13.11.2012 Views

Monday AM 1 Opening Session 2011 Mansfield Lecture ... - ISMRM

Monday AM 1 Opening Session 2011 Mansfield Lecture ... - ISMRM

Monday AM 1 Opening Session 2011 Mansfield Lecture ... - ISMRM

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Thursday <strong>AM</strong><br />

07:30 Surface, Edge & Voxel-Based Analyses<br />

Douglas N. Greve<br />

Plenary <strong>Session</strong><br />

Room Plenary Hall 08:00-08:30 Chair: Debiao Li, <strong>ISMRM</strong> President<br />

08:00 Young Investigator Awards & Poster Awards<br />

<strong>2011</strong> Lauterbur <strong>Lecture</strong><br />

Room Plenary Hall 08:30-09:10 Chair: Debiao Li, <strong>ISMRM</strong> President<br />

08:30 fMRI at 20 – Has It Changed the World?<br />

Bruce R. Rosen, M.D., Ph.D.<br />

Massachusetts General Hospital, Charlestown, MA, USA<br />

Plenary <strong>Lecture</strong>s<br />

Reducing Radiation: MR & CT in the Era of Radiation Dose Concerns<br />

Room Plenary Hall 09:10-10:10 Organizers: Thoralf Niendorf & Bachir Taouli<br />

09:10 518. CT Radiation Exposure: How Bad is it & How Can it Be Reduced in Practice?<br />

Aaron D. Sodickson<br />

Brigham & Women’s Hospital, Boston, MA, USA<br />

The objective of this talk is to convey some understanding about the approximate levels of risk imparted by CT, and the factors influencing<br />

these risks. I will review common radiation terminology, typical dose values for common CT exam types, and technology and patient<br />

factors that influence dose. I will demonstrate how to make order of magnitude cancer risk estimates using the most common Linear-No-<br />

Threshold risk model. Finally, we will explore practical opportunities to reduce radiation exposure, including potential opportunity areas<br />

where MRI may play a role if the common challenges of access, exam duration, and technical complexity can be overcome.<br />

09:30 519. A Hard Look At MR: is It Simple Enough & Fast Enough to Fill the Gap?<br />

Elmar M. Merkle<br />

Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA<br />

This plenary session will focus on abdominal and pelvic CT and MR imaging with an emphasis on: 24/7 availability of MR and CT,<br />

robustness of the data acquisition, vulnerability to artifacts causing substantial study limitations, in room time versus sequence acquisition<br />

time, lack of standardized sequence protocols, and the MR incompatible patient.<br />

09:50 520. A Look Ahead: How Will New MR Techniques & Technologies Change the Landscape?<br />

Heinz-Peter W. Schlemmer<br />

German Cancer Research Centre (DKFZ), Heidelberg, Germany<br />

Through the persistent progress in medicine over the last 4 centuries MR has become an indispensible tool for basic, translational, clinical<br />

research and every-day clinical application. the capability to comprehensively visualize morphology, function and metabolism without<br />

necessitating ionization radiation essentially drives the ongoing progress of personalized medicine. But the whole extent of potentials for<br />

prevention, diagnosis and therapy of diseases by MR will only be exploited if a team of medical doctors, physicists, biologists, chemists,<br />

computer specialists, etc. efficiently works together in optimized processes. Furthermore, Radiologists will have to use “spacey”<br />

communication technology to handle the increased amount and complexity of information.<br />

Hands-On Workshop 1 (Repeat)<br />

Neuro & Musculoskeletal Protocol Optimization<br />

GE Healthcare<br />

Room 520A-D 10:30-12:30<br />

74

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!