MRI of the joints (hip, ankle, foot, elbow, wrist and digits)
- MRI of the shoulder (rotator cuff, shoulder instability, SLAP lesions and other shoulder pathology, including post-operative findings)
- Compare the imaging appearances of normal and abnormal bone marrow processes in MRI
- Characterize and stage bone and soft tissue tumors using MRI
- Use MRI to evaluate cartilage and osteochondral disease
- Optimize CT protocols for multi-detector imaging of stroke
- Characterize head and neck imaging of benign and malignant diseases and cranial nerve anatomy and pathology
- Better interpret vascular disorders of the CNS
- Use the evidence-based approach to imaging patients with headache
- Define management plans for spinal pain procedures
- Approach perfusion imaging in stroke with emphasis on practical implementation and interpretation
Accreditation Statement
The University of California, San Francisco
School of Medicine (UCSF) is accredited by the
Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical
Education (ACCME) to provide continuing
medical education for physicians.
Credit Designation
UCSF designates this educational activity for a maximum of 19.5
AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™. Physicians should only claim credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.
Release date: April 1, 2007
Credits expire: March 31, 2010
CME credit is obtained upon successful completion of a program evaluation. A $30 processing fee must accompany the completed evaluation.
Faculty Disclosure
Faculty for UCSF’s Continuing Medical Education
Program must complete a Declaration of Disclosure
prior to the CME activity. Having an interest in or
affiliation with a commercial entity does not
preclude making a presentation at a CME activity,
but the relationship must be disclosed in advance,
and any potential conflict of interest must be resolved
in accordance with the ACCME Updated Standards
for Commercial Support.
Disclosure must be conveyed to the learning audience
prior to the educational offering; presentation of
information on investigational/off-label use of
pharmaceuticals or medical devices must also
be disclosed. Full disclosure of faculty is listed in the syllabus.
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