Monday am opening session clyde Auditorium 07: 45 08: 20 Welcome and Medal Presentations


Mark A. van Buchem Leiden, The Netherlands MR Imaging of the Breast Michael W. Bourne



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Mark A. van Buchem


Leiden, The Netherlands

MR Imaging of the Breast

Michael W. Bourne


Cardiff, UK

MR Imaging of the Liver

Günther Schneider


Homburg, Germany

MR Angiography

Michael V. Knopp


Bethesda, USA

BRONZE CORPORATE MEMBER SYMPOSIA
Bruker Medical, Inc.
High Field MRI Studies of Brain Injury

Lomond


18:30 – 20:00

High Field MRI Studies of Brain Injury

T. A. Carpenter


Wolfson Brain Imaging Centre, Cambridge, UK

BRONZE CORPORATE MEMBER SYMPOSIA
Schering AG
Challenges in MRI

Hall 2


18:30 – 20:00

Challenges in MRI

Hans Schild


Germany

STUDY GROUP
Dynamic NMR Spectroscopy

Alsh


19:30 – 21:30

Study Group program detail available at http://www.ismrm.org/01



STUDY GROUP
MR Engineering

Forth


19:30 – 21:30

Study Group program detail available at http://www.ismrm.org/01



STUDY GROUP
MR of Cancer

Hall 1


19:30 – 21:30

Study Group program detail available at http://www.ismrm.org/01



STUDY GROUP
MR Imaging Efficacy and Effectiveness

Boisdale


19:30 – 21:30

Study Group program detail available at http://www.ismrm.org/01


MORNING CATEGORICAL COURSE
Emerging Body MRI Applications

Hall 1


07:00 -08:00
Chairs: Neil M. Rofsky
David J. Lomas





Educational Objectives
Upon completion of this course, participants should be able to

  • Recognize the relevance of recent MRI technology developments to diagnostic imaging of the chest, abdomen, and pelvis.

  • Identify the role of fast imaging sequences in body MRI techniques.

  • Describe new imaging applications for evaluating abnormalities of the abdominal and pelvic organs.

  • Implement new protocols for functional imaging of the lung, pancreas, kidney, prostate, and pelvic floor.

  • Recognize the potential value of new methods for interpreting body MRI data.

The final five minutes of each talk will be reserved for questions.

07:00 Pulmonary MRI


Qun Chen

07:30 Imaging the GI Tract


David J. Lomas

MORNING CATEGORICAL COURSE
High Field Imaging, Spectroscopy, and fMRI

Hall 2


07:00 - 08:00
Chairs: Arend Heerschap
J. Thomas Vaughan
Kamil Ugurbil





Educational Objectives
Upon completion of this course, participants should be able to

  • List and explain the advantages of imaging, spectroscopy and fMRI at field strengths of 3T and higher compared to 1.5T and lower.

  • Describe the basic components of a high-field system for clinical imaging and research.

  • Imaging: List clinical imaging methods, applications and research directions enhanced by high-field MRI.

  • Spectroscopy: Appraise spectroscopy as a diagnostic tool at 3T; review research progress at fields to 7T.

  • fMRI: Evaluate the clinical potential of fMRI at 3T and research applications to 7T; explain fMRI contrast mechanisms and their dependency on field strength.

  • Recognize the role(s) of high-field fMRI in the clinic or laboratory.

The final 7 minutes of each talk will be reserved for questions.

Instruments

07:00 High Field B0


Rory Warner
07:30 High Field B1
J. Thomas Vaughan

MORNING CATEGORICAL COURSE
fMRI: What Can We Measure?

Hall 5


07:00 - 08:00

Chairs: Linda Chang


Peter Jezzard
Denis Le Bihan
Eric C. Wong




Educational Objectives
Upon completion of this course, participants should be able to

  • Describe the current theoretical models for the hemodynamic response to brain activation.

  • Identify those physiological parameters which are accessible to MR measurement.

  • Explain the optimum experimental methods for accessing these parameters.

  • Describe emerging areas of functional MRI methodology.

07:00 Introduction and Course Overview

07:10 A Model for Hemodynamic Response to Brain Activity


Richard B. Buxton

07:30 Numerical Modeling of the BOLD Response


Richard P. Kennan

07:50 Discussion



MORNING CATEGORICAL COURSE
Imaging in Sports Medicine

Lomond


07:00 - 08:00
Chairs: Garry E. Gold
Juerg Hodler





Educational Objectives
Upon completion of this course, participants should be able to

  • Use MRI findings to identify mechanisms of joint injury and improve their diagnosis of sports-related abnormalities.

  • Tailor MRI protocols to address sports-related musculoskeletal injuries.

  • Explain the role of MR arthrography in the evaluation of intro-articular injuries.

  • Assess the clinical relevance of sports injuries and correlate MRI findings with surgical treatments.

  • Distinguish trauma-related bone and muscle injuries from neoplastic lesions.

07:00 Foot and Ankle Injuries
Mark Schweitzer

07:25 Stress Injuries in Runners


Gabrielle Bergman

07:50 Discussion



MORNING CATEGORICAL COURSE
Image Reconstruction

Forth


07:00 - 08:00
Chair: Michael H. Buonocore




Educational Objectives
Upon completion of this course, participants should be able to

  • Describe gridding theory and compare different gridding techniques.

  • Describe the hardware used in real-time imaging.

  • Explain reconstruction techniques used when the usual amount of data is not available.

  • Describe specialized techniques to correct for system imperfections and to reduce effects of noise.

The final five minutes of each talk will be reserved for questions.

Gridding Theory and Methods

07:00 Introduction; Choice of Convolution Kernels, Artifacts vs Speed


Peter Boernert

07:30 Data Weighting, SNR, Resolution and Aliasing Issue


James G. Pipe

PLENARY LECTURES
Challenges to MR

Clyde Auditorium

08:15 - 09:30
Chairs: Jörg F. Debatin
J. Thomas Vaughan



Educational Objectives
With regard to ultrasound, X-ray computerized tomography and PET techniques, upon completion of this session, participants should be able to


  • Describe the theory and operation of each modality.

  • Describe the principal capabilities of each modality in the clinical setting.

  • List significant biomedical questions that are uniquely answered by each modality.

  • List current areas of research and development in each modality.

  • Identify apparent strengths and weaknesses of each modality relative to MR.



8:15

157.

Computed Tomography - Faster and Ever Faster

Willi A. Kalender


University Erlangen-Nuernberg, Erlangen, Germany.


8:40

158.

PET - The Future Will Lie in Improved Sensitivity and Specificity

Terry Jones


Cheshire, England, UK.



9:05

159.

Ultrasound in the New Millennium

Thomas Nelson


1University of California, San Diego, San Diego, CA, USA.




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