March F inal. Final Programme. The The ECR ECR is is the the annual meeting of of the the European Society of of Radiology.

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "March F inal. Final Programme. The The ECR ECR is is the the annual meeting of of the the European Society of of Radiology."

Transcription

1 March 7 11 F inal Final Programme The The ECR ECR is is the the annual meeting of of the the European Society of of Radiology.

2 .artundwork designbüro Embracing life through better medical imaging solutions. Better medical imaging solutions for the needs of our customers We have been committed to delivering outstanding medical imaging solutions over decades. Original solutions, that have grown out of the groups' expertise and technical know-how, providing innovations that meet equally the Zeitgeist and the needs of our customers and their patients. Visit us at booth 320 in Expo C and discover solution stars in radiology Hitachi Medical Systems Europe Holding AG Sumpfstrasse 13 CH-6300 Zug

3 Bienvenidos a Viena!!

4 Timetable 08:30 10:00 10:30 12:00 12:15 14:00 Thursday, March 7 Scientific Sessions (100) Siemens Healthcare Symposium 1 Mini Courses MC 24A, MC 25A Bayer HealthCare Symposium SuperSonic Imagine Symposium Siemens Healthcare Symposium Friday, March 8 State of the Art Symposium SA 4 Special Focus Sessions SF 4a, SF 4b Professional Challenges Session PC 4 Mini Courses MC 422, MC 423, MC 428 Multidisciplinary Session MS 4 Refresher Courses E³ Session Update Your Skills (Introductory Lecture) (400) EIBIR/EORTC Symposium Rising Stars Basic Session Post-Processing Face-Off Session ESR meets Spain Mini Course MC 528 E³ Sessions Scientific Sessions Update Your Skills (Introductory Lecture) (500) Rising Stars Basic Session Rising Stars Student Workshop Josef Lissner Honorary Lecture Gold Medal Awards Mini Courses MC 24B, MC 25B Bayer HealthCare Symposium Bracco Symposium GE Healthcare Symposium Siemens Healthcare Symposium Saturday, March 9 New Horizons Session NH 8 Special Focus Sessions SF 8a, SF 8b Categorical Courses CC 818, CC 819 Refresher Courses E³ Sessions Update Your Skills (Introductory Lecture) (800) EFOMP Workshop Rising Stars Student Session ESR meets South Africa E³ Sessions Scientific Sessions Update Your Skills (Practical Courses) (900) EFOMP Workshop Standards and Audit Session Rising Stars Student Session 8 9 Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen Honorary Lecture Mini Courses MC 24C, MC 25C E³ FC Self Assessment Test MIR@ECR Siemens Healthcare and Bayer HealthCare Joint Symposium Bracco Symposium Siemens Healthcare Symposium GE Healthcare Symposium Guerbet Symposium Philips Healthcare Symposia Sunday, March 10 Monday, March 11 2 Special Focus Session SF 12 Professional Challenges Session PC 12 Categorical Courses CC 1218, CC 1219, CC 1221 Refresher Courses E³ Session (1200) Rising Stars Basic Session Special Focus Sessions SF 16a, SF 16b, SF 16c Categorical Courses CC 1618, CC 1619, CC 1621 Refresher Courses E³ Session (1600) Joint Session of the ESR and EFSUMB 12 12E³ Sessions ESR meets Chile Professional Challenges Session PC 13 Categorical Course CC 1321 Scientific Sessions Update Your Skills (Practical Courses) (1300) RTF Highlighted Lectures Scientific Sessions (1700) Santiago Ramón y Cajal Honorary Lecture Junior Image Interpretation Quiz Mini Courses MC 24D, MC 25D GE Healthcare Symposium Samsung Symposium Philips Healthcare Symposium Bracco Symposium Mini Courses MC 24E, MC 25E

5 Timetable 14:00 15:30 16:00 17:30 17:45 19:15 E³ Session Scientific Sessions (200) Siemens Healthcare Symposium Professional Challenges Session PC 3 Mini Course MC 322 Multidisciplinary Session MS 3 Refresher Courses E³ Session (300) 2 3 ESR Radiation Protection Session Opening Ceremony Presentation of Honorary Members Opening Lecture Thursday, March 7 Mini Courses MC 623, MC 628 E³ Session Scientific Sessions Update Your Skills (Practical Course) (600) ESOR Session Rising Stars Student Session Rising Stars Student Workshop ESR meets E-AHPBA New Horizons Session NH 7 Special Focus Sessions SF 7a, SF 7b, SF 7c Categorical Course CC 719 Mini Courses MC 722, MC 723, MC 728 Refresher Courses E³ Sessions Update Your Skills (Practical Course) (700) 6 7 Rising Stars Student Session Friday, March 8 EFRS meets Spain Image Interpretation Quiz Update Your Skills (Practical Courses) (1000) MIR@ECR Hologic Symposium Toshiba Symposia GE Healthcare Nycomed Symposium Philips Healthcare Mini Satellite Symposium New Horizons Session NH 14 Special Focus Sessions SF 14a, SF 14b, SF 14c Categorical Courses CC 1418, CC 1419, CC 1421 Refresher Courses E³ Session Update Your Skills (Practical Course) (1400) Rising Stars Student Final Session Scientific Sessions (1800) Rising Stars 14 Student Workshop State of the Art Symposium SA 11 Special Focus Session SF 11 Professional Challenges Session PC 11 Categorical Courses CC 1118, CC 1121 Multidisciplinary Session MS 11 Refresher Courses E³ Session Update Your Skills (Practical Course) (1100) MIR@ECR Rising Stars Student Workshop State of the Art Symposium SA 15 Special Focus Sessions SF 15a, SF 15b Categorical Courses CC 1518, CC 1519, CC 1521 Refresher Courses E³ Session Update Your Skills (Practical Course) (1500) Special Focus Session SF 19 Refresher Courses (1900) Saturday, March 9 Sunday, March 10 Monday, March 11 3

6 25 th European Congress of Radiology Sessions in Joint Sponsorship with CIRSE EFOMP EFRS ESCR ESER ESGAR ESHNR ESMOFIR ESNR ESOI ESPR ESSR ESTI ESUR EuroPACS EUSOBI ISRRT Congress Venue Austria Center Vienna Bruno Kreisky Platz Vienna, Austria Congress Language English Onsite Opening Hours Cardiovascular and Interventional Radiological Society of Europe European Federation of Organisations for Medical Physics European Federation of Radiographer Societies European Society of Cardiac Radiology European Society of Emergency Radiology European Society of Gastrointestinal and Abdominal Radiology European Society of Head and Neck Radiology European Society of Molecular and Functional Imaging in Radiology European Society of Neuroradiology European Society of Oncologic Imaging European Society of Paediatric Radiology European Society of Musculoskeletal Radiology European Society of Thoracic Imaging European Society of Urogenital Radiology European Society for the Promotion of Picture Archiving and Communication Systems in Medicine European Society of Breast Imaging International Society of Radiographers and Radiological Technologists Registration Wednesday, March 6 12:00 18:00 Thursday, March 7 to Monday, March 11 07:00 18:00 Preview Centre EDIPS ECR s Digital Preview System Wednesday, March 6 12:00 18:00 Thursday, March 7 to Monday, March 11 07:00 18:00 EPOS Scientific Exhibition Thursday, March 7 to Monday, March 11 08:00 18:00 Technical Exhibition EXPO Halls and EXPO Foyer D Friday, March 8 to Sunday, March 10 10:00 18:00 Monday, March 11 10:00 14:00 First Level (Gallery) Thursday, March 7 14:00 18:00 Friday, March 8 to Monday, March 11 10:00 18:00 Travel Service Wednesday, March 6 12:00 18:00 Thursday, March 7 to Monday, March 11 07:00 18:00 Press Office & Business Centre Thursday, March 7 to Monday, March 11 08:00 18:00 4

7 Table of Contents 6 Welcome by the ESR President 8 Welcome by the ECR 2013 Congress President Committees 12 ESR Executive Council 12 Congress Committee 13 Programme Planning Committee 14 Scientific Subcommittees 17 Topic Coordinators Dignitaries 20 Honorary Member George S. Bisset III 22 Honorary Member Tarek A. El-Diasty 24 Honorary Member Gary Glazer 26 Gold Medallist José Cáceres 28 Gold Medallist Johannes Lammer 30 Gold Medallist Maximilian F. Reiser 32 Opening Lecturer Jesús Prieto 34 Honorary Lecturer Carlo Catalano 36 Honorary Lecturer Jean-François Geschwind 38 Honorary Lecturer Luis Martí-Bonmatí General Information 42 Information from A to Z 50 CME at ECR ESR Meets Sessions 53 EFRS Meets Session 55 Plenary Sessions 56 Social Media Guide 59 Image Interpretation Quizzes 61 MIR@ECR 62 EPOS Scientific Exhibition 65 elearning Tools 66 Special Exhibition 67 Cafés & Restaurants 67 Free Publications 71 ECR 2013 welcomes its industry partners 73 ESR Journals 75 Underground Map 77 Floor Plans Programme Overviews 88 Thursday, March 7 90 Friday, March 8 92 Saturday, March 9 94 Sunday, March Monday, March 11 Programme by Topic 100 New Horizons Sessions 101 State of the Art Symposia 102 Special Focus Sessions 107 Professional Challenges Session 108 Multidisciplinary Sessions 109 Categorical Courses 112 Mini Courses 115 Refresher Courses / Scientific Sessions 135 EFOMP Workshop 136 E 3 European Excellence in Education 136 Foundation Course: Neuroimaging 137 Interactive Teaching Sessions 139 Accompanying Sessions 142 EIBIR presents IMAGINE 144 Rising Stars Programme 146 Update Your Skills (Practical Courses) 146 How to biopsy with US guidance 147 Image-guided tumor ablation 149 Satellite Symposia 153 Industry Hands-on Workshops Educational & Scientific Programme 155 Postgraduate Educational Programme 213 Scientific Sessions 271 List of Authors and Co-Authors 297 List of Moderators 300 Credits

8 Dear coll As president of the European Society of Radiology (ESR), it gives me enormous pleasure to welcome you to our society s scientific meeting, the European Congress of Radiology (ECR). I would like to extend a special welcome to the numerous young radiologists joining us in Vienna, especially those visiting for the first time and those who are attending thanks to the support of the Invest in the Youth programme. This event is the culmination of almost two years of intense planning and hard work, by people who have brought many years of valuable experience to the process. I would like to extend not only my congratulations, but my heartfelt thanks, to Prof. Bilbao and to all the members of the planning committees, for assembling a truly exemplary scientific and educational programme, as well as to the talented and dedicated ESR staff who have been involved in putting these plans into action. I wrote in the ECR 2013 Preliminary Programme that everyone involved in the organisation of our annual meeting was delighted and very proud that abstract submission rose again this year. The response to the call for paper abstracts in the summer was extremely encouraging, and the continuation of that response via the EPOS submission system has demonstrated that the radiological community continues to hold our congress in high regard. Speaking of community, being involved in so many different projects in so many different areas of interest over the past year has also brought me into contact with a vast number of committed and hardworking people, who are a great source of encouragement for the future of our discipline. I would like to thank everyone who has contributed to driving our society forward over the last twelve months. Sadly, one year is far too short to achieve everything we set out to accomplish, but I am satisfied that I can look back on an exciting and very productive period. The ESR s main activities this year have focused very much on international relations, especially on a political level. We have established an office in Brussels so that we can take a proactive approach to making our collective voice heard in the European Commission on topics that affect our profession. The biggest issue on the agenda in this respect is the ongoing debate regarding the EMF Directive. At the time of writing, we are optimistic that we will hear positive news on this matter by the time we meet at the ECR. We are also intensifying relations with associate institutional members and other societies outside of Europe. We have organised an international summit for representatives of non-european partners, which we hope will help us gain a better understanding of how we can and should work together in the future. We are also bringing our institutional member societies closer to the fold, by having each one represented at ESR committee level by its president. I was delighted with the involvement of so many groups from all over the world in the first International Day of Radiology (IDoR), which took place on November 8. Prompted by the success of the European Day of Radiology in 2011, IDoR 2012 was introduced to provide the first truly global celebration of radiology. We were very pleased to see so many radiologists joining us in marking the day and helping to promote our profession. We are also extremely grateful to both the Radiological Society of North America and the American College of Radiology for their joint role in bringing this event to life. Our efforts to strengthen relations with the many radiological and partner societies throughout the world will continue at ECR 2013, in the form of the ESR Meets programme. This year, along with Prof. Bilbao s home country, Spain, we will have the pleasure of welcoming the national radiological societies of both Chile and South Africa, as well as this year s partner society, the truly multidiscipli- 6

9 eagues, nary European-African Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary Association (E-AHPBA). The opportunity to hear from and get to know the visiting experts from these societies is one that should not be missed. The ESR Executive Council had a very productive brainstorming meeting in The Hague in June, as well as further meetings in October and December. One pleasing outcome of these meetings has been the establishment of a concept introduced by ESR Past-President, András Palkó. The idea was to assemble a pool of young, up-and-coming professionals in the field of radiology, whom the Executive Council could call upon for opinions, suggestions and feedback, and who would also gain valuable experience in interacting with the ESR committees and becoming acquainted with the structure and processes of our organisation. This body has been named the Leadership Institute and has already proven very valuable as a sounding board. Some of the ESR s most important creations have enjoyed a very successful The European School of Radiology (ESOR), which celebrated its fifth anniversary at ECR 2012 has gone from strength to strength under the stewardship of Nicholas Gourtsoyiannis, welcoming an ever increasing number of students and fellows into its many courses and programmes. The European Institute for Biomedical Imaging Research (EIBIR) has also flourished during its sixth year, attracting vital funding for research and coordinating various projects under the European Commission s 7th Framework Programme. Two major projects, peddose.net and HAMAM, have been successfully completed this year and a number of others are still in progress. At the same time, the European Board of Radiology (EBR), in its second year of existence, has become firmly established as a recognised body for radiological certification and accreditation in Europe. The increasing profile of the European Diploma in Radiology (EDiR) and its acceptance and acknowledgment by national, subspecialty and allied sciences societies has confirmed the EBR s legitimacy. The content of the EDiR examination is based on the ESR s European Training Curriculum, and we are currently in the final stages of updating the curriculum to make it both more comprehensive and easier to understand. The new version will describe not only knowledge, but also the skills, competences and attitudes required for each subspecialty at each level of training. One particularly important change is that the key stages will be given new, simpler names, to avoid any confusion with previous editions of the curriculum. The first three years of common trunk radiological training will be referred to as Level 1 and the final two years of subspecialty interest training will be Level 2. The final document should be completed by the time we meet in Vienna. Last, but by no means least, the ESR s publications have continued to provide an exceptionally high level of quality this year. European Radiology has enjoyed an extremely successful six-year period under the editorship of Adrian Dixon, and will soon enter a new phase under a new editor-in-chief, who will be formally announced at the ECR. With all of these activities and developments in mind, I am very much looking forward to seeing what the next twelve months will bring for the ESR, for our members, and for the world of radiology in general. But first, I am relishing the chance to make the most of the many and varied opportunities offered by our annual congress and the wonderful city of Vienna. I sincerely hope each and every one of you will enjoy this event to the very fullest. Gabriel P. Krestin ESR President 7

10 Welcome It is a great pleasure and a privilege to welcome you to Vienna for the European Congress of Radiology (ECR), the annual meeting of the world s largest radiological society. The ECR has become one of the most keenly anticipated medical conferences over the last two decades, not only as a place to come and learn about the scientific, medical and professional issues of the day, but to meet our colleagues from throughout the world of imaging, to exchange opinions, experience, and knowledge, and to enjoy the inimitable atmosphere of the ECR and its home city, Vienna. I would especially like to address this welcome to our younger attendees, who have been appearing at our congress in increasing numbers in recent years. It is enormously encouraging to see that new generations are not only developing an interest in radiology and radiography, but that they are committed enough to make the trip to Vienna for what may well be the most inspiring experience of their early careers. I am also personally delighted that we, as a society, are able to make this trip a reality for several thousand young people by providing support through the Invest in the Youth programme. Thanks to this very valuable initiative, as well as free registration for all students, I am looking forward to seeing many budding radiologists and radiographers at the Austria Center this year. Each ECR is different from the last; each has its own unique character and there are always innovations that make each congress stand out from its predecessors. But just as important as these differences are those factors that always remain: the vision and talent that we find within our community and the enduring appeal of radiological science. This is what makes the quality of our scientific and educational programme so exceptionally high, bringing thousands of visitors, who are committed to radiology and self-improvement, from all over the world to Vienna each year. On this note, I would like to offer my sincerest thanks to every member of the Programme Planning Committee for their fan- tastic work in assembling this programme and to the extremely capable team at the ESR Office for all their support. I am honoured to have played a part in the creation and organisation of this congress, and I hope that every one of you will gain just as much pleasure from attending as I will from seeing the carefully laid plans and hard work of so many people come to fruition. This year s programme offers many sessions, in many different formats, with the aim of educating and entertaining at the same time. As usual, some of the most successful and popular sessions will be repeated from previous congresses, but plenty of others will be new. The congress is constantly evolving, and the Programme Planning Committee and ESR Office strive tirelessly to stay ahead of the educational needs and demands of radiologists and radiographers. Categorical Courses are the heart of our programme, offering the deepest exploration of any topics at the congress. At ECR 2013 there will be three of these courses: Never without Arteries will be this year s contribution to the recently initiated Clinical Lessons for Imaging Core Knowledge CLICK series; Oncologic Imaging: Follow-up of Systemic and Local Therapies will summarise the most recent information about how responses to therapy should be evaluated in most oncologic situations; and Urogenital Imaging will be a continuation of the ECR 2012 session, covering the latest topics. The programme is always prepared with a strong emphasis on interaction, since the exchange of ideas is a major way to teach and learn. This year the successful E 3 European Excellence in Education will include fourteen 90-minute sessions, which will cover all the major aspects of radiology, with attractive titles such as tips and tricks and pitfalls. The Foundation Course will deal with neuroimaging and, as in previous years, will be followed by a self-assessment test. There will also be two practical courses on how to Update your Skills, which will 8

11 to ECR 2013 provide interactive demonstrations and opportunities for hands-on experience on How to biopsy and How to ablate. Like interaction, multidisciplinarity has become one of those words that appear in every conversation about the ECR. This principle is an increasingly important influence on our work and so it is only natural that we try to reflect this at our congress. The ECR 2013 programme includes three Multidisciplinary Sessions that will show how experts from different disciplines within the same institution, interact and decide on the best way to approach specific clinical situations. In addition, it is my pleasure to welcome the European-African Hepato- Pancreato-Biliary Association (E-AHPBA), a truly multidisciplinary organisation, to the ECR. They will join us as the partner discipline in the ESR Meets programme, and I am personally looking forward to strengthening our relationship with this association, from whom I believe we will learn a great deal, in terms of both science and professional cooperation. Once again, the ESR has invited three countries to share their expertise through the ESR Meets programme. Chile, South Africa, and Spain will present their most recent scientific developments in joint sessions and bring some international flavour to the entrance hall. For the first time, we will have a new session entitled EFRS meets, hosted by the European Federation of Radiographers Societies, reflecting the fact that the EFRS recently chose the ECR to be their official annual meeting. They have chosen to invite Spain as their first guest, and I am pleased to report that a great many Spanish radiographers have chosen to make their way to Vienna for this occasion. We are of course delighted to offer the EFRS this platform and we look forward to building even closer relations between our societies and our professions. As well as these few highlights I have mentioned, you will have the opportunity to attend Refresher Courses, Mini Courses, and State-of-the-Art Symposia; learn more about the most recent developments in New Horizons Sessions; look into a wide variety of topics in Special Focus Sessions; and hear about how to tackle some of our greatest issues in Professional Challenges Session. You will also have the chance to explore a technical exhibition of more than 26,000m 2 in size, and discover the latest products and imaging-related services from around 300 exhibiting companies from all over the world. And if this is not enough stimulation for you, we are lucky enough to be based in one of the most amazing cities in the world, boasting so much in the way of art, culture, cuisine and entertainment that is hard to know where to begin. Exactly how to arrange your schedule at the ECR is often the biggest problem, but however you divide your time, you can always be certain that it will be well spent. I look forward to sharing the experience with you and wish you all a wonderful congress. José Ignacio Bilbao ECR 2013 Congress President 9

12

13 Committees 12 ESR Executive Council 12 Congress Committee 13 Programme Planning Committee 14 Scientific Subcommittees 17 Topic Coordinators

14 ESR Executive Council Congress Committee President Gabriel P. Krestin, Rotterdam/NL 1 st Vice-President Guy Frija, Paris/FR 2 nd Vice-President Lorenzo Bonomo, Rome/IT Past-President András Palkó, Szeged/HU Congress Committee Chairman José I. Bilbao, Pamplona/ES 1 st Vice-Chairman of the Congress Committee Valentin Sinitsyn, Moscow/RU 2 nd Vice-Chairman of the Congress Committee Bernd Hamm, Berlin/DE ESOR Committee Chairman Nicholas Gourtsoyiannis, Athens/GR Publications Committee Chairman Paul M. Parizel, Antwerp/BE Research Committee Chairman Luis Martí-Bonmatí, Valencia/ES Education Committee Chairperson Birgit Ertl-Wagner, Munich/DE Professional Organisation Committee Chairman Yves Menu, Paris/FR National Societies Committee Chairman Luis Donoso, Barcelona/ES Subspecialties and Allied Sciences Committee Chairman Jim A. Reekers, Amsterdam/NL Chairperson (Congress President) J.I. Bilbao; Pamplona/ES 1 st Vice-Chairperson (1 st Congress Vice-President) V. Sinitsyn; Moscow/RU 2 nd Vice-Chairperson (2 nd Congress Vice-President) B. Hamm; Berlin/DE Ordinary Members F. Caseiro-Alves; Coimbra/PT K. Åhlström Riklund; Umea/SE V. Vilgrain; Clichy/FR M.I. Argyropoulou; Ioannina/GR ESR President G.P. Krestin; Rotterdam/NL ESR Executive Director P. Baierl; Vienna/AT Ex-officio Members: Chairperson of the Finance and Internal Affairs Committee B. Brkljačić; Zagreb/HR Chairperson of the Publications Committee P. M. Parizel; Antwerp/BE Finance and Internal Affairs Committee Chairman Boris Brkljačić, Zagreb/HR Communication and External Affairs Committee Chairman Lorenzo E. Derchi, Genoa/IT Strategic Review Committee Chairman Lorenzo Bonomo, Rome/IT Nominations and Awards Committee Chairman András Palkó, Szeged/HU Executive Director Peter Baierl, Vienna/AT 12

15 Programme Planning Committee Postgraduate Educational Programme Chairman: B. Hamm; Berlin/DE Members: V.N. Cassar-Pullicino; Oswestry/UK E. de Kerviler; Paris/FR M.H. Fuchsjäger; Graz/AT H.-U. Kauczor; Heidelberg/DE P.C. Maly Sundgren; Lund/SE A. Rossi; Genoa/IT S.A. Taylor; London/UK A. Trojanowska; Lublin/PL A. van der Lugt; Rotterdam/NL Scientific Papers Chairman: F. Caseiro-Alves; Coimbra/PT Members: G. Forrai; Budapest/HU M. Raissaki; Iraklion/GR D. Tack; Baudour/BE Scientific Exhibition (EPOS ) Chairman: K. Åhlström Riklund; Umea/SE Members: C. Ayuso; Barcelona/ES E.J.R. van Beek; Edinburgh/UK Categorical Courses T. de Baère; Villejuif/FR L.E. Derchi; Genoa/IT C. Loewe; Vienna/AT E³ European Excellence in Education Interactive Teaching Sessions J. Vilar; Valencia/ES Foundation Course M.I. Argyropoulou; Ioannina/GR e-learning D. Caramella; Pisa/IT P. Pokieser; Vienna/AT Cases of the Day J.C. Vilanova; Girona/ES Physics Programme W.J.M. van der Putten; Galway/IE Image Interpretation Quiz D. Vorwerk; Ingolstadt/DE Junior Image Interpretation Quiz A. Alguersuari; Sabadell/ES Evaluation D. Weishaupt; Zurich/CH Publications Committee Chairman (until March 2012) A.K. Dixon; Cambridge/UK ESR Subspecialties Committee Chairman J.A. Reekers; Amsterdam/NL ESR Education Committee Chairman (until March 2012) É. Breatnach; Dublin/IE ESR Professional Organisation Committee Chairman Y. Menu; Paris/FR 13

16 Scientific Subcommittees Abdominal and Gastrointestinal The ESR would like to thank ESGAR for their cooperation on this subcommittee Chairmen: B.J. Op de Beeck; Antwerp/BE S. Romano; Naples/IT Members: D. Akata; Ankara/TR C. Ayuso; Barcelona/ES G. Brancatelli; Palermo/IT D.J. Breen; Southampton/UK D. Cano; Pamplona/ES V. Cappendijk; s Hertogenbosch/NL L. Curvo-Semedo; Coimbra/PT E. Danse; Brussels/BE V.J. Goh; London/UK S. Gourtsoyianni; London/UK L. Guimaraes; Porto/PT M. Hellström; Gothenburg/SE C. Hoeffel; Reims/FR G.G. Karmazanovsky; Moscow/RU S. Leschka; St. Gallen/CH O. Lucidarme; Paris/FR M.M. Maher; Cork/IE A. Maier; Vienna/AT T. Mang; Vienna/AT S. Phoa; Amsterdam/NL S. Schmidt; Lausanne/CH S. Stojanovic; Novi Sad/RS C. Stroszczynski; Regensburg/DE J. Votrubová; Prague/CZ Breast The ESR would like to thank EUSOBI for their cooperation on this subcommittee Chairman: H.M. Dobson; Glasgow/UK Members: C.S. Balleyguier; Villejuif/FR P.A.T. Baltzer; Jena/DE I. Leconte; Brussels/BE M. Lesaru; Bucharest/RO R.M. Mann; Nijmegen/NL F. Pediconi; Rome/IT K. Pinker-Domenig; Vienna/AT M. Torres-Tabanera; Madrid/ES Cardiac The ESR would like to thank the ESCR for their cooperation on this subcommittee Chairman: M. Garðarsdóttir; Reykjavik/IS Members: G. Bastarrika; Pamplona/ES F. Cademartiri; Monastier di Treviso/IT B. Graca; Coimbra/PT K. Gruszczynska; Katowice/PL D. Hahn; Würzburg/DE S. Katsilouli; Athens/GR E. Mershina; Moscow/RU C. Peebles; Southampton/UK P.K. Vanhoenacker; Aalst/BE R. Vliegenthart; Groningen/NL J. Vymazal; Prague/CZ F. Wolf; Vienna/AT Chest The ESR would like to thank ESTI for their cooperation on this subcommittee Chairman: B. Ghaye; Brussels/BE Members: J. Biederer; Kiel/DE E. Castañer; Sabadell/ES R. Cesar; Ljubljana/SI J.D. Dodd; Dublin/IE N. Karabulut; Denizli/TR A.P. Parkar; Bergen/NO H. Prosch; Vienna/AT M.-P. Revel; Paris/FR E. Rizzo; Genolier/CH N. Sverzellati; Parma/IT E.J.R. van Beek; Edinburgh/UK J.E. Wildberger; Maastricht/NL Computer Applications The ESR would like to thank EuroPACS for their cooperation on this subcommittee Chairman: E. Neri; Pisa/IT Members: U.W. Engelmann; Dossenheim/DE B. Gibaud; Rennes/FR M. Onu; Bucharest/RO P. Sögner; Feldkirch/AT Z. Tarján; Budapest/HU 14

17 Scientific Subcommittees Molecular Imaging and Contrast Media Chairman: N. Grenier; Bordeaux/FR Members: I. Carrió; Barcelona/ES C.C. Cyran; Munich/DE B. Elmståhl; Malmö/SE F.A. Gallagher; Cambridge/UK T. Leiner; Utrecht/NL X. Montet; Geneva/CH F. Stacul; Trieste/IT M. Wozniak; Lublin/PL Genitourinary The ESR would like to thank ESUR for their cooperation on this subcommittee Chairman: V. Løgager; Copenhagen/DK Members: M.-F. Bellin; Le Kremlin-Bicêtre/FR D. Beyersdorff; Berlin/DE F.M. Danza; Rome/IT A. Dimopoulou; Uppsala/SE G. Ivanac; Zagreb/HR P. Leonardou; Athens/GR D. Negru; Iasi/RO M.M. Otero-García; Vigo/ES E. Sala; Cambridge/UK H.C. Thoeny; Berne/CH A.T. Turgut; Ankara/TR D. Yakar; Nijmegen/NL Head and Neck The ESR would like to thank the ESHNR for their cooperation on this subcommittee Chairman: S. Bisdas; Tübingen/DE Members: N. Gritzmann; Vienna/AT P. Halimi; Paris/FR C.Z. Karaman; Aydin/TR R. Kohler; Geneva/CH R. Ljumanovic; Amsterdam/NL J. Olliff; Birmingham/UK S. Petrovic; Nis/RS L. Preda; Milan/IT Interventional Radiology The ESR would like to thank CIRSE for their cooperation on this subcommittee Chairman: A. Krajina; Hradec Králové/CZ Members: V. Bérczi; Budapest/HU C. Binkert; Winterthur/CH T.J. Cleveland; Sheffield/UK J. Luis del Cura; Bilbao/ES L. Lonn; Copenhagen/DK F. Orsi; Milan/IT H. Rousseau; Toulouse/FR M. Schoder; Vienna/AT J. Tacke; Passau/DE V. Vidjak; Zagreb/HR P. Vilares Morgado; Porto/PT K. Zelenak; Martin/SK Musculoskeletal The ESR would like to thank the ESSR for their cooperation on this subcommittee Chairman: A.J. Grainger; Leeds/UK Members: N. Boutry; Lille/FR M. Court-Payen; Copenhagen/DK P.M. Cunningham; Navan/IE C. Glaser; Munich/DE A. Klauser; Innsbruck/AT M. Maas; Amsterdam/NL A. Oktay; Izmir/TR A. Plagou; Athens/GR J. Raposo; Lisbon/PT L.M. Sconfienza; San Donato Milanese/IT P. Van Dyck; Antwerp/BE J.C. Vilanova; Girona/ES Neuro The ESR would like to thank the ESNR for their cooperation on this subcommittee Chairman: J. Van Goethem; Antwerp/BE Members: N. Bargalló; Barcelona/ES F. Barkhof; Amsterdam/NL M. Bekiesinska-Figatowska; Warsaw/PL B. Ertl-Wagner; Munich/DE Z. Merhemic; Sarajevo/BA M. Muto; Naples/IT Y. Özsunar; Aydin/TR M.A. Papathanasiou; Athens/GR I.N. Pronin; Moscow/RU J.-P. Pruvo; Lille/FR M.M. Thurnher; Vienna/AT T.A. Yousry; London/UK 15

18 Scientific Subcommittees Paediatric The ESR would like to thank the ESPR for their cooperation on this subcommittee Chairman: R.R. van Rijn; Amsterdam/NL Members: G. del Pozo; Madrid/ES C. Fonda; Florence/IT C. Garel; Paris/FR M. Haliloglu; Ankara/TR W. Hirsch; Leipzig/DE P.D. Humphries; London/UK L.-S. Ording-Müller; Tromsø/NO M. Raissaki; Iraklion/GR Physics in Radiology The ESR would like to thank EFOMP for their cooperation on this subcommittee Chairman: J.N. Vassileva; Sofia/BG Members: T. Beyer; Zurich/CH D. Bor; Ankara/TR O. Ciraj-Bjelac; Belgrade/RS H. Jarvinen; Helsinki/FI R. Padovani; Udine/IT K. Pedersen; Østerås/NO V. Tsapaki; Athens/GR Radiographers The ESR would like to thank the EFRS and the ISRRT for their cooperation on this subcommittee Chairmen: D. Pekarovic; Ljubljana/SI V. Vilgrain; Clichy/FR Members: E. Agadakos; Athens/GR K. Haller; Wiener Neustadt/AT C. Malamateniou; London/UK J. McNulty; Dublin/IE G. Paulo; Coimbra/PT P. Vahtramae; Pärnu/EE Vascular The ESR would like to thank CIRSE for their cooperation on this subcommittee Chairman: K. Malagari; Athens/GR Members: J.-P. Beregi; Nîmes/FR L. Crocetti; Pisa/IT E. Esteban; Alzira/ES K.A. Hausegger; Klagenfurt/AT T. Jargiello; Lublin/PL A. Keeling; Dublin/IE S. Müller-Hülsbeck; Flensburg/DE R. Uberoi; Oxford/UK Oncologic Imaging Chairman: R.G.H. Beets-Tan; Maastricht/NL Members: M. Bellomi; Milan/IT P. Brader; Vienna/AT F. Caseiro-Alves; Coimbra/PT L. Martí-Bonmatí; Valencia/ES C. Matos; Brussels/BE A.G. Rockall; London/UK H.-P. Schlemmer; Heidelberg/DE M.R Torkzad; Stockholm/SE Emergency Radiology Chairman: U. Linsenmaier; Munich/DE Members: I. Arkhipova; Moscow/RU O. Chan; London/UK D.R. Kool; Nijmegen/NL S. Koskinen; Helsinki/FI P.-A. Poletti; Geneva/CH G. Schueller; Bülach/CH M. Stajgis; Poznan/PL M. Zins; Paris/FR 16

19 Topic Coordinators Categorical Courses CLICK (Clinical Lessons for Imaging Core Knowledge): Never without Arteries C. Loewe; Vienna/AT Oncologic Imaging: Follow-up of Systemic and Local Therapies T. de Baère; Villejuif/FR Urogenital Imaging L.E. Derchi; Genoa/IT Mini Courses Organs from A to Z: Heart K. Nikolaou; Munich/DE Controversies in Breast Imaging F. Sardanelli; Milan/IT The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Head and Neck A. Borges; Lisbon/PT The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Musculoskeletal Imaging K. Wörtler; Munich/DE Joint Course of ESR and RSNA (Radiological Society of North America): Essentials in oncologic imaging: what radiologists need to know R.L. Baron; Chicago, IL/US C.J. Herold; Vienna/AT H. Hricak; New York, NY/US Y. Menu; Paris/FR D.M. Panicek; New York, NY/US M.F. Reiser; Munich/DE Multidisciplinary Sessions Managing Patients with Cancer J.I. Bilbao; Pamplona/ES B. Hamm; Berlin/DE B. Sangro; Pamplona/ES V. Vilgrain; Clichy/FR E³ European Excellence in Education Foundation Course: Neuroimaging M.I. Argyropoulou; Ioannina/GR Interactive Teaching Sessions J. Vilar; Valencia/ES Update Your Skills (Practical Courses) How to Biopsy with US Guidance G. Mostbeck; Vienna/AT Image-Guided Tumour Ablation: How to do it D.J. Breen; Southampton/UK M.H. Fuchsjäger; Graz/AT 6 th Post-Processing Face-Off Session A. Graser; Munich/DE 17

20

21 Dignitaries 20 Honorary Member George Simpson Bisset III 22 Honorary Member Tarek A. El-Diasty 24 Honorary Member Gary Glazer 26 Gold Medallist José Cáceres 28 Gold Medallist Johannes Lammer 30 Gold Medallist Maximilian F. Reiser 32 Opening Lecturer Jesús Prieto 34 Honorary Lecturer Carlo Catalano 36 Honorary Lecturer Jean-François Jeff Geschwind 38 Honorary Lecturer Luis Martí-Bonmatí

22 George Simpson Bisset III Houston, TX/US Honorary Member In recognition of his groundbreaking work in the field of diagnostic radiology and his dedication to educating the next generation of radiologists, Professor George Simpson Bisset III will be awarded Honorary Membership of the European Society of Radiology at ECR

23 ESR Dignitaries George Simpson Bisset III serves as chief of paediatric radiology at Texas Children s Hospital and Edward B. Singleton Professor of Radiology at Baylor College of Medicine. Prof. Bisset began his studies at the University of Tennessee, before returning to his native Florida, where he received his medical degree from the University of South Florida in He then went on to complete his residency in paediatrics at the Children s Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio, where he later carried out a fellowship in cardiology, a residency in radiology, and a fellowship in paediatric radiology. Before taking up his current post, Prof. Bisset had already built up a great deal of experience during his career, having not only worked as a radiologist in a number of hospitals, but also as a consultant cardiologist. As a result of his work in paediatric cardiology and radiology, Prof. Bisset has received a number of honours during his career. At the International Pediatric Radiology Congress in 2001, his manuscript received the John A. Caffey Award. He has also been appointed a Fellow of the American College of Radiology, an Honorary Member of the American Association of Physicists in Medicine, and an honorary member of both German and Austrian national radiological societies. During his career, Prof. Bisset has shown a great deal of dedication to research and the development of his discipline. With a total of 125 articles published in peer-reviewed journals and more than 20 book chapters, he has written and researched extensively on the subjects of paediatrics, cardiology and radiology. Prof. Bisset is an active member of many radiological societies, including the American College of Radiologists and the Society for Pediatric Radiology. He is a long-time member of the Radiological Society of North America and is the immediate past president of the society. In 2012, as RSNA President, he strengthened the society s focus on patient care, choosing patients first as the theme of the society s most recent congress. 21

24 Tarek A. El-Diasty Mansoura/EG Honorary Member In recognition of achievements throughout his career, his outstanding contributions to the development of radiology in Egypt and his dedication to fostering international cooperation, Professor Tarek El-Diasty will be awarded Honorary Membership of the European Society of Radiology at ECR

25 ESR Dignitaries Tarek El-Diasty is professor of radiology and chairman of the radiology department at the Urology and Nephrology Centre, Mansoura University, Egypt. Born in Egypt in 1955, Prof. El-Diasty received his medical degree from the Medical Faculty of Mansoura University, Egypt, in He then completed his internship and residency periods at the same institution, receiving his master s degree in 1986 and doctorate in Throughout his long and distinguished career, he has focused on improving urological care in Egypt and he has dedicated much of his time and effort to establishing Egypt s first uroradiology department. An ardent supporter of international cooperation and exchange, Prof. El-Diasty has worked hard to build closer ties between the Egyptian Society of Radiology and other radiological societies around the world. As an ambassador for Egyptian radiology, he has helped to build bridges with the European Society of Radiology and the Radiological Society of North America, to name but a few of the societies he has established links with. In addition to his clinical work, Prof. El-Diasty has also published extensively, with more than 100 peer-reviewed papers and six book chapters to his name. He has also delivered 55 invited lectures and served as chairman of the European Society of Urogenital Radiology (ESUR) Symposium, which took place in Cairo in He has actively participated in every European Congress of Radiology since 1995, as well as every ESUR meeting since A dedicated teacher, Prof. El-Diasty has, to date, supervised more than 50 postgraduate medical students in the field of radiology during his time at Mansoura University. 23

26 Gary Glazer Stanford, CA/US Honorary Member In recognition of his major contributions to the improvement of oncologic imaging as well as his years of work to create one of the world s foremost imaging centres, the late Professor Gary Glazer will be awarded Honorary Membership of the European Society of Radiology at ECR

27 ESR Dignitaries Gary Glazer served as chairman of the department of radiology at the Stanford University School of Medicine, California, for more than 20 years. He was also the Emma Pfeiffer Merner Professor of the Medical Sciences at the same institution. On October 16, 2011, Glazer passed away, at the age of 61, after a long fight with prostate cancer. Born in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1950, Prof. Glazer was born into a family of healthcare professionals, his father being a paediatric radiologist and founding member of the Society of Paediatric Radiology, while his mother worked as a nurse. At the University of Michigan, Prof. Glazer studied cellular biology before moving on to receive his medical degree from Case Western University. He carried out his internship, residency and fellowship training in radiology at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF). He worked for a short time at UCSF, before he returned to the University of Michigan to work as an assistant professor. Six years later he was full professor of radiology and serving as director of magnetic resonance imaging. In 1989, Prof. Glazer became chair of the department of radiology at the Stanford University School of Medicine, and under his chairmanship the department underwent a number of major expansions and improvements, making it one of the most sophisticated imaging centres in the world. He worked to introduce a more patient-centred approach to his department, as he sought to increase the radiologist s interaction with patients. Over the course of his long and distinguished career, Prof. Glazer carried out a great deal of important and influential research. His work in the fields of computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging led to the development of standards for distinguishing liver and adrenal tumours and staging tumours in lung cancer. These standards remain vital to treatment and are still used routinely today. He also published more than 150 peer-reviewed articles, three books and served as consultant editor for a range of highly reputable scientific journals including the New England Journal of Medicine and Radiology. During his career, Prof. Glazer received widespread recognition for his work, which is evidenced by the many awards and honours he received, including Gold Medals from both the Radiological Society of North America and the Association of University Radiologists. He was also an Honorary Member of the French, German and Japanese national radiological societies and served as president of the International Society for Strategic Studies in Radiology from 2003 to Gary Glazer is survived by his wife Diane and two sons Daniel and David. 25

28 José Cáceres Barcelona/ES Gold Medallist In recognition of his many years of dedication to radiological education and training, as well as his tireless efforts to promote the discipline of radiology in Europe and around the world, Professor José Cáceres will be awarded the Gold Medal of the European Society of Radiology at ECR

29 ESR Dignitaries José Cáceres is a professor and former head of diagnostic radiology at H.G.U. Vall d Hebron Universidad Autonoma, Barcelona, Spain. He is also a long-standing member of the ESR and is well-known for his series on the ESR blog, Cáceres Corner, in which he and his puppet colleague challenge radiologists to solve specific cases and take away some important lessons. Prof. Cáceres was born in Seville, Spain in He studied medicine at the University of Seville from 1957 to 1964, before moving to the United States in In the US, he completed an internship at Cook County Hospital in Chicago and later served his residency at the University of Cincinnati from 1966 to 1969, followed by a one-year fellowship in diagnostic radiology. He went on to serve as assistant professor of radiology at the University of Kentucky before returning to Spain in Back in his home country, Prof. Cáceres built up a wealth of clinical and academic experience. He served as head of department and professor in a number of institutions in Madrid, Val- ladolid and Barcelona. In 1996, he took up the posts of professor of radiology and head of diagnostic radiology at the H.G.U. Vall d Hebron Autonomous University of Barcelona, where he served until his retirement in A valued and distinguished member of the international radiological community, Prof. Cáceres is a member of a number of scientific societies including, the Radiological Society of North America, the Spanish Society of Radiology, the Spanish Society of Thoracic Imaging (SEIT) and the European Society of Thoracic Imaging (ESTI). He has served as president of both ESTI and the SEIT, and at ECR 2011 he delivered the Josef Lissner Honorary Lecture. Over the course of his career, Prof. Cáceres has published extensively and has 87 peer-reviewed articles, 12 book chapters and a book to his name. He has also served as chest section editor for the European Journal of Radiology and editor-in-chief of the Spanish radiological publication, Radiología. 27

30 Johannes Lammer Vienna/AT Gold Medallist In recognition of his scientific achievements and his dedication to international exchange and cooperation in the field of radiology, Professor Johannes Lammer will be awarded the Gold Medal of the European Society of Radiology at ECR

31 ESR Dignitaries Johannes Lammer is vice-chairman of the department of radiology and director of cardiovascular and interventional radiology at the Medical University of Vienna, Austria. Born in Vienna, Prof. Lammer studied at the University of Vienna Medical School, where he graduated in 1975, before moving on to work as an intern at hospitals in Bregenz and Feldkirch. He then went to Graz, to complete his residency in radiology at Karl Franzens University. In 1982, he travelled to the United States, where he held visiting fellowships at the department of radiology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, the MD Anderson Hospital and Tumor Institute at the University of Texas in Houston, and the department of radiology at the University of California in San Francisco. In 1984, he took up the post of associate professor of radiology at Karl Franzens University, Graz. In 1990, he became head of the department of angiography and interventional radiology at the University of Vienna. On top of this impressive academic and clinical career, Prof. Lammer has also been very active in the field of international scientific collaboration and exchange. From 1996 to 1997, he served as president of the International Society of Hepato-Biliary-Pancreatic Radiology, followed by presidency of the Austrian Society of Angiology, from 1999 to A long-standing, active and highly valued member of the Cardiovascular and Interventional Radiological Society of Europe, he has served as its treasurer, secretary and president, which exemplifies his dedication to promoting international cooperation within the field of interventional radiology. As an author, Prof. Lammer has published more than 300 articles in peer-reviewed journals such as Radiology, Circulation, The Lancet and the New England Journal of Medicine. He has also written a number of abstracts and book chapters, as well as a book, Praxis der Interventionellen Radiologie (The Practice of Interventional Radiology). His research interests include CT and MR angiography of coronary and peripheral arteries, IR treatment of peripheral vascular and aortic diseases, as well as HCC and liver metastases. As a result of his work, Prof. Lammer has received a number of awards and honours throughout his career, including honorary membership of the Austrian Society of Radiology, the Austrian Society of Interventional Radiology, the Hungarian Society of Interventional Radiology and the Turkish Society of Radiology. He has also received Honorary Fellowship of the British Society of Interventional Radiology and the Gold Medal of the Cardiovascular and Interventional Radiological Society of Europe. 29

32 Maximilian F. Reiser Munich/DE Gold Medallist In recognition of years of groundbreaking work in clinical radiology and his devotion to fostering cooperation on a European and international level, Professor Maximilian Reiser will be awarded the Gold Medal of the European Society of Radiology at ECR

33 ESR Dignitaries Maximilian F. Reiser is professor of radiology, chairman of the department of clinical radiology, and dean of medicine at Ludwig Maximilians University of Munich. In 1973, Prof. Reiser received his medical degree from the Ludwig Maximilians University of Munich, the same institution he now heads. He then completed his residency at the diagnostic radiology department of the Technical University of Munich in He later served as an assistant professor at the same institute, before moving on to become an associate professor at the University of Münster in He then went on to take up the post of professor and chairman of radiology at the University of Bonn in 1989, where he worked until he returned to his alma mater in He has served as professor and chairman of Ludwig Maximilians University s department of radiology since 1993, and in 2008 he was appointed dean of medicine. A well-known figure within the international radiological community, Prof. Reiser has taken an active interest in promoting and furthering the interests of his discipline. A long-time and active member of the European Society of Radiology, he served as president of the Society s congress in 2008, and went on to serve as president of the society in He has also served as president of the German Radiological Society, the European Society of Musculoskeletal Radiology and the joint congress of the German Radiological Society and Austrian Radiological Society in With more than 500 original publications to his name, Prof. Reiser has authored extensively throughout his distinguished clinical and academic career. His main research interests include skeletal radiology, magnetic resonance imaging, abdominal and cardiac imaging, as well as oncologic interventions. Among the many awards he has received throughout his career are Honorary Fellowship of the Royal College of Radiologists and the American College of Radiology. He was also awarded the Holthusen Ring Award of the German Radiological Society. Prof. Reiser is also an honorary member of many national radiological societies, including those of Austria, France, Switzerland, Korea, Greece, Japan, India and Iran, as well as being an honorary member of the Radiological Society of North America. He has also received honorary membership of the Leopoldina, the German National Academy of Science, as well as an honorary doctorate from the veterinary faculty of Ludwig Maximilians University and Tiflis State University. He was also made Foreign Associate of the National Academy of Science (USA) Institute of Medicine (IOM). 31

34 Jesús Prieto Pamplona/ES Opening Lecturer In recognition of his expertise and groundbreaking work in the field of primary biliary cirrhosis and gene therapy of liver diseases, the European Society of Radiology has invited Professor Jesús Prieto to deliver the Opening Lecture, entitled Promises and facts of liver-directed gene therapy, at ECR

35 ESR Dignitaries Jesús Prieto is professor of medicine and director of the department of hepatology and gene therapy at the Centre for Applied Medical Research at the University of Navarra, Spain. He also serves as a consultant internist at the University of Navarra Clinic. An expert in the field of hepatology, Prof. Prieto is considered to be a pioneer of gene therapy in Europe. His research has focused mainly on understanding the underlying mechanisms of liver disease and on the development of new therapies for acute and chronic liver damage. He is credited with contributing to the unravelling of the pathogenesis of primary biliary cirrhosis, where he showed that a defect in bicarbonate transport induces both bile duct injury and immune dysfunction. Through his research, Prof. Prieto has analysed the role of IGF-I deficiency in the progression of liver cirrhosis and has produced clinical and experimental data to show that IGF-I replacement therapy can induce regression of liver fibrosis and a reduction of portal pressure, along with a significant improvement in liver function. In addition, he has identified cardiotrophin-1 as a molecule with potent hepatoprotective properties, making it a natural defence against apoptosis and a potential therapy for patients with acute, severe liver damage. A member of many national and international societies dedicated to the study of the liver, Prof. Prieto has served as president of the Spanish Association for the Study of the Liver and on the Scientific Committee of the European Association for the Study of the Liver. He was made Doctor Honoris Causa by the University of Porto (Portugal) and the University Austral of Buenos Aires (Argentina). Prof. Prieto has authored more than 300 articles, which have appeared in many prestigious peer-reviewed journals such as the New England Journal of Medicine, Journal of Experimental Medicine, Journal of Clinical Investigation, Cell Metabolism, PNAS, Gastroenterology, Journal of Clinical Oncology and many others. 33

36 Carlo Catalano Rome/IT Honorary Lecturer In recognition of his research and work in the areas of cardiovascular imaging and interventional radiology, Professor Carlo Catalano has been invited to present the Josef Lissner Honorary Lecture, entitled MR-guided focused ultrasound: a new string to the radiologist s bow, at ECR

37 ESR Dignitaries Carlo Catalano is professor of radiology and head of the department of diagnostic radiology at La Sapienza University of Rome Hospital. Born in Rome in 1965, Prof. Catalano received his medical degree from La Sapienza University of Rome in 1990 before completing his residency at the University of L Aquila in Up until 1999, he worked as a staff radiologist in the department of radiology and the department of emergency radiology at La Sapienza University of Rome. During this time he focused mainly on CT and MR body imaging along with cardiovascular imaging and interventional procedures. In 1999, he became assistant professor of radiology at La Sapienza, as well as assistant professor at the Campus Bio-Medico University, Rome. Throughout his career, Prof. Catalano has dedicated much of his time to research and education. He became full professor of radiology at La Sapienza University of Rome in 2010, after eight years of teaching and research as associate professor. He serves as the Italian delegate to the European Society of Radiology s Education Committee and has served as a member of the European School of Radiology s faculty for its Teach-the-Teachers programme in Italy, which reflects his experience and passion for the field of radiological education and training. Prof. Catalano has been an active member of the ESR since the beginning of his career, participating as a panellist and as an organiser for the Junior Film Reading Session at ECR Furthermore, during his career he has shown great dedication to developing relations with less developed countries, with the aim of sharing radiological knowledge. A prolific author and researcher, Prof. Catalano has authored more than 170 scientific papers, six books and upwards of 50 book chapters. On top of this, he has delivered more than 150 invited lectures at national and international conferences. 35

38 Jean-François Jeff Geschwind Baltimore, MD/US Honorary Lecturer In recognition of his work in cancer research and his efforts to further the development of oncologic imaging and interventional oncology, Professor Jean-François Geschwind has been invited by the European Society of Radiology to deliver the Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen Honorary Lecture, entitled Interventional oncology: the era of molecular targeted therapy at ECR

39 ESR Dignitaries Jean-François Geschwind is professor of radiology, surgery, and oncology, and director of the division of vascular and interventional radiology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland/US. He is also director of the Interventional Radiology Center and chief of interventional radiology research at the Johns Hopkins Hospital. Originally from France, Prof. Geschwind began his early medical training at the University of Paris School of Medicine and subsequently moved to the United States, where he studied at the University of Pennsylvania and then completed his medical degree at Boston University School of Medicine in Massachusetts. He completed his residency training in diagnostic radiology as a research scholar (sponsored by the National Institutes of Health) at the University of California, San Francisco in He went on to complete his two-year training in vascular and interventional radiology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, before joining the faculty there as an assistant professor. In 2002, he was appointed director of the division of vascular and interventional radiology and the Interventional Radiology Center at Johns Hopkins Hospital, and in 2007 he was promoted to professor of radiology, surgery and oncology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. A leading figure in the field of liver cancer, Prof. Geschwind has focused most of his research on hepatic cancer. He has received numerous grants from foundations, industry and the federal government for his research in the field. Prof. Geschwind has authored or co-authored more than 350 scientific articles and abstracts on interventional radiology and, more specifically, the treatment of liver cancer. As lead or co-investigator on more than 40 clinical trials, Prof. Geschwind s research has been published in highly rated peer-reviewed journals, including the Journal of Clinical Oncology, Clinical Cancer Research, Radiology, European Radiology, Gastroenterology and Annals of Surgery. He has also won numerous national and international awards in recognition of his research accomplishments. In addition to having co-authored the first book dedicated to interventional radiology, entitled Interventional Oncology: Principles and Practice, Prof. Geschwind is currently co-editing the book, Abrams Angiography: Interventional Radiology with Dr. Michael Dake. A prolific speaker and lecturer, both nationally and internationally, Prof. Geschwind has delivered over 200 keynote speeches at scientific assemblies, annual meetings and symposia. He has also served as visiting professor at many prestigious institutions throughout the world. 37

40 Luis Martí-Bonmatí Valencia/ES Honorary Lecturer In recognition of his dedication to scientific research and development, Professor Luis Martí- Bonmatí has been invited by the European Society of Radiology to present the Santiago Ramón y Cajal Honorary Lecture, Research and science: from individuals to societies the Ramón y Cajal background, at ECR

41 ESR Dignitaries Luis Martí-Bonmatí is director of medical imaging at La Fe University and Polytechnic University Hospital, and chief of radiology at Quirón Hospital, Valencia, Spain. He is also professor of radiology at Valencia University. After completing his undergraduate medical training at the University of Valencia in 1983, Prof. Martí-Bonmatí worked as a resident at La Fe University Hospital Valencia until He then began work on his Ph.D. thesis, MRI in the study and characterisation of focal liver lesions, which earned him a doctorate with excellence from the University of Valencia in As a researcher, Prof. Martí-Bonmatí s interests lie mainly in the fields of liver MR and CT, abdominal and pelvic MRI, contrast agents, image processing, and imaging biomarkers. With more than 200 articles listed in PubMed and 55 book chapters to his name, he is an established scientific author. As an editor he has contributed to eight books. He has also supervised twenty-two Ph.D. students, and has delivered hundreds of presentations at scientific meetings, symposia, and international conferences. On top of his work as a clinician and academic, Prof. Martí- Bonmatí has also been engaged in strengthening international ties within the field of radiology. He is an active member of many European scientific societies and has served as president of the Spanish Society of Radiology, the European Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine and Biology and the Spanish Society of Abdominal Imaging. In addition to these presidencies, he has served as vice-president of the European Society of Gastrointestinal and Abdominal Radiology. He is a long-time member of the European Society of Radiology and currently serves as chairman of the society s Research Committee. 39

42 Customise your congress! Plan and personalise your ECR 2013 experience with the Interactive Programme Planner. The IPP offers a great, convenient way to explore the whole ECR programme online and create a custom timetable. You can search or browse for sessions and posters, read full abstracts, create a personal calendar, and even print your own personalised Book of Abstracts. It s also optimised for mobile devices, meaning you can keep every detail that s important to you exactly where you need it right in your hand. Plan your own personalised congress and you ll never lose track again... ipp.myesr.org

43 General Information 42 Information from A to Z 50 CME at ECR ESR Meets Sessions 53 EFRS Meets Session 55 Plenary Sessions 56 Social Media Guide 59 Image Interpretation Quizzes 61 MIR@ECR 62 EPOS Scientific Exhibition 65 elearning Tools 66 Special Exhibition 67 Cafés & Restaurants 67 Free Publications 71 ECR 2013 welcomes its industry partners 73 ESR Journals 75 Underground Map

44 General Information Information from A to Z Arts & Culture Delegates are encouraged to visit the Arts & Culture Desk in the entrance hall for information on Vienna s cultural events such as exclusive opera performances, delightful concerts, and the fascinating exhibitions in Vienna s most important and remarkable museums. Pick up your personal Arts & Culture Brochure at this counter to find descriptions of all cultural places. Badges For organisational and security reasons, badges must be worn at the congress venue. Access to the different areas will only be granted upon presentation of an appropriate badge. Please note that in order to obtain CME credits, it is mandatory to affix your Personal ID stickers to the evaluation forms available in each scientific session, and to drop these into the dedicated boxes. Lost or Forgotten Badges In the case of loss, a replacement badge will only be provided on full payment of the applicable onsite registration fee. Forgotten badges will be replaced against a deposit of the full onsite fee. Book of Abstracts Insights into Imaging (Supplement 1 to Volume 4) Professional delegates will find a complimentary copy in their congress bag. Please note that in accordance with the ESR members wishes, the print version of the Book of Abstracts contains Scientific Sessions only. The extended version of the Book of Abstracts, including the Postgraduate Educational Programme and Satellite Symposia can be accessed at You can also create your own personal Book of Abstracts with the help of the popular ECR Interactive Programme Planner (ipp.myesr.org). Abstracts of EPOS presentations no longer appear in the Book of Abstracts. Each full EPOS presentation can instead be cited by a Digital Object Identifier (DOI), which appears with the presentation at Broadcast Rooms For the second time, the ECR features specific Broadcast Rooms, where you can listen to sessions and view the corresponding presentation material in a relaxed atmosphere when the actual lecture rooms are overcrowded. Broadcast Rooms/Zones are located next to room B (2 nd level), rooms L/M and N/O (1 st level), rooms E1 and F2 (entrance level) and rooms G/H and I/K (lower level). See Floor Plans on pages Business Centre The Press Office & Business Centre, located on the entrance level, offers copy and fax facilities for a small charge. Opening hours: Thursday, March 7 to Monday, March 11: 08:00 18:00 Cafés & Restaurants If you are looking for an ideal meeting point, or if you just want to take a short break, try one of the various foyer cafés and restaurants. They are situated throughout the whole congress venue and on all levels of the building, offering a variety of tasty hot and cold snacks. To offer you the broadest possible variety of Austrian and international delicacies, each café and restaurant has its own theme, from Austrian specialties to Italian treats and Asian delights. See page 67. Please see the coffee-cup signs on the floor plans on pages of this programme to locate the various foyer cafés. Cases of the Day From Thursday to Sunday, five Cases of the Day covering different sections of radiology are shown on computer stations in the EPOS classroom on the 2 nd level. Participants are invited to submit their diagnoses. The winners will be announced on the ESR website. We would like to acknowledge the contribution of the following authors to the Cases of the Day: Thursday: Case 1: R. Basilico, E. Rodolfino, L. Migliorato, V. Calamita, A.R. Ferri, A.R. Cotroneo; Italy Case 2: P. Belli, M. Di Matteo, M. Giuliani; Italy Case 3: M.B. Damasio, F. Rizzo, C. Mattiuz, G.M. Magnano; Italy Case 4: R. Viguer, F. Aparici, F. Mas, L. Martí-Bonmati; Spain Case 5: M.P. García-Peña, L. Cadavid Álvarez; Spain Friday: Case 1: P.I. Davydenko, G.G. Karmazanovsky; Russia Case 2: K. Gruszczynska, P. Ulbrych, K.S. Gołba, J. Biernat, J. Baron; Poland Case 3: E. Fisci, A. Tagliafico; Italy Case 4: G.C. Colleran, M.J. Shelly, B.D Murphy, H.M. Fenlon, E.C. Kavanagh; Ireland Case 5: C.A. Acevedo, I. Delgado, A. Sanchez-Montanez, E. Vazquez; Spain Saturday: Case 1: P.L. Di Paolo, H.A. Vargas, O. Akin, H. Hricak; Italy/United States Case 2: K.-F. Kreitner, N. Abegunewardene; Germany Case 3: I.I. Reidsma, M. Reijnierse; Netherlands Case 4: I.G. Lupescu, G.A. Popa, C.A. Nicolae; Romania Case 5: S. Speca, C. Borelli, G. Soglia, L. Bonomo; Italy Sunday: Case 1: E. Astrinakis, N. Courcoutsakis, A. Karayiannakis, P.K. Prassopoulos; Greece Case 2: M.-P. Revel, B. Fedida; France Case 3: M.J. Shelly, G.C. Colleran, B.D. Murphy, H.M. Fenlon; Ireland Case 4: L. Holzer-Frühwald, M. Pones, C. Kölblinger, M.M. Thurnher; Austria Case 5: M. Teodorescu, E. Coche, B. Ghaye; Belgium 42

45 General Information Information from A to Z Categorical Courses There are two new Categorical Courses, entitled Oncologic Imaging: Follow-up of Systemic and Local Therapies and CLICK (Clinical Lessons for Imaging Core Knowledge): Never without Arteries at ECR The Categorical Course Urogenital Imaging is repeated from ECR The latter and the CLICK Course are interactive courses with electronic voting/self assessment. For both courses, voluntary self-assessment tests will be available after the last session is finished. Tests can be accessed online (assessment.myesr.org) as well as via the EPOS classroom. Places on each course are allocated on a first-come, first-served basis. Please refer to pages for the course programmes. Churches and Religious Communities in Vienna Vienna is a multi-denominational, multi-cultural city. We will be pleased to provide you with information on local religious communities and places of worship at the Travel Service Desk. CME Accreditation System Please make sure you pick up an evaluation form, which is provided at the entrance of each room. Then affix one of your Personal ID stickers to the evaluation form and drop it into the dedicated box in front of each room. This is mandatory in order to obtain CME credits. See pages Coat Check The coat check services are located on the entrance level, in Foyers E and F, as well as on the lower level next to Room D1. Communication Areas If you are looking for the perfect place to meet and talk with friends or just to relax and browse through ECR Today, ECR 2013 offers two areas perfectly equipped for communication and recreation; the ESR Welcome Lounge right in the middle of the entrance hall and the EPOS Lounge on the 2 nd level of the congress venue. Confirmation of Payment and Attendance / CME Accreditation Congress-related confirmation will be available during and after the congress from the ESR website ( via the MyUserArea (login with your last name and your Personal ID as printed on your badge). Internet access is provided at the registration terminals (from Saturday, March 9, afternoon onwards) as well as at the internet points (see floor plans) and W-LAN areas, which are available throughout the congress venue. Congress Language English Congress Venue Austria Center Vienna Bruno Kreisky Platz Vienna, Austria Phone: (+43 1) To reach the ACV by public transport from the city centre (Stephansplatz) take the U1 underground line (red line, direction Leopoldau). Get off at Vienna International Centre/Kaisermühlen and take the exit marked Schüttaustraße. Travelling time: approximately eight minutes. ECR Live After last year s success, the ESR is once again providing a live streaming service for ECR 2013, under the name ECR Live, in an effort to bring the ECR to everyone. The majority of ECR sessions are being broadcast live via the ESR website, with Facebook and Twitter options integrated into the web interface to provide a fully interactive experience. ECR Live is kindly supported by Siemens. Link: live.myesr.org ECR Today ECR Today, the popular daily newspaper of the congress, is published from Thursday to Monday (with a special issue dedicated to the European Diploma in Radiology on Wednesday) and distributed in the entrance hall of the congress venue and in the entrance area of the Technical Exhibition. ECR 2013 Smartphone App The ECR 2013 App gives iphone and Android users a new way to experience the congress. The app is packed with features, including general congress information, scientific and educational programme details, top news stories from ECR Today, full abstracts, and even floor plans of the Austria Center. You can download the app from itunes or via the QR code to the right. The ECR 2013 App is kindly supported by Bracco. EDIPS ECR s Digital Preview System See Preview Centre. EFOMP (European Federation of Organisations for Medical Physics) Workshop This workshop is the 15 th in the series of EFOMP Workshops on New Technology in Diagnostic Radiology. This year s workshop focuses on New frontiers in imaging of the lung. It has been organised by EFOMP in collaboration with the ESR to address the current and future technological requirements for radiology imaging equipment (please refer to page 135). 43

46 General Information Information from A to Z EFRS Meets Session At ECR 2013 the relationship between the ESR and the European Federation of Radiographer Societies (EFRS) will reach a new level of cooperation. The EFRS is hosting the session EFRS meets Spain, underlining the essential role of radiographers in medical imaging. Please refer to page 53 for the programme of the session. EIBIR Booth Visit the EIBIR Booth in the entrance hall for the most recent news on the European Institute for Biomedical Imaging Research. EIBIR presents IMAGINE After last year s success, EIBIR again presents the IMAGINE Workshop. The sessions will feature research institutes, university groups and research departments of industrial companies, presenting novel and exciting technological developments in the field of diagnostic and interventional radiology. See pages Emergency Information/First Aid For fire, medical or police assistance, please contact ACV Information or the nearest available ECR or ACV staff member. A medical specialist trained in emergency medicine will be present for the duration of the congress. EPOS Scientific Exhibition The ECR 2013 electronic scientific exhibition is open Thursday to Monday from 08:00 to 18:00. The EPOS Area, consisting of a classroom with 80 workstations and a lounge, is located in Foyer A on the 2 nd level. A wireless internet network is available in the EPOS Lounge (name EPOS WiFi ), through which the poster exhibition can be accessed as if from within the classroom. At ECR 2013, EPOS is again offering discussions on hot topics in radiology, where authors of the highest-scored posters in each field will discuss them with a moderator. Note: On Saturday, March 9, 12:15 13:15, the EPOS classroom will be closed for the self-assessment test for the participants of the Foundation Course on Neuroimaging. EPOS is kindly supported by Hewlett-Packard. See pages ESOR Booth Visit the ESOR Booth in the entrance hall for the latest news on the European School of Radiology. In addition, there is an ESOR Info Desk in the Rising Stars Lounge. ESR Meets Sessions The purpose of ESR meets is to forge closer ties between the ESR and its guest societies. The three guest nations of this year s ECR are Chile, South Africa and the Congress President s home country, Spain. There are dedicated sessions for the radiological communities of these nations to demonstrate the excellence of radiology in their countries. In addition, ECR 2013 again features special activities focusing on a partner discipline, providing a platform to establish closer ties. This year s guest in the series will be the European-African Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary Association. Places at these sessions are allocated on a first-come, first-served basis. Please refer to pages for the programme of the sessions. ESR Welcome Lounge Visit the ESR Welcome Lounge in the entrance hall! Whether you are looking for an ideal meeting point or just want to take a short break the ESR Welcome Lounge will suit your needs. Free wireless LAN is provided for your convenience. Watch out for artistic performances from the ESR meets countries during the lunch breaks! European Diploma in Radiology (EDiR) An examination for the European Diploma in Radiology is being held at ECR The electronic-based written examination takes place on Wednesday, March 6, in the EPOS Area on the 2 nd level, whereas the case-based oral examinations take place on Thursday, March 7, and Friday, March 8, in various rooms close to the EPOS Area. Success in the examination certifies a standard of radiological knowledge deemed appropriate by the ESR for independent practise in General Radiology. Make sure you grab the special EDiR edition of ECR Today on Wednesday. European Radiology Visit the booth of the ESR s flagship journal, European Radiology, in the entrance hall. See page 73. EURORAD EURORAD is the largest peer-reviewed radiological teaching database on the internet, accessible free of charge to all ESR members. Please visit the EURORAD booth in the entrance hall. Expo Gallery Opening hours: Thursday, March 7: 14:00 18:00 Friday, March 8 to Monday, March 11: 10:00 18:00 Visit the additional technical exhibition area on the 1 st level of the congress venue! 44

47 General Information Information from A to Z Face-Off Session See Post-Processing Face-Off Session. Foundation Course This basic teaching course, which takes place under the heading of E³ European Excellence in Education, in room E2 on the entrance level, is designed to be suitable for trainees and for those who wish to refresh their knowledge. The motto of the course is All you need to know about neuroimaging in 18 easy lessons. This course answers your questions! The course concludes with a self-assessment test in the EPOS Area on Saturday, March 9, 12:15 13:15. Course places are allocated on a first-come, first-served basis. Please refer to page 136 for the course programme. Free Publications The ESR again presents the Free Publications Booth on the 2 nd level, integrated into the EPOS Lounge. Pick up free copies of radiology journals and magazines and get free access to online radiology journals. Free bags are provided for your convenience. Future Meetings Desk This area located on the lower level next to Rooms D1 and D2 offers you an overview of future meetings in the field of radiology and related disciplines, from all over the world. Feel free to contribute flyers and posters to promote your own meetings and courses. Hands-On Workshops See Update Your Skills (Practical Courses). IMAGINE See EIBIR presents IMAGINE. Insights into Imaging Insights into Imaging is the ESR s journal for education and guidelines. It is open access and PubMed indexed. A special printed issue of Insights into Imaging has been placed in all students and residents congress bags. Free copies are also available at the Insights into Imaging booth in the entrance hall. See page 73. Industry Hands-On Workshops At ECR 2013 there are various Industry Hands-On Workshops scheduled, organised by Hologic and Siemens Healthcare. See page 153 for details. Interactive Programme Planner The ESR is again proud to present this popular interactive tool for ECR The IPP provides a convenient way to explore and customise the congress programme online, in both traditional browser and mobile device versions. Featuring various search and browse functions for sessions as well as posters, the IPP also includes a basket option, which enables users to collate items from the programme to create their own personal calendar and even print a personalised Book of Abstracts. The IPP 2013 is kindly supported by Siemens. Link: ipp.myesr.org Interactive Teaching Sessions Under the heading of E 3 European Excellence in Education, ECR 2013 presents 14 interactive teaching sessions dealing with specific topics of common radiological problems, emergencies, imaging of cancer and infections, establishing a two-way interaction between the presenters and the participants. The material is presented in an interactive way, with audience participation and self assessment through the use of an electronic voting system (key-pads). Places are allocated on a first-come, first-served basis. Please refer to page 137 for the programme of the sessions. Internet Points Computer terminals with internet connections are available on the 1 st level and in Extension Expo A, and can be used for various purposes. Delegates can compile their personal session itineraries using the Interactive Programme Planner, send s and browse the internet. (Junior) Image Interpretation Quiz The Image Interpretation Quizzes are two traditional highlights of every ECR. This year s themes are Radiology is global and Golden Eye (see page 59). Liability ESR and the Austria Center Vienna are free from all liabilities that may arise from the delegates and presenters participation in ECR 2013 and its activities. Lost and Found Lost and found articles may be picked up or handed in at the ACV Information Desk located in the entrance area. Meditation & Prayer Room The Meditation & Prayer Room is located on the lower level in Foyer G/H. You will find it marked on the floor plan. Meeting Rooms Meeting rooms at ECR 2013 are to be found on: 3 rd Level Meeting Rooms nd Level Meeting Rooms st Level Meeting Room 14 Lower Level Meeting Rooms You will find them marked on the floor plan. Please contact the Info Service Desk on the 3 rd level for access to and onsite booking of meeting rooms. Membership For membership application and renewal, please go to the registration desks in the entrance hall. 45

48 General Information Information from A to Z Mini Courses ECR 2013 features three new Mini Courses, Controversies in Breast Imaging, The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Head and Neck and The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Musculoskeletal Imaging. The joint course of the ESR and RSNA Essentials in Oncologic Imaging: What Radiologists Need to Know is repeated from last year. The Organs from A to Z series, introduced at ECR 2010, will this year focus on the heart. The Organs from A to Z course, the course on breast imaging and the ESR/RSNA course sessions will be interactive with electronic voting/self assessment. Places for all courses are allocated on a first-come, first-served basis. The Organs from A to Z course is accompanied by a voluntary self-assessment test that will be available after the last session is finished. Tests can be accessed online (assessment.myesr.org) as well as via the EPOS classroom. Please refer to pages for the courses programmes. MIR@ECR After last year s success, the ESR Subcommittee on Management in Radiology has again organised a special session at the ECR on core managerial issues and supportive methods and techniques. It takes place on Saturday, March 9, 13:00 17:30 in Room Q. See page 61. Mobile Guide Get the ECR on your smartphone and always stay up to date! The ECR Mobile Guide brings ECR 2013 to the palm of your hand. Find out all about sessions/lectures, abstracts, exhibitors, floor plans and places to be. Link: m.myesr.org Multidisciplinary Sessions: Managing Patients with Cancer These sessions are intended to promote a multidisciplinary approach to cancer detection and treatment, by bringing together radiologists, surgeons and oncologists to share their expertise. The topics that are covered this year are: colorectal liver metastases, hepatocellular carcinoma and cholangiocarcinoma. Please refer to page 108 for the programme of the sessions. New Horizons Sessions The aim of the New Horizons Sessions is to provide practitioners with an overview of the new developments in a specific area of practice e.g. specialty, technique, or disease. These developments may become routine within a few years, or may indicate a new direction for research and clinical application. There are three New Horizons Sessions, entitled Cartilage imaging, MR/ PET: a marriage made in heaven or hell? and Imaging of the mind, at ECR Session places are allocated on a first-come, first-served basis. Please refer to page 100 for the programme of the sessions. Plenary Sessions See page 55. Post-Processing Face-Off Session The Workstation Face-Off session takes place in Room B on Friday, March 8, 08:30 10:00. The aim of this session is to simulate a realistic reading room atmosphere and to give an impression of how different workstations perform in a clinical scenario. We would like to cordially invite you to attend this exciting tournament of post-processing (see page 139). Press The ECR 2013 Opening Press Conference takes place on Thursday, March 7, at 09:30 at the Austria Center Vienna, Meeting Room 14 (1 st level). For press accreditation, please contact the Press Office & Business Centre on the entrance level. To obtain a press badge, you must present an international press ID or a confirmation letter from the relevant medium. Delegates and exhibitors may display their press kits in the Press Office & Business Centre. There are also several publicly available computer terminals as well as workspace and plug points for you to work with your personal laptop. Opening hours: Thursday, March 7 to Monday, March 11: 08:00 18:00 Preview Centre EDIPS EDIPS, the ECR s digital preview system, allows for fast and easy presenter identification through badge scanning. Large screens in the waiting area display the names of the presenters who are asked to proceed to the Check-In counter, where they can hand in their presentations. At the Preview Stations, presenters have the opportunity to do a final check on their presentations. This year, presenters were offered the option of submitting their material prior to the congress. The Preview Centre is located on the 1 st level, next to Room N/O. Opening hours: Wednesday, March 6: 12:00 18:00 Thursday, March 7 to Monday, March 11: 07:00 18:00 Please note that only digital material will be allowed for oral presentations. The material must be in English and must be provided on CD- ROM, DVD, ZIP disk or USB devices so that it can be transferred to a central server onsite. It is mandatory that the data carriers are delivered to the audiovisual preview centre 2 hours prior to the session, at the latest. Computers connected to data projectors are provided in each lecture room for the speaker to retrieve the saved data. The material remains the property of the speakers. Professional Challenges Sessions These sessions are intended to communicate and exchange issues on radiological training and education, research networking, radiological management and professional developments. This year s topics are Bringing radiology to medical undergraduates, The visibility of the radiologist, Personalised radiology, Legal matters related to multimodality techniques and The radiologist, the clinician and the patient: an impossible trio?. Places are allocated on a first-come, first-served basis. Please refer to page 107 for the sessions programme. 46

49 General Information Information from A to Z Public Transport Tickets for public transportation are available at the registration desks in the entrance area. Special ECR Ticket: 6 days (valid from March 6 11): Underground map; see page 75. Publishers Row (1 st level) & Partner Publishers (entrance level) Opening hours: Thursday, March 7: 14:00 18:00 Friday, March 8 to Monday, March 11: 10:00 17:30 Browse through a wide range of scientific publications displayed by the most important publishers in the field of medicine. Radiology Trainees Forum (RTF) The RTF promotes and coordinates the efforts of radiology trainees at a European level in order to improve the progress of radiology and related sciences. One of the RTF s most important goals is to provide an equal level of radiological knowledge and skills for radiology trainees all over Europe. Highlighted Lectures organised by the RTF will be given on Sunday, March 10, 10:30 12:00 in Room Q (see page 141). The RTF General Assembly takes place on Sunday, March 10, 14:30 16:00, in Meeting Room 9 (3 rd level). For more detailed information please visit the RTF Meeting Point in the Rising Stars Lounge (Foyer B, 2 nd Level). Recording / Photography Video or audio recording of presentations is not allowed without the speaker s/exhibitor s and ECR s prior permission. Flash photography is not permitted during presentations. Interviews must take place outside the lecture room. For queries, please contact the ESR Press Office. Refresher Courses 75 Refresher Courses have been organised by the various scientific subcommittees for ECR Based on the topic of the session, some refresher courses are presented in an integrated format with an organised panel discussion, similar to Special Focus Sessions. Places are allocated on a first-come, first-served basis. Please refer to pages for the programme of the sessions. Registration Opening Hours Wednesday, March 6: 12:00 18:00 Thursday, March 7: 07:00 18:00 Friday, March 8: 07:00 18:00 Saturday, March 9: 07:00 18:00 Sunday, March 10: 07:00 18:00 Monday, March 11: 07:00 18:00 Restaurant Reservations Our staff at the Dining & Shopping Desk in the entrance hall will be pleased to recommend places to eat close to your hotel or near a certain theatre, and will be happy to reserve a table for you. Rising Stars Lounge / Residents & Students Lounge The Rising Stars Lounge for residents and students is located on the 2 nd level, Foyer B. In the lounge you will find information on the European School of Radiology, the European Diploma of Radiology and the Radiology Trainees Forum. Rising Stars Programme See pages Satellite Symposia Industrial Satellite Symposia are presented by international companies. CME credits can be claimed for attendance of these symposia on condition that the relevant completed evaluation form has been received by the organisation. Places are allocated on a first-come, first-served basis. See pages for details. Scientific Presentation Awards The authors of the best scientific papers and scientific/educational exhibits will be presented with a certificate and given free ECR 2014 registration. Scientific Papers: The award will be assigned to the best paper presentation of each topic based on the evaluation by session moderators, subcommittee members and session participants. Selection criteria comprise quality of presentation, scientific content and overall impression of the performance. The award winners will be informed after the congress and will be published on the ESR website. Scientific/educational exhibits: See page 62 (Scientific Exhibition Awards). Security / Safety The safety of all congress attendees is of utmost importance to the European Society of Radiology. The Austria Center Vienna and the ESR have taken security precautions to ensure the maximum possible safety for all ECR participants. Please inform our staff, especially our room attendants, immediately if security problems occur. The ESR reserves the right to check your identification upon admission to the congress centre and/or inside the building. You may be asked at any time to present adequate proof of identity by showing your passport, driver s licence, national or military identification, or student ID, all with photograph and signature. Smoking Smoking is not permitted inside the Austria Center Vienna. The ECR is a non-smoking congress. Outside the building, we kindly ask you to use the ashtrays provided. In addition, there is a dedicated smokers area on the right side of the main building. Please note that smoking is prohibited in front of the main entrance. Society Booths Up to 50 national and international radiological societies present their meetings and societies in the society booths area, which is located on the entrance level, next to the registration desks and the coat checks. 47

50 BOOST YOUR CAREER. TAKE THE EUROPEAN DIPLOMA IN RADIOLOGY (EDiR) EXAM DATES: June 6 8, 2013, Wroclaw/PL (Congress of the Polish Medical Society of Radiology) October 18 22, 2013, Paris/FR (JFR) October 28 November 2, Antalya/TR (TURKRAD 2013)

51 General Information Information from A to Z Special Assistance Delegates with special needs may park on the lower level with direct elevator access to the ACV. All lecture rooms are accessible by wheelchair. Special Exhibition In compliance with the ECR s tradition of offering its delegates an ambitious supporting programme at the annual congress, the ECR is again proud to present an exhibition by Prof. Vogel from Hamburg/DE, in cooperation with the German Röntgenmuseum. This year s exhibit is entitled X-Rays: Evidence and Threat and is presented on the 2 nd level, next to the EPOS Lounge. See page 66. Special Focus Sessions Special Focus Sessions deal with a topic at the cutting edge of development and clinical application. The topics of these sessions are presented so as to promote debate and to give an in-depth analysis. The chairman introduces each aspect of the topic and the panellists then discuss their different perspectives and opinions. The audience is also given the opportunity to discuss their ideas with the lecturers. Places are allocated on a first-come, firstserved basis. Please refer to pages for the programme of the sessions. State of the Art Symposia These sessions are intended to inform the audience about the real state of the art of a given subject. Each of the lecturers is an expert on the topic as a whole or on some specific aspect of the topic, which will be the subject of the respective session. The presentations are followed by a discussion conducted by the panellists, led by the chairman. Places are allocated on a first-come, first-served basis. Please refer to page 101 for the programme of the sessions. Students Sessions At ECR 2013, students have the chance to present their own abstracts in front of a huge audience. The submitters of the best 20 abstracts have been invited to Vienna to present their work in dedicated sessions. See pages Taxi There is a taxi stand outside the main entrance. Technical Exhibition Opening hours: EXPO Halls and EXPO Foyer D Friday, March 8 to Sunday, March 10: 10:00 18:00 Monday, March 11: 10:00 14:00 Travel Service The ESR and ECR are proud to offer their delegates services that should facilitate their travel arrangements and make their stay in Vienna as pleasant as possible. The ESR s Travel Service Desk is located on the entrance level of the Austria Center Vienna. Next to it you can find the ECR s official travel agency Mondial. Opening hours: Wednesday, March 6: 12:00 18:00 Thursday, March 7 to Monday, March 11: 07:00 18:00 Air Travel The Austrian Airlines desk in the entrance area offers the following services for Austrian Airlines and Star Alliance flights: Ticket office & Check-in services: Friday, March 8 to Monday, March 11: 09:00 18:00 Check-in for Star Alliance flights Issue of boarding passes At Vienna Airport Check-in for Star Alliance flights with hand-baggage only; deadline: latest passengers to show up at the respective boarding gate at Vienna Airport according to boarding time shown on boarding pass Check-in for Star Alliance flights (except flights to Tel-Aviv and USA) with baggage; deadline: latest passenger to show up with baggage at the Baggage Drop Off Counters / Terminal 1 at Vienna Airport 45 minutes before departure. Update Your Skills (Practical Courses) The following Update Your Skills (Practical Courses) are presented at ECR 2013: How to biopsy with US guidance Image-guided tumour ablation: How to do it The number of participants of each workshop is restricted. Please refer to pages for the course programmes. Wireless LAN Free wireless LAN access is available throughout the congress venue. The public WiFi ECR requires a login. Please log in with the following data: Username: ecr Password: ecr2013 In addition, every lecture room is equipped with a dedicated WiFi network. Login data will be provided onsite. First Level (Gallery) Thursday, March 7: 14:00 18:00 Friday, March 8 to Monday, March 11: 10:00 18:00 Detailed information on the Technical Exhibition can be found in the On-Show exhibition guide Exhibitor Directory and Product Information, which is distributed together with the congress bags. 49

52 General Information CME at ECR 2013 General Information Each ECR delegate receives confirmation of all activities attended (CME confirmation Record of attendance). The approximate maximum number of hours of scientific activity attendance is 40 (please note that this number differs from the maximum number of UEMS/EACCME credits). CME Accreditation Europe The following European countries accept the ECR 2013 CME accreditation: Austria* Azerbaijan Belgium Bulgaria Croatia Cyprus Czech Republic Denmark Estonia Finland France Georgia Germany** Greece Hungary Iceland Ireland Italy Latvia Lithuania Luxembourg Malta Netherlands Norway Poland Portugal Romania Slovakia Slovenia Spain Sweden Switzerland*** Turkey United Kingdom * The ESR is an accredited CME provider of the Austrian Medical Chamber. The Austrian Medical Chamber has granted a maximum of 40 DFP (Diplom- Fortbildungs-Programm der Österreichischen Akademie der Ärzte) credits for ECR ** The German Society of Radiology (DRG) has granted a minimum of 27 Category 1-credits for ECR The actual number of credits granted will depend on the respective German State Chamber of Physicians (Landesärztekammer) and can be accordingly higher. *** The Swiss Society of Radiology (SGR-SSR) has granted a maximum of 40 Category 1-credits for ECR UEMS The ESR European Society of Radiology is accredited by the European Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (EACCME) to provide the following CME activity for medical specialists. The EACCME is an institution of the European Union of Medical Specialists (UEMS). The ECR 2013 is designated for a maximum of 27 hours of European external CME credits. Each medical specialist should claim only those hours of credit that he/she actually spent in the educational activity. European Accreditation is granted by the EACCME in order to allow participants to validate the credits obtained at this activity in their home European Country. USA Due to an agreement of mutual recognition the American Medical Association (AMA) will convert European continuing medical education (CME) credits to AMA PRA Category 1 Credits. For further information about the conversion of European credits into AMA PRA Category 1 credits, please contact the AMA at pra@ ama-assn.org or visit the AMA website. Worldwide CME claimed at the ECR are accepted by almost all national CME authorities worldwide. CME Acquisition Procedure CME (continuing medical education) credits will only be awarded, if the questionnaire provided at the entrance of each session is fully completed, your unique personal CME sticker, which you will receive together with your badge, is affixed, and the form is dropped into the provided box immediately after the relevant scientific session. The combined participation and evaluation questionnaire considerably helps the next organising committee to select subjects for future ECRs. Evaluation sheets differ depending on the types of the scientific event. Please note that confirmation of any additional attendance of the scientific programme, for which you have not submitted an evaluation form during the congress, cannot be claimed at a later date as late requests cannot be processed and can thus not be included in your record of attendance. Guidance Confirmation of participation in the scientific programme is to be obtained as follows: Scientific Sessions 1. Participate in the event of your interest. 2. Personalise the relevant questionnaire (evaluation form) using your CME sticker, since otherwise it is not possible to sort out the forms afterwards and to provide confirmation. 3. Fill in this form completely during the session. 4. Drop the completed form into the box provided at the exit of the room when leaving the session. 50

53 General Information Scientific Exhibition Attendance and evaluation are recorded online in EPOS. 1. Enter EPOS (Electronic Presentation Online System) and view the posters of your interest. When logging out from EPOS, you will be asked to complete the evaluation form. 2. Fill in this form completely and press the Submit button. A maximum of 3 hours of attendance at the scientific exhibition (SE) will be listed if the participant has completed and submitted the online SE evaluation form using EPOS (Electronic Presentation Online System). CME Confirmations Every participant will be able to view and print his/her personal record of attendance from the internet at the MyUserArea on the condition that the above mentioned procedures have been accomplished. This service is already available onsite at the numerous computer terminals and at the registration desk. Please note that your Personal ID, printed on your badge, is required for login. The printout of your record will be recognised by the national accreditation society upon submission. Please note that the record of attendance will be issued only to the participant. It will not be supplied to any accreditation agency or other organisation/ health authority. After the congress CME certificates will still be available online. To show and print your CME certificates after the congress, please log into the MyUserArea with your last name and Personal ID. Although participants may partially attend multiple concurrent sessions, the total number of hours printed at the end of the list limits the credit to the equivalent of a single session during that time slot. For further information, please contact the ECR CME Support at cme@myesr.org.

54 General Information ESR Meets Sessions Friday, March 8, 10:30 12:00, Room B ESR meets Spain EM 1: Imaging: essential tool from diagnosis to treatment Welcome by the ESR President G.P. Krestin; Rotterdam/NL Presiding: C. Ayuso; Barcelona/ES J.I. Bilbao; Pamplona/ES Introduction [A-111] C. Ayuso; Barcelona/ES Ischaemic stroke [A-112] J. Macho; Barcelona/ES Interlude: Spanish radiologists:open to the world [A-113] E. Fraile Moreno; Madrid/ES Aortic aneurisms [A-114] J.J. Martínez Rodrigo; Valencia/ES Interlude: Radiologists and Spanish wines [A-115] L. Martí-Bonmatí; Valencia/ES Hepatocellular carcinoma: the BCLC approach [A-116] M. Burrel; Barcelona/ES Panel discussion: Is the multidisciplinary environment the natural way to develop excellence and leadership in clinical imaging? Friday, March 8, 16:00 17:30, Room B ESR meets E-AHPBA (European-African Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary Association) EM 2: Pancreatic cystic neoplasms 2013 Welcome by the ESR President G.P. Krestin; Rotterdam/NL Saturday, March 9, 10:25 12:00, Room B ESR meets South Africa EM 3: Imaging HIV and TB Welcome by the ESR President G.P. Krestin; Rotterdam/NL Presiding: J.I. Bilbao; Pamplona/ES C.W. Sperryn; Cape Town/ZA Big Five video Introduction [A-256] C.W. Sperryn; Cape Town/ZA HIV-related cerebrovascular disease: the South African experience [A-257] V. Mngomezulu; Johannesburg/ZA Interlude: Radiology training in South Africa Z. Lockhat; Pretoria/ZA New concepts in the pathogenesis of cerebral TB [A-258] P. Janse van Rensburg; Stellenbosch/ZA Interlude: South Africa: the country, its people, its diversity and its attractions [A-259] Z. Lockhat; Pretoria/ZA Spinal tuberculosis in children [A-260] T. Kilborn; Cape Town/ZA Chronic chest radiographic changes in a cohort of HIV-infected South African children [A-261] R. Pitcher; Cape Town/ZA Panel discussion: HIV and TB: What impact do they have on health care workers? Presiding: J.I. Bilbao; Pamplona/ES P.-A. Clavien; Zurich/CH Introduction [A-144] P.-A. Clavien; Zurich/CH K. Conlon; Dublin/IE Classification/pathology [A-145] C. Verbeke; Stockholm/SE Radiological diagnosis [A-146] S. Skehan; Dublin/IE Current role of endoscopic ultrasonography [A-147] P. Bauerfeind; Zurich/CH How aggressive should the surgeon be? [A-148] K. Conlon; Dublin/IE Panel discussion 52

55 General Information ESR/EFRS Meets Sessions Sunday, March 10, 10:30 12:00, Room B ESR meets Chile EM 4: Topics of ongoing radiological research from the Andes Welcome by the ESR President G.P. Krestin; Rotterdam/NL Presiding: J.I. Bilbao; Pamplona/ES M.A. Pinochet; Santiago/CL Introduction: Radiology in Chile: reality and challenges [A-403] P. Soffia; Santiago/CL M.A. Pinochet; Santiago/CL TI-RADS: a US classification of thyroid nodules related to cancer risk [A-404] E. Horvath; Santiago/CL Interlude: Chile, land of geographical and cultural contrasts [A-405] G. Soto Giordani; Santiago/CL Neuroimaging in epilepsy: in search of invisible lesions [A-406] M. Galvez; Santiago/CL Interlude: Chile, land of wine and poets [A-407] G. Soto Giordani; Santiago/CL MDCT patterns in mesenteric ischaemia: usefulness in predicting clinical outcome [A-408] A. Huete; Santiago/CL Panel discussion: Creating networks between Latin American and European radiology: a unique opportunity for collaborative research projects Saturday, March 9, 14:00 15:30, Room B EFRS meets Spain (European Federation of Radiographer Societies) EM 5: Knowledge development as a tool for radiographers professional improvement Presiding: G. Paulo; Coimbra/PT C. Ruiz Blanco; Madrid/ES Introduction [A-284] G. Paulo; Coimbra/PT C. Ruiz Blanco; Madrid/ES The Spanish radiographer s role in advanced MRI research [A-285] E. Alfayate Sáez; Madrid/ES The radiographer s specialisation in ultrasound: two decades of experience in a public hospital [A-286] M.P. Peña Fernández; Madrid/ES Interlude: Radiology and Spanish art [A-287] C. Ruiz Blanco; Madrid/ES The radiographer as the interface between patient and technology in promoting safety in radiation protection [A-288] J.A. Sória Jerez; Madrid/ES Educational status of radiographers in Spain: comparison with the EU [A-289] M.R. Soto García; Barcelona/ES Panel discussion: Could a transnational and multi-professional combined statement contribute to professional development? 53

56 myesr When you ve checked in to ECR 2013 on. catch up with the latest #ECR2013 news on. become a fan and post us a photo on. and then check out our videos on. ECR 2013' on 4sq - twitter.com/myesr - facebook.com/myesr - youtube.com/myesr

57 Plenary Plenary Sessions Sessions Thursday, March 7, 17:45 19:15, Room A Opening Ceremony Musical entertainment by Janoska Ensemble & Friends Welcome Addresses Gabriel P. Krestin; Rotterdam/NL ESR President José Ignacio Bilbao; Pamplona/ES ECR 2013 Congress President Presentation of ESR Honorary Membership Presentation of ESR Honorary Membership to George S. Bisset III; Houston, TX/US Tarek A. El-Diasty; Mansoura/ET Gary M. Glazer; Stanford, CA/US Opening Lecture Promises and facts of liver-directed gene therapy Jesus Prieto; Pamplona/ES Friday, March 8, 12:15 13:15, Room A Presentation of the ESR Gold Medal Award Presentation of the ESR Gold Medal Award to José Cáceres; Barcelona/ES Johannes Lammer; Vienna/AT Maximilian F. Reiser; Munich/DE Josef Lissner Honorary Lecture MR-guided focused ultrasound: a new string to the radiologist s bow Carlo Catalano; Rome/IT Saturday, March 9, 12:15 12:45, Room A Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen Honorary Lecture Interventional oncology: the era of molecular targeted therapy Jean-François Geschwind; Baltimore, MD/US Saturday, March 9, 14:00 15:30, Room A Image Interpretation Quiz Radiology is global Moderator: Dierk Vorwerk; Ingolstadt/DE Sunday, March 10, 12:15 12:45, Room A Santiago Ramón y Cajal Honorary Lecture Research and science: from individuals to societies the Ramón y Cajal background Luis Martí-Bonmatí; Valencia/ES Sunday, March 10, 13:00 14:00, Room A Junior Image Interpretation Quiz Golden Eye Moderator: Anna Alguersuari; Sabadell/ES Co-Moderator: Ernest Belmonte; Barcelona/ES 55

58 General Information Information from A to Z Social Media Guide & #ECR2013 myesr Facebook Page facebook.com/myesr Full congress coverage, daily photo uploads, daily news, competitions and much more. If you have photos or tips for the myesr community, post them on our wall! ECR 2013 Facebook Event Since you re attending ECR 2013, it s time to update your Facebook Timeline and RSVP to the official Facebook event. myesr Twitter twitter.com/myesr Get the latest and hottest news live from the congress. and tweet at us to let us know you re here. Tweeting about ECR? Using Google+? Taking pictures with Instagram? Here are the official hashtags: General: #ECR2013 ESR Rising Stars: #ESRRisingStars Tweeting about a particular session or room? Add the room name to the hashtag: #ECR2013A, #ECR2013B, #ECR2013Studio, etc. You can also add a simplified presentation or session number: e.g.: A-123 #A123 or SF 4 #SF4 Other useful hashtags: ECR 2013 Party: #ECRParty Check in at ECR 2013: Facebook Places & Foursquare Look out for the official venues and check in! Communication at ECR 2013 Bring all your ECR 2013 social media activity together in one place by using our ECR Social Media Wall. The wall will collect posts and tweets in one convenient stream, which will be visible to participants throughout the congress venue. But you can also access it from anywhere, whether you re at the congress venue, in your hotel, at home, using your laptop or smartphone, or at our internet terminals. ECR Live Your colleagues can also join you at the ECR, online and live via our video and social media stream. Sessions will be streamed for free: just visit the myesr.org homepage and look out for ECR Live. And don t forget to subscribe to our YouTube channel: Want more? Add our other pages to your stream: ESR Rising Stars: facebook.com/esrrisingstars Insights into Imaging: facebook.com/insights.into.imaging European Radiology: facebook.com/eurradiol European Diploma in Radiology: facebook.com/europeandiplomainradiology ESOR: facebook.com/europeanschoolofradiology The whole ECR in your hand: ECR 2013 App Browse through the programme, schedule your favourite sessions and download your personal book of abstracts. No need to carry all those congress booklets with you...

59 General Information Information from A to Z

60 Activities 2013 Visiting Schools Visiting Seminars Visiting Scholarship Programmes Exchange Programmes for Fellowships Teach-the-Teachers Programme Visiting Professorship Programme

61 General Information (Junior) Image Interpretation Quizzes The Image Interpretation sessions, two traditional highlights of every ECR, provide both education and entertainment. Two panels of distinguished radiologists will share their knowledge and diagnosis strategies with you. The slogan for this year s senior quiz is Radiology is global. Radiologists will challenge each other in an enjoyable and exciting competition where they will face some tricky cases. The session will be presented interactively and e-voting units will be provided to the audience. In the junior quiz, with its theme Golden Eye, the panellists will compete with each other in teams. While solving a variety of cases, the moderator will guarantee a scientifically challenging and entertaining session. Saturday, March 9, 14:00 15:30, Room A Image Interpretation Quiz: Radiology is global Moderator: D. Vorwerk; Ingolstadt/DE Referee: A. Agrawal; Delhi/IN Panellists: Team 1: A.R. Gillams; London/UK T. Leiner; Utrecht/NL A. Oikonomou; Alexandroupolis/GR C.W. Sperryn; Cape Town/ZA Team 2: F.M. Danza; Rome/IT H.B. Eggesbø; Oslo/NO P. Rogalla; Toronto, ON/CA M. Studniarek; Gdansk/PL Sunday, March 10, 13:00 14:00, Room A Junior Image Interpretation Quiz: Golden Eye Moderator: A. Alguersuari; Sabadell/ES Co-Moderator: E. Belmonte; Barcelona/ES Panellists: G. Gherarducci; Pisa/IT C. Sayer; Brighton/UK C.M. Sommer; Heidelberg/DE L. Tzarouchi; Ioannina/GR A. Vanrossomme; Brussels/BE = Interactive session with electronic voting/self assessment 59

62 EIBIR SUMMER SCHOOL on Neurology Imaging August 26 30, 2013, Dubrovnik /HR GOAL The EIBIR Summer School on Neurology Imaging is a multidisciplinary summer school, uniting 50 young researchers coming from a variety of backgrounds. The high scientific level and the relaxed atmosphere invite a close and fruitful interaction between everybody present, both participants and staff. TOPICS Imaging modalities (MR, PET, CT), quantitative image analysis, (open-source) tools for image analysis, neuro- and population imaging and image analysis in clinical practice, validation and open-source databases, atlases, applications in the clinic, small animals and clinical trials. FACULTY Dirk Loeckx Wiro Niessen Sébastien Ourselin Daniel Rueckert Xavier Golay Roger Gunn (tbc) Nick Fox (tbc) Aad Van der Lugt (tbc) Julia Schnabel Alex Hammers Due to the great success in 2011, we proudly present the third edition of the EIBIR Summer School. Registration and more info on

63 Management in Radiology Saturday, March 9, 13:00 17:30, Room Q After its great success at ECR 2012, MIR (Management in Radiology), a subcommittee of the ESR Professional Organisation Committee, will again coordinate a session on core managerial issues as well as supportive methods and techniques. Session 1: Innovation management and the future of radiology and radiologists Session 2: Radiology in modern times: challenges by telemedicine, ehealth, appropriateness and safety Chairmen: Yves Menu; Paris/FR Peter Mildenberger; Mainz/DE Chairmen: Guy Frija; Paris/FR Jan Schillebeeckx; Bonheiden/BE 13:00 13:10 13:40 13:45 13:50 13:55 Welcome by the chairs Imaging innovation and the future practice of radiology Bruce Hillman; Charlottesville, VA/US Resident training: preparing young radiologists for the future Birgit Ertl-Wagner; Munich/DE Research, EIBIR, HTA Luis Donoso; Barcelona/ES Health technology assessment: can we show that radiology is value for money? Jane Adam; London/UK Leadership and personal development Yves Menu; Paris/FR 15:15 15:35 15:55 16:15 16:35 16:55 Discussion The radiologist's perspective: report on the development of an ESR White Paper for Teleradiology Eric Ranschaert; s Hertogenbosch/NL The requirements of citizens and the role of patients using telemedicine Karim Berkouk; Brussels/BE Imaging referral guidelines in Europe: impetus, innovations and initiatives Denis Remedios; Harrow/UK Factors affecting safety of patients: workload, reporting speed, etc. Richard FitzGerald; Wolverhampton/UK Evidence Based Radiology: The math of decision in radiology Utku Senol; Antalya/TR 14:00 New imaging methods Moshe Graif; Tel Aviv/IL 17:15 Closing remarks 14:05 Radiology 2020: residents and fellows perspectives Myriam Edjlali-Goujon; Tours/FR 14:10 Debate on innovation management and requirements of radiology 14:45 15:15 Coffee Break 61

64 General Information EPOS Scientific Exhibition Opening Hours Thursday, March 7 to Monday, March 11: 08:00 18:00 The staff of the EPOS Service Desk will be glad to assist you during these times. Location Foyer A, 2 nd level Note: On Saturday, March 9, 12:15 13:15, EPOS will be closed for a self assessment test for the participants of the foundation course on neuroimaging. Thank you for your understanding! WiFi in the EPOS Lounge ECR delegates can access all posters of ECR 2013 at the computer terminals in the EPOS classroom. In addition, a dedicated wireless internet network is available in the EPOS Lounge (name EPOS WiFi ), through which the poster exhibition can be accessed as if from within the classroom. Connect your mobile device to the network and open your internet browser, which will direct you to EPOS. (Please note that this dedicated network only allows access to EPOS ). What s in EPOS at ECR 2013? Over 2,600 new scientific and educational exhibits and scientific paper presentations 20 new Cases-of-the-Day (five new cases each day) 4 Self-Assessment modules on ECR 2013 courses: Categorical Course CLICK (Clinical Lessons for Imaging Core Knowledge): Never without Arteries Categorical Course Urogenital Imaging Mini Course Organs from A to Z: Heart Foundation Course Neuroimaging EURORAD Europe s largest radiological case database Scientific Exhibition Awards A jury of European radiologists has judged all scientific and educational exhibits with regard to their scientific content, educational value, originality and visual impression. Taking advantage of EPOS, the rating was carried out online, prior to the congress, enabling a detailed and considered assessment. On this basis, the Scientific Exhibition Committee has awarded the best posters with Magna Cum Laude, Cum Laude and Certificate of Merits. Awardees can pick up their certificates at the EPOS Service Desk. Each of the Magna Cum Laude awardees will also be granted free ECR 2014 registration. All awarded posters are flagged in EPOS and will be published on the ESR website and on myesr.org/epos EPOS Discussions To enhance interaction, discussions on hot topics in radiology have been arranged, where authors of the selected and best-scored posters in each field will discuss them with a moderator. All discussions take place in the EPOS Area in Foyer A (2 nd level) and ECR delegates are welcome to join, listen, and discuss with the experts. The discussion rounds will be: Friday, March 8, 10:00 10:30 Imaging of the scrotum: why considering MR? Moderator: Lorenzo E. Derchi; Genoa/IT Friday, March 8, 12:30 13:00 Paediatric neuroimaging Moderator: Andrea Rossi; Genoa/IT Friday, March 8, 15:30 16:00 Plaque imaging and myocardial characterisation Moderator: Valentin Sinitsyn; Moscow/RU Saturday, March 9, 10:00 10:30 CT and MRI diagnosis of focal liver masses: when to use what? Moderator: Pablo Ros; Cleveland, OH/US Saturday, March 9, 15:30 16:00 Paediatric chest and heart: state of the art imaging of the young patient Moderator: Rick R. van Rijn; Amsterdam/NL Sunday, March 10, 12:30 13:00 Vascular imaging: CT, MR or something completely different? Challenges in imaging peripheral artery occlusive disease Moderator: Christian Loewe; Vienna/AT Attendance (CME) and Evaluation Attendance of the scientific exhibition is recorded online in EPOS : 1. Enter EPOS and view the posters of your interest. When logging out, you will be asked to complete the evaluation form. 2. Fill in this form and press the Submit button. The evaluation of the electronic scientific exhibition is very important for future planning and your opinion and comments will be highly appreciated. For those who login and submit completed evaluation forms, a maximum of 3 hours attendance at the scientific exhibition will be listed in the record of attendance (CME confirmation). EPOS at ECR 2013 is kindly supported by Hewlett-Packard. 62

65 General Information EPOS Scientific Exhibition ESR thanks all reviewers We cordially thank the members of the Scientific Exhibition Committee and the EPOS Reviewers who reviewed abstracts and graded electronic posters in the past months, establishing the basis for presenting the awards. (in alphabetical order) E. Ada; Izmir/TR H.C. Addley; Cambridge/UK H. Ahmadzadehfar; Bonn/DE A. Alberich-Bayarri; Valencia/ES H. Alkadhi; Zurich/CH G.C. Anselmetti; Candiolo/IT I. Arkhipova; Moscow/RU N. Bargalló Alabart; Barcelona/ES I. Bargellini; Pisa/IT A. Barile; L Aquila/IT T.V. Bartolotta; Palermo/IT G. Bastarrika; Pamplona/ES T. Baumann; Freiburg/DE A.J. Beer; Munich/DE M.-F. Bellin; Villejuif/FR K.S.S. Bhatia; Hampton/UK A. Blandino; Contemplazione, Messina/IT J.G. Blickman; Rochester/US E. Blumfield; New York/US A. Bozzao; Rome/IT F. Cademartiri; Monastier di Treviso/IT C. Calli; Izmir/TR F. Calliada; Pavia/IT R.S.D. Campbell; Liverpool/UK D. Caramella; Pisa/IT N.M. Caserta; Campinas/BR W. Chamroonrat; Philadelphia/US T.M. Cunha; Lisbon/PT J. Damilakis; Iraklion/GR A.I.B. De Backer; Ghent/BE A. de Roos; Leiden/NL S. Delorme; Heidelberg/DE V. Dialani; Boston/US O. Ekberg; Malmö/SE B.B. Ertl-Wagner; Munich/DE Y. Fargeaudou; Clichy/FR E.F.C. Fleury; Sao Paulo/BR R. Forstner; Salzburg/AT A. Fotiadou; Huntingdon/UK F. Frauscher; Innsbruck/AT S. Freeman; Cambridge/UK M.T.G. Gaskarth; Cambridge/UK J.-T. Geitung; Bergen/NO A. Ghiatas; Ekali-Athens/GR S. Gourtsoyianni; London/UK A. Guermazi; Boston/US B. Hansson; Stockholm/SE C. Herzog; Munich/DE J. Heverhagen; Marburg/DE J. Hodel; Paris/FR A. Jackson; Manchester/UK T. Jakobs; Munich/DE J.A. Jakobsen; Oslo/NO C. Kahn; Milwaukee/US N. Kalyvas; Athens/GR A. Kassarjian; Majadahonda (Madrid)/ES F. Knollmann; Pittsburgh/US E. Kotter; Freiburg/DE K.-F. Kreitner; Mainz/DE M. Krokidis; Cambridge/UK A. Laghi; Latina/IT J. Laissy; Paris/FR M. Lemmerling; Beervelde/BE D. Litmanovich; Boston/US E. Llopis; Alzira/ES R. Llorens; Valencia/ES I.G. Lupescu; Bucharest/RO M.G. Mack; Baierbrunn/DE A. Mahnken; Marburg/DE L. Mannelli; Seattle/US R. Manns; Telford/UK K. Marten-Engelke; Göttingen/DE C. Matos; Brussels/BE J. McHugo; Birmingham/UK E. Mershina; Moscow/RU P. Mildenberger; Mainz/DE M. Minami; Ibaraki/JP G. Morana; Treviso/IT P.L. Moyle; Cambridge/UK V.F. Muglia; Ribeirao Preto/BR K. Nikolaou; Munich/DE M. Notohamiprodjo; Munich/DE S. Nougaret; St. Clement de Riviere/FR A. Offiah; Sheffield/UK A. Oikonomou; Alexandroupolis/GR Y. Oishi Tanaka; Tsukuba/JP M. Onu; Bucharest/RO L. Pallwein-Prettner; Linz/AT V. Panebianco; Rome/IT G. Pärtan; Vienna/AT A. Paterson; Belfast/IE L.J. Pina Insausti; Pamplona/ES K. Pinker-Domenig; Vienna/AT T.J. Popiela; Krakow/PL P.K. Prassopoulos; Alexandroupolis/GR L. Preda; Milan/IT S. Puig; Vienna/AT E. Quaia; Trieste/IT D. Regge; Candiolo-Torino/IT A. Righini; Milan/IT P. Rinaldi; Rome/IT S. Robinson; Vienna/AT J. Romero; Boston/US A. Rovira-Canellas; Barcelona/ES R. Rzanny; Jena/DE R. Sanz-Requena; Valencia/ES G. Savino; Rome/IT M. Scharitzer; Vienna/AT K. Schürmann; Aachen/DE T.C. See; Cambridge/UK M.J. Shelly; Dublin/IE P. Sijens; Groningen/NL G.N. Simao; Ribeirao Preto/BR W.H. Sommer; Munich/DE S. Steens; Nijmegen/NL W. Stiller; Heidelberg/DE M. Sumi; Nagasaki/JP D. Tack; Braine-L Alleud/BE A. Taibbi; Palermo/IT S.A. Taylor; London/UK G. Thornbury; Belfast/UK M. Toepker; Vienna/AT M. Torkzad; Sollentuna/SE D. Tsetis; Iraklion/GR A. Tsili; Ioannina/GR S. Ulmer; Kiel/DE E.J.R. van Beek; Edinburgh/UK W.J.M. van der Putten; Galway/IE M.I. Vargas; Geneva/CH B. Verbist; Leiden/NL J.A. Verschakelen; Leuven/BE M.G. Wallis; Cambridge/UK A. Wibmer; Vienna/AT D. Wormanns; Berlin/DE K. Wörtler; Munich/DE X. Wortsman; Santiago/CL P. Wunderlich; Radebeul/DE 63

66 Visit the EPOS TM Area on the second level. Browse through thousands of electronic posters from ECR and other congresses. TRADEMARK OF

67 General Information elearning Tools EPOS Electronic Presentation Online System Let s celebrate the 10 th anniversary of EPOS TM! In 2003, ECR introduced an all-electronic scientific exhibition using EPOS, the Electronic Presentation Online System, thus setting new standards in the medical meeting industry. EPOS contains over 16,000 electronic exhibits from ECR and from other congresses: Online at or in the EPOS Area on the 2 nd level. EPOS at ECR 2013 is kindly supported by Hewlett-Packard. EURORAD Radiological Case Database The largest peer-reviewed teaching database of radiology on the internet offers free access to a wealth of medical information and imaging data, whose accuracy and quality have been validated by some of the most experienced radiologists in Europe. Submitting to and publishing in EURORAD is an exclusive benefit of ESR membership. EURORAD contains case reports for medical students (simple cases), residents in radiology (everyday cases) and senior radiologists (complex cases) in all radiological specialties. For easy retrieval of required cases, the website offers a powerful search engine as well as multi-lingual navigation (English / Spanish / French). EURORAD allows you to download, save, and print the cases as PDF documents, or them via the web-based client. All EURORAD cases are registered with a unique DOI (Digital Object Identifier), which makes all cases citable. 65

68 General Information ECR 2013 SPECIAL EXHIBITION X-RAyS: EvidEncE And ThREAT A notably popular feature at the European Congress of Radiology is the special exhibition, initiated and compiled by Prof. Hermann Vogel from Hamburg, Germany, in cooperation with the Deutsches Röntgenmuseum, which has been part of the annual meeting for years. This year s exhibit is entitled: X-Rays: Evidence and Threat. This year s exhibition covers a wide variety of instances where imaging has been used, from the outlandish to the downright gruesome. It includes images of injuries sustained from terrorist attacks, accidents and torture. It also demonstrates how imaging has been used to detect drugs and explosives hidden inside the human body, as well as some other more benign cosmetic implants. This exhibition provides a unique insight into the physical aftermath of many tragic incidents while also delving into some non-medical imaging applications. It promises to be an eye-opening experience for all. Prof. Hermann Vogel is head physician at the Albers-Schönberg-Institute, the department of radiology at St. Georg Hospital in Hamburg. The new exhibition, which will be shown for the first time at ECR 2013, again features more than 20 posters with partly provocative images. The exhibition is presented on the 2 nd level of the congress venue next to the EPOS Area. U. Hennig Deutsches Röntgen-Museum H. and B. Vogel Institut für Rechtsmedizin 66

69 Cafés & Restaurants at ECR 2013 Want to take a short break? Looking for the right place to eat? The best spots to relax and enjoy tasty hot and cold snacks are our various foyer cafés and restaurants. They are situated throughout the whole congress venue and across all levels of the building. To offer you the broadest variety of Austrian and international delicacies, each café and restaurant has its own theme, from Austrian specialties and Italian treats to Mediterranean pleasures and Asian delights. Lower level, Expo Foyer D Italian Snack Lounge Lower level, Foyer G/H (next to Room G/H) Mediterranean Corner Lower level, Foyer I/K (next to Room I/K) Asian Delights authentic Asian cuisine Entrance level (next to the main entrance) Café Accademia: Accademia del Caffè 1 st level, within EDIPS Preview Centre Vital Lounge 2 nd level, Foyer A (in the EPOS Area) Viennese Snacks & Pastries 2 nd level, Foyer B (in the Rising Stars Lounge) Snack Lounge Free Publications at ECR 2013 Broaden your horizons with Free Publications at ECR 2013 General Information The Free Publications initiative will run for the seventh consecutive year after attracting increasing levels of attention at ECR The Free Publications booth will be located on the second level of the ACV next to the EPOS Area. The booth will be richly stocked with a galaxy of fascinating reading material from many of our associated organisations and publishing houses from around the world, such as Globetech, Diagnostic Imaging, MindByte and European Hospital. In addition to a broad library of print media, internet terminals will also be installed nearby, providing access to a wide variety of online publications. About 20 publishers will provide more than 30 different titles for this initiative, ranging from copies of the ESR s flagship journals European Radiology and Insights into Imaging, to issues from as far afield as Lebanon, many of which will also be available online. Interested delegates can peruse La Radiologia Medica, pick up a copy of International Hospital and browse the online Imaging Management, among others. It is a rare chance to learn from so many diverse medical imaging communities from around the globe, and in this case it is something you can take away with you, with free bags provided to help you make the very best of the opportunity. We are of course enormously grateful for the enthusiasm of our friends in the publishing industry for making the Free Publications initiative possible, and allowing us to provide ECR participants with the chance to pick up some literature and broaden their medical imaging horizons. Free Publications Booth: 2 nd level, next to the EPOS Area. 2 nd level, Foyer C (next to Room C) Italian Restaurant Expo C Café Vienna: Austrian Specialties Expo E Bar XXL Expo Extension A Snack Café 67

70 Enjoy Vienna s cultural highlights Visit the Arts & Culture Desk in the entrance hall

71 Friedensreich Hundertwasser, The Large Path, Namida AG, Glarus, Switzerland

72 Visit the Technical Exhibition! And learn all about the most recent developments in healthcare technology. Opening hours: EXPO Halls and EXPO Foyer D Friday, March 8 to Sunday, March 10: 10:00 18:00 Monday, March 11: 10:00 14:00 First Level (Gallery) Thursday, March 7: 14:00 18:00 Friday, March 8 to Monday, March 11: 10:00 18:00

73 General Information ECR 2013 welcomes its industry partners 4 star level The ESR welcomes its Supporting Members The ESR gives a warm welcome to all its existing and newly joined supporting membership companies! As the ECR puts a special focus on innovation and keeping up to date with recent developments in the field, a close cooperation with the industry leaders is indispensable. The companies contribute with their active involvement to the success of the society and its congress with their continuous support for the cause of radiology in Europe. ESR Supporting Members: 4-star: Agfa HealthCare Bayer HealthCare Bracco Imaging Canon Europe Carestream Health Covidien Mallinckrodt Esaote Fujifilm Europe GE Healthcare Guerbet Hitachi Medical Systems Europe Hologic Philips Healthcare Samsung Medison Siemens Healthcare Sector 3-Star: Shenzhen Mindray Bio-Medical Electronics TeraRecon 2-Star: Cerner Corporation Novarad Corporation Paramed Medical Systems Shimadzu Europa Swissray Medical Thank you for your involvement! 3 star level 2 star level ESR meets countries Each year the ECR places a special focus on its ESR meets countries in 2013 namely Spain, South Africa and Chile with particular emphasis on their scientific and technological developments. The ESR, industry companies and the national societies work closely together to highlight these countries. Additionally, we are proud to present you the ESR meets partner discipline; E-AHPBA (European-African Hepato-Pancreato- Biliary Association). 71

74 Top radiologists read more than just images

75 General Information ESR Journals European Radiology European Radiology at your fingertips! Carry Europe s leading radiology journal with you wherever you go with the European Radiology App download the app from itunes or via the QR code below. European Radiology is the official journal of the ESR and official organ of numerous subspecialty organisations. It acts as a flagship, publishing original scientific papers in the radiological field with an Impact Factor of for Full access to the online version of European Radiology is included in the ESR membership fee. ESR members can also arrange subscriptions for the printed version at special rates in the MyUserArea ( under MyJournals )! Insights into Imaging The clearest insights for all to see! Insights into Imaging is the ESR journal for education and strategies in radiology. Besides excellent review articles, it publishes articles on professional issues, several official documents and political statements. Insights into Imaging is an Open Access journal on the SpringerOpen platform therefore all articles published are freely available. As benefit for ESR members, ESR covers the Article Processing Charges for all its active members! As a reminder of the valuable content and its importance to every radiologist s daily practice, a special printed issue of Insights into Imaging has been placed in all Students and Residents congress bags! Free copies of this booklet are available from the journal s booth in the entrance hall. Links to the journals

76 Insights into Imaging Education and strategies in European radiology The clearest insights for all to see! Now Open Access Read Insights into Imaging without subscription and without restrictions Full articles at

77 General Information Underground Map U-Bahn ECR STOP: Kaisermühlen / Vienna Int. Centre Wiener Linien, November 2012 ACV Underground Line (U-Bahn) Commuter Train (S-Bahn) City Airport Train Urban Train (Lokalbahn) Vienna International Busterminal Customer Service Centre (U3 Erdberg) Infopoints Ticket Sales Park & Ride 75

78 Johannes Krisch in Der Alpenkönig und der Menschenfeind by Ferdinand Raimund Reinhard Werner / Burgtheater More about theatres in Vienna:

79 Floor Plans 78 U2 Lower Level 79 U2 Lower Level EXPO 80 OE Entrance Level 81 OE Entrance Level EXPO 82 O1 First Level 83 O2 Second Level 84 O3 Third Level

80 Floor Plans U2 Lower Level Meditation & Prayer Room Broadcast Room G/H 2 1 RESTAURANT Room G/H Room I/K RESTAURANT Meeting Room 15 Broadcast Room I/K COAT CHECK 3 COAT CHECK 4 Room D1 6 TO EXPO E Room D2 AREA SMOKING 16 3 EXPO FOYER D Future Meetings Meeting Room 16 TO EXPO B/C/E EXPO E 1. Meditation & Prayer Room 2. Broadcast Room G/H 3. Meeting Room Meeting Room Broadcast Room I/K 6. Future Meetings 78

81 Floor Plans U2 Lower Level EXPO COAT CHECK 3 COAT CHECK 4 Room D1 2 TO EXPO E Room D2 AREA SMOKING 16 1 EXPO FOYER D Future Meetings Meeting Room 16 TO EXPO B/C/E EXPO E EXPO C EXPO B 1. Meeting Room Future Meetings 79

82 Floor Plans OE Entrance Level CONGRESS OFFICE COAT CHECK 1 8 Room E2 Partner Publishers Partner Publishers Room F1 COAT CHECK Photo Competition Broadcast Zone E1/E2 Society Booths Room E1 Society Booths REGISTRATION Water Society Booths ESR MEETS Society Booths REGISTRATION 5 5 Room F2 Society Booths Society Booths Broadcast Zone F1/F2 PRESS OFFICE AND BUSINESS CENTRE BAGS ESR WELCOME LOUNGE BAGS SMOKING AREA SIEMENS Experience Lounge Industry Hands-On Workshop Expo Services and Exhibitors Registration ECR Info ACV Info Austrian Airlines Mondial Travel Service Arts & Culture Restaurant Reservations = CASH DISPENSER / ATM MAIN ENTRANCE PHILIPS 1. Mondial 2. Travel Service 3. Arts & Culture 4. Restaurant Reservations 5. Registration 6. Broadcast Zone F1/F2 7. Photo Competition 8. Broadcast Zone E1/E2 80

83 Floor Plans OE Entrance Level EXPO PRESS OFFICE AND BUSINESS CENTRE BAGS WELCOME LOUNGE BAGS SMOKING AREA SIEMENS Experience Lounge Industry Hands-On Workshop Expo Services and Exhibitors Registration ECR Info ACV Info Austrian Airlines Mondial Travel Service Arts & Culture Restaurant Reservations = CASH DISPENSER / ATM MAIN ENTRANCE PHILIPS TO / FROM UNDERGROUND EXPO A EXTENSION EXPO A RECREATION AREA INTERNET TERMINALS 81

84 Floor Plans O1 First Level Internet Terminals PREVIEW CENTRE EDIPS Room P Broadcast Zone L/M Room L/M 1 EXPO GALLERY 3 Room N/O Broadcast Zone N/O Hologic Industry Hands-On Workshop Room 4 2 Studio 2013 Room Y Room X Room Q 1. Broadcast Zone L/M 2. Hologic Industry Hands-On Workshop Room 3. Broadcast Zone N/O 4. Meeting Room 14 82

85 Floor Plans O2 Second Level Meeting Room Rising Stars Lounge Room B Room C RESTAURANT Broadcast Room B/C 2 Meeting Room 12 Meeting Room 11 Meeting Room 10 Special Exhibition Room A EDiR Examination Area EPOS Discussions Corner Room Z 6 EPOS TM Room U 9 EIBIR IMAGINE Theatre ehealth and Imaging Informatics 7 8 Free Publications 1. Meeting Room Broadcast Room B/C 3. Meeting Room Meeting Room Meeting Room Special Exhibition 7. EPOS Discussions Corner 8. ehealth and Imaging Informatics 9. EIBIR IMAGINE Theatre 83

86 Floor Plans O3 Third Level Meeting Room 7 Meeting Room OFFICES 1 17 OFFICES Meeting Room 9 Meeting Room 6 Meeting Room 5 Past Presidents Circle PRESIDENTS OFFICE Meeting Room 1 Meeting Room 2 Meeting Room 3 Meeting Room 4 Info Service Desk 1. Meeting Room 1 2. Meeting Room 2 3. Meeting Room 3 4. Meeting Room 4 5. Meeting Room 5 6. Meeting Room 6 7. Meeting Room 7 8. Meeting Room 8 9. Meeting Room Info Service Desk 11. Past Presidents Circle 84

87 Free ECR Student Registration Students and radiographers-in-training under the age of 30, without any academic degree, can register for free. Rising Stars Lounge We want all students and residents to feel at home at the ECR, which is why we have provided the exclusive Rising Stars Lounge, located on the 2 nd level in Foyer B. Basic Sessions for Students, Residents and Radiographers-in-training Student Sessions Student Hands-On Workshops on Ultrasound See pages for more details Find more information on myesr.org/risingstars and become a Rising Star on Facebook: facebook.com/esrrisingstars

88

89 Programme Overviews 88 Thursday, March 7 90 Friday, March 8 92 Saturday, March 9 94 Sunday, March Monday, March 11

90 Programme Overview Thursday, March 7 Room/ Time A 2 nd Level B 2 nd Level C 2 nd Level D1 Lower Level D2 Lower Level E1 Entrance Level E2 Entrance Level F1 Entrance Level F2 Entrance Level G/H Lower Level 08:30 09:00 09:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 SS 103 Cardiac CT and MRI in preoperative and postoperative evaluation (p. 214) SS 111 Neuro From structure to function) (p. 214) SS 104 Chest Lung cancer: from tissue characterisation to treatment (p. 215) SS 109 Interventional Radiology Chemoembolisation and radioembolisation of liver tumours (p. 215) SS 110 Musculoskeletal Shoulder and hand (p. 216) SS 101a GI Tract Acute bowel diseases: challenges and solutions (p. 216) SS 116 Oncologic Imaging Perfusion CT and MRI: ready for clinical practice (p. 217) SS 102 Breast Breast MRI: improving accuracy and tissue characterisation (p. 217) SS 107 Genitourinary Prostate imaging (p. 218) 11:30 12:00 12:30 13:00 SY 2 SuperSonic Imagine Satellite Symposium (p. 149) 13:30 14:00 14:30 15:00 E³ 220 Interactive Teaching Session Lung cancer (p. 156) SS 208 Head and Neck Head and neck cancer: functional imaging and hybrid modalities (p. 221) SS 204 Chest Airways and infiltrative lung diseases (p. 222) SS 209 Interventional Radiology Ablation and biopsy of the prostate and the kidney (p. 222) SS 210 Musculoskeletal Lower limb: tricks for improved imaging (p. 223) SS 201a GI Tract Bowel imaging: protocol optimisation and intervention (p. 223) SS 216 Oncologic Imaging New biomarkers for tumour quantification (p. 224) SS 202 Breast Improvements in preoperative staging of breast cancer (p. 224) SS 211 Neuro Infection and inflammation (p. 225) 15:30 16:00 16:30 17:00 E³ 320 Interactive Teaching Session Malignant pancreatic tumours (p. 156) RC 301 GI Tract Staging and restaging of rectal and anal cancer (p. 156) RC 303 Cardiac Cardiac imaging: the cutting edge (p. 157) RC 306 Molecular Imaging Molecular imaging in oncology (p. 157) MS 3 Multidisciplinary Sessions: Managing Patients with Cancer Colorectal liver metastases (p. 157) PC 3 Professional Challenges Session Bringing radiology to medical undergraduates (p. 157) RC 302 Breast Functional imaging of the breast (p. 158) RC 307 Genitourinary Renal and adrenal tumours (p. 158) 17:30 17:45-19:15 Room A: Opening Ceremony / Presentation of Honorary Members / Opening Lecture [p. 160] Registration: Wednesday, March 6: 12:00 18:00 / Thursday, March 7 to Monday, March 11: 07:00 18:00 88

91 Programme Overview Thursday, March 7 I/K Lower Level L/M 1 st Level N/O 1 st Level P 1 st Level Q 1 st Level X 1 st Level Y 1 st Level Z 2 nd Level Studio st Level EPOS 2 nd Level Room/ Time 08:30 09:00 09:30 10:00 SS 101b Abdominal Viscera Liver fibrosis and cirrhosis: elastography and biomarkers (p. 218) SS 113 Physics in Radiology Multi modality imaging and MR safety (p. 219) SS 115 Vascular Carotid plaque evaluation (p. 219) SS 117 Emergency Radiology An update on emergency thoraco-abdominal imaging (p. 220) SS 114 Radiographers Importance of education in practice (p. 220) SS 105 Computer Applications IT infrastructure, learning support and teleradiology (p. 221) SY 1 Siemens Healthcare Satellite Symposium (p. 149) 10:30 11:00 11:30 SY 3 Bayer Health- Care Satellite Symposium (p. 149) MC 24A The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Head and Neck A taste of the oral cavity and salivary glands (p. 156) MC 25A The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Musculoskeletal Imaging Trauma (p. 156) SY 4 Siemens Healthcare Satellite Symposium (p. 149) 12:00 12:30 13:00 13:30 SS 201b Abdominal Viscera Hepatocellular carcinoma: diagnosis and management (p. 225) SS 213 Physics in Radiology Innovations in CT technology and data processing (p. 226) SS 215 Vascular Major vessel imaging (p. 226) SS 203 Cardiac Planning cardiac interventions (p. 227) SS 214 Radiographers Managing quality and dose in CT (p. 227) SS 205 Computer Applications Quantitative image analysis and optimisation (p. 228) SY 5 Siemens Healthcare Satellite Symposium (p. 149) 14:00 14:30 15:00 15:30 RC 304 Chest How I report (p. 158) MC 322 Organs from A to Z: Heart Technical and anatomical fundamentals for imaging the heart (p. 159) RC 309 Interventional Radiology Percutaneous treatment of chronic back pain and sciatica (p. 159) RC 315 Vascular Vascular imaging in ischaemic stroke (p. 159) RC 305 Computer Applications New PACS architecture: decoupling image management from image navigation (p. 159) ESR Radiation Protection Session Security scanners at airports: are they safe? (p. 160) 16:00 16:30 17:00 17:30 Technical Exhibition: EXPO First Level (Gallery): 14:00 18:00 EPOS Scientific Exhibition: 08:00 18:00 89

92 Programme Overview Friday, March 8 Room/ Time A 2 nd Level B 2 nd Level C 2 nd Level D1 Lower Level D2 Lower Level E1 Entrance Level E2 Entrance Level F1 Entrance Level F2 Entrance Level G/H Lower Level 08:30 09:00 09:30 RC 401 Abdominal Viscera Pitfalls in interpretation of pancreatic imaging (p. 161) 6 th Post Processing Face-Off Session (p. 139) RC 416 Oncologic Imaging MR imaging for prostate cancer management: the essential guide for radiologists (p. 161) MC 423 Controversies in Breast Imaging Overdiagnosis from screening mammography: should we care about it? (p. 161) RC 417 Emergency Radiology ER: basic principles (p. 161) SA 4 State of the Art Symposium Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) of the abdomen (p. 162) E³ 420 Foundation Course: Neuroimaging The orbit, the petrous bone and the sella (p. 162) MS 4 Multidisciplinary Sessions: Managing Patients with Cancer Hepatocellular carcinoma (p. 162) SF 4a Special Focus Session MRI of the lung: to go? (p. 163) RC 411 Neuro The paediatric brain: not just a small brain (p. 163) 10:00 10:30 11:00 E³ 520a Interactive Teaching Session Pitfalls in abdominal imaging (p. 165) EM 1 ESR meets Spain Imaging: essential tool from diagnosis to treatment (p. 165) E³ 520b Interactive Teaching Session Pitfalls in head and neck imaging (p. 166) SS 504 Chest Lung nodules (p. 229) SS 509 Interventional Radiology Neurovascular and spine interventions (p. 229) SS 510 Musculoskeletal Tendon, muscle and tissue composition (p. 230) E³ 520c Foundation Course: Neuroimaging Paediatric (p. 166) SS 516 Oncologic Imaging Cutting edge imaging in oncology: when and how? (p. 230) SS 502 Breast Elastography and other advances in breast ultrasound (p. 231) SS 507 Genitourinary New frontiers in GU imaging (p. 231) 11:30 12:00 12:30 13:00 12:15 12:45 Gold Medal Awards (p. 55) 12:45 13:15 Honorary Lecture 1 (p. 167) 12:15 13:30 SY 6 Bayer Health- Care Satellite Symposium (p. 149) SY 7 Bracco Satellite Symposium (p. 150) 13:30 14:00 14:30 15:00 SS 607 Genitourinary Female pelvis imaging (p. 234) SS 611 Neuro Alzheimer s and Parkinson s (p. 234) SS 603a Cardiac CT and MRI: risk stratification (p. 235) MC 623 Controversies in Breast Imaging Preoperative MRI in newly diagnosed breast cancer: to do or not to do? (p. 167) SS 609a Interventional Radiology Oncologic ablation and guided interventions (p. 235) SS 610a Musculoskeletal Musculoskeletal tumours (p. 236) E³ 620 Foundation Course: Neuroimaging Trauma and vascularity (p. 167) SS 601 Abdominal Viscera Liver steatosis: imaging and quantification (p. 236) SS 602 Breast Breast imaging after neoadjuvant therapy and surgery (p. 237) SS 603b Cardiac Cardiomyopathy and fibrosis (p. 237) 15:30 16:00 16:30 17:00 E³ 720a Interactive Teaching Session Neurological emergencies (p. 168) EM 2 ESR meets E-AHPBA Pancreatic cystic neoplasms 2013 (p. 168) NH 7 New Horizons Session Cartilage imaging (p. 168) MC 723 Controversies in Breast Imaging Should we add ultrasound to mammographic screening of dense breasts? (p. 169) CC 719 Oncologic Imaging: Follow-up of Systemic and Local Therapies Imaging after systemic therapies: the standards (p. 169) RC 710 Musculoskeletal Peripheral nerve imaging: MRI and US (p. 169) E³ 720b Foundation Course: Neuroimaging Infection and inflammation (p. 169) SF 7a Special Focus Session Radiographers and ultrasonography in Europe (p. 170) SF 7b Special Focus Session Imaging and radiotherapy: all you need to know (p. 170) RC 707 Genitourinary Diagnosis and management of GU tract trauma (p. 170) 17:30 Registration: 07:00 18:00 EPOS Scientific Exhibition: 08:00 18:00 90

93 Programme Overview Friday, March 8 I/K Lower Level L/M 1 st Level N/O 1 st Level P 1 st Level Q 1 st Level X 1 st Level Y 1 st Level Z 2 nd Level Studio st Level EPOS 2 nd Level Room/ Time MC 428 Joint Course of ESR and RSNA (Radiological Society of North America) Essentials in oncologic imaging: what radiologists need to know (part 1) (p. 163) MC 422 Organs from A to Z: Heart Non-ischaemic heart disease (p. 164) EIBIR/EORTC Joint Workshop A radiologist with a ruler in his hand is a dangerous person: seeking standardisation in multicenter imaging trials (p. 164) PC 4 Professional Challenges Session The visibility of the radiologist (p. 164) SF 4b Special Focus Session Justifying CT in paediatric radiology (p. 165) Student Workshop 1 (p. 145) SK 427 Image-Guided Tumour Ablation (p. 147) Rising Stars Basic 1 (p. 144) 08:30 09:00 09:30 10:00 MC 528 Joint Course of ESR and RSNA (Radiological Society of North America) Essentials in oncologic imaging: what radiologists need to know (part 2) (p. 166) SS 511 Neuro Stroke-related arterial disease (p. 232) SS 515 Vascular Novel tools for blood flow evaluation (p. 232) SS 503 Cardiac Advances in coronary CT angiography (p. 233) SS 514 Radiographers The radiographer s role as health care team member (p. 233) SK 527 Image-Guided Tumour Ablation (p. 147) Rising Stars Basic 2 (p. 144) 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 SY 8 GE Healthcare Satellite Symposium (p. 150) SY 9 Siemens Healthcare Satellite Symposium (p. 150) MC 25B The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Musculoskeletal Imaging Degenerative disorders (p. 166) MC 24B The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Head and Neck The infrahyoid neck and lymph nodes (p. 167) EPOS discussion Paediatric neuroimaging (p. 62) 12:30 13:00 13:30 MC 628 Joint Course of ESR and RSNA (Radiological Society of North America) Essentials in oncologic imaging: what radiologists need to know (part 3) (p. 167) SS 608 Head and Neck Technical innovations, TMJ disease and rare entities (p. 238) SS 610b Musculoskeletal Cartilage: advanced imaging (p. 238) SS 609b Interventional Radiology Gynaecological and obstetric interventions (p. 239) ESOR Session Fostering future researchers (p. 139) Student Workshop 2 (p. 145) SK 627 Image-Guided Tumour Ablation (p. 147) SS 606 Molecular Imaging MR/PET and PET/CT (p. 239) Student Session 1 (p. 144) 14:00 14:30 15:00 EPOS discussion Plaque imaging and myocardial characterisation (p. 62) 15:30 MC 728 Joint Course of ESR and RSNA (Radiological Society of North America) Essentials in oncologic imaging: what radiologists need to know (part 4) (p. 171) MC 722 Organs from A to Z: Heart Ischaemic heart disease (p. 171) RC 709 Interventional Radiology Expanding the role of interventional radiology in hepatocellular carcinoma (p. 171) RC 714 Radiographers Clinical audit: from EURATOM to the clinical environment (p. 172) SF 7c Special Focus Session Imaging in intensive care patients (p. 172) SK 727 Image-Guided Tumour Ablation (p. 147) RC 715 Vascular Dialysis fistula (p. 173) Student Session 2 (p. 144) 16:00 16:30 17:00 17:30 Technical Exhibition: EXPO First Level (Gallery): 10:00 18:00 Technical Exhibition: EXPO Halls and EXPO Foyer D:10:00 18:00 91

94 Programme Overview Saturday, March 9 Room/ Time A 2 nd Level B 2 nd Level C 2 nd Level D1 Lower Level D2 Lower Level E1 Entrance Level E2 Entrance Level F1 Entrance Level F2 Entrance Level G/H Lower Level 08:30 09:00 09:30 E³ 820a Interactive Teaching Session Pitfalls in heart imaging (p. 175) SF 8a Special Focus Session Is diagnostic catheter angiography still useful in neuroimaging? (p. 175) NH 8 New Horizons Session MR/PET: a marriage made in heaven or hell? (p. 175) CC 818 CLICK (Clinical Lessons for Imaging Core Knowledge): Never without Arteries How old are you in reality? Vascular age and clinical events (p. 175) CC 819 Oncologic Imaging: Follow-up of Systemic and Local Therapies Imaging after systemic therapies: advanced techniques (p. 176) RC 817 Emergency Radiology Polytrauma: redefining imaging issues for management priorities (p. 176) E³ 820b Foundation Course: Neuroimaging Metabolic and neurodegenerative disorders (p. 176) RC 802 Breast Clinical challenges in breast MRI (p. 177) SF 8b Special Focus Session GI imaging: technological advances and clinical applications (p. 177) EF 1 EFOMP Workshop Lung and chest imaging: new approaches (p. 177) 10:00 10:30 11:00 E³ 920a Interactive Teaching Session Tips and tricks in chest imaging (p. 179) 10:25 12:00 EM 3 ESR meets South Africa Imaging HIV and TB (p. 179) SS 911 Neuro New insights into brain gliomas (p. 241) SS 904 Chest Image quality and dose reduction (p. 241) SS 909 Interventional Radiology Thoracic interventions (p. 242) SS 910 Musculoskeletal Spine: advancing the use of CT and MRI (p. 242) E³ 920b Foundation Course: Neuroimaging Tumours and phacomatosis (p. 180) SS 916 Oncologic Imaging Whole-body imaging: how to do it (p. 243) SS 902 Breast Increased risk of breast cancer (p. 243) EF 2 EFOMP Workshop Lung imaging: multidisciplinary scenario (p. 180) 11:30 12:00 12:30 13:00 12:15 12:45 Honorary Lecture 2 (p. 181) SY 10 Siemens Healthcare and Bayer HealthCare Joint Satellite Symposium (p. 150) SY 11 Bracco Satellite Symposium (p. 150) SY 12 Siemens Healthcare Satellite Symposium (p. 150) SY 13 GE HealthCare Satellite Symposium (p. 150) SY 14 Guerbet Satellite Symposium (p. 151) 13:30 14:00 14:30 15:00 IIQ Image Interpretation Quiz (p. 140) EM 5 EFRS meets Spain Knowledge development as a tool for radiographers professional improvement (p. 181) SY 17 Hologic Satellite Symposium (p. 151) SY 18 Toshiba Satellite Symposium (p. 151) SY 19 Toshiba Satellite Symposium (p. 151) 15:30 16:00 16:30 17:00 E³ 1120 Interactive Teaching Session Breast cancer (p. 182) SA 11 State of the Art Symposium Evaluation of response in haematological malignancy (p. 182) CC 1121 Urogenital Imaging Stones: diagnosis and intervention (p. 182) CC 1118 CLICK (Clinical Lessons for Imaging Core Knowledge): Never without Arteries Stroke (p. 182) RC 1108 Head and Neck Skull base lesions: imaging studies and differential diagnosis (p. 183) RC 1110 Musculoskeletal The knee (p. 183) MS 11 Multidisciplinary Sessions: Managing Patients with Cancer Cholangiocarcinoma (p. 183) SF 11 Special Focus Session Adults with congenital heart disease (GUCH) (p. 184) PC 11 Professional Challenges Session Personalised radiology (p. 184) RC 1111 Neuro Brain tumours: advanced imaging techniques in daily practice - do we really need them? (p. 185) 17:30 Registration: 07:00 18:00 EPOS Scientific Exhibition: 08:00 18:00 92

95 Programme Overview Saturday, March 9 I/K Lower Level L/M 1 st Level N/O 1 st Level P 1 st Level Q 1 st Level X 1 st Level Y 1 st Level Z 2 nd Level Studio st Level EPOS 2 nd Level Room/ Time RC 804 Chest Patterns in chest radiology: are there subtype patterns of ground glass opacity (GGO)? (p. 178) RC 815 Vascular How I report (p. 178) RC 809 Interventional Radiology What should every radiologist know about the endovascular treatment of abdominal aortic aneurysms? (p. 178) RC 803 Cardiac Practical approach to cardiovascular risk stratification with CT and MRI (p. 178) RC 812 Paediatric Imaging the paediatric spine (p. 179) SK 826 How to biopsy with US guidance (p. 146) Student Session 3 (p. 145) 08:30 09:00 09:30 10:00 SS 901 Abdominal Viscera Cross-sectional pancreatic imaging and biomarkers (p. 244) Standards and Audit Session Assessment of radiologists professional performance (p. 180) SS 903 Cardiac Myocardial perfusion and coronary artery disease (p. 244) SS 912 Paediatric Paediatric body and bones (p. 245) SS 914 Radiographers Dose optimisation as daily challenge (p. 245) SK 926 How to Biopsy with US Guidance (p. 146) SK 927 Image-Guided Tumour Ablation (p. 147) SS 905 Computer Applications Computer-aided diagnosis (p. 246) Student Session 4 (p. 145) EPOS discussion CT and MRI diagnosis of focal liver masses: when to use what? (p. 62) 10:30 11:00 11:30 SY 15 Philips Healthcare Satellite Symposium (p. 151) SY 16 Philips Healthcare Satellite Symposium (p. 151) SY 20 GE Healthcare Nycomed Satellite Symposium (p. 152) MC 24C The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Head and Neck Main pipelines of the neck: pharynx and larynx (p. 181) MSY 1 Philips Healthcare Mini Satellite Symposium (p. 151) MC 25C The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Musculoskeletal Imaging Inflammatory/infectious disorders (p. 181) 13:00 14:45 MIR@ECR Innovation management and the future of radiology and radiologists (p. 61) SK 1026 How to Biopsy with US Guidance (p. 146) SK 1027 Image-Guided Tumour Ablation (p. 147) 12:45 14:15 EIBIR Session (p. 140) 12:15-13:15 FC Self Assessment Test (p. 136) 12:00 12:30 13:00 13:30 14:00 14:30 RC 1104 Chest Pulmonary infections: the old and the new (p. 185) RC 1113 Physics in Radiology Cone-beam imaging (p. 185) RC 1109 Interventional Radiology Update on biliary interventions (p. 185) RC 1114 Radiographers Hot topics in magnetic resonance imaging (p. 186) 15:15 17:30 MIR@ECR Radiology in modern times: challenges by telemedicine, ehealth, appropriateness and safety (p. 61) 16:00 18:00 Student Workshop 3 (p. 145) SK 1127 Image-Guided Tumour Ablation (p. 147) Euro- BioImaging Session (p. 141) EPOS discussion Paediatric chest and heart: state of the art imaging of the young patient (p. 62) 15:00 15:30 16:00 16:30 17:00 17:30 Technical Exhibition: EXPO First Level (Gallery): 10:00 18:00 Technical Exhibition: EXPO Halls and EXPO Foyer D:10:00 18:00 93

96 Programme Overview Sunday, March 10 Room/ Time A 2 nd Level B 2 nd Level C 2 nd Level D1 Lower Level D2 Lower Level E1 Entrance Level E2 Entrance Level F1 Entrance Level F2 Entrance Level G/H Lower Level 08:30 09:00 09:30 E³ 1220 Interactive Teaching Session Pitfalls in brain imaging (p. 187) RC 1201 GI Tract How I report (p. 187) CC 1221 Urogenital Imaging Retroperitoneal anatomy, variants and diseases (p. 187) CC 1218 CLICK (Clinical Lessons for Imaging Core Knowledge): Never without Arteries Chest pain: vascular non-cardiac causes (p. 187) CC 1219 Oncologic Imaging: Follow-up of Systemic and Local Therapies Assessing HCC response (p. 188) RC 1210 Musculoskeletal Overuse injuries in sport: a multimodality approach (p. 188) RC 1211 Neuro Stroke: is the prognosis getting any better? (p. 188) SF 12 Special Focus Session Quantitative imaging biomarkers in cardiac radiology (p. 188) RC 1202 Breast Multi-modality breast imaging (p. 189) RC 1207 Genitourinary How I report (p. 189) 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 SS 1316 Oncologic Imaging Rectal cancer imaging: the next step (p. 247) EM 4 ESR meets Chile Topics of ongoing radiological research from the Andes (p. 191) CC 1321 Urogenital Imaging The female pelvis (p. 192) SS 1304 Chest CTPA techniques in lung perfusion and pulmonary hypertension (p. 247) SS 1309 Interventional Radiology Skeletal and endocrinologic interventions (p. 248) SS 1310 Musculoskeletal Arthritis and metabolic bone disease (p. 248) SS 1303 Cardiac Towards improved image quality and detection (p. 249) SS 1311 Neuro Brain tumours: imaging and therapy (p. 249) SS 1302 Breast How to get more from breast imaging modalities (p. 250) SS 1307 Genitourinary The bladder and below (p. 250) 12:00 12:30 13:00 13:30 12:15 12:45 Honorary Lecture 3 (p. 192) JIIQ Junior Image Interpretation Quiz (p. 141) SY 21 GE Healthcare Satellite Symposium (p. 152) SY 22 Samsung Satellite Symposium (p. 152) 14:00 14:30 15:00 E³ 1420 Interactive Teaching Session Common and uncommon errors in plain film and CT imaging of the chest: how to improve your performance (p. 193) NH 14 New Horizons Session Imaging of the mind (p. 193) CC 1421 Urogenital Imaging The male genital system (p. 193) CC 1418 CLICK (Clinical Lessons for Imaging Core Knowledge): Never without Arteries Angina, nonocclusive mesenteric ischaemia (NOMI) and friends: vascular causes of acute abdomen (p. 194) CC 1419 Oncologic Imaging: Follow-up of Systemic and Local Therapies Follow-up of thermal ablation (part I) (p. 194) RC 1410 Musculoskeletal How I report (p. 194) RC 1416 Oncologic Imaging The essentials of lymph node imaging of solid tumours: what the radiologist needs to know (p. 194) SF 14a Special Focus Session Palliative interventional techniques in cancer (p. 195) RC 1402 Breast How I report (p. 195) SF 14b Special Focus Session Comprehensive CT cardiothoracic imaging: a new challenge for radiologists (p. 195) 15:30 16:00 16:30 17:00 E³ 1520 Interactive Teaching Session Thoracic emergencies (p. 198) RC 1501 GI Tract CT colonography: when the new becomes ordinary (p. 198) CC 1521 Urogenital Imaging Paediatrics (p. 198) CC 1518 CLICK (Clinical Lessons for Imaging Core Knowledge): Never without Arteries When every step counts: imaging and management of peripheral arterial occlusive disease (PAOD) (p. 199) CC 1519 Oncologic maging: Follow-up of Systemic and Local Therapies Follow-up of thermal ablation (part II) (p. 199) RC 1517 Emergency Radiology ER: comprehensive imaging of non-traumatic abdominal emergencies (p. 199) SA 15 State of the Art Symposium Imaging impingement syndromes (p. 199) SF 15a Special Focus Session Traumatic brain injury (p. 200) SF 15b Special Focus Session Digital breast tomosynthesis (p. 200) RC 1511 Neuro Epilepsy: a lack of knowledge can be dangerous (p. 201) 17:30 Registration: 07:00 18:00 EPOS Scientific Exhibition: 08:00 18:00 94

97 Programme Overview Sunday, March 10 I/K Lower Level L/M 1 st Level N/O 1 st Level P 1 st Level Q 1 st Level X 1 st Level Y 1 st Level Z 2 nd Level Studio st Level EPOS 2 nd Level Room/ Time RC 1204 Chest Lung cancer staging in 2013 (p. 189) RC 1213 Physics in Radiology Risk assessment and risk communication (p. 190) RC 1209 Interventional Radiology Gynaecological and obstetrical haemorrhagic emergencies (p. 190) RC 1214 Radiographers Dose optimisation in computed tomography (p. 190) RC 1212 Paediatric Oncologic imaging: how to image, follow up and report (p. 191) PC 12 Professional Challenges Session Legal matters related to multimodality techniques (p. 191) Rising Stars Basic 3 (p. 144) 08:30 09:00 09:30 10:00 SS 1301 Abdominal Viscera Abdominal CT: dose reduction and technical improvements (p. 251) SS 1308 Head and Neck Advanced imaging of the ear, orbit and glands (p. 251) SS 1317 Emergency Radiology Technical issues and clinical results (p. 252) SS 1312 Paediatric Chest, heart and radiation awareness (p. 252) TF 1 RTF - Radiology Trainees Forum Highlighted Lectures (p. 192) SK 1326 How to Biopsy with US Guidance (p. 146) SK 1327 Image-Guided Tumour Ablation (p. 147) SS 1306 Contrast Media New agents and protocols (p. 253) PC 13 Professional Challenges Session The radiologist, the clinician and the patient: an impossible trio? (p. 107) 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 SY 23 Philips Healthcare Satellite Symposium (p. 152) SY 24 Bracco Satellite Symposium (p. 152) MC 25D The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Musculoskeletal Imaging Neoplastic/nonneoplastic lesions (p. 192) MC 24D The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Head and Neck The suprahyoid neck: anatomy and diagnostic algorithm of the neck mass (p. 193) EPOS discussion Vascular imaging: CT, MR - or something completely different? Challenges in imaging peripheral artery occlusive disease (p. 62) 12:30 13:00 13:30 RC 1407 Genitourinary Contrast media safety: update (p. 196) RC 1413 Physics in Radiology Hybrid imaging systems (p. 196) RC 1408 Head and Neck Laryngeal cancer and radiology (p. 196) RC 1414 Radiographers Towards advancing and developing the role of radiographers (p. 197) RC 1412 Paediatric Paediatric emergencies (p. 197) SK 1427 Image-Guided Tumour Ablation (p. 147) SF 14c Special Focus Session Advances in forensic radiology (p. 197) Student Final Session (p. 145) 14:00 14:30 15:00 15:30 RC 1503 Cardiac Cardiac CT and MRI in difficult patients: what to do? (p. 201) RC 1513 Physics in Radiology Novel developments in CT and their impact on dose (p. 201) RC 1508 Head and Neck Performing and reporting head and neck examinations: how should I do it? (p. 201) RC 1514 Radiographers Hybrid imaging technologies (p. 202) RC 1512 Paediatric Paediatric MSK radiology: what is important? (p. 202) 16:00 18:00 Student Workshop 4 (p. 145) SK 1527 Image-Guided Tumour Ablation (p. 147) 16:00 16:30 17:00 17:30 Technical Exhibition: EXPO First Level (Gallery): 10:00 18:00 Technical Exhibition: EXPO Halls and EXPO Foyer D:10:00 18:00 95

98 Programme Overview Monday, March 11 Room/ Time 08:30 09:00 09:30 A 2 nd Level E³ 1620 Interactive Teaching Session Acute abdominal inflammatory disorders (p. 203) B 2 nd Level SF 16a Special Focus Session My most beautiful mistakes in paediatric radiology (p. 203) C 2 nd Level CC 1621 Urogenital Imaging The usual, the unusual and the dangerous (p. 203) D1 Lower Level CC 1618 CLICK (Clinical Lessons for Imaging Core Knowledge): Never without Arteries The fast and the furious: vascular trauma resulting from traffic accidents (p. 203) D2 Lower Level CC 1619 Oncologic Imaging: Follow-up of Systemic and Local Therapies Follow-up of local treatments of breast cancer (p. 204) E1 Entrance Level RC 1601a GI Tract Diagnosis and staging of esophageal cancer (p. 204) E2 Entrance Level RC 1616 Oncologic Imaging Complications of cancer treatment and the detection of recurrences (p. 204) F1 Entrance Level RC 1601b Abdominal Viscera/GI Tract Abdominal MRI: standard and advanced protocols in clinical settings (p. 205) F2 Entrance Level ESR General Assembly G/H Lower Level RC 1611 Neuro Spine: update on postoperative imaging and minimally invasive procedures (p. 205) 10:00 10:30 11:00 E³ 1720b Interactive Teaching Session Musculoskeletal emergencies (p. 207) E³ 1720a Interactive Teaching Session Pitfalls in pelvic imaging (p. 208) SS 1711 Neuro Brain ischaemia: perfusion and diffusion (p. 255) SS 1704 Chest Technological refinements: from x-rays to micro-imaging (p. 255) SS 1709 Interventional Radiology Abdominal interventions: from TIPS to bile ducts (p. 256) SS 1710 Musculoskeletal Hip: CT and MRI applications (p. 256) SS 1701a GI Tract CT/MR colonography: technical issues and clinical studies (p. 257) SS 1716 Oncologic Imaging Response evaluation in oncology: beyond RECIST (p. 257) SS 1702 Breast Tomosynthesis: a role in clinical practice? (p. 258) SS 1707 Genitourinary Hints on haematuria and adrenals for all (p. 258) 11:30 12:00 12:30 13:00 13:30 14:00 14:30 SS 1811a Neuro Latest developments in neuroimaging (p. 262) SS 1811b Neuro Spinal imaging (p. 262) SS 1803 Cardiac Cardiac imaging: into the future (p. 263) SS 1809 Interventional Radiology New approaches to aortic and peripheral interventions (p. 263) SS 1810 Musculoskeletal Knee: new horizons (p. 264) SS 1801a GI Tract Colorectal cancer: diagnostic biomarkers and response assessment (p. 264) SS 1802a Breast Newer techniques in breast imaging and therapy (p. 265) SS 1802b Breast Maximising cancer detection in breast screening (p. 265) SS 1807 Genitourinary Mixed modalities in GU imaging (p. 266) 15:00 15:30 16:00 16:30 17:00 RC 1901 GI Tract Cross-sectional imaging of colitis (p. 208) RC 1906 Contrast Media How I optimise contrast media administration (p. 208) RC 1910 Musculoskeletal Intra-articular imaging (p. 209) RC 1916 Oncologic Imaging Gastro-enteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumours (GEP-NET): a multidisciplinary update (p. 209) SF 19 Special Focus Session Tablet-computers in radiology: friend or foe? (p. 209) RC 1902 Breast Breast ultrasound (p. 210) RC 1911 Neuro Multiple sclerosis: 2013 update (p. 210) 17:30 Registration: 07:00 18:00 Technical Exhibition: EXPO Halls and EXPO Foyer D:10:00 14:00 96

99 Programme Overview Monday, March 11 I/K Lower Level L/M 1 st Level N/O 1 st Level P 1 st Level Q 1 st Level X 1 st Level Y 1 st Level Z 2 nd Level Studio st Level EPOS 2 nd Level Room/ Time RC 1604 Chest Pulmonary embolism: guidelines and best practice throughout Europe (p. 205) SF 16c Special Focus Session Making homogeneous HCC readings (p. 205) SF 16b Special Focus Session Head and neck cancer battle: the power of imaging studies (p. 206) RC 1603 Cardiac How I report (p. 206) RC 1605 Computer Applications Improving workflow efficiency and quality (p. 207) Joint Session of the ESR and EFSUMB Advances in diagnostic ultrasound: better results through cooperation (p. 207) 08:30 09:00 09:30 10:00 SS 1701b Abdominal Viscera DWI in pancreatic and hepatobiliary diseases (p. 259) SS 1713 Physics in Radiology Breast imaging and novel CT techniques (p. 259) SS 1703 Cardiac Biomarkers, tissue characterisation and remodelling (p. 260) SS 1712 Paediatric Foetal and neonatal imaging (p. 260) SS 1714 Radiographers Mammography (p. 261) SS 1706 Molecular Imaging Molecular imaging in cancer and degenerative diseases (p. 261) 10:30 11:00 11:30 SS 1801b Abdominal Viscera Liver volume, function and focal lesions (p. 266) SS 1813 Physics in Radiology Patient dose management and dose surveys (p. 267) MC 24E The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Head and Neck Temporal bone: so beautiful, yet so complicated (p. 208) SS 1815 Vascular Vascular research (p. 267) MC 25E The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Musculoskeletal Imaging Metabolic/endocrine disease (p. 208) SS 1812 Paediatric Paediatric brain (p. 268) SS 1814 Radiographers Challenges of different imaging techniques (p. 268) SS 1806 Contrast Media Functional studies and safety (p. 269) 12:00 12:30 13:00 13:30 14:00 14:30 15:00 15:30 RC 1904 Chest Phenotypes in obstructive airway disease: how should I image, analyse and report? (p. 210) RC 1908 Head and Neck Temporal bone: imaging the most common symptoms and signs (p. 210) RC 1915 Vascular Lower extremity venous insufficiency (p. 211) RC 1912 Paediatric Normal variants in paediatric imaging: not to be confused with disease (p. 211) 16:00 16:30 17:00 17:30 Technical Exhibition: EXPO First Level (Gallery): 10:00 18:00 97

100

101 Programme by Topic 100 New Horizons Sessions 101 State of the Art Symposia 102 Special Focus Sessions 107 Professional Challenges Session 108 Multidisciplinary Sessions Managing Patients with Cancer 109 Categorical Courses 109 CLICK (Clinical Lessons for Imaging Core Knowledge): Never without Arteries 110 Oncologic Imaging: Follow-up of Systemic and Local Therapies 111 Urogential Imaging 112 Mini Courses 112 Organs from A to Z: Heart 112 Controversies in Breast Imaging 113 The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Head and Neck 113 The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Musculoskeletal Imaging 114 Joint Course of ESR and RSNA 115 Refresher Courses / Scientific Sessions 115 Abdominal and Gastrointestinal 117 Breast 118 Cardiac 120 Chest 121 Computer Applications 122 Molecular Imaging and Contrast Media 122 Genitourinary 123 Head and Neck 124 Interventional Radiology 126 Musculoskeletal 127 Neuro 129 Paediatric 130 Physics in Radiology 131 Radiographers 132 Vascular 133 Oncologic Imaging 134 Emergency Radiology 135 EFOMP Workshop 136 E 3 European Excellence in Education 136 Foundation Course: Neuroimaging 137 Interactive Teaching Sessions 139 Accompanying Sessions 139 ESR Radiation Protection Session th Post-Processing Face-Off Session 139 EIBIR/EORTC Symposium 139 ESOR Session 140 Standards and Audit Session 140 EIBIR/EuroAIM Session 140 EIBIR Session / Horizon Image Interpretation Quiz 141 Euro-BioImaging 141 RTF Highlighted Lectures 141 Junior Image Interpretation Quiz 141 Joint Session ESR/EFSUMB 142 EIBIR presents IMAGINE 144 Rising Stars Programme 146 Update Your Skills (Practical Courses) 146 How to biopsy with US guidance 147 Image-guided tumor ablation 149 Satellite Symposia 153 Industry Hands-on Workshops Especially marked for ANCED and IOR radiologists or suitable for = Interactive session with electronic voting/self assessment = Session broadcast live at myesr.org

102 New Horizons Sessions Friday, March 8, 16:00 17:30, Room C NH 7: Cartilage imaging Chairman s Introduction [A-149] V.N. Cassar-Pullicino; Oswestry/UK Sodium imaging [A-150] S. Trattnig; Vienna/AT dgemric (delayed gadolinium-enhanced MR imaging of cartilage) [A-151] G. Welsch; Erlangen/DE Diffusion tensor imaging [A-152] C. Glaser; Munich/DE CEST (chemical exchange saturation transfer) [A-153] B. Schmitt; Vienna/AT Panel discussion: What are the envisaged future advances in these cartilage imaging techniques and can we expect to introduce them into clinical practice? Saturday, March 9, 08:30 10:00, Room C NH 8: MR/PET: a marriage made in heaven or hell? Chairman s Introduction [A-207] B. Hamm; Berlin/DE MR/PET in neuroimaging: nuclear medicine [A-208] O. Sabri; Leipzig/DE MR/PET in neuroimaging: radiology [A-209] B.R. Rosen; Charlestown, MA/US MR/PET in oncologic imaging: nuclear medicine [A-210] O. Ratib; Geneva/CH MR/PET in oncologic imaging: radiology [A-211] H.-P. Schlemmer; Heidelberg/DE Panel discussion: What benefits and risks should we expect in terms of basic research, clinical service, and economics? Sunday, March 10, 14:00 15:30, Room B NH 14: Imaging of the mind Chairman s introduction: New insights into the state of consciousness through neuroimaging [420] S. Sunaert; Leuven/BE Brain wiring: resting state fmri [A-421] F. Barkhof; Amsterdam/NL fmri in disorders of consciousness: diagnostic and legal challenges [A-422] C. Di Perri; Liège/BE fmri of cognitive functions: discriminating normal aging, minimal cognitive impairment and Alzheimer s disease [A-423] A. Falini; Milan/IT Panel discussion: New insights into the state of consciousness through neuroimaging. Where are we and where should we go? 100

103 State of the Art Symposia Friday, March 8, 08:30 10:00, Room E1 SA 4: Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) of the abdomen Chairman s Introduction [A-068] Y. Menu; Paris/FR DWI of the abdomen: a tutorial for beginners [A-069] H.C. Thoeny; Berne/CH Liver and pancreas: answering burning questions [A-070] F. Caseiro-Alves; Coimbra/PT DWI of abdominal lymph nodes: PET competitive or just pseudo? [A-071] S. Gourtsoyianni; London/UK Clinical cases Saturday, March 9, 16:00 17:30, Room B SA 11: Evaluation of response in haematological malignancy Chairman s Introduction [A-298] E. de Kerviler; Paris/FR Opportunities and limitations of PET, CT and MRI answering the haematologist s questions [A-299] T.C. Kwee; Utrecht/NL Evaluation of response in multiple myeloma [A-300] J. Hillengass; Heidelberg/DE Evaluation of response in lymphoma with PET/CT [A-301] S.F. Barrington; London/UK Panel discussion: Is it time for biomarker response criteria in haematological malignancies? Sunday, March 10, 16:00 17:30, Room E2 SA 15: Imaging impingement syndromes Chairman s Introduction [A-496] C.W.A. Pfirrmann; Zurich/CH Shoulder [A-497] P. Robinson; Leeds/UK Ankle [A-498] M. Maas; Amsterdam/NL Hip [A-499] K. Wörtler; Munich/DE Panel discussion: Form or function: is impingement a clinical or imaging diagnosis? 101

104 Special Focus Sessions Friday, March 8, 08:30 10:00, Room F2 SF 4a: MRI of the lung: to go? Chairman s introduction: Apéritif [A-080] H. Kauczor; Heidelberg/DE The sequence buffet [A-081] J.M. Wild; Sheffield/UK Preparing your menu [A-082] J. Biederer; Heidelberg/DE Bon appétit! Starters : cystic fibrosis, pneumonia and pulmonary embolism [A-083] M.U. Puderbach; Heidelberg/DE Bon appétit! Main course : pulmonary and mediastinal neoplasms [A-084] E.J.R. van Beek; Edinburgh/UK Panel discussion: Bon appétit! Dessert : what are the benefits of MRI of the lung in clinical workflow and decision-making? Friday, March 8, 08:30 10:00, Room Q SF 4b: Justifying CT in paediatric radiology Chairman s Introduction [A-105] C. Owens; London/UK How should CT be optimised? [A-106] W.A. Kalender; Erlangen/DE When, how, and why I perform CT [A-107] C. Owens; London/UK Why and when CT does not need to be performed [A-108] M. Claudon; Vandoeuvre-les-Nancy/FR Panel discussion: Do we have guidelines for paediatric CT? Do we have alternatives? Friday, March 8, 16:00 17:30, Room F1 SF 7a: Radiographers and ultrasonography in Europe Chairmen s Introduction [A-167] D. Pekarovic; Ljubljana/SI V. Vilgrain; Clichy/FR Levels of training and competencies across Europe [A-169] M. Stanton; Dublin/IE The role and impact of the radiographer conducted US in Portugal [A-169] R. Ribeiro; Lisbon/PT Evolution of radiography education for US in the Netherlands since 1990, and its influence on their role [A-170] G. Plug; Haarlem/NL Panel discussion: What are the challenges and barriers facing role extension? 102

105 Special Focus Sessions Friday, March 8, 16:00 17:30, Room F2 SF 7b: Imaging and radiotherapy: all you need to know Chairman s Introduction [A-171] V.J. Goh; London/UK Modern radiotherapy: what are the new technologies? [A-172] V. Valentini; Rome/IT PET/CT for radiotherapy planning: how does it assist IMRT? [A-173] A. Loft; Copenhagen/DK Response evaluation and treatment adaptation [A-174] K. Haustermans; Leuven/BE MR imaging biomarkers for response evaluation [A-175] R.G.H. Beets-Tan; Maastricht/NL Panel discussion: How can imaging improve outcomes in radiotherapy? Friday, March 8, 16:00 17:30, Room Q SF 7c: Imaging in intensive care patients Chairman s Introduction [A-193] A. Palkó; Szeged/HU Value of MRI for intensive care coma patients with unclear brain pathology [A-194] P.C. Maly Sundgren; Lund/SE Computed tomography of pathologic lung conditions complicating intensive care treatment [A-195] C.M. Schaefer-Prokop; Amersfoort/NL Point-of-care versus diagnostic ultrasound in the intensive care unit [A-196] E. Danse; Brussels/BE Imaging in polytrauma [A-197] U. Linsenmaier; Munich/DE Panel discussion: What training and special skills are radiologists expected to have in order to work with intensive care units? How should we manage the clinical and technical challenges posed by this very specific environment? Saturday, March 9, 08:30 10:00, Room B SF 8a: Is diagnostic catheter angiography still useful in neuroimaging? Chairman s Introduction [A-203] M. Essig; Erlangen/DE What can we expect from vascular diagnostic procedures? [A-204] R. Siemund; Lund/SE Can non-invasive techniques as CTA and MRA replace catheter angio for diagnostic work-up? [A-205] L. Van den Hauwe; Brasschaat/BE Diagnostic catheter angiography is not dead: current indications and advantages over the non-invasive techniques [A-206] T. Engelhorn; Erlangen/DE Panel discussion: The pros and cons of diagnostic catheter angiography in neuroimaging Saturday, March 9, 08:30 10:00, Room F2 SF 8b: GI imaging: technological advances and clinical applications Chairman s Introduction [A-229] S.A. Jackson; Plymouth/UK CEUS of the bowel wall: when and how [A-230] F. Maccioni; Rome/IT Dual-energy (spectral) CT: GI applications [A-231] P. Rogalla; Toronto, ON/CA MR imaging of GI tract motility [A-232] S.A. Taylor; London/UK Panel discussion: When should we integrate these technological advances into our routine practice? Saturday, March 9, 16:00 17:30, Room F1 SF 11: Adults with congenital heart disease (GUCH) Chairman s introduction: Why should a radiologist gather information on GUCH patients? [A-321] M. Gutberlet; Leipzig/DE A list of typical surgical procedures: the top ten in GUCH [A-322] M. Hübler; Zurich/CH Adults are not just big children : differences between children and adults [A-323] A.M. Taylor; London/UK Which modality, for which patient? MRI or CT, that s the question [A-324] J. Bremerich; Basle/CH Panel discussion: Can we now get all the information we need to treat GUCH patients, non-invasively? 103

106 Special Focus Sessions Sunday, March 10, 08:30 10:00, Room F1 SF 12: Quantitative imaging biomarkers in cardiac radiology Chairman s Introduction [A-368] A. van der Lugt; Rotterdam/NL Imaging biomarkers [A-369] J.-P. Vallée; Geneva/CH Imaging biomarkers for myocardial function [A-370] J. Bogaert; Leuven/BE Imaging biomarkers of myocardial viability [A-371] P. Croisille; Saint-Etienne/FR Imaging biomarkers of myocardial ischaemia [A-372] L. Natale; Sesto Fiorentino/IT Panel discussion: How should we implement quantitative biomarkers in clinical practice? Sunday, March 10, 14:00 15:30, Room F1 SF 14a: Palliative interventional techniques in cancer Chairman s Introduction [A-441] K.A. Hausegger; Klagenfurt/AT Cementoplasty of lytic bone metastasis [A-442] A. Gangi; Strasbourg/FR Pleural drainage, pleurodesis [A-443] F. Gleeson; Oxford/UK Percutaneous nephrostomy (PCN) and ureteral stenting [A-444] F. Orsi; Milan/IT Biliary procedures [A-445] M. Krokidis; Cambridge/UK Panel discussion: How invasive can palliation be? When to say no to palliative treatment? Sunday, March 10, 14:00 15:30, Room G/H SF 14b: Comprehensive CT cardiothoracic imaging: a new challenge for radiologists Chairman s Introduction [A-449] L. Bonomo; Rome/IT How to optimise integrated cardiothoracic imaging with CT [A-450] U.J. Schoepf; Charleston, SC/US Coronary artery imaging from a chest CT examination: when and how [A-451] R. Marano; Rome/IT Cardiopulmonary functional imaging from a chest CT examination: when and how [A-452] E.J.R. van Beek; Edinburgh/UK Panel discussion: Is a single CT scan technique and protocol feasible for all the cardiothoracic problems? Sunday, March 10, 14:00 15:30, Room Z SF 14c: Advances in forensic radiology Chairman s Introduction [A-471] G. Guglielmi; Foggia/IT Imaging in forensic medicine [A-472] M. Thali; Zurich/CH Advances in post-mortem CT angiography [A-473] S. Grabherr; Lausanne/CH Virtual anthropology and forensic identification using MDCT [A-474] F. Dedouit; Toulouse/FR Forensic MR imaging [A-475] T. Ruder; Zurich/CH Panel discussion: Which imaging technique for which forensic scenario? Sunday, March 10, 16:00 17:30, Room F1 SF 15a: Traumatic brain injury Chairman s Introduction [A-500] A. Rovira-Cañellas; Barcelona/ES Acute brain trauma: CT vs MRI [A-501] M. Muto; Naples/IT New imaging techniques in the detection and quantification of brain damage [A-502] S. Sunaert; Leuven/BE Advanced imaging of brain trauma: outcome prediction [A-503] D. Galanaud; Paris/FR Cerebrovascular trauma: diagnosis and therapy [A-504] T. Krings; Toronto, ON/CA Panel discussion: Role of neuroimaging in traumatic brain injury in 2013 Sunday, March 10, 16:00 17:30, Room F2 SF 15b: Digital breast tomosynthesis Chairman s Introduction [A-505] G. Gennaro; Padua/IT Optimisation of image acquisition and reconstruction in DBT [A-506] M.J. Yaffe; Toronto, ON/CA Current role of DBT in diagnostic imaging [A-507] S. Zackrisson; Malmö/SE Clinical aspects of computer aided detection and diagnosis in DBT [A-508] H.-P. Chan; Ann Arbor, MI/US Panel discussion: Digital breast tomosynthesis: replacing or just supporting standard mammography? 104

107 Special Focus Sessions Monday, March 11, 08:30 10:00, Room B SF 16a: My most beautiful mistakes in paediatric radiology Chairman s Introduction [A-530] P. Tomà; Rome/IT Abdomen [A-531] S.G.F. Robben; Maastricht/NL CNS [A-532] B. Bernardi; Rome/IT Musculoskeletal [A-533] K. Rosendahl; Bergen/NO Panel discussion: How have you changed or improved yourself after recognising your mistakes? Monday, March 11, 08:30 10:00, Room N/O SF 16b: Head and neck cancer battle: the power of imaging studies Chairman s Introduction [A-568] V. Vandecaveye; Leuven/BE Building blocks for locoregional staging of head and neck tumours [A-569] F.A. Pameijer; Utrecht/NL Detection of tumour recurrence in head and neck cancer: challenges and pitfalls [A-570] M. Becker; Geneva/CH Locoregional treatment failure in head and neck cancer: causes and clinical implications [A-571] R. Maroldi; Brescia/IT P. Nicolai; Brescia/IT Panel discussion: Advanced imaging in clinical practice: how does it help the patient? 105

108 Special Focus Sessions Monday, March 11, 08:30 10:00, Room L/M SF 16c: Making homogeneous HCC readings Chairman s Introduction [A-563] C. Bartolozzi; Pisa/IT HCC diagnosis: how to report typical findings [A-564] C. Ayuso; Barcelona/ES How to interpret and report atypical findings [A-565] C.J. Zech; Basle/CH How to evaluate tumour response to therapies [A-566] J. Ricke; Magdeburg/DE Information technology: the practical impact on the management of HCC patients [A-567] I. Bargellini; Pisa/IT Panel discussion: Case-based discussion: a practical demonstration of how interpretation and reporting affect patient management Monday, March 11, 16:00 17:30, Room F1 SF 19: Tablet computers in radiology: friend or foe? Chairman s Introduction [A-605] E. Neri; Pisa/IT Tablet computers: a technical overview [A-606] J. Fernandez-Bayó; Sabadell/ES Radiological features of the tablet computer [A-607] L. Faggioni; Pisa/IT Reading DICOM images on the tablet [A-608] O. Ratib; Geneva/CH Mobile teleradiology with tablet computers: a critical appraisal [A-609] E.R. Ranschaert; s-hertogenbosch/nl Panel discussion: Are we ready and confident enough to use tablet computers in clinical practice? How and when? 106

109 Professional Challenges Sessions Thursday, March 7, 16:00 17:30, Room F1 PC 3: Bringing radiology to medical undergraduates Chairman s introduction: why does it matter? [A-022] S.J. Golding; Oxford/UK Establishing a radiological presence in the undergraduate curriculum [A-023] R.N. Gibson; Melbourne, VIC/AU Finding the time and resources in the radiology department [A-024] J.L. del Cura; Bilbao/ES Involving the undergraduate with the radiology department [A-025] K. Verstraete; Gent/BE How to ensure teachers are suitably trained [A-026] E. Szabó; Szeged/HU Panel discussion: What needs to be done to overcome the constraints on radiologists? Friday, March 8, 08:30 10:00, Room P PC 4: The visibility of the radiologist Chairman s introduction [A-100] J.A. Reekers; Amsterdam/NL How to optimise the visibility of the radiology department [A-101] J.A. Reekers; Amsterdam/NL Start early with radiological visibility [A-102] M. Maas; Amsterdam/NL Clinical radiology puts you in the spotlight: taking over the clinical responsibility [A-103] E. de Kerviler; Paris/FR Radiology in the 21st century: time to come out of the dark? [A-104] A. Adam; London/UK Panel discussion: Should we improve the visibility of the radiologist? And if yes, how? Sunday, March 10, 08:30 10:00, Room Z PC 12: Legal matters related to multimodality techniques Chairman s introduction [A-398] K. Åhlström Riklund; Umea/SE Radiological legal matters in eastern Europe [A-399] M. Studniarek; Gdansk/PL Legal matters in nuclear medicine [A-400] G.K. von Schulthess; Zurich/CH Legal matters in Scandinavia [A-401] K. Åhlström Riklund; Umea/SE International, regional, national and local framework requirements [A-402] A. Perkins; Nottingham/UK Panel discussion: A discussion with questions from the audience about the differences across Europe Sunday, March 10, 10:30 12:00, Studio 2013 PC 13: The radiologist, the clinician and the patient: an impossible trio? Chairman: C.D. Claussen; Tübingen/DE Moderator: W. Wagner; Vienna/AT The aim of this session is to initiate an open and frank discussion among different stakeholders about the current role of the radiologist in relation to the patient, other clinicians and the public. Which procedures are efficient? Which are inefficient? What should be changed in future and what is manageable during clinical routine? As the participants represent various disciplines, we hope to come to a realistic outlook. Participants: A. Adam; London/UK (Radiologist) G. Marckmann; Munich/DE (Medical Ethicist) M. Peck-Radosavljevic; Vienna/AT (Internal Medicine Doctor) J.A. Reekers; Amsterdam/NL (Radiologist) Saturday, March 9, 16:00 17:30, Room F2 PC 11: Personalised radiology Chairman s introduction [A-325] G.P. Krestin; Rotterdam/NL Personalised medicine: hope or hype? [A-326] O. Golubnitschaja; Bonn/DE Imaging for disease prediction [A-327] M. Vernooij; Rotterdam/NL Molecular imaging: a solution for personalised diagnosis and treatment? [A-328] F.M.A. Kiessling; Aachen/DE Role of imaging in personalised therapy monitoring [A-329] A.R. Padhani; Northwood/UK Panel discussion: Is imaging providing an added value to the omics of personalised medicine? 107

110 Multidisciplinary Sessions Managing Patients with Cancer Thursday, March 7, 16:00 17:30, Room E2 MS 3: Colorectal liver metastases Chairman s introduction [A-017] V. Vilgrain; Clichy/FR Role of imaging in the pretreatment assessment [A-018] V. Vilgrain; Clichy/FR Surgical resection of liver metastases: when and how [A-019] J. Belghiti; Clichy/FR Chemotherapy and novel therapy in colorectal liver metastases: rationale, indications and results [A-020] S. Faivre; Clichy/FR Role of image-guided treatment in colorectal liver metastases [A-021] M. Abdel Rehim; Clichy/FR Case presentation and discussion Friday, March 8, 08:30 10:00, Room F1 MS 4: Hepatocellular carcinoma Chairman s introduction [A-075] B. Sangro; Pamplona/ES Abdominal radiology [A-076] A. Benito; Pamplona/ES Interventional radiology [A-077] J.I. Bilbao; Pamplona/ES Surgery [A-078] F. Pardo; Pamplona/ES Hepatology/oncology [A-079] B. Sangro; Pamplona/ES Case presentation and discussion Saturday, March 9, 16:00 17:30, Room E2 MS 11: Cholangiocarcinoma Chairman s introduction [A-316] B. Hamm; Berlin/DE Surgery of hilar and extrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma [A-317] P. Neuhaus; Berlin/DE Radiology diagnostics and portal vein embolisation in hilar and extrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma [A-318] T. Denecke; Berlin/DE Medical treatment of cholangiocarcinomas [A-319] H. Riess; Berlin/DE Radiology diagnostics and image guided therapies in intrahepatic cholangiocarcinomas [A-320] B. Gebauer; Berlin/DE Case presentation (part 1): hilar cholangiocarcinoma Case presentation (part 2): CCC multimodal treatment 108

111 Categorical Courses CLICK (Clinical Lessons for Imaging Core Knowledge): Never without Arteries Saturday, March 9, 08:30 10:00, Room D1 CC 818: How old are you in reality? Vascular age and clinical events Moderator: L. Lonn; Copenhagen/DK A. Clinical considerations [A-212] E. Minar; Vienna/AT B. Imaging techniques and typical findings [A-213] H.J. Lamb; Leiden/NL C. Interactive case discussion: how to deal with the results? [A-214] A. van der Lugt; Rotterdam/NL Saturday, March 9, 16:00 17:30, Room D1 CC 1118: Stroke Moderator: M.M. Thurnher; Vienna/AT A. Clinical considerations [A-306] P.M. Parizel; Antwerp/BE B. Imaging techniques and typical findings [A-307] J. Vymazal; Prague/CZ C. Interactive case discussion: what is next after diffusion and perfusion? [A-308] A. Dörfler; Erlangen/DE Sunday, March 10, 08:30 10:00, Room D1 CC 1218: Chest pain: vascular non-cardiac causes Moderator: E. Brountzos; Athens/GR A. Clinical considerations [A-355] R. Iezzi; Rome/IT B. Imaging techniques and typical findings [A-356] F. Wolf; Vienna/AT C. Interactive case discussion: what is really important? [A-357] T.R.C. Johnson; Munich/DE Sunday, March 10, 14:00 15:30, Room D1 CC 1418: Angina, non-occlusive mesenteric ischaemia (NOMI) and friends: vascular causes of acute abdomen Moderator: O. Chan; London/UK A. Clinical considerations [A-428] P. Rogalla; Toronto, ON/CA B. Imaging techniques and typical findings [A-429] M. Prokop; Nijmegen/NL C. Interactive case discussion: how to proceed? [A-430] A. Palkó; Szeged/HU Sunday, March 10, 16:00 17:30, Room D1 CC 1518: When every step counts: imaging and management of peripheral arterial occlusive disease (PAOD) Moderator: J.F.M. Meaney; Dublin/IE A. Clinical considerations [A-486] M. Schillinger; Vienna/AT B. Imaging techniques and typical findings [A-487] T. Leiner; Utrecht/NL C. Interactive case discussion: how to deal with the results? Typical cases, pitfalls, and what is next? [A-488] L.P. Lawler; Dublin/IE Monday, March 11, 08:30 10:00, Room D1 CC 1618: The fast and the furious: vascular trauma resulting from traffic accidents Moderator: U. Linsenmaier; Munich/DE A. Clinical considerations [A-538] H. Hoppe; Berne/CH B. Imaging techniques and typical findings [A-539] H. Alkadhi; Zurich/CH C. Interactive case discussion [A-540] R. Morgan; London/UK = Interactive session with electronic voting/self assessment 109

112 Categorical Courses Oncologic Imaging: Follow-up of Systemic and Local Therapies Friday, March 8, 16:00 17:30, Room D2 CC 719: Imaging after systemic therapies: the standards Moderator: E.L. van Persijn van Meerten; Leiden/NL A. RECIST criteria [A-157] Y. Menu; Paris/FR B. PERCIST: evolving considerations for PET response criteria in solid tumours [A-158] T.F. Hany; Zurich/CH C. Evaluation of brain tumours [A-159] C. Majós; L Hospitalet de Llobregat/ES Saturday, March 9, 08:30 10:00, Room D2 CC 819: Imaging after systemic therapies: advanced techniques Moderator: D.-M. Koh; Sutton/UK A. What can we expect from biomarkers [A-215] B. Van Beers; Clichy/FR B. MRI biomarkers: from acquisition to post-processing [A-216] O. Lucidarme; Paris/FR C. Assessing the precision and accuracy of biomarker imaging: is it reproducible? [A-217] C.B. Sirlin; San Diego, CA/US Sunday, March 10, 08:30 10:00, Room D2 CC 1219: Assessing HCC response Moderator: R. Lencioni; Pisa/IT A. Systemic therapies [A-358] V. Vilgrain; Clichy/FR B. Endovascular therapies [A-359] R. Salem; Chicago, IL/US C. Ablative therapies [A-360] C. Ayuso; Barcelona/ES Sunday, March 10, 14:00 15:30, Room D2 CC 1419: Follow-up of thermal ablation (part I) Moderator: W. Prevoo; Amsterdam/NL A. The zone of cell death and collateral phenomena on cross-sectional imaging: from histopathology to the standardisation of terms [A-431] A. Denys; Lausanne/CH B. PET/CT for the evaluation of ablative therapy: Who? Where? When? Does it help? [A-432] D. Deandreis; Villejuif/FR C. Everyday practice: MR and CT for evaluating response to thermal ablation [A-433] C. Dromain; Villejuif/FR Sunday, March 10, 16:00 17:30, Room D2 CC 1519: Follow-up of thermal ablation (part II) Moderator: P.L. Pereira; Heilbronn/DE A. Follow-up imaging of thermal ablative therapies for lung tumours [A-489] A.R. Gillams; London/UK B. Follow-up imaging of percutaneous local treatment of bone tumours [A-490] F. Deschamps; Villejuif/FR C. Follow-up imaging of thermal ablative therapies for kidney tumours [A-491] D.J. Breen; Southampton/UK Monday, March 11, 08:30 10:00, Room D2 CC 1619: Follow-up of local treatments of breast cancer Moderator: M.H. Fuchsjäger; Graz/AT A. MRI-guided HIFU therapies in the breast [A-541] M. Sklair-Levy; Tel Aviv/IL B. Pre- and post- imaging appearance of breast lesion excision system (BLES) lesions [A-542] S. Allen; Sutton/UK C. Common features and pitfalls in imaging the treated breast [A-543] J. Camps Herrero; Valencia/ES 110

113 Categorical Courses Urogential Imaging Saturday, March 9, 16:00 17:30, Room C CC 1121: Stones: diagnosis and intervention Moderator: N.C. Cowan; Oxford/UK A. Imaging patients with renal colic [A-302] G. Heinz-Peer; St. Pölten/AT B. Percutaneous treatment of renal stones [A-303] S. Moussa; Edinburgh/UK C. Intervention in ureteral obstruction and ureteral trauma [A-304] A. Magnusson; Uppsala/SE D. Interactive case discussion [A-305] N.C. Cowan; Oxford/UK Sunday, March 10, 08:30 10:00, Room C CC 1221: Retroperitoneal anatomy, variants and diseases Moderator: U.G. Mueller-Lisse; Munich/DE A. Retroperitoneal anatomy: an embryology based approach [A-351] F.M. Danza; Rome/IT B. Anatomical variants and benign diseases [A-352] S. Merran; Paris/FR C. Malignant tumours [A-353] R.H. Oyen; Leuven/BE D. Interactive case discussion [A-354] U.G. Mueller-Lisse; Munich/DE Sunday, March 10, 10:30 12:00, Room C CC 1321: The female pelvis Moderator: E. Sala; New York, NY/US A. Imaging congenital anomalies of the female genital system [A-409] K. Kinkel; Chêne-Bougeries/CH B. Benign ovarian masses [A-410] R. Forstner; Salzburg/AT C. Imaging the infertile couple [A-411] J. McHugo; Birmingham/UK D. Interactive case discussion [A-412] E. Sala; New York, NY/US Sunday, March 10, 14:00 15:30, Room C CC 1421: The male genital system Moderator: J.O. Barentsz; Nijmegen/NL A. Imaging of prostate cancer: an update [A-424] J.J. Fütterer; Nijmegen/NL B. Scrotal tumours [A-425] P.S. Sidhu; London/UK C. The penis [A-426] M. Bertolotto; Trieste/IT D. Interactive case discussion [A-427] J.O. Barentsz; Nijmegen/NL Sunday, March 10, 16:00 17:30, Room C CC 1521: Paediatrics Moderator: M. Claudon; Vandoeuvre-les-Nancy/FR A. Imaging strategies for children: urinary tract infection and vesico-ureteral reflux [A-482] M. Riccabona; Graz/AT B. Paediatric adrenal tumours [A-483] P.-H. Vivier; Rouen/FR C. Prenatal detection of GU diseases [A-484] F.E. Avni; Lille/FR D. Interactive case discussion [A-485] M. Claudon; Vandoeuvre-les-Nancy/FR Monday, March 11, 08:30 10:00, Room C CC 1621: The usual, the unusual and the dangerous Moderator: S.K. Morcos; Sheffield/UK A. Imaging of renal Trauma [A-534] V. Logager; Copenhagen/DK B. Postoperative anatomy and complications after GU interventions [A-535] H.C. Thoeny; Berne/CH C. GU complications in patients with spinal cord damage [A-536] S. Agarwal; Wrexham/UK D. Interactive case discussion [A-537] S.K. Morcos; Sheffield/UK = Interactive session with electronic voting/self assessment 111

114 Mini Courses Organs from A to Z: Heart Thursday, March 7, 16:00 17:30, Room L/M MC 322: Technical and anatomical fundamentals for imaging the heart Moderator: A. de Roos; Leiden/NL A. Anatomy: too many details in cardiac imaging? [A-036] A.J.B.S Madureira; Porto/PT B. Examination protocols for imaging the heart: CT [A-037] H. Alkadhi; Zurich/CH C. Examination protocols for imaging the heart: MRI [A-038] N.L. Kelekis; Athens/GR Interactive case discussion [A-039] A. de Roos; Leiden/NL Friday, March 8, 08:30 10:00, Room L/M MC 422: Non-ischaemic heart disease Moderator: V.E. Sinitsyn; Moscow/RU A. Congenital heart disease [A-091] M. Gutberlet; Leipzig/DE B. Valvular disease [A-092] J. Bogaert; Leuven/BE C. Cardiomyopathies [A-093] P. Sipola; Kuopio/FI Interactive case discussion [A-094] V.E. Sinitsyn; Moscow/RU Friday, March 8, 16:00 17:30, Room L/M MC 722: Ischaemic heart disease Moderator: C. Catalano; Rome/IT A. Imaging of the coronary arteries: the Holy Grail [A-182] G. Roditi; Glasgow/UK B. The ischaemic myocardium: what to do? [A-183] C. Loewe; Vienna/AT C. The ischaemic heart after treatment: still alive? [A-184] G. Bastarrika; Pamplona/ES Interactive case discussion [A-185] C. Catalano; Rome/IT Controversies in Breast Imaging Friday, March 8, 08:30 10:00, Room D1 MC 423: Overdiagnosis from screening mammography: should we care about it? Moderator: T.H. Helbich; Vienna/AT Teaser: H.J. de Koning; Rotterdam/NL A. The risk of overdiagnosis from screening mammography [A-062] E. Paci; Florence/IT B. How breast radiologists should control the risk of overdiagnosis [A-063] U. Bick; Berlin/DE Discussion [A-064] T.H. Helbich; Vienna/AT H.J. de Koning; Rotterdam/NL Friday, March 8, 14:00 15:30, Room D1 MC 623: Preoperative MRI in newly diagnosed breast cancer: to do or not to do? Moderator: F. Sardanelli; Milan/IT Teaser: N. Houssami; Sydney/AU A. Why we should do preoperative MRI [A-128] W.A. Kaiser; Jena/DE B. Reasons not to do preoperative MRI [A-129] M.G. Wallis; Cambridge/UK Discussion [A-130] F. Sardanelli; Milan/IT N. Houssami; Sydney/AU Friday, March 8, 16:00 17:30, Room D1 MC 723: Should we add ultrasound to mammographic screening of dense breasts? Moderator: F.J. Gilbert; Cambridge/UK Teaser: A. Tardivon; Paris/FR A. We can reduce the interval cancer rate [A-154] W. Berg; Pittsburgh, PA/US B. Do we have enough radiologists to do it? Alternatives to ultrasound to reduce interval cancers [A-155] A. Frigerio; Turin/IT Discussion [A-156] F.J. Gilbert; Cambridge/UK A. Tardivon; Paris/FR = Interactive session with electronic voting/self assessment 112

115 The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Head and Neck Thursday, March 7, 12:30 13:30, Room N/O MC 24A: A taste of the oral cavity and salivary glands [A-001] A. Borges; Lisbon/PT Friday, March 8, 12:30 13:30, Room Q MC 24B: The infrahyoid neck and lymph nodes [A-126] M.G. Mack; Munich/DE Saturday, March 9, 12:30 13:30, Room N/O MC 24C: Main pipelines of the neck: pharynx and larynx [A-274] M. Becker; Geneva/CH Sunday, March 10, 12:30 13:30, Room Q MC 24D: The suprahyoid neck: anatomy and diagnostic algorithm of the neck mass [A-418] A. Trojanowska; Lublin/PL Monday, March 11, 12:30 13:30, Room N/O MC 24E: Temporal bone: so beautiful, yet so complicated [A-588] B. De Foer; Antwerp/BE Mini Courses The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Musculoskeletal Imaging Thursday, March 7, 12:30 13:30, Room P MC 25A: Trauma [A-002] A. Kassarjian; Majadahonda/ES Friday, March 8, 12:30 13:30, Room P MC 25B: Degenerative disorders [A-125] T.M. Link; San Francisco, CA/US Saturday, March 9, 12:30 13:30, Room P MC 25C: Inflammatory/infectious disorders [A-275] V.N. Cassar-Pullicino; Oswestry/UK Sunday, March 10, 12:30 13:30, Room P MC 25D: Neoplastic/non-neoplastic lesions [A-417] F.M.H.M. Vanhoenacker; Antwerp/BE Monday, March 11, 12:30 13:30, Room P MC 25E: Metabolic/endocrine disease [A-589] J. Freyschmidt; Bremen/DE 113

116 Mini Courses Joint Course of ESR and RSNA (Radiological Society of North America) Friday, March 8, 08:30 10:00, Room I/K MC 428: Essentials in oncologic imaging: what radiologists need to know (part 1) Moderator: D.M. Panicek; New York, NY/US A. Principles of oncologic imaging and reporting [A-088] D.M. Panicek; New York, NY/US B. Lung cancers (primary, metastases) [A-089] C.J. Herold; Vienna/AT C. Colon cancer [A-090] R.M. Gore; Evanston, IL/US Questions Friday, March 8, 10:30 12:00, Room I/K MC 528: Essentials in oncologic imaging: what radiologists need to know (part 2) Moderator: H. Hricak; New York, NY/US A. Pancreatic cancer [A-122] F. Caseiro-Alves; Coimbra/PT B. Kidney cancer [A-123] E.K. Fishman; Baltimore, MD/US C. Ovarian cancer [A-124] H. Hricak; New York, NY/US Questions Friday, March 8, 14:00 15:30, Room I/K MC 628: Essentials in oncologic imaging: what radiologists need to know (part 3) Moderator: Y. Menu; Paris/FR A. Oncologic imaging: terminology, definitions and buzzwords [A-134] Y. Menu; Paris/FR B. Liver cancers (primary, metastases) [A-135] R.L. Baron; Chicago, IL/US C. Prostate cancer [A-136] J.O. Barentsz; Nijmegen/NL Questions Friday, March 8, 16:00 17:30, Room I/K MC 728: Essentials in oncologic imaging: what radiologists need to know (part 4) Moderator: M.F. Reiser; Munich/DE A. Lymphoma [A-179] H. Schoder; New York, NY/US B. Musculoskeletal neoplasms [A-180] M.F. Reiser; Munich/DE C. Chemo- and radiation therapy-induced toxicity [A-181] H.-U. Kauczor; Heidelberg/DE Questions = Interactive session with electronic voting/self assessment 114

117 Refresher Courses / Scientific Sessions Abdominal and Gastrointestinal Thursday, March 7, 10:30 12:00, Room E2 SS 101a: Acute bowel diseases: challenges and solutions [B-0051 B-0060] Moderators: J.B. Dormagen; Oslo/NO S. Leschka; St. Gallen/CH Thursday, March 7, 10:30 12:00, Room I/K SS 101b: Liver fibrosis and cirrhosis: elastography and biomarkers [B-0091 B-0100] Moderators: R. Faschingbauer; Innsbruck/AT T.J. Kroencke; Berlin/DE Thursday, March 7, 14:00 15:30, Room E2 SS 201a: Bowel imaging: protocol optimisation and intervention [B-0190 B-0199] Moderators: V. Cantisani; Rome/IT P. Popovic; Ljubljana/SI Thursday, March 7, 14:00 15:30, Room I/K SS 201b: Hepatocellular carcinoma: diagnosis and management [B-0230 B-0239] Moderators: G. Brancatelli; Palermo/IT M. Bruegel; Munich/DE Thursday, March 7, 16:00 17:30, Room C RC 301: Staging and restaging of rectal and anal cancer Chairman s introduction [A-007] R.G.H. Beets-Tan; Maastricht/NL A. Local staging of anal and rectal cancer and impact on initial therapeutic strategy [A-008] S. Gourtsoyianni; London/UK B. Assessment of rectal cancer response [A-009] L. Curvo-Semedo; Coimbra/PT C. Assessment of anal cancer response [A-010] V.J. Goh; London/UK Panel discussion: What clinicians expect from us in rectal and anal cancer staging and re-staging? How should we image patients? Friday, March 8, 08:30 10:00, Room A RC 401: Pitfalls in interpretation of pancreatic imaging Moderator: H.-J. Brambs; Ulm/DE A. Pancreatic cancer or pancreatitis? [A-055] B.J. Op de Beeck; Antwerp/BE B. How can we differentiate cystic neoplasms from pseudocysts? [A-056] T. Denecke; Berlin/DE C. How to manage incidental findings [A-057] C. Triantopoulou; Athens/GR Friday, March 8, 14:00 15:30, Room F1 SS 601: Liver steatosis: imaging and quantification [B-0440 B-0449] Moderators: I. Bargellini; Pisa/IT B. Van Beers; Clichy/FR Saturday, March 9, 10:30 12:00, Room I/K SS 901: Cross-sectional pancreatic imaging and biomarkers [B-0570 B-0579] Moderators: B. Marincek; Cleveland, OH/US G. Zamboni; Verona/IT Sunday, March 10, 08:30 10:00, Room B RC 1201: How I report Moderator: G.A. Rollandi; Genoa/IT A. MDCT in the post-operative abdomen [A-348] D.J.M. Tolan; Leeds/UK B. MDCT in a patient with small bowel ischaemia [A-349] S. Romano; Naples/IT C. MDCT in a patient with small bowel obstruction [A-350] P. Taourel; Montpellier/FR Sunday, March 10, 10:30 12:00, Room I/K SS 1301: Abdominal CT: dose reduction and technical improvements [B-0699 B-0708] Moderators: D. Tack; Baudour/BE A. Taibbi; Palermo/IT Sunday, March 10, 16:00 17:30, Room B RC 1501: CT colonography: when the new becomes ordinary Chairman s introduction [A-478] A. Laghi; Latina/IT A. State-of-the-art techniques in 2013 [A-479] T. Mang; Vienna/AT B. How to set up a service [A-480] P. Lefere; Roeselare/BE C. Interaction with gastroenterologists: friends or enemies? [A-481] A. Graser; Munich/DE C. Hassan; Rome/IT Panel discussion: How to create an efficient CTC team? 115

118 Refresher Courses / Scientific Sessions Abdominal and Gastrointestinal Monday, March 11, 08:30 10:00, Room E1 RC 1601a: Diagnosis and staging of esophageal cancer Chairman s introduction [A-544] Z. Tarján; Budapest/HU A. Diagnosis [A-545] M. Krokidis; CambridgeUK B. Staging [A-546] V. Válek; Brno/CZ C. Treatment response [A-547] B. Mahon; Birmingham/UK Panel discussion: Cross-sectional techniques: developing an integrated imaging algorithm in oesophageal cancer Monday, March 11, 08:30 10:00, Room F1 RC 1601b: Abdominal MRI: standard and advanced protocols in clinical settings Moderator: M.A. Patak; Zurich/CH A. Fistula in ano [A-552] A. Gupta; London/UK B. Pelvic floor disease [A-553] M. Bazot; Paris/FR C. Suspected biliary tumour [A-554] C. Matos; Brussels/BE Monday, March 11, 10:30 12:00, Room E2 SS 1701a: CT/MR colonography: technical issues and clinical studies [B-0789 B-0798] Moderators: D. Cano; Pamplona/ES D.Z. Saranovic; Belgrade/RS Monday, March 11, 14:00 15:30, Room E2 SS 1801a: Colorectal cancer: diagnostic biomarkers and response assessment [B-0939 B-0948] Moderators: A. Filippone; Chieti/IT J. Husty; Brno/CZ Monday, March 11, 14:00 15:30, Room I/K SS 1801b: Liver volume, function and focal lesions [B-0979 B-0988] Moderators: B.I. Choi; Seoul/KR C. Nyhsen; Sunderland/UK Monday, March 11, 16:00 17:30, Room C RC 1901: Cross-sectional imaging of colitis Chairman s introduction [A-590] S.A. Taylor; London/UK A. What protocol to use? [A-591] S. Schmidt; Lausanne/CH B. Differentiating between the causes of colitis [A-592] B. Gallix; Montpellier/FR C. The role of cross-sectional imaging in colonic inflammatory bowel disease [A-593] J. Rimola; Barcelona/ES Panel discussion: The role of cross-sectional imaging in the diagnosis and follow-up of colitis Monday, March 11, 10:30 12:00, Room I/K SS 1701b: DWI in pancreatic and hepatobiliary diseases [B-0829 B-0838] Moderators: G.J. Munneke; London/UK D. Weishaupt; Zurich/CH 116

119 Refresher Courses / Scientific Sessions Breast Thursday, March 7, 10:30 12:00, Room F2 SS 102: Breast MRI: improving accuracy and tissue characterisation [B-0071 B-0080] Moderators: R. Schulz-Wendtland; Erlangen/DE M. Telesca; Rome/IT Thursday, March 7, 14:00 15:30, Room F2 SS 202: Improvements in preoperative staging of breast cancer [B-0210 B-0219] Moderators: R.A. Kubik-Huch; Baden/CH A. Zytoon; Shebin El-Kom/EG Thursday, March 7, 16:00 17:30, Room F2 RC 302: Functional imaging of the breast Moderator: G. Esen; Istanbul/TR A. Contrast-enhanced mammography [A-027] C.S. Balleyguier; Villejuif/FR B. Ultrasound elastography [A-028] A. Athanasiou; Paris/FR C. MRI diffusion, perfusion and spectroscopy [A-029] P.A.T. Baltzer; Jena/DE Friday, March 8, 10:30 12:00, Room F2 SS 502: Elastography and other advances in breast ultrasound [B-0330 B-0339] Moderators: D. Djilas-Ivanovic; Sremska Kamenica/RS P. Skaane; Oslo/NO Friday, March 8, 14:00 15:30, Room F2 SS 602: Breast imaging after neoadjuvant therapy and surgery [B-0450 B-0459] Moderators: G. Gennaro; Padua/IT P. Martinez-Miravete; Zaragoza/ES Saturday, March 9, 08:30 10:00, Room F1 RC 802: Clinical challenges in breast MRI Chairman s introduction [A-225] F.J. Gilbert; Cambridge/UK A. High risk patients: establishing clinical protocols [A-226] J. Veltman; Almelo/NL B. Non-mass like enhancement (NMLE): when to biopsy? [A-227] C.K. Kuhl; Aachen/DE C. Monitoring response to neo-adjuvant chemotherapy [A-228] T.H. Helbich; Vienna/AT Panel discussion: how can the specificity and sensitivity of breast MRI in these indeterminate clinical and imaging scenarios be maximised? Saturday, March 9, 10:30 12:00, Room F2 SS 902: Increased risk of breast cancer [B-0559 B-0569] Moderators: L.A. Carbonaro; San Donato Milanese/IT L. Ollivier; Paris/FR Sunday, March 10, 08:30 10:00, Room F2 RC 1202: Multi-modality breast imaging Chairman s introduction [A-373] M. Lesaru; Bucharest/RO A. Conventional, functional and interventional lymph node assessment [A-374] P.D. Britton; Cambridge/UK B. Multi-modality assessment of the breast following oncoplastic Surgery [A-375] M. Torres-Tabanera; Madrid/ES C. Image guided therapy in breast lesions: indications and techniques [A-376] G. Manenti; Rome/IT Panel discussion: how is the evolution of multi-modality breast imaging changing the nature of the multidisciplinary meeting (MDM)? Sunday, March 10, 10:30 12:00, Room F2 SS 1302: How to get more from breast imaging modalities [B-0679 B-0688] Moderators: N. Houssami; Sydney/AU M. Nadrljanski; Belgrade/RS Sunday, March 10, 14:00 15:30, Room F2 RC 1402: How I report Moderator: A. Tardivon; Paris/FR A. Mammography [A-446] E. Azavedo; Stockholm/SE B. Breast US [A-447] J. Camps Herrero; Valencia/ES C. Breast MRI [A-448] R.M. Mann; Nijmegen/NL 117

120 Refresher Courses / Scientific Sessions Breast Cardiac Monday, March 11, 10:30 12:00, Room F2 SS 1702: Tomosynthesis: a role in clinical practice? [B-0809 B-0818] Moderators: S. Allen; Sutton/UK E.M. Jung; Regensburg/DE Monday, March 11, 14:00 15:30, Room F1 SS 1802a: Newer techniques in breast imaging and therapy [B-0949 B-0958] Moderators: F. Chamming s; Paris/FR M. Sklair-Levy; Tel Aviv/IL Monday, March 11, 14:00 15:30, Room F2 SS 1802b: Maximising cancer detection in breast screening [B-0959 B-0968] Moderators: M. Álvarez-Benito; Córdoba/ES E. Szabó; Szeged/HU Monday, March 11, 16:00 17:30, Room F2 RC 1902: Breast ultrasound Moderator: M. Müller-Schimpfle; Frankfurt a. Main/DE A. Physics and practical aspects of high-quality hand-held and automated breast US [A-610] M.H. Fuchsjäger; Graz/AT B. Complicated cysts and complex-cystic lesions: differentiation and management [A-611] C.F. Weismann; Salzburg/AT C. The use of ultrasound in the evaluation of the nippleareolar complex [A-612] R. Salvador; Barcelona/ES Thursday, March 7, 10:30 12:00, Room B SS 103: CT and MRI in preoperative and postoperative evaluation [B-0001 B-0010] Moderators: G.A. Krombach; Giessen/DE R. Sanz-Requena; Valencia/ES Thursday, March 7, 14:00 15:30, Room P SS 203: Planning cardiac interventions [B-0260 B-0269] Moderators: I. Arkhipova; Moscow/RU P. Mildenberger; Mainz/DE Thursday, March 7, 16:00 17:30, Room D2 RC 303: Cardiac imaging: the cutting edge Moderator: E. Di Cesare; L Aquila/IT A. Cardiac MRI: do we need more than 1.5T? [A-011] B.J. Wintersperger; Toronto, ON/CA B. Cardiac CT: technique in 2020; where to next? [A-012] K. Nikolaou; Munich/DE C. Cardiac hybrid imaging: One-Stop-Shop [A-013] P.A. Kaufmann; Zurich/CH Friday, March 8, 10:30 12:00, Room P SS 503: Advances in coronary CT angiography [B-0370 B-0379] Moderators: S. Bohata; Brno/CZ L. Natale; Sesto Fiorentino/IT Friday, March 8, 14:00 15:30, Room C SS 603a: CT and MRI: risk stratification [B-0410 B-0419] Moderators: E. Mershina; Moscow/RU M.R. Rees; Gwynedd/UK Friday, March 8, 14:00 15:30, Room G/H SS 603b: Cardiomyopathy and fibrosis [B-0460 B-0469] Moderators: P. Donato; Coimbra/PT R. Maksimović; Belgrade/RS 118

121 Refresher Courses / Scientific Sessions Cardiac Saturday, March 9, 08:30 10:00, Room P RC 803: Practical approach to cardiovascular risk stratification with CT and MRI Moderator: C. Peebles; Southampton/UK A. Modern views on value of coronary calcium scoring for risk assessment [A-248] A. Stadler; Vienna/AT B. Coronary CTA: from detection of stenosis to prognosis [A-249] N.R. Mollet; Turnhout/BE C. Myocardial perfusion and viability for risk scoring [A-250] A. de Roos; Leiden/NL Saturday, March 9, 10:30 12:00, Room N/O SS 903: Myocardial perfusion and coronary artery disease [B-0580 B-0589] Moderators: F. Cademartiri; Monastier di Treviso/IT G.I. Kirova-Nedialkova; Sofia/BG Sunday, March 10, 10:30 12:00, Room E2 SS 1303: Towards improved image quality and detection [B-0660 B-0669] Moderators: G. Feuchtner; Innsbruck/AT C. Herzog; Munich/DE Monday, March 11, 08:30 10:00, Room P RC 1603: How I report Moderator: R. Vliegenthart; Groningen/NL A. Chest x-ray in cardiac disease [A-572] M. Rubens; London/UK B. Coronary CTA [A-573] F. Wolf; Vienna/AT C. Cardiac MRI in ischaemic heart disease [A-574] J. Bremerich; Basle/CH Monday, March 11, 10:30 12:00, Room N/O SS 1703: Biomarkers, tissue characterisation and remodelling [B-0849 B-0858] Moderators: M. Das; Maastricht/NL K. Gruszczynska; Katowice/PL Monday, March 11, 14:00 15:30, Room D1 SS 1803: Cardiac imaging: into the future [B-0909 B-0918] Moderators: R.W. Bauer; Frankfurt/DE E. Canet Soulas; Bron/FR Sunday, March 10, 16:00 17:30, Room I/K RC 1503: Cardiac CT and MRI in difficult patients: what to do? Chairman s introduction [A-512] M. Hamilton; Bristol/UK A. Coronary CTA in patients with severe arrhythmias and high heart rate [A-513] C. Loewe; Vienna/AT B. Severe coronary calcinosis and stents: tips and tricks in image acquisition and interpretation [A-514] F. Pugliese; London/UK C. Cardiac MRI: possible problems and how to avoid them [A-515] E. Mershina; Moscow/RU Panel discussion: When to scan and when not to? How can we make the best of what we have? 119

122 Refresher Courses / Scientific Sessions Chest Thursday, March 7, 10:30 12:00, Room D1 SS 104: Lung cancer: from tissue characterisation to treatment [B-0021 B-0030] Moderators: E. Castañer; Sabadell/ES N. Tacelli; Brussels/BE Thursday, March 7, 14:00 15:30, Room D1 SS 204: Airways and infiltrative lung diseases [B-0160 B-0169] Moderators: G.R. Ferretti; Grenoble/FR C. Mueller-Mang; Vienna/AT Thursday, March 7, 16:00 17:30, Room I/K RC 304: How I report Moderator: J. Cáceres; Barcelona/ES A. Bedside chest radiography [A-033] R. Eibel; Schwerin/DE B. CTA and MRA of the pulmonary arteries [A-034] J.E. Wildberger; Maastricht/NL C. PET/CT [A-035] C. Keyzer; Brussels/BE Friday, March 8, 10:30 12:00, Room D1 SS 504: Lung nodules[b-0290 B-0299] Moderators: S. Diederich; Düsseldorf/DE N. Karabulut; Denizli/TR Saturday, March 9, 08:30 10:00, Room I/K RC 804: Patterns in chest radiology: are there subtype patterns of ground glass opacity (GGO)? Chairman s introduction [A-237] A. Oikonomou; Alexandroupolis/GR A. Ground glass opacification: why do we see it and what does it mean? [A-238] S.R. Desai; London/UK B. Inflammatory and infectious GGO [A-239] K. Marten-Engelke; Göttingen/DE C. GGO in dysplasia and neoplasia [A-240] G.R. Ferretti; Grenoble/FR Panel discussion: How should we report and manage ground glass opacity? Saturday, March 9, 16:00 17:30, Room I/K RC 1104: Pulmonary infections: the old and the new Moderator: F. Gleeson; Oxford/UK A. Mycobacterial infections [A-333] C. Beigelman; Lausanne/CH B. Infectious disease in immuno-compromised patients [A-334] C.P. Heussel; Heidelberg/DE C. Emerging infections [A-335] T. Franquet; Barcelona/ES Sunday, March 10, 08:30 10:00, Room I/K RC 1204: Lung cancer staging in 2013 Chairman s introduction: the latest TNM classification [A-380] J. Biederer; Heidelberg/DE A. Local tumour staging [A-381] L. Bonomo; Rome/IT B. Lymph node staging [A-382] W.F.M. De Wever; Leuven/BE C. Distant metastasis and whole body imaging [A-383] G. Antoch; Düsseldorf/DE Panel discussion: Facts and controversies in lung cancer staging Sunday, March 10, 10:30 12:00, Room D1 SS 1304: CTPA techniques in lung perfusion and pulmonary hypertension [B-0630 B-0639] Moderators: I. Hartmann; Rotterdam/NL E.J. Stern; Seattle, WA/US Saturday, March 9, 10:30 12:00, Room D1 SS 904: Image quality and dose reduction [B-0519 B-0528] Moderators: P.A. Grenier; Paris/FR J. Vlahos; London/UK 120

123 Chest Refresher Courses / Scientific Sessions Computer Applications Monday, March 11, 08:30 10:00, Room I/K RC 1604: Pulmonary embolism: guidelines and best practice throughout Europe Chairman s introduction [A-559] M. Rémy-Jardin; Lille/FR A. Pioped 1-2-3: what have we learned so far? [A-560] C. Engelke; Göttingen/DE B. PE in oncologic patients [A-561] B. Ghaye; Brussels/BE C. PE during pregnancy and puerperium [A-562] M.-P. Revel; Paris/FR Panel discussion: Pulmonary embolism work-up in 2013 Monday, March 11, 10:30 12:00, Room D1 SS 1704: Technological refinements: from x-rays to micro-imaging [B-0759 B-0768] Moderators: A.P. Parkar; Bergen/NO C.M. Schaefer-Prokop; Amersfoort/NL Monday, March 11, 16:00 17:30, Room I/K RC 1904: Phenotypes in obstructive airway disease: how should I image, analyse and report? Moderator: P.A. Gevenois; Brussels/BE A. Asthma and associated conditions [A-616] P.-Y. Brillet; Bobigny/FR B. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) [A-617] N. Sverzellati; Parma/IT C. Cystic fibrosis and other bronchiectatic diseases [A-618] M.U. Puderbach; Heidelberg/DE Thursday, March 7, 10:30 12:00, Room Z SS 105: IT infrastructure, learning support and teleradiology [B-0141 B-0149] Moderators: B. Gibaud; Rennes/FR A. Simisker; Tartu/EE Thursday, March 7, 14:00 15:30, Room Z SS 205: Quantitative image analysis and optimisation [B-0280 B-0289] Moderators: L. Faggioni; Pisa/IT M. Fatehi; Tehran/IR Thursday, March 7, 16:00 17:30, Room Q RC 305: New PACS architecture: decoupling image management from image navigation Chairman s introduction [A-047] H.U. Lemke; Berlin/DE A. Image navigation and new PACS architecture [A-048] J. Reponen; Raahe/FI B. Intraoperative imaging for surgeons [A-049] A. Pietrabissa; Pavia/IT C. Dismantling PACS: separating image viewing from the data storage and sharing [A-050] B. Gibaud; Rennes/FR Panel discussion: How should we manage our images today? Saturday, March 9, 10:30 12:00, Room Z SS 905: Computer-aided diagnosis [B-0610 B-0619] Moderators: T. Mang; Vienna/AT D. Regge; Turin/IT Monday, March 11, 08:30 10:00, Room Q RC 1605: Improving workflow efficiency and quality Chairman s introduction [A-575] D. Caramella; Pisa/IT A. Improving quality and efficiency of computerised order entry through decision support [A-576] P. Mildenberger; Mainz/DE B. Improving quality and efficiency of reporting by structure and templates [A-577] N. Dugar; Doncaster/UK C. Improving quality and efficiency of dose management through exchange between modalities and registries [A-578] E. Vaño; Madrid/ES Panel discussion: Will novel IT tools really improve quality and efficiency in daily radiological practice? 121

124 Refresher Courses / Scientific Sessions Molecular Imaging and Contrast Media Genitourinary Thursday, March 7, 16:00 17:30, Room E1 RC 306: Molecular imaging in oncology Moderator: O. Clément; Paris/FR A. New PET-tracers for oncology [A-014] P.L. Choyke; Bethesda, MD/US B. Potential of MRI for molecular imaging in oncology [A-015] F.A. Gallagher; Cambridge/UK C. Emerging molecular imaging techniques [A-016] F.M.A. Kiessling; Aachen/DE Friday, March 8, 14:00 15:30, Room Z SS 606: MR/PET and PET/CT [B-0500 B-0508] Moderators: N. Belcari; Pisa/IT P.R. Ros; Cleveland, OH/US Sunday, March 10, 10:30 12:00, Room Z SS 1306: New agents and protocols [B-0739 B-0748] Moderators: L. Grazioli; Brescia/IT T.C. Lauenstein; Essen/DE Monday, March 11, 10:30 12:00, Room Z SS 1706: Molecular imaging in cancer and degenerative diseases [B-0879 B-0888] Moderators: J. Hakumäki; Kuopio/FI E. Lopci; Rozzano/IT Monday, March 11, 14:00 15:30, Room Z SS 1806: Functional studies and safety [B-1029 B-1038] Moderators: T. Gleeson; Wexford/UK E.M. Merkle; Basle/CH Monday, March 11, 16:00 17:30, Room D2 RC 1906: How I optimise contrast media administration Moderator: W. Semmler; Heidelberg/DE A. CT [A-594] P. Leander; Malmö/SE B. MRI [A-595] G.M. Bongartz; Basle/CH C. PET/CT [A-596] X. Montet; Geneva/CH Thursday, March 7, 10:30 12:00, Room G/H SS 107: Prostate imaging [B-0081 B-0090] Moderators: S. Morozov; Moscow/RU J. Richenberg; Brighton/UK Thursday, March 7, 16:00 17:30, Room G/H RC 307: Renal and adrenal tumours Moderator: B. Brkljačić; Zagreb/HR A. Adrenal masses, a practical approach [A-030] G. Heinz-Peer; St. Pölten/AT B. Staging renal cancer [A-031] R. Pozzi-Mucelli; Verona/IT C. How to deal with small indeterminate renal masses [A-032] O. Hélénon; Paris/FR Friday, March 8, 10:30 12:00, Room G/H SS 507: New frontiers in GU imaging [B-0340 B-0349] Moderators: G. Hagen; Oslo/NO C.M.A. Hoeks; Nijmegen/NL Friday, March 8, 14:00 15:30, Room A SS 607: Female pelvis imaging [B-0390 B-0399] Moderators: L.S. Fournier; Paris/FR A.G. Rockall; London/UK Friday, March 8, 16:00 17:30, Room G/H RC 707: Diagnosis and management of GU tract trauma Moderator: A. Magnusson; Uppsala/SE A. Imaging the kidney and ureter [A-176] M.-F. Bellin; Le Kremlin-Bicêtre/FR B. Imaging the bladder and urethra [A-177] U.G. Mueller-Lisse; Munich/DE C. Interventional radiology for GU Trauma [A-178] B. Peynircioglu; Ankara/TR 122

125 Genitourinary Refresher Courses / Scientific Sessions Head and Neck Sunday, March 10, 08:30 10:00, Room G/H RC 1207: How I report Moderator: G.M. Villeirs; Gent/BE A. Female pelvis MRI [A-377] A.G. Rockall; London/UK B. Prostate MRI [A-378] J.J. Fütterer; Nijmegen/NL C. CT urography [A-379] N.C. Cowan; Oxford/UK Sunday, March 10, 10:30 12:00, Room G/H SS 1307: The bladder and below [B-0689 B-0698] Moderators: M. Baramia; Tbilisi/GE R.H. Oyen; Leuven/BE Sunday, March 10, 14:00 15:30, Room I/K RC 1407: Contrast media safety: update Chairman s introduction [A-453] P. Reimer; Karlsruhe/DE A. Acute non-renal reactions to contrast media: new concepts [A-454] O. Clément; Paris/FR B. Nephrogenic systemic fibrosis: from pathophysiology to recommendations [A-455] H.S. Thomsen; Herlev/DK C. Contrast medium-induced nephropathy and new guidelines [A-456] F. Stacul; Trieste/IT Panel discussion: What is the most appropriate radiological approach to patients with falling egfr and when should contrast media be administered and when should it not? Monday, March 11, 10:30 12:00, Room G/H SS 1707: Hints on haematuria and adrenals for all [B-0819 B-0828] Moderators: O. Nikolic; Novi Sad/RS K. Sugimura; Kobe/JP Monday, March 11, 14:00 15:30, Room G/H SS 1807: Mixed modalities in GU imaging [B-0969 B-0978] Moderators: A.J. Beer; Munich/DE I. Vivas; Pamplona/ES Thursday, March 7, 14:00 15:30, Room C SS 208: Head and neck cancer: functional imaging and hybrid modalities [B-0150 B-0159] Moderators: N. Abolmaali; Dresden/DE S. Steens; Nijmegen/NL Friday, March 8, 14:00 15:30, Room L/M SS 608: Technical innovations, TMJ disease and rare entities [B-0470 B-0479] Moderators: J. Frühwald-Pallamar; Vienna/AT J. Widelec; Brussels/BE Saturday, March 9, 16:00 17:30, Room D2 RC 1108: Skull base lesions: imaging studies and differential diagnosis Moderator: L. Grzycka-Kowalczyk; Lublin/PL A. Anterior cranial fossa with special emphasis on olfactory apparatus lesions [A-309] T.P.J. Duprez; Brussels/BE B. Middle cranial fossa pathologies [A-310] A. Borges; Lisbon/PT C. Posterior cranial fossa pathologies [A-311] H. Tanghe; Rotterdam/NL Sunday, March 10, 10:30 12:00, Room L/M SS 1308: Advanced imaging of the ear, orbit and glands [B-0709 B-0718] Moderators: R. Elias; Rotterdam/NL B.F. Schuknecht; Zurich/CH Sunday, March 10, 14:00 15:30, Room N/O RC 1408: Laryngeal cancer and radiology Chairman s introduction [A-460] J.E. Kabala; Bristol/UK A. Staging of laryngeal cancer: pearls and pitfalls [A-461] R. Maroldi; Brescia/IT B. Evaluation after surgery and non-surgical treatment: expected findings [A-462] S. Bisdas; Tübingen/DE C. Cancer recurrence: how to address clinical dilemmas [A-463] B. Verbist; Leiden/NL Panel discussion: Diagnostic algorithms for diagnosis and follow-up of laryngeal cancer 123

126 Refresher Courses / Scientific Sessions Head and Neck Interventional Radiology Sunday, March 10, 16:00 17:30, Room N/O RC 1508: Performing and reporting head and neck examinations: how should I do it? Moderator: K. Surlan Popovič; Ljubljana/SI A. Sinonasal CT scans: technique and evaluation [A-519] H.B. Eggesbø; Oslo/NO B. Temporal bone: CT and MRI [A-520] M.M. Lemmerling; Gent/BE C. CT and MRI of the neck: how to address key clinical questions [A-521] D. Farina; Brescia/IT Monday, March 11, 16:00 17:30, Room N/O RC 1908: Temporal bone: imaging the most common symptoms and signs Moderator: T. Beale; London/UK A. Conductive hearing loss: what s behind it? [A-619] A. Trojanowska; Lublin/PL B. Sensorineural hearing loss: a challenge for radiologists [A-620] J.W. Casselman; Bruges/BE C. Tinnitus and vertigo: diagnostic algorithm [A-621] R.B.-J. de Bondt; Zwolle/NL Thursday, March 7, 10:30 12:00, Room D2 SS 109: Chemoembolisation and radioembolisation of liver tumours [B-0031 B-0040] Moderators: A. Denys; Lausanne/CH P. Paprottka; Munich/DE Thursday, March 7, 14:00 15:30, Room D2 SS 209: Ablation and biopsy of the prostate and the kidney [B-0170 B-0179] Moderators: J.J. Fütterer; Nijmegen/NL J. Kettenbach; Berne/CH Thursday, March 7, 16:00 17:30, Room N/O RC 309: Percutaneous treatment of chronic back pain and sciatica Chairman s introduction [A-040] A.D. Kelekis; Athens/GR A. Sacroiliac joint syndrome [A-041] D.J. Wilson; Oxford/UK B. Facet syndrome [A-042] M. Gallucci; L Aquila/IT C. Intervertebral disc syndromes [A-043] A. Gangi; Strasbourg/FR Panel discussion: How can imaging methods separate candidates for percutaneous therapy and surgery? Friday, March 8, 10:30 12:00, Room D2 SS 509: Neurovascular and spine interventions [B-0300 B-0309] Moderators: E.R. Gizewski; Innsbruck/AT L. Pierot; Reims/FR Friday, March 8, 14:00 15:30, Room D2 SS 609a: Oncologic ablation and guided interventions [B-0420 B-0429] Moderators: P. Almeida; Coimbra/PT A. Basile; Catania/IT Friday, March 8, 14:00 15:30, Room P SS 609b: Gynaecological and obstetric interventions [B-0490 B-0499] Moderators: P.E. Andersen; Odense/DK R. Nijenhuis; Maastricht/NL 124

127 Refresher Courses / Scientific Sessions Interventional Radiology Friday, March 8, 16:00 17:30, Room N/O RC 709: Expanding the role of interventional radiology in hepatocellular carcinoma Chairman s introduction [A-186] V. Válek; Brno/CZ A. RF ablation [A-187] J.L. del Cura; Bilbao/ES B. Intra-arterial procedures [A-188] F. Orsi; Milan/IT C. Portal vein embolisation before Surgery [A-189] A. Denys; Lausanne/CH Panel discussion: How to allow for more patients with HCC to be treated? Saturday, March 9, 08:30 10:00, Room N/O RC 809: What should every radiologist know about the endovascular treatment of abdominal aortic aneurysms? Chairman s introduction [A-244] H. Rousseau; Toulouse/FR A. Pre-therapeutic radiological evaluation [A-245] J. Raupach; Hradec Kralove/CZ B. EVAR techniques and results [A-246] F. Fanelli; Rome/IT C. Imaging follow-up and treatment of complications [A-247] R. Morgan; London/UK Panel discussion: What are the best imaging methods for follow-up? Saturday, March 9, 10:30 12:00, Room D2 SS 909: Thoracic interventions [B-0529 B-0538] Moderators: J. Tacke; Passau/DE K. Zelenak; Martin/SK Sunday, March 10, 08:30 10:00, Room N/O RC 1209: Gynaecological and obstetrical haemorrhagic emergencies Chairman s introduction [A-388] A.-M. Belli; London/UK A. Etiology and treatment of gynaecological benign and malignant causes of massive bleeding [A-389] A. Keeling; Dublin/IE B. Can we prevent post-partum haemorrhage in high-risk patients? [A-390] J.-P. Pelage; Caen/FR C. Treatment of post-partum haemorrhage [A-391] M. Szczerbo-Trojanowska; Lublin/PL Panel discussion: How to reduce the radiation doses of these methods? Sunday, March 10, 10:30 12:00, Room D2 SS 1309: Skeletal and endocrinologic interventions [B-0640 B-0649] Moderators: L. Crocetti; Pisa/IT D.K. Tsetis; Iraklion/GR Monday, March 11, 10:30 12:00, Room D2 SS 1709: Abdominal interventions: from TIPS to bile ducts [B-0769 B-0778] Moderators: R.F. Dondelinger; Liège/BE B. Sekovski; Split/HR Monday, March 11, 14:00 15:30, Room D2 SS 1809: New approaches to aortic and peripheral interventions [B-0919 B-0928] Moderators: S. Kudrnova; Budapest/HU R. Morgan; London/UK Saturday, March 9, 16:00 17:30, Room N/O RC 1109: Update on biliary interventions Chairman s introduction [A-339] M. Krokidis; Cambridge/UK A. Fistula and benign stenosis [A-340] M. Bezzi; Rome/IT B. Interventions after liver transplantation [A-341] P. Goffette; Brussels/BE C. In tandem with endoscopy [A-342] D.F. Martin; Manchester/UK Panel discussion: Are there new possibilities in the area of biliary interventions? 125

128 Refresher Courses / Scientific Sessions Musculoskeletal Thursday, March 7, 10:30 12:00, Room E1 SS 110: Shoulder and hand [B-0041 B-0050] Moderators: C. Schüller-Weidekamm; Vienna/AT M. Shahabpour; Brussels/BE Thursday, March 7, 14:00 15:30, Room E1 SS 210: Lower limb: tricks for improved imaging [B-0180 B-0189] Moderators: A. Klauser; Innsbruck/AT L.M. Sconfienza; San Donato Milanese/IT Friday, March 8, 10:30 12:00, Room E1 SS 510: Tendon, muscle and tissue composition [B-0310 B-0319] Moderators: J. Healy; London/UK A. Mileto; Durham, NC/US Friday, March 8, 14:00 15:30, Room E1 SS 610a: Musculoskeletal tumours [B-0430 B-0439] Moderators: R. Lalam; Oswestry/UK E. Quaia; Trieste/IT Friday, March 8, 14:00 15:30, Room N/O SS 610b: Cartilage: advanced imaging [B-0480 B-0489] Moderators: A. Karpenko; St. Petersburg/RU P. Omoumi; Brussels/BE Friday, March 8, 16:00 17:30, Room E1 RC 710: Peripheral nerve imaging: MRI and US Chairman s introduction [A-160] J. Renoux; Paris/FR A. Applied radiological anatomy and pathology of the brachial plexus [A-161] S. Gerevini; Milan/IT B. Upper limb nerve entrapment [A-162] D. Weishaupt; Zurich/CH C. Lower limb nerve entrapment [A-163] C. Martinoli; Genoa/IT Panel discussion: Which on-going technological advances in MRI and US could influence the way we image peripheral nerves in the future? Saturday, March 9, 10:30 12:00, Room E1 SS 910: Spine: advancing the use of CT and MRI [B-0539 B-0548] Moderators: P.M. Cunningham; Navan/IE J. Labuscagne; Bunbury, WA/AU Saturday, March 9, 16:00 17:30, Room E1 RC 1110: The knee Chairman s introduction [A-312] F.M.H.M. Vanhoenacker; Antwerp/BE A. Patterns of injury [A-313] P. Van Dyck; Antwerp/BE B. Inflammatory disease [A-314] A. Cotten; Lille/FR C. Soft tissue tumours/tumour-like lesions [A-315] J.C. Vilanova; Girona/ES Panel discussion: What are the remaining clinical questions that imaging currently cannot answer and how can we answer them in the future? Sunday, March 10, 08:30 10:00, Room E1 RC 1210: Overuse injuries in sport: a multimodality approach Moderator: E. Llopis; Valencia/ES A. Overuse injuries in the footballer s ankle [A-361] S.J. Eustace; Dublin/IE B. Overuse injuries in the gymnast s spine [A-362] M.C. De Jonge; Amsterdam/NL C. Upper limb overuse injuries in golfers [A-363] P.J. O Connor; Leeds/UK Sunday, March 10, 10:30 12:00, Room E1 SS 1310: Arthritis and metabolic bone disease [B-0650 B-0659] Moderators: A.J. Grainger; Leeds/UK A. Plagou; Athens/GR Sunday, March 10, 14:00 15:30, Room E1 RC 1410: How I report Moderator: M. Padrón; Madrid/ES A. Soft tissue mass: US/MR [A-434] C. van Rijswijk; Leiden/NL B. MR of vertebral body collapse [A-435] R. Lalam; Oswestry/UK C. MR of the unstable shoulder [A-436] M. Zanetti; Zurich/CH 126

129 Musculoskeletal Refresher Courses / Scientific Sessions Neuro Monday, March 11, 10:30 12:00, Room E1 SS 1710: Hip: CT and MRI applications [B-0779 B-0788] Moderators: M.H. Maurer; Berlin/DE A. Vieira; Porto/PT Monday, March 11, 14:00 15:30, Room E1 SS 1810: Knee: new horizons [B-0929 B-0938] Moderators: M.P. Aparisi Gomez; Valencia/ES A. Cotten; Lille/FR Monday, March 11, 16:00 17:30, Room E1 RC 1910: Intra-articular imaging Chairman s introduction [A-597] A.H. Karantanas; Iraklion/GR A. Standard MR techniques [A-598] C. Faletti; Turin/IT B. CT arthrography [A-599] C.W.A. Pfirrmann; Zurich/CH C. MR arthrography [A-600] J. Kramer; Linz/AT Panel discussion: Which imaging technique for which clinical scenario? Thursday, March 7, 10:30 12:00, Room C SS 111: From structure to function [B-0011 B-0020] Moderators: S.J. Bakke; Oslo/NO B. Ertl-Wagner; Munich/DE Thursday, March 7, 14:00 15:30, Room G/H SS 211: Infection and inflammation [B-0220 B-0229] Moderators: E. Marco de Lucas; Santander/ES G. Schroth; Berne/CH Friday, March 8, 08:30 10:00, Room G/H RC 411: The paediatric brain: not just a small brain Moderator: C. Venstermans; Antwerp/BE A. Neurocutaneous syndromes: more than neurofibromatosis [A-085] B. Ertl-Wagner; Munich/DE B. Patterns of white matter disease in children [A-086] A. Rossi; Genoa/IT C. Paediatric brain tumours [A-087] C. Hoffmann; Tel Hashomer/IL Friday, March 8, 10:30 12:00, Room L/M SS 511: Stroke-related arterial disease [B-0350 B-0359] Moderators: E. Avdagic; Sarajevo/BA P. Barsi; Budapest/HU Friday, March 8, 14:00 15:30, Room B SS 611: Alzheimer s and Parkinson s [B-0400 B-0409] Moderators: B. Góraj; Nijmegen/NL T. Meindl; Landshut/DE 127

130 Refresher Courses / Scientific Sessions Neuro Saturday, March 9, 10:30 12:00, Room C SS 911: New insights into brain gliomas [B-0509 B-0518] Moderators: L.C. Tzarouchi; Ioannina/GR P. Vilela; Almada/PT Saturday, March 9, 16:00 17:30, Room G/H RC 1111: Brain tumours: advanced imaging techniques in daily practice do we really need them? Moderator: Z. Merhemic; Sarajevo/BA A. Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) [A-330] M. Law; Los Angeles, CA/US B. Perfusion imaging [A-331] Y. Özsunar; Aydin/TR C. Follow-up after treatment [A-332] P.C. Maly Sundgren; Lund/SE Sunday, March 10, 08:30 10:00, Room E2 RC 1211: Stroke: is the prognosis getting any better? Chairman s introduction [A-364] J.-P. Pruvo; Lille/FR A. Initial imaging work-up: CT or MR? [A-365] P.M. Parizel; Antwerp/BE B. Stroke: is there really any therapy? [A-366] V. Mendes Pereira; Geneva/CH C. Stenting: does it prevent stroke? [A-367] P. Vilela; Almada/PT Panel discussion: What is the future of stroke prevention and treatment? Sunday, March 10, 10:30 12:00, Room F1 SS 1311: Brain tumours: imaging and therapy [B-0670 B-0678] Moderators: X. Golay; London/UK A. Zimny; Wroclaw/PL Sunday, March 10, 16:00 17:30, Room G/H RC 1511: Epilepsy: a lack of knowledge can be dangerous Moderator: M.A. Papathanasiou; Athens/GR A. Anatomy of the limbic system [A-509] T.A. Yousry; London/UK B. Temporal lobe epilepsy [A-510] I.N. Pronin; Moscow/RU C. fmri in epilepsy [A-511] N. Bargalló; Barcelona/ES Monday, March 11, 08:30 10:00, Room G/H RC 1611: Spine: update on postoperative imaging and minimally invasive procedures Chairman s introduction [A-555] J. Van Goethem; Antwerp/BE A. Postoperative spine [A-556] L. Van den Hauwe; Brasschaat/BE B. Indications for vertebroplasty [A-557] A. Gangi; Strasbourg/FR C. Percutaneous treatment of spinal diseases [A-558] M. Muto; Naples/IT Panel discussion: Minimally invasive spinal procedures: the radiologist s future role? Monday, March 11, 10:30 12:00, Room C SS 1711: Brain ischaemia: perfusion and diffusion [B-0749 B-0758] Moderators: L. Oleaga Zufiría; Barcelona/ES M. Vernooij; Rotterdam/NL Monday, March 11, 14:00 15:30, Room B SS 1811a: Latest developments in neuroimaging [B-0889 B-0898] Moderators: S. Haller; Geneva/CH E. Papadaki; Iraklion/GR Monday, March 11, 14:00 15:30, Room C SS 1811b: Spinal imaging [B-0899 B-0908] Moderators: M. Buruian; Targu-Mures/RO A. Cianfoni; Lugano/CH Monday, March 11, 16:00 17:30, Room G/H RC 1911: Multiple sclerosis: 2013 update Moderator: E.T. Tali; Ankara/TR A. Differential diagnosis of multiple T2-HI white matter lesions [A-613] A. Rovira-Cañellas; Barcelona/ES B. New developments in the diagnosis of multiple sclerosis [A-614] F. Barkhof; Amsterdam/NL C. Imaging of MS treatment-related complications [A-615] M.M. Thurnher; Vienna/AT 128

131 Refresher Courses / Scientific Sessions Paediatric Saturday, March 9, 08:30 10:00, Room Q RC 812: Imaging the paediatric spine Moderator: C.J. Kellenberger; Zurich/CH A. Craniocervical junction abnormalities [A-251] B. Ozgen Mocan; Ankara/TR B. Inflammation, infection and tumours: the role of imaging [A-252] M.I. Argyropoulou; Ioannina/GR C. Imaging spinal trauma in childhood [A-253] M. Maas; Amsterdam/NL Saturday, March 9, 10:30 12:00, Room P SS 912: Paediatric body and bones [B-0590 B-0599] Moderators: K.J. Johnson; Birmingham/UK L.-S. Ording-Müller; Tromsø/NO Sunday, March 10, 08:30 10:00, Room Q RC 1212: Oncologic imaging: how to image, follow up and report Chairman s introduction [A-394] D. Roebuck; London/UK A. Renal and adrenal tumours in children [A-395] A.M.J.B. Smets; Amsterdam/NL B. Paediatric liver malignancies [A-396] D. Roebuck; London/UK C. Oncologic imaging in the paediatric brain [A-397] G. Hahn; Dresden/DE Panel discussion: How far should the radiologist go in suggesting tumour recurrence or post-treatment complications? Sunday, March 10, 10:30 12:00, Room P SS 1312: Chest, heart and radiation awareness [B-0729 B-0738] Moderators: W. Hirsch; Leipzig/DE P.D. Humphries; London/UK Sunday, March 10, 16:00 17:30, Room Q RC 1512: Paediatric MSK radiology: what is important? Moderator: M. Raissaki; Iraklion/GR A. Scoliosis: what the radiologist needs to know [A-525] J.-F. Chateil; Bordeaux/FR B. Benign bone tumours and pseudotumours in children: the pitfalls [A-526] K.J. Johnson; Birmingham/UK C. Congenital bone dysplasias [A-527] A.C. Offiah; Sheffield/UK Monday, March 11, 10:30 12:00, Room P SS 1712: Foetal and neonatal imaging [B-0859 B-0868] Moderators: N. De Graaf; Rotterdam/NL H. Ringertz; Linköping/SE Monday, March 11, 14:00 15:30, Room P SS 1812: Paediatric brain [B-1010 B-1018] Moderators: M.A. Lucic; Sremska Kamenica/RS M. Stenzel; Jena/DE Monday, March 11, 16:00 17:30, Room Q RC 1912: Normal variants in paediatric imaging: not to be confused with disease Moderator: Ø.E. Olsen; London/UK A. Brain [A-626] A. Rossi; Genoa/IT B. Chest and abdomen [A-627] S.G.F. Robben; Maastricht/NL C. Musculoskeletal [A-628] F. Saez; Barakaldo/ES Sunday, March 10, 14:00 15:30, Room Q RC 1412: Paediatric emergencies Moderator: V. Donoghue; Dublin/IE A. The acute non-traumatic neurological patient: CT or MRI? [A-468] E. Vázquez; Barcelona/ES B. Imaging of acute chest pain and/or distress in children [A-469] C.E. de Lange; Oslo/NO C. The role of the interventional radiologist in paediatric Trauma [A-470] J.B. Karani; London/UK 129

132 Refresher Courses / Scientific Sessions Physics in Radiology Thursday, March 7, 10:30 12:00, Room L/M SS 113: Multi modality imaging and MR safety [B-0101 B-0110] Moderators: O. Ciraj-Bjelac; Belgrade/RS O. Speck; Magdeburg/DE Thursday, March 7, 14:00 15:30, Room L/M SS 213: Innovations in CT technology and data processing [B-0240 B-0249] Moderators: C. Leidecker; Forchheim/DE R. Padovani; Udine/IT Saturday, March 9, 16:00 17:30, Room L/M RC 1113: Cone-beam imaging Moderators: O. Ciraj-Bjelac; Belgrade/RS A. Trianni; Udine/IT A. Fundamentals of cone-beam imaging [A-336] M. Kachelrieß; Heidelberg/DE B. Medical applications of CB imaging [A-337] M. Grass; Hamburg/DE C. 3D dentomaxillofacial imaging [A-338] K. Horner; Manchester/UK Sunday, March 10, 08:30 10:00, Room L/M RC 1213: Risk assessment and risk communication Sunday, March 10, 16:00 17:30, Room L/M RC 1513: Novel developments in CT and their impact on dose Moderators: M. Prokop; Nijmegen/NL V. Tsapaki; Athens/GR A. Patient dose assessment in CT [A-516] P.C. Shrimpton; Didcot/UK B. New frontiers in CT: functional and spectral imaging [A-517] N. Pelc; Stanford, CA/US C. New image reconstruction techniques [A-518] J. Sijbers; Antwerp/BE Monday, March 11, 10:30 12:00, Room L/M SS 1713: Breast imaging and novel CT techniques [B-0839 B-0848] Moderators: N. Karssemeijer; Nijmegen/NL M. Koutalonis; Colchester/UK Monday, March 11, 14:00 15:30, Room L/M SS 1813: Patient dose management and dose surveys [B-0989 B-0998] Moderators: H. Bosmans; Leuven/BE W. Stiller; Heidelberg/DE Chairmen s introduction [A-384] M.M. Rehani; Vienna/AT P. Vock; Berne/CH A. Radiation risks for patients and staff [A-385] E. Vaño; Madrid/ES B. Risk in MRI [A-386] R. Peeters; Leuven/BE C. Communication of risk to patients and public [A-387] G. Gamhewage; Geneva/CH Panel discussion: How to communicate risk to patients and the public? Sunday, March 10, 14:00 15:30, Room L/M RC 1413: Hybrid imaging systems Moderators: D.G. Sutton; Dundee/UK J. Votrubová; Prague/CZ A. Clinical SPECT/CT and PET/CT [A-457] T. Beyer; Zurich/CH B. Clinical MR/PET [A-458] G. Antoch; Düsseldorf/DE C. Preclinical hybrid imaging [A-459] N. Belcari; Pisa/IT 130

133 Refresher Courses / Scientific Sessions Radiographers Thursday, March 7, 10:30 12:00, Room Q SS 114: Importance of education in practice [B-0131 B-0140] Moderators: R. Ribeiro; Lisbon/PT T. Roding; Haarlem/NL Thursday, March 7, 14:00 15:30, Room Q SS 214: Managing quality and dose in CT [B-0270 B-0279] Moderators: E. Agadakos; Athens/GR A. Yule; Cardiff/UK Friday, March 8, 10:30 12:00, Room Q SS 514: The radiographer s role as health care team member [B-0380 B-0389] Moderators: V. Syrgiamiotis; Athens/GR C. Vandulek; Kaposvár/HU Friday, March 8, 16:00 17:30, Room P RC 714: Clinical audit: from EURATOM to the clinical environment Moderators: E.J. Adam; London/UK D. Pronk-Larive; Middelburg/NL A. Clinical audit: from the EURATOM treaty to EU guidelines: clinical audit RP 159 [A-190] P. Wood; Helsinki/FI B. Implementation in practice: a comparison of different models [A-191] S. Geers-van Gemeren; Utrecht/NL C. A perspective on the impact and benefits of clinical audit [A-192] S. O Connor; Dublin/IE Saturday, March 9, 10:30 12:00, Room Q SS 914: Dose optimisation as daily challenge [B-0600 B-0609] Moderators: P. Blackburn Andersen; Kolding/DK A. Petakovic; Novo Mesto/SI Saturday, March 9, 16:00 17:30, Room P RC 1114: Hot topics in magnetic resonance imaging Moderators: K. Haller; Wiener Neustadt/AT L. Martí-Bonmatí; Valencia/ES A. New trends in MR safety [A-343] P. Bauer; Vienna/AT B. MR spectroscopy: the role of radiographers in data optimisation [A-344] J. McNulty; Dublin/IE C. Challenges and opportunities in paediatric MR [A-345] V. Syrgiamiotis; Athens/GR Sunday, March 10, 08:30 10:00, Room P RC 1214: Dose optimisation in computed tomography Moderators: G. Frija; Paris/FR D. Pekarovic; Ljubljana/SI A. Innovations in dose optimisation [A-392] S. Foley; Dublin/IE B. Developing patient specific examination protocols [A-393] H. Precht; Odense/DK Sunday, March 10, 14:00 15:30, Room P RC 1414: Towards advancing and developing the role of radiographers Chairmen s introduction [A-464] S. Mathers; Aberdeen/UK D. Tscholakoff; Vienna/AT A. The current status: a clinical perspective [A-465] C. McLaren; London/UK B. The importance of evidence-based practice for the future of advanced practice in radiography [A-466] A. England; Liverpool/UK C. The view from the European level [A-467] G. Paulo; Coimbra/PT Panel discussion: How to use the EFRS guidance document on role development Sunday, March 10, 16:00 17:30, Room P RC 1514: Hybrid imaging technologies Moderators: C.D. Claussen; Tübingen/DE C. Malamateniou; London/UK A. Recent developments [A-522] S. Rep; Ljubljana/SI B. Clinical applications [A-523] T. Lindner; Ternitz/AT C. Trends in radiography education [A-524] P. Hogg; Manchester/UK Monday, March 11, 10:30 12:00, Room Q SS 1714: Mammography [B-0869 B-0878] Moderators: S.J. Foley; Dublin/IE P. Vahtramae; Pärnu/EE Monday, March 11, 14:00 15:30, Room Q SS 1814: Challenges of different imaging techniques [B-1019 B-1028] Moderators: H.H. Hjemly; Oslo/NO J. McNulty; Dublin/IE 131

134 Refresher Courses / Scientific Sessions Vascular Thursday, March 7, 10:30 12:00, Room N/O SS 115: Carotid plaque evaluation [B-0111 B-0120] Moderators: M.A. Aschauer; Graz/AT D. Filippiadis; Athens/GR Thursday, March 7, 14:00 15:30, Room N/O SS 215: Major vessel imaging [B-0250 B-0259] Moderators: W.R. Jaschke; Innsbruck/AT O. Pellerin; Paris/FR Thursday, March 7, 16:00 17:30, Room P RC 315: Vascular imaging in ischaemic stroke Moderator: J. Hendrikse; Utrecht/NL A. Intracranial atherosclerotic disease of carotid arteries [A-044] T. Jargiello; Lublin/PL B. Vertebrobasilar atherosclerotic disease [A-045] L. Valvassori; Milan/IT C. Dissection and vasculitis of intracranial and extracranial arteries [A-046] H.R. Jäger; London/UK Friday, March 8, 10:30 12:00, Room N/O SS 515: Novel tools for blood flow evaluation [B-0361 B-0369] Moderators: J. Barkhausen; Lübeck/DE F.G. Garaci; Rome/IT Saturday, March 9, 08:30 10:00, Room L/M RC 815: How I report Moderator: D. Bilecen; Basle/CH A. CTA and MRA of supra-aortic arteries [A-241] J.H. Gillard; Cambridge/UK B. CTA and MRA of thoracic and abdominal aorta [A-242] H.J. Michaely; Mannheim/DE C. CTA and MRA of peripheral arteries [A-243] T. Leiner; Utrecht/NL Monday, March 11, 14:00 15:30, Room N/O SS 1815: Vascular research [B-0999 B-1008] Moderators: S. Kuribayashi; Tokyo/JP A. Pellegrin; Trento/IT Monday, March 11, 16:00 17:30, Room P RC 1915: Lower extremity venous insufficiency Chairman s introduction [A-622] D.J. West; Stoke-on-Trent/UK A. Venous anatomy and ultrasound [A-623] H. Moschouris; Piraeus/GR B. Rare venous diseases of the lower extremities [A-624] M. Greiner; Neuilly sur Seine/FR C. CT venography and MR venography [A-625] G. O Sullivan; Galway/IE Panel discussion: Which imaging modality is best for planning endovascular management? Friday, March 8, 16:00 17:30, Room Z RC 715: Dialysis fistula Moderator: H. Deutschmann; Graz/AT A. Preoperative mapping [A-198] L. Turmel-Rodrigues; Tours/FR B. Screening for problems [A-199] D. Vorwerk; Ingolstadt/DE C. Evaluation of malfunction [A-200] R. Uberoi; Oxford/UK 132

135 Refresher Courses / Scientific Sessions Oncologic Imaging Thursday, March 7, 10:30 12:00, Room F1 SS 116: Perfusion CT and MRI: ready for clinical practice [B-0061 B-0070] Moderators: S. Delorme; Heidelberg/DE F.A. Gallagher; Cambridge/UK Thursday, March 7, 14:00 15:30, Room F1 SS 216: New biomarkers for tumour quantification [B-0200 B-0209] Moderators: C.J. Herold; Vienna/AT C. Keyzer; Brussels/BE Friday, March 8, 08:30 10:00, Room C RC 416: MR imaging for prostate cancer management: the essential guide for radiologists Chairman s introduction [A-058] H.-P. Schlemmer; Heidelberg/DE A. Clinical challenges: how to treat prostate cancer [A-059] B.A. Hadaschik; Heidelberg/DE B. The radiologist s contribution: how to detect and characterise a tumour [A-060] A.R. Padhani; Northwood/UK C. The radiologist s influence on management. Staging prostate cancer: how it impacts on treatment selection [A-061] H. Hricak; New York, NY/US Panel discussion: Is MRI an integral part of the clinical routine? Friday, March 8, 10:30 12:00, Room F1 SS 516: Cutting edge imaging in oncology: when and how? [B-0320 B-0329] Moderators: K. Coenegrachts; Bruges/BE E.J. Rummeny; Munich/DE Saturday, March 9, 10:30 12:00, Room F1 SS 916: Whole-body imaging: how to do it [B-0549 B-0558] Moderators: T.F. Hany; Zurich/CH D. Lambregts; Maastricht/NL Sunday, March 10, 10:30 12:00, Room A SS 1316: Rectal cancer imaging: the next step [B-0620 B-0629] Moderators: L. Curvo-Semedo; Coimbra/PT C. Hoeffel; Reims/FR Sunday, March 10, 14:00 15:30, Room E2 RC 1416: The essentials of lymph node imaging of solid tumours: what the radiologist needs to know Chairman s introduction [A-437] R.G.H. Beets-Tan; Maastricht/NL A. The current criteria for nodal involvement on CT/MRI [A-438] W. Schima; Vienna/AT B. DWI MR: what does it contribute? [A-439] H.C. Thoeny; Berne/CH C. Nuclear medicine: PET and other nuclear medicine techniques [A-440] P.L. Choyke; Bethesda, MD/US Panel discussion: When and how could imaging make diagnostic biopsy unnecessary? Monday, March 11, 08:30 10:00, Room E2 RC 1616: Complications of cancer treatment and the detection of recurrences Chairman s introduction [A-548] M. Laniado; Dresden/DE A. Head and neck cancer [A-549] L. Oleaga Zufiría; Barcelona/ES B. Liver and pancreatic cancer [A-550] C. Catalano; Rome/IT C. Rectal cancer [A-551] L.C.O. Blomqvist; Stockholm/SE Panel discussion: How to differentiate between treatment sequelae and active disease Monday, March 11, 10:30 12:00, Room F1 SS 1716: Response evaluation in oncology: beyond RECIST [B-0799 B-0808] Moderators: T. Denecke; Berlin/DE M.I. Furmanek; Warsaw/PL Monday, March 11, 16:00 17:30, Room E2 RC 1916: Gastro-entero-pancreatic neuro-endocrine tumours (GEP-NET): a multidisciplinary update Chairman s introduction [A-601] C. Matos; Brussels/BE A. Tumour biology, pathogenesis and classification [A-602] B. Wiedenmann; Berlin/DE B. The current role of nuclear medicine techniques [A-603] C. Deroose; Leuven/BE C. Anatomical imaging: transabdominal US, endoscopic US, MDCT and MRI. What is the most appropriate imaging approach? [A-604] V. Vilgrain; Clichy/FR Panel discussion: The future of hybrid imaging? 133

136 Refresher Courses / Scientific Sessions Emergency Radiology Thursday, March 7, 10:30 12:00, Room P SS 117: An update on emergency thoracoabdominal imaging [B-0121 B-0130] Moderators: B. Feragalli; Chieti/IT A. Huete; Santiago/CL Friday, March 8, 08:30 10:00, Room D2 RC 417: ER: basic principles Moderator: P. Valdés Solís; Marbella/ES A. Logistics and organisation of an emergency radiology department [A-065] M. Körner; Munich/DE B. Advanced trauma life support: basic knowledge for radiologists [A-066] D.R. Kool; Nijmegen/NL C. Mechanism of injury and MDCT protocols: choosing the right protocol for the right patient [A-067] S. Voelckel; Innsbruck/AT Saturday, March 9, 08:30 10:00, Room E1 RC 817: Polytrauma: redefining imaging issues for management priorities Chairman s introduction: advanced imaging, logistics and management priorities in patients after polytrauma [A-218] H. Alkadhi; Zurich/CH A. Vascular Trauma [A-219] G. Schueller; Bülach/CH B. Chest and abdomen [A-220] M. Scaglione; Castel Volturno/IT C. Extremities [A-221] U. Linsenmaier; Munich/DE Panel discussion: How to speed up your diagnoses? Sunday, March 10, 10:30 12:00, Room N/O SS 1317: Technical issues and clinical results [B-0719 B-0728] Moderators: M. Brink; Nijmegen/NL G. Schueller; Bülach/CH Sunday, March 10, 16:00 17:30, Room E1 RC 1517: ER: comprehensive imaging of non-traumatic abdominal emergencies Chairman s introduction: logistics and management of critical patients with abdominal complaints [A-492] S. Wirth; Munich/DE A. Imaging of the most frequent emergencies of the upper abdomen [A-493] C.J. Zech; Basle/CH B. Imaging of the most frequent emergencies of the gastrointestinal tract [A-494] M. Zins; Paris/FR C. Imaging of the most frequent emergencies of the genitourinary tract [A-495] L.E. Derchi; Genoa/IT Panel discussion: How to speed up your diagnoses? 134

137 Organising Committee: EFOMP Workshop New technology in diagnostic radiology: new frontiers in imaging of the lung Chairman: P. Sharp; Aberdeen/UK Members: A. Torresin; Milan/IT W.J.M. van der Putten; Galway/IE J. Vassileva; Sofia/BG Saturday, March 9, 08:30 10:00, Room G/H EF 1: Lung and chest imaging: new approaches Moderators: P. Sharp; Aberdeen/UK W.J.M. van der Putten; Galway/IE Welcome address [A-233] J.I. Bilbao; Pamplona/ES P. Sharp; Aberdeen/UK Radiologist s point of view: clinical and technical requirements for imaging of the lung [A-234] H.-U. Kauczor; Heidelberg/DE Respiratory motion correction in lung imaging [A-235] J. Schnabel; Oxford/UK Role of tomosynthesis in lung imaging [A-236] M. Båth; Gothenburg/SE Saturday, March 9, 10:30 12:00, Room G/H EF 2: Lung imaging: multidisciplinary scenario Moderators: A. Torresin; Milan/IT J. Vassileva; Sofia/BG Pulmonary nodule detection using CAD [A-266] A. Retico; Pisa/IT Optimisation in lung imaging of children [A-267] C. Owens; London/UK Lung imaging: developments in role of PET [A-268] M.-E. Meyer; Amiens/FR Lung imaging: developments in role of MR [A-269] J.M. Wild; Sheffield/UK 135

138 E 3 European Excellence in Education Foundation Course: Neuroimaging Friday, March 8, 08:30 10:00, Room E2 E³ 420: The orbit, the petrous bone and the sella Moderator: B. De Foer; Antwerp/BE A. Imaging of the orbit: the globe and conal lesions [A-072] P.C. Maly Sundgren; Lund/SE B. The petrous bone [A-073] F. Veillon; Strasbourg/FR C. Sella and parasellar pathology [A-074] R. Gasparotti; Brescia/IT Friday, March 8, 10:30 12:00, Room E2 E³ 520c: Paediatric Moderator: D. Prayer; Vienna/AT A. Neonatal hypoxic-ischaemic brain injury [A-119] M.I. Argyropoulou; Ioannina/GR B. Spine and spinal cord malformations [A-120] A. Rossi; Genoa/IT C. Imaging of the foetal brain [A-121] C. Garel; Paris/FR Friday, March 8, 14:00 15:30, Room E2 E³ 620: Trauma and vascularity Moderator: A. Molyneux; Oxford/UK A. CNS Trauma [A-131] P.M. Parizel; Antwerp/BE B. Cerebral ischaemia and infarction [A-132] L. Pierot; Reims/FR C. Vascular malformations of the spinal cord [A-133] D.A. Rüfenacht; Zurich/CH Saturday, March 9, 08:30 10:00, Room E2 E³ 820b: Metabolic and neurodegenerative disorders Moderator: S. Lehéricy; Paris/FR A. Dementia [A-222] B. Gómez-Ansón; Barcelona/ES B. Movement disorders [A-223] T.A. Yousry; London/UK C. Metabolic disorders [A-224] J.F. Schneider; Basle/CH Saturday, March 9, 10:30 12:00, Room E2 E³ 920b: Tumours and phacomatosis Moderator: N. Girard; Marseille/FR A. Brain tumours [A-263] M.M. Thurnher; Vienna/AT B. Tumours of the spinal cord [A-264] J. Van Goethem; Antwerp/BE C. Phacomatosis [A-265] M.A. Papathanasiou; Athens/GR Saturday, March 9, 12:15 13:15, EPOS Area Self assessment test Moderator: M.I. Argyropoulou; Ioannina/GR Interactive computer evaluation of course learning Friday, March 8, 16:00 17:30, Room E2 E³ 720b: Infection and inflammation Moderator: A.D. Gouliamos; Athens/GR A. Infection [A-164] E.T. Tali; Ankara/TR B. Multiple sclerosis [A-165] F. Barkhof; Amsterdam/NL C. Mimics of multiple sclerosis [A-166] V. Dousset; Bordeaux/FR 136

139 E 3 European Excellence in Education Interactive Teaching Sessions Thursday, March 7, 14:00 15:30, Room B E³ 220: Lung cancer A. Detection [A-003] S. Diederich; Düsseldorf/DE B. Follow-up [A-004] F. Gleeson; Oxford/UK Thursday, March 7, 16:00 17:30, Room B E³ 320: Malignant pancreatic tumours A. Solid tumours [A-005] W. Schima; Vienna/AT B. Cystic tumours [A-006] G. Morana; Treviso/IT Friday, March 8, 10:30 12:00, Room A E³ 520a: Pitfalls in abdominal imaging A. Liver [A-109] V. Vilgrain; Clichy/FR B. Pancreas and bile ducts [A-110] R. Manfredi; Verona/IT Friday, March 8, 10:30 12:00, Room C E³ 520b: Pitfalls in head and neck imaging A. Pitfalls in neck imaging [A-117] F.A. Pameijer; Utrecht/NL B. Pitfalls in maxillofacial and skull base imaging [A-118] R. Hermans; Leuven/BE Friday, March 8, 16:00 17:30, Room A E³ 720a: Neurological emergencies A. Non-traumatic [A-142] C. Ozdoba; Berne/CH B. Traumatic [A-143] M. Stajgis; Poznan/PL Saturday, March 9, 08:30 10:00, Room A E³ 820a: Pitfalls in heart imaging A. CT [A-201] G. Bastarrika; Pamplona/ES B. MRI [A-202] M. Francone; Rome/IT Saturday, March 9, 10:30 12:00, Room A E³ 920a: Tips and tricks in chest imaging A. Plain radiography [A-254] J. Cáceres; Barcelona/ES B. CT [A-255] J. Vilar; Valencia/ES Saturday, March 9, 16:00 17:30, Room A E³ 1120: Breast cancer A. Detection [A-296] C.S. Balleyguier; Villejuif/FR B. Follow-up [A-297] G. Forrai; Budapest/HU Sunday, March 10, 08:30 10:00, Room A E³ 1220: Pitfalls in brain imaging A. CT [A-346] L. Van den Hauwe; Brasschaat/BE B. MRI [A-347] M. Essig; Erlangen/DE Sunday, March 10, 14:00 15:30, Room A E³ 1420: Common and uncommon errors in plain film and CT imaging of the chest: how to improve your performance D. Tack; Baudour/BE [A-419] N. Howarth; Chêne-Bougeries/CH Sunday, March 10, 16:00 17:30, Room A E³ 1520: Thoracic emergencies A. Vascular [A-476] E. Castañer; Sabadell/ES B. Pulmonary [A-477] C.M. Schaefer-Prokop; Amersfoort/NL Monday, March 11, 08:30 10:00, Room A E³ 1620: Acute abdominal inflammatory disorders A. Colitis and enterocolitis [A-528] D.J.M. Tolan; Leeds/UK B. Liver and bile ducts [A-529] C.D. Becker; Geneva/CH Monday, March 11, 10:30 12:00, Room B E³ 1720a: Pitfalls in pelvic imaging A. Pitfalls in MRI of the pelvis [A-586] E. Sala; New York, NY/US B. Pitfalls in pelvic ultrasound [A-587] K. Kinkel; Chêne-Bougeries/CH Monday, March 11, 10:30 12:00, Room A E³ 1720b: Musculoskeletal emergencies A. Axial skeleton [A-584] E. Llopis; Valencia/ES B. Peripheral skeleton [A-585] V.N. Cassar-Pullicino; Oswestry/UK = Interactive session with electronic voting/self assessment 137

140 Gustav Klimt, Design Drawing Tree, 1910/11 MAK/Georg Mayer More about museums and exhibitions in Vienna:

141 Accompanying Sessions Thursday, March 7, 16:00 17:30, Room Z ESR Radiation Protection Session Security scanners at airports: are they safe? Moderators: J. Damilakis; Iraklion/GR P. Vock; Berne/CH X-ray backscatter security scanners: principles, performance and potential health risks [A-051] J. Damilakis; Iraklion/GR Cumulative low-level x-ray radiation exposure: is it harmful? [A-052] P. Vock; Berne/CH Security scanners using non-ionising radiation: current status and trends for development [A-053] M. Kemp; Cambridge/UK Friday, March 8, 08:30 10:00, Room B 6 th Post-Processing Face-Off Session Chairman: A. Graser; Munich/DE Co-chairmen: M. D Anastasi; Munich/DE F. Schwarz; Munich/DE After the great success in the last years, ECR 2013 will, for the sixth time, feature a Workstation Face-Off session. Continuous rapid technical advances in CT require state-of-the-art postprocessing tools and workstations. Currently, most solutions are based on a thin client-server architecture which significantly speeds up loading times and workflow. In the 21 st century, radiologists are required to interpret 3D datasets and to handle very large data volumes. For several clinical applications, dedicated post-processing workflows are now available. All major vendors offer a variety of hardware and software, and it is often difficult to recognise the individual strengths and weaknesses of different systems. Our 6 th annual Post-Processing Face-Off Session will allow you to get an impression of the 3D capabilities and large data volume handling provided by the latest workstation technology. Several workstations from different vendors (aycan, GE Healthcare, Philips Healthcare, Siemens, TeraRecon, Vital Images) will be set up on stage next to each other, and two cases provided by the ESR will be demonstrated by expert users. This year, one of the cases is a cardiac case involving CTA of the coronary arteries and functional MRI with rest and stress perfusion imaging. The second case will be an oncology patient with a metastasised malignant melanoma. Tasks will include detection of lung nodules with CAD and segmentation of lesions over time assessing response. The aim of this session is to simulate a realistic reading room atmosphere and to give an impression of how different workstations perform in a clinical scenario. We cordially invite you to attend this exciting tournament of post-processing. Friday, March 8, 08:30 10:00, Room N/O EIBIR/EORTC (European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer) Symposium A radiologist with a ruler in his hand is a dangerous person: seeking standardisation in multicentre imaging trials Moderators: P. Brader; Vienna/AT Y. Liu; Brussels/BE Introduction: Who, what, why, outcome at the end of the symposium [A-095] P. Brader; Vienna/AT Y. Liu; Brussels/BE Setting up clinical trials with functional imaging endpoints: trials and tribulations [A-096] N. desouza; Sutton/UK Challenges, problems on key imaging techniques [A-097] B. van Beers; Clichy/FR Advanced MR neuroimaging in multicentre trials: experience from the EORTC Brain Tumour Group [A-098] M. Smits; Rotterdam/NL Presentation of LUNG study: from the beginning until today [A-099] U. Nestle; Freiburg/DE Discussion, Questions and Answers Friday, March 8, 14:00 15:30, Room Q ESOR Session Fostering future researchers Moderators: N. Gourtsoyiannis; Athens/GR G.P. Krestin; Rotterdam/NL During this session, the European School of Radiology (ESOR) will give participants an insight into the variety of its training programmes and opportunities. Crucial and evolving obstacles to research training in radiology will be put forward for discussion. Introduction G.P. Krestin; Rotterdam/NL ESOR in action 2013 N. Gourtsoyiannis; Athens/GR Research training for residents L. Martí-Bonmatí; Valencia/ES PhD in residency programmes S. Trattnig; Vienna/AT Preparing research trials R.G.H. Beets-Tan; Maastricht/NL Awards During the session, scholars and fellows will be awarded certificates for successfully completing the 2012 ESOR Scholarship and Fellowship Programmes. 139

142 Accompanying Sessions Saturday, March 9, 10:30 12:00, Room L/M Standards and Audit Session Assessment of radiologists professional performance Moderator: E.J. Adam; London/UK Radiologists performance: assessment using peer review [A-270] G. Boland; Wellesley, MA/US Radiologists individual performance: use of standardised test images [A-271] A.G. Gale; Loughborough/UK Radiologists performance: referrers view [A-272] J.M.L. Bosmans; Gent/BE Saturday, March 9, 10:30 12:00, Meeting Room 14, 1 st Level EIBIR/EuroAIM Session Evidence-based radiology Moderators: F. Sardanelli; Milan/IT M.G.M. Hunink; Rotterdam/NL Systematic reviews and meta-analyses in radiology G. Di Leo; Milan/IT Guidelines in radiology L.M. Sconfienza; Milan/IT Clinical decision support for the safe and effective use of imaging tests M.G.M. Hunink; Rotterdam/NL Preoperative breast MRI: the MIPA study R.M. Trimboli; Milan/IT Discussion Saturday, March 9, 12:45 14:15, Room Z EIBIR Session Horizon 2020 Setting the scene for Europe s next research programme Moderators: G.P. Krestin; Rotterdam/NL J. Hennig; Freiburg/DE Horizon 2020: setting the scene insight into Horizon 2020 health priorities, including the research infrastructure perspective K. Berkouk; Brussels/BE IMI How to speed up the development of better and safer medicines for patients E. Vaudano; Brussels/BE Public private partnerships as a booster for research and economic growth in the future N. Denjoy; Brussels/BE The role of imaging in health research in the era of Personalised Medicine L. Martí-Bonmatí; Valencia/ES How EIBIR supports biomedical imaging scientists in their grant applications and research management J. Hennig; Freiburg/DE Questions/Answers Saturday, March 9, 14:00 15:30, Room A Image Interpretation Quiz: Radiology is global Moderator: D. Vorwerk; Ingolstadt/DE Referee: A. Agrawal, Delhi/IN Panellists: Team 1: A.R. Gillams; London/UK T. Leiner; Utrecht/NL A. Oikonomou; Alexandroupolis/GR C.W. Sperryn; Cape Town/ZA Team 2: F.M. Danza; Rome/IT H.B. Eggesbø; Oslo/NO P. Rogalla; Toronto, ON/CA M. Studniarek; Gdansk/PL 140 = Interactive session with electronic voting/self assessment

143 Accompanying Sessions Saturday, March 9, 16:00 17:30, Room Z Euro-BioImaging Towards implementation of a pan-european imaging infrastructure Moderator: J. Hennig; Freiburg/DE Euro-BioImaging Towards implementation of a European open access imaging research infrastructure J. Hennig; Freiburg/DE Making the case: development of a node for UHF-MRI O. Speck; Magdeburg/DE J. Hennig; Freiburg /DE Potential of Phase-Contrast Imaging as a node within Euro-BioImaging F. Bamberg; Munich/DE Discussion Sunday, March 10, 10:30 12:00, Room Q Radiology Trainees Forum RTF Highlighted Lectures Moderators: D. Bulja; Sarajevo/BA V.H. Koen; Harleem/NL Emergency radiology management in patients with polytrauma [A-413] U. Linsenmaier; Munich/DE Imaging of non-traumatic intracranial haemorrhage [A-414] Z. Merhemic; Sarajevo/BA Case-based learning in radiology [A-415] P. Pokieser; Vienna/AT Sunday, March 10, 13:00 14:00, Room A Junior Image Interpretation Quiz: Golden Eye Moderator: A. Alguersuari; Sabadell/ES Co-Moderator: E. Belmonte; Barcelona/ES Panellists: G. Gherarducci; Pisa/IT C. Sayer; Brighton/UK C.M. Sommer; Heidelberg/DE L. Tzarouchi; Ioannina/GR A. Vanrossomme; Brussels/BE Monday, March 11, 08:30 10:00, Room Z Joint Session of the ESR and EFSUMB (European Federation of Societies for Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology) Advances in diagnostic ultrasound: better results through cooperation Moderators: L.E. Derchi; Genoa/IT F. Piscaglia; Bologna/IT Introducing the EFSUMB: the world s largest ultrasound society [A-579] N. Gritzmann; Vienna/AT ESR/EFSUMB collaboration: a newly established platform for joint development of ultrasound in radiology and clinical specialties [A-580] L.E. Derchi; Genoa/IT Image fusion and intervention [A-581] T. Lorentzen; Herlev/DK The EFSUMB non-liver CEUS guidelines [A-582] F. Piscaglia; Bologna/IT The EFSUMB/WFUMB liver-ceus guidelines [A-583] M. Claudon; Vandœuvre-les-Nancy/FR 141

144 EIBIR presents IMAGINE Thursday March 7 to Sunday March 10 Novel technology that shapes radiology: EIBIR presents IMAGINE IMAGINE aims to stimulate interaction between imaging researchers and radiologists. Internationally leading academic and industrial research groups present their latest developments in medical image analysis and image-guided interventions. During the interactive software demonstration sessions the visitors get hands-on experience with developed techniques and tools. EIBIR IMAGINE committee to chair the oral presentations: Chair & coordinator: Marleen de Bruijne, Erasmus MC; Rotterdam/NL & University of Copenhagen; Copenhagen/DK; EIBIR IMAGINE committee: Mari Cruz Villa, Universitat Pompeu Fabra CISTIB Computional Imaging; Barcelona/ES Sune Darkner, Københavns Universitet Datalogisk Institut (DIKU-NC); Copenhagen/DK Jan Klein, Fraunhofer MEVIS Institute for Medical Image Computing; Bremen/DE Emanuele Neri, University of Pisa/Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology; Pisa/IT Christine Tanner, Computer Vision Laboratory / ETH Zurich; Zurich/CH Eva van Rikxoort, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Center, Diagnostic Image Analysis Group; Nijmegen/NL Setting: One lecture (oral presentation) per topic (90 minutes) Two software demonstration sessions per topic: hands-on experience of the techniques and tools. The first session is right after the oral presentation (60 minutes); a second session is held the next day at 12:00 13:00. Programme/Schedule: Thursday, March 7, 16:30 17:30, Room U Novel technology that shapes radiology: EIBIR presents IMAGINE Scientific exchange get-together Oncological image analysis Thursday, March 7, 14:00 15:30, EIBIR IMAGINE Theatre, Room U Oral presentations Moderators: EIBIR IMAGINE committee Quantifying response to CRT in colorectal cancer patients from dynamic imaging M. Bhushan; Oxford /UK Efficient workflows and reporting for RECIST and other quantitative imaging standards in cancer research and clinical practice M. Baumhauer; Heidelberg/DE M. Seitel; Heidelberg/DE IMBIS: Imaging biomarkers information system for medical images post-processing and structured reporting A. Alberich-Bayarri; Valencia/ES Fully automatic estimation of film-based breast percentage density separate out postmenopausal hormone replacement treatment effects as well as expert s estimation K. Petersen; Frederiksberg/DK CT colonography: Accurate registration of prone and supine endoluminal surfaces of the colon T.E. Hampshire; London/UK Optimised workflow for low dose thoracic CT lung cancer screening: automated detection, measurement, temporal matching and volumetry and mass analysis, individualised prediction of cancer risk, structured reporting with follow-up recommendation C. Jacobs; Nijmegen/NL Software demonstrations Oncological image analysis Thursday, March 7, 15:30 16:30, Room U Friday, March 8, 12:00 13:00, Room U 142

145 EIBIR presents IMAGINE Quantitative image analysis Friday, March 8, 14:00 15:30, EIBIR IMAGINE Theatre, Room U Oral presentations Moderators: EIBIR IMAGINE committee An automatic system for segmentation, matching, anatomical labelling and measurement of airways from CT images J. Petersen; Copenhagen/DK New algorithms for quantitative image analysis inspired by functional brain mechanisms B.M. Ter Haar Romeny; Eindhoven/NL Patterns in radiology: spatio-temporal image analysis in research and clinical application R. Donner; Vienna/AT QuantaVita for clinical practice: fully-automated quantitative MRI with normative ranges A. Cherubini; Catanzaro/IT BrainCON: graph theory based multimodal brain connectivity analysis and visualisation software; BrainMOD: multi-purpose software for 4-dimensional multimodal medical image analysis T. Spisák; Debrecen/HU The 3DSlicer open-source platform for segmentation, registration, quantitative imaging and 3D visualisation of biomedical image data S. Pujol; Boston, MA/US Software demonstrations Quantitative image analysis Friday, March 8, 15:30 16:30, Room U Saturday March 9, 12:00 13:00, Room U Image guided interventions and computer aided diagnosis Saturday, March 9, 14:00 15:30, EIBIR IMAGINE Theatre, Room U Oral presentations Moderators: EIBIR IMAGINE committee Markerlessly tracking lung tumours during radiotherapy treatment using Align RT optical surrogate and motion model built from cone-beam CT on day of treatment J. McClelland; London/UK FUSIMO: A prototype for patient-specific prediction of focused ultrasound surgery in moving organs J. Strehlow; Bremen/DE SlicerRT 3D Slicer based open-source toolkit for radiation therapy research C. Pinter; Kingston, ON/CA MRI guided prostate biopsy: a multiparametric, multireader, registration assisted, template based workflow T. Penzkofer; Bosten, MA/US BRIC1936: software package for lesion assessment: segmentation, progression and intensity analysis, in magnetic resonance imaging M.C. Valdés Hernández; Edinburgh/UK Automated labelling framework applied on full and partial spine CT scans J. Hladuvka; Vienna/AT Software demonstrations Image guided interventions and computer aided diagnosis Saturday, March 9, 15:30 16:30, Room U Sunday, March 10, 12 13, Room U 143

146 Rising Stars Programme Basic Sessions Friday, March 8, 08:30 10:00, Studio 2013 Basic Session on Cardiac Radiology Imaging of myocardial infarction and viability M. Francone; Rome/IT Acute aortic syndrome A.J.B.S. Madureira; Porto/PT Cardiac CT in the Workup of Coronary Heart Disease U.J. Schoepf; Charleston, SC/US Friday, March 8, 10:30 12:00, Studio 2013 Basic Session on Neuroradiology Aging, degeneration, and inflammation in the brain: an imaging perspective B. Gómez-Ansón; Barcelona/ES Is the Circle of Willis a circle? H.R. Jäger; London/UK CNS Infections M.M. Thurnher; Vienna/AT Sunday, March 10, 08:30 10:00, Studio 2013 Basic Session on Interventional Radiology Management of aortic aneurysm and dissection R. Morgan; London/UK Overview of the development of interventional radiology techniques B. Ganai; Newcastle/UK Embolisation of liver malignancies M.A.A.J. van den Bosch; Utrecht/NL Student Sessions Friday, March 8, 14:00 15:30, Studio 2013 Student Session 1 Provisional reporting maintaining high standards in radiology F. Seker; Mannheim/DE Provisional reporting radiology versus emergency doctors R. Coroiu; Covasna/RO Provisional reporting The key for diagnosis of polytrauma patients J. Lee; Seoul/KR With the patient; let us establish a rapport K. Song; Seoul/KR Theory and practice in medical education M. Aleksandrova-Moiseja; Riga/LV Friday, March 8, 16:00 17:30, Studio 2013 Student Session 2 Theory vs. practice V. Nechaev; Moscow/RU The imaging professional of the future: how can tasks be distributed? Z. Demeter; Nyíregyháza/HU Theory and practice supposed dichotomy exemplifying the practical role of MRI in diagnosing knee injuries C.G. Iacoban; Baia Mare/RO MRI contrast agents: what radiographers-in-training need to know C. Fraga Piñeiro; Vigo/ES Radiographer students role in large-scale research projects of the European community: my educational perspective M. Breikss; Riga/LV 144

147 Rising Stars Programme Saturday, March 9, 08:30 10:00, Studio 2013 Student Session 3 CT, MRI, US or x-rays for blunt trauma in pregnancy J. Bojarovska; Riga/LV Cervical trauma: is plain x-ray still necessary? H.A. Hanelore; Bistrita/RO Utilisation of radiological examinations in patients with trauma E. Dappa; Pfungstadt/DE Can the anatomy of the heart be taught using reconstructed CT images? A pilot study M. Kolossvary; Budapest/HU Scaphoid and cervical spine fractures: are plain x-rays really enough? D. Grant; Aylesbury/UK Saturday, March 9, 10:30 12:00, Studio 2013 Student Session 4 New algorithm for treatment of trauma patients required: considering total body imaging instead of plain x-ray as initial management H. Emich; Mannheim/DE Post-mortem CT characteristics and its influence on virtual autopsy J.H. van Mourik; Amsterdam/NL Implementing student to student mentorship in the Faculty of Medicine from Grigore T. Popa University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Iasi G.-E. Gilca; Iasi/RO Peer teaching for sonographic and orthopaedic assessment of the large joints B.J. Neubauer; Vienna/AT Occupational exposure in interventional procedures: do active dosimeters influence professional behaviour? C. Paulo; Coimbra/PT Student Hands-on Workshops on Ultrasound In cooperation with Sono4You After last year s success, hands-on workshops exclusively for students will again be held at ECR An expert team of tutors will lead the students through the workshops, which will include six different workstations to give every participant the chance to familiarise themselves with the wide range of possibilities with ultrasound. Workshop 1: Friday, March 8, 10:00 12:00 Workshop 2: Friday, March 8, 14:00 16:00 Workshop 3: Saturday, March 9, 16:00 18:00 Workshop Advanced: Sunday, March 10, 16:00 18:00 Suitable for advanced students and residents. All workshops take place in Room X (1 st level). Registration: These workshops are fully booked. Places may become available at short notice onsite. Sunday, March 10, 14:00 15:00, Studio 2013 Final Student Session The four best student presenters will be awarded by the ESR during this session. 145

148 Update Your Skills (Practical Courses) How to biopsy with US guidance Coordinator: G. Mostbeck; Vienna/AT Speakers: J.-M. Correas; Paris/FR G. Mostbeck; Vienna/AT W. Pokieser; Vienna/AT L. Solbiati; Busto Arsizio/IT Instructors: F. Deschamps; Villejuif/FR H. Kopf; Vienna/AT G. Mauri; Busto Arsizio/IT W. Pokieser; Vienna/AT H. Schuster; Vienna/AT This practical course teaches participants the fundamentals of US-guided biopsy. US-guided biopsy is faster, less invasive and less expensive than surgical biopsy and technically less demanding compared to CT und MR guidance. Tissue acquisition is performed with aspiration needles and/or automated large-core needles and biopsy guns. The choice of the needle depends on the lesion type as well as the pre-test probability of a specific malignancy. This practical course reviews indications, patient preparation, techniques, material preparation and contraindications of US-guided biopsy. Participants will work on phantoms to learn the device-related technical aspects of the performance, how to prepare the patient and percutaneous biopsy device, and how to adequately approach a lesion. State-of-the-art equipment, including different automated large core needles and/or guns will be available. The practical training courses are organised to allow time for each participant to perform interventions under expert supervision. It is recommended to follow the introductory lectures before entering the practical training courses. Learning objectives 1. To know the indications and contraindications and the technical requirements to perform US-guided biopsy procedures. 2. To know requirements for patient preparation, selection of material and specimen preparation for optimal results as well as management of complications. 3. To become familiar with the handling of needles, scan-heads and biopsy guns. Introductory lectures Introduction: why choose US for biopsy guidance? G. Mostbeck; Vienna/AT All you need to know: protocols, patient preparation and consent, needles and guns, aspiration vs. core, indications and contraindications J.-M. Correas; Paris/FR Do we always need the pathologist onsite? What is enough material? Specimen preparation and handling W. Pokieser; Vienna/AT Image fusion: when do we need it? L. Solbiati; Busto Arsizio/IT Schedule Saturday, March 9 SK :30-10:00 Introductory Lectures (Room Z, 2 nd level) SK :30-12:00 Practical Training Course SK :00-15:30 Practical Training Course Sunday, March 10 SK :30-12:00 Practical Training Course All courses take place in Room X (1 st level). Registration The number of participants for each course is limited. Pre-registration has been arranged according to the order in which applications were received. Registration will be possible onsite if seats are still available. Please register in front of Room X, 20 minutes before the start of the course. Please note that an extra fee of 50 per participant is charged for this course. Attendance of the lecture session on Monday morning is mandatory in order to participate in the pre-registered practical training courses. 146

149 Update Your Skills (Practical Courses) Image-Guided Tumour Ablation: How to do it Coordinators: D.J. Breen; Southampton/UK, M.H. Fuchsjäger; Graz/AT Speakers: Liver Ablation D.J. Breen; Southampton/UK L. Crocetti; Pisa/IT T. Helmberger; Munich/DE P.L. Pereira; Heilbronn/DE Breast Ablation B. Brkljačić; Zagreb/HR E. Cossu; Rome/IT M.H. Fuchsjäger; Graz/AT Instructors: Liver Ablation D. Alcorn; Glasgow/UK, P. Almeida; Coimbra/PT, E.M. Anderson; Oxford/UK, R. Bale; Innsbruck/AT, D.J. Breen; Southampton/UK, X. Buy; Strasbourg/FR, R. Illing; London/UK, J. Tacke; Passau/DE Breast Ablation E. Bonanno; Rome/IT, E. Cossu; Rome/IT, M.H. Fuchsjäger; Graz/AT, G. Ivanac; Zagreb/HR, A. Malich; Nordhausen/DE H. Schöllnast; Graz/AT This practical course reviews indications, advantages, limitations and controversial issues in percutaneous image-guided ablation of liver and breast lesions under multimodality imaging guidance. Participants will work on phantoms not only to learn the device-related technical aspects of the performance but also how to choose the adequate guidance method, how to prepare the patient and the percutaneous ablation device, and how to adequately approach the lesion. Oncological as well as quality assurance aspects will be emphasised. State-of-the-art equipment, including different ablation devices (Radio-frequency-, microwave-, cryo-ablation, irreversible electroporation), is available; the practical courses are organised to allow time for each participant to perform interventions under expert supervision. Participants are required to attend the complete practical course (lectures and practical course). Learning objectives 1. To understand the range of ablation technologies currently on offer, their surgical properties, merits and limitations. 2. To comprehend the indications and limitations of percutaneous image-guided tumour ablation. 3. To achieve appropriate case selection and understand the interface with resection and chemo/radio-embolisation. 4. To learn how to plan an appropriate treatment strategy to achieve optimal clinical results. 5. To plan appropriate follow-up and participate fully in multi-disciplinary patient management. 6. To perform image-guided tumour ablation under ultrasound and guidance in accordance to international standards. Registration The number of participants for each course is limited. Pre-registration has been arranged according to the order in which applications were received. Registration will be possible onsite if seats are still available. Please register in front of Room Y, 20 minutes before the start of the course. Please note that an extra fee of 50 per participant is charged for this course. Attendance of the lecture sessions on Friday morning is mandatory in order to participate in the pre-registered practical training courses. Introductory lectures Theoretical introduction: liver ablation Understanding ablation devices and treatment strategies D.J. Breen; Southampton/UK Optimised outcomes in hepatocellular carcinoma ablation L. Crocetti; Pisa/IT Optimised outcomes in ablation of colorectal metastases T. Helmberger; Munich/DE Outcomes: making the case for image-guided ablation in the multidisciplinary patient management P.L. Pereira; Heilbronn/DE Theoretical introduction: breast ablation Indications, patient selection and limitations for imaging-guided breast ablation B. Brkljačić; Zagreb/HR Technical considerations: guidance modalities, treatment devices M. Fuchsjäger; Graz/AT Practical considerations: multidisciplinary patient management E. Cossu; Rome/IT Schedule Friday, March 8 SK :30 10:00 Introductory Lectures (liver ablation; Room Z) SK :30 12:00 Introductory Lectures (breast ablation; Room Z) SK :00 15:30 Liver ablation SK :00 17:30 Breast ablation Saturday, March 9 SK :30 12:00 Liver ablation SK :00 15:30 Breast ablation SK :00 17:30 Liver ablation Sunday, March 10 SK :30 12:00 Breast ablation SK :00 15:30 Liver ablation SK :00 17:30 Breast ablation All practical training courses will take place in Room Y (1 st level). 147

150 Florian Boesch in Radamisto by Georg Friedrich Händel Monika Rittershaus More about opera in Vienna:

151 Satellite Symposia Thursday, March 7, 10:30 11:30, Studio 2013 Satellite Symposium organised by Siemens Healthcare SY 1: Advanced multimodality breast image reading Moderator: T. Hartley; Erlangen/DE Place of digital breast tomosynthesis in diagnostic investigation of breast lesions: old and new paradigms C. Van Ongeval; Leuven/BE Place of breast MRI in diagnostic investigation of breast lesions E. Wenkel; Erlangen/DE Panel Discussion Thursday, March 7, 12:30 13:30, Room G/H Satellite Symposium organised by SuperSonic Imagine SY 2: The benefits UltraFast TM imaging brings to ultrasound Moderator: J. Souquet; Aix-en-Provence/FR Advantages and limitations of ShearWave TM elastography for imaging prostate cancer and guiding biopsy P.S. Zoumpoulis; Athens/GR Benefits of UltraFastTM Doppler in the clinical workflow G. Ivanac; Zagreb/HR Experiences with the Aixplorer and ShearWave TM elastography for the staging of liver fibroses V. Vilgrain; Clichy/FR Advances in breast imaging with ShearWave TM elastography F.K.W. Schäfer; Kiel/DE Thursday, March 7, 12:30 13:30, Room I/K Satellite Symposium organised by Bayer HealthCare SY 3: New insight in breast cancer imaging Moderator: J. Camps Herrero; Valencia/ES Breast MRI for screening breast cancer, why, who and when? L. Umutlu; Essen/DE Overtreatment due to breast MRI a threat, a myth, or both? C.K. Kuhl; Aachen/DE MIPA study: study design, goals, rollout F. Sardanelli; Milan/IT Thursday, March 7, 12:00 13:30, Studio 2013 Satellite Symposium organised by Siemens Healthcare SY 4: Challenges in breast imaging Moderator: J. Barkhausen; Lübeck/DE 3D automated breast ultrasound: accuracy and diagnostic potentials M.J.C.M. Rutten; s Hertogenbosch/NL High image quality with lower dose mammography D. Uhlenbrock; Dortmund/DE Breast imaging from a pathologist s perspective A. Hartmann; Erlangen/DE MR breast in clinical routine W.A. Kaiser; Jena/DE Panel discussion Thursday, March 7, 14:00 15:30, Studio 2013 Satellite Symposium organised by Siemens Healthcare SY 5: Chances with digital breast tomosynthesis (DBT) Moderator: T.H. Helbich; Vienna/AT Physical challenges with digital breast tomosynthesis H. Bosmans; Leuven/BE Experiences with digital breast tomosynthesis in screening S. Zachrisson; Malmö/SE Value of tomosynthesis for the assessment of screendetected abnormalities S.H. Heywang-Köbrunner; Munich/DE Clinical experiences with digital breast tomosynthesis in follow up diagnostics F. Taşkın; Aydin/TR The future of breast tomosynthesis T.H. Helbich; Vienna/AT Panel Discussion Friday, March 8, 12:15 13:30, Room D1 Satellite Symposium organised by Bayer HealthCare SY 6: 25 years of contrast-enhanced MRI: there is more to see! Moderator: F. Caseiro-Alves; Coimbra/PT Contrast enhanced MRI: illuminating the shadows F. Caseiro-Alves; Coimbra/PT Optimising MRI in CNS for treatment planning J. Provenzale; Durham, NC/US The role of contrast in breast MRI F. Pediconi; Rome/IT Cardiovascular MR assessment of viability today and tomorrow J. Schulz-Menger; Berlin/DE Primovist -enhanced MRI in the preoperative assessment of liver function J.M. Lee; Seoul/KR 149

152 Satellite Symposia Friday, March 8, 12:30 13:30, Room G/H Satellite Symposium organised by Bracco SY 7: Breast MRI: where are we, and where are we going? Moderator: T.H. Helbich; Vienna/AT Current and future role of breast MRI C.K. Kuhl; Aachen/DE Challenges to contrast-enhanced breast MRI: pros and cons T.H. Helbich; Vienna/AT Contrast protocols F. Sardanelli; Milan/IT Friday, March 8, 12:30 13:30, Room I/K Satellite Symposium organised by GE Healthcare SY 8: Evidence of avant-garde MR Moderator: D. Pickuth; Saarbrücken/DE Sharing GE MR vision and future R. Hausmann; Waukesha, WI/US Innovativ technology: the clinical application of silent MR A. van der Lugt; Rotterdam/NL Getting closer to metallic implants M. Padrón; Madrid/ES Friday, March 8, 12:30 13:30, Room L/M Satellite Symposium organised by Siemens Healthcare SY 9: Pioneering futures in ultrasound Moderator: P.S. Sidhu; London/UK Strain imaging in the breast with a focus on the new VTIQ technology C.S. Balleyguier; Villejuif/FR Ultrasound study of the pancreas with CPS (CEUS) and ARFI (elastography): improving the diagnosis of pancreatic tumours M. D Onofrio; Verona/IT Image fusion: is this something we need? A. Nilsson; Uppsala/SE Saturday, March 9, 12:30 13:30, Room D1 Satellite Symposium jointly organised by Siemens Healthcare and Bayer HealthCare SY 10: Synergies in CT for better patient care: cutting edge CT and optimised contrast media application Moderator: J.E. Wildberger; Maastricht/NL Clinical benefits of a new fully integrated CT detector H. Alkadhi; Zurich/CH Optimise your CT results from scan to contrast media application J.E. Wildberger; Maastricht/NL Protocol optimisation in cutting edge CT A.H. Mahnken; Marburg/DE Saturday, March 9, 12:30 13:30, Room E1 Satellite Symposium organised by Bracco SY 11: Personalised CT imaging: a patient centric approach Moderator: M. Prokop; Nijmegen/NL Tailoring CT exams: when and how? C. Loewe; Vienna/AT How to balance radiation dose and diagnostic yield? H.-C. Becker; Munich/DE What if the patient is at risk? M.-F. Bellin; Le Kremlin-Bicêtre/FR Saturday, March 9, 12:30 13:30, Room E2 Satellite Symposium organised by Siemens Healthcare SY 12: Leading. With MAGNETOM. Moderator: T.J. Vogl; Frankfurt a. Main/DE Leading. With MAGNETOM. N. Bolle; Erlangen/DE Novel imaging techniques in abdominal imaging H.J. Michaely; Mannheim/DE Sustainability in a complex healthcare environment T.J. Vogl; Frankfurt a. Main/DE Saturday, March 9, 12:30 13:30, Room F2 Satellite Symposium organised by GE Healthcare SY 13: Developing innovative breast care solutions to improve clinical confidence Moderator: R.C. Sigal; Velizy/FR Case clarification with digital breast tomosynthesis versus mammography special views A. Stork; Düsseldorf/DE Contrast enhanced spectral mammography versus breast MRI: clinical experience E.M. Fallenberg; Berlin/DE New frontiers of advanced breast ultrasound A. Mundinger; Osnabrück/DE Role of MR DWI in breast cancer: correlation with histopathology V. Martinez de Vega; Madrid/ES 150

153 Satellite Symposia Saturday, March 9, 12:30 13:30, Room G/H Satellite Symposium organised by Guerbet SY 14: Combining high tolerance with high diagnostic performance in contrast enhanced MRI Moderator: S.O. Schönberg; Mannheim/DE Introduction S.O. Schönberg; Mannheim/DE Tolerance of MR contrast agent in at risk patients G. Deray; Paris/FR Optimal gadolinium concentration with high diagnostic accuracy M. Lell; Erlangen/DE MRI follow-up after kidney cancer cryoablation E. de Kerviler; Paris/FR Questions and conclusion S.O. Schönberg; Mannheim/DE Saturday, March 9, 12:30 13:30, Room I/K Satellite Symposium organised by Philips Healthcare SY 15: Transforming healthcare through innovative MR technology Moderator: J. van den Heuvel; Eindhoven/NL Imaging in cancer: multi-parametric whole-body and prostate imaging S. Punwani; London/UK New MR imaging approaches in assessing the aging brain M.A. van Buchem; Leiden/NL Saturday, March 9, 12:30 13:30, Room L/M Satellite Symposium organised by Philips Healthcare SY 16: News in mammography: spectral imaging in mammography screening Moderator: M. Danielsson; Solna/SE Experiences of MicroDose in tailored breast cancer screening program including women between years P. Panizza; Milan/IT Latest development in mammography: non-invasive single-shot spectral imaging S. Suryanarayanan; Andover, MA/US Spectral lesion evaluation: will it be possible to distinguish cysts from solid masses on the screening mammogram? M.G. Wallis; Cambridge/UK Questions Saturday, March 9, 14:00-14:30, Room N/O Mini Satellite Symposium organised by Philips Healthcare MSY 1: Transforming healthcare with CT Moderator: L. De Vries; Amsterdam/NL Clinical outcomes of novel CT reconstruction techniques E.E.J.G. Coche; Brussels/BE Saturday, March 9, 14:00 15:30, Room C Satellite Symposium organised by Hologic SY 17: Celebrating the evolution of breast tomosynthesis: from research to large-scale, population-based screening programs, to advanced applications Moderator: A. Smith; Bedford, MA/US A review of the evolution of breast tomosynthesis A. Smith; Bedford, MA/US The Oslo clinical tomosynthesis screening experience P. Skaane; Oslo/NO Initial experience with tomosynthesis biopsy D. Bernardi; Trento/IT Saturday, March 9, 14:00 15:30, Room E1 Satellite Symposium organised by Toshiba SY 18: Clinical advances in multimodality applications new perspectives in perfusion and fusion imaging Moderator: B. Hamm; Berlin/DE The impact of smart fusion on the diagnostic outcome T. Fischer; Berlin/DE CEUS of the kidney: from new technology to patient management improvement J.-M. Correas; Paris/FR Liver and pancreatic perfusion using Aquilion ONE vision J. Hermans; Nijmegen/NL Saturday, March 9, 14:00 15:30, Room F2 Satellite Symposium organised by Toshiba SY 19: Multimodal imaging for neuro applications Moderator: P.A. Brouwer; Leiden/NL Neuro applications using Aquilion ONE P.A. Brouwer; Leiden/NL Advanced neuroimaging at 3T with a 32ch head coil T. Okada; Kyoto/JP Neurological interventions using Toshiba Infinix H. Fransen; Gent/BE 151

154 Satellite Symposia Saturday, March 9, 14:00 15:30, Room L/M Satellite Symposium organised by GE Healthcare Nycomed SY 20: CT and MR diagnostic capabilities and safety: new tendency Moderators: V.N. Kornienko; Moscow/RU I.E. Tyurin; Moscow/RU Low-dose and low-iodine CT coronary angiography V.E. Sinitsyn; Moscow/RU MRI safety actual issues E. Mershina; Moscow/RU Brain heart axis R. Rienmüller; Graz/AT Russian radiology best practice clinical experience sharing A. Lukianchenko; Moscow/RU GE Healthcare innovative solutions for modern healthcare V.I. Grischenko; Moscow/RU Sunday, March 10, 12:30 13:30, Room C Satellite Symposium organised by GE Healthcare SY 21: Patient care and image quality: at the forefront of CT innovations and contrast media Moderator: V.E. Sinitsyn; Moscow/RU Key properties of isosmolar contrast media R.P. Franke; Ulm/DE Optimising image quality and patient care in cardiac CT D. Andreini; Milan/IT Spectral imaging: clinical breakthrough in oncology P. Ardies; Malle/BE Sunday, March 10, 12:30 13:30, Room G/H Satellite Symposium organised by Samsung SY 22: A new tool for detecting and diagnosing breast cancer: ultrasound ElastoScan Moderator: W. van de Vooren; Delft/NL Introduction to ElastoScan W. van de Vooren; Delft/NL The positive influence of ElastoScan on early breast cancer detection V.F. Duda; Marburg/DE Has ElastoScan positively influenced the way of breast surgery? C. Kohler; Marburg/DE Sunday, March 10, 12:30 13:30, Room L/M Satellite Symposium organised by Philips Healthcare SY 23: Transforming healthcare with ultrasound Moderator: S.T. Elliott; Newcastle upon Tyne/UK Opening Sonoelastography of the liver: the clinical point of view C. Filice; Pavia/IT Results with ElastPQ in the assessment of diffuse liver disease G. Ferraioli; Pavia/IT Fusion imaging with contrast enhanced ultrasound in the abdomen A. Martegani; Como/IT Innovation in high resolution breast ultrasound D.A. Clevert; Munich/DE Questions and answers Sunday, March 10, 12:30 13:30, Room N/O Satellite Symposium organised by Bracco SY 24: Cost-effectiveness and improvement of patient management with contrast enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) Moderator: G.H. Mostbeck; Vienna/AT Implementation of CEUS in the daily practice of the imaging center M. Wüstner; Trier/DE CEUS in interventional radiology: clinical outcomes and impact on patient management E.M. Jung; Regensburg/DE Clinical and cost effectiveness of CEUS for liver imaging: the NICE diagnostics guidance T. Hoare; Newcastle Upon Tyne/UK 152

155 Industry Hands-on Workshops Thursday, March 7 to Sunday, March 10, Siemens Experience Lounge, Entrance Level Industry Hands-on Workshops organised by Siemens Healthcare Clinical experts will demonstrate how to better use and further benefit from our solutions for advanced multimodality reading. A special focus will be placed on the imaging software syngo.via. Benefit from experts experience and receive an update on state-of-the-art techniques in computed tomography, magnetic resonance, molecular imaging and breast imaging. As a registered attendee for ECR 2013 these workshops are free of charge. Thursday, March 7: 14:00 15:30: MRI breast reading and reporting W.A. Kaiser; Jena/DE 16:00 17:30: Digital breast tomosynthesis J. Barkhausen; Lübeck/DE Friday, March 8: 10:00 11:30: CT Colonography T. Mang; Vienna/AT 12:00 13:30: Digital breast tomosynthesis J. Barkhausen; Lübeck/DE 14:00 15:30: Advanced orthopaedic hip and knee MRI R. Sutter; Zurich/CH 16:00 17:30: CT oncology A. Graser; Munich/DE Saturday, March 9: 10:00 11:30: Multimodal prostate MRI M. Röthke; Heidelberg/DE 12:00 13:30: MRI and CT for imaging acute stroke Karl-Olof Loevblad, Geneva P. Schramm; Göttingen/DE 14:00 15:30: Hybrid imaging in daily routine: SPECT- CT and PET-CT in orthopaedics and oncology C. von Gall; Erlangen/DE 16:00 17:30: Digital breast tomosynthesis J. Barkhausen; Lübeck/DE Sunday, March 10: 10:00 11:30: CT Dual Energy M. Kerl; Frankfurt/DE 12:00 13:30: Hybrid imaging in daily routine: SPECT-CT and PET-CT in orthopaedics and oncology C. von Gall; Erlangen/DE 14:00 15:30: CT cardiac R. Bauer; Frankfurt/DE 16:00 17:30: MRI breast reading and reporting W.A. Kaiser; Jena/DE Thursday, March 7 to Sunday, March 10, Hologic Hands-on Workshop Room, 1 st Level Industry Hands-on Workshops organised by Hologic Hologic is offering a series of 75-minute educational sessions for radiologists throughout the congress. The workshops include hands-on experience reading 3D breast tomosynthesis images in combination with conventional and synthesised 2D images. Brief lectures will provide an overview of the technologies prior to the hands-on. This programme is intended for radiologists interested in learning more about this breast cancer screening and diagnosis technology. Hologic Breast Tomosynthesis Hands-on Workshops Schedule Thursday, March 7: 13:00 14:15 15:00 16:15 Friday, March 8: 10:15 11:30 13:45 15:00 15:30 16:45 Saturday, March 9: 10:15 11:30 Sunday, March 10: 10:15 11:30 13:45 15:00 15:30 16:45 153

156 Zubin Mehta at the Musikverein More about concerts in Vienna:

157 Postgraduate Educational Programme Session numbers are prefixed by CC, E 3, EF, EM, HL, MC, MS, NH, OL, PC, RC, SA, SF, TF Presentation numbers are prefixed by the letter A Key to Abbreviations CC Categorical Course E 3 European Excellence in Education EF EFOMP Workshop EM ESR meets Session HL MC MS NH OL PC RC SA SF TF Honorary Lecture Mini Course Multidisciplinary Session New Horizons Session Opening Lecture Professional Challenges Session Refresher Course State of the Art Symposium Special Focus Session Radiology Trainees Forum

158 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-001 A :30 13:30 Room N/O The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Head and Neck MC 24A A taste of the oral cavity and salivary glands 12:30 A-001 A taste of the oral cavity and salivary glands A. Borges; Lisbon/PT 1. To become familiar with the anatomy of the oral cavity and salivary glands. 2. To learn how to tailor imaging approaches to the patient s clinical presentation. 3. To appreciate the main pathologic processes of the oral cavity and salivary glands. 12:30 13:30 Room P The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Musculoskeletal Imaging MC 25A Trauma 12:30 A-002 Trauma A. Kassarjian; Majadahonda/ES 1. To learn about the basic mechanisms of musculoskeletal trauma. 2. To become familiar with typical musculoskeletal injuries and injury patterns. 3. To understand the impact of different radiological methods in the trauma setting. 14:00 15:30 Room B Interactive Teaching Session E³ 220 Lung cancer 14:00 A-003 A. Detection S. Diederich; Düsseldorf/DE 1. To learn which imaging techniques are appropriate for detecting lung cancer. 2. To learn about the most relevant imaging findings in lung cancer. 3. To understand the behaviour of lung cancer related to imaging. 14:45 A-004 B. Follow-up F. Gleeson; Oxford/UK 1. To know the common features of lung cancer recurrence. 2. To learn how to establish follow-up protocols after treatment of lung cancer. 16:00 17:30 Room B Interactive Teaching Sessions E³ 320 Malignant pancreatic tumours 16:00 A-005 A. Solid tumours W. Schima; Vienna/AT 1. To learn how to differentiate tumours from other non-tumoural pathology. 2. To understand how to choose the proper imaging technology. 3. To appreciate how to determine resectability and extension of the tumour. 16:45 A-006 B. Cystic tumours G. Morana; Treviso/IT 1. To learn how to choose the proper imaging modality. 2. To understand the criteria of malignancy and benignity. 3. To learn how to follow-up the lesions. 16:00 17:30 Room C GI Tract RC 301 Staging and restaging of rectal and anal cancer 16:00 A-007 Chairman s introduction R.G.H. Beets-Tan; Maastricht/NL 16:05 A-008 A. Local staging of anal and rectal cancer and impact on initial therapeutic strategy S. Gourtsoyianni; London/UK 1. To learn about optimised MR techniques for rectal and anal cancer staging. 2. To become familiar with the role of endorectal ultrasound in anorectal cancer staging. 3. To understand basic TNM staging and assessment of the CRM on imaging. 4. To understand how imaging findings influence the initial therapeutic approach. 16:35 A-009 B. Assessment of rectal cancer response L. Curvo-Semedo; Coimbra/PT 1. To learn the rationale for following-up on patients after neoadjuvant chemoradiation. 2. To understand conventional imaging criteria for assessing tumour response. 3. To learn about new techniques for assessing response, including diffusion MRI and PET/CT. 16:55 A-010 C. Assessment of anal cancer response V.J. Goh; London/UK 1. To learn the rationale for restaging after therapy. 2. To know how to assess the tumour response with conventional imaging criteria. 3. To learn about new techniques for assessing response in anal cancer, including diffusion MRI and PET/CT. Panel discussion: 17:15 What clinicians expect from us in rectal and anal cancer staging and restaging? How should we image patients? 156

159 Postgraduate Educational Programme 16:00 17:30 Room D2 Cardiac RC 303 Cardiac imaging: the cutting edge Moderator: E. Di Cesare; L Aquila/IT 16:00 A-011 A. Cardiac MRI: do we need more than 1.5T? B.J. Wintersperger; Toronto, ON/CA 1. To learn about the differences between 1.5T and 3T cardiac MRI. 2. To understand the clinical applications of high-field cardiac MRI. 3. To become familiar with the problems of using high-field cardiac MRI in daily routine. 16:30 A-012 B. Cardiac CT: technique in 2020; where to next? K. Nikolaou; Munich/DE 1. To learn about the latest technical developments in state-of-the-art cardiac CT. 2. To explore what new developments will influence cardiac CT over the next few years. 3. To understand if what you need is a lot of rows, tubes or both for optimal cardiac CT. 17:00 A-013 C. Cardiac hybrid imaging: One-Stop-Shop P.A. Kaufmann; Zurich/CH 1. To understand the principles of cardiac hybrid imaging. 2. To learn about the diagnostic value of hybrid imaging. 3. To know about possible indications for performing hybrid imaging. 16:00 17:30 Room E1 Molecular Imaging RC 306 Molecular imaging in oncology Moderator: O. Clément; Paris/FR 16:00 A-014 A. New PET-tracers for oncology P.L. Choyke; Bethesda, MD/US 1. To learn about the new specific tracers that can be used in oncologic patients. 2. To become familiar with their possible impact on patient management. 3. To understand their potential and limitations for practice. 16:30 A-015 B. Potential of MRI for molecular imaging in oncology F.A. Gallagher; Cambridge/UK 1. To become familiar with the different approaches to molecular imaging with MRI. 2. To understand the role of molecular imaging in oncology. 3. To learn about emerging MRI techniques for molecular imaging. 17:00 A-016 C. Emerging molecular imaging techniques F.M.A. Kiessling; Aachen/DE 1. To become familiar with optical imaging techniques and probes. 2. To learn about the potential of targeted US contrast agents. 3. To appreciate emerging hybrid imaging techniques. 16:00 17:30 Room E2 Multidisciplinary Session: Managing Patients with Cancer MS 3 Colorectal liver metastases 16:00 A-017 Chairman s introduction V. Vilgrain; Clichy/FR Session Objectives: 1. To learn about the prognostic factors of colorectal liver metastases. 2. To become familiar with the most common therapeutic strategies. 3. To understand the role of the multidisciplinary team in patients with colorectal liver metastases. 16:05 A-018 Role of imaging in the pretreatment assessment V. Vilgrain; Clichy/FR 1. To become familiar with imaging findings indicating surgical resectability. 2. To understand the role of CT and MR imaging in staging liver metastases. 3. To learn about the role of new imaging techniques in staging liver metastases. 16:20 A-019 Surgical resection of liver metastases: when and how J. Belghiti; Clichy/FR 1. To become familiar with surgical indications of liver metastases. 2. To understand treatment planning strategies. 3. To learn about prognostic factors for surgical candidates. 16:35 A-020 Chemotherapy and novel therapy in colorectal liver metastases: rationale, indications and results S. Faivre; Clichy/FR 1. To appreciate the rationale behind chemotherapy and novel therapy. 2. To learn about the most common protocols of chemotherapy and novel therapy. 3. To consolidate knowledge in treatment efficacy. 16:50 A-021 Role of image-guided treatment in colorectal liver metastases M. Abdel Rehim, A. Sibert, V. Barrau, Z. Ben Lakhdar, V. Vilgrain; Clichy/FR 1. To learn about the most common image-guided treatments. 2. To understand advantages and drawbacks of each treatment. 3. To become familiar with the role of image-guided treatments. 17:05 Case presentation and discussion 16:00 17:30 Room F1 Professional Challenges Session PC 3 Bringing radiology to medical undergraduates 16:00 A-022 Chairman s introduction: why does it matter? S.J. Golding; Oxford/UK Session Objectives: 1. To understand why radiologists need to make undergraduate teaching a priority. 2. To become familiar with the effect of teaching undergraduates on the student and the institution. 3. To appreciate the objectives with which the undergraduate should be taught. A-011 A-022 Thursday 157

160 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-023 A :05 A-023 Establishing a radiological presence in the undergraduate curriculum R.N. Gibson; Melbourne/AU 1. To understand the importance of radiology s undergraduate profile. 2. To understand the effect of a presence throughout the curriculum on education. 3. To become familiar with the ways in which radiology s curricular presence may be achieved at individual stages. 16:20 A-024 Finding the time and resources in the radiology department J. del Cura; Bilbao/ES 1. To be aware of the competing demands on departmental resources. 2. To understand the available methods for creating time for teaching. 3. To understand the physical resources that aid effective and efficient teaching. 16:35 A-025 Involving the undergraduate with the radiology department K.L.A. Verstraete; Gent/BE 1. To understand the effect of involvement in radiology on learning. 2. To become familiar with the potential methods of undergraduate involvement. 3. To understand the value and management of short-term and longterm attachments to the radiology department. 16:50 A-026 How to ensure teachers are suitably trained E. Szabó, Z. Morvay, E. Nagy, I. Mátéka; Szeged/HU 1. To learn that teaching is a psychomotor skill with its own training requirements. 2. To understand the importance of course design and methods of assessment to learning. 3. To understand the ways in which radiological teachers may obtain training appropriate to their needs. Panel discussion: 17:05 What needs to be done to overcome the constraints on radiologists? 16:00 17:30 Room F2 Breast RC 302 Functional imaging of the breast Moderator: G. Esen; Istanbul/TR 16:00 A-027 A. Contrast-enhanced mammography C.S. Balleyguier 1, E. Fallenberg 2, S. Canale 1, C. Dromain 1 ; 1 Villejuif/FR, 2 Berlin/DE 1. To understand the underlying physical principles of contrastenhanced mammography (CEM). 2. To become familiar with different protocols. 3. To appreciate the potential impact of CEM on every day clinical practice. 16:30 A-028 B. Ultrasound elastography A. Athanasiou; Paris/FR 1. To understand the basic principles of US elastography. 2. To learn about the difference between strain and shear wave elastography and their respective results. 3. To appreciate the additional value of US elastography to B-mode US. 17:00 A-029 C. MRI diffusion, perfusion and spectroscopy P.A.T. Baltzer; Vienna/AT 1. To understand the diagnostic value of diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) in its present clinical applications. 2. To learn about the technical basics and potential use of MRI perfusion in the breast. 3. To understand promises and challenges of MR spectroscopy in clinical practice. 16:00 17:30 Room G/H Genitourinary RC 307 Renal and adrenal tumours Moderator: B. Brkljacic; Zagreb/HR 16:00 A-030 A. Adrenal masses, a practical approach G. Heinz-Peer; St. Pölten/AT 1. To become familiar with the different imaging appearances of adrenal masses including pathological relation. 2. To learn the different imaging techniques to improve evaluation of benign versus malignant adrenal masses. 3. To understand the impact of imaging given the information that the patient has/has not a known malignancy. 16:30 A-031 B. Staging renal cancer R. Pozzi-Mucelli; Verona/IT 1. To recognise the CT/MRI/US findings for staging. 2. To learn about the optimal imaging protocol for the diagnosis and staging of renal cancer. 3. To understand treatment options and implications. 17:00 A-032 C. How to deal with small indeterminate renal masses O. Hélénon; Paris/FR 1. To become familiar with the various appearances of small indeterminate renal masses. 2. To learn about the respective roles of US, CT and MR imaging in investigating small renal masses. 3. To learn the main pitfalls in assessing small renal masses. 16:00 17:30 Room I/K Chest RC 304 How I report Moderator: J. Cáceres; Barcelona/ES 16:00 A-033 A. Bedside chest radiography R. Eibel; Schwerin/DE 1. To learn a structured reporting approach. 2. To understand key imaging findings in different clinical settings. 3. To improve confidence by linking pattern recognition, interpretation and diagnosis. 16:30 A-034 B. CTA and MRA of the pulmonary arteries J.E. Wildberger; Maastricht/NL 1. To learn more about recent improvements in CT and MR angiography. 2. To learn a structured approach to reporting CTA or MRA. 3. To become familiar with the role of CT angiography in comparison to MR angiography. 158

161 Postgraduate Educational Programme 17:00 A-035 C. PET/CT C. Keyzer; Brussels/BE 1. To understand the basic principles of PET/CT using FDG. 2. To become familiar with physiologic FDG uptake and frequent pitfalls. 3. To learn about FDG PET/CT in non-oncologic and oncologic disorders and how to report. 16:00 17:30 Room L/M Organs from A to Z: Heart MC 322 Technical and anatomical fundamentals for imaging the heart Moderator: A. de Roos; Leiden/NL 16:00 A-036 A. Anatomy: too many details in cardiac imaging? A.J.B.S. Madureira; Porto/PT 1. To learn about the detailed anatomy of the heart. 2. To learn about the anatomy of the thoracic vasculature and great vessels. 3. To get an overview of important incidental findings in cardiac imaging. 16:20 A-037 B. Examination protocols for imaging the heart: CT H. Alkadhi; Zurich/CH 1. To get an overview of different examination protocols. 2. To learn about various strategies in radiation dose optimisation. 3. To identify suitable clinical indications for cardiac CT. 16:40 A-038 C. Examination protocols for imaging the heart: MRI N.L. Kelekis; Athens/GR 1. To get an overview of different examination protocols. 2. To learn about typical cardiac MR artefacts and pitfalls. 3. To identify suitable clinical indications for cardiac MRI. 17:00 A-039 Interactive case discussion A. de Roos; Leiden/NL 16:00 17:30 Room N/O Interventional Radiology RC 309 Percutaneous treatment of chronic back pain and sciatica 16:00 A-040 Chairman s introduction A.D. Kelekis; Athens/GR 16:05 A-041 A. Sacroiliac joint syndrome D.J. Wilson; Oxford/UK 1. To learn about relevant anatomy and clinical presentations of the syndrome. 2. To know more about the available treatments. 3. To learn about clinical results and possible further developments. 16:28 A-042 B. Facet syndrome M. Gallucci; L Aquila/IT 1. To understand the difference between facet joint and disc disease. 2. To learn about different treatment options for facet disease. 3. To learn how to manage patients. 16:51 A-043 C. Intervertebral disc syndromes A. Gangi, J. Garnon, G. Tsoumakidou, I. Enescu; Strasbourg/FR 1. To understand possible treatment techniques for disc disease. 2. To know more about clinical and imaging findings in treatment. 3. To learn about published results on percutaneous disc treatment. Panel discussion: 17:14 How can imaging methods separate candidates for percutaneous therapy and surgery? 16:00 17:30 Room P Vascular RC 315 Vascular imaging in ischaemic stroke Moderator: J. Hendrikse; Utrecht/NL 16:00 A-044 A. Intracranial atherosclerotic disease of carotid arteries T. Jargiello; Lublin/PL 1. To become familiar with appropriate imaging protocols for all imaging modalities and the pros and cons of each modality. 2. To learn about imaging signs of atherosclerotic disease in the carotid artery territory. 3. To learn about the classification of lesions and indications for treatment. 16:30 A-045 B. Vertebrobasilar atherosclerotic disease L. Valvassori, M. Piano; Milan/IT 1. To learn about the appropriate imaging protocol and the imaging signs of extracranial and intracranial atherosclerosis. 2. To learn about the epidemiology, symptomatology and natural history. 3. To learn about the classification of lesions and indications for treatment. 17:00 A-046 C. Dissection and vasculitis of intracranial and extracranial arteries H.R. Jäger; London/UK 1. To learn the imaging signs of dissection and different types of large/ medium vessel vasculitis. 2. To learn about lesion morphology and haemodynamic consequences of dissection and vasculitis. 3. To learn about imaging protocols for detection of dissection and large/medium vessel vasculitis. 16:00 17:30 Room Q Computer Applications RC 305 New PACS architecture: decoupling image management from image navigation 16:00 A-047 Chairman s introduction H.U. Lemke; Berlin/DE Session Objectives: 1. To introduce models of image management and workflow. 2. To present the evolution of image management outside of radiology (surgery, interventions etc.). 3. To discuss the technical requirements for better image sharing and distribution. A-035 A-047 Thursday 159

162 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-048 A :05 A-048 A. Image navigation and new PACS architecture J. Reponen; Raahe/FI 1. To learn about recent changes in PACS design and infrastructure. 2. To understand the role of data management in PACS architecture. 3. To become acquainted with different PACS architectures. 4. To understand technical, workflow and legal aspects of innovative technologies. 16:28 A-049 B. Intraoperative imaging for surgeons A. Pietrabissa 1, L. Pugliese 1, A. Peri 1, F.P. Tinozzi 1, V. Ferrari 2 ; 1 Pavia/IT, 2 Pisa/IT 1. To understand why surgeons need more intraoperative guidance. 2. To learn about the role of robotics and augmented reality in general surgery. 3. To become familiar with patient-specific simulation. 4. To appreciate the place of surgical training and accreditation. 16:51 A-050 C. Dismantling PACS: separating image viewing from the data storage and sharing B. Gibaud; Rennes/FR 1. To learn about strategic issues of generic image archiving and distribution. 2. To understand new concepts of independent front ends of PACS. 3. To become familiar with new examples of PACS implementation based on component architecture. 4. To appreciate new strategies of PACS architecture and migration. 18:30 18:50 Room A Plenary Session OL Opening Lecture Presiding: J.I. Bilbao; Pamplona/ES 18:30 A-054 Promises and facts of liver-directed gene therapy J.M. Prieto; Pamplona/ES 1. To learn about novel therapeutic approaches in hepatology. 2. To understand principles and applications of liver-directed gene therapy. 3. To appreciate flexibility, potential and limitations of the procedure. 4. To become familiar with gene therapy vectors and their clinical use. 5. To consolidate knowledge of novel approaches to treat liver diseases. Panel discussion: 17:14 How should we manage our images today? 16:00 17:30 Room Z ESR Radiation Protection Session Security scanners at airports: are they safe? Moderators: J. Damilakis; Iraklion/GR, P. Vock; Berne/CH 16:00 A-051 X-ray backscatter security scanners: principles, performance and potential health risks J. Damilakis; Iraklion/GR 1. To become familiar with the technological principles of security scanners. 2. To learn about the detection performance of x-ray security scanners. 3. To understand the radiation doses and risks from x-ray backscatter security scanners. 16:30 A-052 Cumulative low-level x-ray radiation exposure: is it harmful? P. Vock; Berne/CH 1. To learn about risks of x-ray exposure in relation to age. 2. To appreciate the difference between individual and collective radiogenic risks. 3. To understand issues related to cumulative radiation doses and possible risks from medical x-ray screening procedures. 17:00 A-053 Security scanners using non-ionising radiation: current status and trends for development M. Kemp; Cambridge/UK 1. To understand the current status of non-ionising radiation technology for the detection of explosives and other threats. 2. To learn about trends for development of millimetre-wave and terahertz technology. 3. To learn about the challenges and limitations of these technologies. 160

163 Postgraduate Educational Programme 08:30 10:00 Room A Abdominal Viscera RC 401 Pitfalls in interpretation of pancreatic imaging Moderator: H.-J. Brambs; Ulm/DE 08:30 A-055 A. Pancreatic cancer or pancreatitis? B.J. Op de Beeck, A. Snoeckx, M. Spinhoven, R. Salgado, P.M. Parizel; Antwerp/BE 1. To become familiar with the common benign mimickers of pancreatic malignancy. 2. To learn how to differentiate between benign and malignant lesions. 3. To know the limitations and complementary roles of CT and MR. 09:00 A-056 B. How can we differentiate cystic neoplasms from pseudocysts? T. Denecke; Berlin/DE 1. To learn the most common cystic lesions of the pancreas. 2. To know typical imaging findings of pseudocysts and cystic tumours. 3. To become familiar with imaging elements that help differentiate between cystic lesions. 09:30 A-057 C. How to manage incidental findings C. Triantopoulou; Athens/GR 1. To learn how to differentiate between benign and malignant cystic lesions. 2. To know the correct management of unclassified cystic lesions through imaging. 3. To become familiar with the reference imaging criteria suggesting treatment. 08:30 10:00 Room C Oncologic Imaging RC 416 MR imaging for prostate cancer management: the essential guide for radiologists 08:30 A-058 Chairman s introduction H.-P. Schlemmer; Heidelberg/DE 08:35 A-059 A. Clinical challenges: how to treat prostate cancer B.A. Hadaschik; Heidelberg/DE 1. To understand how diagnosis is established through PSA evaluation and biopsy. 2. To learn about different treatment options. 08:58 A-060 B. The radiologist s contribution: how to detect and characterise a tumour A.R. Padhani; Northwood/UK 1. To understand how multiparametric MRI detects prostate cancer. 2. To learn how to perform, interpret and communicate multi parametric MRIs. 3. To learn how to support image guided biopsy. 4. To understand the need for the standardisation of MRI protocols and reports. 09:21 A-061 C. The radiologist s influence on management. Staging prostate cancer: how it impacts on treatment selection H. Hricak; New York, NY/US 1. To learn how advanced MR techniques improve staging. 2. To learn how imaging impacts on clinical management (treatment selection and response monitoring). 3. To understand the need for the implementation of MRI in clinical practice and clinical trials. 4. To understand the need for specialised training of radiologists in prostate cancer imaging. Panel discussion: 09:44 Is MRI an integral part of the clinical routine? 08:30 10:00 Room D1 Controversies in Breast Imaging MC 423 Overdiagnosis from screening mammography: should we care about it? Moderator: T.H. Helbich; Vienna/AT Teaser: H.J. de Koning; Rotterdam/NL 08:30 A-062 A. The risk of overdiagnosis from screening mammography E. Paci, D. Puliti; Florence/IT 08:55 A-063 B. How breast radiologists should control the risk of overdiagnosis U. Bick; Berlin/DE 09:20 A-064 Discussion T.H. Helbich 1, H.J. de Koning 2 ; 1 Vienna/AT, 2 Rotterdam/NL 08:30 10:00 Room D2 Emergency Radiology RC 417 ER: basic principles Moderator: P. Valdés Solís; Marbella/ES 08:30 A-065 A. Logistics and organisation of an emergency radiology department M. Körner; Landshut/DE 1. To understand how an emergency radiology department should be organised. 2. To become familiar with the logistics, staffing and technical equipment of an ER department operating 24/7. 09:00 A-066 B. Advanced trauma life support: basic knowledge for radiologists D.R. Kool; Nijmegen/NL 1. To understand the relationship between ATLS and emergency radiology. 2. To know more about the rational use of CR, US and CT according to patient priorities in the emergency setting. 3. To become familiar with priority-oriented reporting of findings. 09:30 A-067 C. Mechanism of injury and MDCT protocols: choosing the right protocol for the right patient S. Voelckel 1, M. Rieger 2 ; 1 Innsbruck/AT, 2 Hall in Tirol/AT 1. To understand mechanisms of traumatic injuries. 2. To become familiar with established whole body MDCT protocols and their possible relation to injuries. 3. To know the impact of MDCT findings on patient management. A-055 A-067 Friday 161

164 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-068 A :30 10:00 Room E1 State of the Art Symposium SA 4 Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) of the abdomen 08:30 A-068 Chairman s introduction Y. Menu; Paris/FR Session Objectives: 1. To understand DWI principles. 2. To learn about appropriate protocols for DWI of the abdomen. 3. To learn how to analyse and report DWI images. 4. To understand the clinical value of DWI for detection, characterisation and prognostic evaluation. 08:35 A-069 DWI of the abdomen: a tutorial for beginners H.C. Thoeny; Berne/CH 1. To understand the principles of DWI. 2. To learn the different acquisition protocols (optimal b values, optimal sequences) and their advantages and disadvantages. 3. To learn how DWI can be integrated into acquisition protocols, and whether it precludes the need for other sequences. 4. To learn how to interpret ADC maps and values. 08:55 A-070 Liver and pancreas: answering burning questions F. Caseiro-Alves; Coimbra/PT 1. To understand the images observed in the main focal liver and pancreatic diseases. 2. To learn if DWI can provide useful information concerning tissue characterisation. 3. To understand the clinical circumstances in which DWI is most helpful. 4. To learn if DWI helps in the evaluation of diffuse liver diseases and how iron and fat could be misleading issues. 09:15 A-071 DWI of abdominal lymph nodes: PET competitive or just pseudo? S. Gourtsoyianni; London/UK 1. To understand the signal of lymph nodes on DWI sequences, and to identify the correlation between histological changes and DWI signal in benign and malignant lymph nodes involvement. 2. To learn whether or not ADC value is helpful for characterisation. 3. To compare DWI and PET and understand their respective roles. 4. To open the door to the future combination of PET and MRI. 09:35 Clinical cases 08:30 10:00 Room E2 Foundation Course: Neuroimaging E³ 420 The orbit, the petrous bone and the sella Moderator: B. De Foer; Antwerp/BE 08:30 A-072 A. Imaging of the orbit: the globe and conal lesions P.C. Maly Sundgren; Lund/SE 1. To understand the embryology and imaging findings of the most common malformations of the orbit. 2. To learn about space occupying lesions and the differential diagnosis of tumours and inflammatory conditions. 3. To become familiar with the role of conventional and advanced MR sequences in the diagnostic approach of lesions in the orbit. 09:00 A-073 B. The petrous bone F. Veillon; Strasbourg/FR 1. To understand the normal imaging anatomy. 2. To learn about the role of CT and MRI in the evaluation of congenital malformations. 3. To become familiar with the most common acquired lesions of the middle and inner ear. 09:30 A-074 C. Sella and parasellar pathology R. Gasparotti; Brescia/IT 1. To consolidate knowledge about the normal anatomy and the age related patterns of the normal pituitary gland. 2. To learn how to evaluate congenital and acquired lesions of the sella and parasellar region. 3. To become familiar with imaging protocols. 08:30 10:00 Room F1 Multidisciplinary Session: Managing Patients with Cancer MS 4 Hepatocellular carcinoma 08:30 A-075 Chairman s introduction B. Sangro; Pamplona/ES Session Objectives: 1. To learn the current management of HCC as laid out in scientific guidelines. 2. To identify those areas of uncertainty, where multidisciplinary teams are needed most. 3. To understand the basis of personalised care for HCC patients and the need for multidisciplinary teams. 08:35 A-076 Abdominal radiology A. Benito; Pamplona/ES 1. To learn which imaging procedures should be considered standard of care for staging HCC and which are potential improvements that await confirmation. 2. To understand the limitations of imaging in the diagnosis and evaluation of response to locoregional and antiangiogenic therapies. 3. To learn about the scientific evidence supporting the use of percutaneous ablation procedures other than radiofrequency. 08:50 A-077 Interventional radiology J.I. Bilbao; Pamplona/ES 1. To learn about locoregional intraarterial therapies currently being used for HCC and the rationale behind their use. 2. To become familiar with patient selection for embolising procedures prior to and after angiographic evaluation. 3. To learn some tips that may help reduce side effects and prevent complications of transarterial therapies. 4. To understand how IRs can help patients with unresectable tumours being evaluated for resection. 09:05 A-078 Surgery F. Pardo; Pamplona/ES 1. To learn about the main factors behind the resectability of HCC. 2. To learn about the evolving criteria for liver transplantation. 3. To understand the potential role of radiologists in the intraoperative or postoperative management of HCC. 4. To learn about complications of locoregional therapies (percutaneous ablation or intraarterial therapies) that could complicate resection or transplantation. 162

165 Postgraduate Educational Programme 09:20 A-079 Hepatology/oncology B. Sangro; Pamplona/ES 1. To learn the basis of tumour staging in HCC and the general treatment paradigm. 2. To learn about the discrepancies between different treatment guidelines and clinical practice. 3. To become familiar with systemic anticancer agents and their impact on locoregional and surgical treatment of HCC. 09:35 Case presentation and discussion 08:30 10:00 Room F2 Special Focus Session SF 4a MRI of the lung: to go? 08:30 A-080 Chairman s introduction: Apéritif H.-U. Kauczor; Heidelberg/DE Session Objectives: 1. To learn how to do MRI of the lung in clinical routine. 2. To understand the rationales and potential clinical applications of MRI of the lung. 3. To understand the prerequisites for acceptance of MRI of the lung by our clinical colleagues. 08:33 A-081 The sequence buffet J.M. Wild; Sheffield/UK 1. To learn about the basic physics of MR imaging of protons in the lung. 2. To understand the role of different magnetic field strengths and parallel receiver coils. 3. To appreciate the potential of fast imaging sequences for imaging the lung. 08:48 A-082 Preparing your menu J. Biederer; Heidelberg/DE 1. To learn how to combine MR sequences with a comprehensive imaging protocol. 2. To become familiar with the different diagnostic scopes of the protocol components. 3. To learn how to apply protocol variations for specific clinical questions. 4. To learn when to use IV contrast-enhanced series. 09:03 A-083 Bon appétit! Starters : cystic fibrosis, pneumonia and pulmonary embolism M.U. Puderbach; Heidelberg/DE 1. To understand the application of MRI to morphological and functional imaging of airway diseases. 2. To appreciate the potential of MRI for imaging pulmonary embolisms using different morphological and functional MRtechniques. 09:23 A-084 Bon appétit! Main course : pulmonary and mediastinal neoplasms E.J.R. van Beek; Edinburgh/UK 1. To understand the application of MRI sequences to the staging of lung cancer. 2. To become familiar with the role of MRI in lung cancer work-ups. 3. To learn about the limitations of MRI in chest tumours. 08:30 10:00 Room G/H Neuro RC 411 The paediatric brain: not just a small brain Moderator: C. Venstermans; Edegem/BE 08:30 A-085 A. Neurocutaneous syndromes: more than neurofibromatosis B. Ertl-Wagner; Munich/DE 1. To become familiar with the typical clinical presentations of neurocutaneous syndromes. 2. To consolidate knowledge of the typical imaging patterns of the major neurocutaneous syndromes. 3. To become familiar with some less common features of neurocutaneous syndromes. 09:00 A-086 B. Patterns of white matter disease in children A. Rossi; Genoa/IT 1. To become familiar with the most common white matter diseases in children. 2. To learn how to differentiate between white matter diseases in children. 3. To consolidate knowledge of appropriate imaging protocols for MRI of children with white matter disease. 09:30 A-087 C. Paediatric brain tumours C. Hoffmann; Tel Hashomer/IL 1. To learn about the difference between paediatric and adult brain tumours. 2. To understand the imaging strategy for the paediatric population. 3. To recognise the most common paediatric brain tumours. 08:30 10:00 Room I/K Joint Course of ESR and RSNA (Radiological Society of North America) MC 428 Essentials in oncologic imaging: what radiologists need to know (part 1) Moderator: D.M. Panicek; New York, NY/US 08:30 A-088 A. Principles of oncologic imaging and reporting D.M. Panicek; New York, NY/US 1. To review general principles of oncologic imaging. 2. To understand the critical importance of clinical context during interpretation of oncologic exams. 3. To evaluate ways to ensure that our reports provide added value and reflect the radiologist s role as consultant. 08:55 A-089 B. Lung cancers (primary, metastases) C.J. Herold; Vienna/AT 1. To review the strengths and limitations of radiologic techniques suitable for detecting and characterising primary and metastatic lesions in the lungs. 2. To understand the imaging findings relevant for lung cancer T, N and M staging, and appraise the implications of the new IASLC lung cancer staging system. 3. To evaluate the imaging findings used to assess response to conventional and new therapies for lung cancers. A-079 A-089 Friday Panel discussion: 09:43 Bon appétit! Dessert : what are the benefits of MRI of the lung in clinical workflow and decision-making? 163

166 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-090 A :25 A-090 C. Colon cancer R.M. Gore, R. Silvers; Evanston, IL/US 1. To get an overview of current recommendations for the diagnosis of colorectal cancer. 2. To understand the specific role of MDCT, MR imaging, endoscopic ultrasound, and PET/CT in the staging of colorectal cancer in optimising patient management. 3. To learn the utility of imaging in assessing tumour response to therapy and in the general follow-up of patients with colorectal cancer. 09:50 Questions 08:30 10:00 Room L/M Organs from A to Z: Heart MC 422 Non-ischaemic heart disease Moderator: V.E. Sinitsyn; Moscow/RU 08:30 A-091 A. Congenital heart disease M. Gutberlet; Leipzig/DE 1. To understand the value of available imaging modalities in congenital heart disease. 2. To get an overview of common cases of congenital heart failure. 3. To learn how to read post-surgical cases in patients with congenital heart disease. 08:50 A-092 B. Valvular disease J. Bogaert; Leuven/BE 1. To learn about various imaging modalities available for imaging the cardiac valves. 2. To get an overview of various types of valvular diseases. 3. To understand myocardial changes caused by valvular pathologies. 09:10 A-093 C. Cardiomyopathies P. Sipola; Kuopio/FI 1. To get an overview of different types of cardiomyopathies. 2. To differentiate typical imaging findings in various cardiomyopathies. 09:30 A-094 Interactive case discussion V.E. Sinitsyn; Moscow/RU 08:30 10:00 Room N/O EIBIR/EORTC Joint Workshop A radiologist with a ruler in his hand is a dangerous person: seeking standardisation in multicenter imaging trials Moderators: P. Brader; Vienna/AT, Y. Liu; Brussels/BE 08:30 A-095 Introduction: imaging and the future of cancer therapy P. Brader 1, Y. Liu 2 ; 1 Vienna/AT, 2 Brussels/BE 1. To seek standardisation of imaging biomarkers in multicenter cancer clinical trials. 2. To demonstrate examples of imaging implementation in optimised study design. 3. To explore future collaboration between EORTC and EIBIR. 08:40 A-096 Setting up clinical trials with functional imaging endpoints: trials and tribulations N.M. desouza; Sutton/UK Learning Objective: 1. To understand the processes involved in incorporating functional imaging end points into clinical trials and appreciate the limitations. 09:00 A-097 Challenges, problems on key imaging techniques B. Van Beers; Clichy/FR 09:20 A-098 Advanced MR neuroimaging in multicentre trials: experience from the EORTC Brain Tumour Group M. Smits; Rotterdam/NL 09:40 A-099 Presentation of LUNG study: from the beginning until today U. Nestle; Freiburg/DE 08:30 10:00 Room P Professional Challenges Session PC 4 The visibility of the radiologist 08:30 A-100 Chairman s introduction J.A. Reekers; Amsterdam/NL Session Objectives: 1. To learn how the visibility of the radiologist can be increased. 2. To understand that radiology needs to play a central role in diagnosis and treatment. 3. To learn from the experts and increase understanding through Q & A. 08:33 A-101 How to optimise the visibility of the radiology department J.A. Reekers; Amsterdam/NL 1. To learn how to organise a radiology department within a hospital. 2. To learn how to optimise contact with clinical partners. 3. To learn how to create an open radiology department. 08:45 A-102 Start early with radiological visibility M. Maas; Amsterdam/NL 1. To learn how to set up an undergraduate teaching programme for radiology. 2. To learn how to overcome the barriers of a traditional curriculum. 3. To learn about the results of an undergraduate teaching programme for radiology. 09:05 A-103 Clinical radiology puts you in the spotlight: taking over the clinical responsibility E. de Kerviler; Paris/FR 1. To learn how to become more clinically involved. 2. To learn about the requirements of clinical radiology. 3. To learn how to manage the clinical problems of others. 09:25 A-104 Radiology in the 21st century: time to come out of the dark? A. Adam; London/UK 1. To learn about the role of the radiologist as quality controller. 2. To learn how to become proactive and drive patient pathways rather than simply responding to requests. 3. To learn about improved visibility through improved service. 164 Panel discussion: 09:45 Should we improve the visibility of the radiologist? And if yes, how?

167 Postgraduate Educational Programme 08:30 10:00 Room Q Special Focus Session SF 4b Justifying CT in paediatric radiology 08:30 A-105 Chairman s introduction C. Owens; London/UK Session Objectives: 1. To become familiar with the importance of CT justification and optimisation. 2. To understand the evidence base for concern. 3. To become familiar with realistic alternatives to CT. 08:34 A-106 How should CT be optimised? W.A. Kalender; Erlangen/DE 1. To become familiar with the dose levels currently encountered in paediatric CT. 2. To become familiar with new developments towards dose reduction in CT. 3. To learn about tools for assessing organ dose and effective dose values. 08:56 A-107 When, how, and why I perform CT C. Owens; London/UK 1. To become familiar with the concept of CT fit for purpose. 2. To appreciate the role of CT in paediatric body imaging. 3. To become familiar with suggested parameters for use of CT in cardiothoracic imaging, describing risks and benefits. 09:18 A-108 Why and when CT does not need to be performed M. Claudon; Vandoeuvre-les-Nancy/FR 1. To become familiar with alternative imaging methods to replace CT. 2. To appreciate the advantages and disadvantages of these alternative methods of imaging. 3. To become familiar with a practical model for CEUS and MRI in body imaging. Panel discussion: 09:40 Do we have guidelines for paediatric CT? Do we have alternatives? 10:30 12:00 Room A Interactive Teaching Session E³ 520a Pitfalls in abdominal imaging 10:30 A-109 A. Liver V. Vilgrain, M. Ronot, A. Kerbaol, O. Bruno; Clichy/FR 1. To learn about morphologic changes in the liver observed in noncirrhotic diseases. 2. To understand imaging features enabling distinction between intra and extrahepatic tumours. 3. To become familiar with liver lesions mimicking liver tumours. 11:15 A-110 B. Pancreas and bile ducts R. Manfredi; Verona/IT 1. To understand the MRI technique for evaluating the pancreatic parenchyma, the pancreatic duct system and the biliary tree, the functional assessment following secretin stimulation. 2. To appreciate the signs in MR imaging of the pancreas and bile ducts. 3. To understand the diagnostic imaging criteria useful for differential diagnosis. 10:30 12:00 Room B ESR meets Spain EM 1 Imaging: essential tool from diagnosis to treatment Welcome by the ESR President: G.P. Krestin; Rotterdam/NL Presiding: C. Ayuso; Barcelona/ES J.I. Bilbao; Pamplona/ES 10:30 A-111 Introduction C. Ayuso; Barcelona/ES Session Objectives: 1. To discuss the role of imaging techniques in different clinical scenarios where radiologists are key, from diagnosis to treatment. 2. To present technical imaging innovations that assist the diagnosis, treatment and follow-up in three different clinical scenarios: ischaemic stroke, aortic aneurism and hepatocellular carcinoma. 3. To present specific clinical advantages and results of the multimodality approach. 10:35 A-112 Ischaemic stroke J. Macho; Barcelona/ES 1. To discuss the clinical and neuroradiologic implications of an early diagnosis. Evaluation of CT and MR diffusion/perfusion in patient selection for endoarterial treatment. 2. To understand the rationale behind mechanical endoarterial reperfusion of acute vascular occlusion. 3. To analyse the short and medium term results of a regional programme for acute stroke treatment after three years. 10:55 A-113 Interlude: Spanish radiologists: open to the world E. Fraile Moreno; Madrid/ES 11:00 A-114 Aortic aneurisms J.J. Martínez Rodrigo; Valencia/ES 1. To understand the role of imaging modalities in diagnosis and endovascular treatment of aortic aneurisms. 2. To learn about the role of 3D imaging techniques to assist the endovascular treatment of aortic aneurisms. 3. To appreciate the role of imaging modalities in evaluating the complications of endovascular aortic repair. 11:20 A-115 Interlude: Radiologists and Spanish wines L. Martí-Bonmatí; Valencia/ES 1. To understand the influence of the country, the climate and the situation in the quality of wines. 2. To learn about Spain s characteristics that influence the wine quality. 3. To appreciate why the soil (and by extension the terroir) is so important. 11:25 A-116 Hepatocellular carcinoma: the BCLC approach M. Burrel; Barcelona/ES 1. To understand the clinical implications of an early diagnosis, when the lesion is small and asymptomatic. 2. To learn about the rationale behind the current guidelines for model treatment options. 3. To appreciate the spectrum of locoregional therapies for HCC from percutaneous to intravascular approaches. Panel discussion: 11:45 Is the multidisciplinary environment the natural way to develop excellence and leadership in clinical imaging? A-105 A-116 Friday 165

168 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-117 A :30 12:00 Room C Interactive Teaching Sessions E³ 520b Pitfalls in head and neck imaging 10:30 A-117 A. Pitfalls in neck imaging F.A. Pameijer; Utrecht/NL 1. To understand the variations of normal anatomy in the neck that should not be interpreted as abnormal. 2. To become familiar with the incidental findings that are frequently encountered when searching for neck disease. 3. To recognise suboptimal neck studies, or technique related problems and understand how these may influence interpretation. 11:15 A-118 B. Pitfalls in maxillofacial and skull base imaging R. Hermans; Leuven/BE 1. To understand the basic requirements for an optimal imaging study of the skull base and maxillofacial region. 2. To become familiar with anatomical variants, potentially mimicking disease. 3. To learn to appreciate incidental findings, avoiding unnecessary concern while recognising relevant pathology. 10:30 12:00 Room E2 Foundation Course: Neuroimaging E³ 520c Paediatric Moderator: D. Prayer; Vienna/AT 10:30 A-119 A. Neonatal hypoxic-ischaemic brain injury M.I. Argyropoulou; Ioannina/GR 1. To understand gestational age-related patterns of brain injury. 2. To understand the role of ultrasound and MRI for the initial diagnosis and follow-up of these patients. 3. To understand when and how to use advanced MRI techniques for delineation of lesions and for prognosis. 11:00 A-120 B. Spine and spinal cord malformations A. Rossi; Genoa/IT 1. To understand the embryology underlying the different categories of malformations. 2. To learn the key morphological features. 3. To learn how to use a simplified diagnostic imaging approach. 11:30 A-121 C. Imaging of the foetal brain C. Garel; Paris/FR 1. To become familiar with the normal appearance of the developing brain. 2. To learn about the protocols and the limitations of foetal imaging. 3. To gain knowledge about the imaging findings of the most common brain abnormalities. 10:30 12:00 Room I/K Joint Course of ESR and RSNA (Radiological Society of North America) MC 528 Essentials in oncologic imaging: what radiologists need to know (part 2) Moderator: H. Hricak; New York, NY/US 10:30 A-122 A. Pancreatic cancer F. Caseiro-Alves; Coimbra/PT 1. To understand current pathologic concepts for the classification of pancreatic tumours. 2. To learn about imaging findings used for tumour detection, staging, and restaging after adjuvant therapy. 3. To understand the role of functional and molecular information provided by PET/CT, DWI and perfusion imaging when assessing pancreatic tumours. 10:55 A-123 B. Kidney cancer E.K. Fishman; Baltimore, MD/US 1. To understand the diagnostic implications of minimally invasive treatments of renal cancer. 2. To review the genetic causes of renal cancer and the radiologic appearances of specific histologic subtypes. 3. To review the potential role of molecular imaging in the management of advanced renal cancer. 11:20 A-124 C. Ovarian cancer H. Hricak; New York, NY/US 1. To get an overview of the essential imaging findings in characterisation and staging of ovarian cancer. 2. To learn the key imaging findings that affect management of ovarian cancer. 3. To understand the changes in imaging armamentarium in ovarian cancer, and learn the best practice in proper image utilisation. 11:50 Questions 12:30 13:30 Room P The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Musculoskeletal Imaging MC 25B Degenerative disorders 12:30 A-125 Degenerative disorders T.M. Link; San Francisco, CA/US 1. To understand the basic pathophysiology of degenerative processes in peripheral joints and in the spine. 2. To become familiar with typical imaging findings of osteoarthritis and degenerative changes in the spine. 3. To learn about the differential diagnosis of degenerative disorders. 166

169 Postgraduate Educational Programme 12:30 13:30 Room Q The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Head and Neck MC 24B The infrahyoid neck and lymph nodes 12:30 A-126 The infrahyoid neck and lymph nodes M.G. Mack; Munich/DE 1. To become familiar with the different anatomic compartments of the infrahyoid neck. 2. To understand lymph node classification and level system. 3. To learn about the best imaging approach to an IHN mass. 4. To be able to localise and provide a useful differential diagnosis. 12:45 13:15 Room A Plenary Session HL 1 Josef Lissner Honorary Lecture Presiding: J.I. Bilbao; Pamplona/ES 12:45 A-127 MR guided focused ultrasound: a new string to the radiologist s bow C. Catalano; Rome/IT 1. To learn about the technical and physical principles of MR guided focused ultrasound. 2. To understand the advantages of MR guidance. 3. To become familiar with the approved clinical applications and the ongoing clinical trials. 4. To learn the research activities and the possible future applications in the fields of drug delivery and gene therapy. 14:00 15:30 Room D1 Controversies in Breast Imaging MC 623 Preoperative MRI in newly diagnosed breast cancer: to do or not to do? Moderator: F. Sardanelli; Milan/IT Teaser: N. Houssami; Sydney/AU 14:00 A-128 A. Why we should do preoperative MRI W.A. Kaiser; Jena/DE 14:25 A-129 B. Reasons not to do preoperative MRI M.G. Wallis; Cambridge/UK 14:50 A-130 Discussion F. Sardanelli 1, N. Houssami 2 ; 1 Milan/IT, 2 Sydney/AU 14:00 15:30 Room E2 Foundation Course: Neuroimaging E³ 620 Trauma and vascularity Moderator: A. Molyneux; Oxford/UK 14:00 A-131 A. CNS trauma P.M. Parizel, C. Venstermans, F. De Belder, T. Van der Zijden, L. van den Hauwe, M. Voormolen, J. Van Goethem; Antwerp/BE 1. To become familiar with the different types of intracranial injury and the appropriate imaging patterns. 2. To learn about the imaging characteristics of intracranial haemorrhage by CT and MR. 3. To be able to recognise imaging findings that are critical for the patient s prognosis. 14:30 A-132 B. Cerebral ischaemia and infarction L. Pierot; Reims/FR 1. To consolidate knowledge of CT findings and conventional MRI findings. 2. To become familiar with the imaging findings and diagnostic role of diffusion and perfusion MRI. 3. To be informed of the indications and techniques for endovascular stroke treatment. 15:00 A-133 C. Vascular malformations of the spinal cord D.A. Rüfenacht, I. Wanke; Zurich/CH 1. To understand the pathophysiology of vascular anomalies. 2. To become familiar with imaging protocols. 3. To be informed of the indications of interventional therapeutic procedures. 14:00 15:30 Room I/K Joint Course of ESR and RSNA (Radiological Society of North America) MC 628 Essentials in oncologic imaging: what radiologists need to know (part 3) Moderator: Y. Menu; Paris/FR 14:00 A-134 A. Oncologic imaging: terminology, definitions and buzzwords Y. Menu; Paris/FR 1. To get an overview and precise explanation of current cancer-related terminology, definitions and buzz words used in everyday practice. 2. To understand why and how this terminology should ensure and simplify communication with all specialists involved in cancer management, including clinicians, researchers as well as other radiologists. 3. To learn common tricks and traps in providing a radiology report, illustrated with clinical cases. 14:20 A-135 B. Liver cancers (primary, metastases) R.L. Baron; Chicago, IL/US 1. To get an overview of the AASLD/EASL imaging criteria for noninvasive diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma. 2. To learn about best practice CT/MR/US imaging techniques that optimise characterisation, detection and staging of primary and metastatic liver tumours. 3. To understand the key role specific findings reported by radiologists have in determining patient treatment options for hepatocellular carcinoma. 14:55 A-136 C. Prostate cancer J.O. Barentsz; Nijmegen/NL 1. To learn the key clinical indications for MR imaging in prostate cancer. 2. To get an overview of essential MR imaging techniques in detection, characterisation, localisation and staging of prostate cancer. 3. To understand how MR imaging influences therapeutic decisions and how best to provide a value added MR report. 15:20 Questions A-126 A-136 Friday 167

170 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-142 A :00 17:30 Room A Interactive Teaching Session E³ 720a Neurological emergencies 16:00 A-142 A. Non-traumatic C. Ozdoba; Berne/CH 1. To learn which imaging modality to use. 2. To understand how to identify early ischaemia. 3. To be able to select patients for treatment. 16:45 A-143 B. Traumatic M. Stajgis; Poznan/PL 1. To understand the proper imaging protocols for trauma patients. 2. To become familiar with imaging findings in acute head trauma. 3. To learn about the imaging findings in spinal cord trauma. 16:00 17:30 Room B ESR meets E-AHPBA EM 2 Pancreatic cystic neoplasms 2013 Welcome by the ESR President: G.P. Krestin; Rotterdam/NL Presiding: J.I. Bilbao; Pamplona/ES P.-A. Clavien; Zurich/CH 16:00 A-144 Introduction P.-A. Clavien 1, K. Conlon 2 ; 1 Zurich/CH, 2 Dublin/IE Session Objectives: 1. To understand the importance of the recent WHO classification and its relevance to therapy. 2. To become familiar with the radiological work-up for patients with pancreatic cystic tumours. 3. To appreciate the current role of endoscopic ultrasonography in diagnosis and management. 4. To become familiar with the indications for surgical intervention and the role of organ-sparing therapies. 16:03 A-145 Classification/pathology C. Verbeke; Stockholm/SE 1. To understand the morphological classification of pancreatic cystic lesions based on the distinction between neoplastic/non-neoplastic and epithelial/non-epithelial cysts. 2. To become familiar with the key distinctive macroscopic features of the various cyst entities and to understand the basic microscopic diagnostic features. 3. To appreciate the considerable variation in macroscopic appearances and the potential overlap between certain entities. 4. To become familiar with the macroscopic features of malignant transformation within primarily benign cystic lesions. 16:21 A-146 Radiological diagnosis S. Skehan; Dublin/IE 1. To become familiar with the optimal imaging modalities for cystic pancreatic lesions. 2. To learn about the characteristic imaging features of cystic pancreatic lesions and to describe how imaging can contribute to preoperative diagnosis. 3. To discuss the appropriate imaging surveillance of selected cystic pancreatic lesions. 16:39 A-147 Current role of endoscopic ultrasonography P. Bauerfeind; Zurich/CH 1. To appreciate the technical aspects, performance characteristics and limitations of EUS and EUS-FNA in PCNs. 2. To understand how EUS and EUS-guided FNA help to establish a diagnosis in PCNs. 3. To appreciate the added information that EUS brings in staging premalignant and malignant PCNs and in orientating surgical decisionmaking. 16:57 A-148 How aggressive should the surgeon be? K. Conlon; Dublin/IE 1. To understand the clinical indications for surgical intervention. 2. To appreciate the rationale for deciding on a particular procedure. 3. To discuss the outcomes of observation versus surgery. Panel discussion: 17:15 The multidisciplinary assessment and management of pancreatic cystic neoplasia 16:00 17:30 Room C New Horizons Session NH 7 Cartilage imaging 16:00 A-149 Chairman s introduction V.N. Cassar-Pullicino; Oswestry/UK Session Objectives: 1. To review the basics of articular cartilage physiology. 2. To introduce the quantitative MR tools used to assess collagen and proteoglycan depletion. 3. To learn about the problems arising from the avascular nature of articular cartilage. 16:03 A-150 Sodium imaging S. Trattnig; Vienna/AT 1. To get familiar with the basic principles of sodium imaging. 2. To understand technical challenges of sodium imaging and how to handle them. 3. To learn about clinical applications of sodium imaging in cartilage, cartilage repair and other MSK structures. 16:21 A-151 dgemric (delayed gadolinium-enhanced MR imaging of cartilage) G. Welsch 1, S. Trattnig 2 ; 1 Erlangen/DE, 2 Vienna/AT 1. To learn the basic principles of dgemric and the current used techniques for clinical imaging. 2. To learn about the current clinical applications of dgemric. 3. To get an overview of future uses of dgemric in therapeutic studies. 16:39 A-152 Diffusion tensor imaging C. Glaser; Munich/DE 1. To discuss basic principles of diffusion imaging in MSK. 2. To review technical challenges and current achievements. 3. To look into potential future directions. 16:57 A-153 CEST (chemical exchange saturation transfer) B. Schmitt; Vienna/AT 1. To understand basic principles of CEST imaging. 2. To learn about the current status of gagcest imaging. 3. To become aware of technical pitfalls and future approaches. 168

171 Postgraduate Educational Programme Panel discussion: 17:15 What are the envisaged future advances in these cartilage imaging techniques and can we expect to introduce them into clinical practice? 16:00 17:30 Room D1 Controversies in Breast Imaging MC 723 Should we add ultrasound to mammographic screening of dense breasts? Moderator: F.J. Gilbert; Cambridge/UK Teaser: A. Tardivon; Paris/FR 16:00 A-154 A. We can reduce the interval cancer rate W.A. Berg; Pittsburgh, PA/US 16:25 A-155 B. Do we have enough radiologists to do it? Alternatives to ultrasound to reduce interval cancers A. Frigerio; Turin/IT 16:50 A-156 Discussion F.J. Gilbert 1, A. Tardivon 2 ; 1 Cambridge/UK, 2 Paris/FR 16:00 17:30 Room D2 Oncologic Imaging: Follow-up of Systemic and Local Therapies CC 719 Imaging after systemic therapies: the standards Moderator: E.L. van Persijn van Meerten; Leiden/NL 16:00 A-157 A. RECIST criteria Y. Menu; Paris/FR 1. To consolidate knowledge of evaluation of solid tumour response. 2. To learn about tips and tricks to help bring RECIST to everyday practice. 3. To understand advantages and limitations of RECIST. 16:30 A-158 B. PERCIST: evolving considerations for PET response criteria in solid tumours T.F. Hany; Zurich/CH 1. To learn about the evaluation of solid tumours through metabolic imaging. 2. To understand the benefits of metabolic imaging. 17:00 A-159 C. Evaluation of brain tumours C. Majós; L Hospitalet de Llobregat/ES 1. To learn about evaluation criteria for brain tumours. 2. To become familiar with the evaluation of brain tumours after treatment with various therapies. 16:00 17:30 Room E1 Musculoskeletal RC 710 Peripheral nerve imaging: MRI and US 16:00 A-160 Chairman s introduction J. Renoux; Paris/FR 16:05 A-161 A. Applied radiological anatomy and pathology of the brachial plexus S. Gerevini; Milan/IT 1. To understand the anatomy of the brachial plexus as demonstrated with MRI. 2. To appreciate the range of pathology seen at the brachial plexus. 3. To become familiar with the MRI findings of brachial plexus pathology. 16:28 A-162 B. Upper limb nerve entrapment D. Weishaupt; Zurich/CH 1. To become familiar with the strengths and weaknesses of US and MRI for assessing upper limb nerves. 2. To appreciate the imaging findings of upper limb nerve entrapment. 16:51 A-163 C. Lower limb nerve entrapment C. Martinoli, A. Tagliafico; Genoa/IT 1. To become familiar with the strengths and weaknesses of US and MRI for assessing lower limb nerves. 2. To appreciate the imaging findings of lower limb nerve entrapment. Panel discussion: 17:14 Which on-going technological advances in MRI and US could influence the way we image peripheral nerves in the future? 16:00 17:30 Room E2 Foundation Course: Neuroimaging E³ 720b Infection and inflammation Moderator: A. Gouliamos; Athens/GR 16:00 A-164 A. Infection E.T. Tali; Ankara/TR 1. To understand the concept of leaky vessels in the infectious meningeal, parenchymal and ventricular involvement. 2. To learn how to proceed with imaging when time is of the essence. 3. To become familiar with the specific imaging patterns of bacterial, viral, fungal, parasitic and prion infections. 16:30 A-165 B. Multiple sclerosis F. Barkhof; Amsterdam/NL 1. To learn about the role of MRI in detecting focal and diffuse multiple sclerosis pathology. 2. To consolidate knowledge of lesion distribution, signal intensity characteristics and patterns of contrast enhancement. 3. To be able to apply the 2010 McDonald criteria to the diagnosis of MS. 17:00 A-166 C. Mimics of multiple sclerosis V. Dousset; Bordeaux/FR 1. To be aware of the top ten mimics of multiple sclerosis. 2. To become familiar with the imaging findings suggestive of other disorders. 3. To be informed of the importance of imaging the spinal cord for the differential diagnosis of MS/MS mimics. A-154 A-166 Friday 169

172 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-167 A :00 17:30 Room F1 Special Focus Session SF 7a Radiographers and ultrasonography in Europe 16:00 A-167 Chairmen s introduction D. Pekarovic 1, V. Vilgrain 2 ; 1 Ljubljana/SI, 2 Clichy/FR Session Objectives: 1. To understand why ultrasound continues to be a growth area in diagnostic imaging. 2. To identify the challenges posed by the growth of this field. 3. To understand the challenges faced by radiographers carrying out US across Europe. 16:05 A-168 Levels of training and competencies across Europe M.T. Stanton; Dublin/IE 1. To appreciate the similarities between radiographer competencies across Europe. 2. To become familiar with the regulations for radiographers to train and practice in Europe. 3. To understand an expert-derived consensus of educational standards for radiographer in Europe. 16:28 A-169 The role and impact of the radiographer conducted US in Portugal R.T. Ribeiro; Lisbon/PT 1. To become familiar with the radiographers role in the context of a professional progression framework. 2. To understand the synergies at play in interprofessional relationships and team-work. 3. To learn the benefits of having radiographers in the management and optimisation of health systems. 16:51 A-170 Evolution of radiography education for US in the Netherlands since 1990, and its influence on their role G. Plug; Haarlem/NL 1. To learn about US education over an entire four year bachelor programme. 2. To understand the role of the radiographers as a result of this bachelor programme. 3. To appreciate changes in the education programme following changes in the role of the radiographers. Panel discussion: 17:14 What are the challenges and barriers facing role extension? 16:00 17:30 Room F2 Special Focus Session SF 7b Imaging and radiotherapy: all you need to know 16:00 A-171 Chairman s introduction V.J. Goh; London/UK Session Objectives: 1. To understand the principles of modern radiotherapy. 2. To learn how functional and metabolic imaging have been integrated into radiotherapy planning, adaptation and response evaluation. 3. To become familiar with imaging findings after radiotherapy. 4. To understand how imaging affects radiotherapy outcomes. 16:05 A-172 Modern radiotherapy: what are the new technologies? V. Valentini; Rome/IT 1. To become familiar with 3D conformal radiotherapy and intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) and intensity modulated radiosurgery (IMRS). 2. To learn about brachytherapy and intraoperative radiotherapy (IORT) and its indications. 3. To understand how IMRT contributes to better treatment outcomes as compared with conventional radiotherapy. 16:23 A-173 PET/CT for radiotherapy planning: how does it assist IMRT? A. Loft; Copenhagen/DK 1. To learn about anatomical imaging risk compartments that define gross tumour volume (GTV). 2. To understand how PET/CT assists in delineating the GTV. 3. To understand the role of PET/CT guided IMRT and how it can lead to treatment adaptation. 16:41 A-174 Response evaluation and treatment adaptation K. Haustermans; Leuven/BE 1. To understand the molecular tumour microenvironment (tumour hypoxia, -apoptosis and -proliferation) that may impact response to radiation treatment. 2. To learn how tumour heterogeneity, reflecting tumour microenvironment, influences dose distribution in IMRT. 3. To learn how response assessment during IMRT leads to adaptation and tailoring of radiation treatment. 16:59 A-175 MR imaging biomarkers for response evaluation R.G.H. Beets-Tan; Maastricht/NL 1. To learn about the range of MR imaging biomarkers that can be used for markers of tumor microenvironment and heterogeneity. 2. To understand the role and accuracy of diffusion and perfusion (MR) imaging for evaluation of response during and after radiotherapy. 3. To become familiar with the MR imaging findings after radiotherapy and understand the pitfalls and interpretation difficulties. Panel discussion: 17:17 How can imaging improve outcomes in radiotherapy? 16:00 17:30 Room G/H Genitourinary RC 707 Diagnosis and management of GU tract trauma Moderator: A. Magnusson; Uppsala/SE 16:00 A-176 A. Imaging the kidney and ureter M.-F. Bellin; Le Kremlin-Bicêtre/FR 1. To learn the indications, advantages and disadvantages of imaging modalities after trauma. 2. To learn the appropriate diagnostic imaging studies and imaging findings of different types of trauma. 3. To be able to identify a kidney that is in danger after trauma. 16:30 A-177 B. Imaging the bladder and urethra U.G. Mueller-Lisse; Munich/DE 1. To be able to identify patients requiring urgent cysto-urethrography. 2. To learn to identify bladder and urethral injury. 3. To learn the imaging techniques necessary for accurate initial evaluation of the urethra in cases of complicated pelvic trauma. 170

173 Postgraduate Educational Programme 17:00 A-178 C. Interventional radiology for GU trauma B. Peynircioglu; Ankara/TR 1. To be able to determine which cases deserve management by interventional radiology. 2. To understand the techniques to manage fistulas and ruptures of the ureter and urethra. 3. To appreciate the vascular and non-vascular interventional techniques in kidney trauma. 16:00 17:30 Room I/K Joint Course of ESR and RSNA (Radiological Society of North America) MC 728 Essentials in oncologic imaging: what radiologists need to know (part 4) Moderator: M.F. Reiser; Munich/DE 16:00 A-179 A. Lymphoma H. Schoder; New York, NY/US 1. To get a practical, clinically relevant summary of key imaging issues in Hodgkin and non-hodgkin lymphoma. 2. To learn how imaging, especially PET and PET-CT can optimally assess and measure tumour treatment response, providing a valueadded radiology report. 16:30 A-180 B. Musculoskeletal neoplasms M.F. Reiser; Munich/DE 1. To become familiar with the imaging modalities which enable to detect and differentiate benign and malignant bone neoplasms. 2. To consolidate knowledge of radiographic, CT and MRI findings which enable to classify and stage bone tumours. 3. To understand the potential role of PET-CT and whole body MRI. 4. To learn the signs indicative of favourable and poor response to preoperative chemotherapy and for recurrence of malignant bone tumours. 16:55 A-181 C. Chemo- and radiation therapy-induced toxicity H.-U. Kauczor; Heidelberg/DE 1. To get an overview of organ-specific toxicity and other adverse effects of chemo- and radiotherapy. 2. To review the key imaging findings of therapy-induced organ toxicity and adverse effects. 3. To understand how to differentiate inflammatory, infectious, fibrotic, and necrotic changes from tumour recurrence. 17:20 Questions 16:00 17:30 Room L/M Organs from A to Z: Heart MC 722 Ischaemic heart disease Moderator: C. Catalano; Rome/IT 16:00 A-182 A. Imaging of the coronary arteries: the Holy Grail G. Roditi; Glasgow/UK 1. To learn about the meaning of CT coronary calcium screening for risk assessment. 2. To identify suitable modalities and challenges for non-invasive coronary angiography. 3. To understand the potential of coronary plaque imaging beyond calcium. 16:20 A-183 B. The ischaemic myocardium: what to do? C. Loewe; Vienna/AT 1. To learn how to evaluate the function of the ischaemic myocardium. 2. To identify methods of assessing the viability of the ischaemic myocardium. 3. To get an overview of the therapeutic consequences depending on imaging findings. 16:40 A-184 C. The ischaemic heart after treatment: still alive? G. Bastarrika; Toronto, ON/CA 1. To learn how to analyse cardiac images following bypass grafting. 2. To understand the value of cardiac imaging after coronary interventions (PTA and stenting). 3. To assess potential therapeutic consequences. 17:00 A-185 Interactive case discussion C. Catalano; Rome/IT 16:00 17:30 Room N/O Interventional Radiology RC 709 Expanding the role of interventional radiology in hepatocellular carcinoma 16:00 A-186 Chairman s introduction V. Válek; Brno/CZ 16:05 A-187 A. RF ablation J. del Cura; Bilbao/ES 1. To understand the indications for RF ablation. 2. To learn about the technique and devices for RF ablation. 3. To learn about results, complications and follow-up strategies. 16:28 A-188 B. Intra-arterial procedures F. Orsi; Milan/IT 1. To become familiar with the indications for intra-arterial treatment of HCC. 2. To learn the techniques of intra-arterial treatment. 3. To learn about results, complications and follow-up strategies. 16:51 A-189 C. Portal vein embolisation before surgery A. Denys, P. Bize; Lausanne/CH 1. To become familiar with imaging strategies and indications for embolisation. 2. To understand embolisation methods. 3. To learn about results, complications and follow-up strategies. Panel discussion: 17:14 How to allow for more patients with HCC to be treated? A-178 A-189 Friday 171

174 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-190 A :00 17:30 Room P Radiographers RC 714 Clinical audit: from EURATOM to the clinical environment Moderators: E.J. Adam; London/UK, D. Pronk-Larive; Middelburg/NL 16:00 A-190 A. Clinical audit: from the EURATOM treaty to EU guidelines: clinical audit RP 159 P. Wood; Helsinki/FI 1. To understand the background to the publication of RP 159 along with its purpose and scope. 2. To become familiar with the principles and prerequisites of clinical audit as outlined by RP To become familiar with the relationship between clinical audit and regulatory controls. 4. To gain an insight into potential national, regional and international issues associated with clinical audit. 16:30 A-191 B. Implementation in practice: a comparison of different models S. Geers-van Gemeren; Utrecht/NL 1. To understand the key components required to allow clinical audit to be implemented in practice. 2. To gain an insight into different implementation models. 3. To be informed about the key considerations that must be made prior to implementing an audit model: organisation, auditors, process, financing, the roles of professional bodies, and outcomes. 17:00 A-192 C. A perspective on the impact and benefits of clinical audit S. O Connor; Dublin/IE 1. To gain an insight into the use of clinical audit from the perspective of a clinical audit lead in an international diagnostic imaging service provider. 2. To become familiar with the challenges that may be encountered when undertaking clinical audit. 3. To understand the significant impact that clinical audit can have from the perspective of the patient, the healthcare team and on service delivery. 16:00 17:30 Room Q Special Focus Session SF 7c Imaging in intensive care patients 16:00 A-193 Chairman s introduction A. Palkó; Szeged/HU Session Objectives: 1. To understand the importance of imaging diagnostics in the unique and challenging clinical setting of the intensive care units. 2. To learn about the technical and methodological considerations to be taken into account with this patient group. 3. To learn more about the most important conditions and the imaging findings as well as the diagnostic imaging algorithms to be used in the intensive care environment. 16:05 A-194 Value of MRI for intensive care coma patients with unclear brain pathology P.C. Maly Sundgren; Lund/SE 1. To understand the importance of magnetic resonance imaging in cases of unclear brain pathology causing severe dysfunction of the central nervous system. 2. To understand the significance of imaging in the evaluation of brain function and potential outcome following anesthesia, injuries and hypoxia. 3. To become familiar with the imaging signs and their predictive value and accuracy regarding brain death, and future role of imaging in decisions concerning the termination of intensive treatment. 16:23 A-195 Computed tomography of pathologic lung conditions complicating intensive care treatment C.M. Schaefer-Prokop; Amersfoort/NL 1. To understand the spectrum of pathological lung conditions, which complicate intensive care treatment. 2. To learn about the role of diagnostic imaging and its technical difficulties and requirements in the intensive care environment. 3. To become familiar with the most important imaging signs and symptoms of tracheobronchial and lung conditions, influencing the treatment and survival of the intensive care patient. 16:41 A-196 Point-of-care versus diagnostic ultrasound in the intensive care unit E. Danse, P.-F. Laterre, L. Jacquet, A. Dragean, I. Nica, P. Trefois, L. Annet; Brussels/ BE 1. To understand the concept and role of point-of-care ultrasound and its technical and training requirements. 2. To become familiar with the role and tasks of diagnostic ultrasound versus point-of-care ultrasound in the most common pathologic conditions in intensive care. 3. To learn more about typical ultrasound findings and their significance in the diagnosis, differential diagnosis and therapy of intensive care patients. 16:59 A-197 Imaging in polytrauma U. Linsenmaier; Munich/DE 1. To appreciate the clinical significance of conditions characterised by multiple severe injuries and their systemic and multi-organ complications. 2. To explain the special role of imaging, the diagnostic algorithm and the technical, organisational and training requirements for the diagnosis and follow-up of polytrauma patients. 3. To consolidate knowledge of imaging signs and symptoms and their diagnostic value in patients with polytrauma. Panel discussion: 17:17 What training and special skills are radiologists expected to have in order to work with intensive care units? How should we manage the clinical and technical challenges posed by this very specific environment? 172

175 Postgraduate Educational Programme 16:00 17:30 Room Z Vascular RC 715 Dialysis fistula Moderator: H.A. Deutschmann; Graz/AT 16:00 A-198 A. Preoperative mapping L. Turmel-Rodrigues; Tours/FR 1. To become familiar with the indications and techniques for preoperative arterial venous mapping. 2. To learn about the venous anatomy. 3. To become familiar with the potential pitfalls of preoperative mapping. 16:30 A-199 B. Screening for problems D. Vorwerk; Ingolstadt/DE 1. To understand the spectrum of problems with dialysis fistula. 2. To learn about screening protocols and the results of screening. 3. To learn about the most common problems and how to detect them. 17:00 A-200 C. Evaluation of malfunction R. Uberoi; Oxford/UK 1. To understand the main indications and results of angioplasty. 2. To learn about thrombectomy and aspiration. 3. To become familiar with the indications for stenting. A-198 A-200 Friday 173

176 Postgraduate Educational Programme 174

177 Postgraduate Educational Programme 08:30 10:00 Room A Interactive Teaching Session E³ 820a Pitfalls in heart imaging 08:30 A-201 A. CT G. Bastarrika; Toronto, ON/CA 1. To learn about practical aspects of postprocessing, reading and reporting non-invasive cardiac CT examinations. 2. To learn how to improve reading of results by recognising technical causes for various artifacts in cardiac CT. 3. To become familiar with approaches to reducing false inaccuracies and misinterpretations when assessing coronary artery stenosis. 09:15 A-202 B. MRI M. Francone; Rome/IT 1. To learn about common pitfalls in MRI evaluation of the heart. 2. To become familiar with cardiac anatomical variants, potentially mimicking disease. 08:30 10:00 Room B Special Focus Session SF 8a Is diagnostic catheter angiography still useful in neuroimaging? 08:30 A-203 Chairman s introduction M. Essig; Erlangen/DE Session Objectives: 1. To become familiar with the current debate on the need for diagnostic catheter angio. 2. To learn about the pros and cons of diagnostic catheter angio. 3. To learn about the pros and cons of alternative non-invasive angiography techniques. 08:35 A-204 What can we expect from vascular diagnostic procedures? R. Siemund; Lund/SE 1. To learn about the expectations from vascular diagnostic procedures in the diagnostic work-up. 2. To become familiar with the expectations from vascular diagnostic procedures in therapy planning and therapeutic procedures. 3. To learn about the expectations from vascular diagnostic procedures in the follow-up assessments. 08:58 A-205 Can non-invasive techniques as CTA and MRA replace catheter angio for diagnostic work-up? L. van den Hauwe, M. Voormolen, T. van der Zijden, R. Salgado, J.W. Van Goethem, P.M. Parizel; Antwerp/BE 1. To become familiar with the diagnostic potential of CTA and MRA. 2. To understand the current proved clinical indications where CTA and MRA can replace catheter angio. 3. To learn about safety issues in non-invasive procedures. 09:21 A-206 Diagnostic catheter angiography is not dead: current indications and advantages over the non-invasive techniques T. Engelhorn; Erlangen/DE 1. To learn about the current indications for diagnostic catheter angiography. 2. To become familiar with complication rates of selective catheter angiography in high volume centers. 3. To appreciate some technical innovations for diagnostic catheter angiography. Panel discussion: 09:44 The pros and cons of diagnostic catheter angiography in neuroimaging 08:30 10:00 Room C New Horizons Session NH 8 MR/PET: a marriage made in heaven or hell? 08:30 A-207 Chairman s introduction B. Hamm; Berlin/DE Session Objectives: 1. To introduce the potential of this new imaging modality. 2. To appreciate a new opportunity for cooperation between radiology and nuclear medicine. 08:33 A-208 MR/PET in neuroimaging: nuclear medicine O. Sabri; Leipzig/DE 1. To learn about what we are able to do now. 2. To understand the nuclear aspect of neuroimaging. 3. To learn about the possibilities and limitations of neuroimaging. 08:51 A-209 MR/PET in neuroimaging: radiology B.R. Rosen; Charlestown, MA/US 1. To demonstrate the value of this hybrid technique. 2. To understand the radiological aspect of neuroimaging. 3. To learn about the possibilities and limitations of neuroimaging. 09:09 A-210 MR/PET in oncologic imaging: nuclear medicine O. Ratib; Geneva/CH 1. To learn about what we are able to do now. 2. To understand the nuclear aspect of oncologic imaging. 3. To learn about the possibilities and limitations of oncologic imaging. 09:27 A-211 MR/PET in oncologic imaging: radiology H.-P. Schlemmer; Heidelberg/DE 1. To demonstrate the value of this hybrid technique. 2. To become familiar with the radiologic aspect of oncologic imaging. 3. To learn about possibilities and limitations of oncologic imaging. Panel discussion: 09:45 What benefits and risks should we expect in terms of basic research, clinical service, and economics? 08:30 10:00 Room D1 CLICK (Clinical Lessons for Imaging Core Knowledge): Never without Arteries CC 818 How old are you in reality? Vascular age and clinical events Moderator: L. Lonn; Copenhagen/DK 08:30 A-212 A. Clinical considerations E. Minar; Vienna/AT 1. To learn about the frequency and importance of vascular diseases. 2. To become familiar with clinical risk stratification strategies. 3. To learn about the possibility of reducing cardiovascular risk. A-201 A-212 Saturday 175

178 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-213 A :00 A-213 B. Imaging techniques and typical findings H.J. Lamb; Leiden/NL 1. To learn about the imaging modalities used for the assessment of cardiovascular risk. 2. To learn how to select the right test for the right patient. 3. To become familiar with the newest innovations and newest guidelines in non-invasive cardiovascular risk assessment. 09:30 A-214 C. Interactive case discussion: how to deal with the results? A. van der Lugt; Rotterdam/NL 1. To understand the strength of non-invasive risk stratification in properly selected patient populations. 2. To consolidate knowledge of the selection of the appropriate imaging technique, image interpretation and image-based treatment recommendation. 3. To learn about the risks of the inappropriate use of such risk stratification tests (Ca-scoring) in symptomatic patients. 2. To become familiar with alternative imaging modalities such as US, DSA and MR. 3. To learn about typical and atypical imaging findings. 09:00 A-220 B. Chest and abdomen M. Scaglione; Castel Volturno/IT 1. To become familiar with the most important imaging findings and their impact on patient management. 2. To understand common classification systems, trauma scoring systems and their impact on patient management. 3. To learn about typical and atypical imaging findings. 09:20 A-221 C. Extremities U. Linsenmaier, L.L. Geyer; Munich/DE 1. To become familiar with imaging strategies, the role of CR, CT and MR. 2. To understand common classification systems and their impact on patient management. 3. To learn about typical and atypical imaging findings. 08:30 10:00 Room D2 Oncologic Imaging: Follow-up of Systemic and Local Therapies CC 819 Imaging after systemic therapies: advanced techniques Moderator: D.-M. Koh; Sutton, Surrey/UK 08:30 A-215 A. What can we expect from biomarkers B. Van Beers; Clichy/FR 1. To become familiar with biomarkers. 2. To consolidate knowledge of various biomarkers and their utility. 09:00 A-216 B. MRI biomarkers: from acquisition to post-processing O. Lucidarme, M. Wagner, C. Pellot Barakat, F. Frouin; Paris/FR 1. To become familiar with MRI biomarkers. 2. To learn about tips and tricks for MRI biomarker evaluation. 09:30 A-217 C. Assessing the precision and accuracy of biomarker imaging: is it reproducible? C.B. Sirlin; San Diego, CA/US 1. To understand imaging biomarker precision (repeatability and reproducibility) and accuracy and how it is evaluated. 2. To understand how to interpret biomarker precision and accuracy in the context of the biomarker s intended use. 08:30 10:00 Room E1 Emergency Radiology RC 817 Polytrauma: redefining imaging issues for management priorities 08:30 A-218 Chairman s introduction: advanced imaging, logistics and management priorities in patients after polytrauma H. Alkadhi; Zurich/CH 08:40 A-219 A. Vascular trauma G. Schueller; Bülach/CH 1. To become familiar with the use of dedicated MDCT protocols, classification of vascular injuries and treatment options. Panel discussion: 09:40 How to speed up your diagnoses? 08:30 10:00 Room E2 Foundation Course: Neuroimaging E³ 820b Metabolic and neurodegenerative disorders Moderator: S. Lehéricy; Paris/FR 08:30 A-222 A. Dementia B. Gómez-Ansón; Barcelona/ES 1. To understand when and why you should image dementia. 2. To become familiar with the imaging findings of the most common primary degenerative and secondary vascular dementias. 3. To understand how to recognise normal pressure hydrocephalus as an underlying cause of subcortical dementia. 09:00 A-223 B. Movement disorders T.A. Yousry; London/UK 1. To learn the typical imaging findings, their anatomic substrate and the limitations of conventional MRI. 2. To understand the contribution of advanced imaging techniques such as DTI, SWI and high field imaging as well as quantitative MR postprocessing techniques. 3. To understand the role of MR in the diagnosis and differential diagnosis of movement disorders. 09:30 A-224 C. Metabolic disorders J.F. Schneider; Basle/CH 1. To become familiar with the imaging findings of the most important innate metabolic defects affecting CNS. 2. To learn how to recognise patterns of gray and white matter involvement. 3. To learn about specific discriminating imaging findings. 176

179 Postgraduate Educational Programme 08:30 10:00 Room F1 Breast RC 802 Clinical challenges in breast MRI 08:30 A-225 Chairman s introduction F.J. Gilbert; Cambridge/UK 08:35 A-226 A. High risk patients: establishing clinical protocols J. Veltman; Almelo/NL 1. To become familiar with the literature on the role of breast MRI in screening of high risk patients. 2. To understand current protocols in clinical practice. 3. To appreciate the challenges of breast MRI imaging in this patient group. 08:58 A-227 B. Non-mass like enhancement (NMLE): when to biopsy? C.K. Kuhl; Aachen/DE 1. To learn about the clinical significance of NMLE. 2. To understand differential diagnosis for NMLE. 3. To become familiar with a work-up algorithm of NMLE cases. 09:21 A-228 C. Monitoring response to neo-adjuvant chemotherapy T.H. Helbich; Vienna/AT 1. To understand the clinical aspects of neo-adjuvant chemotherapy. 2. To appreciate evidence-based protocols for imaging in this clinical setting. 3. To learn about particular imaging challenges of assessing response to neo-adjuvant chemotherapy. Panel discussion: 09:44 How can the specificity and sensitivity of breast MRI in these indeterminate clinical and imaging scenarios be maximised? 08:30 10:00 Room F2 Special Focus Session SF 8b GI imaging: technological advances and clinical applications 08:30 A-229 Chairman s introduction S.A. Jackson; Plymouth/UK Session Objectives: 1. To review the significant recent advances in GI imaging. 2. To understand the place of these advances in the clinical imaging of patients. 3. To summarise the future directions of GI radiology in the 21st century. 08:35 A-230 CEUS of the bowel wall: when and how F. Maccioni; Rome/IT 1. To review the relevant clinical indications for CEUS of the bowel. 2. To learn how to optimally perform a CEUS examination of the bowel wall. 3. To appreciate important findings in patients with IBD and learn how to evaluate inflammatory activity of the bowel wall. 08:58 A-231 Dual-energy (spectral) CT: GI applications P. Rogalla; Toronto, ON/CA 1. To review the concept and technique of dual-energy CT. 2. To understand the clinical application of dual-energy CT in GI imaging. 3. To appreciate the additional benefits of the technique in routine clinico-radiological practice. 09:21 A-232 MR imaging of GI tract motility S.A. Taylor; London/UK 1. To learn about the MRI protocols that can best assess bowel motility. 2. To understand the various software approaches to quantifying bowel motility. 3. To become familiar with how motility MRI can be used in clinical practice. Panel discussion: 09:44 When should we integrate these technological advances into our routine practice? 08:30 10:00 Room G/H EFOMP Workshop New technology in diagnostic radiology: new frontiers in imaging of the lung EF 1 Lung and chest imaging: new approaches Moderators: P. Sharp; Aberdeen/UK, W.J.M. van der Putten; Galway/IE 08:30 A-233 Welcome address J.I. Bilbao 1, P. Sharp 2 ; 1 Pamplona/ES, 2 Aberdeen/UK 08:40 A-234 Radiologist s point of view: clinical and technical requirements for imaging of the lung H.-U. Kauczor; Heidelberg/DE 1. To comprehend the new approaches towards functional and molecular lung imaging. 2. To understand their potential in comprehensive and quantitative lung imaging. 3. To become familiar with new applications of structural functional and molecular imaging in lung disease. 09:10 A-235 Respiratory motion correction in lung imaging J.A. Schnabel; Oxford/UK 1. To comprehend the problem of motion corruption and difference in breath holds in lung imaging. 2. To become familiar with state-of-the-art motion correction methods in single- and multi-modality lung imaging. 3. To understand the concept of modelling complex sliding motion of the lungs. 09:35 A-236 Role of tomosynthesis in lung imaging M. Båth; Gothenburg/SE 1. To understand the technical principles of chest tomosynthesis. 2. To become familiar with the results of the latest clinical evaluations of chest tomosynthesis. A-225 A-236 Saturday 177

180 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-237 A :30 10:00 Room I/K Chest RC 804 Patterns in chest radiology: are there subtype patterns of ground glass opacity (GGO)? 08:30 A-237 Chairman s introduction A. Oikonomou; Alexandroupolis/GR Session Objectives: 1. To learn about the prevalence and low specificity of GGO. 2. To appreciate the need for definition of GGO subtypes to improve radiological diagnoses. 08:35 A-238 A. Ground glass opacification: why do we see it and what does it mean? S.R. Desai; London/UK 1. To appreciate the different physiological conditions which cause GGO pattern. 2. To learn about the associations and reversibility of physiology-related GGO. 08:58 A-239 B. Inflammatory and infectious GGO K. Marten-Engelke; Göttingen/DE 1. To learn more about the inflammatory conditions which cause GGO. 2. To appreciate the histopathological correlates of inflammatory and infectious GGO. 3. To become familiar with GGO in autoimmune and infectious lung disease. 09:21 A-240 C. GGO in dysplasia and neoplasia G.R. Ferretti, S. Lantuejoul; Grenoble/FR 1. To learn more about the dysplastic and neoplastic conditions causing GGO. 2. To appreciate the histopathological correlates of dysplastic and neoplastic GGO. 3. To understand how to estimate malignancy on the basis of GGO pattern. Panel discussion: 09:44 How should we report and manage ground glass opacity? 08:30 10:00 Room L/M Vascular RC 815 How I report Moderator: D. Bilecen; Basle/CH 08:30 A-241 A. CTA and MRA of supra-aortic arteries J.H. Gillard; Cambridge/UK 1. To learn about a structured reporting approach to angiographic studies of supra-aortic arteries. 2. To understand the role of post-processing techniques and quantitative analysis of arterial stenosis. 3. To be able to answer specific clinical questions about supra-aortic arterial occlusive diseases. 09:00 A-242 B. CTA and MRA of thoracic and abdominal aorta H.J. Michaely; Mannheim/DE 1. To learn about a structured reporting approach to aneurysmal and obstructive diseases. 2. To learn the classifications of aneurysmatic aortic diseases. 3. To understand the role of post-processing techniques in aortic diseases. 4. To be able to answer specific clinical questions about aortic diseases. 09:30 A-243 C. CTA and MRA of peripheral arteries T. Leiner; Utrecht/NL 1. To learn about a structured reporting approach to peripheral arterial obstructive diseases. 2. To understand the importance of quantitative analysis of peripheral arterial obstructions and how to report these analyses. 3. To be able to answer specific clinical questions about peripheral arterial diseases. 08:30 10:00 Room N/O Interventional Radiology RC 809 What should every radiologist know about the endovascular treatment of abdominal aortic aneurysms? 08:30 A-244 Chairman s introduction H. Rousseau, J. Auriol, C. Lions, F. Mokrane; Toulouse/FR 08:35 A-245 A. Pre-therapeutic radiological evaluation J. Raupach, O. Renc, P. Hoffmann, J. Zizka; Hradec Kralove/CZ 1. To learn about the best pretreatment imaging modality. 2. To understand planning and sizing of appropriate stent-graft. 3. To become familiar with critical criteria and vessel morphology. 08:58 A-246 B. EVAR techniques and results F. Fanelli; Rome/IT 1. To understand indications and contraindications for EVAR. 2. To know more about advantages of different types of stent-graft. 3. To become familiar with percutaneous vascular access. 4. To learn about the latest trials. 09:21 A-247 C. Imaging follow-up and treatment of complications R. Morgan; London/UK 1. To learn about available imaging methods for follow-up. 2. To become familiar with complications and failure of EVAR. 3. To understand how to treat endoleaks. Panel discussion: 09:44 What are the best imaging methods for follow-up? 08:30 10:00 Room P Cardiac RC 803 Practical approach to cardiovascular risk stratification with CT and MRI Moderator: C. Peebles; Southampton/UK 08:30 A-248 A. Modern views on value of coronary calcium scoring for risk assessment A. Stadler; Vienna/AT 1. To understand what kind of information calcium scoring can deliver and the appropriate indications. 2. To become familiar with its role in an asymptomatic and in a symptomatic population. 3. To learn about the current data and guidelines supporting its use for assessment of cardiac risk. 178

181 Postgraduate Educational Programme 09:00 A-249 B. Coronary CTA: from detection of stenosis to prognosis N.R. Mollet 1, F. Cademartiri 2 ; 1 Turnhout/BE, 2 Rotterdam/NL 1. To understand the accuracy of CTA in the diagnosis of coronary disease. 2. To become familiar with the strengths and limitations of the various quantification techniques. 3. To appreciate the prognostic value of CTA in coronary disease. 09:30 A-250 C. Myocardial perfusion and viability for risk scoring A. de Roos; Leiden/NL 1. To become familiar with the current status of CT and MRI for evaluation of myocardial perfusion and viability. 2. To understand the accuracy of myocardial perfusion in identifying ischaemia and its role in risk assessment. 3. To learn the prognostic value of viability imaging in ichaemic heart disease. 08:30 10:00 Room Q Paediatric RC 812 Imaging the paediatric spine Moderator: C.J. Kellenberger; Zurich/CH 08:30 A-251 A. Craniocervical junction abnormalities B. Ozgen Mocan; Ankara/TR 1. To learn about normal cervical junction development and anatomy. 2. To understand congenital cervical junction anomalies. 3. To appreciate acquired cervical junction pathology. 09:00 A-252 B. Inflammation, infection and tumours: the role of imaging M.I. Argyropoulou; Ioannina/GR 1. To learn about the etiologies and the imaging findings of infectious, para-infectious and autoimmune disorders. 2. To appreciate the role of spinal MRI in the differential diagnosis of multiple sclerosis vs its mimics. 3. To become familiar with the imaging findings of primary and metastatic tumours. 4. To learn about the indications of whole spine MRI with presence of brain tumours. 09:30 A-253 C. Imaging spinal trauma in childhood M. Maas; Amsterdam/NL 1. To understand how best to investigate suspected spinal trauma in a child. 2. To appreciate the imaging findings. 3. To consolidate knowledge about the differences between paediatric and adult spinal trauma. 10:30 12:00 Room A Interactive Teaching Session E³ 920a Tips and tricks in chest imaging 10:30 A-254 A. Plain radiography J. Cáceres; Barcelona/ES 1. To become familiar with useful signs in the diagnosis of chest disorders in the chest radiograph. 2. To learn about common pitfalls in plain radiography of the chest. 3. To understand the mechanisms that cause errors in image interpretation of chest radiographs. 11:15 A-255 B. CT J. Vilar; Valencia/ES 1. To become familiar with useful signs in the diagnosis of chest disorders in CT. 2. To learn about common pitfalls in CT of the chest. 3. To understand the mechanisms that cause errors in image interpretation of chest CT. 10:25 12:00 Room B ESR meets South Africa EM 3 Imaging HIV and TB Welcome by the ESR President: G.P. Krestin; Rotterdam/NL Presiding: J.I. Bilbao; Pamplona/ES C. Sperryn; Cape Town/ZA 10:30 A-256 Introduction C. Sperryn; Cape Town/ZA Session Objectives: 1. To learn about cerebrovascular disease in HIV infected patients in South Africa. 2. To understand the pathogenesis of TB meningitis and its implications for treatment. 3. To become familiar with the MR imaging of spinal TB in children and possible differential diagnoses. 4. To consolidate knowledge of chest radiograph reporting in HIVinfected children. 5. To appreciate South Africa, the country, its diversity and how its radiologists are trained. 10:35 A-257 HIV-related cerebrovascular disease: the South African experience V. Mngomezulu; Johannesburg/ZA 1. To learn about the clinical and imaging spectrum of cerebrovascular disease in HIV infected patients in South Africa. 2. To appreciate the role of other co-factors in the pathogenesis of HIV related cerebrovascular disease. 3. To become familiar with the challenges and technical strategies in the medical and interventional management of these conditions. 10:50 A-258 Interlude: Radiology training in South Africa Z. Lockhat; Pretoria/ZA 10:55 A-259 New concepts in the pathogenesis of cerebral TB P. Janse van Rensburg, R. Hewlett; Stellenbosch/ZA 1. To learn more about the morphological spectrum of tuberculous meningoencephalitis as shown on contrast MRI. 2. To understand the pathogenesis of TBM and its implications for disease progression and treatment. 3. To appreciate the importance of imaging-pathologic correlation. 4. To become familiar with imaging of TBM. 5. To consolidate knowledge of neurotuberculosis. 11:10 A-260 Interlude: South Africa: the country, its people, its diversity and its attractions Z. Lockhat; Pretoria/ZA 11:15 A-261 Spinal tuberculosis in children T. Kilborn; Cape Town/ZA 1. To learn about the spectrum of tuberculous infection of the spine in children namely; intramedullary spinal tuberculomas, tuberculous spondylitis and rarely tuberculous epidural abscess. A-249 A-261 Saturday 179

182 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-262 A To appreciate the incidence of tuberculous arachnoiditis and tuberculomas in patients presenting with tuberculous meningitis and its implications for management. 3. To become familiar with MR imaging of spinal TB and possible differential diagnoses. 4. To discuss the role of ultrasound and CT in the imaging algorithm. 5. To understand the importance of accurate and timely radiological diagnosis for guiding management. 11:30 A-262 Chronic chest radiographic changes in a cohort of HIVinfected South African children R. Pitcher, C. Lombard, M. Cotton, S. Beningfield, H. Zar; Cape Town/ZA 1. To learn about the level of chronic chest radiographic changes encountered in HIV-infected children who do not have access to HAART. 2. To better understand the clinical and immunological correlates of chest radiographic changes in HAART-naïve HIV-infected children. 3. To appreciate a. the burden of paediatric pulmonary disease on resource-limited healthcare environment with a high prevalence of paediatric HIVinfection. b. the impact of HAART on chest radiographic changes in HIV-infected children. c. the importance of the early initiation of HAART in HIV-infected children. d. the challenges to healthcare delivery in a resource-limited healthcare environment. 4. To become familiar with standardised chest radiographic reporting techniques utilised for research in paediatric pulmonary radiology. 5. To consolidate knowledge of paediatric chest radiograph reporting, with particular emphasis on: i. The impact of technical factors ii. The importance of standardised terminology iii. Paediatric-specific normal variants iv. Useful chest radiographic signs Panel discussion: 11:45 HIV and TB: What impact do they have on health care workers? 10:30 12:00 Room E2 Foundation Course: Neuroimaging E³ 920b Tumours and phacomatosis Moderator: N. Girard; Marseille/FR 10:30 A-263 A. Brain tumours M.M. Thurnher; Vienna/AT 1. To learn about the imaging findings and the limitations of conventional MRI in the evaluation of brain tumours. 2. To become familiar with new MRI techniques available for advanced brain tumour imaging. 3. To learn about the potential of functional imaging (fmri, PET, SPECT) in tumour characterisation, treatment decisions, and follow up. 11:00 A-264 B. Tumours of the spinal cord J. Van Goethem, C. Venstermans, F. De Belder, L. van den Hauwe, P. Parizel; Antwerp/BE 1. To become familiar with the imaging findings of primary and metastatic tumours of the spinal cord. 2. To be able to recognise metastatic disease in the extradural, epidural, subdural and paraspinal compartments. 3. To learn how best to use imaging and create the appropriate protocol. 11:30 A-265 C. Phacomatosis M.A. Papathanasiou; Athens/GR 1. To learn how and when you should image. 2. To consolidate knowledge about conventional neuroimaging findings of the more common phacomatoses. 3. To be informed of the possible applications of advanced neuroimaging techniques :30 12:00 Room G/H Physics in Radiology EFOMP Workshop New technology in diagnostic radiology: new frontiers in imaging of the lung EF 2 Lung imaging: multidisciplinary scenario Moderators: A. Torresin; Milan/IT, J.N. Vassileva; Sofia/BG 10:30 A-266 Pulmonary nodule detection using CAD A. Retico; Pisa/IT 1. To comprehend the basic steps to design a CAD system for lung nodule detection in CT scans. 2. To be aware of the possible usage of CAD as second reader in the clinical practice. 3. To understand how the impact of CAD on the reader sensitivity is evaluated. 10:50 A-267 Optimisation in lung imaging of children C. Owens; London/UK 1. To understand the importance of a dynamic team approach to optimisation of local CT techniques in all hospitals. 2. To appreciate the iterative nature and concept of sharing protocols across sites. 3. To become familiar with the techniques, tips and tricks to perform as low as reasonably achievable CT imaging that is fit for purpose. 4. To consolidate knowledge of low dose acquisition of CT images and post-processing techniques to optimise images using images to illustrate. 11:10 A-268 Lung imaging: developments in role of PET M.-E. Meyer, P. Bailly, J. Daouk; Amiens/FR 1. To learn about respiratory motion management in PET acquisitions. 2. To understand techniques of respiratory motion compensation or full motion correction to prevent inappropriate attenuation correction and errors in quantification. 3. To consolidate knowledge of adaptive treatment and advanced follow-up: optimisation of radiotherapy planning. 11:35 A-269 Lung imaging: developments in role of MR J.M. Wild; Sheffield/UK 1. To comprehend the basic MR physics of imaging protons and hyperpolarised gases in the lungs. 2. To understand the techniques that are in use in clinical lung and pulmonary vascular MRI. 3. To become familiar with established and future clinical applications of MRI in lung and pulmonary vascular disease. 10:30 12:00 Room L/M Standards and Audit Session Assessment of radiologists professional performance Moderator: E.J. Adam; London/UK 10:30 A-270 Radiologists performance: assessment using peer review G. Boland; Wellesley, MA/US 1. To comprehend the importance of peer review to education, clinical care, research, best practices and cost. 2. To understand how to implement an effective peer review program. 3. To become familiar with the differing peer review tools including electronic decision support.

183 Postgraduate Educational Programme 11:00 A-271 Radiologists individual performance: use of standardised test images A.G. Gale; Loughborough/UK 1. To understand the use of standardised test sets. 2. To comprehend the advantages and limitations of using test sets to measure the radiological performance. 11:30 A-272 Radiologists performance: referrers view J.M.L. Bosmans; Gent/BE 1. To become familiar with the views and expectatations of referring clinicians concerning communication with the radiologist and more specifically regarding the radiology report. 2. To understand the different needs of particular subgroups of referrers. 3. To become familiar with the views and expectations of referrers regarding structured reporting and its potential effect on productivity and training. 12:15 12:45 Room A Plenary Session HL 2 Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen Honorary Lecture Presiding: J.I. Bilbao; Pamplona/ES 12:15 A-273 Interventional oncology: the era of molecular targeted therapy J.-F. Geschwind; Baltimore, MD/US 1. To learn about basic principles of cancer biology. 2. To understand the importance of tumour metabolism and recognise its role in cancer growth. 3. To appreciate the growing impact of image-guided therapies for cancer. 12:30 13:30 Room N/O The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Head and Neck MC 24C Main pipelines of the neck: pharynx and larynx 12:30 A-274 Main pipelines of the neck: pharynx and larynx M. Becker; Geneva/CH 1. To become familiar with the anatomy of the pharynx and larynx. 2. To learn how to choose and tailor imaging techniques according to clinical presentation. 3. To appreciate the most common pathologies affecting these structures. 4. To be able to provide a useful differential diagnosis of pharyngeal and laryngeal lesions. 12:30 13:30 Room P The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Musculoskeletal Imaging MC 25C Inflammatory/infectious disorders 12:30 A-275 Inflammatory/infectious disorders V.N. Cassar-Pullicino; Oswestry/UK 1. To understand the pathophysiology of inflammatory conditions of the musculoskeletal system. 2. To learn about the basic imaging criteria for the diagnosis of arthritis, osteomyelitis, and spondylitis. 3. To become familiar with the differential diagnosis of the most common inflammatory diseases. 14:00 15:30 Room B EFRS meets Spain EM 5 Knowledge development as a tool for radiographers professional improvement Presiding: G. Paulo; Coimbra/PT, C. Ruiz Blanco; Madrid/ES 14:00 A-284 Introduction G. Paulo 1, C. Ruiz Blanco 2 ; 1 Coimbra/PT, 2 Madrid/ES Session Objectives: 1. To understand Spanish radiographers education and professional status and its comparison with other European countries. 2. To learn about the role of radiographer within the framework of the Spanish health system. 3. To learn about areas of professional development for radiographers in Spain. 14:05 A-285 The Spanish radiographer s role in advanced MRI research E. Alfayate Sáez; Madrid/ES 1. To understand the role of radiographer in a MRI research centre. 2. To understand the daily activity in a MRI research center and the continuous professional development related to it. 3. To learn about the potential areas of research development in MRI. 14:23 A-286 The radiographer s specialisation in ultrasound: two decades of experience in a public hospital M.P. Peña Fernández; Getafe/ES 1. To understand the role of the radiographer in ultrasound. 2. To learn about inter-professional relations in ultrasound. 3. To appreciate the advantages of a radiographer in ultrasound for radiology department outcomes and for the quality of patient care. 14:41 A-287 Interlude: Radiology and Spanish art C. Ruiz Blanco; Madrid/ES 14:46 A-288 The radiographer as the interface between patient and technology in promoting safety in radiation protection J.A. Soria Jerez; Madrid/ES 1. To learn how to enhance patient safety in radiation protection. 2. To learn about radiographers role in optimising procedures. 3. To understand the continuous professional development requirements needed to maintain high standards in patient safety. A-271 A-288 Saturday 181

184 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-289 A :04 A-289 Educational status of radiographers in Spain: comparison with the EU M.R. Soto García; Barcelona/ES 1. To understand the Spanish radiography education model. 2. To learn about the limitations of Spanish education on free movement on professionals in Europe. 3. To learn about solutions for education-model development regarding professional harmonisation. Panel discussion: 15:22 Could a transnational and multi-professional combined statement contribute to professional development?16:00-17:30 Room A 16:00 17:30 Room A Interactive Teaching Session E³ 1120 Breast cancer 16:00 A-296 A. Detection C.S. Balleyguier; Villejuif/FR 1. To understand the respective role of each imaging technique in the diagnosis of breast cancer. 2. To learn about common pitfalls in the diagnosis of breast cancer. 16:45 A-297 B. Follow-up G. Forrai; Budapest/HU 1. To understand the common features of recurrent breast cancer. 2. To learn how to establish imaging follow-up protocols or breast cancer. 16:00 17:30 Room B State of the Art Symposium SA 11 Evaluation of response in haematological malignancy 16:00 A-298 Chairman s introduction E. de Kerviler; Paris/FR Session Objectives: 1. To become reacquainted with the standard criteria for therapeutic response in myeloma and lymphoma. 2. To demonstrate the role of CT, MRI and PET in the assessment of therapeutic response. 3. To show that functional imaging is now essential for patient evaluation at baseline and follow-up. 4. To consider future imaging biomarkers in the assessment of response. 16:05 A-299 Opportunities and limitations of PET, CT and MRI answering the haematologist s questions T.C. Kwee; Utrecht/NL 1. To learn the various imaging features of lymphoma. 2. To learn the advantages and limitations of CT, PET, and MRI in the evaluation of lymphoma. 3. To understand the importance of and opportunities provided by (new) functional imaging methods for staging and follow-up of lymphoma. 16:28 A-300 Evaluation of response in multiple myeloma J. Hillengass; Heidelberg/DE 1. To understand the pathophysiologic mechanisms of multiple myeloma. 2. To be able to compare the significance of imaging and serological markers for response evaluation in myeloma. 3. To assess the significance of the depth of response to systemic treatment. 16:51 A-301 Evaluation of response in lymphoma with PET/CT S.F. Barrington; London/UK 1. To understand the role of interim PET/CT in the evaluation of metabolic response to lymphoma. 2. To become aware of proposed reporting criteria developed for assessment of interim PET/CT. 3. To get an overview of current clinical trials exploring the role of response adapted therapy according to PET/CT. Panel discussion: 17:14 Is it time for biomarker response criteria in haematological malignancies? 16:00 17:30 Room C Urogenital Imaging CC 1121 Stones: diagnosis and intervention Moderator: N.C. Cowan; Oxford/UK 16:00 A-302 A. Imaging patients with renal colic G. Heinz-Peer; St. Pölten/AT 1. To learn about imaging approaches to patients with renal colic. 2. To become familiar with the strengths and limitations of various imaging techniques. 3. To learn about the management of patients with renal colic. 16:20 A-303 B. Percutaneous treatment of renal stones S. Moussa; Edinburgh/UK 1. To appreciate the importance of imaging, stone selection and planning for percutaneous nephron-lithotomy (PCNL). 2. To become familiar with the technical aspects and different approaches to PCNL. 3. To appreciate the importance of recognising and avoiding complications. 16:40 A-304 C. Intervention in ureteral obstruction and ureteral trauma A. Magnusson; Uppsala/SE 1. To learn how to manage a patient with ureteral obstruction. 2. To understand when and how to treat a patient with ureteral trauma. 3. To learn more about how to perform a nephrostomy. 17:00 A-305 D. Interactive case discussion N.C. Cowan; Birmingham/UK 16:00 17:30 Room D1 CLICK (Clinical Lessons for Imaging Core Knowledge): Never without Arteries CC 1118 Stroke Moderator: M.M. Thurnher; Vienna/AT 16:00 A-306 A. Clinical considerations P.M. Parizel, P. Cras, T. Menovsky, T. Van der Zijden, M. Voormolen; Antwerp/BE 1. To become familiar with the frequency and causes of stroke. 2. To learn about the most important risk factors and predisposing diseases. 3. To learn about the importance of imaging for treatment decisionmaking and planning. 182

185 Postgraduate Educational Programme 16:30 A-307 B. Imaging techniques and typical findings J. Vymazal; Prague/CZ 1. To learn about state-of-the art imaging in cases of suspected stroke. 2. To discuss potential pros and cons of using MR and CT. 3. To become familiar with most recent innovations in stroke imaging. 17:00 A-308 C. Interactive case discussion: what is next after diffusion and perfusion? A. Dörfler; Erlangen/DE 1. To become familiar with typical cases demonstrating the crucial role of imaging modalities in the diagnosis and treatment decisionmaking in ischaemic stroke. 2. To consolidate knowledge of the selection of the appropriate imaging technique, image interpretation and image based treatment recommendation. 3. To learn about the importance of imaging for treatment decisions and planning. 16:00 17:30 Room D2 Head and Neck RC 1108 Skull base lesions: imaging studies and differential diagnosis Moderator: L. Grzycka-Kowalczyk; Lublin/PL 16:00 A-309 A. Anterior cranial fossa with special emphasis on olfactory apparatus lesions T.P.J. Duprez; Brussels/BE 1. To learn the imaging techniques of the anterior skull base with an emphasis on the olfactory apparatus. 2. To become familiar with the imaging findings. 3. To understand how to differentiate between lesions in the anterior skull base. 16:30 A-310 B. Middle cranial fossa pathologies A. Borges; Lisbon/PT 1. To become familiar with imaging strategies for the middle cranial fossa. 2. To know more about imaging findings of common lesions. 3. To learn how to differentiate between the lesions in middle cranial fossa. 17:00 A-311 C. Posterior cranial fossa pathologies H. Tanghe; Rotterdam/NL 1. To learn the imaging techniques in the posterior cranial fossa. 2. To become familiar with the imaging findings of common posterior cranial fossa pathologies. 3. To understand how to differentiate between the lesions in the posterior cranial fossa. 16:00 17:30 Room E1 Musculoskeletal RC 1110 The knee 16:00 A-312 Chairman s introduction F.M.H.M. Vanhoenacker; Antwerp/BE 16:05 A-313 A. Patterns of injury P. Van Dyck; Antwerp/BE 1. To know more about the imaging appearances of soft tissue and osteoarticular injury. 2. To become familiar with the patterns of bone and soft tissue injury in the knee. 16:28 A-314 B. Inflammatory disease A. Cotten; Lille/FR 1. To know more about the imaging appearances of soft tissue and osteoarticular inflammation. 2. To become familiar with imaging findings of specific inflammatory conditions. 16:51 A-315 C. Soft tissue tumours/tumour-like lesions J.C. Vilanova; Girona/ES 1. To know more about the spectrum of intra and para-articular soft tissue tumours, and soft tissue tumour-like lesions. 2. To become familiar with US and MRI findings of specific soft tissue lesions. Panel discussion: 17:14 What are the remaining clinical questions that imaging currently cannot answer and how can we answer them in the future? 16:00 17:30 Room E2 Multidisciplinary Session: Managing Patients with Cancer MS 11 Cholangiocarcinoma 16:00 A-316 Chairman s introduction B. Hamm; Berlin/DE Session Objectives: 1. To learn about state-of-the-art diagnosis of cholangiocarcinoma. 2. To understand the value of surgical and systemic strategies in therapy. 3. To appreciate image-guided interventional treatment. 16:05 A-317 Surgery of hilar and extrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma P. Neuhaus; Berlin/DE 1. To become familiar with prognosis depending on the evolution of surgical approach. 2. To become familiar with surgical decision making: left/right liver resection, hilar resection, pancreatic head resection. 3. To become familiar with technique of extended right hemihepatectomy. 4. To become familiar with liver function, volume. 5. To become familiar with biliary decompression left/right, internal/ external. A-307 A-317 Saturday 183

186 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-318 A :20 A-318 Radiology - diagnostics and portal vein embolisation in hilar and extrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma T. Denecke; Berlin/DE 1. To learn about diagnosis/differential diagnosis. 2. To learn about surgical planning through imaging: bile ducts, vascular system, hyperplasia induction, liver function testing. 16:35 A-319 Medical treatment of cholangiocarcinomas H. Riess; Berlin/DE 1. To become familiar with chemotherapy of extrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma. 2. To become familiar with treatment concepts for intrahepatic cholangiocarcinomas. 3. To become familiar with systemic vs. intra-arterial chemotherapy. 16:50 A-320 Radiology - diagnostics and image guided therapies in intrahepatic cholangiocarcinomas B. Gebauer; Berlin/DE 1. To learn about image guided therapy decisions. 2. To learn about local ablation in non-surgical candidates (RFA, CTbrachytherapy). 3. To learn about intra-arterial port implantation. 4. To learn about transarterial radioembolisation. 17:05 Case presentation (part 1): hilar cholangiocarcinoma 17:17 Case presentation (part 2): CCC multimodal treatment 16:00 17:30 Room F1 Special Focus Session SF 11 Adults with congenital heart disease (GUCH) 16:00 A-321 Chairman s introduction: Why should a radiologist gather information on GUCH patients? M. Gutberlet; Leipzig/DE Session Objectives: 1. To learn about the increasing number of GUCH patients. 2. To appreciate the importance of lifelong imaging follow-ups. 3. To become familiar with the need for specialised GUCH centres. 16:05 A-322 A list of typical surgical procedures: the top ten in GUCH M. Hübler, D. Hitendu, M. Schweiger, M. Greutmann; Zurich/CH 1. To become familiar with the most common surgical procedures in congenital heart disease (CHD). 2. To know more about the typical postoperative problems in GUCH patients. 3. To learn about how imaging can help the cardiac surgeon. 16:30 A-323 Adults are not just big children : differences between children and adults A.M. Taylor; London/UK 1. To understand the age dependency in the selection of imaging modalities. 2. To learn about radiation exposure issues in GUCH patients. 3. To understand what the difference between imaging of children and adults. 16:55 A-324 Which modality, for which patient? MRI or CT, that s the question J. Bremerich; Basle/CH 1. To learn about the pros and cons of different imaging modalities for GUCH patients. 2. To become familiar with imaging of the most common entities in GUCH. 3. To consolidate knowledge of imaging protocols after surgical correction of CHD. Panel discussion: 17:20 Can we now get all the information we need to treat GUCH patients, non-invasively? 16:00 17:30 Room F2 Professional Challenges Session PC 11 Personalised radiology 16:00 A-325 Chairman s introduction G.P. Krestin; Rotterdam/NL Session Objectives: 1. To understand the concept of personalised radiology. 2. To get an overview of the role of imaging in personalised medicine. 3. To learn about the concept of personalised medicine and personalised healthcare. 16:06 A-326 Personalised medicine: hope or hype? O. Golubnitschaja; Bonn/DE 1. To understand the definition of personalised medicine. 2. To learn about some of the successful examples of personalised healthcare. 3. To understand the present limitations in adapting personalised medicine. 16:22 A-327 Imaging for disease prediction M. Vernooij; Rotterdam/NL 1. To learn about population imaging. 2. To become familiar with the role of imaging in disease prediction. 3. To understand the need for validated imaging biomarkers. 16:38 A-328 Molecular imaging: a solution for personalised diagnosis and treatment? F.M.A. Kiessling; Aachen/DE 1. To become familiar with the role of molecular imaging for disease localisation and characterisation, patient selection to therapy and therapy monitoring. 2. To learn about individualised image-guided drug delivery systems. 3. To understand the concept of theranostics: the combination of targeted imaging and targeted therapy. 16:54 A-329 Role of imaging in personalised therapy monitoring A.R. Padhani; Northwood/UK 1. To become familiar with the general role of imaging in treatment monitoring and drug development. 2. To understand the requirements of imaging biomarker development for treatment monitoring in personalised medicine. 3. To understand how to develop the evidence base so that imaging biomarkers can be used for personalised therapeutic approaches. Panel discussion: 17:10 Is imaging providing an added value to the omics of personalised medicine? 184

187 Postgraduate Educational Programme 16:00 17:30 Room G/H Neuro RC 1111 Brain tumours: advanced imaging techniques in daily practice - do we really need them? Moderator: Z. Merhemic; Sarajevo/BA 16:00 A-330 A. Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) M. Law; Los Angeles, CA/US 1. To appreciate DWI in the characterisation of focal brain lesions. 2. To understand how to differentiate between tumoural and nontumoural disease using DWI. 3. To consolidate knowledge on how to combine DWI with other advanced MRI tools. 4. To find out if DTI is really useful in the clinical setting or merely a mathematical algorithm of the tensor. 16:30 A-331 B. Perfusion imaging Y. Özsunar; Aydin/TR 1. To appreciate the value of perfusion imaging. 2. To understand why perfusion imaging is needed. 3. To become familiar with principles, applications, and pitfalls of various perfusion imaging techniques. 4. To consolidate knowledge of perfusion imaging of various brain masses that can be encountered in daily practice. 17:00 A-332 C. Follow-up after treatment P.C. Maly Sundgren; Lund/SE 1. To understand the present traditional model for the follow-up and monitoring of brain tumour treatment. 2. To become familiar with different imaging biomarkers for early assessment of brain tumour treatment response. 3. To consolidate presently available knowledge and ideas on brain tumour imaging follow-up for future brain tumour treatment and monitoring of response. 16:00 17:30 Room I/K Chest RC 1104 Pulmonary infections: the old and the new Moderator: F. Gleeson; Oxford/UK 16:00 A-333 A. Mycobacterial infections C. Beigelman; Lausanne/CH 1. To appreciate the imaging features of primary and post-primary infections in TB. 2. To learn about the similarities and differences between TB and non- TB mycobacterial infections. 3. To understand the radiologist s role in diagnosis. 16:30 A-334 B. Infectious disease in immuno-compromised patients C.-P. Heussel; Heidelberg/DE 1. To appreciate the various types of immuno-deficiencies and their related infections. 2. To become familiar with the role of the radiologist in immunocompromised patients. 3. To learn how to follow pulmonary infections in immunocompromised patients. 17:00 A-335 C. Emerging infections T. Franquet; Barcelona/ES 1. To learn more about emerging infections. 2. To become familiar with radiological patterns and conditions which suggest viral infections. 3. To learn how to improve diagnostic accuracy. 16:00 17:30 Room L/M Physics in Radiology RC 1113 Cone-beam imaging Moderators: O. Ciraj-Bjelac; Belgrade/RS, A. Trianni; Udine/IT 16:00 A-336 A. Fundamentals of cone-beam imaging M. Kachelrieß; Heidelberg/DE 1. To understand the principles of volumetric image formation with flat detectors. 2. To understand the difference between CBCT and MSCT. 3. To learn about reconstruction techniques and image processing. 4. To become acquainted with the important image quality parameters. 16:30 A-337 B. Medical applications of CB imaging M. Grass; Hamburg/DE 1. To become acquainted with the applications of CB imaging. 2. To learn about systems design and parameters. 3. To understand image quality characteristics. 4. To learn how to use cone beam images in image guided interventions. 17:00 A-338 C. 3D dentomaxillofacial imaging K. Horner; Manchester/UK 1. To become acquainted with CBCT systems for dentomaxillofacial imaging. 2. To learn about image quality characteristics and patient dose compared to other techniques. 3. To learn how to access CB images and influence the clinical outcome. 16:00 17:30 Room N/O Interventional Radiology RC 1109 Update on biliary interventions 16:00 A-339 Chairman s introduction M. Krokidis 1, A.A. Hatzidakis 2 ; 1 Cambridge/UK, 2 Iraklion/GR Session Objective: 1. To review the various interventional techniques for the treatment of complex biliary diseases. 16:05 A-340 A. Fistula and benign stenosis M. Bezzi; Rome/IT 1. To know about the etiology of fistulas and benign stenoses. 2. To become familiar with the various imaging modalities and findings in benign fistulas and stenoses. 3. To understand the techniques, results, and complications of interventional treatments. A-330 A-340 Saturday 185

188 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-341 A :28 A-341 B. Interventions after liver transplantation P.P. Goffette; Brussels/BE 1. To know about the appropriate imaging algorithm for the detection of biliary complications after liver transplantation. 2. To become familiar with the techniques of interventional treatment of biliary complications after liver transplantion. 3. To understand the results and complications in comparison with surgical management. 16:51 A-342 C. In tandem with endoscopy D.F. Martin; Manchester/UK 1. To be aware of the indications for tandem use of percutaneous and endoscopic approach. 2. To learn the tips and tricks of tandem technique. 3. To learn about the results and complications of tandem treatment. Panel discussion: 17:14 Are there new possibilities in the area of biliary interventions? 16:00 17:30 Room P Radiographers RC 1114 Hot topics in magnetic resonance imaging Moderators: K. Haller; Wiener Neustadt/AT, L. Martí-Bonmatí; Valencia/ES 16:00 A-343 A. New trends in MR safety P. Bauer; Vienna/AT 1. To become familiar with the standard MRI safety measures (metal check and SAR limits). 2. To understand the new challenges for MRI safety given the technological advances in high-field magnets, faster gradients coils, hybrid MR imaging and new contrast agents. 3. To learn about updated MRI safety guidelines with reference to recent literature, white papers and accredited MRI safety websites. 4. To appreciate the MRI safety implications for pregnant women, neonates and the general paediatric population. 16:30 A-344 B. MR spectroscopy: the role of radiographers in data optimisation J. McNulty; Dublin/IE 1. To learn about the basic principles of MR spectroscopy contrasting them to the basic principles of MR imaging. 2. To understand the benefits of using MRS in clinical practice. 3. To appreciate how image quality is defined in MRS, to highlight the parameters which affect image quality in MRS and how these can be modified by the radiographer. 4. To become familiar with examples of common MRS artefacts and how these can be corrected by the radiographer. 17:00 A-345 C. Challenges and opportunities in paediatric MR V. Syrgiamiotis; Athens/GR 1. To learn about the basic anatomical/physiological differences within the paediatric population, contrasting it with the general adult population. 2. To understand the MRI scan parameter modifications required to accommodate these differences and their trade-offs. 3. To become familiar with examples of improved, optimised imaging protocols against standard, preset, commercially available adult imaging protocols. 4. To consolidate knowledge on the optimal use of equipment to achieve a successful and clinically useful paediatric MRI exam. 186

189 Postgraduate Educational Programme 08:30 10:00 Room A Interactive Teaching Session E³ 1220 Pitfalls in brain imaging 08:30 A-346 A. CT L. van den Hauwe 1, S. Pugliese 2, J.W. Van Goethem 1, C. Venstermans 1, F. De Belder 1, T. van der Zijden 1, M. Voormolen 1, P.M. Parizel 1 ; 1 Antwerp/BE, 2 Rome/IT 1. To learn about common pitfalls in CT evaluation of the brain. 2. To become familiar with anatomical variants, potentially mimicking disease. 09:15 A-347 B. MRI M. Essig; Erlangen/DE 1. To learn about common pitfalls in MRI evaluation of the brain. 2. To become familiar with anatomical variants, potentially mimicking disease. 08:30 10:00 Room B GI Tract RC 1201 How I report Moderator: G.A. Rollandi; Genoa/IT 08:30 A-348 A. MDCT in the post-operative abdomen D.J.M. Tolan; Leeds/UK 1. To become familiar with an optimised MDCT protocol for the detection of post-operative complications. 2. To learn the normal post-operative appearance of common surgical material including mesh, packing and sutures. 3. To understand the expected findings of peritoneal air, fluid and bowel dilatation in the immediate post operative course. 4. To learn the most common causes of clinical deterioration in the post-operative state and their imaging findings. 09:00 A-349 B. MDCT in a patient with small bowel ischaemia S. Romano; Naples/IT 1. To understand the patho-physiologic mechanism leading to arterial, venous or low-flow state vascular injury. 2. To learn how to differentiate different stages of disease from early potentially transient ischaemia to late infarction. 3. To become familiar with reperfusion damage of the intestine. 4. To understand the accuracy of the various radiological signs of bowel ischaemia. 09:30 A-350 C. MDCT in a patient with small bowel obstruction P. Taourel; Montpellier/FR 1. To understand a simple classification for the causes of bowel obstruction. 2. To become familiar with CT protocols. 3. To learn a structured approach to the reporting of CT. 4. To understand the accuracy of the various radiological signs of bowel obstruction. 08:30 10:00 Room C Urogenital Imaging CC 1221 Retroperitoneal anatomy, variants and diseases Moderator: U.G. Mueller-Lisse; Munich/DE 08:30 A-351 A. Retroperitoneal anatomy: an embryology based approach F.M. Danza; Rome/IT 1. To understand the development of the retroperitoneum during the embryo development, introducing the concept of a unique subperitoneal space. 2. To understand the importance of fascial planes in determining the pattern of diffusion of diseases. 3. To apply these new concepts signs during routine diagnostic work. 08:50 A-352 B. Anatomical variants and benign diseases S. Merran; Paris/FR 1. To learn about the most important variants of retroperitoneal vessels and about renal anomalies. 2. To understand the role of radiology in patients with retroperitoneal fibrosis and infections. 3. To become familiar with benign retroperitoneal tumours and learn about the clues for differential diagnosis. 09:10 A-353 C. Malignant tumours R.H. Oyen, F. Claus, D. Hompes, L. De Wever; Leuven/BE 1. To learn about the spectrum of malignant retroperitoneal neoplasms. 2. To understand the role of preoperative cytology/histology by needle aspiration/biopsy. 3. To learn about the predictors for survival after resection of retroperitoneal sarcoma. 09:30 A-354 D. Interactive case discussion U.G. Mueller-Lisse; Munich/DE 08:30 10:00 Room D1 CLICK (Clinical Lessons for Imaging Core Knowledge): Never without Arteries CC 1218 Chest pain: vascular non-cardiac causes Moderator: E. Brountzos; Athens/GR 08:30 A-355 A. Clinical considerations R. Iezzi; Rome/IT 1. To become familiar with clinical diagnostic algorithms in cases of non-cardiac acute chest pain. 2. To learn about the constituents of acute aortic syndrome. 3. To become familiar with prognosis, treatment and outcome and learn about the influence of imaging on treatment decisions in acute chest pain. 09:00 A-356 B. Imaging techniques and typical findings F. Wolf; Vienna/AT 1. To learn about state-of-the-art CT angiographic imaging in acute chest pain (after ruling out MI). 2. To become familiar with the techniques and advantages of ECG gating in CT angiographies of acute chest pain. 3. To discuss the potential role of additional MR angiography. A-346 A-356 Sunday 187

190 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-357 A :30 A-357 C. Interactive case discussion: what is really important? T.R.C. Johnson; Munich/DE 1. To become familiar with typical cases illustrating the role of imaging modalities in the diagnosis and differential diagnosis of acute chest pain. 2. To consolidate knowledge of the selection of the appropriate imaging technique, image interpretation and image based treatment recommendation. 3. To understand the most important information urgently needed for treatment decisions and planning. 08:30 10:00 Room D2 Oncologic Imaging: Follow-up of Systemic and Local Therapies CC 1219 Assessing HCC response Moderator: R. Lencioni; Pisa/IT 08:30 A-358 A. Systemic therapies V. Vilgrain, M. Ronot, M. Zappa, S. Faivre, E. Raymond; Clichy/FR 1. To learn about difficulties in HCC assessment with local therapy. 2. To become familiar with various evaluation criteria of HCC. 09:00 A-359 B. Endovascular therapies R. Salem; Chicago, IL/US 1. To appreciate the value of different imaging techniques for assessment of intra-arterial therapies of HCC. 2. To become familiar with post-treatment imaging after intra-arterial therapies according to type of therapy. 09:30 A-360 C. Ablative therapies C. Ayuso; Barcelona/ES 1. To learn about the value of different imaging techniques for the assessment of ablative therapies of HCC. 2. To become familiar with post-treatment imaging after ablative therapies according to type of therapy. 08:30 10:00 Room E1 Musculoskeletal RC 1210 Overuse injuries in sport: a multimodality approach Moderator: E. Llopis; Valencia/ES 08:30 A-361 A. Overuse injuries in the footballer s ankle S.J. Eustace; Dublin/IE 1. To learn the spectrum of overuse injuries sustained by footballers at the ankle joint. 2. To understand the mechanisms by which these injuries occur. 3. To become familiar with the imaging findings seen in overuse injuries at the ankle. 09:00 A-362 B. Overuse injuries in the gymnast s spine M.C. De Jonge; Amsterdam/NL 1. To become familiar with the types of chronic injuries seen in the gymnast s spine. 2. To understand the strengths and weaknesses of different imaging modalities for imaging these injuries. 09:30 A-363 C. Upper limb overuse injuries in golfers P.J. O Connor; Leeds/UK 1. To understand the types and mechanisms of overuse injuries seen in the upper limb in golfers. 2. To understand the advantages and disadvantages of different imaging modalities. 3. To become familiar with the imaging findings seen in overuse injuries of the upper limb. 08:30 10:00 Room E2 Neuro RC 1211 Stroke: is the prognosis getting any better? 08:30 A-364 Chairman s introduction J.-P. Pruvo; Lille/FR 08:35 A-365 A. Initial imaging work-up: CT or MR? P.M. Parizel, T. Van der Zijden, F. De Belder, C. Venstermans, L. van den Hauwe, R. Salgado, J. Van Goethem, M. Voormolen; Antwerp/BE 1. To become familiar with a comprehensive imaging protocol in patients with suspected stroke. 2. To know the advantages and disadvantages of CT and MR in the initial work-up of stroke patients. 3. To recognise the different imaging patterns in stroke. 08:58 A-366 B. Stroke: is there really any therapy? V. Mendes Pereira, K.-O. Lovblad; Geneva/CH 1. To learn the natural evolution of untreated stroke. 2. To understand the advantages and disadvantages of the different therapeutic options in stroke patients. 3. To recognise imaging patterns that may determine therapy in stroke patients. 09:21 A-367 C. Stenting: does it prevent stroke? P. Vilela; Almada/PT 1. To understand the natural history of extracranial and intracranial carotid and vertebral artery atherosclerotic and non-atherosclerotic diseases. 2. To become familiar with the endovascular treatment indications of extracranial and intracranial arterial disorders. 3. To understand the endovascular treatment strategies aimed at stroke prevention. 4. To recognise the present and future challenges for PTA and stenting of extracranial and intracranial arteries. Panel discussion: 09:44 What is the future of stroke prevention and treatment? 08:30 10:00 Room F1 Special Focus Session SF 12 Quantitative imaging biomarkers in cardiac radiology 08:30 A-368 Chairman s introduction A. van der Lugt; Rotterdam/NL Session Objectives: 1. To appreciate the increasing role of imaging biomarkers in radiological research and clinical practice. 2. To understand the importance of quantification and standardisation of imaging biomarkers. 3. To become familiar with the spectrum of quantitative imaging biomarkers in cardiac radiology 188

191 Postgraduate Educational Programme 08:33 A-369 Imaging biomarkers J.-P. Vallée; Geneva/CH 1. To understand the concept of imaging biomarkers. 2. To learn about the different types of biomarkers (anatomical/ functional/molecular). 3. To understand the different applications of imaging biomarkers (detection, prediction, response). 4. To learn about the standardisation and validation of imaging biomarkers. 08:45 A-370 Imaging biomarkers for myocardial function J. Bogaert; Leuven/BE To become familiar with the quantitative imaging biomarkers of: 1) cardiac mass (MRI/CT) 2) ventricular volume (MRI/CT) 3) ventricular function (MRI/CT) 09:05 A-371 Imaging biomarkers of myocardial viability P. Croisille; Saint-Etienne/FR To become familiar with the quantitative imaging biomarkers of: 1) infarct size using delayed enhancement (MRI/CT) 2) areas at risk in myocardial infarction using T2w MRI 3) cardiac contractility using cine or tag MRI after low dose dobutamine challenge 09:25 A-372 Imaging biomarkers of myocardial ischaemia L. Natale; Rome/IT To become familiar with the quantitative imaging biomarkers of: 1) myocardial perfusion (MRI/CT), 2) cardiac contraction after high dose dobutamine challenge (MRI) 3) coronary atherosclerosis (CT) Panel discussion: 09:45 How should we implement quantitative biomarkers in clinical practice? 08:30 10:00 Room F2 Breast RC 1202 Multi-modality breast imaging 08:30 A-373 Chairman s introduction M. Lesaru; Bucharest/RO 08:35 A-374 A. Conventional, functional and interventional lymph node assessment P.D. Britton; Cambridge/UK 1. To learn about normal lymph node morphology. 2. To understand criteria suggestive of morphological abnormality. 3. To become familiar with factors affecting overall sensitivity of preoperative lymph node assessment. 08:58 A-375 B. Multi-modality assessment of the breast following oncoplastic surgery M. Torres-Tabanera, S. Perez-Rodrigo; Madrid/ES 1. To learn about the range of oncoplastic breast procedures in current clinical practice. 2. To become familiar with imaging features resulting from oncoplastic surgery. 3. To appreciate the potential pitfalls encountered while imaging such cases. 09:21 A-376 C. Image guided therapy in breast lesions: indications and techniques G. Manenti, G. Simonetti; Rome/IT 1. To understand indications for therapeutic interventions in malignant and benign lesions. 2. To learn about current image guided therapeutic techniques in malignant and benign lesions. 3. To appreciate possible future developments of therapeutic interventions. Panel discussion: 09:44 How is the evolution of multi-modality breast imaging changing the nature of the multi-disciplinary meeting (MDM)? 08:30 10:00 Room G/H Genitourinary RC 1207 How I report Moderator: G.M. Villeirs; Gent/BE 08:30 A-377 A. Female pelvis MRI A.G. Rockall; London/UK 1. To learn a structured reporting approach to MR imaging. 2. To learn a structured reporting approach to uterine and cervical cancer staging. 3. To learn a structured reporting approach to adnexal masses. 09:00 A-378 B. Prostate MRI J.J. Fütterer; Nijmegen/NL 1. To learn a structured reporting approach to MR imaging. 2. To learn the most essential points and details to be reported in prostate cancer patients. 3. To understand the major weaknesses of a prostate MR report. 09:30 A-379 C. CT urography N.C. Cowan; Birmingham/UK 1. To learn how to read and report CT urography. 2. To understand how to optimise CT urography for haematuria and urothelial cancer. 3. To report specimen cases and self-assess your own performance. 08:30 10:00 Room I/K Chest RC 1204 Lung cancer staging in :30 A-380 Chairman s introduction: the latest TNM classification J. Biederer; Heidelberg/DE 08:35 A-381 A. Local tumour staging L. Bonomo; Rome/IT 1. To learn about the T staging of lung cancer. 2. To become familiar with the current state of the different imaging technique to assess the T stage. 3. To appreciate limitations and pitfalls. A-369 A-381 Sunday 189

192 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-382 A :58 A-382 B. Lymph node staging W.F.M. De Wever; Leuven/BE 1. To learn about N staging in lung cancer. 2. To learn the current state of endobronchial ultrasound for intrathoracic intervention. 3. To become familiar with limitations and pitfalls. 09:21 A-383 C. Distant metastasis and whole body imaging G. Antoch; Düsseldorf/DE 1. To appreciate the role of PET/CT and whole-body MRI. 2. To learn about the sensitivity and specificity. 3. To become familiar with the role of imaging in early response evaluation and in follow-up. Panel discussion: 09:44 Facts and controversies in lung cancer staging 08:30 10:00 Room L/M Physics in Radiology RC 1213 Risk assessment and risk communication 08:30 A-384 Chairmen s introduction M.M. Rehani 1, P. Vock 2 ; 1 Vienna/AT, 2 Berne/CH Session Objectives: 1. To learn about risk, risk estimation, risk perception and communication. 2. To become familiar with radiation risk: past and present. 3. To appreciate why we need to inform patients and the public about the risks and how. 4. To understand what referring doctors should know about risk. 08:35 A-385 A. Radiation risks for patients and staff E. Vaño; Madrid/ES 1. To get the latest information on stochastic risks in radiology. 2. To understand the risks for children compared to adults. 3. To get the latest information on tissue reaction to medical procedures. 4. To learn about radiation cataract and its dose dependence. 08:58 A-386 B. Risk in MRI R.R. Peeters; Leuven/BE 1. To learn about the risks for patients from MRI procedures. 2. To be informed about the contraindications for MRI scan. 3. To learn about risks for staff in an MRI department. 09:21 A-387 C. Communication of risk to patients and public G. Gamhewage; Geneva/CH 1. To become familiar with communicating risk according to the imaging modality. 2. To become familiar with important rules in communication. 3. To understand the relationship between threat/hazard and perception of parents regarding imaging for their child. 4. To learn how to select an appropriate risk communications strategy suited to parents and children. Panel discussion: 09:44 How to communicate risk to patients and the public? 08:30 10:00 Room N/O Interventional Radiology RC 1209 Gynaecological and obstetrical haemorrhagic emergencies 08:30 A-388 Chairman s introduction A.-M. Belli; London/UK 08:35 A-389 A. Etiology and treatment of gynaecological benign and malignant causes of massive bleeding A. Keeling; Dublin/IE 1. To know more about causes of massive bleeding due to gynaecological disorders. 2. To learn about diagnostic imaging and therapeutic embolisation. 3. To review published results obtained through embolisation. 08:58 A-390 B. Can we prevent post-partum haemorrhage in high-risk patients? J.-P. Pelage; Caen/FR 1. To learn how to identify a high-risk patient. 2. To become familiar with preventive measures and medication. 3. To know more about techniques for invasive prevention. 4. To learn about the results obtained through preventive techniques. 09:21 A-391 C. Treatment of post-partum haemorrhage M. Szczerbo-Trojanowska; Lublin/PL 1. To learn about clinical evaluation of post-partum haemorrhage. 2. To become familiar with relevant anatomy. 3. To understand catheterisation and embolisation techniques. 4. To become familiar with results of embolisation. Panel discussion: 09:44 How to reduce the radiation doses of these methods? 08:30 10:00 Room P Radiographers RC 1214 Dose optimisation in computed tomography Moderators: G. Frija; Paris/FR, D. Pekarovic; Ljubljana/SI 08:30 A-392 A. Innovations in dose optimisation S. Foley; Dublin/IE 1. To consolidate knowledge in the area. 2. To become familiar with recent developments based on scanner design features and to be aware of the evidence base that supports these developments. 3. To become familiar with recent developments based on non-scanner based approaches such as shielding and to be aware of the evidence base that supports these approaches. 4. To learn more about the potential for future developments in the area. 09:15 A-393 B. Developing patient specific examination protocols H. Precht; Odense/DK 1. To understand the importance of employing patient specific examination protocols in computed tomography by exploring the benefits of such protocols. 2. To understand the categories of patients for which specifically tailored protocols must always be employed. 190

193 Postgraduate Educational Programme 3. To appreciate the potential impact of patient specific protocols on image quality and patient dose through the use of sample cases. 4. To discover a simple framework which could assist radiographers in introducing patient specific examination protocols to their departments. 08:30 10:00 Room Q Paediatric RC 1212 Oncologic imaging: how to image, follow up and report 08:30 A-394 Chairman s introduction D. Roebuck; London/UK 08:35 A-395 A. Renal and adrenal tumours in children A.M.J.B. Smets; Amsterdam/NL 1. To appreciate the role of US, CT, MRI and scintigraphy. 2. To become familiar with the imaging findings and the main differential diagnoses. 3. To learn about the imaging strategies for diagnosis and staging. 08:58 A-396 B. Paediatric liver malignancies D. Roebuck; London/UK 1. To understand the role of US, CT and MRI. 2. To become familiar with the imaging findings and the main differential diagnoses. 3. To learn the imaging strategies for diagnosis and in staging. 09:21 A-397 C. Oncologic imaging in the paediatric brain G. Hahn; Dresden/DE 1. To understand the role of CT, MRI and MRS. 2. To become familiar with the imaging findings and the main differential diagnoses. 3. To learn about the imaging findings of post-chemo/radiation therapy conditions and complications. Panel discussion: 09:44 How far should the radiologist go in suggesting tumour recurrence or post-treatment complications? 08:30 10:00 Room Z Professional Challenges Session PC 12 Legal matters related to multimodality techniques 08:30 A-398 Chairman s introduction K. Åhlström Riklund; Umea/SE Session Objectives: 1. To learn about legal matters in multimodality imaging in different parts of Europe, in radiology and nuclear medicine. 2. To understand the challenges in hybrid imaging, with respect to both radiology and nuclear medicine. 3. To consolidate knowledge of the situation in different parts of Europe. 08:35 A-399 Radiological legal matters in eastern Europe M. Studniarek; Gdansk/PL 1. To learn about legal matters in multimodality imaging in eastern Europe. 2. To understand the specific role and diagnostic applications of PET/ CT imaging as a result of national guidelines in eastern Europe, with the example of Poland. 3. To consolidate knowledge of the limits of the application of diagnostic CT in PET/CT units in radiology and nuclear medicine procedures listed (officially identified) in Poland. 08:53 A-400 Legal matters in nuclear medicine G.K. von Schulthess; Zurich/CH 1. To understand issues facing tracer development and clinical use of tracers. 2. To understand the process of getting new tracers approved for clinical use. 3. To understand the process of getting reimbursement for integrated imaging procedures. 09:11 A-401 Legal matters in Scandinavia K. Åhlström Riklund; Umeå/SE 1. To learn about the educational situation in multimodality imaging in northern Europe. 2. To learn about national guidelines for multimodality imaging in northern Europe. 3. To learn what you need to run a PET/CT and cyclotron facility in northern Europe. 09:29 A-402 International, regional, national and local framework requirements A. Perkins; Nottingham/UK 1. To learn about the origin of the radiation protection framework. 2. To appreciate the framework for radiation protection at international, regional and national levels. 3. To understand the responsibilities of different parties within the working environment. Panel discussion: 09:47 A discussion with questions from the audience about the differences across Europe 10:30 12:00 Room B ESR meets Chile EM 4 Topics of ongoing radiological research from the Andes Welcome by the ESR President: G.P. Krestin; Rotterdam/NL Presiding: J.I. Bilbao; Pamplona/ES M.A. Pinochet; Santiago/CL 10:30 A-403 Introduction: Radiology in Chile: reality and challenges P. Soffia; M.A. Pinochet Santiago/CL Session Objectives: 1. To learn about some interesting recent and ongoing Chilean radiological research projects in the field of diagnostic imaging. 2. To get a glimpse of unique radiological and non-radiological topics in Chile. 10:35 A-404 TI-RADS: a US classification of thyroid nodules related to cancer risk E. Horvath; Santiago/CL 1. To learn about an ultrasonographic-based pattern classification that enables a cancer risk approach to an accurate selection of thyroid nodules that require fine needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB). 2. To understand the description of the 10 US pattern for thyroid nodule classification. 3. To correctly classify the pattern into the TIRADS categories. 4. To learn how to determine those patterns most closely related with malignancy. A-394 A-404 Sunday 191

194 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-405 A :55 A-405 Interlude: Chile, land of geographical and cultural contrasts G. Soto Giordani; Santiago/CL 11:00 A-406 Neuroimaging in epilepsy: in search of invisible lesions M. Galvez; Santiago/CL Learning Objective: 1. To learn about solutions to improve visualisation of epileptogenic lesions not visible on conventional MRI. 11:20 A-407 Interlude: Chile, land of wine and poets G. Soto Giordani; Santiago/CL 11:25 A-408 MDCT patterns in mesenteric ischaemia: usefulness in predicting clinical outcome A. Huete; Santiago/CL 1. To learn to identify the most frequent patterns of ischaemic bowel wall damage in patients with arterial mesenteric ischaemia using MDCT angiography. 2. To correlate patterns of bowel wall ischaemia on MDCT with clinical outcome. 3. To identify secondary, non-specific findings of bowel ischaemia on MDCT that signal a potential adverse clinical course. Panel discussion: 11:45 Creating networks between Latin American and European radiology: a unique opportunity for collaborative research projects 10:30 12:00 Room C Urogenital Imaging CC 1321 The female pelvis Moderator: E. Sala; New York, NY/US 10:30 A-409 A. Imaging congenital anomalies of the female genital system K. Kinkel; Chêne-Bougeries/CH 1. To understand Mullerian duct anomalies through embryology and its classification. 2. To learn about the indications of MRI or 3D US according to clinical and sonographic findings. 3. To understand imaging technique and report requirements and the impact of imaging results on treatment options. 10:50 A-410 B. Benign ovarian masses R. Forstner; Salzburg/AT 1. To become familiar with common and rare benign adnexal lesions. 2. To appreciate the added value of CT and MRI in the differential diagnosis of benign adnexal masses. 3. To learn about an algorithm for evaluating incidental adnexal masses with imaging. 11:10 A-411 C. Imaging the infertile couple J. McHugo; Birmingham/UK 1. To understand the incidence and causes of infertility in female and male patients. 2. To learn about cost-effective strategies for imaging in cases of female and male infertility. 3. To understand the rationale for best outcomes. 11:30 A-412 D. Interactive case discussion E. Sala; New York, NY/US 10:30 12:00 Room Q RTF - Radiology Trainees Forum TF 1 Highlighted Lectures Moderators: D. Bulja; Sarajevo/BA, V.H. Koen; Harleem/NL 10:30 A-413 Emergency radiology management in patients with polytrauma U. Linsenmaier, L.L. Geyer, S. Wirth; Munich/DE 1. To understand the complex up to date radiological management of patients with polytrauma/multiple trauma. 2. To become familiar with basic concepts, MDCT protocols and major findings in patients with polytrauma/multiple trauma. 11:00 A-414 Imaging of non-traumatic intracranial haemorrhage Z. Merhemic; Sarajevo/BA 1. To review different underlying pathologies of non-traumatic intracranial haemorrhage. 2. To learn how to use CT/CTA, MRI/MRA, and DSA in patients with non-traumatic intracranial haemorrhage. 3. To discuss the value of T2* (GRE/SWI) in evaluation of causes of intracranial haemorrhage. 11:30 A-415 Case-based learning in radiology P. Pokieser; Vienna/AT 1. To learn about the basics of case based learning. 2. To understand the pedagogic potentials of real world settings. 3. To become familiar with case based ESR learning facilities. 12:15 12:45 Room A Plenary Session HL 3 Santiago Ramón y Cajal Honorary Lecture Presiding: J.I. Bilbao; Pamplona/ES 12:15 A-416 Research and science: from individuals to societies - the Ramón y Cajal background L. Martí-Bonmatí; Valencia/ES 1. To learn about Santiago Ramón y Cajal, a Spanish histologist, neuroscientist, and Nobel laureate. 2. To appreciate the change from individual research to multidisciplinary working groups. 3. To understand the concept of science and research, and how communication, grouping and socialisation do influence both. 12:30 13:30 Room P The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Musculoskeletal Imaging MC 25D Neoplastic/non-neoplastic lesions 12:30 A-417 Neoplastic/non-neoplastic lesions F.M.H.M. Vanhoenacker; Antwerp/Ghent/Mechelen/BE 1. To understand the basic principles of diagnosing bone and soft tissue tumours. 2. To become familiar with the most important entities and their typical imaging presentations. 3. To learn about the specific advantages and weaknesses of the different imaging modalities. 192

195 Postgraduate Educational Programme 12:30 13:30 Room Q The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Head and Neck MC 24D The suprahyoid neck: anatomy and diagnostic algorithm of the neck mass 12:30 A-418 The suprahyoid neck: anatomy and diagnostic algorithm of the neck mass A. Trojanowska; Lublin/PL 1. To become familiar with the compartmental anatomy of the suprahyoid neck. 2. To understand the central role of the parapharyngeal space in the localisation of suprahyoid neck masses. 3. To be able to localise and provide a useful differential diagnosis of a SHN mass. 4. To learn the best imaging approach to the suprahyoid neck. 14:00 15:30 Room A Interactive Teaching Session E³ 1420 Common and uncommon errors in plain film and CT imaging of the chest: how to improve your performance 14:00 A-419 Common and uncommon errors in plain film and CT imaging of the chest: how to improve your performance D. Tack 1, N. Howarth 2 ; 1 Baudour/BE, 2 Chêne-Bougeries/CH 1. To learn about the common reasons for errors in interpretation of plain film and CT imaging. 2. To understand how a side-by-side comparison of chest x-rays and MDCT of missed lesions can help reduce the busy radiologist s error rate. 3. To improve the skills required for accurate interpretation of plain film and CT imaging of the chest. 14:00 15:30 Room B New Horizons Session NH 14 Imaging of the mind 14:00 A-420 Chairman s introduction: New insights into the state of consciousness through neuroimaging S. Sunaert; Leuven/BE Session Objectives: 1. To become familiar with recent advances in functional brain imaging, and how these lead to the imaging of consciousness and reading the mind. 2. To understand how imaging contributes to the study of the functional connectivity and network topology of the human brain. 3. To understand how these new techniques and insight lead to (pre-) clinical applications. 14:05 A-421 Brain wiring: resting state fmri F. Barkhof; Amsterdam/NL 1. To understand the basics of resting-state fmri. 2. To become familiar with the organisation of intrinsic connections as detected with resting state fmri in the human brain. 3. To consolidate the current knowledge of brain networks in aging and dementia, and pharmacology research. 14:28 A-422 fmri in disorders of consciousness: diagnostic and legal challenges C. Di Perri, S. Laureys; Liège/BE 1. To understand the role of structural MRI, DTI and spectroscopy in severe brain injury. 2. To become familiar with the role of resting state and activation fmri in diagnosis and prognosis after coma. 3. To understand which fmri paradigms are consciousness tests in coma and related condition. 14:51 A-423 fmri of cognitive functions: discriminating normal aging, minimal cognitive impairment and Alzheimer s disease A. Falini; Milan/IT 1. To consolidate knowledge of dementia and Alzheimer s disease clinically. 2. To become familiar with common imaging features of dementia and Alzheimer s disease. 3. To appreciate the results from fmri and DTI and other advanced neuroimaging techniques used in research of dementia and Alzheimer s disease. Panel discussion: 15:14 New insights into the state of consciousness through neuroimaging. Where are we and where should we go? 14:00 15:30 Room C Urogenital Imaging CC 1421 The male genital system Moderator: J.O. Barentsz; Nijmegen/NL 14:00 A-424 A. Imaging of prostate cancer: an update J.J. Fütterer; Nijmegen/NL 1. To understand multiparametric MR imaging techniques. 2. To learn how to interpret prostate MRIs. 3. To understand the potential of new MRI developments. 14:20 A-425 B. Scrotal tumours P.S. Sidhu; London/UK 1. To understand the pathological types of primary and secondary tumours of the testis. 2. To appreciate the US features of the various histological types of testicular tumours. 3. To appreciate the role of newer US imaging techniques, and the role of further imaging. 14:40 A-426 C. The penis M. Bertolotto; Trieste/IT 1. To learn about the most relevant penile diseases that can be diagnosed by imaging. 2. To know the diagnostic roles of US, MRI and other imaging techniques. 3. To understand how imaging influences treatment and follow-up. 15:00 A-427 D. Interactive case discussion J.O. Barentsz; Nijmegen/NL A-418 A-427 Sunday 193

196 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-428 A :00 15:30 Room D1 CLICK (Clinical Lessons for Imaging Core Knowledge): Never without Arteries CC 1418 Angina, non-occlusive mesenteric ischaemia (NOMI) and friends: vascular causes of acute abdomen Moderator: O. Chan; London/UK 14:00 A-428 A. Clinical considerations P. Rogalla; Toronto, ON/CA 1. To learn about the frequency and importance of the vascular causes of an acute abdomen. 2. To learn about the differential diagnosis as well as the different vascular causes of acute abdomen. 3. To learn about prognosis, treatment and outcome of acute abdomen caused by vascular diseases. 14:30 A-429 B. Imaging techniques and typical findings M. Prokop; Nijmegen/NL 1. To learn about the importance of selecting the appropriate imaging technique in cases of acute abdomen to detect vascular causes. 2. To become familiar with the typical imaging appearance of the different vascular causes of acute abdomen and their most important differential diagnosis. 3. To become familiar with potential pitfalls and problems of identifying vascular causes of acute abdomen. 15:00 A-430 C. Interactive case discussion: how to proceed? A. Palkó; Szeged/HU 1. To become familiar with typical cases, illustrating the role of imaging modalities in the diagnosis and differential diagnosis of acute abdomen. 2. To consolidate knowledge of the selection of the appropriate imaging technique, image interpretation and image based treatment recommendation. 3. To understand the most important information urgently needed for treatment decisions and planning. 14:00 15:30 Room D2 Oncologic Imaging: Follow-up of Systemic and Local Therapies CC 1419 Follow-up of thermal ablation (part I) Moderator: W. Prevoo; Amsterdam/NL 14:00 A-431 A. The zone of cell death and collateral phenomena on cross-sectional imaging: from histopathology to the standardisation of terms A. Denys, P. Bize; Lausanne/CH 1. To understand histopathologic changes after various ablation techniques. 2. To become familiar with post-ablation imaging based on histopathologic correlation of ablation zones in various organs. 3. To learn about the adequate terms for reporting and publishing on post-ablation imaging. 14:30 A-432 B. PET/CT for the evaluation of ablative therapy: Who? Where? When? Does it help? D. Deandreis; Villejuif/FR 1. To understand who are the best candidates for a PET/CT follow-up of ablation therapies. 2. To learn about what is the optimal timing of PET/CT in the followup of ablative therapies. 15:00 A-433 C. Everyday practice: MR and CT for evaluating response to thermal ablation C. Dromain, C. Caramella, L. Vilcot, S. Bidault, F. Bidault, F. Deschamps; Villejuif/FR 1. To become familiar with the imaging aspects of successful ablation. 2. To learn about the main pitfalls of post-ablation imaging. 3. To consolidate knowledge of the imaging aspects of most common complications. 14:00 15:30 Room E1 Musculoskeletal RC 1410 How I report Moderator: M. Padrón; Madrid/ES 14:00 A-434 A. Soft tissue mass: US/MR C. van Rijswijk; Leiden/NL 1. To become familiar with the strengths/weaknesses of US/MRI in assessing soft tissue tumours. 2. To understand the US/MRI specific findings that aid diagnosis. 3. To learn a structured approach to reporting. 14:30 A-435 B. MR of vertebral body collapse R. Lalam; Oswestry/UK 1. To be able to differentiate benign from malignant causes. 2. To learn about the changes of the vertebral body with time, disease progression and therapy. 3. To learn a structured reporting approach. 15:00 A-436 C. MR of the unstable shoulder M. Zanetti; Zurich/CH 1. To learn about the specific imaging findings of instability. 2. To become familiar with the different types of shoulder instability. 3. To learn a structured approach to reporting. 14:00 15:30 Room E2 Oncologic Imaging RC 1416 The essentials of lymph node imaging of solid tumours: what the radiologist needs to know 14:00 A-437 Chairman s introduction R.G.H. Beets-Tan; Maastricht/NL 14:05 A-438 A. The current criteria for nodal involvement on CT/MRI W. Schima; Vienna/AT 1. To become familiar with current criteria. 2. To learn about imaging features which are highly specific for nodal disease. 3. To understand the diagnostic performance of cross-sectional imaging. 14:28 A-439 B. DWI MR: what does it contribute? H.C. Thoeny; Berne/CH 1. To understand the principles of DWI of nodes. 2. To recognise the imaging appearance of nodes on DWI MRI. 3. To become familiar with studies evaluating the diagnostic performance of DWI MRI. 194

197 Postgraduate Educational Programme 14:51 A-440 C. Nuclear medicine: PET and other nuclear medicine techniques P.L. Choyke; Bethesda, MD/US 1. To learn which tumours are typically FDG-avid. 2. To understand the factors that contribute to the diagnostic performance of FDG-PET. 3. To become familiar with other nuclear imaging techniques for lymph node imaging. Panel discussion: 15:14 When and how could imaging make diagnostic biopsy unnecessary? 14:00 15:30 Room F1 Special Focus Session SF 14a Palliative interventional techniques in cancer 14:00 A-441 Chairman s introduction K.A. Hausegger; Klagenfurt/AT Session Objectives: 1. To learn about different palliative techniques in cancer. 2. To understand when to indicate different palliative techniques. 3. To become familiar with the limitations of palliative techniques. 4. To learn when palliation does not help the patient. 14:03 A-442 Cementoplasty of lytic bone metastasis A. Gangi, J. Garnon, G. Tsoumakidou, I. Enescu; Strasbourg/FR Learning Objective: 1. To learn about the indications, techniques, clinical results and complications of cementoplasty. 14:21 A-443 Pleural drainage, pleurodesis F. Gleeson; Oxford/UK 1. To become familiar with the indication for drainage of malignant pleural effusion. 2. To learn about the indications, technique and clinical results of pleurodesis. 14:39 A-444 Percutaneous nephrostomy (PCN) and ureteral stenting F. Orsi; Milan/IT 1. To become familiar with the indication for percutaneous nephrostomy in patients with malignant urinary obstruction. 2. To learn about the technique, clinical results and complications of PCN and antegrade ureteral stenting. 14:57 A-445 Biliary procedures M. Krokidis 1, A.A. Hatzidakis 2 ; 1 Cambridge/UK, 2 Iraklion/GR 1. To become familiar with the indications for drainage in malignant biliary obstruction. 2. To learn about the technique, clinical results and complications of percutaneous cholangiography and biliary stenting. Panel discussion: 15:15 How invasive can palliation be? When to say no to palliative treatment? 14:00 15:30 Room F2 Breast RC 1402 How I report Moderator: A. Tardivon; Paris/FR 14:00 A-446 A. Mammography E. Azavedo; Stockholm/SE 1. To become familiar with the basic parts of a structured report. 2. To understand which information a clinician needs in a report of a breast cancer patient. 3. To learn how to compose a report on a patient with a BI-RADS 3 lesion. 14:30 A-447 B. Breast US J. Camps Herrero; Valencia/ES 1. To become familiar with BI-RADS categories of breast US. 2. To learn how to integrate clinical information and radiological findings. 3. To learn how to compose a US report in a breast cancer patient. 15:00 A-448 C. Breast MRI R.M. Mann; Nijmegen/NL 1. To understand how to integrate conventional (mammography and US) findings in a breast MRI report. 2. To learn how to include morphological and kinetic information and why this needs to be done thoroughly. 3. To become familiar with the necessary skills to compose a report on a breast cancer patient (staging, follow-up, relapse, etc). 14:00 15:30 Room G/H Special Focus Session SF 14b Comprehensive CT cardiothoracic imaging: a new challenge for radiologists 14:00 A-449 Chairman s introduction L. Bonomo; Rome/IT Session Objectives: 1. To understand the importance of looking at the heart on a CT scan of the chest. 2. To learn how to optimise integrated cardiothoracic imaging with CT. 3. To become familiar with the key imaging findings and learn how to report. 14:05 A-450 How to optimise integrated cardiothoracic imaging with CT U.J. Schoepf; Charleston, SC/US 1. To learn how to select CT protocols that enable assessment of the heart-lung axis with the lowest possible radiation dose. 2. To become familiar with the ECG-synchronisation protocols for cardio-thoracic CT image acquisitions. 3. To understand strategies for image post-processing and displaying for evaluating diseases affecting the heart-lung axis. A-440 A-450 Sunday 195

198 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-451 A :28 A-451 Coronary artery imaging from a chest CT examination: when and how R. Marano; Rome/IT 1. To become familiar with the main clinical indications that could require assessment of the heart and coronary arteries in the course of chest CT. 2. To learn how to recognise the normal and abnormal appearance of heart and coronary arteries commonly observed on chest CT. 3. To learn about the acquisition protocol to couple chest CT with ECGgated cardiac CT. 14:51 A-452 Cardiopulmonary functional imaging from a chest CT examination: when and how E.J.R. van Beek; Edinburgh/UK 1. To understand the feasibility of CT based cardiopulmonary functional imaging. 2. To be able to grasp clinical scenarios where cardiopulmonary functional CT imaging may be helpful. 3. To be able to set the use of CT within a larger framework of imaging modalities. Panel discussion: 14:14 Is a single CT scan technique and protocol feasible for all the cardiothoracic problems? 14:00 15:30 Room I/K Genitourinary RC 1407 Contrast media safety: update 14:00 A-453 Chairman s introduction P. Reimer; Karlsruhe/DE Session Objectives: 1. To discuss the safety steps to be taken before contrast administering. 2. To present the newest safety guidelines. 14:05 A-454 A. Acute non-renal reactions to contrast media: new concepts O. Clément; Paris/FR 1. To understand what are allergic and non-allergic hypersensitivity reactions. 2. To learn the clinical symptoms according to the Ring and Messmer classification. 3. To understand the importance of tryptase sampling and skin testing in the follow-up. 14:28 A-455 B. Nephrogenic systemic fibrosis: from pathophysiology to recommendations H.S. Thomsen; Herlev/DK 1. To understand the underlying pathophysiology. 2. To learn about the clinical implications of the recent recommendations/guidelines. 3. To become familiar with legal issues. 14:51 A-456 C. Contrast medium-induced nephropathy and new guidelines F. Stacul; Trieste/IT 1. To become familiar with newest guidelines on contrast induced nephropathy (CIN). 2. To understand the future clinical implications of the new guidelines. Panel discussion: 15:14 What is the most appropriate radiological approach to patients with falling egfr and when should contrast media be administered and when should it not? 14:00 15:30 Room L/M Physics in Radiology RC 1413 Hybrid imaging systems Moderators: D.G. Sutton; Dundee/UK, J. Votrubová; Prague/CZ 14:00 A-457 A. Clinical SPECT/CT and PET/CT T. Beyer; Zurich/CH 1. To review the origins of SPECT/CT and PET/CT imaging systems. 2. To understand the basic principles and general clinical applications. 3. To speculate on trends in dual-modality PET- and SPECT-based imaging technology. 14:30 A-458 B. Clinical MR/PET G. Antoch; Düsseldorf/DE 1. To become acquainted with the origins and evolution of MR/PET. 2. To be informed of the current applications. 15:00 A-459 C. Preclinical hybrid imaging N. Belcari; Pisa/IT 1. To learn about hybrid imaging tools in animal imaging/pre-clinical research. 2. To understand possible clinical applications. 14:00 15:30 Room N/O Head and Neck RC 1408 Laryngeal cancer and radiology 14:00 A-460 Chairman s introduction J.E. Kabala; Bristol/UK Session Objectives: 1. To discuss the epidemiology. 2. To learn about the available diagnostic imaging modalities. 3. To become familiar with the available treatment options. 14:05 A-461 A. Staging of laryngeal cancer: pearls and pitfalls R. Maroldi; Brescia/IT 1. To become familiar with the typical findings of T1-T4 laryngeal cancer. 2. To learn about the patterns of local nodal involvement. 3. To understand possible imaging pitfalls in staging. 14:28 A-462 B. Evaluation after surgery and non-surgical treatment: expected findings S. Bisdas; Tübingen/DE 1. To appreciate the expected imaging findings after surgery of laryngeal cancer. 2. To become familiar with imaging findings after non surgical treatment. 3. To know about the possible imaging pitfalls. 14:51 A-463 C. Cancer recurrence: how to address clinical dilemmas B. Verbist; Leiden/NL 1. To understand the limitations of clinical examination. 2. To appreciate the value of different imaging techniques in the detection of recurrence. 3. To become familiar with the imaging findings of recurrent laryngeal cancer. Panel discussion: 15:14 Diagnostic algorithms for diagnosis and follow-up of laryngeal cancer 196

199 Postgraduate Educational Programme 14:00 15:30 Room P Radiographers RC 1414 Towards advancing and developing the role of radiographers 14:00 A-464 Chairmen s introduction S. Mathers 1, D. Tscholakoff 2 ; 1 Aberdeen/UK, 2 Vienna/AT Session Objectives: 1. To appreciate the potential importance of advancing and developing the role of radiographers for the profession and for healthcare. 2. To become familiar with the level of activity across international societies in fostering this. 3. To understand the importance of such role developments meeting real clinical needs. 14:05 A-465 A. The current status: a clinical perspective C. McLaren; London/UK 1. To become familiar with the current status from the perspective of a radiographer in an advanced practice in a paediatric interventional role. 2. To understand the key factors that facilitate this advanced role, as well as the challenges faced during implementation. 3. To become familiar with the impact that this advanced role has had on patient care, interprofessional relationships and service delivery, in one institution. 14:28 A-466 B. The importance of evidence-based practice for the future of advanced practice in radiography A. England; Liverpool/UK 1. To become familiar with examples of evidence-based practice in the area of advanced practice and role development in radiography. 2. To understand the importance of such an evidence-based approach when considering the introduction of advanced roles in a clinical setting. 3. To gain an insight into the education and training requirements for advanced practice and role development. 14:51 A-467 C. The view from the European level G. Paulo; Coimbra/PT 1. To understand the influence of evidence-based practice on the future of the radiography profession in Europe. 2. To become familiar with the advantage of advanced practice and role development in radiography in health systems. 3. To understand the benefits of advanced practice and role development in radiography for the patients. Panel discussion: 15:14 How to use the EFRS guidance document on role development 14:00 15:30 Room Q Paediatric RC 1412 Paediatric emergencies Moderator: V. Donoghue; Dublin/IE 14:00 A-468 A. The acute non-traumatic neurological patient: CT or MRI? E. Vázquez; Barcelona/ES 1. To learn about the currently limited role of CT in the non-traumatic acute setting. 2. To become familiar with radioprotection strategies and protocols adapted to children. 3. To consolidate the role of MRI as the modality of choice for acute non-traumatic neurologically ill children, with an emphasis on newer techniques. 4. To become familiar with imaging findings and the main differential diagnosis of acute neurological conditions in children. 14:30 A-469 B. Imaging of acute chest pain and/or distress in children C.E. de Lange; Oslo/NO 1. To understand the role of radiographs, US, CT and MRI. 2. To become familiar with the most common conditions that cause acute chest pain and/or distress in children. 3. To appreciate the different differential diagnoses, depending on the age of the patient. 4. To understand the consequences of delaying in their diagnosis and treatment. 15:00 A-470 C. The role of the interventional radiologist in paediatric trauma J.B. Karani; London/UK 1. To understand the role of CT, CTA and conventional angiography in the diagnosis of traumatic vascular complications. 2. To understand the importance of vascular and non-vascular intervention following trauma in children. 14:00 15:30 Room Z Special Focus Session SF 14c Advances in forensic radiology 14:00 A-471 Chairman s introduction G. Guglielmi; Foggia/IT Session Objectives: 1. To become familiar with the role of imaging in forensic pathology. 2. To learn how the use of a contrast medium may help the native scan to recognise vascular lesions. 3. To learn about the possibilities of MDCT in anthropological identification. 14:05 A-472 Imaging in forensic medicine M. Thali; Zurich/CH 1. To learn why imaging methods are becoming essential modalities in forensic medicine. 2. To become familiar with the modalities that can be used in forensic imaging. 3. To learn what the future developments in forensic radiology and imaging will be. 14:23 A-473 Advances in post-mortem CT angiography S. Grabherr; Lausanne/CH 1. To consolidate knowledge of the advantages and limits of postmortem CT angiography. 2. To understand the method of multi-phase post-mortem CT angiography and the indication for its performance. 3. To become familiar with the objectives and latest achievements of the Technical Working Group of Post-mortem Angiography Methods (TWGPAM). 14:41 A-474 Virtual anthropology and forensic identification using MDCT F. Dedouit; Toulouse/FR 1. To learn about the different paleo-pathological diagnoses and anthropological identification of bone lesions with MSCT. 2. To learn about the possibilities of MSCT for comparative identification. 3. To understand reconstructive identification and the main techniques useful for age-at-death assessment and sex determination. A-464 A-474 Sunday 197

200 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-475 A :59 A-475 Forensic MR imaging T.D. Ruder; Zurich/CH 1. To learn about typical post-mortem alterations in MR imaging. 2. To become familiar with application of MR imaging in the postmortem setting. 3. To understand the added value of post-mortem cardiac MR in cases of cardiac death. Panel discussion: 15:17 Which imaging technique for which forensic scenario? 16:00 17:30 Room A Interactive Teaching Session E³ 1520 Thoracic emergencies 16:00 A-476 A. Vascular E. Castañer; Sabadell/ES 1. To become familiar with the main causes of thoracic vascular emergencies. 2. To understand the role of MDCT angiography in thoracic emergencies. 3. To learn about the radiological signs in vascular thoracic emergencies and its impact on the management of these patients. 16:45 A-477 B. Pulmonary C.M. Schaefer-Prokop; Amersfoort/NL 1. To learn about the role of imaging in severe attacks of obstructive lung disease. 2. To become familiar with direct and indirect signs of pleural disease causing respiratory failure with special emphasis on the intensive care patient. 3. To learn about imaging features that are helpful for the differential diagnosis of pulmonary consolidations causing respiratory failure. 4. To understand the interaction of comorbidity, age and extent of pulmonary disease resulting in severe respiratory failure and the role of imaging in it. 16:00 17:30 Room B GI Tract RC 1501 CT colonography: when the new becomes ordinary 16:00 A-478 Chairman s introduction A. Laghi; Rome/IT 16:05 A-479 A. State-of-the-art techniques in 2013 T. Mang; Vienna/AT 1. To become familiar with an optimised technique and how it can be optimised for specific patient groups. 2. To briefly describe basic interpretation and the role of CAD. 3. To understand the most common interpretative pitfalls and potential complications, and how they can be avoided. 16:28 A-480 B. How to set up a service P. Lefere; Roeselare/BE 1. To appreciate the need for training prior to CTC and understand the role of training courses and double reporting. 2. To become familiar with ways of maximising service efficiency, including cost effectiveness, and how best to replace the barium enema. 3. To appreciate the differences in approach from setting up a service for older symptomatic patients to setting up colorectal cancer screening. 4. To learn a basic audit framework. 16:51 A-481 C. Interaction with gastroenterologists: friends or enemies? A. Graser 1, C. Hassan 2 ; 1 Munich/DE, 2 Rome/IT 1. To understand what the gastroenterologists wants to know when referring their patients for CTC in both symptomatic and screening patients. 2. To learn how to formulate local polyp reporting guidelines and how best to integrate the service with the needs of patients. 3. To propose the most effective method for integrating endoscopic and CTC services, minimising competition and maximising cooperation. Panel discussion: 17:14 How to create an efficient CTC team? 16:00 17:30 Room C Urogenital Imaging CC 1521 Paediatrics Moderator: M. Claudon; Vandoeuvre-lès-Nancy/FR 16:00 A-482 A. Imaging strategies for children: urinary tract infection and vesico-ureteral reflux M. Riccabona; Graz/AT 1. To learn about the information provided by ultrasonography, MRI and nuclear medicine examinations. 2. To become familiar with the technique and indications for micturating cystourethrogram and contrast-enhanced voiding urosonography. 3. To become familiar with an imaging algorithm for diagnostic approaches, and different strategies. 16:20 A-483 B. Paediatric adrenal tumours P.-H. Vivier; Rouen/FR 1. To become familiar with the different adrenal tumours in paediatrics. 2. To learn how imaging can help in differentiating neuroblastoma from Wilm s tumour. 3. To understand the value of adequate examinations for the initial workup of adrenal tumours. 16:40 A-484 C. Prenatal detection of GU diseases F.E. Avni; Lille/FR 1. To learn how to assess the diagnostic criteria of foetal uropathies. 2. To learn how to apply a standardised post-natal approach. 3. To understand the rationale behind a standardised approach. 17:00 A-485 D. Interactive case discussion M. Claudon; Vandoeuvre-lès-Nancy/FR 198

201 Postgraduate Educational Programme 16:00 17:30 Room D1 CLICK (Clinical Lessons for Imaging Core Knowledge): Never without Arteries CC 1518 When every step counts: imaging and management of peripheral arterial occlusive disease (PAOD) Moderator: J.F.M. Meaney; Dublin/IE 16:00 A-486 A. Clinical considerations M. Schillinger; Vienna/AT 1. To become familiar with clinical diagnosis and classification of peripheral arterial occlusive disease. 2. To learn about the most important clinical differential diagnosis. 3. To learn about the importance of imaging for treatment decisionmaking and planning. 16:30 A-487 B. Imaging techniques and typical findings T. Leiner; Utrecht/NL 1. To learn about state-of-the art MR angiographic imaging of the peripheral arteries (including modern non-enhanced techniques). 2. To learn about state-of-the art CT angiographic imaging of the peripheral arteries (including modern dose-saving techniques). 3. To become familiar with the appropriate selection of the right patient for the right imaging test. 17:00 A-488 C. Interactive case discussion: how to deal with the results? Typical cases, pitfalls, and what is next? L.P. Lawler; Dublin/IE 1. To become familiar with typical cases illustrating the role of different imaging modalities in the diagnosis and differential diagnosis of PAOD. 2. To consolidate knowledge of the selection of the appropriate imaging technique, image interpretation and image based treatment recommendation. 3. To understand the needs and principles in modern multidisciplinary management of PAOD. 16:00 17:30 Room D2 Oncologic Imaging: Follow-up of Systemic and Local Therapies CC 1519 Follow-up of thermal ablation (part II) Moderator: P.L. Pereira; Heilbronn/DE 16:00 A-489 A. Follow-up imaging of thermal ablative therapies for lung tumours A.R. Gillams; London/UK 1. To consolidate knowledge of imaging aspect of successful ablation. 2. To become familiar with the main pitfalls of post-ablation imaging. 3. To learn about the imaging aspects of most common complications. 16:30 A-490 B. Follow-up imaging of percutaneous local treatment of bone tumours F. Deschamps, G. Farouil, T. de Baere; Villejuif/FR 1. To learn about the post-ablation aspects, according to the ablation technique used. 2. To consolidate knowledge of the imaging aspects of successful ablation on various types of follow-up imaging, including CT and MRI. 17:00 A-491 C. Follow-up imaging of thermal ablative therapies for kidney tumours D.J. Breen; Southampton/UK 1. To learn about the post-ablation aspects, according to ablation technique used. 2. To become familiar with the imaging aspect of successful ablation. 3. To appreciate the imaging aspect of most common complications. 16:00 17:30 Room E1 Emergency Radiology RC 1517 ER: comprehensive imaging of nontraumatic abdominal emergencies 16:00 A-492 Chairman s introduction: logistics and management of critical patients with abdominal complaints S. Wirth, M.F. Reiser; Munich/DE Session Objectives: 1.To learn about requirements for abdominal imaging for an emergency radiology department. 2. To learn about current developments with a clinical focus on who should undergo what and when, what kind of CT exam to use in order to triage emergency patients to the appropriate therapy options. 16:15 A-493 A. Imaging of the most frequent emergencies of the upper abdomen C.J. Zech; Basle/CH 1. To become familiar with dedicated MDCT protocols. 2. To learn about other types of imaging such as US and MR. 3. To learn about typical and atypical imaging findings. 16:35 A-494 B. Imaging of the most frequent emergencies of the gastrointestinal tract M. Zins, I. Boulay-Coletta; Paris/FR 1. To become familiar with dedicated MDCT protocols. 2. To learn about other types of imaging such as US and MR. 3. To learn about typical and atypical imaging findings. 16:55 A-495 C. Imaging of the most frequent emergencies of the genitourinary tract L.E. Derchi; Genoa/IT 1. To become familiar with dedicated MDCT protocols. 2. To learn about other types of imaging such as US and MR. 3. To learn about typical and atypical imaging findings. Panel discussion: 17:15 How to speed up your diagnoses? 16:00 17:30 Room E2 State of the Art Symposium SA 15 Imaging impingement syndromes 16:00 A-496 Chairman s introduction C.W.A. Pfirrmann; Zurich/CH Session Objectives: 1. To learn about the role of imaging for the diagnosis of impingement syndromes. 2. To understand what the clinician needs to know from the radiologist. 3. To learn the diagnostic value of different imaging modalities to answer the clinical questions. A-486 A-496 Sunday 199

202 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-497 A :05 A-497 Shoulder P. Robinson; Leeds/UK 1. To understand impingement mechanisms of the shoulder. 2. To become familiar with external and internal shoulder impingement. 3. To learn about the typical imaging findings. 4. To appreciate the strength and weaknesses of different imaging modalities. 16:28 A-498 Ankle M. Maas; Amsterdam/NL 1. To understand impingement mechanisms of the ankle. 2. To become familiar with anterior and posterior ankle impingement. 3. To learn about the typical imaging findings. 4. To appreciate the strength and weaknesses of different imaging modalities. 16:51 A-499 Hip K. Wörtler; Munich/DE 1. To understand impingement mechanisms of the hip. 2. To become familiar with cam and pincer type femoroacetabular impingement (FAI). 3. To learn about the typical imaging findings. 4. To appreciate the strength and weaknesses of different imaging modalities. Panel discussion: 17:14 Form or function: is impingement a clinical or imaging diagnosis? 16:00 17:30 Room F1 Special Focus Session SF 15a Traumatic brain injury 16:00 A-500 Chairman s introduction A. Rovira-Cañellas; Barcelona/ES Session Objectives: 1. To understand the role of neuroradiology in the initial assessment. 2. To appreciate the role of conventional and non-conventional imaging techniques in the diagnosis and monitoring of primary and secondary traumatic lesions of the brain. 3. To learn about the prognostic value of neuroimaging. 4. To become familiar with the various types of cerebrovascular traumas and their treatment options. 16:05 A-501 Acute brain trauma: CT vs MRI M. Muto; Naples/IT 1. To understand the role of neuroradiology in the management of brain trauma patients. 2. To learn about the correlation between neuroradiological features and clinical findings. 3. To understand the importance of imaging follow-up. 16:23 A-502 New imaging techniques in the detection and quantification of brain damage S. Sunaert; Leuven/BE 1. To consolidate knowledge of new advanced imaging techniques. 2. To learn about quantifying brain damage using these techniques. 3. To understand the challenges of performing MR examinations in these patients. 16:41 A-503 Advanced imaging of brain trauma: outcome prediction D. Galanaud; Paris/FR 1. To understand the value of diffusion tensor imaging and MR spectroscopy in severe cases. 2. To understand the role of these techniques in early- and late-phase diagnosis and treatment follow-up. 3. To learn about the lesion patterns associated with favourable and unfavourable outcomes. 16:59 A-504 Cerebrovascular trauma: diagnosis and therapy T. Krings; Toronto, ON/CA 1. To learn about the classification of the different types of cerebrovascular trauma. 2. To become familiar with vascular emergencies requiring urgent treatment. 3. To become familiar with treatment strategies in cerebrovascular trauma. Panel discussion: 17:17 Role of neuroimaging in traumatic brain injury in :00 17:30 Room F2 Special Focus Session SF 15b Digital breast tomosynthesis 16:00 A-505 Chairman s introduction G. Gennaro; Padua/IT Session Objectives: 1. To understand the physical parameters and reconstruction methods which determine digital breast tomosynthesis (DBT) image quality. 2. To learn about DBT clinical performance and potential clinical applications. 3. To understand if CAD could be successfully applied compensate for the time required to review DBT images. 16:05 A-506 Optimisation of image acquisition and reconstruction in DBT M.J. Yaffe, J.G. Mainprize; Toronto, ON/CA 1. To understand DBT principles. 2. To learn about DBT acquisition and optimisation. 3. To understand DBT reconstruction algorithms. 4. To become familiar with radiation dose from DBT. 16:28 A-507 Current role of DBT in diagnostic imaging S. Zackrisson, K. Lång, A. Tingberg, P. Timberg, D. Förnvik, M. Dustler, I. Andersson; Malmö/SE 1. To understand the potential impact of DBT on sensitivity and specificity of breast cancer detection. 2. To appreciate limitations of DBT and its impact on image interpretation time and effort. 3. To understand if DBT is applicable to screening. 16:51 A-508 Clinical aspects of computer aided detection and diagnosis in DBT H.-P. Chan; Ann Arbor, MI/US 1. To learn about the challenges of DBT interpretation in clinical practice. 2. To understand the potential impact of computer-aided detection on DBT. 3. To learn about CAD as a second reader to improve DBT sensitivity. 4. To appreciate CAD as a concurrent reader to improve DBT workflow. Panel discussion: 17:14 Digital breast tomosynthesis: replacing or just supporting standard mammography? 200

203 Postgraduate Educational Programme 16:00 17:30 Room G/H Neuro RC 1511 Epilepsy: a lack of knowledge can be dangerous Moderator: M.A. Papathanasiou; Athens/GR 16:00 A-509 A. Anatomy of the limbic system T.A. Yousry; London/UK 1. To learn the components of the limbic system. 2. To understand the structure of the hippocampus proper. 3. To become familiar with the imaging characteristics at 1.5T, 3T, and 9.4T. 16:30 A-510 B. Temporal lobe epilepsy I.N. Pronin; Moscow/RU 1. To become familiar with MR-characteristics of neoplastic and nonneoplastic causes of temporal lobe epilepsy. 2. To learn about optimised imaging protocol. 3. To appreciate the potential impact of modern MR-imaging techniques to improve visualisation of structural brain changes. 17:00 A-511 C. fmri in epilepsy N. Bargalló; Barcelona/ES 1. To become familiar with the application and limitations of fmri. 2. To appreciate technical aspects and interpretation of fmri for language localisation and memory testing. 3. To consolidate of advanced fmri applications. 16:00 17:30 Room I/K Cardiac RC 1503 Cardiac CT and MRI in difficult patients: what to do? 16:00 A-512 Chairman s introduction M. Hamilton; Bristol/UK 16:05 A-513 A. Coronary CTA in patients with severe arrhythmias and high heart rate C. Loewe; Vienna/AT 1. To understand the criteria for optimal patient selection and preparation to achieve best results. 2. To learn about acquisition techniques in patients with arrhythmias and tachycardia. 3. To become familiar with the post-processing techniques available for optimising images quality following the scan. 16:28 A-514 B. Severe coronary calcinosis and stents: tips and tricks in image acquisition and interpretation F. Pugliese 1, A. Rossi 2 ; 1 London/UK, 2 Trieste/IT 1. To understand the challenge of calcification and stents when performing coronary CTA. 2. To become familiar with technical features that maximise image quality in this patient group. 3. To be aware of the accuracy of coronary CTA in stented or calcified vessels with the optimum imaging techniques. 16:51 A-515 C. Cardiac MRI: possible problems and how to avoid them E. Mershina; Moscow/RU 1. To learn the importance of patient selection and preparation in achieving high quality scans. 2. To understand the practical techniques available for performing a successful scan in difficult patients such as those with arrhythmia or poor breath-holding ability. 3. To learn how imaging parameters can be changed for optimal results. Panel discussion: 17:14 When to scan and when not to? How can we make the best of what we have? 16:00 17:30 Room L/M Physics in Radiology RC 1513 Novel developments in CT and their impact on dose Moderators: M. Prokop; Nijmegen/NL, V. Tsapaki; Athens/GR 16:00 A-516 A. Patient dose assessment in CT P.C. Shrimpton; Didcot/UK 1. To become familiar with technical dose parameters in CT. 2. To understand how to assess patient dose. 3. To be informed about the role of diagnostic reference levels in CT. 16:30 A-517 B. New frontiers in CT: functional and spectral imaging N. Pelc; Stanford, CA/US 1. To learn about new developments in functional and spectral CT imaging. 2. To learn about impact on patient dose. 17:00 A-518 C. New image reconstruction techniques J. Sijbers; Antwerp/BE 1. To understand the principles of iterative reconstruction techniques in CT. 2. To learn about novel algorithms. 3. To learn about the impact on patient dose. 16:00 17:30 Room N/O Head and Neck RC 1508 Performing and reporting head and neck examinations: how should I do it? Moderator: K. Surlan Popovič; Ljubljana/SI 16:00 A-519 A. Sinonasal CT scans: technique and evaluation H.B. Eggesbø; Oslo/NO 1. To learn how to perform a state-of-the-art CT examination of the sinuses. 2. To understand how to evaluate and what to report on CT examinations of the sinuses. 16:30 A-520 B. Temporal bone: CT and MRI M.M. Lemmerling; Gent/BE 1. To learn how to perform a state-of-the art CT and MRI examination of the temporal bone. 2. To learn how to create a complete temporal bone report. A-509 A-520 Sunday 201

204 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-521 A :00 A-521 C. CT and MRI of the neck: how to address key clinical questions D. Farina; Brescia/IT 1. To understand key clinical questions. 2. To learn how to do a structured reading of the CT and MRI scans of the head and neck. 3. To become familiar with reporting in order to address the needs of the clinician. 17:00 A-527 C. Congenital bone dysplasias A.C. Offiah; Sheffield/UK 1. To understand the role of the radiologist in diagnosing congenital bone dysplasias. 2. To understand how to classify bone dysplasias. 3. To become familiar with reporting radiological studies related to bone dysplasias. 16:00 17:30 Room P Radiographers RC 1514 Hybrid imaging technologies Moderators: C.D. Claussen; Tübingen/DE, C. Malamateniou; London/UK 16:00 A-522 A. Recent developments S. Rep; Ljubljana/SI 1. To become familiar with the basic principles of hybrid imaging. 2. To learn about the newest techniques in hybrid imaging. 3. To understand the potential technical implications of the use of hybrid imaging. 16:30 A-523 B. Clinical applications T. Lindner; Ternitz/AT 1. To become familiar with the major clinical applications of hybrid imaging. 2. To understand its benefits and drawbacks compared with a single modality. 3. To become familiar with some case studies. 17:00 A-524 C. Trends in radiography education P. Hogg; Manchester/UK 1. To understand the impact on education. 2. To learn how these new requirements can be met by changes in the curriculum of educational institutions in Europe. 3. To understand what further changes in European laws, research infrastructure, and collaboration might be required to strengthen and protect the introduction of hybrid imaging in clinical practice. 16:00 17:30 Room Q Paediatric RC 1512 Paediatric MSK radiology: what is important? Moderator: M. Raissaki; Iraklion/GR 16:00 A-525 A. Scoliosis: what the radiologist needs to know J.-F. Chateil, S. Missonnier; Bordeaux/FR 1. To learn about the aetiology of scoliosis. 2. To become familiar with imaging findings, measurements and follow-up. 3. To understand how to report imaging findings. 16:30 A-526 B. Benign bone tumours and pseudotumours in children: the pitfalls K.J. Johnson; Birmingham/UK 1. To recognise the most common benign bone tumours and pseudotumours. 2. To understand the differences between benign bone and pseudo tumours and malignancies in children. 3. To understand imaging modalities that could help in the differential diagnosis of benign bone tumours and pseudo tumours in children. 202

205 Postgraduate Educational Programme 08:30 10:00 Room A Interactive Teaching Session E³ 1620 Acute abdominal inflammatory disorders 08:30 A-528 A. Colitis and enterocolitis D.J.M. Tolan; Leeds/UK 1. To know how to choose the appropriate imaging modality. 2. To become familiar with the patterns of distribution and appearance in imaging. 3. To learn how to differentiate ischaemia from inflammation. 09:15 A-529 B. Liver and bile ducts C.D. Becker; Geneva/CH 1. To know the advantages of each imaging technique. 2. To become familiar with the findings in infrequent infections. 3. To learn how to study obstructive jaundice. 08:30 10:00 Room B Special Focus Session SF 16a My most beautiful mistakes in paediatric radiology 08:30 A-530 Chairman s introduction P. Tomà; Rome/IT Session Objectives: 1. To become familiar with growth and development of newborns to teens. 2. To become familiar with the main pitfalls in paediatric radiology. 08:35 A-531 Abdomen S.G.F. Robben; Maastricht/NL 1. To become familiar with the most important differential diagnoses. 2. To learn about imaging strategies for children. 3. To understand the role, importance of, and information obtained, from ultrasonography. 08:58 A-532 CNS B. Bernardi, T. Verdolotti; Rome/IT 1. To understand the significance of MR findings in a developing brain. 2. To learn how to avoid misinterpretations of easily detectable MR abnormalities. 3. To become familiar with the differential diagnosis of uncommon diseases. 09:21 A-533 Musculoskeletal K. Rosendahl; Bergen/NO 1. To become familiar with the various controversies regarding US screening programmes for developmental dysplasia of the hip. 2. To understand the value of ultrasonography in the study of the musculoskeletal system. 3. To learn how and when to use MRI for investigations and differential diagnosis. Panel discussion: 09:44 How have you changed or improved yourself after recognising your mistakes? 08:30 10:00 Room C Urogenital Imaging CC 1621 The usual, the unusual and the dangerous Moderator: S.K. Morcos; Sheffield/UK 08:30 A-534 A. Imaging of renal trauma V. Logager; Copenhagen/DK 1. To learn how to recognise and describe the different types of traumatic renal injuries. 2. To learn how to correlate these image findings with clinical severity. 3. To understand treatment possibilities. 08:50 A-535 B. Postoperative anatomy and complications after GU interventions H.C. Thoeny; Berne/CH 1. To become familiar with expected imaging findings after (partial) nephrectomy, ileal bladder substitute and radical prostatectomy. 2. To understand common complications after surgery. 3. To learn where and how to detect tumour recurrence. 09:10 A-536 C. GU complications in patients with spinal cord damage S. Agarwal; Wrexham/UK 1. To understand the pathophysiology of urinary tract problems in patients with spinal cord damage. 2. To become familiar with the urinary tract complications associated with this group of patients. 3. To understand the role of different modalities and common problems during imaging. 09:30 A-537 D. Interactive case discussion S.K. Morcos; Sheffield/UK 08:30 10:00 Room D1 CLICK (Clinical Lessons for Imaging Core Knowledge): Never without Arteries CC 1618 The fast and the furious: vascular trauma resulting from traffic accidents Moderator: U. Linsenmaier; Munich/DE 08:30 A-538 A. Clinical considerations H. Hoppe; Berne/CH 1. To learn about the frequency and importance of arterial involvement in deceleration trauma. 2. To know more about the differential diagnosis as well as the different localisations of arterial lesions. 3. To learn about prognosis, treatment and outcome after arterial involvement. 09:00 A-539 B. Imaging techniques and typical findings H. Alkadhi; Zurich/CH 1. To learn about the importance of selecting the appropriate imaging technique to allow for the detection of arterial involvement in trauma patients. 2. To become familiar with the typical image appearance of arterial involvement in trauma patients. 3. To learn about the most important findings and diagnoses for treatment planning. A-528 A-539 Monday 203

206 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-540 A :30 A-540 C. Interactive case discussion R. Morgan; London/UK 1. To become familiar with typical cases illustrating the role of appropriate imaging modalities in the assessment of patients after deceleration trauma. 2. To consolidate knowledge of the selection of the appropriate imaging technique, image interpretation and image based treatment recommendation. 3. To understand the most important information urgently needed for treatment decisions and planning. 08:30 10:00 Room D2 Oncologic Imaging: Follow-up of Systemic and Local Therapies CC 1619 Follow-up of local treatments of breast cancer Moderator: M.H. Fuchsjäger; Graz/AT 08:30 A-541 A. MRI-guided HIFU therapies in the breast M. Sklair-Levy; Tel Aviv/IL 1. To learn about HIFU in breast tumours. 2. To become familiar with the post-hifu aspects of various types of imaging. 09:00 A-542 B. Pre- and post- imaging appearance of breast lesion excision system (BLES) lesions S.D. Allen; Sutton/UK 1. To understand the mechanism of the BLES technique. 2. To become familiar with the post-bles aspects of various types of imaging. 09:30 A-543 C. Common features and pitfalls in imaging the treated breast J. Camps Herrero; Valencia/ES 1. To learn about the post-surgical and post-radiation therapies aspects of the breast and their timing. 2. To learn about how to diagnose a recurrence in the treated breast and its differential diagnoses. 3. To become familiar with the imaging findings of post-ablation (RFA) of breast. 08:30 10:00 Room E1 GI Tract RC 1601a Diagnosis and staging of esophageal cancer 08:30 A-544 Chairman s introduction Z. Tarján; Budapest/HU 08:35 A-545 A. Diagnosis M. Krokidis; Cambridge/UK 1. To become familiar with the pros and cons of each of the main diagnostic imaging modalities available when assessing a patient with suspected esophageal cancer. 2. To learn the basic imaging findings of esophageal cancer through each modality with emphasis on local disease. 3. To understand the pitfall in diagnosis and staging of tumours located in the gastroesophageal junction. 08:58 A-546 B. Staging V. Válek; Brno/CZ 1. To learn about optimised EUS, MDCT and PET-CT techniques for esophageal cancer staging. 2. To critically review those imaging findings impacting on patient management with regard to palliation, radiation therapy and surgery. 3. To understand the potential of imaging prognostic markers. 09:21 A-547 C. Treatment response B. Mahon; Birmingham/UK 1. To learn the normal post-surgical and post-radiation therapy imaging findings and criteria and to differentiate between these and local recurrence. 2. To become familiar with anatomical and functional imaging criteria to assess treatment response. 3. To learn the rationale for follow-up of patients after definitive or neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy. Panel discussion: 09:44 Cross-sectional techniques: developing an integrated imaging algorithm in oesophageal cancer 08:30 10:00 Room E2 Oncologic Imaging RC 1616 Complications of cancer treatment and the detection of recurrences 08:30 A-548 Chairman s introduction M. Laniado; Dresden/DE 08:35 A-549 A. Head and neck cancer L. Oleaga Zufiría; Barcelona/ES 1. To learn about the possible range of late toxicity effects after surgery and chemoradiotherapy of the neck. 2. To become familiar with the imaging findings after surgery and chemoradiotherapy. 3. To understand which imaging method to use to differentiate between treatment sequelae and remaining tumour. 08:58 A-550 B. Liver and pancreatic cancer C. Catalano; Rome/IT 1. To become familiar with the imaging of complications following pancreatic surgery and liver chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy. 2. To understand how these changes can conceal or mimic active disease. 3. To learn how to distinguish post-treatment changes from residual or recurrent disease. 09:21 A-551 C. Rectal cancer L.C.O. Blomqvist; Stockholm/SE 1. To understand the role of CT, PET and MRI in the surveillance of patients after rectal cancer surgery. 2. To become familiar with the imaging changes of the irradiated and resected tumour bed. 3. To understand the diagnostic algorithm for early detection of a local recurrence in the treated tumour bed. Panel discussion: 09:44 How to differentiate between treatment sequelae and active disease 204

207 Postgraduate Educational Programme 08:30 10:00 Room F1 GI Tract RC 1601b Abdominal MRI: standard and advanced protocols in clinical settings Moderator: M.A. Patak; Zurich/CH 08:30 A-552 A. Fistula in ano A. Gupta; London/UK 1. To learn optimised MRI state-of-the-art protocols to image patients with fistula in ano. 2. To understand of the role of imaging in fistula classification and staging, impact on therapeutic decision-making, assessment of activity and in treatment monitoring. 3. To describe how to provide an optimal MRI fistula report. 09:00 A-553 B. Pelvic floor disease M. Bazot, L. Jarboui, I. Thomassin-Naggara, F. Haab, E. Darai; Paris/FR 1. To learn the clinical indications and the optimised dynamic MR imaging protocol for investigating pelvic floor disease in patients. 2. To understand common and uncommon findings related to the posterior, middle and anterior compartments and how they impact on subsequent patient management. 3. To understand how to introduce MRI into a pelvic floor therapy and how to best integrate with conventional techniques. 09:30 A-554 C. Suspected biliary tumour C. Matos; Brussels/BE 1. To learn the basic MRI technique for patients with suspected biliary tumour. 2. To understand advanced imaging protocols for both structural and functional imaging of the bile ducts, and when these are indicated. 3. To understand the MR imaging findings which best differentiate benign from malignant disease, and how to produce an optimised report. 08:30 10:00 Room G/H Neuro RC 1611 Spine: update on postoperative imaging and minimally invasive procedures 08:30 A-555 Chairman s introduction J. Van Goethem; Antwerp/BE 08:35 A-556 A. Postoperative spine L. van den Hauwe, J.W. Van Goethem, C. Venstermans, F. De Belder, P.M. Parizel; Antwerp/BE 1. To become familiar with the appropriate imaging technique in the postoperative spine. 2. To learn how to differentiate between normal and abnormal postoperative findings. 3. To recognise the most common postoperative complications. 08:58 A-557 B. Indications for vertebroplasty A. Gangi, J. Garnon, G. Tsoumakidou, I. Enescu; Strasbourg/FR 1. To consolidate knowledge of the actual indications for vertebral augmentation. 2. To understand the contraindications and limitations. 3. To become familiar with the algorithm of patient selection. 4. To understand the best timing for vertebral augmentation. 09:21 A-558 C. Percutaneous treatment of spinal diseases M. Muto; Naples/IT 1. To understand the clinical indications for percutaneous treatment of spinal diseases. 2. To know what diagnostic modality to suggest. 3. To become familiar with the different percutaneous techniques available. Panel discussion: 09:44 Minimally invasive spinal procedures: the radiologist s future role? 08:30 10:00 Room I/K Chest RC 1604 Pulmonary embolism: guidelines and best practice throughout Europe 08:30 A-559 Chairman s introduction M. Rémy-Jardin; Lille/FR 08:35 A-560 A. Pioped 1-2-3: what have we learned so far? C. Engelke; Göttingen/DE 1. To appreciate the results of Pioped in the light of technological refinements in To become familiar with the pros and cons of CT versus MR. 3. To understand the residual potential indications of scintigraphy. 08:58 A-561 B. PE in oncologic patients B. Ghaye; Brussels/BE 1. To learn about the increased risk of venous thromboembolism. 2. To understand the means of recognising peripheral PE, including CAD and new software tools. 3. To learn how to deal with clinically unsuspected PE, both for reporting and treatment. 09:21 A-562 C. PE during pregnancy and puerperium M.-P. Revel; Paris/FR 1. To learn more about the increased risk of venous thromboembolism. 2. To appreciate the pros and cons of US, CT, MR and scintigraphy. 3. To learn about specific diagnostic algorithms. Panel discussion: 09:44 Pulmonary embolism work-up in :30 10:00 Room L/M Special Focus Session SF 16c Making homogeneous the reading in HCC 08:30 A-563 Chairman s introduction C. Bartolozzi; Pisa/IT Session Objectives: 1. To become familiar with common and uncommon findings in HCC and with updated guidelines in HCC diagnosis and follow-up. 2. To understand how interpretation and reporting in HCC influence patient management. 3. To learn about recent developments in computer-aided reporting. A-552 A-563 Monday 205

208 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-564 A :35 A-564 HCC diagnosis: how to report typical findings C. Ayuso; Barcelona/ES 1. To learn about AASLD/EASL imaging criteria for non-invasive diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma. 2. To understand the need for standardised interpretation and reporting in HCC surveillance. 3. To learn the current terminology in HCC reporting. 08:53 A-565 How to interpret and report atypical findings C.J. Zech; Basle/CH 1. To learn about common tricks and traps in interpreting atypical findings in HCC surveillance. 2. To learn about the key elements for homogeneous reading and reporting in atypical HCC. 3. To understand the key role that specific findings reported by radiologists have in determining patient management. 09:11 A-566 How to evaluate tumour response to therapies J. Ricke; Magdeburg/DE 1. To understand imaging findings after HCC locoregional and systemic treatments. 2. To learn about the current guidelines for defining HCC response to treatment. 3. To learn about the key elements of homogeneous reading and reporting after HCC treatment. 09:29 A-567 Information technology: the practical impact on the management of HCC patients I. Bargellini; Pisa/IT 1. To understand the need for new systems to improve standardization of reading and reporting. 2. To learn about now tools and software for managing oncologic patients. 3. To understand the added value of computer technology in the management of HCC patients. Panel discussion: 09:47 Case-based discussion: a practical demonstration of how interpretation and reporting affect patient management 08:30 10:00 Room N/O Special Focus Session SF 16b Head and neck cancer battle: the power of imaging studies 08:30 A-568 Chairman s introduction V. Vandecaveye; Leuven/BE Session Objectives: 1. To learn how to choose the optimal imaging modality for head and neck cancer staging and detection of tumour recurrence. 2. To understand which elements are key to writing a structured radiological report in diagnosis and staging. 3. To become familiar with the imaging features of tumour relapse versus complications in the post-treatment neck. 4. To understand the clinical role of imaging in post-treatment patient management. 08:35 A-569 Building blocks for locoregional staging of head and neck tumours F.A. Pameijer; Utrecht/NL 1. To learn how to make a choice between CT and MRI. 2. To understand which imaging findings should be assessed to obtain a radiological TN-stage. 3. To become familiar with structured radiological reporting of head and neck tumours. 09:00 A-570 Detection of tumour recurrence in head and neck cancer: challenges and pitfalls M. Becker; Geneva/CH 1. To appreciate the spectrum of expected tissue alterations after therapy and their temporal relationship. 2. To understand the imaging aspects of common complications after therapy. 3. To become familiar with key imaging features of tumour recurrence. 4. To learn the potential pitfalls in post-therapeutic image interpretation and how to avoid them. 09:20 A-571 Locoregional treatment failure in head and neck cancer: causes and clinical implications R. Maroldi, P. Nicolai; Brescia/IT 1. To understand the most frequent causes of local and regional posttreatment relapses. 2. To become familiar with the indications and options for salvage surgery and non-surgical procedures. 3. To understand the role of imaging in decision-making concerning local and regional recurrences. Panel discussion: 09:50 Advanced imaging in clinical practice: how does it help the patient? 08:30 10:00 Room P Cardiac RC 1603 How I report Moderator: R. Vliegenthart; Groningen/NL 08:30 A-572 A. Chest x-ray in cardiac disease M.B. Rubens; London/UK 1. To be aware of the indications for performing a chest x-ray in patients with cardiac disease. 2. To become familiar with the most important and relevant findings for the diagnosis of cardiac disease. 3. To learn about a structured approach to reading chest x-ray in cardiac patients. 09:00 A-573 B. Coronary CTA F. Wolf; Vienna/AT 1. To appreciate the scope of information needed by a referring physician from a coronary CTA examination. 2. To become familiar with protocols of cardiac CT and image processing. 3. To learn a structured approach to reading cardiac CT examinations. 09:30 A-574 C. Cardiac MRI in ischaemic heart disease J. Bremerich; Basle/CH 1. To know when to do cardiac MRI in ischaemic heart disease. 2. To become familiar with protocols of cardiac MRI and image processing. 3. To learn about a structured reporting approach to cardiac MRI. 206

209 Postgraduate Educational Programme 08:30 10:00 Room Q Computer Applications RC 1605 Improving workflow efficiency and quality 08:30 A-575 Chairman s introduction D. Caramella; Pisa/IT Session Objectives: 1. To highlight the need for IT tools to ensure quality control. 2. To understand how to collect data concerning radiation dose. 3. To learn about the integration of contrast media injectors into PACS. 08:35 A-576 A. Improving quality and efficiency of computerised order entry through decision support P. Mildenberger; Mainz/DE 1. To understand the relationship of decision support tools and evidence-based medicine. 2. To learn how decision support tools can be implemented for requesting radiological studies. 3. To appreciate potential effects of decision support tools on workflow efficiency. 08:58 A-577 B. Improving quality and efficiency of reporting by structure and templates N. Dugar; Doncaster/UK 1. To learn about clinical requirements for structured reports. 2. To become familiar with the IT requirements for report templates. 3. To appreciate the potential to generate data for evidence-based radiology. 09:21 A-578 C. Improving quality and efficiency of dose management through exchange between modalities and registries E. Vaño; Madrid/ES 1. To learn about current European regulation requirements and standards on patient dosimetry. 2. To become familiar with the dose reporting evolution and dose structured reporting. 3. To appreciate the potential for dose analysis and reporting as well as future registries. Panel discussion: 09:44 Will novel IT tools really improve quality and efficiency in daily radiological practice? 08:30 10:00 Room Z Joint Session of the ESR and EFSUMB Advances in diagnostic ultrasound: better results through cooperation Moderators: L.E. Derchi; Genoa/IT, F. Piscaglia; Bologna/IT 08:30 A-579 Introducing the EFSUMB: the world s largest ultrasound society N. Gritzmann; Vienna/AT 1. To learn about the work and responsibility of the different committees. 2. To understand the membership basis and objectives of the EFSUMB. 3. To learn about the benefits for ultrasound societies and individual members. 4. To learn about the educational tools of the EFSUMB. 08:48 A-580 ESR/EFSUMB collaboration: a newly established platform for joint development of ultrasound in radiology and clinical specialties L.E. Derchi; Genoa/IT 1. To learn about the goals of the ESR Working Group on Ultrasound. 2. To understand the cooperative agreement between the ESR and EFSUMB. 3. To learn about the initial results of the cooperation between the two societies. 09:06 A-581 Image fusion and intervention T. Lorentzen; Herlev/DK 1. To understand the technical aspects of image fusion with ultrasound (US) and other imaging modalities (most frequently CT or MRI). 2. To learn how to align two sets of data, obtained through different axial imaging techniques, with one another and perform live US scanning, where the fused image follows the live US. 3. To understand how a lesion, even when invisible, can be targeted for US-guided, using CT and MRI image fusion. 09:24 A-582 The EFSUMB non-liver CEUS guidelines F. Piscaglia, S. Marinelli, E. Terzi; Bologna/IT 1. To learn about new guidelines and clinical recommendations on the use of contrast enhanced ultrasound in non-liver applications, which were released by the EFSUMB in To learn about the process of producing the document. 3. To learn, based on the evidence, which organs are suitable for CEUS in daily practice, and which are only suitable for research using CEUS. 09:42 A-583 The EFSUMB/WFUMB liver-ceus guidelines M. Claudon; Vandoeuvre-les-Nancy/FR 1. To learn about the current practice of contrast enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) worldwide. 2. To learn how the CEUS international guidelines were established. 3. To learn about the main indications for CEUS in cases of liver disease. 10:30 12:00 Room A Interactive Teaching Session E³ 1720b Musculoskeletal emergencies 10:30 A-584 A. Axial skeleton E. Llopis; Valencia/ES 1. To understand the principal indications for emergency spinal imaging. 2. To be able to analyse the pros and cons of each imaging modality in spinal trauma: how, why, when? 3. To become familiar with key MRI findings in spinal infection, tumour cord compression and other non-traumatic spine disorders. 4. To become familiar with the main emergency complications following spinal surgery. 11:15 A-585 B. Peripheral skeleton V.N. Cassar-Pullicino; Oswestry/UK 1. To learn when and how to use the different imaging modalities in acute skeletal lesions. 2. To learn about the US and MRI findings in infection. 3. To understand the value of MDCT in acute MSK lesions. A-575 A-585 Monday 207

210 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-586 A :30 12:00 Room B Interactive Teaching Session E³ 1720a Pitfalls in pelvic imaging 10:30 A-586 A. Pitfalls in MRI of the pelvis E. Sala; New York, NY/US 1. To become familiar with normal variations in MRI appearances of female pelvis resulting from physiologic conditions (e.g. different phases of menstrual cycle) and treatments (including exogenous hormone therapy, surgery and radiation) potentially mimicking disease. 2. To discuss the role of correct MR imaging plane in avoiding potential mis-classification of uterine anomalies and parametrial invasion in patients with cervical cancer. 3. To recognise certain pitfalls related to dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI and diffusion weighted MRI. 11:15 A-587 B. Pitfalls in pelvic ultrasound K. Kinkel; Chêne-Bougeries/Geneva/CH 1. To become familiar with anatomical variants, potentially mimicking disease. 2. To learn about common pitfalls in pelvic ultrasound. 12:30 13:30 Room N/O The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Head and Neck MC 24E Temporal bone: so beautiful, yet so complicated 12:30 A-588 Temporal bone: so beautiful, yet so complicated B. De Foer; Wilrijk-Antwerp/BE 1. To become familiar with temporal bone anatomy. 2. To learn how to choose and tailor imaging techniques according to clinical presentation. 3. To appreciate the most common pathologies affecting the three main compartments of the temporal bone. 16:00 17:30 Room C GI Tract RC 1901 Cross-sectional imaging of colitis 16:00 A-590 Chairman s introduction S.A. Taylor; London/UK 16:05 A-591 A. What protocol to use? S. Schmidt; Lausanne/CH 1. To become familiar with the role of colonic distension prior to imaging of suspected or known colitis. 2. To understand typical CT, MRI and US protocols. 3. To highlight the pros and cons of CT, MRI and US. 16:28 A-592 B. Differentiating between the causes of colitis B. Gallix; Montpellier/FR 1. To learn the most common cause of colitis through cross sectional imaging in both immune competent and immune compromised patients. 2. To become familiar with differentiating infectious, inflammatory, ischaemic and autoimmune conditions based on cross sectional imaging criteria. 3. To understand the limitations of cross sectional imaging in differentiating between its causes. 16:51 A-593 C. The role of cross-sectional imaging in colonic inflammatory bowel disease J. Rimola; Barcelona/ES 1. To learn the optimised examination protocols for ulcerative colitis and colonic Crohn s disease in the acute, subacute and chronic disease setting. 2. To describe criteria for the assessment of disease activity through CT, MRI and ultrasound. 3. To outline an integrated approach to the use of cross sectional imaging in colonic inflammatory bowel disease. Panel discussion: 17:14 The role of cross-sectional imaging in the diagnosis and follow-up of colitis 12:30 13:30 Room P The Beauty of Basic Knowledge: Musculoskeletal Imaging MC 25E Metabolic/endocrine disease 12:30 A-589 Metabolic/endocrine disease J. Freyschmidt; Bremen/DE 1. To understand the basic pathophysiology of metabolic and endocrine bone diseases. 2. To become familiar with the most typical imaging findings of metabolic and endocrine diseases. 3. To appreciate specific imaging patterns and to discuss the value of different imaging techniques :00 17:30 Room D2 Contrast Media RC 1906 How I optimise contrast media administration Moderator: W. Semmler; Heidelberg/DE 16:00 A-594 A. CT P. Leander; Malmö/SE 1. To understand the pharmacokinetics of iodinated contrast media. 2. To learn about patient, contrast medium and scanning factors associated with contrast enhancement and scan timing. 3. To become familiar with protocols for optimised contrast enhancement. 16:30 A-595 B. MRI G.M. Bongartz; Basle/CH 1. To understand the differences between iodinated contrast agents and gadolinium chelates and their impact on contrast medium administration. 2. To learn about injection and scanning protocols for optimised vascular and parenchymal enhancement. 3. To review the influence of tissue-specific contrast media on the injection and scanning protocols.

211 Postgraduate Educational Programme 17:00 A-596 C. PET/CT X. Montet; Geneva/CH 1. To become familiar with the role of contrast-enhanced CT in PET/ CT. 2. To understand the influence of CT contrast-enhancement on attenuation correction of PET images. 3. To learn about the importance of adequately timing the injection of CT and PET agents for optimal PET/CT. 16:00 17:30 Room E1 Musculoskeletal RC 1910 Intra-articular imaging 16:00 A-597 Chairman s introduction A.H. Karantanas; Iraklion/GR 16:05 A-598 A. Standard MR techniques C. Faletti; Turin/IT 1. To become familiar with the techniques used in standard MR. 2. To learn about the strengths/weaknesses of standard MR along with diagnostic problems related to anatomical variation. 16:28 A-599 B. CT arthrography C.W.A. Pfirrmann; Zurich/CH 1. To become familiar with the techniques used in CT arthrography. 2. To learn about the strengths/weaknesses of CT arthrography. 16:51 A-600 C. MR arthrography J. Kramer; Linz/AT 1. To become familiar with the techniques used in MR arthrography. 2. To learn about the strengths/weaknesses of MR arthrography. Panel discussion: 17:14 Which imaging technique for which clinical scenario? 16:00 17:30 Room E2 Oncologic Imaging RC 1916 Gastro-entero-pancreatic neuroendocrine tumours (GEP-NET): a multidisciplinary update 16:00 A-601 Chairman s introduction C. Matos; Brussels/BE 16:05 A-602 A. Tumour biology, pathogenesis and classification B. Wiedenmann; Berlin/DE 1. To learn about basic aspects of GEP-NET biology, pathogenesis and classification. 2. To understand the epidemiology and current treatment options. 3. To become familiar with rational clinical management. 16:28 A-603 B. The current role of nuclear medicine techniques C.M. Deroose; Leuven/BE 1. To learn about the cellular properties of GEP-NET used in molecular imaging. 2. To become familiar with the different modalities and new tracers being used. 3. To learn about the performance of the different methods available. 16:51 A-604 C. Anatomical imaging: transabdominal US, endoscopic US, MDCT and MRI. What is the most appropriate imaging approach? V. Vilgrain, M.-P. Vullierme, P. Ruszniewski, A. Sauvanet; Clichy/FR 1. To learn how to recognise the specific imaging features of GEP-NET. 2. To learn about the strengths and weaknesses of the different imaging modalities. 3. To understand the optimal use of the different imaging modalities in relation to tumour localisation and staging. Panel discussion: 17:14 The future of hybrid imaging 16:00 17:30 Room F1 Special Focus Session SF 19 Tablet-computers in radiology: friend or foe? 16:00 A-605 Chairman s introduction E. Neri; Pisa/IT Session Objectives: 1. To give an overview of current tablet-computer technology and its practical use in radiology. 2. To discuss the pros and cons of using tablet-computers. 3. To analyse specific and critical areas of utilisation (DICOM images reading and teleradiology). 16:05 A-606 Tablet-computers: a technical overview J. Fernandez-Bayó; Sabadell/ES 1. To learn about PC evolution: from desktops, to laptops and tablets. 2. To appreciate the portability of a tablet-computer. 3. To become familiar with the hardware features with a specific focus on displays and networks. 16:23 A-607 Radiological features of the tablet-computer P. Sacco 1, L. Faggioni 2 ; 1 Siena/IT, 2 Pisa/IT 1. To appreciate the radiological features available on a tablet-computer. 2. To become familiar with radiological atlases, databases, social networks. 3. To learn how the tablet-computer can help at a congress and prepare presentations. 16:41 A-608 Reading DICOM images on the tablet O. Ratib; Geneva/CH 1. To understand the DICOM readers available for tablet-computers. 2. To become familiar with the different approaches to DICOM reading (local vs remote) and the PACS/tablets integration. 3. To appreciate the pros and cons of DICOM image-reading with tablet-computers in regards to image quality and displays. 16:59 A-609 Mobile teleradiology with tablet-computers: a critical appraisal E.R. Ranschaert; s-hertogenbosch/nl 1. To learn about mobile teleradiology within and outside the hospital. 2. To become familiar with the potential risks of mobile teleradiology (data security, confidentiality, etc.). Panel discussion: 17:17 Are we ready and confident enough to use tablet-computers in clinical practice? How and when? A-596 A-609 Monday 209

212 Postgraduate Educational Programme A-610 A :00 17:30 Room F2 Breast RC 1902 Breast ultrasound Moderator: M. Müller-Schimpfle; Frankfurt a. Main/DE 16:00 A-610 A. Physics and practical aspects of high-quality hand-held and automated breast US M.H. Fuchsjäger; Graz/AT 1. To understand the physics of hand-held and whole breast US. 2. To become familiar with the practical technique of hand-held and whole breast US. 3. To appreciate the clinical applications of hand-held and whole breast US including automated screening. 16:30 A-611 B. Complicated cysts and complex-cystic lesions: differentiation and management G. Rizzatto 1, C.F. Weismann 2 ; 1 Gorizia/IT, 2 Salzburg/AT 1. To learn about the US appearance of complicated cysts and complexcystic lesions. 2. To consolidate knowledge on differential diagnosis for these respective lesions. 3. To understand the diagnostic algorithm for a work-up of these lesions. 17:00 A-612 C. The use of ultrasound in the evaluation of the nippleareolar complex R. Salvador; Barcelona/ES 1. To understand the normal anatomy of the nipple-areolar complex. 2. To become familiar with conditions commonly affecting the nippleareolar complex. 3. To appreciate the value of US for diagnosis and management of these conditions. 16:00 17:30 Room G/H Neuro RC 1911 Multiple sclerosis: 2013 update Moderator: E. Tali; Ankara/TR 16:00 A-613 A. Differential diagnosis of multiple T2-HI white matter lesions A. Rovira-Cañellas; Barcelona/ES 1. To learn about recognition patterns that might be helpful in suggesting the most likely etiology of brain multifocal T2 lesions. 2. To understand the role of spinal cord imaging in the differential diagnosis. 3. To appreciate a neuroradiologic diagnostic strategy for multiple white matter lesions of unknown origin. 16:30 A-614 B. New developments in the diagnosis of multiple sclerosis F. Barkhof; Amsterdam/NL 1. To understand the 2010 revision of the McDonald criteria for MS. 2. To become aware of MRI red-flags in the diagnostic process. 3. To become familiar with new developments in pulse-sequences and field-strength. 4. To understand how to use spinal cord imaging in a diagnostic setting. 17:00 A-615 C. Imaging of MS treatment-related complications M.M. Thurnher; Vienna/AT 1. To become familiar with therapy options in multiple sclerosis (MS). 2. To understand therapy induced complications. 3. To understand the pathophysiology of immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS). 4. To become familiar with imaging findings in IRIS. 16:00 17:30 Room I/K Chest RC 1904 Phenotypes in obstructive airway disease: how should I image, analyse and report? Moderator: P.A. Gevenois; Brussels/BE 16:00 A-616 A. Asthma and associated conditions P.-Y. Brillet; Bobigny/FR 1. To learn more about the imaging findings in asthma and associated conditions, especially with low-dose and expiratory CT. 2. To appreciate the potential to grade the severity of the disease from CT. 3. To learn how to report findings indicative of asthma and associated conditions. 16:30 A-617 B. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) N. Sverzellati; Parma/IT 1. To learn more about the imaging findings in COPD, including low dose and expiratory CT. 2. To become familiar with the concept of CT phenotyping: airway obstruction vs. alveolar destruction. 3. To appreciate the radiological findings of remodelling of airways and pulmonary vasculature. 17:00 A-618 C. Cystic fibrosis and other bronchiectatic diseases M.U. Puderbach; Heidelberg/DE 1. To learn more about the imaging findings in bronchiectasis, especially at MRI. 2. To appreciate the role of imaging in primary diagnosis, surveillance and therapy monitoring. 3. To become familiar with the role of imaging in surgical planning. 16:00 17:30 Room N/O Head and Neck RC 1908 Temporal bone: imaging the most common symptoms and signs Moderator: T. Beale; London/UK 16:00 A-619 A. Conductive hearing loss: what s behind it? A. Trojanowska; Lublin/PL 1. To review the most common causes of conductive hearing loss. 2. To become familiar with the imaging findings in patients with conductive hearing loss. 3. To differentiate the most frequent causes of conductive hearing loss. 210

213 Postgraduate Educational Programme 16:30 A-620 B. Sensorineural hearing loss: a challenge for radiologists J. Casselman 1, B. De Foer 2 ; 1 Bruges/BE, 2 Antwerp/BE 1. To learn which imaging techniques should be used. 2. To become familiar with the different causes of sensorineural hearing loss. 3. To recognise and differentiate the imaging findings in the most frequent causes of sensorineural hearing loss. 17:00 A-621 C. Tinnitus and vertigo: diagnostic algorithm R.B. de Bondt; Zwolle/NL 1. To learn the most common causes. 2. To understand imaging strategies. 3. To become familiar with typical imaging findings. 16:00 17:30 Room P Vascular RC 1915 Lower extremity venous insufficiency 16:00 A-622 Chairman s introduction D.J. West; Stoke-on-Trent/UK 16:05 A-623 A. Venous anatomy and ultrasound H. Moschouris; Piraeus/GR 1. To become familiar with normal venous anatomy the indications for imaging and the US techniques. 2. To learn about the typical and atypical appearances of venous pathology. 3. To understand the potential pitfalls and limitations of US. 16:28 A-624 B. Rare venous diseases of the lower extremities M. Greiner 1, P. Lemasle 1, A. Bisdorff-Bresson 2 ; 1 Neuilly sur Seine/FR, 2 Paris/FR 1. To become familiar with anatomic variants. 2. To learn about anatomy with specific congenital disorders, such as persistent sciatic vein Klippel Trenaunay-Weber syndrome. 3. To become familiar with differential diagnosis and pitfalls in the diagnosis of the above conditions. 16:51 A-625 C. CT venography and MR venography G. O Sullivan, D.G. Lohan; Galway/IE 1. To learn about its indications and pros and cons compared to US. 2. To become familiar with imaging parameters, contrast media protocols and flow dependent and flow independent techniques. 3. To become familiar with pitfalls and artefacts that affect correct evaluation of imaging findings after endovascular treatments. 16:00 17:30 Room Q Paediatric RC 1912 Normal variants in paediatric imaging: not to be confused with disease Moderator: Ø.E. Olsen; London/UK 16:00 A-626 A. Brain A. Rossi; Genoa/IT 1. To learn about normal variants in the neonatal and child s brain. 2. To understand the typical imaging characteristics of normal variants that should suffice for correct interpretation. 3. To become familiar with the differentiation between normal variants and disease. 16:30 A-627 B. Chest and abdomen S.G.F. Robben; Maastricht/NL 1. To learn about normal variants in the neonatal and paediatric chest and abdomen. 2. To familiarise oneself with the imaging appearances of common normal variants. 3. To understand how to differentiate between normal variants and disease. 17:00 A-628 C. Musculoskeletal F. Saez; Bilbao/ES 1. To learn about normal variants in the neonatal and paediatric musculoskeletal system. 2. To familiarise oneself with the imaging appearances of common normal variants. 3. To understand how to differentiate between normal variants and disease. 4. To learn how to integrate age, location and clinical history with the radiological features before establishing a diagnosis. A-620 A-628 Panel discussion: 17:14 Which imaging modality is best for planning endovascular management? Monday 211

214

215 Scientific Sessions Session numbers are prefixed by SS Presentation numbers are prefixed by the letter B

216 Scientific Sessions B-0001 B :30 12:00 Room B Cardiac SS 103 CT and MRI in preoperative and postoperative evaluation Moderators: G.A. Krombach; Giessen/DE, R. Sanz-Requena; Valencia/ES 10:30 B-0001 Multiparametric functional MRI for postoperative follow-up in patients with the ROSS-procedure: comparison of the aortic root replacement versus the subcoronary implantation technique C.O. Ritter 1, U. Baier 1, S.P. Sommer 1, R. Leyh 1, H. Köstler 1, D. Hahn 1, M.J. Beer 2 ; 1 Würzburg/DE, 2 Graz/AT 10:39 B-0002 Flow pattern evaluation of apico-aortic conduit (CORREX) in high-risk patients with severe aortic stenosis: a cardiac magnetic resonance (MR) investigation C. Mantini, A.R. Cotroneo, A. Tartaro, E. Di Gianfrancesco, C. Canosa, M. Foschi, D. Marinelli, G. Di Giammarco; Chieti/IT 10:48 B-0003 Pre- and postinterventional evaluation of cardiac function in patients suffering from mitral regurgitation using cardiac MRI P. Krumm, C.S. Zuern, T.H. Wurster, C. Bretschneider, S. Mangold, B. Klumpp, A. May, C.D. Claussen, U. Kramer; Tübingen/DE 10:57 B-0004 Pre- and post-interventional analysis of myocardial strain in patients undergoing mitral valve clipping using cardiac MRI P. Krumm, C.S. Zuern, T.H. Wurster, A. Seeger, S. Mangold, B. Klumpp, C.D. Claussen, A. May, U. Kramer; Tübingen/DE 11:06 B-0005 Pressure overloaded right ventricles: importance of trabeculae in evaluation of RV function by CMR M.M.P. Driessen 1, V.J.M. Baggen 1, H.G. Freling 2, F.J. Meijboom 1, G.T. Sieswerda 1, R.J. Snijder 3, T. Leiner 1, T.P. Willems 2 ; 1 Utrecht/NL, 2 Groningen/NL, 3 Nieuwegein/NL 11:15 B-0006 Opacification ratios to detect changes in coronary flow by computed tomography angiography comparison between pre- and post-stented lesions P.B. Rizzi 1, R.J. Cerci 1, P. Lemos 2, C.E. Rochitte 2, I. Gottlieb 3, R.T. George 1, J. Texter 1, A.C. Lardo 1, J.A.C. Lima 1 ; 1 Baltimore, MD/US, 2 São Paulo/BR, 3 Rio de Janeiro/BR 11:24 B-0007 Additional value of cardiac computed tomography to assess prosthetic valvular dysfunctions A.A. Azarine, N. Hrynchyshyn, A. Samadi, L. Perdrix, G. Ashrafpoor, A. Redheuil, L. Macron, E. Mousseaux, B. Diebold; Paris/FR 11:33 B-0008 Cardiac computed tomography angiography results in diagnostic and therapeutic change in prosthetic heart valve endocarditis J. Habets 1, W. Tanis 1, L.A. van Herwerden 1, W.P.T.M. Mali 1, R.B.A. van den Brink 2, B.A.J.M. de Mol 2, S.A.J. Chamuleau 1, R.P.J. Budde 1 ; 1 Utrecht/NL, 2 Amsterdam/NL 11:42 B-0009 Anatomical variance of coronary venous system in dual source computed tomography M. Krupinski, M. Kuniewicz, J. Lelakowski, M. Irzyk, B. Laskowicz, M. Urbanczyk; Krakow/PL 11:51 B-0010 Feasibility of MRI in patients with implanted subcutaneous loop recorder type REVEAL XT : data from the surprise study L. Christensen, A. Christensen, H. Christensen; Copenhagen/DK 10:30 12:00 Room C Neuro SS 111 From structure to function Moderators: S.J. Bakke; Oslo/NO, B. Ertl-Wagner; Munich/DE 10:30 B-0011 Regional cortical thickness is associated with neurocognitive profile in progressive myoclonus epilepsy type 1 (EPM1, Unverricht-Lundborg disease) S. Suoranta 1, E. Niskanen 2, M. Äikiä 1, P. Koskenkorva 1, M. Könönen 1, R. Kälviäinen 1, R. Vanninen 1 ; 1 Kuopio/FI, 2 Vaasa/FI 10:39 B-0012 Language impairment and reduced structural connectivity in Rolandic epilepsy R. Besseling, J. Jansen, W.H. Backes; Maastricht/NL 10:48 B-0013 Relative contributory role of Interictal/Ictal SPECT, interictal PET, MR spectroscopy and T2 relaxometry in localisation of seizure focus in temporal lobe epilepsies: a metaanalysis and systematic review V. Venugopal 1, S.K. Puri 1, I. Afshan 1, A.D. Prabhu 2 ; 1 New Delhi/IN, 2 Chennai/IN 10:57 B-0014 Subtle changes in normal appearing white matter precede development of white matter lesions B.F.J. Verhaaren, M. de Groot, R. de Boer, S. Klein, A. Hofman, A. van der Lugt, M.A. Ikram, W.J. Niessen, M.W. Vernooij; Rotterdam/NL 11:06 B-0015 Retrograde degeneration of optic nerve and visual pathway in open angle glaucoma: a morphologic evaluation using 3T MRI S. Sidek, F. A. Rahman, K. Rahmat, N. Mohd Ramli, N. Mohd Ramli; Kuala Lumpur/MY 11:15 B-0016 High blood pressure and cerebral white matter lesion progression in the general population B.F.J. Verhaaren, M.W. Vernooij, R. de Boer, A. Hofman, W.J. Niessen, A. van der Lugt, M.A. Ikram; Rotterdam/NL 11:24 B-0017 MRI texture analysis in Unverricht-Lundborg disease reveals more complex and heterogeneous textural appearance in thalami, putamen and amygdala than in controls K.K. Holli 1, S. Suoranta 2, E. Niskanen 3, P. Dastidar 1, H. Eskola 1, R. Vanninen 2 ; 1 Tampere/FI, 2 Kuopio/FI, 3 Vaasa/FI 11:33 B-0018 Structural MRI-assisted diagnosis of major depressive disorder using surface-based volumetric parameter classification approach L. Qiu, S. Lui, X. Huang, J. Zhang, X. Yang, Q. Yue, L. Zou, Q. Gong; Chengdu/CN 11:42 B-0019 Resting-state networks, and peculiarities of the brain metabolism in patients with Parkinson s disease (PD) and different level of cognitive impairment (CI): fmri and 1 H MRS study Z.Z. Rozhkova, O.M. Omelchenko; Kiev/UA 214

217 Scientific Sessions 11:51 B-0020 Relationship among fractional anisotropy (FA) values, EEG activity and cognitive status in mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer s disease (AD) patients F. Pitocco, G. Curcio, F. Scrascia, Y. Errante, A. Giona, C. Mallio, F. Vernieri, B. Beomonte Zobel, C. Quattrocchi; Rome/IT 10:30 12:00 Room D1 Chest SS 104 Lung cancer: from tissue characterisation to treatment Moderators: E. Castañer; Sabadell/ES, N. Tacelli; Brussels/BE 10:30 B-0021 Prognostic value of CT perfusion parameters in patients with early stage resectable non-small cell lung cancer L. Calandriello, A.R. Larici, A. del Ciello, G. Rindi, G. Petrone, L. Bonomo; Rome/IT 10:39 B-0022 Dynamic volume perfusion CT in patients with lung cancer: baseline perfusion characteristics of different histological subtypes J. Shi 1, C. Fink 2, G. Schmid-Bindert 3, L.R. Pilz 3, P. Apfaltrer 3, H. Haubenreisser 3, U. Haberland 4, S.O. Schönberg 3, T. Henzler 3 ; 1 Shanghai/CN, 2 Celle/DE, 3 Mannheim/DE, 4 Forchheim/DE 10:48 B-0023 Correlation between grade and histological subtype of pulmonary adenocarcinoma and [18F] fluorodeoxyglucose standardized uptake value after evaluation by PET/CT L. Xu, A. Burke, S. Feigenberg; Baltimore, MD/US 10:57 B-0024 Which response criteria best help predict survival of patients with EGFR-mutant lung adenocarcinoma following EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitor? J. Lee, H. Lee, J.-H. Kim, M.-J. Ahn, H. Kang, K. Lee; Seoul/KR 11:06 B-0025 Radiogenomic approach to identify anaplastic lymphoma kinase-positive lung adenocarcinoma C. Jeong, H. Lee, J. Han, J. Jeong, K. Lee, K. Park, M.-J. Ahn, B.-T. Kim; Seoul/KR 11:15 B-0026 Mucinous vs nonmucinous adenocarcinoma in situ (AIS): imaging features, EGFR mutation and EGFR gene copy number status, and prognosis D. Kim, H.-J. Lee, J. Wi, S. Lee, C. Park, J. Goo; Seoul/KR 11:24 B-0027 Validation of a computed-tomography-based risk model for the prediction of cardiovascular disease in a lung cancer screening setting P.M. Jairam, P.A. de Jong, W.P.T.M. Mali, Y. van der Graaf; Utrecht/NL 11:33 B-0028 Diagnostic accuracy of virtual 18F-FDG PET/CT bronchoscopy for the detection of lymph node metastases in non-small cell lung cancer patients M.C. Herbrik 1, C. Buchbender 2, J. Treffert 3, B. Geiger 4, V. Hartung-Knemeyer 1, H. Kühl 1, G. Antoch 2, M. Forsting 1, T.A. Heusner 2 ; 1 Essen/DE, 2 Düsseldorf/DE, 3 Knoxville, TN/US, 4 Princeton, NJ/US 11:42 B-0029 Percutaneous transthoracic CT-guided biopsy using large core needles: initial experience U.C. Lalji, J.E. Wildberger, M. Bendek, M. Das; Maastricht/NL 11:51 B-0030 Primary lung cancer treated using radiofrequency ablation: two-year outcome data J. Beeson, N. Wickings, V. Anikin, S. Kaul, P. Dalal; London/UK 10:30 12:00 Room D2 Interventional Radiology SS 109 Chemoembolisation and radioembolisation of liver tumours Moderators: A. Denys; Lausanne/CH, P.M. Paprottka; Munich/DE 10:30 B-0031 Repeated transarterial chemoembolization in the treatment of liver metastases of colorectal cancer: local tumour control and survival data T. Gruber-Rouh, N.N.N. Naguib, M. Beeres, B. Bodelle, S. Zangos, N. Nour Eldin, R. Hammerstingl, T.J. Vogl; Frankfurt/DE 10:39 B-0032 Holmium-166 radioembolisation: results of a phase 1, dose escalation study in patients with unresectable, chemorefractory liver metastases the HEPAR trial M.L.J. Smits, J.F.W. Nijsen, M.A.A.J. van den Bosch, M.G.E.H. Lam, M.A.D. Vente, W.P.T.M. Mali, A.D. van het Schip, B.A. Zonnenberg, J.F. Prince; Utrecht/NL 10:48 B-0033 Repetitive transarterial chemoembolization as a palliative treatment option for liver metastases from cutaneous malignant melanoma: indications, outcomes and role in patient s management T. Gruber-Rouh, P. Weisser, N.N.N. Naguib, K. Eichler, M. Harth, S. Zangos, N.- E.A. Nour-Eldin, T.J. Vogl; Frankfurt/DE 10:57 B-0034 Experimental study on transarterial administration of survivin sirna combined with transarterial chemoembolization in rats with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) T.J. Vogl 1, J. Qian 2, A. Tran 1, E. Oppermann 1, U. Imlau 1, Y. Hamidavi 1, H. Korkusuz 1, W.O. Bechstein 1 ; 1 Frankfurt a. Main/DE, 2 Wuhan/CN 11:06 B-0035 Role of transarterial chemoembolization as bridging strategy in T2 HCC patients on the waiting list E. Bozzi, I. Bargellini, F. Turini, A. Cicorelli, R. Cioni, C. Bartolozzi; Pisa/IT 11:15 B-0036 Semi-automatic volumetric tumour segmentation for hepatocellular carcinoma: comparison between C-arm cone-beam computed tomography and MRI V. Tacher 1, M. Lin 2, M. Chao 1, L. Gjesteby 1, N. Bhagat 1 ; 1 Baltimore, MD/US, 2 Briarcliff Manor, NY/US 11:24 B-0037 Transcatheter arterial chemoembolisation of hepatocellular carcinoma in transplant patients: smaller bead diameter and hypervascularity lead to higher tumour necrosis M. Hakky, S. Amirifeli, C. Wald, C. Molgaard, H. Ahari; Burlington, MA/US 11:33 B-0038 Initial RECIST tumour reduction as a predictive parameter for transarterial chemoembolisation treatment success in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma D.B. Hasdemir, B.C. Meyer, N. Schweitzer, A. Vogel, C. von Falck, H. Rosenthal, F. Wacker, T. Rodt; Hannover/DE B-0020 B-0038 Thursday 215

218 Scientific Sessions B-0039 B :42 B-0039 Intraprocedural parenchymal blood volume measurement using repetitive C-arm CT in patient with hepatocellular carcinoma and breast cancer during TACE: therapy response and evaluation T.J. Vogl, S. Blösser, P. Schäfer, E. Mbalisike, S. Zangos; Frankfurt a. Main/DE 11:51 B-0040 Study on the effect of chemoembolization combined with microwave ablation for the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma in rats T.J. Vogl 1, J. Qian 2, U. Imlau 1, Y. Hamidavi 1, H. Korkusuz 1, E. Oppermann 1, W.O. Bechstein 1 ; 1 Frankfurt a. Main/DE, 2 Wuhan/CN 10:30 12:00 Room E1 Musculoskeletal SS 110 Shoulder and hand Moderators: C. Schüller-Weidekamm; Vienna/AT, M. Shahabpour; Brussels/BE 10:30 B-0041 Diagnosing adhesive capsulitis of shoulder on sonography alone: is it possible? A. Tandon, S. Dewan, S. Bhatt, A.K. Jain; New Delhi/IN 10:39 B-0042 MR imaging of glenoid bone loss K.R. Lee, J.F. Griffith, W.A. Ng, M. Tong, S. Nimish; Hong Kong/HK 10:48 B-0043 Rotator cuff tendon tear size and retraction and quantification of muscle fatty infiltration using chemical shift-based water-fat MR imaging S. Lee, L. Nardo, R. Lucas, D. Karampinos, J. Carballido-Gamio, A. Lai, C.B. Ma, T. Link, R. Krug; San Francisco, CA/US 10:57 B-0044 Comparison of 3D turbo spin-echo space sequences with conventional 2D MRI sequences to assess the shoulder joint J.K. Kloth 1, M. Winterstein 1, M. Akbar 1, E. Meyer 2, D. Paul 2, H.-U. Kauczor 1, M.- A. Weber 1 ; 1 Heidelberg/DE, 2 Erlangen/DE 11:06 B-0045 Evaluation of MR-arthrography in identifying bony Bankart lesions: usefulness of thin-slice T1 weighted GRE sequences G. Foti, E. Oliboni, L. Romano; Negrar/IT 11:15 B-0046 Superior labral dimension of the glenoid labrum on direct MR arthrography (MRA): relationship with presence of SLAP T. Im 1, J.-A. Choi 1, G. Lee 1, J. Oh 1, S. Hong 2, H. Kang 1 ; 1 Seongnam/KR, 2 Seoul/KR 11:24 B-0047 Evaluation of concomitant osseous carpal injuries in patients with distal radial fractures in MDCT A. von Schneider-Egestorf, C. von Falck, B. Meyer, F. Wacker, H. Rosenthal; Hannover/DE 11:33 B-0048 Normal anatomy and variants of the trapeziometacarpal joint at MR imaging in asymptomatic volunteers A. Hirschmann, R. Sutter, A. Schweizer, C.W.A. Pfirrmann; Zurich/CH 11:42 B-0049 Safety of dorsal wrist arthroscopy portals: a magnetic resonance study R. Cazzato, R. Del Vescovo, F. Giurazza, R.F. Grasso, B. Beomonte Zobel; Rome/IT 11:51 B-0050 Comparison of three-dimensional indirect isotropic MR arthrography and conventional MR arthrography for the diagnosis of rotator cuff tears J. Lee, Y. Yoon, S. Ji; Seoul/KR 10:30 12:00 Room E2 GI Tract SS 101a Acute bowel diseases: challenges and solutions Moderators: J. Dormagen; Oslo/NO, S. Leschka; St. Gallen/CH 10:30 B-0051 The emperor s new clothes? An evaluation of the accuracy of transabdominal ultrasound in diagnosing acute appendicitis P. Yoong 1, C.A. Johnson 2, S. Fernando 1, J.W. Graham 1 ; 1 King s Lynn/UK, 2 London/UK 10:39 B-0052 Added value of ultrasound re-evaluation for patients with equivocal CT findings of acute appendicitis: a preliminary study J. Sim, H. Kim, J. Yeon, B. Suh, K. Kim, Y. Ha, S. Paik; Sungnam-si, Gyeonggi-do/KR 10:48 B-0053 Reduced Z-axis coverage at multidetector-row CT to decrease radiation dose and maintain diagnostic accuracy in adults suspected of acute appendicitis N. Brassart 1, C. Winant 2, D. Tack 3, P. Gevenois 1, V. de Maertelaer 1, C. Keyzer 1 ; 1 Brussels/BE, 2 Mons/BE, 3 Baudour/BE 10:57 B-0055 The effectiveness of multidetector computed tomography in patients that underwent immediate intestinal resection due to acute abdominal pain M. İnci, F. Özkan, S. Bozkurt, M. Yüksel, O. Peker; Kahramanmaraş/TR 11:06 B-0056 In the evaluation of patients with obscure gastrointestinal bleed, does MDCT angiography have a role? C.B. Kulkarni, S. Moorthy, S.K. Pullara, R.R. Kannan, P.V. Ramchandran, S. Srinivasan; Kochi/IN 11:15 B-0057 Venous mesenteric ischaemia vs acute arterial mesenteric ischaemia with reperfusion: similarities and differences D. Berritto 1, F. Iacobellis 1, M.P. Belfiore 1, M.A. Mazzei 2, L. Saba 3, R. Di Mizio 4, S. Cappabianca 1, A. Rotondo 1, R. Grassi 1 ; 1 Naples/IT, 2 Siena/IT, 3 Cagliari/IT, 4 Penne/IT 11:24 B-0058 Non-occlusive mesenteric ischaemia (NOMI) with and without reperfusion: CT features useful for diagnosis and their prognostic value M.A. Mazzei 1, G. Imbriaco 1, S. Guerrini 1, N. Cioffi Squitieri 1, E. Foderà 1, D. Berritto 2, P. Mercuri 1, F.G. Mazzei 1, L. Volterrani 1 ; 1 Siena/IT, 2 Naples/IT 11:33 B-0059 Diagnosis of acute arterial mesenteric ischaemia with and without reperfusion using 7T-MRI in an animal model D. Berritto 1, F. Iacobellis 1, M.P. Belfiore 1, M.A. Mazzei 2, L. Saba 3, M. Scaglione 4, S. Cappabianca 1, A. Rotondo 1, R. Grassi 1 ; 1 Naples/IT, 2 Siena/IT, 3 Cagliari/IT, 4 Castel Volturno/IT 216

219 Scientific Sessions 11:42 B-0060 The potential benefit of abdominal CT to help differentiate between strains of clostridium difficile S.N. Reddy, S. Taori, I.R. Poxton, F. Ewing, D. Brown, J.T. Murchison; Edinburgh/UK 10:30 12:00 Room F1 Oncologic Imaging SS 116 Perfusion CT and MRI: ready for clinical practice Moderators: S. Delorme; Heidelberg/DE, F.A. Gallagher; Cambridge/UK 10:30 B-0061 Functional MRI changes in follow-up after external beam radiation therapy of the prostate A.M. Weidner; Mannheim/DE 10:39 B-0062 Acute changes in rectal cancer perfusion CT parameters during short-course radiotherapy correlate with radiological response to therapy J.M. Franklin, E.J. Hill, T. Pwint, F.V. Gleeson, R.A. Sharma, E.M. Anderson; Oxford/UK 10:48 B-0063 CT perfusion for evaluation of early treatment response of liver metastases after 90 Y-radioembolisation C.S. Reiner, F. Morsbach, B.-R. Sah, N. Schäfer, T. Pfammatter, H. Alkadhi; Zurich/CH 10:57 B-0064 First-pass perfusion CT on 256-detector row CT in the quantitative assessment of perfusion map for solid malignant neoplastic liver lesions: preliminary results O. Minutolo, D. Ippolito, A.C. Cadonici, P.A. Bonaffini, C.R.G.L. Talei Franzesi, S. Sironi; Monza/IT 11:06 B-0065 CT perfusion imaging in stage II-III non-small cell lung cancer patients undergoing chemo-radiotherapyevaluation of metabolic tumour activity M. Das, B. Reymen, P. Lambin, H. Sharifi, J.E. Wildberger, D. De Ruysscher, W. van Elmpt; Maastricht/NL 11:15 B-0066 Imaging of antivascular effects of multikinase inhibitors (MKI) in patients with metastatic renal cell cancer (mrcc) using dynamic contrast- enhanced CT (DCE-CT, perfusion CT): a pilot study A. Sterzik, M. Staehler, J. Casuscelli, M. Karpitschka, F. Schwarz, M.F. Reiser, A. Graser; Munich/DE 11:24 B-0067 Early vs late recurrent glioblastomas: added value of T1-weighted perfusion MR imaging compared with T2- weighted perfusion MR imaging S.J. Kang, H.S. Kim, S.J. Kim, C.G. Choi; Seoul/KR 11:33 B-0068 Monitoring the antivascular effects of a novel multimodal therapy with dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI (DCE-MRI) in an experimental human squamous cell carcinoma model A. Sterzik, P. Paprottka, P. Zengel, S. Roßpunkt, E. Baloch, M. Moser, M.F. Reiser, K. Nikolaou, C. Cyran; Munich/DE 11:42 B-0069 Fractional 3D quantification of early contrastenhancing tumour fractions on dynamic MRI acquisitions in soft tissue sarcoma: prospective comparison with partial tissue-stained pathological tumour viability estimates A.K. Singh, W. Cai, A. Imanzadeh, S. Saini, G. Harris; Boston, MA/US 11:51 B-0070 A perfusion CT-derived patient-specific arterial input function for pharmacokinetic modelling of dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI J.M. Franklin, M. Enescu, E.J. Hill, R.A. Sharma, J.A. Schnabel, F.V. Gleeson, E.M. Anderson; Oxford/UK 10:30 12:00 Room F2 Breast SS 102 Breast MRI: improving accuracy and tissue characterisation Moderators: R. Schulz-Wendtland; Erlangen/DE, M. Telesca; Rome/IT 10:30 B-0071 BI-RADS -adapted combined contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance and diffusion-weighted imaging reading for multiparametric imaging of breast lesions at 3T improves diagnostic accuracy K. Pinker-Domenig, H. Bickel, T.H. Helbich, S. Gruber, S. Trattnig, W. Bogner; Vienna/AT 10:39 B-0072 The additional value of expert reading of 3 Tesla breast MRI in patients with microcalcifications on mammography L.G. Merckel 1, H.M. Verkooijen 1, N.H.G.M. Peters 1, R.M. Mann 2, W.B. Veldhuis 1, K.M. Duvivier 1, T. van Dalen 1, P.H.M. Peeters 1, M.A.A.J. van den Bosch 1 ; 1 Utrecht/NL, 2 Nijmegen/NL 10:48 B-0073 Which threshold level is appropriate for analysis of the computer-aided detection system of breast MRI? Effect of pathologic tumour characteristics and biological markers S. Song 1, B. Seo 1, K.-W. Hwang 2, K. Cho 3, O. Woo 3 ; 1 Ansan/KR, 2 Incheon/KR, 3 Seoul/KR 10:57 B-0074 The additional value of diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) in MR-mammography: should we still look at curves? P.A.T. Baltzer 1, M. Dietzel 2, J.L. Halder 3, W.A. Kaiser 3 ; 1 Vienna/AT, 2 Erlangen/DE, 3 Jena/DE 11:06 B-0075 Apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) measurements of breast lesions: most suspect area versus complete lesion assessment P.A.T. Baltzer 1, M. Dietzel 2, J.L. Halder 3, W.A. Kaiser 3 ; 1 Vienna/AT, 2 Erlangen/DE, 3 Jena/DE 11:15 B-0076 Combined contrast-enhanced MRI (CE-MRI) and 3D multivoxel proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (3D-1H-MRSI) at 3 Tesla enables an improved characterization of breast tumours K. Pinker-Domenig, S. Gruber, W. Bogner, B. Brück, H. Bickel, P.A.T. Baltzer, T. Helbich; Vienna/AT B-0060 B-0076 Thursday 217

220 Scientific Sessions B-0077 B :24 B-0077 Application of breast MRI vs. classical prognostic factors to predict survival in patients with primary breast cancer M. Dietzel 1, P.A.T. Baltzer 2, R. Zoubi 3, H. Habrecht 4, C. Jerowski 4, I.B. Runnebaum 4, W.A. Kaiser 4 ; 1 Erlangen/DE, Jena/DE, 2 Jena/DE, Vienna/AT, 3 Bielefeld/DE, Jena/DE, 4 Jena/DE 11:33 B-0079 Diagnosis of breast lesions using proton MRspectroscopy at 1.5 and 3 Tesla: a systematic review and meta-analysis P.A.T. Baltzer 1, M. Dietzel 2, W.A. Kaiser 3 ; 1 Vienna/AT, 2 Erlangen/DE, 3 Jena/DE 11:42 B-0080 Volumetric assessment of MRI enhancement kinetics of invasive breast cancers with a post-processing software with correlation of hormonal receptor subtypes L.C.H. Leong 1, E. Gombos 2 ; 1 Singapore/SG, 2 Boston, MA/US 10:30 12:00 Room G/H Genitourinary SS 107 Prostate imaging Moderators: S. Morozov; Moscow/RU, J. Richenberg; Brighton/UK 10:30 B-0081 Reliability of the PI-RADS scoring system for functional prostate MRI M. Quentin, L. Schimmoeller, C. Arsov, R. Rabenalt, R. Lanzman, G. Antoch, P. Albers, D. Blondin; Düsseldorf/DE 10:39 B-0082 Preoperative multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mp-mri) reduces positive surgical margins after robotic-assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy (RALP): experience in 136 patients S. Alessi, G. Petralia, G. Musi, A. Alconchel, G. Bardo, S. Raimondi, G. Renne, O. De Cobelli, M. Bellomi; Milan/IT 10:48 B-0083 The cost-effectiveness of MRI and MR-guided biopsy versus TRUS-guided biopsy in the diagnosis of prostate cancer S. Crienen, M. de Rooij, J.O. Barentsz, J.A. Witjes, J.P.C. Grutters, M.M. Rovers; Nijmegen/NL 10:57 B-0084 Quantitative shear wave elastography: detection and characterisation of prostate cancer on 105 patients J.-M. Correas, A. Khairoune, A.-M. Tissier, V. Vassiliu, A. Méjean, O. Hélénon; Paris/FR 11:06 B T multi-parametric ultrahigh b values (b 2000) MR imaging for detection and localisation of peripheral and transition zone prostate cancer G. Manenti, M. Nezzo, S. Altobelli, M. Antonicoli, S. Capuani, G. Simonetti; Rome/IT 11:15 B-0086 Analysis of the dependence on b-values of DWI signal model outcomes in peripheral healthy and cancerous prostate tissues S. Lucarini, L.N. Mazzoni, S. Chiti, S. Busoni, C. Gori, I. Menchi; Florence/IT 11:24 B-0087 Comparison of diffusional kurtosis imaging and monoexponential DWI model in distinguishing healthy from cancerous peripheral prostate tissues S. Lucarini, L.N. Mazzoni, S. Chiti, S. Busoni, C. Gori, I. Menchi; Florence/IT 11:33 B-0088 MRI+MRSI reliably detects and excludes high-grade prostate cancer in patients with elevated PSA G.M. Villeirs, J. Schatteman, P.J. De Visschere, G.O. De Meerleer, N. Lumen, W. Oosterlinck; Gent/BE 11:42 B-0089 Correlation between 1H-MR spectroscopy and haematochemical evaluation (PSA) in patients undergoing radiation therapy for prostate cancer F. Barchetti, V. Panebianco, A. Pace, V. Forte, V. Forte, V. Tombolini, C. Catalano; Rome/IT 11:51 B-0090 The role of 3 T diffusion imaging in prostate cancer recurrence after radical prostatectomy F. Barchetti, V. Panebianco, V. Forte, A. Pace, V. Tombolini, C. Catalano; Rome/IT 10:30 12:00 Room I/K Abdominal Viscera SS 101b Liver fibrosis and cirrhosis: elastography and biomarkers Moderators: R. Faschingbauer; Innsbruck/AT, T.J. Kroencke; Berlin/DE 10:30 B-0091 Estimation of reference values for liver elasticity in biopsy-proven normal liver using Supersonic Shear Wave imaging: measurement reliability and effect of steatosis C. Suh, S. Kim, K. Kim; Seoul/KR 10:39 B-0092 Accuracy of a new real-time shear wave elastography technique in the assessment of significant liver fibrosis: preliminary results G. Ferraioli, C. Tinelli, B. Dal Bello, R. Lissandrin, M. Zicchetti, C. Filice; Pavia/IT 10:48 B-0093 MR elastography for predicting progression of cirrhosis U. Motosugi, T. Takamura, T. Ichikawa, K. Sano, H. Morisaka, S. Ichikawa, T. Araki; Yamanshi/JP 10:57 B-0094 Evaluation of shear wave elastography for liver fibrosis quantification A. Guibal, T. Lefort, C. Cohen-Bacrie, G. Renosi, J. Scoazec, J. Dumortier, P. Valette; Lyon/FR 11:06 B-0095 Evaluation of shear wave elastography to monitor development of fibrosis after liver transplantation O. Kolokythas 1, R. Bhattacharya 1, I.W. Liou 1, A. Kang 1, P. Bhargava 1, L.M. Mitsumori 1, C. Cuevas 1, M.F. Bruce 2 ; 1 Seattle, WA/US, 2 Aix-en-Provence/FR 11:15 B-0096 The efficacy of Gadoxetate Disodium-enhanced magnetic resonance (MR) imaging in staging liver fibrosis D.S. Feier 1, C. Balassy 2, N. Bastati-Huber 2, J. Stift 2, R. Badea 1, A. Ba-Ssalamah 2 ; 1 Cluj-Napoca/RO, 2 Vienna/AT 11:24 B-0097 Differential portal venous flow response to terlipressin in normal and cirrhotic rats: non-invasive assessment using phase-contrast MRI M. Chouhan, A. Bainbridge, N. Davies, R. Mookerjee, R. Jalan, S. Walker-Samuel, M. Lythgoe, S. Punwani, S.A. Taylor; London/UK 218

221 Scientific Sessions 11:33 B-0098 Evaluation of T1rho as a potential MR biomarker for liver cirrhosis: comparison of healthy control subjects and patients with liver cirrhosis I. Rauscher 1, C. Ganter 1, P. Martirosian 2, E.J. Rummeny 1, K. Holzapfel 1 ; 1 Munich/DE, 2 Tübingen/DE 11:42 B-0099 Biomarkers of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease diagnosed by 1H SRM 3T J. Martin-Rodriguez, J. Arrebola, J. Gonzalez-Calvin; Granada/ES 11:51 B-0100 Absolute quantification of phosphorus compounds in the liver on a clinical 3T scanner A. Laufs 1, R. Livingstone 2, S. Kahl 1, B. Nowotny 1, B. Klueppelholz 1, G. Giani 1, J. Bunke 3, J.-H. Hwang 1, M. Roden 1 ; 1 Düsseldorf/DE, 2 Vellore/IN, 3 Hamburg/DE 10:30 12:00 Room L/M Physics in Radiology SS 113 Multi modality imaging and MR safety Moderators: O. Ciraj-Bjelac; Belgrade/RS, O. Speck; Magdeburg/DE 10:30 B-0101 MR tumour perfusion measurements: dual echo versus multi-echo approach V. Hietschold, M. Riebisch, A. Abramyuk, M. Laniado, N. Abolmaali; Dresden/DE 10:39 B-0102 PET/MR imaging of the pelvis in the presence of endoprostheses: reducing image artefacts and increasing accuracy through inpainting C.N. Ladefoged, F. Andersen, S. Keller, J. Löfgren, A.E. Hansen, S. Holm, L. Hojgaard, T. Beyer; Copenhagen/DK 10:48 B-0103 Combined PET/MR imaging: the effect of ignoring bone during MR-based attenuation correction in oncology imaging J. Saa, J. Löfgren, R. Sersar, M. Aznar, C. Ladefoged, F. Andersen, R. Larsen, T. Beyer; Copenhagen/DK 10:57 B-0104 Assessment of the performance of TOF-PET and PET reconstructions on edge definition of cold regions in the presence of solitary hot spots and low count-rate studies Y. Bouchareb 1, M. Masoomi 2, M. Newell 1 ; 1 London/UK, 2 Portsmouth/UK 11:06 B-0105 The incidence of biological effects from 3.0 Tesla (T) MRI compared to 1.5 T: an observational study in 911 consecutive outpatients F. Alghamdi, P. Bertrand, L. Barantin, M.A. Lauvin, X. Cazals, F. Domengie, R. Bibi, D. Herbreteau, J.-P. Cottier; Tours/FR 11:15 B-0106 Static magnetic fields in 1.5 and 3 T MR scanners do not influence perception of pain and touch compared with placebo exposition A. Pomschar, K. Kamm, R. Ruscheweyh, R. Laubender, M.F. Reiser, A. Straube, B. Ertl-Wagner; Munich/DE 11:24 B-0107 Safety and efficiency of low-field magnetic resonance imaging in patients with cardiac rhythm management devices C. Schukro, M. Lee; Vienna/AT 11:33 B-0108 Possible hazardous effect of MR safe metallic implants for workers N. Oberhofer 1, P. Ferrari 2 ; 1 Bolzano/IT, 2 Mattarello/IT 11:42 B-0109 Swedish national study on modality choice and justification of CT, MRI and US examinations in children B. Isberg 1, H. Jorulf 2, U. Svahn 1, S. Richter 1, W. Leitz 1 ; 1 Stockholm/SE, 2 Uppsala/SE 11:51 B-0110 In vitro comparison of ultrasound-based elastography techniques S. Franchi-Abella 1, J.-M. Correas 2, C. Elie 2 ; 1 Le Kremlin-Bicêtre/FR, 2 Paris/FR 10:30 12:00 Room N/O Vascular SS 115 Carotid plaque evaluation Moderators: M.A. Aschauer; Graz/AT, D. Filippiadis; Athens/GR 10:30 B-0111 Arterial stiffness is associated with carotid intraplaque haemorrhage in the general population: the Rotterdam study M. Selwaness, Q. van den Bouwhuijsen, F.U.S. Mattace-Raso, G. Verwoert, A. Hofman, O.H. Franco, J.J. Wentzel, J. Witteman, A. van der Lugt; Rotterdam/NL 10:39 B-0112 Evaluation of carotid atherosclerotic plaque with labbased X-ray phase-contrast imaging H. Hetterich 1, S. Fill 1, M. Willner 2, F. Bamberg 1, J. Herzen 2, A. Hipp 2, M.F. Reiser 1, F. Pfeiffer 2, T. Saam 1 ; 1 Munich/DE, 2 Garching/DE 10:48 B-0113 Meta-analysis and systematic review of the predictive value of carotid plaque haemorrhage by magnetic resonance imaging on cerebrovascular events T. Saam 1, H. Hetterich 1, V. Hoffmann 2, C. Yuan 3, M. Treitl 1, M. Dichgans 1, H. Poppert 1, M.F. Reiser 1, F. Bamberg 1 ; 1 Munich/DE, 2 Neuherberg/DE, 3 Seattle, WA/US 10:57 B-0114 Genetic loci for coronary calcification and serum lipids relate to aortic and carotid calcification D. Bos, M.A. Ikram, A. Isaacs, B.F.J. Verhaaren, A. Hofman, C.M. van Duijn, J.C.M. Witteman, A. van der Lugt, M.W. Vernooij; Rotterdam/NL 11:06 B-0115 Is carotid intima-media (IMT) and extra media thickness (EMT) a surrogate marker of early atherosclerosis in patients with inflammatory bowel disease? A. Oikonomou, E. Astrinakis, P. Zezos, N. Courcoutsakis, A. Mpampali, I. Karatzoglou, G. Kouklakis, P. Prassopoulos; Alexandroupolis/GR 11:15 B-0116 Assessment of microvasculature in atherosclerotic plaque with dynamic contrast-enhanced-mri: model comparison, reproducibility and validation with histology M.E. Kooi 1, M.E. Gaens 1, R.H.M. van Hoof 1, J.C. Sluimer 1, S. Heeneman 1, M.J.A.P. Daemen 2, J.E. Wildberger 1, R.M. Kwee 1, W.H. Backes 1 ; 1 Maastricht/NL, 2 Amsterdam/NL 11:24 B-0117 Effect of expansive arterial remodelling on clinical presentation and plaque composition: an in vivo MRI study of the carotid arteries A. Helck 1, M. Buchholz 1, A. Rominger 1, C. Yuan 2, M.F. Reiser 1, K. Nikolaou 1, M. Dichgans 1, A. Karpinska 1, T. Saam 1 ; 1 Munich/DE, 2 Seattle, WA/US B-0098 B-0117 Thursday 219

222 Scientific Sessions B-0118 B :33 B-0118 Determination of the vascular input function using magnitude or phase-based MRI: influence on dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI model parameters in carotid plaques R.H.M. van Hoof 1, M.T.B. Truijman 1, E. Hermeling 1, R.J. van Oostenbrugge 1, R.J. van der Geest 2, M.J.A.P. Daemen 3, J.E. Wildberger 1, W.H. Backes 1, M.E. Kooi 1 ; 1 Maastricht/NL, 2 Leiden/NL, 3 Amsterdam/NL 11:42 B-0119 Low does CT angiography using iterative reconstruction for the assessment of carotid artery stenosis L. Crush, M. O Keeffe, B. Normoyle, F. O Neill, E.M. Canniff, P.D. Mc Laughlin, S. O Neill, O. O Connor, M.M. Maher; Cork/IE 11:51 B-0120 Determining the vulnerable plaque: correlation between 18F-FDG PET and dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI in atherosclerotic plaques of symptomatic patients M.T.B. Truijman, R.M. Kwee, R.H.M. van Hoof, R.J. van Oostenbrugge, W.H. Mess, J.E. Wildberger, W.H. Backes, J.A. Bucerius, M.E. Kooi; Maastricht/NL 10:30 12:00 Room P Emergency Radiology SS 117 An update on emergency thoracoabdominal imaging Moderators: B. Feragalli; Chieti/IT, A. Huete; Santiago/CL 10:30 B-0121 Emergency CT: what is missed at first reading? A. Platon, G. Varnay, C.D. Becker, P.-A. Poletti; Geneva/CH 10:39 B-0122 Traumatic aortic injury: what is changing? J.M. Artigas 1, M. Martí De Gracia 2, J.A. Soto 3, A. Garcia-Valiente 1, M. Marini 4, P. Parrilla 1 ; 1 Zaragoza/ES, 2 Madrid/ES, 3 Boston, MA/US, 4 A Coruña/ES 10:48 B-0123 Comparison between dedicated coronary CT angiogram and triple rule out using 320 multislice CT in cases of acute chest pain Y. Ragab, H. Hamza, H. Awadalla; Cairo/EG 10:57 B-0124 Can the presence of active or recent bleeding in CT angio of acute lower intestinal bleeding be predicted? M. Marti de Gracia 1, J.M. Artigas Martín 2, J.A. Soto 3, A. Borobia 1, A. Vicente 1, G. Garzón 1 ; 1 Madrid/ES, 2 Zaragoza/ES, 3 Boston, MA/US 11:06 B-0125 Accuracy of the AAST organ injury scale as a CT imaging checklist for traumatic liver and spleen injuries G. Homann 1, C.M. Toschke 2, P. Gaßmann 3, U. Hanning 1, W. Heindel 1, V. Vieth 1 ; 1 Münster/DE, 2 Ahlen/DE, 3 Mainz/DE 11:15 B-0126 Comparison of efficacy and safety between distal embolization and augmented embolization techniques for treating blunt splenic injuries with active haemorrhage Y.-C. Wong, L.-J. Wang, C.-H. Wu, H.-W. Chen; Taoyuan/TW 11:24 B-0127 Diagnostic performance of MDCT in the evaluation of bowel obstruction: can the radiologist s experience make a difference? A. Ferri, R. Basilico, N. Civitareale, A. Lella, V. Calamita, A. Cotroneo; Chieti/IT 11:33 B-0128 Diagnosis of bowel obstruction performed by MSCT in emergency department compared with the surgical findings E. Capalbo, F. Sajadidhekrodi, M. Cosentino, M. Peli, M. Lovisatti, A. Kluzer, S. Fornari, M. Cariati; Milan/IT 11:42 B-0129 Accuracy of ultrasonographic diagnosis of acute appendicitis in pregnant women N. Kokhanovsky, A.-R. Zeina, N. Reindorp, A. Levit-Kantor, Y. Glick, A. Nachtigal; Hadera/IL 11:51 B-0130 Quality assessment of out sourced after-hours computed tomography teleradiology reports in a central London University Hospital J. Hohmann 1, P. de Villiers 1, C. Urigo 2, D. Sarpi 1, C. Newerla 3, J. Brookes 1 ; 1 London/UK, 2 Lugano/CH, 3 Basle/CH 10:30 12:00 Room Q Radiographers SS 114 Importance of education in practice Moderators: R. Ribeiro; Lisbon/PT, T. Roding; Haarlem/NL 10:30 B-0131 Risk management in radiology: applying failure mode effects and criticality analysis in computer tomography M. Antoniutti, C. Maso, N. Vecchiato, S. Doratiotto; Treviso/IT 10:39 B-0132 How important is the experience in breast imaging for radiographers performing breast-mri? P. Clauser, V. Londero, C. Molinari, R. Girometti, S. Da Dalt, C. Zuiani, M. Bazzocchi; Udine/IT 10:48 B-0133 Radiography authorship: a European and international review B. Snaith; Wakefield/UK 10:57 B-0134 The influence of clinical placement setting on academic achievement within an undergraduate diagnostic radiography programme E. Lewis, M. Hardy; Bradford/UK 11:06 B-0135 Use of radiation in operating theatres in Finland P. Heikkilä 1, A. Henner 1, P. Tenkanen-Rautakoski 2, M. Pirinen 2, S.-M. Ahonen 1 ; 1 Oulu/FI, 2 Helsinki/FI 11:15 B-0136 Information-seeking behaviour of radiographers L. Sancho 1, A.F.C.L. Abrantes 1, L.P.V. Ribeiro 1, R.P.P. Almeida 1, S.I. Rodrigues 1, C.A. Silva 2 ; 1 Faro/PT, 2 Evora/PT 11:24 B-0137 Dose reduction in computer tomography, the effects of technologist training on the number of extra anatomic images T.W.F. Pappot, M.E.J. Pijl; Arnhem/NL 11:33 B-0138 Evidence-based practice in radiology M. Dias 1, A.F.C.L. Abrantes 1, C.A. Silva 2, R.P.P. Almeida 1, L.P.V. Ribeiro 1, J. Pinheiro 1, K.B. Azevedo 1 ; 1 Faro/PT, 2 Evora/PT 11:42 B-0139 Radiographers quality assurance work: resistance and cooperation R. Gullien, J.G. Andersen, A.E. Haakull; Oslo/NO 220

223 Scientific Sessions 11:51 B-0140 Radiographers knowledge about adverse reactions to iodinated contrast media A. Santos, L. Capitolina, I. Silva, A. Saraiva; Coimbra/PT 10:30 12:00 Room Z Computer Applications SS 105 IT infrastructure, learning support and teleradiology Moderators: B. Gibaud; Rennes/FR, A. Simisker; Tartu/EE 10:30 B-0141 Development of the ViSion ontology D.J. Vining 1, U. Salem 1, C. Popovici 2, L. Jiang 3, C. Duran 1, A. Pitici 2, I. Aghenitei 2, M. Jurca 2, R. Rosu 2 ; 1 Houston, TX/US, 2 Chapel Hill, NC/US, 3 Beijing/CN 10:39 B-0142 IT infrastructure to support secondary use of routinely acquired clinical imaging data for research K. Leung, F. Van der Lijn, H.A. Vrooman, W.J. Niessen, M.C.J.M. Sturkenboom; Rotterdam/NL 10:48 B-0143 Interactive methods improve radiology long-term learning J.C. Pueyo, J. Etxano, P. Slon, R. Zalazar, J. Ros, L. García del Barrio, G. Bastarrika, A. Villanueva; Pamplona/ES 10:57 B-0144 The radiology events register (RaER): incident reporting in radiology C. Mandel 1, T. Schultz 2, N. Hannaford 2, J. Grimm 3 ; 1 Melbourne/AU, 2 Adelaide/AU, 3 Sydney/AU 11:06 B-0145 The liver imaging atlas: an interactive multimodality web-based reference and educational resource of liver imaging O. Kolokythas, S. Zaidi, S. Osman, A.P. Tornow, T.T. Pham, S. Bastawrous, G.S. Phillips, P. Bhargava, D.L. Coy; Seattle, WA/US 11:15 B-0146 Evaluation of teleradiology and telemedicine regarding financial and personnel benefit for regions with low population density M.C. Spoerl, N. Hosten; Greifswald/DE 11:24 B-0147 Fast search for radiology cases in hospital systems via content-based image retrieval G. Langs 1, R. Donner 1, M. Holzer 1, D. Markonis 2, H. Mueller 2, E. Birngruber 1 ; 1 Vienna/AT, 2 Sierre/CH 11:33 B-0148 Internet-based surveys among referring in-hospital clinicians and radiologists: a useful tool to evaluate report quality and interdisciplinary co-operation C. Neumann, O. Khalifa, D. Tscholakoff, G. Mostbeck; Vienna/AT 11:42 B-0149 Cross regional diagnostic radiology network for preoperative assessment of colorectal cancer: preliminary experiences L.C.O. Blomqvist 1, C. Kling-Hassler 1, A. Sjövall 1, T. Almqvist 1, P. Asp 1, H. Walfridsson 2, R. Sundqvist 1, U. Hertin 1 ; 1 Stockholm/SE, 2 Sollentuna/SE 14:00 15:30 Room C Head and Neck SS 208 Head and neck cancer: functional imaging and hybrid modalities Moderators: N. Abolmaali; Dresden/DE, S. Steens; Nijmegen/NL 14:00 B-0150 CT perfusion of head and neck lymph nodes: differentiation between untreated and treated lymphoma A.M. Tawfik 1, N.M. Batouty 1, A.A. Razek 1, S. Eteiba 1, M.A. Shaheed 1, T.J. Vogl 2 ; 1 Mansoura/EG, 2 Frankfurt am Main/DE 14:09 B-0151 Prediction of treatment response in head and neck carcinomas using IVIM-DWI: evaluation of lymph node metastasis T. Hauser 1, M. Essig 2, F.B. Laun 1, M. Münter 3, A. Jensen 1, K.H. Fritsche 1, B. Stieltjes 1 ; 1 Heidelberg/DE, 2 Erlangen/DE, 3 Stuttgart/DE 14:18 B-0152 Combined perfusion-diffusion-weighted MRI for staging of recurrent papillary thyroid cancer: a feasibility study K.N.A. De Paepe, R. Hermans, F. De Keyzer, V. Vander Poorten, S. Nuyts, E. Hauben, B. Decallonne, M. Bex, V. Vandecaveye; Leuven/BE 14:27 B-0153 Diagnostic evaluation of patients with squamous cell cancer of the head and neck after free flap reconstructions the usefulness of functional imaging techniques M. Członkowski, A. Trojanowska, P. Trojanowski, J. Klatka, A. Drop; Lublin/PL 14:36 B-0154 The role of MRI and FDG PET/CT imaging in the detection of unknown primary tumours with cervical metastases A. Lévai; Budapest/HU 14:45 B-0155 Diffusion-weighted MR imaging in characterization of head and neck lesions F.U. Öztürk, F.Y. Dönmez, F. Kural, S. Çetiner, M. Ağıldere; Ankara/TR 14:54 B-0156 Comparison of contrast-enhanced PET/CT and PET/ MRI with only T2-weighted images in patients with head and neck cancer how much MR information is needed in PET/MRI? F.P. Kuhn, M. Hüllner, S.S. Kollias, G.K. Von Schulthess, P. Veit-Haibach; Zurich/CH 15:03 B-0157 Comparison of contrast-enhanced PET/MRI and contrast-enhanced PET/CT in patients with head and neck cancers F.P. Kuhn, M. Hüllner, S.S. Kollias, G.K. Von Schulthess, P. Veit-Haibach; Zurich/CH 15:12 B-0158 Initial clinical results of simultaneous PET/MRI in comparison with PET/CT in patients with head and neck cancer P. Stumpp, K. Kubiessa, S. Purz, M. Gawlitza, A. Kühn, K.G. Steinhoff, A. Boehm, R. Kluge, T. Kahn; Leipzig/DE 15:21 B-0159 Diagnostic accuracy of 18 F-FDG-PET/CT and fused 18 F-FDG-PET-MR images for T and N staging of primary oral malignancies P. Heusch 1, C. Buchbender 1, C. Sproll 1, J. Terjung 2, A. Scherer 1, G. Antoch 1, J. Handschel 1, T.A. Heusner 1 ; 1 Düsseldorf/DE, 2 Essen/DE B-0140 B-0159 Thursday 221

224 Scientific Sessions B-0160 B :00 15:30 Room D1 Chest SS 204 Airways and infiltrative lung diseases Moderators: G.R. Ferretti; Grenoble/FR, C. Mueller-Mang; Vienna/AT 14:00 B-0160 How does iterative image reconstruction effect emphysema quantification with chest CT? H. Jafarov 1, C. Fink 2, H. Haubenreisser 1, M. Meyer 1, P. Apfaltrer 1, S.O. Schönberg 1, T. Henzler 1 ; 1 Mannheim/DE, 2 Celle/DE 14:09 B-0161 Assessing pulmonary perfusion in emphysema: automated quantification of perfused blood volume in dual-energy CTPA F.G. Meinel, A. Graef, S.F. Thieme, F. Bamberg, C. Neurohr, M.F. Reiser, T.R.C. Johnson; Munich/DE 14:18 B-0162 Densitometry on MDCT in cystic fibrosis: radiological evidence for emphysema M.O. Wielpütz 1, O. Weinheimer 2, M. Eichinger 1, M. Wiebel 1, J. Biederer 1, H.-U. Kauczor 1, C.-P. Heussel 1, M.A. Mall 1, M. Puderbach 1 ; 1 Heidelberg/DE, 2 Mainz/DE 14:27 B-0163 The effect of inspiration on airway dimensions measured in CT images from the Danish Lung Cancer Screening Trial J. Petersen 1, M.M.W. Wille 2, L.H. Thomsen 2, A. Feragen 1, A. Dirksen 2, M. de Bruijne 3 ; 1 Copenhagen/DK, 2 Hellerup/DK, 3 Rotterdam/NL 14:36 B-0164 Chronic bronchitis in large airway: airway wall measurements on thin-slice low-dose CT X. Xie, A.E. Dijkstra, J.M. Vonk, M. Oudkerk, H.J.M. Groen, R. Vliegenthart; Groningen/NL 14:45 B-0165 Value of inspiratory and expiratory lung volume und lung density for detection of bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome (BOS): a feasibility study S. Dettmer 1, O. Otten 1, C. de Wall 1, J.-M. Kuhnigk 2, F. Wacker 1, H.-O. Shin 1 ; 1 Hannover/DE, 2 Bremen/DE 14:54 B-0166 Value of density mappings in computed tomography for detection of bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome (BOS) S. Dettmer, T. Kaireit, O. Solyanik, C. de Wall, F. Wacker, H.-O. Shin; Hannover/DE 15:03 B-0167 Feasibility of krypton ventilation for CT imaging of lung ventilation: preliminary animal data A.H. Mahnken 1, G. Jost 2, H. Pietsch 2 ; 1 Marburg/DE, 2 Berlin/DE 15:12 B-0168 Quantification of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis by semiquantitative HRCT score: correlation between radiologists and pulmonary function tests L. Navarro Vilar, M.L. Domingo Montañana, R. Peris Sanchez, E. Fernandez Fabrellas, C. Ramírez Fuentes, J. Vilar Samper; Valencia/ES 15:21 B-0169 High-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) of the lungs in brain dead pigs: a feasibility study G. Bozovic 1, S. Steen 1, T. Sjöberg 1, C. Schaefer-Prokop 2, J. Verschakelen 3, Q. Liao 1, R. Siemund 1, I. Björkman-Burtscher 1 ; 1 Lund/SE, 2 Amersfoort/NL, 3 Leuven/BE 14:00 15:30 Room D2 Interventional Radiology SS 209 Ablation and biopsy of the prostate and the kidney Moderators: J.J. Fütterer; Nijmegen/NL, J. Kettenbach; Berne/CH 14:00 B T magnetic resonance-guided transgluteal biopsies of the prostate in patients with clinically suspected prostate cancer: technique and feasibility B. Bodelle, N.N.N. Naguib, K. Eichler, T.J. Vogl, S. Zangos; Frankfurt/DE 14:09 B-0171 Magnetic resonance-guided biopsy (MRGB) in combination with multiparametric MRI (mpmri) after negative transrectal guided ultrasound (TRUS) biopsy of the prostate S. Polanec, T. Helbich, K. Pinker-Domenig, S. Leitner, P. Brader; Vienna/AT 14:18 B-0172 MRI-guided biopsy of the prostate: evaluation of patient acceptance and adverse effects T. Franiel, N. Egbers, C. Schwenke, A. Maxeiner, C. Stephan, B. Hamm; Berlin/DE 14:27 B-0173 MRI+US fusion-guided prostate biopsy and ablation H. Amalou, S. Xu, P. Pinto, B. Wood; Bethesda, MD/US 14:36 B-0174 Non-invasive focal therapy of organ confined prostate cancer: phase I study using magnetic resonance guided focused ultrasound technology and excision pathology for efficacy assessment A. Napoli, V. Panebianco, M. Anzidei, F. Boni, V. Noce, L. Bertaccini, G. Cartocci, F. Ciolina, C. Catalano; Rome/IT 14:45 B-0175 Technical challenges, pitfalls and obstacles on performing prostatic artery embolisation for benign prostatic hyperplasia H.A.M.R. Rio Tinto, T. Bilhim, L. Fernandes, J. Pereira, J.M. Pisco; Lisbon/PT 14:54 B-0176 Mid-term results of percutaneous image-guided radiofrequency ablation of renal tumours P. Balageas, F. Cornelis, Y. Le Bras, J.-M. Ferrière, A. Ravaud, N. Grenier; Bordeaux/FR 15:03 B-0177 Retrospective study of renal tumors treated with radio frequency ablation at Uppsala University Hospital since 2007: which factors affect ablation results? V. Acosta Ruiz, A. Magnusson, P. Dahlman, E. Brekkan, M. Lönnemark; Uppsala/SE 15:12 B-0178 Irreversible electroporation (IRE) of the pig kidney with involvement of the renal pelvis technical aspects, clinical outcome and 3d lesion analysis C.M. Sommer, M.F. Wachter, S. Fritz, D. Vollherbst, U. Stampfl, N. Bellemann, T. Gockner, T. Mokry; Heidelberg/DE 15:21 B-0179 Retrograde ureteral stent exchange: comparison between the direct grasping and the simple snare technique R. Cazzato, R. Grasso, G. Luppi, E. Faiella, R. Del Vescovo, F. Giurazza, B. Beomonte Zobel; Rome/IT 222

225 Scientific Sessions 14:00 15:30 Room E1 Musculoskeletal SS 210 Lower limb: tricks for improved imaging Moderators: A. Klauser; Innsbruck/AT, L.M. Sconfienza; Milan/IT 14:00 B-0180 MR imaging of articular cartilage at the ankle: utility of axial traction J.S. Bauer, P. Jungmann, C. Schäffeler, M. Sauerschnig, A. Mann, T. Baum, E.J. Rummeny, K. Wörtler; Munich/DE 14:09 B-0181 Do sagittal and coronal alignment of the hindfoot change in upright weight-bearing position? Comparison of upright weight-bearing and supine nonweight-bearing computed tomography A. Hirschmann, C.W.A. Pfirrmann, N. Espinosa, G. Klammer, F.M. Buck; Zurich/CH 14:18 B-0182 MRI in plantar plate disease evaluation: diagnostic value of stress test C. Ottonello, I. D Ambrosio, P. Giuliani, P. Ronconi; Rome/IT 14:27 B-0183 Stable or unstable tear of the medial meniscus of the knee: can weight-bearing MRI solve the problem? A. La Marra, S. Mariani, E. Costantini, A. Conchiglia, A. Barile, C. Masciocchi; L Aquila/IT 14:36 B-0184 Periosteal high volume image-guided injection of recalcitrant medial collateral ligament injuries: a retrospective case series analysis O. Drumm, O. Chan, P. Malliaras, D. Morrissey, N. Maffulli; London/UK 14:45 B-0185 Ischiofemoral impingement, do you want to believe? R. Prada, R. Oca, A. Rocha, L. Fernández, M. Costas, G. Tardáguila; Vigo/ES 14:54 B-0186 US-guided viscosupplementation of the hip: therapeutic efficacy in patients affected by femoroacetabular impingment C. Martini 1, F. Lacelli 2, E. Fabbro 1, G. Ferrero 1, G. Serafini 2 ; 1 Genoa/IT, 2 Pietra Ligure/IT 14:00 15:30 Room E2 GI Tract SS 201a Bowel imaging: protocol optimisation and intervention Moderators: V. Cantisani; Rome/IT, P. Popovic; Ljubljana/SI 14:00 B-0190 Abdominal and pelvic CT: is positive enteric contrast still necessary? Preliminary results of a clinical investigation S. Kammerer, A. Knauer, B. Buerke, C. Schuelke, W.L. Heindel, J. Wessling; Münster/DE 14:09 B-0191 Value of oral effervescent powder administration for multidetector CT evaluation of the oesophagus K.I. Ringe, S. Meyer, F. Wacker, H.-J. Raatschen; Hannover/DE 14:18 B-0192 Prospective study of using balloon duodenography catheters in CT enteroclysis for small bowel diseases K.C.H. Lau, L.M.F. Tee; Hong Kong/HK 14:27 B-0193 Role of preoperative imaging with multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) in the management of patients with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) symptoms, candidate to sleeve surgical revision M. Rengo, D. Caruso, F. Vecchietti, M.M. Maceroni, G. Silecchia, A. Laghi; Latina/IT 14:36 B-0194 Accuracy of MDCT in preoperative definition of maximum tumour diameter in patients with gastric cancer M.A. Mazzei, S. Guerrini, N. Salvini, P. Mercuri, A. Parrinello, N. Cioffi Squitieri, D. Marrelli, F.G. Mazzei, L. Volterrani; Siena/IT 14:45 B-0195 Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) and jejunostomy (PEJ) placement guided by CT fluoroscopy with or without simultaneous endoscopy in otherwise untreatable patients C.G. Trumm 1, R.-T. Hoffmann 2, R.A. Lang 3, H. Winter 1, R. Weidenhagen 1, K.-W. Jauch 1, M.F. Reiser 1, F.W. Spelsberg 1 ; 1 Munich/DE, 2 Dresden/DE, 3 Ottobeuren/DE B-0180 B-0199 Thursday 15:03 B-0187 A new way to measure lower limb length and alignment using 3D models based on biplanar linear radiography: a comparison with measurements on supine CT scans and upright full-length radiographs R. Guggenberger, C.W. Pfirrmann, P. Koch, F. Buck; Zurich/CH 15:12 B-0188 Dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI can assess vascularity within pseudarthrotic clefts and predicts good clinical outcome M.-A. Weber 1, K. Bloess 1, I. Burkholder 2, D. Bender 1, G. Schmidmaier 1, H.- U. Kauczor 1, O. Schoierer 1 ; 1 Heidelberg/DE, 2 Zweibrücken/DE 15:21 B-0189 Osteoidosteoma post-procedural MR-imaging characteristics following percutaneous MR-guided laser ablation in an open 1.0 Tesla MRI S. Fuchs, B. Gebauer, L. Stelter, M. Maurer, D. Renz, P. Schwabe, B. Hamm, F. Streitparth; Berlin/DE 14:54 B-0196 CT assessment of post-resection arterial stumps for right-sided colorectal cancer: a potential marker of quality of resection? T.L. Kaye, D.G. Jayne, N.P. West, D.J.M. Tolan; Leeds/UK 15:03 B-0197 Evaluation of Crohn s disease recurrence in patients with ileocolic anastomosis: value of computed tomography enterography with water enema F. Paparo, M. Revelli, C. Puppo, I. Garello, L. Bacigalupo, L. Rollandi, R. Piccazzo, A. Garlaschi, G.A. Rollandi; Genoa/IT 15:12 B-0198 Crohn s disease activity: correlation of inflammatory mediators with overall small-bowel motility S. Bickelhaupt 1, S. Pazahr 1, J.M. Froehlich 1, R. Cattin 2, H. Bouquet 3, G. Rogler 1, P. Frei 1, A. Boss 1, M. Patak 1 ; 1 Zurich/CH, 2 Biel/CH, 3 Berne/CH 15:21 B-0199 Pilot study to assess the diagnostic performance of MRI in the identification of adhesions between the abdominal wall and small bowel loops, using a timeefficient protocol A. Gupta, A. Hansmann, P.F.C. Lung, R. Tandon, R. Ilangovan, M. Marshall; Middlesex/UK 223

226 Scientific Sessions B-0200 B :00 15:30 Room F1 Oncologic Imaging SS 216 New biomarkers for tumour quantification Moderators: C.J. Herold; Vienna/AT, C. Keyzer; Brussels/BE 14:00 B D CT-histogram analysis enables distinguishing affected and FDG-negative lymph nodes in patients with lung cancer P. Flechsig 1, C. Kratochwil 1, J. Moltz 2, C.-p. Heussel 1, R. Talanow 1, H.-U. Kauczor 1, U. Haberkorn 1, F.L. Giesel 1 ; 1 Heidelberg/DE, 2 Bremen/DE 14:09 B-0201 Tumour vascularization imaging without contrast agents: the potential of IVIM-MRI M. Iima 1, O. Reynaud 2, T. Tsurugizawa 2, L. Ciobanu 2, J.-R. Li 2, F. Geffroy 2, B. Djemai 2, D. Le Bihan 2 ; 1 Kyoto/JP, 2 Gif-sur-Yvette/FR 14:18 B-0202 Intravoxel incoherent motion (IVIM) diffusionweighted MRI for monitoring the therapeutic efficacy of a vascular disrupting agent (CKD-516) in rabbit VX2 liver tumours I. Joo, J. Lee, J. Han, B. Choi; Seoul/KR 14:27 B-0203 Texture analysis on contrast-enhanced computed tomography combined with FDG-PET in predicting the response to chemotherapy of advanced non-small cell lung cancer M. Ravanelli, F. Ferraroni, D. Farina, M. Morassi, P. Tessitore, P. Rossini, R. Maroldi; Brescia/IT 14:36 B-0204 Texture analysis of advanced non-small cell lung cancer on contrast-enhanced computed tomography: prediction of the response to the first-line chemotherapy M. Ravanelli, M. Morassi, D. Farina, E. Roca, R. Maroldi; Brescia/IT 14:45 B-0205 Textural analysis of lymphoma on unenhanced computed tomography: initial evidence for a relationship with tumour glucose metabolism, stage, end of treatment status and survival S. Babikir, B. Ganeshan, A.M. Groves, I. Kayani; London/UK 14:54 B-0206 Improvement in both sensitivity and specificity of readers with next generation of mammography CAD V. Nikitin, I. Lossev, A. Filatov, N. Bagotskaya; Longmont, CO/US 15:03 B-0207 Assessing the contribution of hypoxia to R2* differences between cancerous and normal prostate tissue A. Johnson, A. Latifoltojar, V. Hamy, H. Fitzke, K. Shmueli, S. Punwani; London/UK 15:12 B-0208 Scatter amplitude is a good landmark for tumour localisation and treatment assessment in timedomain diffuse optical tomography during neoadjuvant chemotherapy in breast cancer M. Van de Giessen, B.E. Schaafsma, J.R. Kroep, M.N.J.M. Wasser, C.J.H. Van de Velde, B.P.F. Lelieveldt, J. Dijkstra, A.L. Vahrmeijer; Leiden/NL 15:21 B-0209 Software validation of metastatic sarcoma lesion assessment using CT volumetric density tumour trajectory L.R. Folio 1, V.M. Derderian 1, E.C. Jones 1, M.S. Merchant 1, A.M. Venkatesan 1, E. Lotan 2 ; 1 Bethesda, MD/US, 2 Tel Hashomer/IL 14:00 15:30 Room F2 Breast SS 202 Improvements in preoperative staging of breast cancer Moderators: R.A. Kubik-Huch; Baden/CH, A. Zytoon; Shebin El-Kom/EG 14:00 B-0210 Usefulness of ultrasonography (US) and ultrasonography-guided fine-needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) for axillary staging in breast cancer: is the breast imaging reporting and data system (BI-RADS) categorisation applicable? H. Ahn, S. Kim, B. Yun, M. Kim, M. Jang, S. Park, S.-W. Kim, E. Kang; Gyeonggi-do/KR 14:09 B-0211 Improving diagnostic yield in axillary lymphadenopathy sampling: core biopsy and vacuumassisted core biopsy R. Salvador, X. Salvador, I. Miranda, O. Dominguez, L. Romero; Barcelona/ES 14:18 B-0212 Gadofosveset-enhanced axillary MRI for nodal staging in breast cancer R. Schipper, M.B.I. Lobbes, L.M. van Roozendaal, C.J.G. Castro, B. de Vries, E.M. Heuts, K.B.M.I. Keymeulen, M.L. Smidt, R.G.H. Beets-Tan; Maastricht/NL 14:27 B-0213 Assessment of 18 Fluorodesoxyglucose positron emission tomography (18FDG PET-CT) vs contrastenhanced magnetic resonance imaging at 3 Tesla (3T CE-MRI) for lymph node staging in breast cancer patients H. Magometschnigg, H. Bickel, G.J. Wengert, G. Karanikas, P. Brader, K. Pinker- Domenig; Vienna/AT 14:36 B-0214 Imaging of axillary lymph nodes in breast cancer patients: How do enhancement kinetics of contrastenhanced lymph nodes apparent on dynamic MRmammography correlate with standardised uptake value of 18F-FDG PET/CT? J. Krammer, C.G. Kaiser, A. Schnitzer, S.O. Schönberg, K. Wasser; Mannheim/DE 14:45 B-0215 Ultrasound elastography in the diagnostic assessment of axillary lymph nodes in women presenting to a breast imaging centre L. Sim, L. Leong; Singapore/SG 14:54 B-0216 The Z011 trial: is this the end of axillary ultrasound in the pre-operative assessment of breast cancer patients? T.P. Farrell, M. Stenson, P.A. Carroll, M. Griffin, E.M. Connolly, S.A. O Keeffe; Dublin/IE 15:03 B-0217 Surgical impact of preoperative breast MRI in women under 40 A. Porto 1, A. Petrillo 1, R. Fusco 1, S. Filice 1, M. D Aiuto 1, R.M. Trimboli 2, F. Sardanelli 2 ; 1 Naples/IT, 2 San Donato Milanese/IT 224

227 Scientific Sessions 15:12 B-0218 Imaging features in mammography and breast ultrasound are related to HER-2 receptor overexpression of primary invasive breast cancer A. Adams 1, K.G.A. Gilhuijs 1, K.E. Pengel 2, C.E. Loo 2, W.P.T.M. Mali 1, S.G. Elias 1 ; 1 Utrecht/NL, 2 Amsterdam/NL 15:12 B T MRS alterations in brain metabolism in HAARTnaive HIV infection A. Trofimova, T. Trofimova, G. Kataeva, S. Medvedev, N. Belyakov, V. Rassokhin, A. Korotkov, E. Malakhova; St. Petersburg/RU B-0218 B :21 B-0219 Is availability of breast MRI-guided intervention associated with improved results of breast MRI screening of the contralateral breast in women with newly diagnosed breast carcinoma? V. Freitas 1, S. Kulkarni 2, S. Ghai 2, R. Fleming 2, A. Scaranelo 2, P. Crystal 2 ; 1 Rio De Janeiro/BR, 2 Toronto, ON/CA 14:00 15:30 Room G/H Neuro SS 211 Infection and inflammation Moderators: E. Marco de Lucas; Sancibrian/ES, G. Schroth; Berne/CH 14:00 B-0220 Evaluation of plaque detection and optimum time of enhancement in acute attack multiple sclerosis after contrast injection H. Hashemi, H. Ghanaati, S. Behzadi, M. Harirchian, M. Yaghoobi, M. Shakiba, A. Jalali, K. Firouznia; Tehran/IR 14:09 B-0221 Respiratory syncytial virus-related encephalitis: brain MR study with diffusion imaging A. Pak, S. Suh, G. Son, Y. Lee, H. Seo, K. Kim, B. Eun, N. Lee, H. Seol; Seoul/KR 14:18 B-0222 Cortical-juxtacortical lesions in clinically isolated syndromes: distribution and diagnostic value J.P. Salazar, C. Auger, D. Pareto, R. Mitjana, M. Tintore, J. Corral; Barcelona/ES 14:27 B-0223 Regional MRI perfusion measures predict motor/ executive function in patients with clinically isolated syndrome E. Papadaki, P. Simos, T. Panou, V. Mastorodemos, E. Amanakis, T. Maris, A. Karantanas, A. Plaitakis; Iraklion/GR 14:36 B-0224 The central vein sign : is there a place for susceptibility-weighted imaging in possible multiple sclerosis? T. Kau, M. Taschwer, M. Schönfelder, J.R. Weber, K.A. Hausegger; Klagenfurt/AT 14:45 B-0225 Single- and multi-voxel proton spectroscopy in patients with pyogenic brain abscess P.-H. Lai, C.-W. Ko, S.-H. Hsu, J.-H. Fu, P.-C. Wang, H.-B. Pan; Kaohsiung/TW 14:54 B-0227 Directional diffusivity changes describing microstructural damage in normal appearing and lesioned cervical cord white matter in multiple sclerosis N. Berkovitz, P. Gottlieb, S. Tal; Zrifin/IL 15:03 B-0228 Cognitive deficits in clinically isolated syndrome correlate with perfusion changes indicative of inflammation E. Papadaki, P. Simos, T. Panou, V. Mastorodemos, E. Amanakis, T. Maris, A. Karantanas, A. Plaitakis; Iraklion/GR 14:00 15:30 Room I/K Abdominal Viscera SS 201b Hepatocellular carcinoma: diagnosis and management Moderators: G. Brancatelli; Palermo/IT, M. Bruegel; Munich/DE 14:00 B-0230 Intravoxel incoherent motion diffusion-weighted MR imaging of hepatocellular carcinoma: correlation with enhancement degree and histological grade S. Woo, J. Lee, J.-H. Yoon, I. Joo, J. Han, B. Choi; Seoul/KR 14:09 B-0231 Accuracy of contrast-enhanced imaging in the pretransplantation staging of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and pathologic predictive factors of HCC recurrence after liver transplantation (LT) G. Besutti, A. Pecchi, M. De Santis, G. Tarantino, F. Di Benedetto, P. Torricelli; Modena/IT 14:18 B-0232 Detection of HCC and liver metastases with BR14: final results of a multicentre phase IIA study J. Hohmann 1, A. Müller 2, J. Skrok 3, K.-J. Wolf 2, A. Martegani 4, C.F. Dietrich 5, T. Albrecht 2 ; 1 Basle/CH, 2 Berlin/DE, 3 Baltimore, MD/US, 4 Como/IT, 5 Bad Mergentheim/DE 14:27 B-0233 Integrating contrast-enhanced sonography (CEUS) in the follow-up algorithm of patients with percutaneously ablated hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) O. Catalano, P. Vallone, V. Granata, F. Izzo, V. Albino, A. Nunziata, A. Petrillo; Naples/IT 14:36 B-0234 Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) treated with transarterial chemoembolization (TACE): volume CT perfusion (VCTP) imaging in the detection of early changes preliminary results J. Steiner, T. Wimmer, D. Bohlsen, F. Quehenberger, H. Schöllnast; Graz/AT 14:45 B-0235 Role of dynamic contrast-enhanced perfusion MR imaging in monitoring of patients with HCC lesions treated by radiofrequency ablation or transarterial chemoembolization C. Trattenero, D. Ippolito, M. Colombo, P.A. Bonaffini, R. Corso, S. Sironi; Milan/IT 14:54 B-0236 Diagnostic efficacy of combined dynamic perfusion MRI with ADC mapping in the assessment of therapeutic effects of HCC-treated lesions: preliminary results D. Ippolito, C. Trattenero, P. Bonaffini, C. Capraro, R. Corso, S. Sironi; Monza/IT 15:03 B-0237 Recurrence patterns of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) after liver transplantation (LT) and variations in dynamic imaging and histopathological characteristics between the primary and the intrahepatic recurrent HCC G. Besutti, A. Pecchi, M. De Santis, G. Tarantino, F. Di Benedetto, P. Torricelli; Modena/IT Thursday 225

228 Scientific Sessions B-0238 B :12 B-0238 Accuracy of mrecist versus RECIST 1.1 in predicting outcome in hepatocellular carcinoma treated with Sorafenib G. Gallusi, M. Di Martino, C. Lombardo, M. Del Monte, R. Di Miscio, A.F. Attili, C. Catalano; Rome/IT 15:21 B-0239 Could antiplatelet therapy prevent hepatocellular carcinoma? 7 Tesla liver magnetic resonance imaging study in a mouse model of hbv-related chronic hepatitis P. Marra, A. Esposito, G. Sitia, A. Palmisano, T. Canu, F. De Cobelli, L.G. Guidotti, A. Del Maschio; Milan/IT 14:00 15:30 Room L/M Physics in Radiology SS 213 Innovations in CT technology and data processing Moderators: C. Leidecker; Forchheim/DE, R. Padovani; Udine/IT 14:00 B-0240 Performance evaluation of a new CT detector with minimal electronic noise for low dose abdominal perfusion imaging E. Klotz, U. Haberland, B. Schmidt; Forchheim/DE 14:09 B-0241 Performance of a next-generation solid-state detector with fully integrated readout electronics for MDCT: quantitative analysis of image quality and radiation exposure reduction potential in comparison with its predecessor G. Pahn, L.-S. Veloza, H.-P. Schlemmer, H.-U. Kauczor, W. Stiller; Heidelberg/DE 14:18 B-0242 Integrated circuit detector technology in abdominal computed tomography: value in obese patients F. Morsbach 1, S. Bickelhaupt 1, S. Raetzer 1, B. Schmidt 2, H. Alkadhi 1 ; 1 Zurich/CH, 2 Forchheim/DE 14:27 B-0243 Comparison of filtered back projection (FBP) with hybrid and iterative reconstruction algorithms (HIR and IR) in low dose protocols including high and low kv settings in CT angiography by testing the detectability of simulated endoleak and thrombus in a phantom study Z. Deák, J. Grimm, F. Mück, M. Treitl, M.F. Reiser, S. Wirth; Munich/DE 14:36 B-0244 Influence of sinogram affirmed iterative reconstruction of CT data on image noise characteristics and lowcontrast detectability in comparison with filtered back projection: an objective approach C. von Falck 1, V. Bratanova 1, T. Rodt 1, B. Meyer 1, S. Waldeck 2, F. Wacker 1, H.- o. Shin 1 ; 1 Hannover/DE, 2 Koblenz/DE 14:45 B-0245 CTDI measurements using radiochromic films N. Tomic, N. Sharoubim, F. DeBlois, J. Seuntjens; Montreal, QC/CA 14:54 B-0246 Physical characterization of iterative reconstruction algorithms in computed tomography and assessment of image quality for the optimization of a dual-energy abdominal protocol L. Berta, L. Mascaro, M. Cataldo, R. Maroldi; Brescia/IT 15:03 B-0248 The impact of tube voltage, scan direction and beam collimation on the performance of automatic tube current modulation systems in paediatric and adult CT N. Buls 1, J. Schoenaers 2, G. Van Gompel 1, K. Nieboer 1, J. de Mey 1 ; 1 Jette/BE, 2 Hasselt/BE 15:12 B D spatial resolution evaluation of clinical CT using a spherical phantom T. Mäkelä, V. Sairanen, J.I. Peltonen, M. Kortesniemi; Helsinki/FI 14:00 15:30 Room N/O Vascular SS 215 Major vessel imaging Moderators: W.R. Jaschke; Innsbruck/AT, O. Pellerin; Paris/FR 14:00 B-0250 Low dose runoff CTA: what protocol is preferred without special reconstruction algorithms? E. Kondratyev, G. Karmazanovsky; Moscow/RU 14:09 B-0251 Value of contrast-enhanced MRA of the peripheral arteries at 3T: results of a large European multicentre trial comparing meglumine gadoterate to gadobutrol- MRA with DSA C. Loewe 1, J. Arnaiz 2, D. Krause 3, L. Marti Bonmati 4, M. Aschauer 5, A. Tartaro 6, M. Lombardi 7, M. Burrel 8, R. Izzillo 9 ; 1 Vienna/AT, 2 Santander/ES, 3 Dijon/FR, 4 Valencia/ES, 5 Graz/AT, 6 Chieti/IT, 7 Pisa/IT, 8 Barcelona/ES, 9 Saint-Denis/FR 14:18 B-0252 Nonenhanced quiescent-interval single-shot (QISS) MRA in assessment of peripheral artery disease: comparison with digital subtraction angiography (DSA) R.S. Lanzman 1, P. Heusch 1, J. Aissa 1, P. Schmitt 2, J. Klasen 1, D. Blondin 1, G. Antoch 1, P. Kröpil 1 ; 1 Düsseldorf/DE, 2 Erlangen/DE 14:27 B-0253 Magnetic resonance thrombus characterisation can identify patients with rapid abdominal aortic aneurysm expansion V.L. Nguyen 1, T. Leiner 2, M.C.J. Wishaupt 1, F.A.M.V. Hellenthal 1, R.J. van der Geest 3, E.M. Kooi 1, G.W.H. Schurink 1 ; 1 Maastricht/NL, 2 Utrecht/NL, 3 Leiden/NL 14:36 B-0254 CT angiography of abdominal aorta with low kv CT protocol and low contrast medium volume: a feasibility study C.R.G.L. Talei Franzesi, D. Ippolito, P. Bonaffini, A.C. Cadonici, A. Masetto, S. Sironi; Monza/IT 14:45 B-0255 An international multi-centre comparison of the non-contrast MR angiography technique time-spatial labelling inversion pulse (time-slip) against contrastenhanced CT angiography for assessing renal artery stenosis: the renal artery contrast-free trial (REACT) T.S.E. Albert 1, I. Parienty 2, V. Catala 3, H. Xue 4, V. Katabathina 5, J.E. Lopera 5, Z.Y. Jin 4, N. Yellin 1, M. Akahane 6 ; 1 Monterey, CA/US, 2 Antony/FR, 3 Barcelona/ES, 4 Beijing/CN, 5 San Antonio, TX/US, 6 Tokyo/JP 14:54 B-0256 Zonal variations in the size of the atherosclerotic aortic arch during cardiac cycle and their implications on endovascular stenting S. Puppala, A. Shah, C. Dadnam; Leeds/UK 226

229 Scientific Sessions 15:03 B-0257 CT angiography for the evaluation of the thoracic aorta: dynamic changes in the cardiac cycle with implications for thoracic endograft treatment J. Vallejos, C. Capunay, P. Carrascosa, J.C. Parodi, M.I. Sagarduy, P. Cortines; Vicente López/AR 15:12 B-0258 Peripheral artery occlusion disease (PAOD): comparison of CE-MRA versus DSA in grading of stenosis and planning therapy T.J. Vogl, C. Wurz, S. Zangos, A. Thalhammer, T. Schmitz-Rixen; Frankfurt a. Main/DE 15:21 B-0259 Iodine load reduction in CT aorta angiography with gemstone spectral imaging: comparison with standard CT aorta angiography X. Luo, J. Wu, J. Sun, M. Chen; Yangzhou/CN 14:00 15:30 Room P Cardiac SS 203 Planning cardiac interventions Moderators: I. Arkhipova; Moscow/RU, P. Mildenberger; Mainz/DE 14:00 B-0260 Anatomical angulation between the long axis of the left ventricle and left ventricular outflow tract as possible predictor of postprocedural complications in patients undergoing transapical aortic valve implantation B. Foldyna, M. Haensig, C. Lücke, D. Holzhey, S. Nitzsche, M. Borger, F.W. Mohr, M. Gutberlet, L. Lehmkuhl; Leipzig/DE 14:09 B-0261 Temporal dynamics of the aortic root and the aortic valve: implications for transcatheter aortic valve implantation T. Jurencak, B. Kietselaer, C. Mihl, V. Van Ommen, L. van Garsse, J. Wildberger, M. Das; Maastricht/NL 14:18 B-0262 Aortic annulus area assessment by multidetector computed tomography for predicting paravalvular regurgitation in patients undergoing balloonexpandable transcatheter aortic valve implantation a comparison with transthoracic and transoesophageal echocardiography G. Pontone, D. Andreini, E. Bertella, S. Mushtaq, S. Cortinovis, A. Annoni, A. Formenti, G. Ballerini, M. Pepi; Milan/IT 14:27 B-0263 Transcatheter aortic valve replacement: performance of an aortic valvular complex model for semiautomated quantification of aortic annulus dimensions at cardiac CT P. Blanke 1, E.-M. Spira 1, D. Bernhardt 2, R. Ionasec 3, U. Ebersberger 4, T. Flohr 2, M. Langer 1, U.J. Schoepf 5 ; 1 Freiburg/DE, 2 Forchheim/DE, 3 Princeton, NJ/US, 4 Munich/DE, 5 Charleston, SC/US 14:36 B-0264 Dimensions of the aortic root and the aortic valve for transcatheter aortic valve implantation: non- ECG-triggered multi-detector CT high-pitch scans compared with retrospectively ECG-gated low-pitch cardiac scans T. Jurencak, B. Kietselaer, C. Mihl, P. Nelemans, V. Van Ommen, L. van Garsse, J. Wildberger, M. Das; Maastricht/NL 14:45 B-0265 Is aortic valve calcium distribution a predictor for outcome after transcutaneous aortic valve implantation? P. Apfaltrer 1, G. Schymik 2, T. Germann 1, H. Schroefel 2, M. Meyer 1, C. Fink 1, S.O. Schönberg 1, T. Henzler 1 ; 1 Mannheim/DE, 2 Karlsruhe/DE 14:54 B-0266 Influence of observer experience and training on proficiency in cardiac CT interpretation J.M. Kerl 1, U.J. Schoepf 2, R.W. Bauer 1, P. Costello 2, T.J. Vogl 1, C. Herzog 1 ; 1 Frankfurt a. Main/DE, 2 Charleston, SC/US 15:03 B-0267 Utility of cardiac magnetic resonance in the identification of patients eligible for early implantation of cardioverter defibrillator after acute myocardial infarction E. Belloni 1, E. Emanuele 2, G. Marchesi 3, D. Aschieri 3, S. Ferraro 3, E. Michieletti 3, G.Q. Villani 3, P. Scagnelli 1 ; 1 Castel San Giovanni/IT, 2 Robbio/IT, 3 Piacenza/IT 15:12 B-0268 Optimisation of contrast injection protocol for CT angiography in transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI): preliminary results D. Di Marco 1, M. Giglio 2, R. Fachechi 1, S. Sironi 1, P. Spagnolo 2 ; 1 Monza/IT, 2 Milan/IT 15:21 B-0269 Assessment of aortic valve area in patients with severe aortic stenosis using cardiac dual-source computed tomography: comparison with transthoracic echocardiography and cardiac magnetic resonance H. An, S. Ko, H. Hwang, M. Song, J. Choi, J. Shin; Seoul/KR 14:00 15:30 Room Q Radiographers SS 214 Managing quality and dose in CT Moderators: E. Agadakos; Athens/GR, A. Yule; Cardiff/UK 14:00 B-0270 Personalised low dose chest CT applying adaptive iterative dose reduction algorithm (AIDR 3D) integrated automatic exposure control techniques with 320-slice MDCT: initial clinical trial X. Chen; Guangzhou/CN 14:09 B-0271 Feasibility of low dose protocol at 640-slice dynamic volume CT for diagnosing central airways narrowing Z.-X. Ding, Z. Wang; Hangzhou/CN 14:18 B-0272 Conducting a national diagnostic reference level survey for computed tomography examinations: the Portuguese experience J. Santos 1, S. Foley 2, G. Paulo 1, M.F. McEntee 3, L. Rainford 2 ; 1 Coimbra/PT, 2 Dublin/IE, 3 Sydney/AU 14:27 B-0273 Comparison of image quality between left and right arm injection of contrast agent in computed tomography of carotid arteries D. Hribar, N. Djuric, S. Sterzaj, T. Holc, M. Kovacic, A. Janezic; Ljubljana/SI 14:36 B-0274 Dose assessment in paediatric head computed tomography examinations C.L.D.C. Fernandes, S.I. Rodrigues, A.F.C.L. Abrantes, L.P.V. Ribeiro, R.P.P. Almeida, C.A. Silva, K.B. Azevedo; Faro/PT B-0257 B-0274 Thursday 227

230 Scientific Sessions B-0275 B :45 B-0275 Dose values in eye lens in paediatric brain computed tomography: influence of different protocols C. Carriço 1, M. Inácio 1, A. Kristiansen 2, M. Larsen 2, J. Santos 1, S. Holm 2, G. Paulo 1 ; 1 Coimbra/PT, 2 Odense/DK 14:54 B-0276 Influence of different arm positioning of MSCT of chest by apply automatic tube current modulation technique Z.-X. Ding, Z. Wang; Hangzhou/CN 15:03 B-0277 The effectiveness of lead apron for radiation protection in CT N. Weber, P. Monnin, C. Elandoy, S. Ding; Lausanne/CH 15:12 B-0278 Optimisation of local diagnostic reference levels in head computed tomography M. Monteiro, A. Carvalho, J. Matias, J. Santos; Coimbra/PT 15:21 B-0279 Comparison of radiation dose and image quality between sequential and spiral brain CT I. Pace, F. Zarb; Msida/MT 14:54 B-0286 A patient dose managing solution identifies erroneous parameter settings in CT acquisition protocols, and contributes towards lowering radiation exposure T. De Bondt 1, Q. Collier 1, R. Salgado 1, M. Geldof 1, F. Deferme 1, J. Valette 2, A. Jomier 2, W. Van Hecke 1, P.M. Parizel 1 ; 1 Antwerp/BE, 2 Mutzig/FR 15:03 B-0287 Evaluation of the quality of abdominal computed tomography images reconstructed with iterative reconstruction technique L. Henriksson, A. Persson, M. Sandborg; Linköping/SE 15:12 B-0288 Improved image quality of virtual non-contrast dualenergy CT images using a new iodine subtraction algorithm A. Helck, N. Hummel, F. Meinel, S.F. Thieme, M.F. Reiser, A. Graser, T.R.C. Johnson; Munich/DE 15:21 B-0289 Image quality of monoenergetic low-kev datasets for lower extremity dual-energy CT angiography S. Sudarski, D. Schneider, P. Apfaltrer, S.O. Schönberg, T. Henzler; Mannheim/DE 14:00 15:30 Room Z Computer Applications SS 205 Quantitative image analysis and optimisation Moderators: L. Faggioni; Pisa/IT, M. Fatehi; Tehran/IR 14:00 B-0280 Consistent automatic adipose tissue quantification in MR abdomen images D. Smeets, W. Van Hecke, D. Loeckx; Leuven/BE 14:09 B-0281 Computational texture analysis in interstitial lung disease: comparison of descriptors and classification accuracy J. Ofner 1, C. Mueller-Mang 1, A. Burner 1, D. Markonis 2, A. Depeursinge 2, H. Mueller 2, G. Langs 1 ; 1 Vienna/AT, 2 Sierre/CH 14:18 B-0282 Quantification of correlations between somatostatin receptors expression in biopsies from neuroendocrine tumours and PET/CT uptake values in the context of personalised medicine M. Athelogou 1, D. Kaemmerer 2, A. Lupp 3, V. Prasad 4, R. Schoenmeyer 1, G. Binnig 1, R. Baum 2 ; 1 Munich/DE, 2 Bad Berka/DE, 3 Jena/DE, 4 Berlin/DE 14:27 B D analysis CT software in volumetric and densitometric analysis of urinary stones M. Moschetta, A. Scardapane, M. Telegrafo, G. Angelelli, A.A. Stabile Ianora; Bari/IT 14:36 B-0284 The 3DSlicer open-source platform for segmentation, registration, quantitative imaging and 3D visualization of biomedical image data S. Pujol 1, S. Pieper 2, R. Kikinis 1 ; 1 Boston, MA/US, 2 Cambridge, MA/US 14:45 B-0285 Can the CT acquisition protocol be used in combination with the study description to optimise patient dose tracking for CT examinations? T. De Bondt 1, Q. Collier 1, R. Salgado 1, M. Geldof 1, F. Deferme 1, J. Valette 2, A. Jomier 2, W. Van Hecke 1, P.M. Parizel 1 ; 1 Antwerp/BE, 2 Mutzig/FR 228

231 Scientific Sessions 10:30 12:00 Room D1 Chest SS 504 Lung nodules Moderators: S. Diederich; Düsseldorf/DE, N. Karabulut; Denizli/TR 10:30 B kV computed tomography of the thorax: valence for computer-assisted nodule evaluation and radiation dose first clinical results B. Schulz 1, B. Bodelle 1, T. Lehnert 1, F. Al-Butmeh 1, M. Sedlmair 2, R. Banckwitz 2, D. Klement 1, T.J. Vogl 1, M.J. Kerl 1 ; 1 Frankfurt a. Main/DE, 2 Erlangen/DE 10:39 B-0291 Improved accuracy of lung cancer diagnosis for fastgrowing lung nodules in CT lung cancer screening by optimisation of volume-doubling time cut-off M.A. Heuvelmans 1, M. Oudkerk 1, G.H. De Bock 1, X. Xie 1, P.M.A. Van Ooijen 1, M.J.W. Greuter 1, P.A. De Jong 2, H.J.M. Groen 1, R. Vliegenthart 1 ; 1 Groningen/NL, 2 Utrecht/NL 10:48 B-0292 AIDR improves characterisation of sub-centimetre pulmonary GGO on low dose HRCT S. Hashemi Amroabadi 1, H. Mehrez 2, R.S. Cobbold 1, N.S. Paul 1 ; 1 Toronto, ON/CA, 2 Markham, ON/CA 10:57 B-0293 Comparison of capabilities for differentiating malignant SPNs from benign SPNs among dynamic first-pass perfusion area-detector CT, dynamic firstpass MRI and FDG-PET/CT Y. Ohno 1, S. Seki 1, M. Nishio 1, H. Koyama 1, T. Yoshikawa 1, S. Matsumoto 1, Y. Fujisawa 2 ; 1 Kobe/JP, 2 Ohtawara/JP 11:06 B-0294 Can dual-energy index help to differentiate malignant and benign lesions of lung? A. Kannivelu, S. Srinivasan, H.S. Teh, H.T. Koay, C.H.A. Tan, T.W. Choy, K.K. Yeow, S.K.J. Lim; Singapore/SG 11:15 B-0295 Features of resolving and non-resolving indeterminate pulmonary nodules on follow-up CT: the NELSON study Y. Zhao, M. Dorrius, M. Heuvelmans, P. van Ooijen, M. Oudkerk, R. Vliegenthart; Groningen/NL 11:24 B-0296 Stratification of pure ground-glass opacity (GGO) nodular lung adenocarcinoma using quantitative analysis of CT imaging metrics to select patients for limited-resection more precisely J. Son, H. Lee, J. Kim, J. Han, K. Lee, O. Kwon, B. Kim, H. Kim, Y. Shim; Seoul/KR 11:33 B-0297 Non-solid, part-solid or solid? Classification of pulmonary nodules in thoracic CT by radiologists and a computer-aided diagnosis system C. Jacobs 1, E.M. van Rikxoort 2, J.-M. Kuhnigk 1, E.T. Scholten 3, P.A. de Jong 4, C. Schaefer-Prokop 5, M. Prokop 2, B. van Ginneken 2 ; 1 Bremen/DE, 2 Nijmegen/NL, 3 Haarlem/NL, 4 Utrecht/NL, 5 Amersfoort/NL 11:42 B-0298 Solid pulmonary nodules detected by low-dose CT: effect of semi-automatic software on volumetry in vitro and in vivo Y. Zhao, M. Dorrius, P. van Ooijen, M. Oudkerk, R. Vliegenthart; Groningen/NL 11:51 B-0299 Feasibility of training radiographers to detect nodules in CT lung cancer screening A. Nair 1, N. Gartland 1, B. Barton 1, E. Ifeakor 1, J. Hodgkinson 1, R. Vliegenthart 2, P.A. de Jong 3, M. Prokop 4, A. Devaraj 1 ; 1 London/UK, 2 Groningen/NL, 3 Utrecht/NL, 4 Nijmegen/NL 10:30 12:00 Room D2 Interventional Radiology SS 509 Neurovascular and spine interventions Moderators: E.R. Gizewski; Innsbruck/AT, L. Pierot; Reims/FR 10:30 B-0300 Carotid artery stenting: results and analysis of a single-centre experience after 12 years F. Fanelli, A. Cannavale, E. Boatta, M. Corona, C. Cirelli, F.M. Salvatori; Rome/IT 10:39 B-0301 Additional value of mechanical thrombectomy devices in thrombo-embolic complications during endovascular occlusion of intracranial aneurysms M.H.J. Voormolen, T. van der Zijden, T. Menovsky, P.N.M. Parizel; Antwerp/BE 10:48 B-0302 Stent-assisted endovascular occlusion of intracranial aneurysms M.H.J. Voormolen, T. Van der Zijden, T. Menovsky, P. Parizel; Antwerp/BE 10:57 B-0303 Long-term results of microsurgical and endovascular therapy of intracranial aneurysms in patients following subarachnoid haemorrhage K. Bojanowski 1, J. Baron 2, B. Kostkiewicz 1, M. Zawadzki 1, J. Walecki 1 ; 1 Warsaw/PL, 2 Katowice/PL 11:06 B-0304 Embolisation of cerebral aneurysms with hydrogelcoated coils: systematic review and meta-analysis A. Pałys, Z. Serafin, W. Lasek; Bydgoszcz/PL 11:15 B-0305 Effect of antiplatelet therapy on radiographic outcome of positivity on diffusion-weighted imaging in elective endovascular coiling of unruptured cerebral aneurysm T. Matsushige, K. Shinagawa, Y. Akiyama, T. Okazaki, S. Sakamoto, Y. Kiura, K. Sugiyama, K. Kurisu; Hiroshima/JP 11:24 B-0306 MR-guided lumbosacral nerve root injection therapy using an open 1.0 Tesla MRI system: a clinical investigation F. Streitparth 1, M. De Bucourt 1, T. Hartwig 1, T. Walter 1, M. Maurer 1, D. Renz 1, B. Gebauer 1, B. Hamm 1, U. Teichgräber 2 ; 1 Berlin/DE, 2 Jena/DE 11:33 B-0307 Vertebral split fractures: the role of percutaneous vertebroplasty L. Huwart 1, O. Hauger 2, P.-Y. Marcy 1, P. Foti 1, M.-E. Amoretti 1, P. Brunner 3, N. Amoretti 1 ; 1 Nice/FR, 2 Bordeaux/FR, 3 Monaco/MC 11:42 B-0308 Percutaneous vertebroplasty in vertebra plana: does the presence of intravertebral cleft impact the efficiency of the procedure? L. Huwart 1, P.-Y. Marcy 1, P. Foti 1, M.-E. Amoretti 1, O. Hauger 2, P. Brunner 3, N. Amoretti 1 ; 1 Nice/FR, 2 Bordeaux/FR, 3 Monaco/MC 11:51 B-0309 Percutaneous ablation of spinal osteoid osteoma: report of 37 patients G. Tsoumakidou, J. Garnon, I. Enescu, X. Buy, A. Gangi; Strasbourg/FR B-0290 B-0309 Friday 229

232 Scientific Sessions B-0310 B :30 12:00 Room E1 Musculoskeletal SS 510 Tendon, muscle and tissue composition Moderators: J. Healy; London/UK, A. Mileto; Durham, NC/US 10:30 B-0310 Efficacy of intra-tendinous injection of plateletrich plasma to treat tendinosis: comprehensive assessment on a murine model B. Dallaudiere 1, M. Lempicki 1, L. Pesquer 2, P. Meyer 2, E. Schouman-Claeys 1, J.-M. Serfaty 1 ; 1 Paris/FR, 2 Bordeaux/FR 10:39 B-0311 High volume image-guided injections in patellar tendinopathy S.L. Morton, O. Chan, D. Morrissey, J. King, T. Crisp, N. Maffulli; London/UK 10:48 B-0312 Biomechanical properties of the calcaneal tendon in vivo assessed by transient shear wave elastography S. Aubry 1, J.-R. Risson 1, A. Kastler 2, B. Barbier-Brion 1, M. Runge 1, B. Kastler 1 ; 1 Besancon/FR, 2 Clermont-Ferrand/FR 10:57 B-0313 Muscle elastography in patients affected by multiple sclerosis G. Illomei, G. Spinicci, M. Arru, M. Marrosu; Cagliari/IT 11:06 B-0314 Dixon-based MRI for assessment of muscle-fat content in-vitro and in patients with achillodynia in comparison to healthy volunteers M.A.F. Fischer, C.W.A. Pfirrmann, N. Espinosa, D.A. Raptis, F.M. Buck; Zurich/CH 11:15 B-0315 Postmortal 31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy of the skeletal muscle: a-atp/pi ratio as a forensic tool? J. Yamamura 1, T.M. Schidt 1, R. Fischer 1, Z.J. Wang 2, M. Lorenzen 1 ; 1 Hamburg/DE, 2 Dallas, TX/US 11:24 B-0316 Visceral fat by DXA: current methods and potential clinical implications A. Bazzocchi, D. Diano, F. Ponti, A. Andreone, C. Sassi, U. Albisinni, G. Battista; Bologna/IT 11:33 B-0317 Post-exercise intramyocellular acetylcarnitine levels in endurance trained and sedentary subjects measured with 1 H-MRS L. Lindeboom, B.M.W. Brouwers, T. van de Weijer, C.I.H.C. Nabuurs, M.E. Kooi, M.K.C. Hesselink, P. Schrauwen, J.E. Wildberger, V.B. Schrauwen-Hinderling; Maastricht/NL 11:42 B-0318 In vivo differentiation of muscle precursor cells using MR relaxometry N.C. Chuck, F. Azzabi Zouraq, D. Eberli, A. Boss; Zurich/CH 11:51 B-0319 MRI findings of the bone marrow related to unloading with longitudinal follow-up L. Nardo 1, D. Sandman 1, W. Virayavanich 1, S. Lee 1, A. Lai 1, L. Zhang 2, R. Souza 1, M. Guindani 2, T. Link 1 ; 1 San Francisco, CA/US, 2 Houston, TX/US 10:30 12:00 Room F1 Oncologic Imaging SS 516 Cutting edge imaging in oncology: when and how? Moderators: K. Coenegrachts; Bruges/BE, E.J. Rummeny; Munich/DE 10:30 B-0320 Virtual 3D 18F-FDG PET/CT panendoscopy for assessing the upper airways of head and neck cancer patients: initial results P. Heusch 1, C. Buchbender 1, B. Geiger 2, J. Treffert 3, T. Lauenstein 4, M. Forsting 4, G. Antoch 1, T.A. Heusner 1 ; 1 Duesseldorf/DE, 2 Princeton, NJ/US, 3 Knoxville, TN/US, 4 Essen/DE 10:39 B F-FLT- PET in the diagnosis of gastric cancer T. Staniuk 1, M. Studniarek 2, W. Zegarski 1, E. Srutek 1, B. Malkowski 1 ; 1 Bydgoszcz/PL, 2 Bojano/PL 10:48 B-0322 First clinical experience in restaging of patients with recurrent prostate cancer by 11C-choline-PET/ MR: comprehensive diagnostic MR protocol and comparison with 11C-choline-PET/CT M. Eiber, M. Souvatzoglou, E.J. Rummeny, M. Schwaiger, A.J. Beer; Munich/DE 10:57 B-0323 Apparent diffusion coefficient for evaluating early tumour response to neoadjuvant chemo-radiotherapy in locally advanced cervical cancer: correlation with histopathology. Preliminary results M. Miccò, A.L. Valentini, B. Gui, A.M. De Gaetano, M. Iacobucci, L. Bonomo; Rome/IT 11:06 B-0324 The value of DWI in differentiating ocular tumours from retinal detachment K. Erb, G. Willerding, M. Taupitz, B. Hamm, P. Asbach; Berlin/DE 11:15 B-0325 Dosimetric impact of MR vs CT delineation of boost volume in breast cancer M. Betti, L. Orlandini, C. Biagini, M. de Liguoro, F. Mungai, L. Natale, L. Cionini; Sesto Fiorentino/IT 11:24 B-0326 PET/MR vs PET/CT in lung cancer N staging: initial experience with a three-segment model attenuation correction A. Kohan, C. Rubbert, J.L. Vercher Conejero, S. Partovi, R. Jones, K. Herrmann, P. Faulhaber; Cleveland, OH/US 11:33 B-0327 Incidental findings in the general adult population using whole body MRI as a screening method S. Ulus, E. Karaarslan; Istanbul/TR 11:42 B-0328 Bone metastasis at a glance: a new advanced visualization algorithm for fast and easy detection in thoracoabdominal CT D.F. Toth, M. Toepker, M.E. Mayerhoefer, J. Furtner, U. Asenbaum, G. Karanikas, M. Weber, C. Czerny, H. Ringl; Vienna/AT 11:51 B-0329 Comparison of the utility of whole body MRI with and without contrast-enhanced quick 3D and double RF fat suppression techniques, conventional whole body MRI, PET/CT and conventional examination for assessment of recurrence in NSCLC patients Y. Ohno 1, S. Seki 1, M. Nishio 1, H. Koyama 1, T. Yoshikawa 1, S. Matsumoto 1, S. Satou 2, K. Sugimura 1 ; 1 Kobe/JP, 2 Ohtawara/JP 230

233 Scientific Sessions 10:30 12:00 Room F2 Breast SS 502 Elastography and other advances in breast ultrasound Moderators: D. Djilas-Ivanovic; Sremska Kamenica/RS, P. Skaane; Oslo/NO 10:30 B-0330 Quantitative shear wave elastography: evaluating an additional use with conventional ultrasound in diagnosis of breast lesions J. Moon, K.-S. Jung, S. Koh, J.-Y. Jung; Anyang-si/KR 10:39 B-0331 Quantitative ShearWave ultrasound elastography: initial experience in palpable breast masses S. Hari, S. Naga, A. Dhar, M. Jana; New Delhi/IN 10:48 B-0332 Can the ring sign improve the performance of shearwave elastography in benign/malignant differentiation of screen detected solid breast masses? M. Szewcyk-Bieda, A. Evans, S. Vinnicombe, P. Whelehan, K. Thomson; Dundee/UK 10:57 B-0334 Influence of menopause in women on breast elasticity measured by elasticity parameters with sonoelastography X. Wang, Y. Wang, P. Xu; Shanghai/CN 11:06 B-0335 Stiffness measured by Shear Wave elastography: a biomarker of the early chemotherapy response in a human breast cancer model? F. Chamming s, M. Le Frère-Belda, v. Fitoussi, L. Pidial, H. Latorre-Ossa, J.- L. Gennisson, O. Clément, C.-A. Cuenod, L.S. Fournier; Paris/FR 11:15 B-0336 SONAZOID (perflubutane) microbubble-enhanced ultrasound for differential diagnosis of breast lesions: pooled analysis of phase 2 and 3 clinical studies Y. Miyamoto 1, T. Ito 2, E. Takada 3, T. Hirai 4, K. Omoto 5, R. Sekiguchi 3, T. Okuno 6, S. Kanazawa 1, F. Moriyasu 1 ; 1 Tokyo/JP, 2 Osaka/JP, 3 Tochigi/JP, 4 Nara/JP, 5 Saitama/JP, 6 Kobe/JP 11:24 B-0337 US-based automated breast volume scanner (ABVS): improvement of breast lesion detection in 51 patients initial study X. Wang, Y. Wang, P. Xu; Shanghai/CN 11:33 B-0338 Useful of real-time virtual sonography (RVS) on the evaluation of MRI-detected lesions of the breast in second-look sonography S. Nakano, K. Fujii, M. Yoshida, J. Kousaka, Y. Mori, T. Ando, R. Tetsuka, T. Fukutomi, T. Ishiguchi; Nagakute/JP 11:42 B-0339 Targeting accuracy of real-time virtual sonography (RVS) in sonographic identification of enhancing lesions in breast MRI S. Nakano, K. Fujii, M. Yoshida, J. Kousaka, Y. Mori, T. Ando, R. Tetsuka, T. Fukutomi, T. Ishiguchi; Nagakute/JP 10:30 12:00 Room G/H Genitourinary SS 507 New frontiers in GU imaging Moderators: G. Hagen; Oslo/NO, C.M.A. Hoeks; Nijmegen/NL 10:30 B-0340 Functional evaluation of transplanted kidneys using arterial spin labelling (ASL) MRI at 1.5T and 3T: results in 105 patients R.S. Lanzman, D. Blondin, P. Heusch, P. Bilk, P. Kröpil, F. Miese, G. Antoch, H.- J. Wittsack; Düsseldorf/DE 10:39 B-0341 Assessment of novel chemokine-directed therapy of renal allograft rejection in a murine animal model with multiparametric functional MRI M. Notohamiprodjo, A. Kalnins, M. Kolb, A. Wagner, M.F. Reiser, K. Nikolaou, J. Andrassy; Munich/DE 10:48 B-0342 Assesment cisplatin-induced interstitial nephropathy using diffusion-weighted MRI R. Del Vescovo, F. Giurazza, R.L. Cazzato, C.L. Piccolo, R.F. Grasso, B. Beomonte Zobel; Rome/IT 10:57 B-0343 Value of diffusion-weighted-mr-imaging for the detection of nephritis H.J. Michaely 1, M. Reichert 1, B. Henninger 2, S. Haneder 1, S.O. Schönberg 1 ; 1 Mannheim/DE, 2 Innsbruck/AT 11:06 B-0344 DCE-MRI assessment of kidney function and renal masses: single slice versus whole organ/tumour M. Notohamiprodjo, A.D. Helck, S. Winter, M. Staehler, M. Braunagel, M. Ingrisch, M.F. Reiser, K. Nikolaou; Munich/DE 11:15 B-0345 In vivo sodium (23Na) imaging of the human kidneys at 7.0T: preliminary results S. Haneder 1, V. Juras 2, H.J. Michaely 1, S.O. Schönberg 1, S. Trattnig 2, Š. Zbýň 2 ; 1 Mannheim/DE, 2 Vienna/AT 11:24 B-0346 Arterial spin labelling for the prostate: initial experience at 3T MRI S. Takahashi 1, N. Aoyama 1, T. Kimura 2, K. Kitajima 1, Y. Ueno 1, S. Sato 3, K. Sugimura 1 ; 1 Kobe/JP, 2 Otawara/JP, 3 Osaka/JP 11:33 B-0347 A new look at the female pelvis: ultra-high-field (7T) MR imaging L. Umutlu, O. Kraff, A. Fischer, S. Kinner, S. Maderwald, M. Forsting, M.E. Ladd, T.C. Lauenstein; Essen/DE 11:42 B-0348 Bridging septa in T2-weighted MRI of healthy volunteers: is there an association with the peri- and pararenal fat thickness? B. Mensel, R. Bülow, F. Weber, J.-P. Kühn, N. Hosten, K. Hegenscheid; Greifswald/DE 11:51 B-0349 Feasibility of 3T MR diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) for reconstructing anatomic connectivity of sacral plexus V. Iotti 1, A. Pecchi 1, L. Nocetti 1, F. Fiocchi 1, C. Alboni 2, P. Torricelli 1 ; 1 Modena/IT, 2 Sassuolo/IT B-0330 B-0349 Friday 231

234 Scientific Sessions B-0350 B :30 12:00 Room L/M Neuro SS 511 Stroke-related arterial disease Moderators: E. Avdagic; Sarajevo/BA, P. Barsi; Budapest/HU 10:30 B-0350 Atherosclerotic calcification is related to cognitive decline: the Rotterdam study D. Bos, M.W. Vernooij, A. Hofman, G.P. Krestin, J.C.M. Witteman, A. van der Lugt, M.A. Ikram; Rotterdam/NL 10:39 B-0351 Does clinical severity in acute stroke reliably predict large vessel occlusion? Results from a prospective cohort study of CT angiography (CTA) in hyper-acute stroke C. Hansen, C. Ovesen, H. Christensen, I. Havsteen, J. Nielsen, A. Christensen; Copenhagen/DK 10:48 B-0352 Value of monoenergetic low KV dual-energy CT datasets for improved image quality of cervical and cerebral CT-angiography D. Schneider, P. Apfaltrer, H. Haubenreisser, M. Meyer, S. Sudarski, C. Fink, S.O. Schönberg, T. Henzler; Mannheim/DE 10:57 B-0353 Black blood MRI in patients with and without suspected primary angiitis of the central nervous system T. Saam, T. Pfefferkorn, M. Habs, C. Opherk, A. Straube, M. Dichgans, M.F. Reiser, K. Nikolaou, J. Linn; Munich/DE 11:06 B T MRI reveals extra- and intracranial involvement in giant cell arteritis (GCA) S. Siemonsen, C. Brekenfeld, T. Klink, J. Fiehler, T. Bley; Hamburg/DE 11:15 B-0355 BOLD fmri of cerebrovascular reserve in patients with severe stenosis of the middle cerebral artery: preliminary results A. Krainik, A. Attye, M. Villien, K. Boubagra, K. Garambois, J. Bouvier, J. Warnking, F. Tahon, O. Detante; Grenoble/FR 11:24 B-0356 Intracranial artery calcification on CT predicts poor outcome after stroke: results from a prospective cohort study C. Ovesen, H. Christensen, A.-M. Abild, C. Hansen, I. Havsteen, J. Nielsen, A. Christensen; Copenhagen/DK 11:33 B-0357 Intracranial artery stenosis on CT angiography (CTA) predicts poor outcome after stroke: results from a prospective cohort study C. Ovesen, H. Christensen, A.-M. Abild, C. Hansen, I. Havsteen, J. Nielsen, A. Christensen; Copenhagen/DK 11:42 B-0358 Contribution of the temporal maximum intensity projection (tmip) datasets for measurement of the middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion and predictive value for results of systemic thrombolytic therapy J. Baxa, R. Tupý, V. Rohan, B. Kreuzberg, J. Ferda; Pilsen/CZ 11:51 B-0359 MRI findings in small vessel disease and their relationship to cognitive impairment P. Benjamin, A.J. Lawrence, B. Patel, A.W. Chung, T.R. Barrick, A.D. Mackinnnon, R. Morris, H.S. Markus; London/UK 10:30 12:00 Room N/O Vascular SS 515 Novel tools for blood flow evaluation Moderators: J. Barkhausen; Lübeck/DE, F. Garaci; Rome/IT 10:30 B-0361 Assessment of blood flow haemodynamics of liver cirrhosis patients after treatment with a TIPS stentgraft using a flowsensitive 4D MRI imaging at 3 Tesla Z. Stankovic 1, M.F. Russe 2, B. Jung 2, W. Euringer 2, Z. Csatari 2, L. Stehlin 2, M. Langer 2, M. Markl 1 ; 1 Chicago, IL/US, 2 Freiburg/DE 10:39 B-0362 Evaluation of atherosclerosis and endothelial functions in nonalcoholic hepatosteatosis patients: comparison with ultrasound and biochemical markers M.G. Yilmabasar, A. Hayirlioglu, U. Ozdamarlar, I. Kuru; Istanbul/TR 10:48 B-0363 CT angiography in renal donors using automated kvp selection in combination with sinogram-affirmed iterative reconstruction: evaluation of radiation dose and image quality M.P.F. Botelho, F.D. Gonzalez-Guindalini, P. Entezari, H. Chalian, V. Yaghmai; Chicago, IL/US 10:57 B-0364 Comparison of high pitch (3) and standard pitch (0.6) CT angiography using 128-slice dual-source CT in patients with peripheral arterial disease K. Choo, J. Park, J. Kim, J. Roh; Busan/KR 11:06 B-0365 Differential diagnosis of cervical artery dissection and intra-arterial thrombosis using MRI and MRA M. Dreval, M. Krotenkova, L. Kalashnikova, L. Dobryinina, R. Konovalov; Moscow/RU 11:15 B-0366 Impact of organ-specific dose reduction on image quality of head and neck CT-angiography R.S. Lanzman, L. Schimmöller, P. Heusch, S. Dietrich, F. Miese, J. Aissa, T.A. Heusner, G. Antoch, P. Kröpil; Düsseldorf/DE 11:24 B-0367 Precision of pulmonary vein diameter measurements assessed by CE-MRA and steady-state-free precession imaging F. Henes, P. Bannas, M. Regier, J. Buhk, K. Müllerleile, G. Adam, M. Groth; Hamburg/DE 11:33 B-0368 The application of CT angiography with whole brain perfusion imaging in the evaluation of patients with transient ischaemic attack H. Shi, F. Yang, X. Ma, W. Guo, S. Dong, M. Qiao; Beijing/CN 11:42 B-0369 Multicentre, intra-individual comparison of single dose gadobenate dimeglumine and double dose gadopentetate dimeglumine for MR angiography of the peripheral arteries R. Iezzi 1, J. Wang 2, F. Yan 2, J. Liu 3, D. Li 4, X. Wang 3, Y. Li 2, F. De Cobelli 5, G. Pirovano 6 ; 1 Rome/IT, 2 Shanghai/CN, 3 Peking/CN, 4 Hefei/CN, 5 Milan/IT, 6 Princeton, NJ/US 232

235 Scientific Sessions 10:30 12:00 Room P Cardiac SS 503 Advances in coronary CT angiography Moderators: S. Bohata; Brno/CZ, L. Natale; Sesto Fiorentino/IT 10:30 B-0370 Evaluation of a novel algorithm for coronary motion compensation in prospective and retrospective coronary CT angiography (CCTA) J.-L. Sablayrolles 1, J. Feignoux 1, P. Ayestaran 2, A. Sagniez 2 ; 1 Saint Denis/FR, 2 Buc/FR 10:30 12:00 Room Q Radiographers SS 514 The radiographer s role as health care team member Moderators: V. Syrgiamiotis; Athens/GR, C. Vandulek; Kaposvár/HU 10:30 B-0380 How do radiographers interact with children in the radiographic examination? B. Björkman 1, K. Enskär 1, M. Golsäter 1, R.J. Simeonsson 2 ; 1 Jönköping/SE, 2 Chapel Hill, NC/US B-0370 B :39 B-0371 Estimating effective dose for cardiac CT with patientspecific dose maps in comparison with DLP conversion ( k factor ) method J.H. Yanof 1, C. Thompson 1, J. Wiegert 2, K. Yaddanapudi 1, S. Halliburton 1 ; 1 Cleveland, OH/US, 2 Hamburg/DE 10:48 B-0372 Impact of a new detector technology (Stellar, Siemens Healthcare) on image noise in coronary CTA S.D.C. Deseive 1, A.-L. Menges 1, S. Martinoff 1, M. Hadamitzky 1, T. Flohr 2, B. Schmidt 2, C. Thierfelder 2, T. Allmendinger 2, J. Hausleiter 1 ; 1 Munich/DE, 2 Erlangen/DE 10:57 B-0373 Radiation dose reduction in computed tomography myocardial perfusion imaging using iterative reconstruction and patient-tailored imaging M. Williams 1, S. Golay 1, N.W. Weir 1, S. Mirsadraee 1, E.J.R. Van Beek 1, J. Reid 2, G. McKillop 1, N. Uren 1, D.E. Newby 1 ; 1 Edinburgh/UK, 2 Melrose/UK 11:06 B-0374 Radiation dose reduction in cardiac CTA using a novel iterative reconstruction algorithm in 320-row detector CT T. Durmus 1, R. Luhur 1, J. Blobel 2, J. Mews 2, A. Lembcke 1 ; 1 Berlin/DE, 2 Neuss/DE 11:15 B-0375 Computed tomography coronary angiography with a consistent dose below 2 msv using double high-pitch spiral acquisition in patients with atrial fibrillation Q. Wang, Y. Chen, B. He; Beijing/CN 11:24 B-0376 Coronary artery calcium scoring from dual-source chest CT: potentials for ungated, high-pitch scan technique in routine clinical practice F. Molinari, A. Hutt, M. Rémy-Jardin, J.-B. Faivre, A. Simeone, E. Algeri, J. Rémy; Lille/FR 11:33 B-0377 Diagnostic accuracy of free-breathing coronary CTA using dual-source CT high-pitch acquisition: comparison of single and double scans with conventional angiography M.C. So 1, W.L. Chin 2, C.M. Wong 1, C.W. Tai 1, M.W. Leung 1 ; 1 Hong Kong/HK, 2 Singapore/SG 11:42 B-0378 One beat coronary CT angiography using 640 slices multidetector CT scanner in patients with atrial fibrillation A. Gennarelli, A. Di Sibio, M. Perri, F. Di Stasio, V. Felli, M. Di Luzio, A.V. Giordano, E. Di Cesare, C. Masciocchi; L Aquila/IT 11:51 B-0379 Influence of AIDR on accuracy of plaque characterisation and lumen assessment during CT coronary angiography A. Ursani, H. Mehrez, H. Kashani, N. Paul; Toronto, ON/CA 10:39 B-0381 Requesting x-rays at the right time to utilise the capacity of the radiology department: an everyday challenge M. Mowinckel-Nilsen; Os/NO 10:48 B-0382 Risk management in computed tomography using an incident reporting system M. Antoniutti, S. Doratiotto; Treviso/IT 10:57 B-0383 Is a radiographer-led immediate reporting service for emergency department referrals a cost-effective initiative? M. Hardy 1, B. Snaith 2 ; 1 Bradford/UK, 2 Wakefield/UK 11:06 B-0384 An investigation into the ability of Irish radiographers: in the identification of wrist and scaphoid fractures A.P. Tyrrell 1, L. Rainford 2 ; 1 Kilkenny/IE, 2 Dublin/IE 11:15 B-0385 Workloads of reporting radiographers and sonographers: cost-effectiveness compared with consultant radiologist W.P. Hedges 1, S.H. Khan 2 ; 1 Lancaster/UK, 2 Blackburn/UK 11:24 B-0386 Radiographer s expectations for role development: a national survey in view of radiography students in final year of graduation C.M. Mendes, A.F.C.L. Abrantes, R.P.P. Almeida, L.P.V. Ribeiro, S.I. Rodrigues; Faro/PT 11:33 B-0387 Job satisfaction among radiographers in Switzerland: a national survey N. Richli Meystre, P. Lehmann, N. Mamboury; Lausanne/CH 11:42 B-0388 Progression of quality improvement works in radiography by radiographers R. Gullien, J.G. Andersen, A.E. Haakull; Oslo/NO 11:51 B-0389 Radiographer contribution to the interpretation of trauma radiographs: a survey of UK practice B. Snaith 1, M. Hardy 2, E. Lewis 1 ; 1 Wakefield/UK, 2 Bradford/UK Friday 233

236 Scientific Sessions B-0390 B :00 15:30 Room A Genitourinary SS 607 Female pelvis imaging Moderators: L.S. Fournier; Paris/FR, A.G. Rockall; London/UK 14:00 B-0390 Diagnostic and prognostic value of 18 F-FDG PET/ MR over MR and PET/CT in recurrent gynaecologic malignancies prior to pelvic exenteration I.A. Burger 1, H.A. Vargas 2, O.F. Donati 2, V. Andikyan 2, H. Schoder 2, D. Chi 2, E. Sala 2, H. Hricak 2 ; 1 Zurich/CH, 2 New York, NY/US 14:09 B-0391 Diagnostic value of quantitative measurement of microvascular changes achieved using perfusion MR imaging in the assessment of tumour grading in endometrial carcinoma O. Minutolo, D. Ippolito, A.C. Cadonici, P.A. Bonaffini, C. Capraro, S. Sironi; Monza/IT 14:18 B-0392 Influence of pathophysiological parameters with kinematic MRI in evaluation of female pelvic floor M. Palumbo, S. Carbone, L.S. Maltese, D. D Elia, A. Luceri, V. Ricci, L. Volterrani; Siena/IT 14:27 B-0393 Origin of the uterine artery in females using threedimensional reconstructed contrast-enhanced MR angiography before uterine artery embolisation: where to look for it N.N.N. Naguib, N.-E.A. Nour-Eldin, T. Lehnert, B. Schulz, S. Zangos, T.J. Vogl; Frankfurt a. Main/DE 14:36 B-0394 Fibre tracking evaluation of sacral nervous pathways 3D architecture in women affected by endometriosis M. Sergi, V. Vinci, S. Bernardo, P. Sollazzo, M. Saldari, L. Manganaro; Rome/IT 14:45 B-0395 How to improve magnetic resonance accuracy in detection of deep infiltrating colorectal endometriosis: correlation with laparoscopy and histopathology M. Miccò, A.L. Valentini, B. Gui, V. Ninivaggi, M. Marino, L. Bonomo; Rome/IT 14:54 B-0396 Preliminary functional study with MR defecography in patients suffering from deep endometriosis P. Sollazzo, S. Bernardo, M. Sergi, V. Vinci, M. Saldari, L. Manganaro; Rome/IT 15:03 B-0397 Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging of the female pelvis: do apparent diffusion coefficient values of the fat tissue change over the menstrual phases? F. Fornasa, A. Gasparini, F. Pantalone, M. Bellotti, A. Dibenedetto, C. Cicciò; San Bonifacio/IT 15:12 B-0398 Effect of different birthing positions on pelvic bony dimensions in healthy women and pregnant patients in MR pelvimetry S. Zangos, K. Eichler, A. Schollenberger, A. Reitter, F. Louwen, P. Siebenhandl, T. Gruber-Rouh, T.J. Vogl; Frankfurt a. Main/DE 15:21 B-0399 Retrospective analysis of elements that can predict short- and long-term outcome in patients affected by uterine leiomyomas and treated with MRgFUS F. Ciolina, A. Napoli, F. Zaccagna, F. Boni, L. Bertaccini, V. Noce, B. Cavallo Marincola, C. Catalano; Rome/IT 14:00 15:30 Room B Neuro SS 611 Alzheimer s and Parkinson s Moderators: B. Góraj; Nijmegen/NL, T. Meindl; Landshut/DE 14:00 B-0400 MCI to AD conversion and the role of myoinositol (MI) and N-acetylaspertate (NAA) as biomarkers for this process J. Walecki, M. Barcikowska, J.B. Ćwikła, T. Gabrylewicz, T. Bulski; Warsaw/PL 14:09 B-0401 Evaluation of posterior cingulate region with FDG-PET and MR advanced techniques (MRS, PWI and DTI) in patients with MCI correlation of the methods A. Zimny, J. Bladowska, A. Macioszek, P. Szewczyk, E. Trypka, R. Wojtynska, J. Leszek, M.J. Sasiadek; Wroclaw/PL 14:18 B-0402 The relation of uric acid with brain atrophy and cognition: the Rotterdam scan study B.F.J. Verhaaren, M.W. Vernooij, A. Dehghan, H. Vrooman, R. de Boer, W.J. Niessen, A. van der Lugt, M.A. Ikram; Rotterdam/NL 14:27 B-0403 MR spectroscopy in mild and moderate cognitive impairment as illness outcome predictor: preliminary experience J. Forner Giner 1, A. Alberich-Bayarri 1, G. Garcia Marti 1, A. Pomar-Nadal 1, J. Rayón- Aledo 2, L. Martí-Bonmatí 1 ; 1 Valencia/ES, 2 Madrid/ES 14:36 B-0404 Differentiating multiple system atrophy and Parkinson s disease on 3T MRI: a novel use of decision tree S. Rajandran Nair, L.K. Tan, N. Ramli, S.Y. Lim, K. Rahmat, H. Mohd Nor; Kuala Lumpur/MY 14:45 B-0405 Subthalamic nuclei 3 Tesla T2-relaxometry correlated to UPDRS scores in pre-deep brain stimulation (DBS) patients with Parkinson disease with consideration to the laterality of the disease T.M.L. Lönnfors-Weitzel, T. Weitzel, J. Slotboom, C. Kiefer, A. Kaelin-Lang, C. Pollo, R. Wiest; Berne/CH 14:54 B-0406 Increased regional grey matter volume in Parkinson s disease patients with excessive daytime sleepiness: an MRI study M. Chondrogiorgi, L.C. Tzarouchi, A. Zikou, P. Kosta, M.I. Argyropoulou, S. Konitsiotis; Ioannina/GR 15:03 B-0407 Olfactory tract evaluation in patients with Parkinson disease (PD) and hyposmia: a diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) study F. Pitocco, L. Di Biase, A. Giona, L. Scarciolla, C. Mallio, Y. Errante, J. Melgari, B. Beomonte Zobel, C. Quattrocchi; Rome/IT 15:12 B-0408 The neural correlates of anomia in the conversion from mild cognitive impairment to Alzheimer s disease E. Pravata 1, J. Tavernier 1, R. Parker 2, H. Vavro 3, J.E. Mintzer 1, M. Spampinato 1 ; 1 Charleston, SC/US, 2 Gainesville, FL/US, 3 Zagreb/HR 15:21 B-0409 Gender differences in grey matter atrophy patterns in the mild cognitive and early Alzheimer s disease M. Spampinato 1, E. Pravata 1, B. Langdon 1, K. Patrick 1, R. Parker 2 ; 1 Charleston, SC/US, 2 Gainesville, FL/US 234

237 Scientific Sessions 14:00 15:30 Room C Cardiac SS 603a CT and MRI: risk stratification Moderators: E.A. Mershina; Moscow/RU, M.R. Rees; Gwynedd/UK 14:00 B-0410 Updated algorithms using in-office-evaluation and calcium score may reduce referral of stable angina patients to computed tomography coronary angiography A.S. Dharampal, A. Rossi, A. Dedic, S.L. Papadopoulou, A. Weustink, K. Nieman, E. Boersma, P.J. de Feijter, G.P. Krestin; Rotterdam/NL 14:09 B-0411 Dynamic CT perfusion imaging for the detection of myocardial ischaemia: a first experience with a 3D semi-automated evaluation software U. Ebersberger 1, R.P. Marcus 2, U.J. Schoepf 1, P. Blanke 1, Y. Wang 3, L. Geyer 1, A.D. McQuiston 1, D. Bernhardt 4, F. Bamberg 2 ; 1 Charleston, SC/US, 2 Munich/DE, 3 Beijing/CN, 4 Forchheim/DE 14:18 B-0412 Quantitative evaluation of myocardial perfusion reserve at 3 and 1.5 Tesla in comparison to invasive measurement of fractional flow reserve for detection of coronary artery disease T. Walcher, K. Ikuye, W. Rottbauer, J. Woehrle, P. Bernhardt; Ulm/DE 14:27 B-0413 Dynamic stress computed tomography perfusion imaging for the detection of functionally significant coronary lesions A. Rossi 1, A. Dharampal 1, S.E. Petersen 2, E. Klotz 3, G.P. Krestin 1, K. Gruszczynska 4, E. Capuano 2, P.J. de Feyter 1, F. Pugliese 2 ; 1 Rotterdam/NL, 2 London/UK, 3 Forchheim/DE, 4 Katowice/PL 14:36 B-0414 In vivo quantification of total atherosclerotic burden: prognostic accuracy of whole body CTA in relation to traditional cardiovascular risk index and 5-year follow-up F. Zaccagna, A. Napoli, G. Cartocci, V. Noce, F. Boni, C. Catalano; Rome/IT 14:45 B-0415 Diagnostic performance of computed tomography coronary angiography to detect or exclude angiographic high-risk-cad A.S. Dharampal, S.L. Papadopoulou, A. Rossi, W.B. Meijboom, E. Boersma, K. Nieman, P.J. de Feijter, G.P. Krestin; Rotterdam/NL 14:54 B-0416 Cost effectiveness and rule-out strategy of MDCT- CA in patients with undifferentiated chest pain in emergency department R. Malago, M. Tezza, C. Barbiani, A. Pezzato, G. Sala, G. Taioli, R. Pozzi Mucelli; Verona/IT 15:03 B-0417 Transient ischaemic dilation of the left ventricle on SPECT: correlation with findings at coronary CT angiography U. Ebersberger, W.T. Halligan, P.B. Morris, B.T. Mischen, S.A. Chiaramida, U.J. Schoepf; Charleston, SC/US 15:12 B-0418 Relationship between myocardial scar and coronary artery plaque in diabetes patients: from preliminary results of assessment with cardiac computed tomography angiography and magnetic resonance imaging in patients with type 2 diabetes for detection of unrecognised myocardial scar in subclinical coronary atherosclerosis (ACCREDIT) study J.-W. Kang 1, S. Choi 2, S. Ko 1, Y. Choe 1, B. Choi 1, W. Lee 1, T.-H. Lim 1 ; 1 Seoul/KR, 2 Seongnam/KR 15:21 B-0419 Epicardial fat volume and coronary artery disease at CT: racial differences in African American and white patients with acute chest pain P. Apfaltrer 1, A. Schindler 2, U.J. Schoepf 2, J. Nance 2, U. Ebersberger 2, R. Vliegenthart 2 ; 1 Mannheim/DE, 2 Charleston, SC/US 14:00 15:30 Room D2 Interventional Radiology SS 609a Oncologic ablation and guided interventions Moderators: P. Almeida; Coimbra/PT, A. Basile; Catania/IT 14:00 B-0420 Radiation exposure in CT-guided interventions R. Kloeckner, D. Pinto dos Santos, C. Düber, M. Pitton; Mainz/DE 14:09 B-0421 Percutaneous image-guided cryotherapy: a new therapeutic possibility for local recurrence of soft tissue sarcomas? N. Lippa, A. Italiano, P. Sargos, M. Kind, E. Stoeckle, B. N Guyen Bui, F. Cornelis; Bordeaux/FR 14:18 B-0422 Robot-assisted radiofrequency ablation of liver tumours: early experience B.J.J. Abdullah, C.H. Yeong, K.L. Goh, B.K. Yoong, G.F. Ho, C. Yim; Kuala Lumpur/MY 14:27 B-0423 Image-guided percutaneous thermal ablation of hepatic and renal tumours using high-frequency jet ventilation to minimise respiratory motion D.M.L. Tse, D.Y.F. Chung, S. Scott, P. Boardman, F.V. Gleeson, E.M. Anderson; Oxford/UK 14:36 B-0424 Radiofrequency ablation of hepatocellular carcinoma associated with chronic liver disease without cirrhosis: long-term experience L. Sottocornola, A. Salmi, A. Rossini, R. Maroldi, P. Cabassa; Brescia/IT 14:45 B-0425 Safety and efficacy of sonographically guided percutaneous radiofrequency ablation of left lobe hepatocellular carcinoma M.I.M.A. Ibrahim; Sohag/EG 14:54 B-0426 Percutaneous, ultrasound-guided IRE ablations of unresectable pancreatic cancer A. Nilsson, C. Månsson, J. Krause, R. Brahmstaedt, P. Nygren, B.-M. Karlson; Uppsala/SE B-0410 B-0426 Friday 235

238 Scientific Sessions B-0427 B :03 B-0427 High-intensity focused ultrasound ablation of pancreatic cancer: a totally non-invasive treatment for tumour control of locally advanced lesions (stage III) F. Zaccagna, A. Napoli, G. Cartocci, G. Brachetti, L. DI Mare, F. Boni, V. Noce, L. Bertaccini, C. Catalano; Rome/IT 15:12 B-0428 Fusion imaging-guided percutaneous biopsy of focal hepatic lesions with poor conspicuity on conventional ultrasonography H. Park, M. Lee, M. Kim, M. Lee, J. Hwang, T. Kang, S. Lim, H. Lim, H. Lim; Seoul/KR 15:21 B-0429 CTNAV: a prospective randomised clinical trial of a navigation system for computer assisted CT guided interventions P. Durand, A. Moreau-Gaudry, J. Frandon, M. Medici, E. Chipon, C. Sengel, I. Bricault; Grenoble/FR 14:00 15:30 Room E1 Musculoskeletal SS 610a Musculoskeletal tumours Moderators: E. Quaia; Trieste/IT, R. Lalam; Oswestry/UK 14:00 B-0430 Magnetic resonance imaging parameters predictive for malignancy: a prospective study of 100 consecutive soft-tissue musculoskeletal masses V. Vasilevska Nikodinovska, M. Samargiski, V. Janevska, S. K.Kunovska; Skopje/MK 14:09 B-0431 Evaluation of features and role of ultrasound and MR imaging in large lipomas and well-differentiated liposarcomas H. Gupta 1, V. Bhat 2, S. Edward 1, E. Hensor 1, P. Robinson 1 ; 1 Leeds/UK, 2 Cardiff/UK 14:18 B-0432 Comparison of efficacy of surgical-, CT- and PET-CTguided biopsy in musculoskeletal lesions J.L.M.A. Gielen, A.M. De Schepper, S. Ceyssens, D.H. Creytens, J. Somville, P. Van Dyck, P. Pauwels, M. Peeters, P.M. Parizel; Antwerp/BE 14:27 B-0433 CT evaluation of thoracic bone metastasis: comparison of 3D volume-rendered images and combined axial and coronal multiplanar reconstruction images K. Doo 1, E.-Y. Kang 1, H. Yong 1, O. Woo 1, K. Lee 2, Y.-W. Oh 1 ; 1 Seoul/KR, 2 Ansan/KR 14:36 B-0434 DCE-MRI for assessment of vessel remodelling associated with bone defect healing in experimental lytic bone metastases D. Komljenovic, W. Semmler, T. Bäuerle; Heidelberg/DE 14:45 B-0435 View-angle tilting (VAT) and slice-encoding metal artifact correction (SEMAC) for MR imaging of orthopaedic tumor prostheses P.M. Jungmann 1, C. Ganter 1, F. Pohlig 1, C. Schaeffeler 1, J.S. Bauer 1, M. Nittka 2, E.J. Rummeny 1, H. Rechl 1, K. Woertler 1 ; 1 Munich/DE, 2 Erlangen/DE 14:54 B-0436 Association of QCT bone mineral density and bone structure with vertebral fractures in patients with multiple myeloma J. Borggrefe 1, S. Giravent 2, F. Thomsen 2, J. Peña 2, A. Wulff 2, A. Günther 1, M. Heller 2, C.C. Glüer 1 ; 1 Cologne/DE, 2 Kiel/DE 15:03 B-0437 Imaging patterns in multiple myeloma: observations at whole body MRI N.M. Long, O.M. Drumm, P. O Gorman, S.J. Eustace; Dublin/IE 15:12 B-0438 Efficacy of whole body low-dose CT (WBLDCT) in the staging of patients with early multiple myeloma: comparison with whole body magnetic resonance imaging (WBMRI) V. Besostri, D. Ippolito, P.A. Bonaffini, A. Masetto, A. Cuccia, S. Sironi; Milan/IT 15:21 B-0439 Role of apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) maps in the evaluation of tumour response in chemotherapy in patients with multiple myeloma P.A. Bonaffini, D. Ippolito, V. Besostri, A. Casiraghi, A. Di Lelio, S. Sironi; Monza/IT 14:00 15:30 Room F1 Abdominal Viscera SS 601 Liver steatosis: imaging and quantification Moderators: I. Bargellini; Pisa/IT, B. Van Beers; Clichy/FR 14:00 B-0440 Presence/absence of hepatic steatosis after percutaneous intraportal pancreatic islet transplantation in 108 allo- and auto-transplanted patients: can ultrasound predict the clinical outcome? G. Agostini, M. Venturini, G. Querques, P. Maffi, C. Gremizzi, A. Palmisano, F. De Cobelli, A. Secchi, A. Del Maschio; Milan/IT 14:09 B-0441 Phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy (31P-MRS) in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) J.M. Abrigo, V.-S. Wong, D.-W. Yeung, G.-H. Wong, A.-h. Chan, H.-Y. Chan, W.- W. Chu; Shatin/HK 14:18 B-0442 Clinical implications of fatty liver on hepatic diffusionweighted imaging studied in healthy subjects H. Dijkstra, A. Handayani, P. Kappert, M. Oudkerk, P.E. Sijens; Groningen/NL 14:27 B-0443 Liver fat volume fraction quantification in patients with chronic liver diseases with separated estimation of fat and water relaxation times at 1.5 and 3.0T B. Leporq, F. Pilleul, O. Beuf; Villeurbanne/FR 14:36 B-0444 Combination of liver intravoxel incoherent motion imaging with MR fat quantification at 3.0T to distinguish between pure steatosis and NASH B. Leporq 1, F. Pilleul 1, J. Dumortier 2, O. Guillaud 2, T. Lefort 2, O. Beuf 1 ; 1 Villeurbanne/FR, 2 Lyon/FR 14:45 B-0445 Quantification of steatosis hepatitis and liver iron overload in a population-based study using magnetic resonance imaging J.P. Kühn 1, D. Hernando 2, H. Völzke 1, S.B. Reeder 2, N. Hosten 1, B. Mensel 1, K. Hegenscheid 1, M. Evert 1, S. Baumeister 1 ; 1 Greifswald/DE, 2 Madison, WI/US 14:54 B-0446 Effect of Gd-EOB-DTPA on hepatic fat quantification using high-speed T2-corrected multiecho acquisition (HISTO) at 1H MR spectroscopy Y. Park 1, C. Lee 1, I. Kim 1, B. Kiefer 2, K. Kim 1, J. Choi 1, J. Lee 1, C. Park 1 ; 1 Seoul/KR, 2 Erlangen/DE 236

239 Scientific Sessions 15:03 B-0447 Brown adipose tissue influences body fat composition and hepatic steatosis M.K. Werner, S. Ripkens, M. Schmadl, I. Stef, A. Deckert, C.D. Claussen, C. Würslin, N. Stefan, C. Pfannenberg; Tübingen/DE 15:12 B-0448 In-phase/opposed-phase MRI and MR spectroscopic measurements for the quantification of liver fat content in morbidly obese patients H.H. Bertram 1, G. Thörmer 2, N. Garnov 2, T. Schütz 2, V. Peter 2, T. Kahn 2, H. Busse 2 ; 1 Munich/DE, 2 Leipzig/DE 15:21 B-0449 Dynamic contrast enhanced-mri (DCE-MRI) functional assessment of vascular events occurring during the intra-hepatic engraftment of pancreatic islets may predict long-term outcome of islets transplantation A. Palmisano, A. Esposito, G. Ironi, P. Maffi, F. De Cobelli, T. Canu, A. Secchi, A. Del Maschio; Milan/IT 14:00 15:30 Room F2 Breast SS 602 Breast imaging after neoadjuvant therapy and surgery Moderators: G. Gennaro; Padua/IT, P. Martinez-Miravete; Logroño/ES 14:00 B-0450 Early response monitoring of neoadjuvant chemotherapy in breast cancer patients using magnetic resonance imaging: a systematic review M. Lobbes 1, R. Prevos 1, M. Smidt 1, V. Tjan-Heijnen 1, M. van Goethem 2, R.G.H. Beets-Tan 1, J. Wildberger 1 ; 1 Maastricht/NL, 2 Antwerp/BE 14:09 B-0451 The role of magnetic resonance imaging in assessing residual disease and pathologic complete response in breast cancer patients receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy: a systematic review R. Prevos 1, M. Smidt 1, V. Tjan-Heijnen 1, M. van Goethem 2, R.-J. Schipper 1, R.G.H. Beets-Tan 1, J. Wildberger 1, M. Lobbes 1 ; 1 Maastricht/NL, 2 Antwerp/BE 14:18 B-0452 Radiological evaluation of complete pathological response after neoadjuvant chemotherapy treatment of breast carcinoma N.M.A. Abdel Razek, H.A. El Ghazaly, O.Z. Yousef; Cairo/EG 14:27 B-0453 Breast MRI at 3T: a pilot study estimating the role of unenhanced MRI (DWI combined with T2 IDEAL sequence) vs CE-MRI in the assessment of response to neo-adjuvant chemotherapy F. Vasselli, F. Pediconi, M. Telesca, M. Luciani, V. Casali, E. Miglio, A. Castrignanò, C. Catalano; Rome/IT 14:36 B-0454 Radiological findings in breast autologous fat injection: a retrospective review in 12-year follow-up L. Camera, I. Baglio, G. Barbazeni, A. Bianchin, M. Valdo, S. Montemezzi; Verona/IT 14:45 B-0455 Invasive ductal carcinoma with marked necrosis on neoadjuvant chemotherapy: RECIST or mrecist in MRI assessment of tumour response? M.M. Nadrljanski, Z.C. Milosevic; Belgrade/RS 14:54 B-0456 CAD-based assessment of therapy monitoring in neoadjuvant chemotherapy of breast cancer J.S. Grueneisen 1, S. Maderwald 1, T. Heusner 2, S. Kuemmel 1, E.A. Hauth 1, M. Forsting 1, T.C. Lauenstein 1, L. Umutlu 1 ; 1 Essen/DE, 2 Düsseldorf/DE 15:03 B-0457 Breast MRI for assessment of primary systemic chemotherapy (PSC): computer assisted diagnosis (CAD) predicts degree of tissue response and residual tumour mass P.A.T. Baltzer 1, M. Dietzel 2, W.A. Kaiser 3 ; 1 Vienna/AT, 2 Erlangen/DE, 3 Jena/DE 15:12 B-0458 Evaluation of residual breast tissue post-mastectomy using breast MRI V. Tsehmaister Abitbol, A. Rundstein, A. Shalmon, E. Konen, M. Sklair-Levy; Tel Hashomer/IL 15:21 B-0459 Breast cancer recurrence in DIEP flap reconstructed breasts: a 12-year retrospective study J.A. Farras Roca, A. Luciani, R. Bosc, E. Meyblum, P. Beaussart, F. Pigneur, Y. Belkacemi, A. Rahmouni, T.-H. Dao; Créteil/FR 14:00 15:30 Room G/H Cardiac SS 603b Cardiomyopathy and fibrosis Moderators: P. Donato; Coimbra/PT, R. Maksimović; Belgrade/RS 14:00 B-0460 Potential value of fibrosis quantification in dilated cardiomyopathy A. Jacquier, A. Kallifatidis, B. Maurel, A. Flavian, J. Gaubert, J. Bartoli, G. Moulin; Marseille/FR 14:09 B-0461 Potential value of fibrosis quantification in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy A. Jacquier, A. Kallifatidis, B. Maurel, A. Flavian, J. Gaubert, J. Bartoli, G. Moulin; Marseille/FR 14:18 B-0462 Extent of myocardial scar detected by late Gadolinium enhancement-cardiac magnetic resonance (LGE-CMR) as a predictor of major adverse cardiac events (MACE) in HCM patients S. Bertugno, G. Ligabue, F. Fiocchi, L. Nocetti, S. Vasaturo, V. Morini, A. Barbieri, R. Lugli; Modena/IT 14:27 B-0463 Myocardial scar extension detected by late Gadolinium enhancement-cardiovascular magnetic resonance (LGE-CMR) for arrhythmic risk stratification of HCM patients S. Bertugno, G. Ligabue, F. Fiocchi, L. Nocetti, S. Vasaturo, V. Morini, A. Barbieri, R. Lugli, P. Torricelli; Modena/IT 14:36 B-0464 Prognostic value of RV remodelling in pulmonary hypertension: cardiac magnetic resonance study N. Galea, M. Francone, I. Carbone, I. Iacucci, P. David, C. Vizza, C. Catalano; Rome/IT 14:45 B-0465 Evaluation of Brugada syndrome by cardiac magnetic resonance L. Salvatori 1, C. Tessa 1, i. Del Meglio 1, S. Diciotti 2, C. Vignali 1, G. Casolo 1 ; 1 Lido di Camaiore/IT, 2 Firenze/IT B-0447 B-0465 Friday 237

240 Scientific Sessions B-0466 B :54 B-0466 Sensitivity of cardiac magnetic resonance varies with clinical presentation of biopsy-proven acute myocarditis: correlation with necrosis/apoptosis patterns of viral aetiology G. Cannavale, M. Francone, R. Rosati, P. David, A. Frustaci, C. Catalano; Rome/IT 15:03 B-0467 Cardiac magnetic resonance vs echocardiography for the assessment of cardiac volumes and function in thalassemia intermedia patients C. Tudisca 1, A. Meloni 2, C. Ascioti 3, S. Renne 3, V. Santamaria 4 ; 1 Palermo/IT, 2 Pisa/IT, 3 Lamezia Terme/IT, 4 Vibo Valentia/IT 15:12 B-0468 Right heart involvement in thalassaemia major (TM) patients: a cardiac MR (CMR) assessment F. Pitocco, I. Di Giampietro, A. De Vivo, P. Cianciulli, C. Liguori, B. Beomonte Zobel; Rome/IT 15:21 B-0469 β-thalassaemia as a new potential risk factor for left ventricular noncompaction (LVNC): a cardiac MRI evaluation C. Liguori, I. Di Giampietro, F. Pitocco, P. Cianciulli, B. Beomonte Zobel; Rome/IT 14:00 15:30 Room L/M Head and Neck SS 608 Technical innovations, TMJ disease and rare entities Moderators: J. Frühwald-Pallamar; Vienna/AT, J. Widelec; Brussels/BE 14:00 B-0470 CT numbers of CBCT regarding position dependence on different size of field-of-view M. Imura 1, T. Todoroki 2 ; 1 Kyoto/JP, 2 Osaka/JP 14:09 B-0471 Dual-source 128-slice MDCT neck: radiation dose and image quality estimation of a clinically relevant dualenergy, high-pitch, standard single-energy protocol J. Paul, E. Mbalisike, T.J. Vogl; Frankfurt a. Main/DE 14:18 B-0472 Performance of filtered back-projection (FBP), statistical (ASIR) and model-based (VEO) iterative reconstruction of neck CT staging examinations F.G. Mück, L. Geyer, J. Grimm, Z. Deak, M.F. Reiser, S. Wirth; Munich/DE 14:27 B-0473 Maxillary sinus pyocele: a new radiological entity A. Lacan-Melki, S. Espinoza-Boireau, I. Khettab, P. Halimi; Paris/FR 14:36 B-0474 Carotid blowout syndrome in patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma treated with radiotherapy: a review of 12-year experience V.K. Fung, J.S. Shum, B.M. Lai, C. Chu, W.K. Kan; Hong Kong/HK 14:45 B-0475 Nasal-type NK/T-cell lymphoma of the nasal cavity and PNS: CT and MR imaging findings K. Kang 1, S. Suh 1, K. Kim 1, K. Son 1, Y. Lee 2, H. Seo 2, N. Lee 1, H. Seol 1 ; 1 Seoul/KR, 2 Ansan/KR 14:54 B-0476 Temporomandibular joint internal derangement: correlation of MRI findings with clinical symptoms K. Šurlan Popovič, U. Lamot, M. Vrabec, R. Klavžar; Ljubljana/SI 15:03 B-0477 An investigation of relative signal intensity of MR images in retrodiscal tissue and lateral pterygoid muscle in patients with temporomandibular joint disorder and its relation with MRI findings Z. Ghoncheh, M. Panjnosh, H. Banihashemi; Tehran/IR 15:12 B-0478 High resolution 3D MR imaging of the temporomandibular joint: feasibility and comparison with 2D sequences U. Navarro, M. Ravanelli, D. Farina, E. Botturi, R. Maroldi; Brescia/IT 15:21 B-0479 Radiological anatomy of the ethmoidal arteries: a cone beam CT study L. Sottocornola, M. Dal Corso, M. Ravanelli, L. Pianta, R. Maroldi; Brescia/IT 14:00 15:30 Room N/O Musculoskeletal SS 610b Cartilage: advanced imaging Moderators: A. Karpenko; St. Petersburg/RU, P. Omoumi; Brussels/BE 14:00 B-0480 Direct comparison of MR imaging at 1.5- and 3.0-T for evaluating the articular cartilage of the knee P. Van Dyck 1, C. Kenis 1, V. Lambrecht 2, K. Wouters 1, F.M.H.M. Vanhoenacker 1, J.L. Gielen 1, P.M. Parizel 1 ; 1 Antwerp/BE, 2 Gent/BE 14:09 B-0481 Biochemical imaging of the knee s cartilage: comparison of three techniques at 3 Tesla C. Rehnitz 1, J. Kupfer 1, N. Streich 1, I. Burkholder 2, B. Schmitt 3, L. Lauer 3, H.- U. Kauczor 1, M.-A. Weber 1 ; 1 Heidelberg/DE, 2 Zweibrücken/DE, 3 Erlangen/DE 14:18 B-0482 High-resolution flat-panel CT arthrography for cartilage defect detection: comparison to multidetector CT R. Guggenberger 1, S. Winklhofer 1, T. Redel 2, J. Korporaal 2, A. Meier 2, J. von Spiczak 1, G. Andreisek 1, H. Alkadhi 1 ; 1 Zurich/CH, 2 Forchheim/DE 14:27 B-0483 Longitudinal evaluation of T2 relaxation time in relation to baseline volume of femorotibial cartilage data from the osteoarthritis initiative P. Beringer 1, L. Nardo 1, H. Liebl 1, U.R. Heilmeier 1, A. Lai 1, F. Liu 1, G.B. Joseph 1, F. Eckstein 2, T.M. Link 1 ; 1 San Francisco, CA/US, 2 Salzburg/AT 14:36 B-0484 Longitudinal increase of T2 relaxation time in normal subjects indicating physiological aging of the collagen network and cartilage matrix: data from the osteoarthritis initiative (OAI) U.R. Heilmeier, P. Beringer, L. Nardo, H. Liebl, S. Lee, G. Joseph, C.E. McCulloch, M.C. Nevitt, T.M. Link; San Francisco, CA/US 14:45 B D delayed gadolinium-enhanced MRI of cartilage (dgemric) at 3T used to evaluate the effect of hyaluronic acid on cartilage quality in knee osteoarthritis patients J. van Tiel, M. Reijman, K. Bos, J. Verhaar, G.P. Krestin, S. Bierma - Zeinstra, H. Weinans, G. Kotek, E. Oei; Rotterdam/NL 14:54 B-0486 T2* mapping and delayed gadolinium-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging in cartilage (dgemric) of glenohumeral cartilage in asymptomatic volunteers at 3T B. Bittersohl 1, F.R. Miese 1, C. Dekkers 1, H. Senyurt 1, J. Kircher 2, H.-J. Wittsack 1, G. Antoch 1, R. Krauspe 1, C. Zilkens 1 ; 1 Düsseldorf/DE, 2 Cologne/DE 238

241 Scientific Sessions 15:03 B-0487 Validity of gradient-echo three-dimensional delayed gadolinium-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging of hip joint cartilage: a histologically controlled study C. Zilkens 1, F.R. Miese 1, M. Herten 1, S. Kurzidem 1, M. Jäger 2, D. König 3, G. Antoch 1, R. Krauspe 1, B. Bittersohl 1 ; 1 Düsseldorf/DE, 2 Essen/DE, 3 Viersen/DE 15:12 B-0488 In-vivo sodium magnetic resonance (MR) imaging of healthy intervertebral discs during unloading K.M. Friedrich, J. Wimmer, V. Juras, S. Zbyn, I. Nöbauer-Huhmann, S. Trattnig; Vienna/AT 15:21 B-0489 T2 mapping for assessment of lumbar disc repair after autologous disc-derived chondrocyte transplantation (ADCT) M. Glowacki, M. Ostrowska, W. Gradkowski, J. Walecki; Warsaw/PL 15:03 B-0497 Uterine artery embolization for management of secondary postpartum haemorrhage associated with placenta accreta Z. Wang, Z. Jin, X. Li; Beijing/CN 15:12 B-0498 Placenta percreta: role of bilateral occlusion balloons insertion in to internal iliac arteries to prevent haemorrhage and hysterectomy M. Teixidor Viñas, A.-M. Belli, E. Chandraharan; London/UK 15:21 B-0499 Efficacy of bilateral uterine artery embolization as a first-line therapeutic option for acquired uterine arteriovenous malformations J. Shin, H.-K. Yoon, G.-Y. Ko, D.-I. Gwon; Seoul/KR B-0487 B :00 15:30 Room P Interventional Radiology SS 609b Gynaecological and obstetric interventions Moderators: P. Andersen; Odense/DK, R. Nijenhuis; Maastricht/NL 14:00 B-0490 Non-invasive treatment of uterine fibroids using MRguided high-intensity focused ultrasound: results on quality of life, non-perfused volume ratio and size reduction over 12 months F. Ciolina, A. Napoli, B. Cavallo Marincola, F. Boni, F. Zaccagna, V. Noce, L. Bertaccini, C. Catalano; Rome/IT 14:09 B-0491 MRI-guided focused ultrasound treatment of symptomatic uterine fibroids: impact of technology advancement on ablation volumes in 115 patients C.G. Trumm 1, R. Stahl 1, D.-A. Clevert 1, P. Herzog 2, I. Mindjuk 2, S. Kornprobst 2, R.- T. Hoffmann 3, M.F. Reiser 1, M. Matzko 2 ; 1 Munich/DE, 2 Dachau/DE, 3 Dresden/DE 14:18 B-0492 Efficacy of MRI-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) treatment of uterine fibroids: evaluation of nonperfused volume (NPV), fibroid shrinkage and clinical improvement at 6-month follow-up I. Invernizzi 1, M. Vaiani 1, P. Colombo 1, F. Zucconi 1, S. Sironi 2, C. Ticca 1 ; 1 Milan/IT, 2 Monza/IT 14:27 B-0493 Uterine adenomyosis treated by MRgFUS: technical approach and clinical results F. Ferrari, A. Miccoli, F. Arrigoni, A.V. Giordano, E. Fascetti, G. Mascaretti, C. Masciocchi; L Aquila/IT 14:36 B-0494 Is uterine artery embolisation in large sized myoma as efficient as in normal sized myoma: a retrospective comparative study in 263 patients H. Choi 1, G. Jeon 1, M. Kim 2, J. Lee 1, J. Yoon 1, S. Hwang 1 ; 1 Seongnam/KR, 2 Seoul/KR 14:45 B-0495 Usefulness of pelvic artery embolisation: a comparison between caesarean section and vaginal delivery in 176 patients H. Lee, G. Jeon; Seongnam-si/KR 14:54 B-0496 Transarterial embolization in the treatment of postpartum haemorrhage Z. Wang, X. Li, Z. Jin; Beijing/CN 14:00 15:30 Room Z Molecular Imaging SS 606 MR/PET and PET/CT Moderators: N. Belcari; Pisa/IT, P.R. Ros; Cleveland, OH/US 14:00 B-0500 Simultaneous 68 Ga-DOTATOC PET/MRI for whole body staging in patients with neuroendocrine tumours: preliminary results K.J. Beiderwellen 1, T.D. Poeppel 1, V. Hartung-Knemeyer 1, C. Buchbender 2, H. Kuehl 1, A. Bockisch 1, T.C. Lauenstein 1 ; 1 Essen/DE, 2 Düsseldorf/DE 14:09 B-0501 Diffusion-weighted imaging as part of hybrid FDG-PET/ MRI protocols for whole body cancer staging: does it benefit lesion detection? T.A. Heusner 1, P. Heusch 1, V. Hartung-Knemeyer 2, K. Beiderwellen 2, T. Lauenstein 2, M. Forsting 2, G. Antoch 1, C. Buchbender 1 ; 1 Düsseldorf/DE, 2 Essen/DE 14:18 B-0502 Molecular imaging of the prostate using multiparametric functional [11C]-acetate PET/MRI: proof of concept S. Polanec, T. Helbich, K. Pinker-Domenig, S. Leitner, B. Füger, G. Karanikas, M. Margreiter, S. Kommata, P. Brader; Vienna/AT 14:27 B-0503 PET/CT guided therapy planning in prostate cancer patients eligible for radiotherapy: results from a bicentric clinical study E. Lopci 1, B.A. Jereczek-Fossa 2, M. Rodari 1, G. Pepe 1, C. Fodor 2, D. Zerini 2, O. De Cobelli 2, R. Orecchia 2, A. Chiti 1 ; 1 Rozzano/IT, 2 Milan/IT 14:36 B-0504 Detection of lung nodules in an integrated whole body MR/PET scanner: comparison to PET/CT N.F. Schwenzer, C. Schraml, S. Gatidis, C. Brendle, H. Schmidt, C. Pfannenberg, C.D. Claussen; Tübingen/DE 14:45 B-0505 Assessment of tumour aggressiveness with quantitative perfusion imaging and tumour volume in patients with lung cancer: correlation with metabolic parameters of 18 FDG-PET/CT D. Fior, D. Ippolito, P.A. Bonaffini, C. Capraro, C. Messa, S. Sironi; Monza/IT 14:54 B-0506 FDG-PET/CT for the early prediction of histopathological complete response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy in breast cancer patients T.A. Heusner 1, C. Riegger 1, S. Kuemmel 2, M. Forsting 2, V. Hartung-Knemeyer 2, G. Antoch 1, C. Buchbender 1 ; 1 Düsseldorf/DE, 2 Essen/DE Friday 239

242 Scientific Sessions B-0507 B :03 B-0507 Diagnostic accuracy of 11C-choline PET (CHO-PET) in patient affected by hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC): comparison with CT/MRI E. Lopci, G. Torzilli, A. Palmisano, M. Scorsetti, A. Chiti; Rozzano/IT 15:12 B-0508 PIB-PET as a pathological and functional marker in Alzheimer s disease V. Abreu 1, A. Nordberg 2 ; 1 Lorenskog/NO, 2 Stockholm/SE 240

243 Scientific Sessions 10:30 12:00 Room C Neuro SS 911 New insights into brain gliomas Moderators: L.C. Tzarouchi; Ioannina/GR, P. Vilela; Almada/PT 10:30 B-0509 Data-driven grading of brain gliomas: a multiparametric MRI study V. Panara, D. Tortora, P. Mattei, S. Salice, C. Briganti, A. Cotroneo, A. Tartaro, M. Caulo; Chieti/IT 10:39 B-0510 Combining diffusion kurtosis imaging, dynamic susceptibility-weighted MR imaging and short echo time chemical shift imaging for grading gliomas S. Van Cauter 1, F. De Keyzer 1, D. Sima 1, J. Veraart 2, F. D Arco 1, R. Peeters 1, S. Van Gool 1, S. Sunaert 1, U. Himmelreich 1 ; 1 Leuven/BE, 2 Antwerp/BE 10:48 B-0511 Dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) MRI of cerebral gliomas: assessment of tumoral angiogenesis with low gadolinium-based contrast agent dose D. Gadda, L. Mazzoni, M. Moretti, S. Chiti, G. Giordano; Firenze/IT 10:57 B-0512 Correction of CBV perfusion maps from T1 leakage effect allows a better correlation of perfusion DSC MR imaging with histopathologic glioma grading and an estimation of vascular permeability F. Viry 1, D. Galanaud 1, A. Mitulescu 2, Y. Chaibi 2, V. Reina 1, D. Leclercq 1, D. Dormont 1 ; 1 Paris/FR, 2 La Ciotat/FR 11:06 B-0513 Paradoxical imaging features of high-grade gliomas with oligodendroglial component: quantitative analysis on diffusion and DSC perfusion MR imaging L. Sunwoo, S. Choi, T. Kim, S.-H. Lee, C.-K. Park, J.-H. Kim, C.-H. Sohn, S.-H. Park, I. Kim; Seoul/KR 11:15 B-0514 Survival predictive value of perfusion-weighted MRI relative cerebral blood volume (rcbv) in glioblastoma multiforme adjusted by multiple biomarkers including MGMT promoter methylation G. Viteri, P. Slon, J. Etxano, G. Aldave, R. García-Eulate, J.L. Zubieta, S. Tejada, R. Díez-Valle, P.D. Dominguez; Pamplona/ES 11:24 B-0515 Additive value of arterial spin labeling in differentiating primary central nervous system lymphoma from glioblastoma multiforme: an observer performance study K. Yamashita, T. Yoshiura, A. Hiwatashi, O. Togao, K. Kikuchi, K. Yoshimoto, H. Honda; Fukuoka/JP 11:33 B-0516 Glioma grading using pharmacokinetic parameters in T1-weighted dynamic contrast-enhanced perfusion MR S.C. Jung, S. Choi, S. Kim, H. Shin, J. Yeom, I. Ryoo; Seoul/KR 11:42 B-0517 Intravoxel incoherent motion MR imaging with biexponential and stretched-exponential model in grading cerebral gliomas Y. Bai 1, D. Shi 1, S. Dou 1, F. Sun 2, M. Wang 1 ; 1 Zhengzhou/CN, 2 Beijing/CN 11:51 B-0518 Apparent diffusion coefficient obtained by magnetic resonance imaging as a prognostic marker in glioblastomas: correlation with MGMT promoter methylation status L. Calabria 1, M. Rossi Espagnet 1, F. Tavanti 1, A. Boellis 1, V. Coppola 2, M. Federici 1, A. Romano 1, L. Fantozzi 1, A. Bozzao 1 ; 1 Rome/IT, 2 Ronciglione/IT 10:30 12:00 Room D1 Chest SS 904 Image quality and dose reduction Moderators: P.A. Grenier; Paris/FR, J. Vlahos; London/UK 10:30 B-0519 Clinical evaluation of an automatic tube voltage selection in chest CT angiography T. Niemann, S. Henry, F. Pontana, K. Yasunaga, J.-B. Faivre, J. Rémy, M. Rémy- Jardin; Lille/FR 10:39 B-0520 Organ-based tube-current modulation: impact of breast position in clinical practice S. Taylor 1, D. Tack 2, V. De Maertelaer 3, P. Gevenois 3 ; 1 Montigny-le-Tilleul/BE, 2 Baudour/BE, 3 Brussels/BE 10:48 B-0521 Reduced radiation exposure of the female breast during low-dose chest CT using an organ-based tubecurrent modulation and bismuth shield: comparison of image quality and radiation dose Y. Kim, Y. Sung, E. Kim, H. Kim, J. Choi; Incheon/KR 10:57 B-0522 Evaluation of automated attenuation-based tube potential selection in combination with organ-specific dose reduction for clinical chest CT P. Kröpil, L. Schimmöller, S. Dietrich, P. Heusch, J. Aissa, G. Antoch, R.S. Lanzman; Düsseldorf/DE 11:06 B-0523 Thoracic imaging with low-dose MDCT at low tube voltages using iterative image reconstruction: where is the limit of diagnostic confidence compared to the clinical standard? W. Stiller 1, G. Pahn 1, J.L. Mayer 1, M. Dadrich 1, J. Hirsch 2, S. Böhme 3, K. Markstaller 3, G. Szabó 1, H.-U. Kauczor 1 ; 1 Heidelberg/DE, 2 Witten/DE, 3 Vienna/AT 11:15 B-0524 Effect of acquisition parameters and reconstruction algorithm on lesion conspicuity in low-dose MDCT of the thorax V. Yaghmai, H.G. Töre, M.P.F. Botelho, F.D. Gonzalez-Guindalini, S.K. Patel, K. Dill, C.B. Harmath; Chicago, IL/US 11:24 B-0525 Evaluation of an iterative reconstruction algorithm (idose) to reduce image noise and improve image quality in submillisievert CT scans of the thorax M. Henninger, A.A. Fingerle, C. Markus, T. Zahel, P.B. Noël, E.J. Rummeny, M. Dobritz; Munich/DE 11:33 B-0526 Phantom study for adaptive iterative dose reduction 3D (AIDR 3D) for low-dose chest CT examination: utility for identification of pulmonary ground glass opacity and nodule on 320-detector row CT using different scanning methods S. Seki 1, H. Koyama 1, Y. Ohno 1, M. Nishio 1, T. Yoshikawa 1, S. Matsumoto 1, N. Sugihara 2, H. Inokawa 2, K. Sugimura 1 ; 1 Kobe/JP, 2 Ohtawara/JP 11:42 B-0527 The lateral scan projection radiograph (topogram) in CT pulmonary angiography: the effect on scan length and radiation dose J.C.L. Rodrigues, I. Negus, N.E. Manghat, M.C.K. Hamilton; Bristol/UK B-0509 B-0527 Saturday 241

244 Scientific Sessions B-0528 B :51 B-0528 Accuracy of lung nodule volumetry using adaptive iterative dose reduction 3D for ultra-low dose of 320-detector row CT: a phantom study K. Doo 1, E.-Y. Kang 1, H. Yong 1, O. Woo 1, K. Lee 2, Y.-W. Oh 1 ; 1 Seoul/KR, 2 Ansan/KR 11:51 B-0538 Endovascular treatment of haemoptysis of pulmonary artery origin: a single-centre experience A. Khalil, S. Haddad, M. Tassart, A. Parrot, M.-F. Carette; Paris/FR 10:30 12:00 Room D2 Interventional Radiology SS 909 Thoracic interventions Moderators: J. Tacke; Passau/DE, K. Zelenak; Martin/SK 10:30 B-0529 CT-guided lung biopsy: core needle coaxial technique with autologous blood needle tract embolisation compared with fine needle aspiration in diagnostic yield and post-biopsy pneumothorax rate S. Lee 1, A. Montaser 2, L. Nardo 1, U.R. Heilmeier 1, B.A. Aronson 2 ; 1 San Francisco, CA/US, 2 Canton, OH/US 10:39 B-0530 Computed tomography-guided lung biopsy with the patient in lateral position and the biopsy side down: effect on pneumothorax rate and clinical significance G. Velonakis, D. Filippiadis, A. Mazioti, S.I. Argentos, K. Malagari, A. Kelekis, N. Kelekis; Athens/GR 10:48 B-0531 C-arm cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) needle path overlay for percutaneous biopsy of pulmonary nodules C. Floridi, F. Fontana, A. Ierardi, G. DeMarchi, L. Nocchi-Cardim, C. Pellegrino, G. Carrafiello, C. Fugazzola; Varese/IT 10:57 B-0532 Computed tomography guided trans-thoracic fine needle aspiration biopsy of pulmonary nodule: pulmonary haemorrhage, complication or advantage? M. De Filippo, L. Saba, G. Concari, C. Rossi; Parma/IT 11:06 B-0533 Feasibility and safety of CT-guided percutaneous radiofrequency, microwave or cryoablation of the pulmonary and mediastinal unresectable tumours adjacent to the heart and large vessels C. Pusceddu, L. Melis, G. Meloni; Cagliari/IT 11:15 B-0534 Factors influencing local tumour control in patients with neoplastic pulmonary nodules treated with microwave ablation (MWA): a risk factor analysis T.J. Vogl, T.S. Worst, N.N.N. Naguib, N.-E.A. Nour-Eldin; Frankfurt a. Main/DE 11:24 B-0535 Percutaneous microwave ablation of lung tumours C. Pusceddu, L. Melis, G. Meloni; Cagliari/IT 11:33 B-0536 MRI chest parameters used in the assessment of tumour response post microwave ablation of pulmonary metastases N.-E.A. Nour-Eldin, N.N.N. Naguib, T. Gruber-Rouh, T. Lehnert, M. Sadegi, T.J. Vogl; Frankfurt a. Main/DE 11:42 B-0537 Transpulmonary chemoembolisation (TPCE) and transpulmonary chemoperfusion (TPCP) as a treatment for unresectable primary and secondary lung tumours: local tumour control and survival T.J. Vogl, A. Müller, S. Zangos, T. Lehnert; Frankfurt a. Main/DE 10:30 12:00 Room E1 Musculoskeletal SS 910 Spine: advancing the use of CT and MRI Moderators: P.M. Cunningham; Navan/IE, J. Labuscagne; Bunbury, WA/AU 10:30 B-0539 Cervical nerve root infiltration under CT and MRI guidance: a cost comparison M.H. Maurer, M. debucourt, T. Hartwig, B. Hamm, F. Streitparth; Berlin/DE 10:39 B-0540 Fast inner volume imaging of the lumbar spine with a zoomed SPACE sequence using parallel transmit P. Riffel 1, S. Kannengiesser 2, D. Paul 2, S.O. Schönberg 1, H.J. Michaely 1 ; 1 Mannheim/DE, 2 Erlangen/DE 10:48 B-0541 The importance of ispection of true FISP sequences during MRI of the lumbar spine M. Papavasilopoulou, M. Raissaki, C. Voulgaris, A. Karantanas; Iraklion/GR 10:57 B-0542 Computed tomography of the cervical spine: comparison of image quality between standarddose filtered back-projection and low-dose iterative reconstruction protocols F. Becce 1, Y. Ben Salah 2, F.R. Verdun 1, B.C. Vande Berg 2, F.E. Lecouvet 2, R. Meuli 1, P. Omoumi 2 ; 1 Lausanne/CH, 2 Brussels/BE 11:06 B-0543 Imaging quality of reduced radiation dose lumbar spine CT with iterative reconstruction C.-J. Lin, S. Hung, W. Guo, T. Wu; Taipei/TW 11:15 B-0544 Multidetector computed tomography of the cervical spine: optimisation of iterative reconstruction strength levels P. Omoumi 1, F.R. Verdun 2, Y. Ben Salah 1, B.C. Vande Berg 1, F.E. Lecouvet 1, R. Meuli 2, F. Becce 2 ; 1 Brussels/BE, 2 Lausanne/CH 11:24 B-0545 Relationship among facet joint fluid (FJF) at MRI, age, and disk degeneration in patients affected with low back pain C. Ottonello 1, A. Giardino 2, G.D.E. Papini 3, A. Sharipova 3, G. Di Leo 3, F. Sardanelli 3 ; 1 Pomezia/IT, 2 Milan/IT, 3 San Donato Milanese/IT 11:33 B-0546 Typification of posterior instability in patients with spondylolysis or isthmic spondylolisthesis P. Niggemann 1, J. Kuchta 2, H. Urbach 2, H.H. Schild 2 ; 1 Mannheim/DE, 2 Bonn/DE 11:42 B-0547 Differentiation of benign and malignant vertebral body fractures with dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI T. Geith 1, A. Biffar 1, G. Schmidt 1, S. Sourbron 2, H.R. Duerr 1, M.F. Reiser 1, A. Baur- Melnyk 1 ; 1 Munich/DE, 2 Leeds/UK 11:51 B-0548 Trabecular bone structure analysis of the spine using clinical MDCT: can it predict vertebral bone strength? T. Baum 1, M. Gräbeldinger 1, E. Grande Garcia 1, R. Burgkart 1, J. Patsch 2, E.J. Rummeny 1, T.M. Link 3, J.S. Bauer 1 ; 1 Munich/DE, 2 Vienna/AT, 3 San Francisco, CA/US 242

245 Scientific Sessions 10:30 12:00 Room F1 Oncologic Imaging SS 916 Whole-body imaging: how to do it Moderators: T.F. Hany; Zurich/NL, D.M.J. Lambregts; Maastricht/NL 10:30 B-0549 Cross over PET/MRI vs PET/CT study in oncological patients: does it change management? J. Al-Kalbani, K. Alnabhani, A. Afaq, R. Syed, C. O Meara, A. Barnes, J. Boumanji; London/UK 10:39 B-0550 Whole body magnetic resonance imaging, including diffusion-weighted imaging, for staging malignant lymphoma: comparison to computed tomography in 135 patients T.C. Kwee 1, M.A. Vermoolen 1, E.A. Akkerman 2, M. Kersten 2, R. Fijnheer 3, F.J. Beek 1, M.S. van Leeuwen 1, M.B. Bierings 1, R.A.J. Nievelstein 1 ; 1 Utrecht/NL, 2 Amsterdam/NL, 3 Amersfoort/NL 10:48 B-0551 Combination of continuously moving table MRI and PET including image fusion: improved lesion detection in local and distant recurrence of rectal cancer T. Baumann, A.-O. Schäfer, M. Langer; Freiburg/DE 10:57 B-0552 Does positron emission tomography data acquisition impact simultaneous diffusion-weighted imaging in a whole body PET/MRI system? R.S. Lanzman 1, C. Buchbender 1, P. Heusch 1, V. Hartung-Knemeyer 2, T. Lauenstein 2, M. Forsting 2, G. Antoch 1, T. Heusner 1 ; 1 Düsseldorf/DE, 2 Essen/DE 11:06 B-0553 Standardised uptake values for [18F]-FDG in normal organ tissues: comparison of whole body PET/CT and PET/MRI C. Buchbender 1, P. Heusch 1, V. Hartung-Knemeyer 2, H. Kühl 2, T. Lauenstein 2, M. Forsting 2, G. Antoch 1, T.A. Heusner 1 ; 1 Düsseldorf/DE, 2 Essen/DE 11:15 B-0554 Impact of FDG PET-CT on patient management and radiotherapy treatment planning in locally advanced cervical carcinoma S. Fleming, R. Cooper, S. Swift, F. Chowdhury, A. Scarsbrook, C. Patel; Leeds/UK 11:24 B-0555 Is there a role for standard uptake value in the prognostic evaluation of lung nodules? A. Bazzocchi, S. Brocchi, G. Facchini, V. Ambrosini, S. Ascanio, G. Battista, S. Fanti; Bologna/IT 11:33 B-0556 Detection of underlying malignancy in patients with paraneoplastic neurological syndromes: comparison of 18F-FDG-PET/CT and contrast-enhanced CT N. Schramm, A. Rominger, C. Schmidt, C. Schmid-Tannwald, F.G. Meinel, M.F. Reiser, C. Rist; Munich/DE 11:42 B-0557 FDG-avid duodenal lesions: a retrospective analysis of their significance in oncology practice S. Puri, L. Jones, J. Strang; Rochester, NY/US 11:51 B-0558 Feasibility and first clinical experiences with simultaneous PET/MR imaging of cervical cancer: comparison of image quality with MRI and PET/CT P. Brandmaier, S. Purz, M. Reinhardt, M. Gawlitza, H. Barthel, O. Sabri, T. Kahn, R. Kluge, P. Stumpp; Leipzig/DE 10:30 12:00 Room F2 Breast SS 902 Increased risk of breast cancer Moderators: L.A. Carbonaro; San Donato Milanese/IT, L. Ollivier; Paris/FR 10:30 B-0559 Individual radiosensitivity: a key-issue to reconsider high breast cancer risk patient screening modalities C. Colin 1, N. Foray 2, F. De Vathaire 3, M. Bourguignon 4, P.-J. Valette 1 ; 1 Pierre-Bénite/FR, 2 Lyon/FR, 3 Villejuif/FR, 4 Paris/FR 10:39 B-0560 Which screenings program should be offered to women with BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations? A simulation of comparative cost-effectiveness G.H. De Bock 1, K.M. Vermeulen 1, L. Jansen 1, J.C. Oosterwijk 1, S. Siesling 1, T. Feenstra 1, N. Houssami 2, M.J.W. Greuter 1 ; 1 Groningen/NL, 2 Syndey/AU 10:48 B-0561 MRI of hereditary breast cancer: can hyper T2 signal intensity be considered as a new semeiotic parameter of higher aggressiveness? G. Trecate, R. Agresti, S. Viganò, L. Suman, D. Vergnaghi, C. Ferranti, M. Marchesini, G. Scaperotta, P. Panizza; Milan/IT 10:57 B-0562 Fully automated MRI breast density (BD) measurement: comparison to standard mammographic density estimation G.J. Wengert, W.-D. Vogl, T.H. Helbich, H. Bickel, W. Bogner, K. Pinker-Domenig; Vienna/AT 11:06 B-0563 Fully automated quantitative MRI breast density (BD) measurement confirms higher breast density in breast cancer patients K.J. Pinker-Domenig, G.J. Wengert, H. Bickel, H.F. Magomatschnigg, M. Curda, T.H. Helbich; Vienna/AT 11:15 B-0564 To excise or not to excise? Management of high-risk breast lesions in a symptomatic population J.D. Cunningham, A. Corr, E. Kelliher, A. O Shea, J. Kerr, D. Duke, N. Hambly; Dublin/IE 11:24 B-0565 The diagnostic value of 3 Tesla breast MRI in the diagnosis of in situ and invasive breast cancer L.G. Merckel 1, H.M. Verkooijen 1, N.H.G.M. Peters 1, R.M. Mann 2, W.B. Veldhuis 1, T. van Dalen 1, W.P.T.M. Mali 1, P.H.M. Peeters 1, M.A.A.J. van den Bosch 1 ; 1 Utrecht/NL, 2 Nijmegen/NL 11:33 B-0566 Positive enhancement integral values in diagnostic magnetic resonance imaging of breast carcinoma: ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) vs invasive ductal carcinoma (IDC) M.M. Nadrljanski, O.S. Radulovic, Z.C. Milosevic; Belgrade/RS 11:42 B-0567 DCIS at image-guided needle biopsy: can breast MRI pre-operatory predict invasivity? M. Marcon, V. Bertani, P. Clauser, E. Di Gaetano, V. Londero, A. Linda, R. Girometti, C. Zuiani, M. Bazzocchi; Udine/IT 11:51 B-0568 Breast dynamic MRI in patient with DCIS percutaneous biopsy diagnosis: are different grades associated with specific features? V. Bertani, M. Marcon, P. Clauser, A. Linda, V. Londero, R. Girometti, C. Zuiani, M. Bazzocchi; Udine/IT B-0549 B-0568 Saturday 243

246 Scientific Sessions B-0569 B :00 B-0569 Triple negative breast cancers (TNBCs) versus nontriple negative breast cancers (non-tnbcs) diagnosed during a high-risk screening program: sensitivity of imaging modalities and patient outcome R.M. Trimboli 1, F. Podo 2, F. Santoro 2, F. Sardanelli 3 ; 1 San Donato Milanese/IT, 2 Rome/IT, 3 Milan/IT 10:30 12:00 Room I/K Abdominal Viscera SS 901 Cross-sectional pancreatic imaging and biomarkers Moderators: B. Marincek; Cleveland, OH/US, G.A. Zamboni; Verona/IT 10:30 B-0570 Dynamic contrast MR imaging of the pancreas under free breathing in combination with navigator technique T. Masui 1, M. Katayama 1, K. Sato 1, K. Terauchi 1, K. Tsukamoto 1, K. Mizuki 1, Y. Iwadate 2, H. Sakahara 1, H. Kabasawa 2 ; 1 Hamamatsu/JP, 2 Hino/JP 10:39 B-0571 Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging of healthy pancreas: a study to investigate the effect of age on apparent diffusion coefficient values C. Ma, C. Pan, H. Zhang, H. Wang, J. Wang, S. Chen, J. Lu; Shanghai/CN 10:48 B-0572 Pancreatic cystic lesion fluid content virtual analysis by means of acoustic radiation force impulse (ARFI) ultrasound imaging: fact or fiction? S. Canestrini, M. D Onofrio, R. De Robertis, S. Crosara, E. Demozzi, G. Puntel, R. Pozzi Mucelli; Verona/IT 10:57 B-0573 Role of perfusion CT in the evaluation of pancreatic masses R. Vasudevan, M. Kang, R. Gupta, D. Bhasin, S. Rana, N. Khandelwal; Chandigarh/IN 11:06 B-0574 Comparison between CT and CEUS in the diagnosis of pancreatic adenocarcinoma S. Crosara, M. D Onofrio, R. De Robertis, S. Canestrini, R. Pozzi Mucelli; Verona/IT 11:15 B-0575 High-resolution diffusion-weighted imaging of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma using 2D reduced field of view single-shot echo planar imaging at 3.0 Tesla C. Ma, Y. Li, H. Wang, S. Chen, J. Lu; Shanghai/CN 11:24 B-0576 Imaging features of acinar cell cystadenoma: can we differentiate them from branch duct IPMNs? C. Delavaud 1, G. D Assignies 1, J. Cros 1, P. Ruszniewski 1, P. Hammel 1, A. Couvelard 2, V. Vilgrain 1, M.-P. Vullierme 1 ; 1 Clichy sur Seine/FR, 2 Paris/FR 11:33 B-0577 Diffusion-weighted 3T MR imaging with b-multiple SE- EPI in the differential diagnosis of cystic pancreatic lesions P. Boraschi, F. Donati, R. Gigoni, G. Gherarducci, U. Boggi, F. Falaschi, C. Bartolozzi; Pisa/IT 11:42 B-0578 Cystic fibrosis in juveniles and adults: association of fatty involution of the pancreas at MDCT with CFTR genetic mutation and insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus U.G. Mueller-Lisse, N. Ashoori, H.A. Strube, M. Schmitz, R. Fischer, R.M. Huber, M.F. Reiser, E.M. Coppenrath; Munich/DE 11:51 B-0579 Pancreatic atrophy in β-thalassaemia population: morphological MR evaluation and correlation with pancreatic functional parameters C. Liguori, F. Pitocco, I. Di Giampietro, P. Cianciulli, B. Beomonte Zobel; Rome/IT 10:30 12:00 Room N/O Cardiac SS 903 Myocardial perfusion and coronary artery disease Moderators: F. Cademartiri; Monastier di Treviso/IT, G.I. Kirova-Nedialkova; Sofia/BG 10:30 B-0580 Dual bolus dynamic contrast-enhanced cardiac perfusion imaging: comparison of eight reported analysis methods B.M. Müller-Bierl, K. Tanaka, N. Buls, Y. Fierens, T. van Cauteren, I. Willekens, R. Luypaert, J. De Mey; Brussels/BE 10:39 B-0581 Image quality and radiation exposure of low-dose dual-source dynamic CT stress myocardial perfusion Imaging: a randomized study comparing 80-kVp/370- mas and 100-kVp/300-mAs protocols M. Fujita, K. Kitagawa, T. Ito, Y. Shiraishi, Y. Kurobe, M. Nagata, M. Ishida, H. Sakuma, K. Dohi; Tsu/JP 10:48 B-0582 Feasibility of CT-based dynamic stress perfusion imaging to differentiate ischaemic and infarcted myocardium as compared with magnetic resonance imaging F. Bamberg, R. Marcus, K. Hildebrandt, F. Schwarz, D. Theisen, K. Bauner, A. Becker, T. Johnson, K. Nikolaou; Munich/DE 10:57 B-0583 Adenosine perfusion and late gadolinium enhancement at 3 Tesla in comparison to 1.5 Tesla for the detection of coronary artery stenosis T. Walcher, K. Ikuye, W. Rottbauer, J. Woehrle, P. Bernhardt; Ulm/DE 11:06 B-0584 Myocardial perfusion defects and late gadolinium enhancement in asymptomatic subjects with subclinical atherosclerosis and mild coronary calcifications results of the Heinz Nixdorf recall MRI substudy T. Schlosser, K. Nassenstein, P. Hunold, K.-H. Joeckel, J. Barkhausen, R. Erbel, B. Sievers; Essen/DE 11:15 B-0585 Late enhancement multidetector computed tomography (LE-MDCT) assessment of scar substrate in recurrent ventricular tachycardia (VT) C. Colantoni, A. Esposito, A. Palmisano, F. De Cobelli, F. Baratto, G. Maccabelli, P. Della Bella, A. Del Maschio; Milan/IT 11:24 B-0586 Dynamic CT perfusion imaging of the myocardium using a wide detector CT scanner: stress/rest or stress only A.M. Huber 1, V. Leber 1, B. Gramer 1, M. Vembar 2, A. Leber 1, E. Hoffmann 1, E.J. Rummeny 1 ; 1 Munich/DE, 2 Cleveland, OH/US 11:33 B-0587 Advanced age and apnoea-hypopnoea index predict subclinical atherosclerosis in patients with obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome B. Arık 1, C. Gümüş 1, M. İnci 2, M. Ege 3, A. Zorlu 4, K. Varol 1, Ö. Doğan 1 ; 1 Sivas/TR, 2 Kahramanmaraş/TR, 3 Ankara/TR, 4 Malatya/TR 244

247 Scientific Sessions 11:42 B-0588 Prevalence of severe subclinical coronary artery disease on cardiac CT and MRI in patients with extracardiac arterial disease M.A.M. den Dekker 1, J.J.A.M. van den Dungen 1, I.F.J. Tielliu 1, R.A. Tio 1, R.M.J.J. Jaspers 2, M. Oudkerk 1, R. Vliegenthart 1 ; 1 Groningen/NL, 2 Deventer/NL 11:51 B-0589 Dual-energy CT with non-linear image blending improves visualization of delayed myocardial contrast enhancement in acute myocardial infarction A.H. Mahnken 1, P. Bruners 2, K. Kartje 2, B. Schmidt 3 ; 1 Marburg/DE, 2 Aachen/DE, 3 Forchheim/DE 10:30 12:00 Room P Paediatric SS 912 Paediatric body and bones Moderators: K.J. Johnson; Birmingham/UK, L.-S. Ording-Müller; Tromsø/NO 10:30 B-0590 Accuracy of ultrasound using a computerised technique to evaluate nonalcoholic fatty liver disease in obese and eutrophic adolescents as compared with MRI J.H.R.N. Nascimento, R.B.S. Soder, M.E. Epifanio, M.B. Baldisserotto; Porto Alegre/BR 10:39 B-0591 Can ultrasonography reliably differentiate between ileo-colic and small bowel intussusception? N. Simanovsky 1, N. Lioubashevsky 2, K. Rozovsky 2, N. Hiller 2 ; 1 Beth Horon/IL, 2 Jerusalem/IL 10:48 B-0593 Early-stage disease activity of the wrist in juvenile idiopathic arthritis: assessment with MRI in a pilot study C.M. Nusman, R. Hemke, D. Schonenberg, J.M. van den Berg, K.M. Dolman, T.W. Kuijpers, M.A.J. van Rossum, M. Maas; Amsterdam/NL 10:57 B-0594 Clavicle radiographs in children: a waste of time and radiation? M.R. Jackson, M.-P. Lirette, P. Leonard; Edinburgh/UK 11:06 B-0595 A follow-up study of a delayed approach to managing developmental hip dysplasia (DDH) L. Woods, M. Khalil, A. Witwit, S. Manickam, M. Churchill, V. Cook; London/UK 11:15 B-0596 Value of lower-limb MRI in the staging and re-staging of post-treatment osteonecrosis in paediatric patients with lymphoproliferative disease A. Masetto, D. Ippolito, P.A. Bonaffini, L. Longoni, A. Sala, A. Rovelli, S. Sironi; Monza/IT 11:24 B-0597 Painful paediatric hip: frog-leg lateral view only! J. Bomer, F. Klerx, H.C. Holscher; Den Haag/NL 11:33 B-0598 DXA as a key instrument for the evaluation and the follow-up of adolescents affected by anorexia nervosa F. Ciccarese, G. Facchini, E. Di Pietro, F. Moscano, L. Iero, E. Franzoni, G. Battista, A. Bazzocchi; Bologna/IT 11:42 B-0599 Replacing conventional spine radiographs with dualenergy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) in children with suspected reduction in bone density E. Adiotomre, L. Summers, P. Broadley, I. Lang, G. Morrison, A. Offiah; Sheffield/UK 10:30 12:00 Room Q Radiographers SS 914 Dose optimisation as daily challenge Moderators: P. Blackburn Andersen; Kolding/DK, A. Petakovic; Novo Mesto/SI 10:30 B-0600 Estimating organs cancer incidence related to patient radiation exposure following PCI for acute and chronic coronary total occlusion D. Maccagni; Milan/IT 10:39 B-0601 Project retake: quality assurance of radiation hygiene by maintaining image quality S.M. Khan; Oslo/NO 10:48 B-0602 Implementation of a quality control program in a radiology department M. Leão, L.P.V. Ribeiro, A.F.C.L. Abrantes, J. Pinheiro, R.P.P. Almeida, K.B. Azevedo, S.I. Rodrigues; Faro/PT 10:57 B-0603 Assessment of radiological imaging conformities based in quality control charts S. Cândido, A.M. Ribeiro, L.P.V. Ribeiro, A.F.C.L. Abrantes, J. Pinheiro, K.B. Azevedo, R.P.P. Almeida; Faro/PT 11:06 B-0604 A review of diagnostic imaging frequency to aid research exploring the issue of consent for higher dose paediatric examinations J.L. Portelli 1, J. McNulty 2, S. Mohan 2, P. Bezzina 1, L. Rainford 2 ; 1 Msida/MT, 2 Dublin/IE 11:15 B-0605 An approach for Portuguese diagnostic reference levels for bedside chest radiography A. Sousa, S. Serém, J. Santos, G. Paulo; Coimbra/PT 11:24 B-0606 An investigation into the relationship between the exposure index value and image quality M.-L. Butler, L. Rainford; Dublin/IE 11:33 B-0607 Attenuation of anode heel effect with an aluminum filter and their influence on patient dose in lumbar spine radiography J. Soares, R. Dores, P. Sousa, S.I. Rodrigues, L.P.V. Ribeiro, A.F.C.L. Abrantes, R.P.P. Almeida; Faro/PT 11:42 B-0608 Antero-posterior (AP) pelvic radiography: collimator errors and their effects on radiation dose H. Brookfield 1, A.S. Manning-Stanley 2, A. England 1 ; 1 Liverpool/UK, 2 Salford/UK 11:51 B-0609 Breast shielding significantly reduces breast dose during lumbar spine radiography N. Mekiš, D. Žontar, D. Škrk; Ljubljana/SI B-0588 B-0609 Saturday 245

248 Scientific Sessions B-0610 B :30 12:00 Room Z Computer Applications SS 905 Computer-aided diagnosis Moderators: T. Mang; Vienna/AT, D. Regge; Turin/IT 10:30 B-0610 Automated characterization of pulmonary nodules in thoracic CT images using a segmentation-based classification system C. Jacobs 1, E.M. van Rikxoort 2, J.-M. Kuhnigk 1, E.T. Scholten 3, P.A. de Jong 4, C. Schaefer-Prokop 5, M. Prokop 2, B. van Ginneken 2 ; 1 Bremen/NL, 2 Nijmegen/NL, 3 Haarlem/NL, 4 Utrecht/NL, 5 Amersfoort/NL 10:39 B-0611 Semiautomatic estimation of right ventricular parameters from MR images: a new stereological approach M. Mazonakis, K. Pagonidis, C. Varveris, J. Damilakis; Iraklion/GR 10:48 B-0612 Automated computerized software for diameter and volume measurements of pulmonary metastatic disease: preliminary evaluation E. Lotan, D. Aharoni, S. Raskin, B. Boursi, R. Berger, E. Konen; Ramamt Gan/IL 10:57 B-0613 Computerised morphological estimation of sex and age from subjective investigation to computerassisted analysis A. Vlcek, F. Kanz, W. Weninger, J. Streicher, D. Risser, F. Kainberger; Vienna/AT 11:06 B-0614 Semiautomatic evaluation of quantitative pharmacokinetic parameters systematic evaluation of a new CAD-tool and evaluation of clinical performance at high field 3T MRI M. Dietzel, A. Dörfler; Erlangen/DE 11:15 B-0615 Rapid semi-automated volumetry of pleural effusion in MDCT M.P.F. Botelho, F.D. Gonzalez-Guindalini, H. Chalian, V. Yaghmai; Chicago, IL/US 11:24 B-0616 Software-supported evaluation of small-bowel motility using free-breathing cine MRI S. Bickelhaupt 1, R. Cattin 2, S. Raible 2, J.M. Froehlich 1, H. Bouquet 3, U. Bill 3, M.A. Patak 1 ; 1 Zurich/CH, 2 Biel/CH, 3 Berne/CH 11:33 B-0617 Automated system for CT carotid plaque characterisation into symptomatic and asymptomatic classes L. Saba 1, U. Acharia 2, M. Anzidei 3, M. Piga 1, J.S. Suri 4 ; 1 Cagliari/IT, 2 Singapore/SG, 3 Rome/IT, 4 Pocatello, ID/US 11:42 B-0618 Automated labelling framework applied on full and partial spine CT scans D. Major, J. Hladuvka, F. Schulze, K. Bühler; Vienna/AT 11:51 B-0619 Segmentation-free scheme for computer-assisted image interpretation: application to CT colonography F. Chandelier 1, T. Cabrera 2, P. Kocsis 1, L. Stein 2, V. Demers 2 ; 1 Granby, QC/CA, 2 Montreal, QC/CA 246

249 Scientific Sessions 10:30 12:00 Room A Oncologic Imaging SS 1316 Rectal cancer imaging: the next step Moderators: L. Curvo-Semedo; Coimbra/PT, C. Hoeffel; Reims/FR 10:30 B-0620 Predictive value of combined quantitative parameters obtained with ADC map and 18-FDG/PET study in assessment of treatment response of patients with advanced rectal cancer: histopathologic correlation D. Ippolito, A. Cadonici, C. Trattenero, L. Monguzzi, C. Capraro, S. Sironi; Monza/IT 10:39 B-0621 Intrinsic gradient of the vascular function in rectal tumours M.H. Martens, E. Kluza, S. Subhani, M. Maas, C. Jeukens, G.L. Beets, R.G.H. Beets-Tan; Maastricht/NL 10:48 B-0622 Enhanced vascular structure and function in the tumour-surrounding mesorectum: potential risk factors for patients with rectal cancer M.H. Martens, E. Kluza, J.-P.J.E. Kleijnen, M. Maas, C.R.L.P. Jeukens, W.H. Backes, G.L. Beets, R.G.H. Beets-Tan; Maastricht/NL 10:57 B-0623 Value of 3D FSE Cube sequence at 3T MRI in preoperative local staging of rectal cancer R. Scandiffio, P. Vagli, P. Bemi, A. Mantarro, L. Faggioni, R. Balestri, P. Buccianti, E. Neri, C. Bartolozzi; Pisa/IT 11:06 B-0624 Prediction of subsequent metastatic disease by dynamic contrast MRI in locally advanced rectal cancer E.M. Anderson, J.M. Franklin, L. Tanner, M. Brady, F.V. Gleeson; Oxford/UK 11:15 B-0625 Features on MRI after transanal endoscopic microsurgery in patients with rectal cancer L.A. Heijnen 1, M. Maas 1, M.H. Martens 1, D.M.J. Lambregts 1, J.W.A. Leijtens 2, W. Deserno 2, G.L. Beets 1, R.G.H. Beets-Tan 1 ; 1 Maastricht/NL, 2 Roermond/NL 11:24 B-0626 Role of perfusional MRI and DWI to predict pathological complete response to neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy in rectal cancer C.N. De Cecco, M. Ciolina, M.M. Maceroni, G. Muscogiuri, F. Iafrate, A. Laghi; Rome/IT 11:33 B-0627 Additional value of diffusion-weighted (DWI) MRI for predicting complete tumour response (T0N0) in rectal cancer treated with neo-adjuvant chemoradiation therapy (CRT) S. Sassen 1, M. de Booij 1, M.N. Sosef 1, G. Lammering 2, C.M.M. Bakker 1, R. Clarijs 1, R.C.M. Berendsen 1, J. Wals 1, R.F.A. Vliegen 1 ; 1 Heerlen/NL, 2 Maastricht/NL 11:42 B-0628 Advanced characterisation of rectal cancer prior surgery: preliminary results on the evaluation of multimodality functional MRI techniques in correlation to histopathology D. Hausmann, D. Dinter, P. Kienle, F. Doyan, S.O. Schönberg, U.I. Attenberger; Mannheim/DE 11:51 B-0629 ColoCare: compartmental quantification of obesity on CT as risk factor for colorectal cancer J. Welzel, H. Hogenauer, J. Staffa, D. Scherer, L. Grenacher, C. Ulrich, H.- U. Kauczor; Heidelberg/DE 10:30 12:00 Room D1 Chest SS 1304 CTPA techniques in lung perfusion and pulmonary hypertension Moderators: I. Hartmann; Rotterdam/NL, E.J. Stern; Seattle, WA/US 10:30 B-0630 Impact of iterative reconstructions on the diagnosis of acute pulmonary embolism (PE) on low-dose CT angiograms: clinical experience in 53 patients F. Pontana, S. Henry, J.-B. Faivre, N. Tacelli, S. Bendaoud, M. Rémy-Jardin, J. Rémy; Lille/FR 10:39 B-0631 Comparison of image quality and radiation dose between 64-MDCT and high pitch 128-DSCT protocols in triple rule-out studies A. Fernandez del Valle, C. Delgado, R. Oca, N. Silva, G. Tardáguila; Vigo/ES 10:48 B-0632 Sinogram-affirmed iterative reconstructed simulated ECG-gated ultra high pitch CT pulmonary angiography in the acute setting: effect on dose and image quality S.J. Co 1, S. Nicolaou 1, J. Mayo 1, T. Liang 1, D. Hou 1, K. Krzymyk 2 ; 1 Vancouver, BC/CA, 2 Topanga, CA/US 10:57 B kv CT pulmonary angiography in clinical routine: initial experience, radiation dose and image quality R.W. Bauer, F. Al-Butmeh, C. Frellesen, J.A. Wichmann, T. Lehnert, T.J. Vogl, M. Kerl; Frankfurt am Main/DE 11:06 B-0634 Automated quantification of pulmonary perfused blood volume in acute pulmonary embolism using dual-energy CTPA F.G. Meinel, A. Graef, F. Bamberg, S.F. Thieme, C. Neurohr, C. Kupatt, M.F. Reiser, T.R.C. Johnson; Munich/DE 11:15 B-0635 Dual-source CT perfusion maps: do they increase the diagnostic confidence in the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism by CT? E. Stiefsohn, S. Scharer, H. Prosch, C. Neumann, K. Osinger, M. Weber, G. Mostbeck; Vienna/AT 11:24 B-0636 CT-pulmonary angiography follow-up in acute pulmonary embolism: resolution of emboli and change of CT signs of right heart dilatation and pulmonary hypertension C. Neumann, H. Prosch, K. Osinger, D. Vedrilla, M. Weber, G. Mostbeck; Vienna/AT 11:33 B-0637 Clinical significance of high density thrombi on non-enhanced CT scan in patients with pulmonary thromboembolism K.S. Beck, B. Lee, H. Kim, D. Han; Seoul/KR 11:42 B-0638 Automated quantification of pulmonary perfused blood volume by dual-energy CTPA in chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension F.G. Meinel, A. Graef, M. Armbruster, C. Neurohr, M.F. Reiser, T.R.C. Johnson; Munich/DE 11:51 B-0639 Non-invasive diagnosis of pulmonary hypertension with dynamic contrast-enhanced computed tomography M. Pienn 1, G. Kovacs 1, M. Tscherner 1, T.R.C. Johnson 2, P. Kullnig 1, R. Stollberger 1, A. Olschewski 1, H. Olschewski 1, Z. Bálint 1 ; 1 Graz/AT, 2 Munich/DE B-0620 B-0639 Sunday 247

250 Scientific Sessions B-0640 B :30 12:00 Room D2 Interventional Radiology SS 1309 Skeletal and endocrinologic interventions Moderators: L. Crocetti; Pisa/IT, D.K. Tsetis; Iraklion/GR 10:30 B-0640 Selective arterial embolisation for bone tumours G. Rossi 1, E. Rimondi 1, A.F. Mavrogenis 2, A. Andreone 1, P. Spinnato 1, G. Garzillo 1, P. Ruggieri 1, D. Vanel 1, A. Bazzocchi 1 ; 1 Bologna/IT, 2 Athens/GR 10:39 B-0641 Radiofrequency ablation of osteoid osteoma: technique with special tricks for difficult anatomical locations and atypical nidus A.K. Janu, B. Jankharia, K. Pilania, P. Thakrar; Mumbai/IN 10:48 B-0642 Osteoid osteomas of the elbow: a challenging location A. Bazzocchi, G. Facchini, G. Bettelli, E. Castiello, M. Cavaciocchi, R. Rotini, U. Albisinni; Bologna/IT 10:57 B-0643 MR-guided high-intensity focused ultrasound for noninvasive treatment of osteoid osteoma M. Anzidei, A. Napoli, G. Brachetti, B. Cavallo Marincola, G. Cartocci, F. Boni, V. Noce, L. Bertaccini, C. Catalano; Rome/IT 11:06 B-0644 MR-guided focused ultrasound ablation on bone metastases: role of dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI in the evaluation of treatment response A. Napoli, V. Noce, M. Anzidei, F. Boni, G. Brachetti, G. Cartocci, L. Bertaccini, C. Catalano, F. Ciolina; Rome/IT 11:15 B-0645 Palliative treatment of bone metastases: analysis of biological effects of MR-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) versus external beam radiation therapy (EBRT). A randomised comparative trial using functional diffusion maps as molecular activity indicator A. Napoli, G. Brachetti, D.S. De Oliveira, G. Cartocci, F. Boni, V. Noce, C. Marsecano, V. Tombolini, C. Catalano; Rome/IT 11:24 B-0646 Percutaneous laser ablation of metastatic lymph nodes in the neck from papillary thyroid carcinoma: 1-year results G. Mauri 1, T. Tondolo 1, L. Cova 1, T. Ierace 1, N.S. Goldberg 2, L. Solbiati 1 ; 1 Busto Arsizio/IT, 2 Jerusalem/IL 11:33 B-0648 Arterial spin labelling (ASL) MRI for monitoring kidney perfusion before and after renal denervation: initial results C. Schleich, D. Blondin, P. Kröpil, O. Vonend, P. Heusch, H.-J. Wittsack, G. Antoch, R.S. Lanzman; Düsseldorf/DE 11:42 B-0649 Reliable and reproducible sampling of adrenal veins in the management of hyperaldosteronism, a technically demanding yet feasible procedure: an institutional experience C.H. Lam, H.L. Chow, S.H. Chiu, H.Y. Cho, S. Lau; Hong Kong/HK 10:30 12:00 Room E1 Musculoskeletal SS 1310 Arthritis and metabolic bone disease Moderators: A.J. Grainger; Leeds/UK, A. Plagou; Athens/GR 10:30 B-0650 Radiological peripheral involvement in a cohort of polyarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis at adulthood A. Feydy, R. Bazeli, V. Freire, M. Elhai, J. Wipff, C. Job-Deslandre, A. Kahan, J.-L. Drapé; Paris/FR 10:39 B-0651 Monitoring of initial methotrexate therapy effect on cartilage composition in early rheumatoid arthritis with biochemical MRI of finger cartilage C. Schleich, B. Ostendorf, C. Buchbender, C. Nowak, P. Sewerin, M. Schneider, G. Antoch, A. Scherer, F. Miese; Düsseldorf/DE 10:48 B-0652 Quantification of synovitis in the cranio-cervical region in early rheumatoid arthritis using dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCEI) and diffusion-weighted (DWI) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) M. Jeromel 1, V. Jevtič 1, M. Tomšič 1, I. Pisanec 2, J. Markota 1, I. Serša, 1, A. Ambrožič 1 ; 1 Ljubljana/SI, 2 Celje/SI 10:57 B-0653 Slow radiographic progression of bone destruction in the hands in early psoriatic arthritis without correlation to clinical disease activity M. Geijer 1, U. Lindqvist 2, T. Husmark 3, G.-M. Alenius 4, P.T. Larsson 5, A. Teleman 6, E. Theander 7 ; 1 Lund/SE, 2 Uppsala/SE, 3 Falun/SE, 4 Umeå/SE, 5 Stockholm/SE, 6 Oskarström/SE, 7 Malmö/SE 11:06 B-0654 Role of dynamic MRI in predicting outcome of patients affected with early stage arthritis C.A. Mattiuz 1, L.M. Sconfienza 1, M. Cimmino 2, G. Garlaschi 2, G. Di Leo 1, F. Sardanelli 1 ; 1 Milan/IT, 2 Genoa/IT 11:15 B-0655 Association of trochlear dysplasia with degenerative abnormalities in the knee: data from the osteoarthritis initiative P.M. Jungmann 1, S.-C. Tham 2, H. Liebl 3, M. Nevitt 3, C.E. McCulloch 3, J. Lynch 3, T.M. Link 3 ; 1 Munich/DE, 2 Singapore/SG, 3 San Francisco, CA/US 11:24 B-0656 Reliability of tomosynthesis for semiquantitative assessment of knee osteoarthritis features by radiologists with different levels of expertise D. Hayashi 1, L. Xu 1, J. Gusenburg 1, F.W. Roemer 1, D.J. Hunter 2, L. Li 1, A. Guermazi 1 ; 1 Boston, MA/US, 2 Sydney/AU 11:33 B-0657 Scoring hip abnormalities using MR images (SHAMRI): a novel hip whole joint osteoarthritis evaluation system S. Lee 1, L. Nardo 1, A. Lai 1, D. Kumar 1, C.R. Wyatt 1, R.B. Souza 1, N.E. Lane 2, S. Majumdar 1, T.M. Link 1 ; 1 San Francisco, CA/US, 2 Sacramento, CA/US 11:42 B-0658 Cortical thickness mapping reveals effects of age, weight and osteophytes in the proximal femur T.D. Turmezei, G.M. Treece, A.H. Gee, C.J. Tonkin, K.E.S. Poole; Cambridge/UK 11:51 B-0659 Multifocal endosteal thickening of the femur in patients on long-term bisphosphonate therapy presenting with atypical femoral fractures M.A. Png, P.C. Mohan, J.S.B. Koh, T.S. Howe; Singapore/SG 248

251 Scientific Sessions 10:30 12:00 Room E2 Cardiac SS 1303 Towards improved image quality and detection Moderators: G. Feuchtner; Innsbruck/AT, C. Herzog; Munich/DE 10:30 B-0660 Stenosis quantification in coronary CT angiography: impact of an integrated circuit detector with iterative reconstruction F. Morsbach 1, L. Desbiolles 2, A. Plass 1, S. Leschka 2, B. Schmidt 3, V. Falk 1, H. Alkadhi 1, P. Stolzmann 1 ; 1 Zurich/CH, 2 St. Gallen/CH, 3 Forchheim/DE 10:39 B-0661 CT coronary angiography: effect of iodine CONcentration on vascular attenuation. The CT-CON multicentric study preliminary results M. Rengo 1, A.S. Dharampal 2, D. Caruso 1, K. Nieman 2, A. Laghi 1, G.P. Krestin 2 ; 1 Latina/IT, 2 Rotterdam/NL 10:48 B-0662 MDCT coronary angiography evolution of phasic critical stenosis in myocardial bridges R. Malago, M. Tezza, G. Sala, A. Pezzato, C. Barbiani, R. Pozzi Mucelli; Verona/IT 10:57 B-0663 Quantitative CT coronary angiography: does it predict functionally significant coronary stenoses? A. Rossi 1, S. Papadopoulou 1, F. Pugliese 2, B. Russo 1, A. Dharampal 1, P.H. Kitslaar 3, S.E. Petersen 2, P. de Feyter 1, G.P. Krestin 1 ; 1 Rotterdam/NL, 2 London/UK, 3 Leiden/NL 11:06 B-0664 Impact of iterative CT image reconstruction on calcium score measurements J.A.C. van Osch 1, M. Mouden 1, J.A. van Dalen 1, J.R. Timmer 1, S. Reiffers 1, M.J.W. Greuter 2, J.P. Ottervanger 1, S. Knollema 1, P.L. Jager 1 ; 1 Zwolle/NL, 2 Groningen/NL 11:15 B-0665 Accuracy of prospectively ECG-triggered ultra lowdose coronary dual-source CT angiography using iterative reconstruction M. Lell, C. Layritz, T. Pflederer, W. Wuest, S. Achenbach, M. Uder; Erlangen/DE 11:24 B-0666 Influence of iterative reconstruction on coronary calcium score in cardiac computed tomography K. Jaspers 1, J.A.C. Van Osch 2, J.M. Groen 1, M.J.W. Greuter 1 ; 1 Groningen/NL, 2 Zwolle/NL 11:33 B-0667 Magnetic resonance velocity mapping-based evaluation of elevated mean pulmonary arterial pressure: the impact of visualisation techniques U. Reiter 1, G. Reiter 1, G. Kovacs 1, A. Stalder 2, M.A. Gulsun 3, A. Greiser 2, H. Olschewski 1, M.H. Fuchsjäger 1 ; 1 Graz/AT, 2 Erlangen/DE, 3 Princeton, NJ/US 11:42 B-0668 Undersampled real time cine SSFP with through-time radial GRAPPA: evaluation of RV function in breathhold and free breathing B.J. Wintersperger 1, A. Pellow 1, G. Bastarrika 1, M.A. Griswold 2, N. Seiberlich 2, M. Sussman 1 ; 1 Toronto, ON/CA, 2 Cleveland, OH/US 11:51 B-0669 Diagnostic accuracy of delayed phase dual-energy CT for the detection of chronic myocardial infarction compared to 3-T MRI late gadolinium enhancement J.L. Wichmann, J.M. Kerl, T. Lehnert, M. Doss, T.J. Vogl, R.W. Bauer; Frankfurt am Main/DE 10:30 12:00 Room F1 Neuro SS 1311 Brain tumours: imaging and therapy Moderators: X. Golay; London/US; A. Zimny; Wroclaw/PL 10:30 B-0670 Intra-arterial ophthalmic artery chemotherapy for group D retinoblastoma in children: 4-years Lausanne experience S. Binaghi, J.-B. Zerlauth, M. Beck-Popovic, F. Munier, R. Meuli; Lausanne/CH 10:39 B-0671 Neurocutaneous melanosis in children with giant congenital melanocytic nevi O. Szczygielski, M. Boczar, E. Sawicka, M. Bekiesinska-Figatowska, J. Madzik, A. Romaniuk-Doroszewska, M. Uliasz, T. Klepacka, E. Michalak; Warsaw/PL 10:48 B-0672 Surveillance neuroimaging in patients with medulloblastoma should include diffusion-weighted imaging L. van den Hauwe, C. Gidding, E. van Lindert, P. Wesseling, B. Goraj; Nijmegen/NL 10:57 B-0673 Preoperative evaluation of consistency of meningiomas: diagnostic efficacy of MRI A. Hiwatashi, T. Yoshiura, O. Togao, K. Yamashita, K. Kikuchi, K. Yoshimoto, M. Mizoguchi, S.O. Suzuki, H. Honda; Fukuoka/JP 11:06 B-0674 Radiation-induced telangiectasia in the long-term survivors of intracranial germ cell tumours: wholeventricle vs whole-brain radiation L. Li, S. Mugikura, T. Murata, T. Kumabe, K. Jingu, T. Fujii, E. Mori, S. Takahashi; Sendai/JP 11:15 B-0675 Dynamic sequences in Intraoperative MRI during transsphenoidal resection of pituitary adenomas: quantitative analysis M. Rossi Espagnet 1, A. Boellis 1, V. Coppola 2, A. Romano 1, S. Pugliese 1, F. Tavanti 1, L. Calabria 1, L. Fantozzi 1, A. Bozzao 1 ; 1 Rome/IT, 2 Ronciglione/IT 11:24 B-0676 Preoperative classification of cerebral tumours by applying whole brain VPCT: which parameter to use in order to achieve the highest prognostic value? A. Xyda 1, E. Klotz 2, U. Haberland 2, R. Schramm 3, M. Knauth 3, P. Schramm 3 ; 1 Iraklion/GR, 2 Forchheim/DE, 3 Göttingen/DE 11:33 B-0677 Apparent diffusion coefficient in determination of histological subtype of meningioma D.A. Stojanov; Nis/RS 11:42 B-0678 Evaluation of diffusivity in pituitary adenoma in the Sella Turcica with 3D turbo field echo with diffusionsensitized driven-equilibrium preparation: initial experience A. Hiwatashi 1, T. Yoshiura 1, O. Togao 1, K. Yamashita 1, K. Kikuchi 1, H. Honda 1, M. Obara 2 ; 1 Fukuoka/JP, 2 Tokyo/JP B-0660 B-0678 Sunday 249

252 Scientific Sessions B-0679 B :30 12:00 Room F2 Breast SS 1302 How to get more from breast imaging modalities Moderators: N. Houssami; Sydney/AU, M. Nadrljanski; Belgrade/RS 10:30 B-0679 Magnetic resonance imaging of fibroadenomas in the female breast: new insights on dynamic and morphologic profiles and differential diagnosis from malignant breast lesions M. Dietzel 1, P.A.T. Baltzer 2, W.A. Kaiser 3 ; 1 Erlangen, Jena/DE, 2 Jena/DE, Vienna/AT, 3 Jena/DE 10:39 B-0680 Texture analysis of malignant breast tumours: is a differentiation of ductal carcinoma in situ, invasive ductal and invasive lobular breast cancer possible? T. Knogler 1, K. Pinker-Domenig 1, N. Perry 2, S. Milner 2, K. Mokbel 2, M.E. Mayerhoefer 1 ; 1 Vienna/AT, 2 London/UK 10:48 B-0681 Variation of apparent diffusion coefficients (ADC) measured in the normal breast using diffusionweighted MR mammography: effects of menopausal status, anthropometric measures and hormone intake K. Hegenscheid, R. Seipel, R. Laqua, C.O. Schmidt, H. Völzke, N. Hosten, B. Mensel; Greifswald/DE 10:57 B-0682 Second-look US with MR volume navigation (V Nav) of breast lesions: a way to make it objective A. Fausto, P. Mercuri, L. Mantovani, L. Volterrani; Siena/IT 11:06 B-0683 Dense breasts as a new standard indication for MR mammography: prospective analysis of 1488 consecutive patients C.G. Kaiser 1, C. Reich 2, K. Wasser 1, S.O. Schönberg 1, W.A. Kaiser 2 ; 1 Mannheim/DE, 2 Jena/DE 11:15 B-0684 Is 2D central projection obtained with digital breast tomosynthesis qualitatively equivalent to digital mammmography? P. Clauser 1, V. Londero 1, C. Molinari 1, R. Girometti 1, A. Taibi 2, S. Vecchio 3, C. Zuiani 1, M. Bazzocchi 1 ; 1 Udine/IT, 2 Ferrara/IT, 3 Bologna/IT 11:24 B-0685 The role of additional ultrasound and tomosynthesis after normal digital mammography: comparison between both techniques P. Slon, J. Etxano, I. Simon-Yarza, G. Viteri, A. Elizalde, L.J. Pina Insausti; Pamplona/ES 11:33 B-0686 Lesion detection and characterization of one-view digital breast tomosynthesis combined with one-view mammography compared to two-view mammography G. Gennaro 1, E.R. Hendrick 2, A. Toledano 3, R. Chersevani 4, C. di Maggio 1, M. La Grassa 5, L. Pescarini 1, I. Polico 1, A. Proietti 1 ; 1 Padua/IT, 2 Denver, CO/US, 3 Washington, DC/US, 4 Gorizia/IT, 5 Aviano/IT 11:42 B-0687 Does the adjunct of digital breast tomosynthesis (DBT) increase inter-reader reproducibility of twodimensional digital mammography (2D-DM)? G. Di Leo 1, L.A. Carbonaro 1, M. Bazzocchi 2, V. Londero 2, A. Dal Col 2, R.M. Trimboli 1, F. Sardanelli 1 ; 1 San Donato Milanese/IT, 2 Udine/IT 11:51 B-0688 One-to-one comparison between digital mammography and digital breast tomosynthesis using a fully automated software: breast density underestimation on digital breast tomosynthesis varies in different BI-RADS classes A. Tagliafico, S. Airaldi, F. Cavagnetto, B. Bingotti, S. Tosto, D. Astengo, M. Calabrese; Genoa/IT 10:30 12:00 Room G/H Genitourinary SS 1307 The bladder and below Moderators: M. Baramia; Tbilisi/GE, R.H. Oyen; Leuven/BE 10:30 B-0689 The role of CT as a staging tool and prognostic biomarker in the pretreatment evaluation of intradiverticular bladder tumours P.L. Di Paolo, H.A. Vargas, H. Hricak; New York, NY/US 10:39 B-0690 Usefulness of diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging in patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer selected for radical cystectomy: lymph node staging prospective study and comparison with CT scan J. Borrego Gómez, J. Martel Villagrán, E. De la Peña, J. Culebras, C. Llorente; Madrid/ES 10:48 B-0691 Use of FLAIR sequences for detection and local staging of bladder tumours with MRI M. Di Girolamo, G. Muscogiuri, M. Cappucci, V. Catena, R. Persechino, V. David; Rome/IT 10:57 B-0692 Magnetic resonance virtual cystoscopy versus conventional cystoscopy in the detection of urinary bladder cancer S. Elangovan; Puducherry/IN 11:06 B-0693 Voiding MR cystourethrography: a new diagnostic imaging technique for the evaluation of male lower urinary tract M. Di Girolamo, C. Cantone, E.M. Pandolfi, R. Persechino, F. Caporilli Razza, V. David; Rome/IT 11:15 B-0694 Micturition MRI: voiding assessment in continent ileal urinary reservoir J. Lopater 1, A. Scherrer 1, V. Delmas 2, S. Gey 2, Y. Neuzillet 1, T. Lebret 1 ; 1 Suresnes/FR, 2 Paris/FR 11:24 B-0695 Clinical relevance of magnetic resonance dynamic spongiourethrotomography of male urethral stricture detection E. Banchik, V. Dombrovsky, M. Kogan, V. Mitusov; Rostov-on-Don/RU 11:33 B-0696 Urinary bladder neck dysfunction in male patients: evaluation with MRI and with voiding MRcystourethrography M. Di Girolamo, A. Trucchi, S. Mariani, G. Muscogiuri, I. Casazza, V. David; Rome/IT 250

253 Scientific Sessions 11:42 B-0697 MRI findings of radiation-induced changes in the urethra and periurethral tissues in patients with prostate cancer C. Marigliano 1, O.F. Donati 2, O. Akin 2, D. Goldman 2, J. Eastham 2 ; 1 Rome/IT, 2 New York, NY/US 11:51 B-0698 MRI anatomic evaluation in patients with persistent urinary incontinence after advance male sling: a work in progress study with a 3T system V. Zampa, D. Pistolesi, S. Ortori, L. Faggioni, M. Marletta, C. Bartolozzi; Pisa/IT 10:30 12:00 Room I/K Abdominal Viscera SS 1301 Abdominal CT: dose reduction and technical improvements Moderators: D. Tack; Baudour/BE, A. Taibbi; Palermo/IT 10:30 B-0699 Hybrid iterative reconstruction for abdominal CT: can the radiation dose be decreased while preserving the low-contrast detectability? S.T. Schindera 1, D. Odedra 2, S. Arsalan Raza 2, T.K. Kim 2, H.-J. Jang 2, Z. Szucs- Farkas 3, P. Rogalla 2 ; 1 Basle/CH, 2 Toronto, ON/CA, 3 Biel/CH 10:39 B-0700 Image quality on liver CT based on sinogram-affirmed iterative reconstruction algorithm B. Schulz, B. Bodelle, P. Siebenhandl, M. Beeres, F. Al-Butmeh, C. Frellesen, T.J. Vogl; Frankfurt a. Main/DE 10:48 B-0701 Efficacy of a liver detection algorithm for noise reduction in abdominal CT N. Ardley 1, K. Buchan 2, K. Lau 1 ; 1 Clayton/AU, 2 Melbourne/AU 10:57 B-0702 Impact of modified abdominal CT protocols for obese patients with filtered back projection and hybrid iterative reconstruction technique on image quality, radiation dose and low-contrast detectability: a phantom study S.T. Schindera 1, D. Odedra 2, D. Mercer 2, S. Thipphavong 2, P. Chou 2, Z. Szucs- Farkas 3, P. Rogalla 2 ; 1 Basle/CH, 2 Toronto, ON/CA, 3 Biel/CH 11:06 B-0703 Automated attenuation-based tube potential selection for abdominal CT examinations: impact on image quality and dose reduction P. Kröpil, P. Heusch, L. Schimmöller, F. Miese, S. Dietrich, G. Antoch, R.S. Lanzman; Düsseldorf/DE 11:15 B-0704 Second generation dual-energy CT of the abdomen: radiation dose comparison with 64- and 128-row single energy acquisition C.N. De Cecco, A. Darnell, N. Macias, G. Muscogiuri, C. Ayuso, A. Laghi; Rome/IT 11:24 B-0705 Can iterative reconstructions improve the detection of small hypervascular liver nodules with dual-energy CT? L. Facchetti 1, L. Berta 2, L. Mascaro 1, F. Pittiani 1, L. Romanini 1, R. Maroldi 1 ; 1 Brescia/IT, 2 Milan/IT 11:33 B-0706 Low-voltage CT of the abdomen: correlation between patient diameters and subjective image quality, toward identifying cutoff patient diameters for patient selection. G.A. Zamboni, M. Ambrosetti, R. Pozzi Mucelli; Verona/IT 11:42 B-0707 Preliminary application of spectral CT imaging in the differentiation of hepatic tumours W. Chen, X. Ye, C. Zhou; Beijing/CN 11:51 B-0708 Ultra-high-field imaging of the biliary tract at 7 Tesla: initial results of Gd-EOB-DTPA-enhanced magnetic resonance cholangiography A. Fischer, O. Kraff, S. Orzada, F. Nensa, L.C. Schäfer, M.E. Ladd, L. Umutlu, T.C. Lauenstein; Essen/DE 10:30 12:00 Room L/M Head and Neck SS 1308 Advanced imaging of the ear, orbit and glands Moderators: R. Elias; Rotterdam/NL, B.F. Schuknecht; Zurich/CH 10:30 B-0709 Volume-rendering 3D-MRI for detection of auditory pathways in children under evaluation for cochlear implantation I. Burck, N.N. Nagy, M. Harth, T. Stöver, T.J. Vogl, S. Strieth; Frankfurt a. Main/DE 10:39 B-0710 Congenital sensorineural hearing loss and ABI surgery: pre-operative radiological protocol and considerations after 12 years of experience M. Barillari, R. Cerini, F. Spagnolli, N. Cardobi, M. Carner, L. Colletti, V. Colletti, R. Pozzi Mucelli; Verona/IT 10:48 B-0711 Three dimensional and multiplanar reconstruction of the internal auditory canal using high-resolution MR imaging before cochlear implantation: does the size of the cochlear nerve affect the results of speech recognition outcome after implantation? N.N.N. Naguib, N.-E.A. Nour-Eldin, T. Lehnert, T. Lehnert, M. Harth, T.J. Vogl, C. Hey; Frankfurt a. Main/DE 10:57 B-0712 Local tumour control in uveal melanoma (UM) after gamma knife radiosurgery (GKR): quantitative assessment of tumour response with contrastenhanced ultrasound (CEUS) C. Colantoni, M. Venturini, G. Modorati, A. Colucci, M. Di Nicola, G. Agostini, F. De Cobelli, F. Bandello, A. Del Maschio; Milan/IT 11:06 B-0713 Evaluation of lacrimal drainage system obstruction using combined multidetector CT and instillation dacryocystography M. Shweel, A. ElShafaey, M. Nasar, R. MohyElDien; ElMinia/EG 11:15 B-0714 Parotid gland tumours shear wave elastography: a preliminary study S. Espinoza-Boireau, I. Khettab, A. Lacan Melki, P. Halimi; Paris/FR B-0697 B-0714 Sunday 251

254 Scientific Sessions B-0715 B :24 B-0715 Does heterogeneous echogenicity of the thyroid parenchyma influence the detection of multifocality and bilaterality for papillary thyroid carcinoma on preoperative ultrasound staging? S. Herh, E.-K. Kim, H. Moon, J. Kwak; Seoul/KR 11:33 B-0716 Role of elastography in the characterisation of thyroid nodules F. Sogaro, P. Tessitore, A. Scrimieri, F. Pittiani, A. Borghesi, R. Maroldi; Brescia/IT 11:42 B-0717 The new approach to thyroid elastosonography time-strain curves may aid the differentiation of nodules R.Z. Slapa, B. Migda, W.S. Jakubowski, J. Bierca, J. Slowinska-Srzednicka; Warsaw/PL 11:51 B-0718 Semiquantitative strain elastography for the evaluation of chronic thyroiditis F. Ozkan, M. Sahin, K. Gul, M.F. Inci, M. Yuksel; Kahramanmaras/TR 10:30 12:00 Room N/O Emergency Radiology SS 1317 Technical issues and clinical results Moderators: M. Brink; Nijmegen/NL, G. Schueller; Bülach/CH 10:30 B-0719 Advanced visualisation of intracranial hematomas of cranial computed tomography H. Ringl, F. Stiassny, W. Schima, M. Toepker, C. Czerny, G. Schueller, U. Asenbaum, J. Furtner, C.J. Herold; Vienna/AT 10:39 B-0720 Simple and easy way using time-intensity curve of perfusion-weighted images to find penumbra in stroke patients within 4.5 hours of onset due to the carotid artery occlusion T. Mori, T. Iwata, Y. Miyazaki, M. Nakazaki, Y. Takahashi; Kamakura/JP 10:48 B-0721 CT imaging in an emergency setting is not substantially delayed by iterative reconstruction M.J. Willemink, A.M.R. Schilham, T. Leiner, W.P.T.M. Mali, P.A. de Jong, R.P.J. Budde; Utrecht/NL 10:57 B-0722 Patient-tailored automatic kvp selection with sinogram-affirmed iterative reconstruction (SAFIRE) to reduce dose in patients undergoing emergent CT imaging of abdomen and pelvis: an intra-patient comparison F.D. Gonzalez-Guindalini, M.P.F. Botelho, H. Chalian, V. Yaghmai; Chicago, IL/US 11:06 B-0723 Automated selection of tube potential in thoracoabdominal trauma CT results in significant dose savings C. Frellesen, J. Kerl, T. Lehnert, M. Harth, B. Schulz, B. Bodelle, M. Beeres, T.J. Vogl, R.W. Bauer; Frankfurt/DE 11:15 B-0724 Usefulness of low-dose CT with or without adaptive statistical iterative reconstruction (ASIR) in the diagnosis of acute appendicitis J.J. Fondevila, M.S. Carreras, I. Arrieta, J. Mesa, A.R. Gil, T. Marquina, A. Castrillo, I. Aguirregoicoa, L. Martinez; Barakaldo/ES 11:24 B-0725 The diagnostic yield of MSCT in the detection of obscure infection focuses S. Schleder, L. Luerken, L.-M. Dendl, P. Wiggermann, C. Stroszczynski, A. Schreyer; Regensburg/DE 11:33 B-0726 Impact and appropriateness of emergency department ultrasonography requests: a prospective study E.S. Ventura, Y. Costa, F.V. Gomes; Faro/PT 11:42 B-0727 Post mortem computed tomography (PMCT) quality management in critical care? S. Kirchhoff, M.F. Reiser, O. Peschel, M. Graw, K.-G. Kanz; Munich/DE 11:51 B-0728 Portrayal of radiology in major medical television series: does it influence the perception of radiology in the general population? T. Heye 1, E.M. Merkle 2, J.R. Leyendecker 3, D.T. Boll 1, R.T. Gupta 1 ; 1 Durham, NC/US, 2 Basle/CH, 3 Winston-Salem, NC/US 10:30 12:00 Room P Paediatric SS 1312 Chest, heart and radiation awareness Moderators: W. Hirsch; Leipzig/DE, P.D. Humphries; London/UK 10:30 B-0729 Radiation dose levels in paediatric chest CT: experience in 506 children evaluated with dual-source CT T. Santangelo, L. Colas, T. Niemann, A. Simeone, M. Rémy-Jardin, J. Rémy; Lille/FR 10:39 B-0730 Multi-detector CT studies in children: a comparison of radiation doses between paediatric and non-paediatric radiology units. Results from the first 2011 Italian SIRM survey C. Granata 1, F. Palorini 2, D. Origgi 2, D. Matranga 3, S. Salerno 3 ; 1 Genoa/IT, 2 Milan/IT, 3 Palermo/IT 10:48 B-0731 Is paediatric chest CT achievable at 70 kv? A feasibility study in 130 children T. Niemann, S. Henry, L. Colas, J.-B. Faivre, T. Santangelo, J. Rémy, M. Rémy- Jardin; Lille/FR 10:57 B-0732 Anthropometry of children and mathematical phantoms applied to dose reconstruction in paediatric radiology M.C. Seidenbusch, K. Schneider; Munich/DE 11:06 B-0733 Radiation exposure during scanograms (scoutviews) in paediatric computed tomography (CT) K. Schneider, V. Teusch, M.C. Seidenbusch; Munich/DE 11:15 B-0734 Reference values for cardiac valve diameters in extreme preterm infants A. Adams, N. Wesseling, J.L.M. Strengers, W.B. de Vries, M.C. Molenschot; Utrecht/NL 11:24 B-0735 Asymmetric lung perfusion in congenital heart disease: impact of differential pulmonary arterial anatomy and pulmonary vascular resistance O. Kondrachuk, T. Yalynska, R. Tammo, I. Iershova, N. Rokytska; Kiew/UA 252

255 Scientific Sessions 11:33 B-0736 Whole heart 4D haemodynamics in patients with transposition of the great arteries after switch procedure J. Geiger 1, M. Markl 2, D. Hirtler 1, B. Jung 1, B. Stiller 1, M. Langer 1 ; 1 Freiburg/DE, 2 Chicago, IL/US 11:42 B-0737 Chest-CT protocol standardization for multicentre trial in cystic fibrosis (CF) infants P. Ciet 1, K. Gonzalez Graniel 1, S. Stick 2, M. de Bruijne 1, H.A.W.M. Tiddens 1, M. Van straten 1 ; 1 Rotterdam/NL, 2 Perth/AU 11:51 B-0738 Cystic fibrosis lung disease in children: correlation between MRI and HRCT scores C. Sileo, H. Corvol, P.-Y. Boelle, E. Blondiaux, A. Clement, H. Ducou Le Pointe; Paris/FR 11:33 B-0746 CT coronary angiography with low concentration (240 mg Iodine/ml) contrast material C. Mihl 1, J.F. Kalafut 2, M. Yanniello 2, G. Muehlenbruch 3, F.F. Behrendt 3, J.E. Wildberger 1, M. Das 1 ; 1 Maastricht/NL, 2 Pittsburgh, PA/US, 3 Aachen/DE 11:42 B-0747 The impact of MR contrast agent concentration on bolus geometry G. Jost, H. Pietsch; Berlin/DE 11:51 B-0748 Transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) in malignant liver metastases: evaluation of a fast C-arm CT acquisition protocol with a robotic multi-axis C-arm system T.J. Vogl 1, M. von Roden 2, E. Mbalisike 1, S. Zangos 1 ; 1 Frankfurt a. Main/DE, 2 Forchheim/DE B-0736 B :30 12:00 Room Z Contrast Media SS 1306 New agents and protocols Moderators: L. Grazioli; Brescia/IT, T.C. Lauenstein; Essen/DE 10:30 B-0739 Magnetic resonance imaging diagnosis of metastatic lymph nodes: efficacy of the novel ultrasmall superparamagnetic iron oxide agent with monodisperse iron oxide core and multiple-interaction ligands R.-E. Yoo 1, S. Choi 1, H. Cho 1, E.-g. Kim 2, J. Park 2, W.-J. Myeong 2 ; 1 Seoul/KR, 2 Daejeon/KR 10:39 B-0740 Gold as a potential contrast agent for dual-energy CT R. Krissak, M. Elgert, B. Kusch, R. Hünerbein; Bad Langensalza/DE 10:48 B-0741 Potential use of intra-articular diluted high-relaxivity gadolinium-based contrast agent for magnetic resonance arthrography (MRA): an in-vitro study L.M. Sconfienza, A. Aliprandi, P. Cannaò, S. Sdao, M. Bandirali, F. Sardanelli; Milan/IT 10:57 B-0742 Feasibility of contrast agent volume reduction on 640-slice CT coronary angiography in patients with low heart rate Z.-X. Ding, Z. Wang; Hangzhou/CN 11:06 B-0743 The influence of the contrast media protocol and the scan mode on arterial enhancement in cardiac CT E. Talakic, D. Stocker, P. Täubl, R. Maderthaner, F. Quehenberger, H. Schoellnast, M. Tillich; Graz/AT 11:15 B-0744 Multislice CT angiography with direct intra-arterial ultra-low-dose-contrast injection for the evaluation of renal graft failure: initial study M. Guzinski, J. Kurcz, J. Garcarek, M. Sasiadek; Wrocław/PL 11:24 B-0745 Feasibility in low kv CT angiography of the abdominal aorta: assessment of image quality, radiation exposure and contrast material volume C.R.G.L. Talei Franzesi, D. Ippolito, P.A. Bonaffini, V. Bartolo, C. Trattenero, S. Sironi; Monza/IT Sunday 253

256 Scientific Session 254

257 Scientific Sessions 10:30 12:00 Room C Neuro SS 1711 Brain ischaemia: perfusion and diffusion Moderators: L. Oleaga Zufiría; Bilbao/ES, M. Vernooij; Rotterdam/NL 10:30 B-0749 Prognostic impact of perfusion CT data in the early period after subarachnoid haemorrhage C. Mathys, D. Martens, D.C. Reichelt, J. Aissa, K. Rybacki, K.-G. Klein, G. Antoch, B. Turowski; Düsseldorf/DE 10:39 B-0750 Advanced MRI sequences in the acute evaluation of transient ischaemic attack (TIA). A comparison between DTI, DWI and ASL including 8 weeks followup scans: preliminary results from the Copenhagen TIA-MRI-study A. Christensen, C. Ovesen, J. Damm, J. Nielsen, H. Christensen; Copenhagen/DK 10:48 B-0751 Normal laterality index of cerebrovascular reserve of the middle cerebral artery: a 100 volunteers BOLD fmri study A. Krainik, A. Attye, I. Tropres, L. Lamalle, J.-F. Le Bas; Grenoble/FR 10:57 B-0752 In-vivo validation of velocity measurements by quantitative phase contrast MR angiography of the brain supplying arteries: a comparison with Doppler sonography K.W. Hsieh, F. Kellner-Weldon, C. Zubler, R. Verma, M.-L. Mono, M. Reinert, J. Gralla, G. Schroth, M. El-Koussy; Berne/CH 11:06 B-0754 Eligibility of 3-dimensional CT perfusion blood flowvolume mismatch to predict time from symptom onset in acute ischemic stroke K.M. Thierfelder, L. von Baumgarten, F.G. Meinel, A.B. Baumann, K. Nikolaou, M.F. Reiser, W.H. Sommer; Munich/DE 11:15 B-0755 Whole brain CT perfusion: volumetric assessment of perfusion deficits in patients with acute ischemic stroke K.M. Thierfelder 1, L. von Baumgarten 1, E. Klotz 2, A.B. Baumann 1, K. Nikolaou 1, M.F. Reiser 1, W.H. Sommer 1 ; 1 Munich/DE, 2 Erlangen/DE 11:24 B-0756 Time-to-peak (TTP) maps using whole brain CT perfusion in minor stroke: a diagnostic tool beyond penumbra measurement S. Chakraborty, M.E. Ahmad, J.K. Wasserman, K. Keyhanian, D. Dowlatshahi, G. Stotts; Ottawa, ON/CA 11:33 B-0757 Reliability of flow-volume mismatch assessment in whole brain coverage CT perfusion in acute stroke patients K.M. Thierfelder, L. von Baumgarten, F.G. Meinel, K. Nikolaou, F.F. Strobl, M.F. Reiser, W.H. Sommer; Munich/DE 11:42 B-0758 Influence of temporal sampling rate of CTP acquisitions on cerebral perfusion maps using a digital phantom M. Oei 1, R. van den Boom 1, L.J. Oostveen 1, H.O.A. Laue 2, B. van Ginneken 1, R. Manniesing 1, M. Prokop 1 ; 1 Nijmegen/NL, 2 Bremen/DE 10:30 12:00 Room D1 Chest SS 1704 Technological refinements: from x-rays to micro-imaging Moderators: A.P. Parkar; Bergen/NO, C.M. Schaefer-Prokop; Amersfoort/NL 10:30 B-0759 Evaluation of pulmonary nodules by serial radiographs obtained by a flat-panel detector Y. Nakano, K. Maeda, S. Kitahara, T. Toyama, M. Kuwabara; Kusatsu/JP 10:39 B-0760 Function ventilation analysis in dynamic chest x-ray examination: in comparison with 133Xe lung ventilation scintigraphy T. Abe, T. Izuka, N. Motohashi, Y. Shiraishi, N. Koyanagi, A. Kurosaki, M. Ito, H. Ogata, S. Kudou; Kiyose, Tokyo/JP 10:48 B-0761 Performance evaluation of automatic chest radiograph reading for detection of tuberculosis (TB): a comparative study with clinical officers and certified readers on TB suspects in sub-saharan Africa P. Maduskar 1, L. Hogeweg 1, B. van Ginneken 1, H. Ayles 2 ; 1 Nijmegen/NL, 2 London/UK 10:57 B-0762 Diagnostic imaging costs before and after digital tomosynthesis implementation in patient management after suspected thoracic lesions on chest radiography E. Quaia, E. Baratella, G. Grisi, R. Cuttin, G. Poillucci, S. Kus, M. Cova; Trieste/IT 11:06 B-0763 Lung ultrasound in the elderly population: investigating the limit between physiological and pathological patterns A. Chiesa, F. Ciccarese, G. Gardelli, F. Feletti, U. Regina, M. Zompatori; Bologna/IT 11:15 B-0764 Digital X-ray optical densitometry in assessment of respiratory function in patients with COPD exacerbation N. Gorbunov, V. Laptev; Novosibirsk/RU 11:24 B-0765 Diffusion-weighted echo-planar MRI with multiple b-values in primary lung cancer: a new approach to the non-invasive differentiation of histological subtypes? M. Regier, D. Schwarz, A. Laqmani, F.O.G. Henes, G. Adam; Hamburg/DE 11:33 B-0766 Non-contrast-enhanced perfusion MRI for preoperative assessment of lung function in patients with nonsmall-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) G. Sommer, G. Bauman, C. Draenkow, C.-P. Heussel, H.-U. Kauczor, H.- P. Schlemmer, M. Puderbach; Heidelberg/DE 11:42 B-0767 Comparison of assessment of preoperative pulmonary vasculature in non-small cell lung cancer patients by non-contrast-enhanced and 4D contrast-enhanced MR angiography at 3T and by contrast-enhanced thinsection MDCT using a 64-detector row system Y. Ohno 1, S. Seki 1, M. Nishio 1, H. Koyama 1, T. Yoshikawa 1, S. Matsumoto 1, S. Satou 2, K. Sugimura 1 ; 1 Kobe/JP, 2 Ohtawara/JP B-0749 B-0767 Monday 255

258 Scientific Sessions B-0768 B :51 B-0768 In vivo micro-ct and 18 F-FDG micro-pet imaging of SPC-raf and SPC-myc transgenic mouse models of lung adenocarcinoma T. Rodt, C. von Falck, M. Luepke, K. Hueper, R. Halter, S. Dettmer, C. Boehm, J. Borlak, F. Wacker; Hannover/DE 11:51 B-0778 Comparison of outcomes of endovascular treatment with stent placement in patients with early and late hepatic venous outflow obstruction (HVOO) G. Viteri, J. Etxano, P. Slon, F. Rotellar, J.I. Herrero, A. Benito, J.I. Bilbao; Pamplona/ES 10:30 12:00 Room D2 Interventional Radiology SS 1709 Abdominal interventions: from TIPS to bile ducts Moderators: R.F. Dondelinger; Liège/BE, B. Sekovsky; Split/HR 10:30 B-0769 Clinical relevance and interventional-radiological management of early complications after pancreatic surgery: a 12-year single-centre experience on 1285 patients G. Agostini, M. Venturini, F. De Cobelli, S. Cappio, M. Salvioni, E. Di Rosa, G. Balzano, P. Maffi, A. Del Maschio; Milan/IT 10:39 B-0770 Management of post-surgical biliary leakage with retrievable covered stent: preliminary results A. Gioppo, A. Campari, J. Parraga, C. Michelozzi, L. Rahali, A. Sacrini, F. Melchiorre, G. Cornalba; Milan/IT 10:48 B-0771 Bioabsorbable biliary stent in the percutaneous treatment of benign biliary stricture: preliminary experience G. Mauri, C. Michelozzi, V. Pedicini, D. Poretti, M. Tramarin, F. Melchiorre, G. Cornalba, G. Brambilla; Milan/IT 10:57 B-0772 Patient doses in liver-transplanted children with biliary strictures treated with interventional radiology procedures: a single centre survey L. Maruzzelli, G. Mamone, R. Miraglia, L. Indovina, A. Luca; Palermo/IT 11:06 B-0773 Endoluminal RFA with subsequent ductoplasty for biliary and pancreatic duct malignant block recanalisation M. Mizandari 1, N. Habib 2 ; 1 Tbilisi/GE, 2 London/UK 11:15 B-0774 Effectiveness of therapeutic lymphography on lymphatic leakage T. Gruber-Rouh, N.N.N. Naguib, T. Lehnert, A. Thalhammer, S. Zangos, B. Schulz, V. Jacobi, T.J. Vogl; Frankfurt/DE 11:24 B-0775 Tips for TIPS: 12-year experience C. Zini, F. Fanelli, M. Bezzi, E. Boatta, M. Corona, P. Lucatelli, A. Cannavale, C. Cirelli, F.M. Salvatori; Rome/IT 11:33 B-0776 A new trial with a newly designed Y-shaped covered stent for the palliative treatment of hilar malignant obstruction of liver: mid-term result B. Kang 1, G. Jung 2 ; 1 Seoul/KR, 2 Busan/KR 11:42 B-0777 The comparison of balloon-occluded retrograde transvenous obliteration for gastric varices using liquid and foam sclerosants J. Koizumi 1, K. Myojin 1, C. Itou 1, N. Mori 1, T. Sekiguchi 1, T. Hara 1, T. Ichikawa 1, Y. Imai 1, B. Janne d Othée 2 ; 1 Isehara/JP, 2 Baltimore, MD/US 10:30 12:00 Room E1 Musculoskeletal SS 1710 Hip: CT and MRI applications Moderators: M.H. Maurer; Berlin/DE, A. Vieira; Porto/PT 10:30 B-0779 Retrospective analysis of CT as secondary imaging in the diagnosis of occult femoral neck fracture K.J. Partington, P. Robinson, H. Gupta; Leeds/UK 10:39 B-0780 MRI or CT for occult hip fracture: Do either miss clinically relevant fractures? K. Sneddon, H. Rehman, Z. Davis, F. Perks, T.O. White, R.G.E. Clement; Edinburgh/UK 10:48 B-0781 Digital tomosynthesis in diagnosis of occult hip fractures M. Geijer 1, D. Collin 2, J.H. Göthlin 2 ; 1 Lund/SE, 2 Mölndal/SE 10:57 B-0782 Advanced core decompression for patients with avascular necrosis of the hip: therapeutic success monitored by MRI A. Lazik, O. Kraff, T. Claßen, S. Landgraeber, F. Grabellus, T.C. Lauenstein, J.M. Theysohn; Essen/DE 11:06 B-0783 Lower-limb MRI examination as a predictive factor of articular collapse in haematological young patients with femoral head osteonecrosis: lesion surface versus lesion volume A. Masetto, D. Ippolito, P.A. Bonaffini, D. Fior, A.S. Casiraghi, S. Sironi; Monza/IT 11:15 B-0784 Alpha angles and herniation pits: revisited on MRI in 80 asymptomatic hip joints E. Lee, J.-A. Choi, G. Lee, H. Kang; Seongnam-si/KR 11:24 B-0785 Gluteus tendinopathy in femoroacetabular impingement (FAI): findings with MR-artrography of the hip E. Lanza 1, G. Pozzi 1, C. Garcia Parra 2, R. Bisogno 1, A. Zerbi 1 ; 1 Milan/IT, 2 Bergamo/IT 11:33 B-0786 Evaluation of a new method for the assessment of anterior acetabular coverage and hip joint space narrowing R. Ferré, E. Gibon, A. Feydy, H. Guerini, R. Campana, N. Zee, C. Bourdet, M. Hammadouche, J.-l. Drapé; Paris/FR 11:42 B-0787 Diagnostic value of MR enterography (MRE), after oral administration of glucose-polyethylene, in the determination of the activity of disease in patients with known Crohn s disease: a prospective single centre study V. Bartolo, D. Ippolito, C. Trattenero, P.A. Bonaffini, V. Besostri, S. Sironi; Monza/IT 256

259 Scientific Sessions 11:51 B-0788 Metal artefact reduction in hip prosthesis with iterative reconstructions F. Morsbach 1, S. Bickelhaupt 1, G. Wanner 1, A. Krauss 2, B. Schmidt 2, H. Alkadhi 1 ; 1 Zurich/CH, 2 Forchheim/DE 10:30 12:00 Room E2 GI Tract SS 1701a CT/MR colonography: technical issues and clinical studies Moderators: D. Cano; Pamplona/ES, D.Z. Saranovic; Belgrade/RS 10:30 B-0789 CT colonography: accurate registration of prone and supine endoluminal surfaces of the colon T.E. Hampshire, H.R. Roth, E. Helbren, A. Plumb, D. Boone, G. Slabaugh, S. Halligan, D.J. Hawkes; London/UK 10:39 B-0790 A multi-centre randomised double-blind placebocontrolled trial to evaluate the value of a single bolus intravenous alfentanil in CT colonography T.N. Boellaard, M.P. van der Paardt, M.W. Hollmann, S. Eberl, J. Peringa, G. Kavaliauskiene, J.H. Runge, J.A.W. Tielbeek, J. Stoker; Amsterdam/NL 10:48 B-0791 The possible role of contrast material-enhanced computed tomographic colonography (CTC) in the surveillance after surgery for colorectal cancer M. Morone, G. Mazza, T. Natilla, G. Baiocchi, M. Ghedi, E. Dettori, B. Frittoli, L. Grazioli; Brescia/IT 10:57 B-0792 CT colonography: comparative study of experienced vs non-experienced radiologists using 3D flythrough approach with and without CAD software F. Vecchietti, M. Rengo, D. Caruso, C.N. De Cecco, D. Bellini, A. Laghi; Latina/IT 11:06 B-0793 CT colonography bowel preparation: influence of a laxative agent on a fluid tagging preparation M. Rengo, D. Bellini, M.M. Maceroni, F. Vecchietti, D. Caruso, P. Lucchesi, A. Laghi; Latina/IT 11:15 B-0794 Flat lesions: CTC with and without CAD G. Mazza, T. Natilla, M. Morone, B. Frittoli, G. Baiocchi, L. Grazioli; Brescia/IT 11:24 B-0795 MR colonography to screen for colorectal neoplasia in asymptomatic adults A. Graser, A. Melzer, E. Lindner, P. Stieber, M.F. Reiser, B. Göke, F.T. Kolligs; Munich/DE 11:33 B-0796 Retrospective evaluation of diverticular disease in a large cohort of 1091 patients who underwent CT colonography M. Ciolina 1, C. De Cecco 2, P. Baldassari 1, M. Iannitti 1, A. Pichi 1, F. Iafrate 1, A. Laghi 2 ; 1 Rome/IT, 2 Latina/IT 11:42 B-0797 Accuracy of water enema-mdct in colon cancer staging: a prospective study C. Ridereau-Zins 1, E. Sibileau 1, A. Pavageau 1, D. Vanel 2, E. Lermite 1, E. Metivier- Cesbron 1, C. Aube 1 ; 1 Angers/FR, 2 Bologna/IT 11:51 B-0798 Feasibility study of low-dose CT colonography using model-based iterative reconstruction: preliminary findings in 20 patients V. Vardhanabhuti, C. Roobottom; Plymouth/UK 10:30 12:00 Room F1 Oncologic Imaging SS 1716 Response evaluation in oncology: beyond RECIST Moderators: T. Denecke; Berlin/DE, M.I. Furmanek; Warsaw/PL 10:30 B-0799 Calibration of computed tomography (CT) volumetric measurements for assessing tumour response to drug therapy in a randomised multicentre oncology study R. Avila 1, D. Yankelevitz 2, V. Archer 3, G. Zahlmann 4 ; 1 Clifton Park, NY/US, 2 New York, NY/US, 3 Welwyn Garden City/UK, 4 Basle/CH 10:39 B-0800 Evaluating the agreement between tumour volumetry and the estimated volumes of tumour lesions using an algorithm M. D Anastasi, R.P. Laubender, V. Heinemann, M.F. Reiser, M. Schlichting, A. Graser; Munich/DE 10:48 B-0801 Chemotherapy response evaluation with magnetic resonance (MR) and FDG-PET/CT in gastroesophageal tumours (GT): apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) and standardised uptake volume (SUV) changes compared with tumour regression grade (TRG) at histology F. Giganti, F. De Cobelli, C. Canevari, E. Orsenigo, L. Albarello, E. Mazza, C. Staudacher, L. Gianolli, A. Del Maschio; Milan/IT 10:57 B-0802 Treatment response assessment in Hodgkin lymphoma: in search for morphological correlates of metabolic activity T. Knogler, G. Karanikas, M. Weber, K. El-Rabadi, M.E. Mayerhoefer; Vienna/AT 11:06 B-0803 Predictive values of MRI parameters for the progression-free survival after radioembolisation in patients with metastases of neuroendocrine tumours W.H. Sommer, F. Ceelen, P. Paprottka, M.F. Reiser, D. Theisen; Munich/DE 11:15 B-0804 One-month apparent diffusion coefficientdetermined response at diffusion-weighted MRI is an independent predictor of response to transarterial chemoembolization for hepatocellular carcinoma V. Vandecaveye, K. Michielsen, F. De Keyzer, W. Laleman, M. Komuta, F. Nevens, T. Roskams, C. Verslype, G. Maleux; Leuven/BE 11:24 B-0805 Real-time imaging of the therapeutic response of tumours to anti-vascular treatment in mice by gadofosveset-enhanced MRI A.J. Höink 1, T. Persigehl 2, J. Ring 1, R.M. Mesters 1, W.E. Berdel 1, W.L. Heindel 1, C. Bremer 1, C. Schwöppe 1 ; 1 Münster/DE, 2 Cologne/DE 11:33 B-0806 Reproducibility of therapy response evaluation between experienced and less experienced readers of pleural mesothelioma by mrecist, RECIST 1.0, RECIST 1.1, and WHO L. Stahlhut 1, A. Bunck 1, Y. Tan 2, M. Steen 1, X. Guo 2, D. Maintz 1, L. Schwartz 2, B. Zhao 2, T. Persigehl 1 ; 1 Cologne/DE, 2 New York, NY/US 11:42 B-0807 Use of multimedia structured reporting for tumour response assessment D.J. Vining 1, A. Pitici 2, I. Aghenitei 2, C. Popovici 2, M. Jurca 2, R. Rosu 2, A. Tsimberidou 1 ; 1 Houston, TX/US, 2 Chapel Hill, NC/US B-0788 B-0807 Monday 257

260 Scientific Sessions B-0808 B :51 B-0808 Comparison of breast-mri vs. standard prognostic factors for the prediction of local recurrence after treatment of primary breast cancer P.A.T. Baltzer 1, M. Dietzel 2, H. Habrecht 3, R. Zoubi 4, C. Jerowski 3, I.B. Runnebaum 3, W.A. Kaiser 3 ; 1 Jena/DE, Vienna/AT, 2 Erlangen/DE, Jena/DE, 3 Jena/DE, 4 Bielefeld/DE, Jena/DE 10:30 12:00 Room F2 Breast SS 1702 Tomosynthesis: a role in clinical practice? Moderators: S. Allen; Sutton/UK, E.M. Jung; Regensburg/DE 10:30 B-0809 The role of additional tomosynthesis combined with digital mammography P. Martínez 1, J. Echano 2, M. Sainz 1, I. Simon 2, G. Viteri 2, A. Garcia Lallana 1, C. Minguillon 1, L. Pina 2 ; 1 Zaragoza/ES, 2 Pamplona/ES 10:39 B-0810 Does breast tomosynthesis combined with 2D digital mammography increase the detection rate of breast cancer? R. Saiz-Mendiguren 1, C. Marginet-Mangas 1, A. Garcia-Lallana 2, E. Martinez 1, C. Ibarburen 1, L. Pina Insausti 3 ; 1 Palma de Mallorca/ES, 2 Santurce/ES, 3 Pamplona/ES 10:48 B-0811 Detection rate for suspicious lesions of digital breast tomosynthesis in combination with digital mammography or 2D central projection imaging C. Zuiani 1, P. Clauser 1, V. Londero 1, C. Molinari 1, R. Girometti 1, A. Taibi 2, S. Vecchio 3, M. Bazzocchi 1 ; 1 Udine/IT, 2 Ferrara/IT, 3 Bologna/IT 10:57 B-0812 Digital mammography in comparison with digital breast tomosynthesis in detection of multicentric breast cancer N. Prvulovic, D. Djilas, M. Prvulovic, D. Bogdanovic, K. Koprivsek; Novi Sad/RS 11:06 B-0813 The role of tomosynthesis after normal mammography according to ACR density patterns J. Etxano, P. Slon, I. Simon-Yarza, R. Zalazar, A. Elizalde, L. Pina; Pamplona/ES 11:15 B-0814 Influence of breast density on diagnostic performance of digital breast tomosynthesis (DBT) after digital mammography (DM) focusing on recall rate reduction L.A. Carbonaro 1, R.M. Trimboli 1, N. Verardi 1, M. Fedeli 2, G. Di Leo 1, F. Sardanelli 1 ; 1 San Donato Milanese/IT, 2 Milan/IT 11:24 B-0815 Recall rate reduction by adding double reading digital breast tomosynthesis (DBT) to digital mammography (DM) L.A. Carbonaro 1, R.M. Trimboli 1, N. Verardi 1, K. Khouri Chalouhi 2, G. Di Leo 1, F. Sardanelli 1 ; 1 San Donato Milanese/IT, 2 Milan/IT 11:33 B-0816 Breast tomosynthesis versus digital mammography: evaluation of diagnostic potential in women with abnormal screening mammograms M.A. Shaaban; Cairo/EG 11:42 B-0817 Analysis of discordant screening-detected cancers at FFDM (2D) versus 2D plus tomosynthesis (combo mode) in a population-based screening program: results from the Oslo tomosynthesis screening trial P. Skaane, R. Gullien, M. Krager, U. Haakenaasen, M. Izadi, I.N. Jebsen, U. Ekseth, E.B. Eben; Oslo/NO 11:51 B-0818 The STORM trial of screening mammography: screening with tomosynthesis or standard mammography S. Ciatto (posthumous) 1, N. Houssami 2, D. Bernardi 1, F. Caumo 3, P. Macaskill 2 ; 1 Trento/IT, 2 Sydney/AU, 3 Verona/IT 10:30 12:00 Room G/H Genitourinary SS 1707 Hints on haematuria and adrenals for all Moderators: O. Nikolic; Novi Sad/RS, H. Sugimura; Miyazaki/JP 10:30 B-0819 Impact of patient mobilisation on interpretation of upper urinary tract filling defects seen on MDCT urography J.M. Froehlich, A. Joeres, P.J. Probst, F. Nussberger, H.C. Thoeny; Berne/CH 10:39 B-0820 Evaluation of diagnostic strategies for hematuria using risk stratification N.C. Cowan; Birmingham/UK 10:48 B-0821 Use of novel iterative reconstruction in CT KUB: approach on improving image quality V. Vardhanabhuti, C. Roobottom, S. Ilyas; Plymouth/UK 10:57 B-0822 Renal cell carcinoma subtype differentiation on single-phase contrast-enhanced CT F. Veloso Gomes 1, J. Palas 2, A. Matos 2, V. Mascarenhas 3, V. Herédia 4, S. Duarte 3, M. Ramalho 2 ; 1 Faro/PT, 2 Almada/PT, 3 Lisbon/PT, 4 Évora/PT 11:06 B-0823 To assess parameters within CT findings to aid distinction of histological subtype of renal cell carcinoma within our institute M.J. Conneely, D. Ferguson, C. Donagh, M. Quinlan, T. McHale, P. McCarthy; Galway/IE 11:15 B-0824 MDCT in differentiating pt1-2 from pt3 tumours in clear cell RCC O. Le, C. Wood, P. Tamboli, R. Vikram; Houston, TX/US 11:24 B-0825 Reader variability in urinary stone size estimation: training does not help M. Lidén, T. Andersson, H. Geijer; Örebro/SE 11:33 B-0826 Contrast-enhanced CT and chemical shift MRI: accuracy for lipid-poor adenoma characterization Y.A. Choi, B.K. Park, J.M. Seo, S.Y. Park, C.K. Kim; Seoul/KR 11:42 B-0827 Functional MRI with diffusion-weighted imaging and ADC map in characterization of undetermined adrenal lesions: comparison with chemical shift imaging C.R.G.L. Talei Franzesi, D. Ippolito, P.A. Bonaffini, C. Capraro, V. Besostri, S. Sironi; Monza/IT 258

261 Scientific Sessions 11:51 B-0828 Non-contrast-enhanced MR adrenal venography for adrenal venous sampling H. Ota, K. Takase, N. Satani, T. Kimura, K. Seiji, Y. Ono, R. Morimoto, F. Sato, S. Takahashi; Sendai/JP 10:30 12:00 Room I/K Abdominal Viscera SS 1701b DWI in pancreatic and hepatobiliary diseases Moderators: G.J. Munneke; London/UK, D. Weishaupt; Zurich/CH 10:30 B-0829 Feasibility of abdominal diffusion Kurtosis imaging compared to standard diffusion weighted imaging at 1.5 and 3 Tesla J. Hansmann, A. Lemke, J. Wambsganss, S.O. Schönberg, U. Attenberger; Mannheim/DE 10:39 B-0830 Differential diagnosis of benign from malignant distal biliary strictures: value of adding diffusion-weighted imaging to conventional magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography R.-E. Yoo, J. Lee, J. Yoon, J. Kim, J. Han, B. Choi; Seoul/KR 10:48 B-0831 Correlation of measurements of diffusion-weighted MR imaging and Gd-EOB-DTPA-enhanced MR imaging in hepatic malignant tumours: ADC versus signal intensity on hepatobiliary phase S. Choi, Y. Park, C. Lee, K. Kim, J. Choi, J. Lee, C. Park; Seoul/KR 10:57 B-0832 Non-invasive assessment of solid benign and malignant focal liver lesions by quantitative analysis of functional MRI with diffusion-weighted imaging M. Colombo, D. Ippolito, P.A. Bonaffini, C. Trattenero, V. Bartolo, S. Sironi; Monza/IT 11:06 B-0833 Quantitative data analysis of the diffusion-weighted MR-images in the differential diagnosis of metastatic liver disease of colorectal and pancreatic aetiology Y. Savchenkov, S. Bagnenko, G. Trufanov, V. Fokin; St. Petersburg/RU 11:15 B-0834 Does the ADC-map eradicate the T2-shine-through effect affecting DW images of focal liver lesions? A study with exponential ADC-maps R. Girometti, M. Maieron, S. Pullini, E. Minighin, L. Cereser, G. Como, M. Bazzocchi, C. Zuiani; Udine/IT 11:24 B-0835 Prevalence of the T2-shine-through effect on DW images of focal liver lesions: a study with exponential ADC-maps at 1.5T R. Girometti, M. Maieron, E. Minighin, S. Pullini, L. Cereser, G. Como, M. Bazzocchi, C. Zuiani; Udine/IT 11:33 B-0836 DWI magnetic resonance imaging in the evaluation of HCC recurrence after trans-arterial chemoembolization (TACE): comparison with contrast-enhanced MR imaging M. Di Martino, R. Di Miscio, M. Del Monte, C. Lombardo, D. Geiger, C. Catalano; Rome/IT 11:42 B-0837 MRI of pancreatic adenocarcinoma including diffusionweighted imaging: assessment of tumour conspicuity and pathologic correlation L. Legrand, V. Duchatelle, V. Molinié, I. Boulay-Coletta, E. Sibileau, M. Zins; Paris/FR 11:51 B-0838 Evaluation of diffusion-weighted MR imaging for detection of infection in acute pancreatic collections and/or necrosis: preliminary results F. Islim, A.E. Salik, S. Bayramoglu, K. Guven, H. Alis, A.N. Turhan; Istanbul/TR 10:30 12:00 Room L/M Physics in Radiology SS 1713 Breast imaging and novel CT techniques Moderators: N. Karssemeijer; Nijmegen/NL, M. Koutalonis; Colchester/UK 10:30 B-0839 Comparative detector evaluation of full field digital mammography (FFDM) systems using the Fourier definition of the Hotelling-observer signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) R. Wise, I. Delakis, E. Kulama, D. McRobbie; London/UK 10:39 B-0840 Spectral reconstruction algorithm for digital breast tomosynthesis I. Sechopoulos, V. Mejia-Bustamante, S.S.J. Feng, J. Nagy; Atlanta, GA/US 10:48 B-0841 Contrast-detail visibility analysis for digital breast tomosynthesis versus digital mammography S. Elie, W.J.H. Veldkamp, R.E. van Engen, M.J.M. Broeders; Nijmegen/NL 10:57 B-0842 Can a colour representation of grey-scale images improve object detectability in mammography? E. Salvagnini 1, L. Cockmartin 1, K. Michielsen 1, J. Jacobs 2, N.W. Marshall 1, L. Struelens 3, H. Bosmans 1 ; 1 Leuven/BE, 2 Heverlee/BE, 3 Mol/BE 11:06 B-0843 Volumetric breast-density measurement using spectral mammography A. Gooßen 1, M. Lundqvist 2, K. Erhard 1, E. Fredenberg 2 ; 1 Hamburg/DE, 2 Solna/SE 11:15 B-0844 Monochromatic dual-energy X-rays for precise measurement of bone mineral density: preliminary results C.-H. Lee, K.-H. Yoon, Y.-H. Lee, E. Kang, D. Kang; Iksan/KR 11:24 B-0845 Phase contrast imaging using grating interferometer: preliminary results D. Kang, K.-H. Yoon, Y.-H. Lee, E. Kang, C.-H. Lee; Iksan/KR 11:33 B-0846 First in-vitro results of microbubbles as a scattering contrast agent for X-ray dark-field imaging measured at a first pre-clinical X-ray phase-contrast and darkfield CT scanner A. Velroyen 1, M. Bech 1, A. Tapfer 1, M. Ingrisch 2, C.C. Cyran 2, S. Auweter 2, K. Nikolaou 2, M.F. Reiser 2, F. Pfeiffer 1 ; 1 Garching/DE, 2 Munich/DE 11:42 B-0847 In vivo urinary stones chemical compound identification using dual-energy CT T. Kraśnicki, M. Guziński, P. Podgórski, J. Bladowska, A. Czarnecka, K. Tupikowski, M. Sąsiadek; Wrocław/PL B-0828 B-0847 Monday 259

262 Scientific Sessions B-0848 B :51 B-0848 Value of monoenergetic low-kev dual-energy CT datasets for improved image quality of abdominal CT angiography S. Sudarski, D. Schneider, P. Apfaltrer, S.O. Schönberg, T. Henzler; Mannheim/DE 10:30 12:00 Room N/O Cardiac SS 1703 Biomarkers, tissue characterisation and remodelling Moderators: M. Das; Maastricht/NL, K. Gruszczynska; Katowice/PL 10:30 B-0849 Biomarkers of atherosclerotic and myocardial remodelling: correlation with plaque volume in cardiac CT L.L. Geyer 1, A. Krazinski 1, J.R. Silverman 1, F. Bamberg 2, U. Ebersberger 2, P. Costello 1, U.J. Schoepf 1 ; 1 Charleston, SC/US, 2 Munich/DE 10:39 B-0850 Morpho-functional and metabolic assessment of the heart in adult-onset growth hormone (GH) deficiency patients with cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) and 31P MR spectroscopy (31P-MRS) M. Cava, F. De Cobelli, A. Esposito, G. Perseghin, A. Rossini, R. Lanzi, M. Losa, T. Canu, A. Del Maschio; Milan/IT 10:48 B-0851 Right ventricular remodelling after ST-elevation myocardial infarction M. Tille, M. Gutberlet, H. Thiele, M. Grothoff; Leipzig/DE 10:57 B-0852 Influence of periprocedural myonecrosis assessed by magnetic resonance delayed enhancement in patients with bifurcation lesions angioplasty on prognosis at one-year follow-up R. Gil, J. Walecki, D. Vassilev, M. Furmanek, A. Michałek, M. Odyniec-Nowacka, A.J. Piliszek; Warsaw/PL 11:06 B-0853 Exposure to a high fat diet during early development increases the susceptibility to cardiac lipid accumulation P.A. van Ewijk, S. Paglialunga, J. Slenter, J.E. Wildberger, J. Glatz, M.K.C. Hesselink, P. Schrauwen, V.B. Schrauwen-Hinderling, M.E. Kooi; Maastricht/NL 11:15 B-0854 Cardiac and hepatic iron and heart function by MR in thalassaemia major patients treated with combined deferiprone and desferrioxamine regimen versus monotherapies: a multi-centre, observational and prospective study C. Tudisca 1, P. Ricchi 2, A. Meloni 3, E. Grassedonio 1, M. Santodirocco 4 ; 1 Palermo/IT, 2 Naples/IT, 3 Pisa/IT, 4 San Giovanni Rotondo/IT 11:24 B-0855 Are the preferential patterns of myocardial iron overload preserved at the CMR follow-up? C. Tudisca 1, A. Meloni 2, G. Giuffrida 3, E. Grassedonio 1, E. Chiodi 4, A. Pietrapertosa 5, M. Lombardi 2, M. Midiri 1, A. Pepe 2 ; 1 Palermo/IT, 2 Pisa/IT, 3 Catania/IT, 4 Ferrara/IT, 5 Bari/IT 11:33 B-0856 The effect of partial volume averaging on peak velocity measurements in phase contrast magnetic resonance angiography (PCMRA) J.C.L. Rodrigues 1, K. Minhas 1, G. Pieles 1, C. Bucciarelli-Ducci 1, R. Tulloh 1, N.E. Manghat 1, C.J. Occleshaw 2, M.C.K. Hamilton 1 ; 1 Bristol/UK, 2 Auckland/NZ 11:42 B-0857 Different patterns of delayed cardiac enhancement in symptomatic patients with post-total correction of tetralogy of fallot assessed by cardiac MRI and its correlation with right ventricular function: a report from Iran F. Akhavan, M. Motevalli, N. Abolfat-h-Zadeh Ghale Joughi; Tehran/IR 11:51 B-0858 Diastolic versus systolic acquisition of T1 maps of normal human myocardium at 1.5T magnetic resonance imaging U. Reiter 1, G. Reiter 1, K. Dorr 1, A. Greiser 2, R. Maderthaner 1, M.H. Fuchsjäger 1 ; 1 Graz/AT, 2 Erlangen/DE 10:30 12:00 Room P Paediatric SS 1712 Foetal and neonatal imaging Moderators: N. De Graaf; Rotterdam/NL, H. Ringertz; Linköping/SE 10:30 B-0859 Antenatal blood flow quantification by phase-contrast MRI using a new triggering method: comparison with Doppler ultrasound in a sheep model B.P. Schönnagel, C. Much, J. Yamamura, G. Adam, F. Ueberle, M. Tavares de Sousa, H. Kooijman, U. Wedegärtner; Hamburg/DE 10:39 B-0860 Relationship between body growth and regional brain volume changes in extremely premature small for gestational age babies L.C. Tzarouchi, A. Drougia, A. Zikou, A. Charisiadi, P. Kosta, L. Astrakas, S. Andronikou, M.I. Argyropoulou; Ioannina/GR 10:48 B-0861 Do vascular events impact brain maturation of twin pregnancies complicated with twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome? S. Bargy; Paris/FR 10:57 B-0862 Microstructural changes of white matter tracts in small for gestational age very preterm infants evaluated at term equivalent age L.C. Tzarouchi, A. Drougia, A. Zikou, P. Kosta, L. Astrakas, S. Andronikou, M.I. Argyropoulou; Ioannina/GR 11:06 B-0863 The tail sign in the differential diagnosis of vermian pathologies in foetuses under 24 weeks: role of foetal MRI P. Sollazzo, M. Sergi, V. Vinci, S. Bernardo, M. Saldari, L. Manganaro; Rome/IT 11:15 B-0864 Real time cine-mri in children and foetuses with head and neck pathology T. Feygin, A. Pollock, J. Stein, T. Victoria; Philadelphia, PA/US 11:24 B-0865 Magnetic-resonance-imaging-based ratio of fetal lung volume to foetal body volume as a new prognostic marker in congenital diaphragmatic hernia M. Weidner, C. Hagelstein, A. Debus, A. Walleyo, S.O. Schönberg, T. Schaible, K.A. Büsing, S. Kehl, K.W. Neff; Mannheim/DE 260

263 Scientific Sessions 11:33 B-0866 Repetitive MR measurements of lung volume in foetuses with congenital diaphragmatic hernia to investigate the individual development of pulmonary hypoplasia during pregnancy C. Hagelstein, M. Weidner, A. Debus, A. Walleyo, S.O. Schönberg, T. Schaible, S. Kehl, K.A. Büsing, K.W. Neff; Mannheim/DE 11:42 B-0867 Periventricular nodular heterotopia: prenatal ultrasound findings E. Blondiaux, C. Sileo, C. Nahama-Allouche, M.-L. Moutard, A. Gelot, J.- M. Jouannic, H. Ducou le Pointe, C. Garel; Paris/FR 11:51 B-0868 Role of foetal MR in the evaluation of gastrointestinal tract anomalies S. Bernardo, V. Vinci, P. Sollazzo, M. Sergi, M. Saldari, L. Manganaro; Rome/IT 10:30 12:00 Room Q Radiographers SS 1714 Mammography Moderators: S.J. Foley; Dublin/IE, P. Vahtramae; Pärnu/EE 10:30 B-0869 Online portfolio for radiographers attending the breast cancer screening mammography certificate in Switzerland N. Richli Meystre, L. Flaction, R. Le Coultre; Lausanne/CH 10:39 B-0870 Inter-observer agreement among PGMI radiographer in Cambridge/UK and Oslo/NO in assessing each other s and their own mammography screening exams R. Gullien 1, E. Rostad 1, A.E. Haakull 1, R.L. Hammond 1, M. Hauge 1, K. Taylor 2, J.G. Andersen 1 ; 1 Oslo/NO, 2 Cambridge/UK 10:48 B-0871 Radiation dose levels assessment in mammography C. Lourenço, P. Sousa, S.I. Rodrigues, A.F.C.L. Abrantes, L.P.V. Ribeiro, K.B. Azevedo, R.P.P. Almeida; Faro/PT 10:57 B-0872 Quality control in digital mammography: radiographers practice at 5 hospitals of Lisbon C. Tomás, C. Gonçalves, C.I.S. Reis; Lisbon/PT 11:06 B-0873 An investigation into the psychological anxiety of Maltese women before and after a mammogram C. Falzon; Sta Lucija/MT 11:15 B-0874 Ergonomic and environmental assessment in digital mammography room: impact on radiographers activity S. Costa, E. Oliveira, F. Serranheira, S. Viegas, C.I.S. Reis; Lisbon/PT 11:24 B-0875 Accuracy of students, and radiographers, with and without, mammography post-graduation in interpretation of mammography images R.B.J. Cópio 1, K.B. Azevedo 1, A.F.C.L. Abrantes 1, L.P.V. Ribeiro 1, R.P.P. Almeida 1, C.A. Silva 2 ; 1 Faro/PT, 2 Evora/PT 11:33 B-0876 Patient satisfaction assessment in mammography exams L. Borralho, L.P.V. Ribeiro, C.A. Silva, A.F.C.L. Abrantes, J. Pinheiro, R.P.P. Almeida; Faro/PT 11:42 B-0877 Impacts of digital mammography in radiographers practice L. Painho, T. Fernandes, C.I.S. Reis; Lisbon/PT 11:51 B-0878 Imaging ethics B. Hofmann; Oslo/NO 10:30 12:00 Room Z Molecular Imaging SS 1706 Molecular imaging in cancer and degenerative diseases Moderators: J. Hakumäki; Kuopio/FI, E. Lopci; Rozzano/IT 10:30 B-0879 Improving current preclinical therapy monitoring methods by multiparametric MR using a hnisexpressing tumour xenograft mouse model E.J. Koziolek 1, I. Apostolova 2, A. Tarkowska 1, U. Schumacher 1, W. Brenner 2, G. Adam 1, M.G. Kaul 1 ; 1 Hamburg/DE, 2 Berlin/DE 10:39 B-0880 In vivo assessment of the anti-apoptotic effect of c-kit+ pluripotent bone marrow cells on ischaemic myocardium in mice with hybrid fluorescence molecular tomography x-ray computed tomography M. Wildgruber, A. Ale, K. Kosanke, R. Braren, R. Meier, E.J. Rummeny, V. Ntziachristos; Munich/DE 10:48 B-0881 Magnetic resonance imaging of murine myocardial infarction with an elastin-binding contrast agent M. Wildgruber 1, M. Settles 1, I. Bielicki 1, K. Kosanke 1, A.M. Huber 1, E.J. Rummeny 1, R.M. Botnar 2 ; 1 Munich/DE, 2 London/DE 10:57 B-0882 Comparison of nanobodies and conventional monoclonal antibodies for in vivo fluorescence imaging of lymphomas P. Bannas, A. Lenz, V. Kunick, W. Danquah, F. Haag, M. Trepel, G. Adam, H. Ittrich, F. Koch-Nolte; Hamburg/DE 11:06 B-0883 The design of a dual-functional imaging contrast agent for targeting to tumour endothelial marker (TEM8) Q. Quan 1, X. Huang 2, J. Xie 2, Y. Yan 3, H. Gao 2, G. Zhang 1, X. Chen 2 ; 1 Shanghai/CN, 2 Bethesda, MD/US, 3 Madison, WI/US 11:15 B-0884 Folic acid-modified dendrimer-entrapped gold nanoparticles as nanoprobes for targeted computed tomography imaging of human lung adenocarcinoma L.-F. Zheng, H. Wang, C. Peng, M.-W. Shen, X.-Y. Shi, G.-X. Zhang; Shanghai/CN 11:24 B-0885 Imaging of the therapeutic efficiency of photodynamic therapy with a new designed fluorescence optical annexin probe K. Haedicke, S. Gräfe, F. Lehmann, W.A. Kaiser, I. Hilger; Jena/DE 11:33 B-0886 Bimodal NIRF nanoparticles as an optical and MRI contrast agent for imaging cells of the mononuclear phagocyte system J. Domey 1, C. Bergemann 2, I. Krumbein 1, J.R. Reichenbach 1, S. Bremer-Streck 1, W.A. Kaiser 1, I. Hilger 1 ; 1 Jena/DE, 2 Berlin/DE B-0866 B-0886 Monday 261

264 Scientific Sessions B-0887 B :42 B-0887 Assessment of in vivo cell viability of Gd or SPIO cells using MRI and BLI J. Guenoun, A. Ruggiero, G. Doeswijk, R. Janssens, G.A. Koning, G. Kotek, G.P. Krestin, M.R. Bernsen; Rotterdam/NL 11:51 B-0888 Interaction of magnetically labelled multipotent mesenchymal stromal cells and E-/P-selectins monitored by magnetic resonance imaging in mice J. Salamon, K. Peldschus, D. Wicklein, C. Lange, H. Ittrich, U. Schumacher, G. Adam; Hamburg/DE 15:12 B-0897 Intra- and inter-scanner test-retest reliability of whole-brain arterial spin labeling perfusion MRI B. Wu, X. Wu, X. Lou, M. Ge, L. Ma; Beijing/CN 15:21 B-0898 Software for the radiological view: fully automated CT-based quantification of microangiopathic density reduction in white matter in comparison to gold standard MRI U. Hanning 1, I. Noelte 2, G. Homann 1, T. Niederstadt 1, V. Hesselmann 1, W. Heindel 1, A. Kemmling 3 ; 1 Münster/DE, 2 Mannheim/DE, 3 Hamburg/DE 14:00 15:30 Room B Neuro SS 1811a Latest developments in neuroimaging Moderators: S. Haller; Geneva/CH, E. Papadaki; Iraklion/GR 14:00 B-0889 Improved image quality for higher diagnostic accuracy of cranial computed tomography using iterative image reconstruction H. Haubenreisser 1, C. Fink 2, P. Apfaltrer 1, B. Schmidt 3, M. Sedlmair 3, S.O. Schönberg 1, T. Henzler 1 ; 1 Mannheim/DE, 2 Celle/DE, 3 Forchheim/DE 14:09 B-0890 Synchrotron radiation micro-ct imaging of the mouse brain A. Chabrol 1, H. Rositi 1, M. Marinescu 1, M. Langer 2, C. Olivier 2, F. Peyrin 2, C. Frindel 1, M. Wiart 1, Y. Berthezène 1 ; 1 Lyon/FR, 2 Grenoble/FR 14:18 B-0891 Effect of dose reduction on cerebral CT perfusion maps: results from a hybrid digital perfusion phantom R. van den Boom 1, M. Oei 1, L.J. Oostveen 1, H. Laue 2, B. van Ginneken 1, R. Manniesing 1, M. Prokop 1 ; 1 Nijmegen/NL, 2 Bremen/DE 14:27 B-0892 idose hybrid iterative reconstruction algorithm improves image quality in brain CT and partly compensates for radiation dose reduction A. Löve, R. Siemund, P. Höglund, D. van Westen, L. Stenberg, C. Petersen, I.M. Björkman-Burtscher; Lund/SE 14:36 B-0893 MRI susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI): role in the differentiation of inflammatory pathologies from highgrade glioma S. Chu 1, Y. Wang 1, Z. Yang 1, F. Xv 1, O. Boyko 2 ; 1 Shanghai/CN, 2 Los Angeles, CA/US 14:45 B-0894 Inter-session reproducibility of cerebral blood flow (CBF) in the primary motor cortex as assessed in the VESPA (vendor-specific features of ASL-MRI) study R.M.E. Steketee 1, H.-J.M.M. Mutsaerts 2, G.C. Houston 3, C.B.L.M. Majoie 2, A.J. Nederveen 2, M. Smits 1 ; 1 Rotterdam/NL, 2 Amsterdam/NL, 3 Zeist/NL 14:54 B-0895 Are quantitative pharmacokinetic data of dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI influenced by observer-related bias? New data with special focus on reproducibility, precision, accuracy, reliability, repeatability and systematic bias M. Dietzel 1, M. Saake 1, P.A.T. Baltzer 2, S. Lang 1, B. Volbers 1, T. Struffert 1, T. Engelhorn 1, A. Dörfler 1 ; 1 Erlangen/DE, 2 Vienna/AT 15:03 B-0896 MR elastography (MRE) for non-invasive differentiation of intracranial tumours: results of a histology correlated study M. Simon 1, J. Guo 2, M. Bonsanto 1, D. Petersen 1, I. Sack 2, J. Würfel 3 ; 1 Lübeck/DE, 2 Berlin/DE, 3 Göttingen/DE 14:00 15:30 Room C Neuro SS 1811b Spinal imaging Moderators: M. Buruian; Targu-Mures/RO, A. Cianfoni; Lugano/CH 14:00 B-0899 Diagnosis of lumbosacral transitional vertebrae on lumbar MRI: role of spinal and paraspinal anatomic markers and value of additional whole-spine localizer N. Tokgoz, M. Ucar, B. Erdogan Sendur, K. Kılıc, C. Ozcan; Ankara/TR 14:09 B-0900 Intravertebral gas in the cervical spine P. Slon, J. Etxano, G. Viteri, I. Simón-Yarza, M. Páramo, P. García, J.C. Pueyo, J. Larrache; Pamplona/ES 14:18 B-0901 The importance of craniovertebral and cervicomedullary angle on cervicogenic headache G. Çoban 1, I. Çöven 1, E.B. Çifçi 1, E. Yıldırım 1, C.A. Yazıcı 2, B. Horasanlı 1 ; 1 Konya/TR, 2 Ankara/TR 14:27 B-0902 Acute low back/leg pain due to lumbar disc herniation: intradiscal and intraforaminal injections of oxygenozone vs steroid and anaesthetics A. Alexandre 1, G. Izzo 1, G.G. Giardina 1, L. Coro 2, A. Alexandre 2 ; 1 Rome/IT, 2 Treviso/IT 14:36 B-0903 Optimising a BLADE sequence for T2-weighted MRI of the cervical spine in transverse orientation: is there a chance for artefact reduction? C. Fellner 1, C.M. Wendl 1, C. Stroszczynski 1, T. Finkenzeller 2 ; 1 Regensburg/DE, 2 Nürnberg/DE 14:45 B-0904 Role of 3D MRI with ProSet technique in the evaluation of lumbar radiculopathy D. Grasso, C. Borreggine, C. Bristogiannis, L.P. Stoppino, D. Melchionda, L. Macarini; Foggia/IT 14:54 B-0905 Assessing severity of peripheral neuropathy with DTI C. Mathys, J. Aissa, G. Meyer zu Hörste, D.C. Reichelt, G. Antoch, B. Turowski, H.-P. Hartung, K.A. Sheikh, H.C. Lehmann; Düsseldorf/DE 15:03 B-0906 Leukodystrophy with brainstem and spinal cord involvement and lactate elevation (LBSL): assessment of the involved white matter tracts by MRI H.M.H. Kassem 1, S. Radwan 1, M.H.I. Elmahdy 1, A.A.S.W. Wafae 2, H.R.S. Farghaly 1 ; 1 Riyadh/SA, 2 Cairo/EG 15:12 B-0907 Diffusion tensor imaging of the spondylotic cervical spinal cord: a new biomarker in cervical spinal cord myelopathy? A preliminary study F.W. Cartes-Zumelzu, S. Ingorokva, H. Kostron, G.M. Feuchtner, C. Kremser, R. Granata, G. Broessner, C. Thomé; Innsbruck/AT 262

265 Scientific Sessions 15:21 B-0908 Diffusion tensor imaging and magnetisation transfer imaging of spinal cord in MS patients M. Gencturk, Y. Anik, H. Efendi, A. Demirci; Kocaeli/TR 14:00 15:30 Room D1 Cardiac SS 1803 Cardiac imaging: into the future Moderators: R.W. Bauer; Frankfurt a. Main/DE, E. Canet Soulas; Bron/FR 14:00 B-0909 Ablation of atrial flutter guided by magnetic resonance imaging M. Grothoff, P. Sommer, C. Piorkowski, J. Hoffmann, G. Hindricks, M. Gutberlet; Leipzig/DE 14:09 B-0910 Quantitative BOLD response of the left ventricular myocardium to hyperoxic respiratory challenge at 1.5 T and 3.0T cardiac magnetic resonance imaging S. Winklhofer, S. Pazahr, R. Manka, H. Alkadhi, A. Boss, P. Stolzmann; Zurich/CH 14:18 B-0911 High-resolution susceptibility-weighted magnetic resonance imaging of rat heart microvasculature E. Blondiaux, L. Pidial, G. Autret, D. Balvay, C.-A. Cuenod, H. Ducou le Pointe, O. Clément; Paris/FR 14:27 B-0912 T2-weighted dark blood cardiac imaging using a dualsource parallel radiofrequency transmission with RF shimming at 3 T compared with standard MR imaging at 3 T M. Rasper, M. Settles, B. Gramer, M. Souvatzoglou, E.J. Rummeny, A. Huber; Munich/DE 14:36 B-0913 Myocardial T1-mapping and myocardial extracellular volume (ECV) fraction: intraindividual comparison of gadobutrol and gadoterate meglumine in an animal model K.U. Bauner 1, T. Sander 1, D. Theisen 1, H. Pietsch 2, G. Jost 2, M.F. Reiser 1, K. Nikolaou 1, B.J. Wintersperger 3 ; 1 Munich/DE, 2 Berlin/DE, 3 Toronto, ON/CA 14:45 B-0914 Noninvasive diagnosis of pulmonary hypertension via magnetic resonance vortex flow detection: definition of cut-off criteria G. Reiter 1, U. Reiter 1, G. Kovacs 1, A. Stalder 2, M.A. Gulsun 3, A. Greiser 2, H. Olschewski 1, M.H. Fuchsjäger 1 ; 1 Graz/AT, 2 Erlangen/DE, 3 Princeton, NJ/US 14:54 B-0915 Feasibility study for an image-based enhancement of low-dose intra-procedural 4D C-arm cardiac flatdetector CT (4D-FD-CT) Y. Kyriakou 1, C. Koehler 1, S. de Buck 2, D. Nuyens 2, H. Heidbuchel 2 ; 1 Forchheim/DE, 2 Leuven/BE 15:03 B-0916 Assessment of HU-value stability in dynamic CT-scans for quantitative estimation of myocardial perfusion M. Handler 1, T. Rienmüller 1, P. Ourednicek 2, V. Makarenko 3, L. Bockeria 3, S. Zhorzholiani 3, I. Krestinich 3, R. Rienmüller 4, C. Baumgartner 1 ; 1 Hall in Tirol/AT, 2 Prague/CZ, 3 Moscow/RU, 4 Graz/AT 15:12 B-0917 Impact of iterative image reconstruction algorithms on the feasibility of automated plaque assessment in coronary computed tomographic angiography S. Puchner, M. Ferencik, M. Károlyi, S. Do, P. Maurovich-Horvat, U. Hoffmann, C. Schlett; Boston, MA/US 15:21 B-0918 Calcium score of small coronary calcifications on multi detector computed tomography: a phantom study J.M. Groen 1, K.F. Kofoed 2, M. Zacho 2, R. Vliegenthart 1, T.P. Willems 1, M.J.W. Greuter 1 ; 1 Groningen/NL, 2 Copenhagen/DK 14:00 15:30 Room D2 Interventional Radiology SS 1809 New approaches to aortic and peripheral interventions Moderators: S. Kudrnova; Budapest/HU, R. Morgan; London/UK 14:00 B-0919 Paclitaxel-coated balloons for the failing dialysis access: a prospective randomized controlled trial P.M. Kitrou, K. Katsanos, S. Spiliopoulos, N. Cristeas, M. Kuriakopoulou, D. Karnabatidis, D. Siablis; Patras/GR 14:09 B-0920 Lower limb multilevel treatment with drug eluting balloon: 12-month results from the DEBELLUM trial F. Fanelli, A. Cannavale, P. Lucatelli, A. Wlderk, C. Cirelli, F.M. Salvatori, L. Scarciolla; Rome/IT 14:18 B-0921 Directional atherectomy of chronic total femoropopliteal occlusions: middle-term outcomes M. Rossi, G.M. Varano, F. Laurino, G. Orgera, A. Zolovkins, N. Maltzeff, M. Citone, V. David; Rome/IT 14:27 B-0922 Predictive value of angiographic scores for the integrated management of the ischaemic diabetic foot F.M. Turini, I. Bargellini, A. Piaggesi, A. Cicorelli, R. Cervelli, E. Iacopi, R. Cioni, C. Bartolozzi; Pisa/IT 14:36 B months results of a randomised trial comparing mono- or dual-antiplatelet therapy in interventionally treated patients with peripheral arterial disease F.F. Strobl 1, J. Schmehl 2, K. Brechtel 2, T. Zeller 3, C.D. Claussen 2, G. Tepe 4 ; 1 Munich/DE, 2 Tübingen/DE, 3 Bad Krozingen/DE, 4 Rosenheim/DE 14:45 B-0924 Comparing 2D angiography, 3D rotational angiography, and pre-procedural CT image fusion with 2D fluoroscopy for endovascular repair of thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm V. Tacher 1, M. Lin 2, P. Desgranges 1, T. Grünhagen 3, A. Luciani 1, J.-P. Becquemin 1, J.-F. Deux 1, A. Rahmouni 1 ; 1 Creteil/FR, 2 Briarcliff Manor, NY/US, 3 Best/NL 14:54 B-0925 Endoleak complications of thoracic endovascular aortic repair (TEVAR): long-term outcomes and survival A. Rampoldi, P. Fratto, M. Solcia, R. Vercelli, C. Migliorisi, F. Barbosa, D. Foresti, M. Nichelatti, G. Cornalba; Milan/IT 15:03 B-0926 Selective coverage of the left subclavian artery without recanalization in patients with patent vertebro-vertebral arterial communications during TEVAR: a single centre study M. Lee; Seoul/KR B-0908 B-0926 Monday 263

266 Scientific Sessions B-0927 B :12 B-0927 Completely CT-guided treatment of lumbar artery fed type 2 endoleaks after stent graft repair of abdominal aortic aneurysms with direct sac puncture and embolization with the liquid embolic agent ethylene vinyl alcohol copolymer (Onyx) M. Treitl 1, M. Sadeghi 2, K. Eberhardt 1, D. Maxien 1, M.F. Reiser 1 ; 1 Munich/DE, 2 Erding/DE 15:21 B-0928 Endovascular treatment of type 1 endoleaks after stent graft repair of aortic aneurysms: effectiveness and safety of the ethylene vinyl alcohol copolymer Onyx as liquid embolic agent M. Treitl 1, M. Sadeghi 2, K. Eberhardt 1, D. Maxien 1, M.F. Reiser 1 ; 1 Munich/DE, 2 Erding/DE 14:00 15:30 Room E1 Musculoskeletal SS 1810 Knee: new horizons Moderators: M. Aparisi Gomez; Valencia/ES, A. Cotten; Lille/FR 14:00 B-0929 PCL index as an objective MRI tool to evaluate anatomic ACL reconstruction during functional activities A. Ntoulia 1, F. Zampeli 1, E. Pappas 2, S. Ristanis 1, A. Georgoulis 1 ; 1 Ioannina/GR, 2 Brooklyn, NY/US 14:09 B-0930 Microstructural evaluation of the cruciate ligaments with MR diffusion tensor imaging (DTI): correlations with knee stability L. Di Clemente 1, D. Tortora 1, V. Panara 1, M. Savastano 1, V. Calvisi 2, P. Palumbo 2, A. Tartaro 1, A.R. Cotroneo 1, M. Caulo 1 ; 1 Chieti/IT, 2 L Aquila/IT 14:18 B-0931 Dynamic contrast-enhanced imaging for detection of complications after double-bundle reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament Y.-C. Lin 1, Y.-H. Juan 1, Y.-C. Cheung 1, W.-L. Yeh 1, C.-H. Chiu 1, C.-F. Tan 1, C.- M. Kuo 2 ; 1 Taoyuan/TW, 2 Ilan/TW 14:27 B-0932 Susceptibility artifacts on knee MRI: their frequency, change over time, and their relation with radiographydetected calcifications and joint space narrowing, and MR-detected meniscal tears M. Jarraya 1, D. Hayashi 1, A. Guermazi 1, C.K. Kwoh 2, M.J. Hannon 2, C.E. Moore 3, J.M. Jakicic 2, S.M. Green 2, F.W. Roemer 4 ; 1 Boston, MA/US, 2 Pittsburgh, PA/US, 3 Houston, TX/US, 4 Augsburg/DE 14:36 B-0933 Meniscal pathology demonstraded by MRI and low level laser therapy: a double-blinded placebo controlled trial O. Kiritsi 1, N. Malliaropoulos 2, K. Tsitas 2, K. Omar 1 ; 1 Gorleston on sea, Great Yarmouth/UK, 2 Thessaloniki/GR 14:45 B-0934 Meniscal tears are associated with adjacent tibiofemoral cartilage degeneration assessed using 3T MRI T2 relaxation time H. Alizai, W. Lin, H. Liebl, L. Nardo, C. McCulloch, J. Lynch, M. Nevitt; San Francisco, CA/US 14:54 B-0935 Articular depression assessed by MDCT as a predictor of soft-tissue injuries in tibial plateau fractures: intraindividual correlation to findings at magnetic resonance imaging M. Regier, A. Spiro, F.O.G. Henes, G. Adam; Hamburg/DE 15:03 B-0936 Anatomical risk factors in patients after patellar dislocation: a case-control study using MRI T. Köhlitz, S. Scheffler, T. Jung, E. Wiener, B. Vollnberg, G. Diederichs; Berlin/DE 15:12 B-0937 Early changes of trabecular bone structure in asymptomatic subjects with knee malalignment T. Baum, J. Penzel, M. Sauerschnig, E.J. Rummeny, K. Wörtler, J.S. Bauer; Munich/DE 15:21 B-0938 Total knee arthroplasty MR imaging with the WARP-technique, featuring slice-encoding metal artefact correction (SEMAC) and view-angle tilting (VAT): reduction of metal artefacts for STIR and intermediate-weighted sequences R. Sutter, R. Hodek, S.F. Fucentese, C.W.A. Pfirrmann; Zurich/CH 14:00 15:30 Room E2 GI Tract SS 1801a Colorectal cancer: diagnostic biomarkers and response assessment Moderators: A. Filippone; Chieti/IT, J. Husty; Brno/CZ 14:00 B-0939 MR imaging evaluation of rectal cancer before and after chemoradiation therapy R. Cazzato, C.L. Piccolo, R. Del Vescovo, F. Giurazza, R.F. Grasso, B. Beomonte Zobel; Rome/IT 14:09 B-0940 MRI-based selection of clinical complete and good responders after chemoradiation for rectal cancer allows for successful minimal invasive treatment L. Heijnen 1, M. Maas 1, M.H. Martens 1, D.M.J. Lambregts 1, J.W.A. Leijtens 2, R.G.H. Beets-Tan 1, G.L. Beets 1 ; 1 Maastricht/NL, 2 Roermond/NL 14:18 B-0941 Diffusion-weighted-based volumetry in the assessment of response in patients with rectal cancer treated with neo-adjuvant therapy: feasibility study S.F. Carbone, M. Palumbo, V. Ricci, L. Pelliccia, E. Cacchiarelli, L. Volterrani; Siena/IT 14:27 B-0942 Therapy response assessment in locally advanced rectal cancer: comparison between functional dynamic and diffusion parameters in MRI R. Fusco, V. Granata, M. Petrillo, M. Sansone, A. Petrillo; Naples/IT 14:36 B-0943 Reproducibility of MRI texture analysis in primary rectal cancer S. Gourtsoyianni 1, G. Ljungqvist 1, A. Khan 2, R. Glynne- Jones 2, B. Ganeshan 3, K. Miles 3, V. Goh 1 ; 1 London/UK, 2 Northwood/UK, 3 Falmer/UK 14:45 B-0944 Predictors of mesorectal fascia infiltration on spectral pre-saturation inversion-recovery (SPIR) MR imaging sequence after gadolinium injection in patients with rectal carcinoma after neoadjuvant chemo- and radiation therapy E. Quaia, L. De Paoli, A. Gennari, B. Cabibbo, M. Cova; Trieste/IT 14:54 B-0945 Neoadjuvant therapy in locally advanced colon cancer: the role of MDCT I. Gonzalez Crespo, D. Cano, J. Etxano, P. Slon, J. Arredondo; Pamplona/ES 264

267 Scientific Sessions 15:03 B-0946 Assessment of the variation in the contrast-to-noise ratio across a range of CT scanners in a multicentre perfusion CT study of colorectal cancer (PROSpeCT): a phantom study M. Lewis, V.J. Goh; London/UK 15:12 B-0947 Diffusion-weighted-based MRI: volumetry and apparent diffusion coefficient S.F. Carbone, M. Palumbo, T. Carfagno, V. Ricci, L. Pirtoli, L. Volterrani; Siena/IT 15:21 B-0948 Computed tomography of the bowel: a prospective comparison study between four techniques M. Revelli, F. Paparo, L. Bacigalupo, A. Garlaschi, L. Cevasco, E. Biscaldi, G. Rollandi; Genoa/IT 14:00 15:30 Room F1 Breast SS 1802a Newer techniques in breast imaging and therapy Moderators: F. Chamming s; Paris/FR, M. Sklair-Levy; Tel Aviv/IL 14:00 B-0949 The impact of contrast-enhanced digital mammography on the characterization of breast lesions M.H. Helal, R.M.K. Fouad, M.A. Aly, R. Wessam, I. Gouda, N. AbdelShafi, O.M. Nada, S. Mansour, M. Elbadawy; Cairo/EG 14:09 B-0950 Clinical feasibility of contrast-enhanced dual-energy mammography (CEDEM) with a tungsten (W)/titanium (Ti) anode/filter combination: a prototype report T. Knogler 1, R. Leithner 1, M. Hörnig 2, F. Semturs 1, M. Waitzbauer 1, G. Langs 1, P. Homolka 1, K. Pinker-Domenig 1, T.H. Helbich 1 ; 1 Vienna/AT, 2 Erlangen/DE 14:18 B-0951 Comparison of contrast-enhanced dual-energy mammography (CEDEM) with contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (CE-MRI) in breast lesions: a prototype report T. Knogler 1, R. Leithner 1, M. Hörnig 2, M. Waitzbauer 1, F. Semturs 1, G. Langs 1, P. Homolka 1, K. Pinker-Domenig 1, T.H. Helbich 1 ; 1 Vienna/AT, 2 Erlangen/DE 14:27 B-0952 Metabolic imaging of breast tumours with dedicated breast 18F-FDG PET-CT: comparison with contrastenhanced MRI at 3T (3T CE-MRI) H.F. Magometschnigg, T.H. Helbich, H. Bickel, G. Wengert, B. Brück, K. Pinker- Domenig; Vienna/AT 14:36 B-0953 High spatial and temporal resolution breast imaging at 7 Tesla goes clinical K. Pinker-Domenig, P.A.T. Baltzer, T. Helbich, S. Gruber, W. Bogner, O. Zaric, L. Minarikova, H. Moosbauer, S. Trattnig; Vienna/AT 14:45 B-0954 Evaluation of T1/T2 ratios in a pilot study as a potential biomarker of biopsy: proven benign and malignant breast lesions in correlation with histopathological disease stage M.A. Malikova, J.N. Tkacz, P.J. Slanetz, A. Aakil, C.-Y. Guo, H. Jara; Boston, MA/US 14:54 B-0955 Improved differentiation of breast tumours using novel imaging system based on co-registered optoacoustic tomography and ultrasound P. Otto 1, K. Kist 1, N.C. Dornbluth 1, T. Stavros 1, D. Herzog 1, B. Clingman 1, J. Zalev 1, P. Lavin 2, A. Oraevsky 3 ; 1 San Antonio, TX/US, 2 Southborough, MA/US, 3 Houston, TX/US 15:03 B-0956 Breast lesion excision system (BLES) innovative breast biopsy technology: experience under sterotactic guidance in small microcalcification clusters S. Vigano, G.P. Scaperrotta, C. Ferranti, L. Suman, M. Marchesini, E. Capalbo, P. Panizza; Milan/IT 15:12 B-0957 Percutaneous breast lesion excision system (BLES): a new tool for complete closed excision of high risk lesions N.M. Abdel Razek; Cairo/EG 15:21 B-0958 Cryoablation as local therapy for patients with breast cancer bone metastases (BCBM) C. Pusceddu 1, S. Pilleri 2, G. Amucano 1, L. Melis 1, G. Meloni 2 ; 1 Cagliari/IT, 2 Sassari/IT 14:00 15:30 Room F2 Breast SS 1802b Maximising cancer detection in breast screening Moderators: M. Álvarez-Benito; Córdoba/ES, E. Szabó; Szeged/HU 14:00 B-0959 Breast cancer prediction modelling based on common mammographic findings in screening J. Timmers 1, A.L.M. Verbeek 1, R.M. Pijnappel 2, J. in t Hout 1, M.J.M. Broeders 1, G.J. den Heeten 3 ; 1 Nijmegen/NL, 2 Utrecht/NL, 3 Amsterdam/NL 14:09 B-0960 Non-blinded versus blinded double reading of screening mammograms in the Netherlands: a population-based study L.E.M. Duijm 1, G.J. den Heeten 2, J. Nederend 1, M.J.M. Broeders 2 ; 1 Eindhoven/NL, 2 Nijmegen/NL 14:18 B-0961 Discrepant screening mammography assessments at double reading: impact of arbitration by a third reader on screening outcome L.E.M. Duijm 1, G.J. den Heeten 2, J. Nederend 1, M.J.M. Broeders 2 ; 1 Eindhoven/NL, 2 Nijmegen/NL 14:27 B-0962 First experiences with a self-test for Dutch breast screening radiologists as a quality assurance tool J. Timmers 1, A. Verbeek 1, R. Pijnappel 2, M. Broeders 1, G. den Heeten 3 ; 1 Nijmegen/NL, 2 Utrecht/NL, 3 Amsterdam/NL 14:36 B-0963 Transition from analogue to digital screening mammography significantly increases the proportion of women referred twice for the same lesion L.E.M. Duijm, H. Wiersma; Eindhoven/NL 14:45 B-0964 Audits as part of quality assurance in the Dutch breast cancer screening programme T.D. Geertse, R. Holland, C.G.C.M. van Landsveld-Verhoeven, J.M.H. Timmers, K.H. Schuur, R. Pijnappel, F. Jansen, M.J.M. Broeders, G.J. den Heeten; Nijmegen/NL B-0946 B-0964 Monday 265

268 Scientific Sessions B-0965 B :54 B-0965 Avoidable surgical consultations in women with a positive screening mammogram: experience from a southern region of the Dutch breast screening programme I.L. Schreutelkamp, R.M. Kwee, M. de Booij, M.E.A.P. Adriaensen van Roij; Heerlen/NL 15:03 B-0966 BI-RADS 3 category, a pain in the neck for the radiologist: which technique detects more cases? J. Etxano, I. Simon-Yarza, G. Viteri, M. Paramo, A. Elizalde, L.J. Pina Insausti; Pamplona/ES 15:12 B-0967 Adding 3D automated breast ultrasound (ABUS) to service screening mammography in dense breasts B. Wilczek, K. Hågemo, B. Adalsteisson, M. Janicijevic, K. Thorneman, C. Hinzer, K. Leifland; Stockholm/SE 15:21 B-0968 Feasibility of automated 3D breast ultrasound scanning in screening of women with high risk J.C.M. van Zelst, R.D.M. Mus, T. Tan, N. Karssemeijer, R.M. Mann; Nijmegen/NL 14:54 B-0975 Perfusion and permeability DCE-MRI measurements in renal cell carcinoma and metastases: effect of ROI size and positioning on inter- and intraobserver variability M. Braunagel, E. Radler, M. Ingrisch, M. Staehler, A. Crispin, K. Nikolaou, M.F. Reiser, M. Notohamiprodjo; Munich/DE 15:03 B-0976 Can a contrast-enhanced ultrasound nephrostogram be used instead of a fluoroscopic nephrostogram: preliminary findings M. Daneshi, K. Patel, D. Huang, M. Sellars, P. Sidhu; London/UK 15:12 B-0977 Vena cava anomalies associated with horseshoe kidney on MDCT T. Ichikawa, J. Koizumi, S. Kawada, Y. Imai; Isehara/JP 15:21 B-0978 Comparison of dynamic transperineal ultrasound with evacuation proctography for the evaluation of patients with posterior compartment pelvic disorders M.J. Webb, Y. Ron, S. Zelber-Sagi, E. Tiomni, Z. Halpern, E. Santo; Tel Aviv/IL 14:00 15:30 Room G/H Genitourinary SS 1807 Mixed modalities in GU imaging Moderators: A.J. Beer; Munich/DE, I. Vivas; Pamplona/ES 14:00 B-0969 Simultaneous [18F] choline PET/MRI of the prostate: initial results A. Wetter, C. Lipponer, F. Nensa, T. Olbricht, H. Rübben, A. Bockisch, T. Lauenstein; Essen/DE 14:09 B-0970 Advantage of hybrid whole body 3T PET-MRI scanner for prostate cancer imaging T. de Perrot, O. Rager, M. Pusztaszeri, L. Koehl, A. Figueiral, M.-F. Pelte, C. Iselin, O. Ratib, J.-P. Vallee; Geneva/CH 14:18 B-0971 Renal cell carcinoma subtype differentiation: CT vs MRI F. Veloso Gomes 1, A. Matos 2, J. Palas 2, V. Herédia 3, V. Mascarenhas 4, M. Ramalho 2 ; 1 Faro/PT, 2 Almada/PT, 3 Évora/PT, 4 Lisboa/PT 14:27 B-0972 Characterization of complex cystic renal masses according to the Bosniak criteria: results after a 5-year follow-up with CEUS M. Bertolotto, V. Savoca, W. Toscano, S. Kus, C. Cercato, M.A. Cova; Trieste/IT 14:36 B-0973 Differentiation between benign Leydig cell and malignant germ cell testicular tumours with qualitative and quantitative contrast-enhanced ultrasound assessments D.Y. Huang, R.J. Eckersly, M.E. Sellars, P.S. Sidhu; London/UK 14:45 B-0974 US and colour-doppler findings in testicular lymphoma and their mimics M. Bertolotto 1, L.E. Derchi 2, M. Secil 3, M. Valentino 4, P. Pavlica 5, M.A. Cova 1 ; 1 Trieste/IT, 2 Genova/IT, 3 Izmir/TR, 4 Tolmezzo/IT, 5 Bologna/IT 14:00 15:30 Room I/K Abdominal Viscera SS 1801b Liver volume, function and focal lesions Moderators: B. Choi; Seoul/KR, C.M. Nyhsen; Sunderland/UK 14:00 B-0979 ROC curve analysis of diagnostic confidence of CT and MR in focal liver pathology L. Saba 1, M. Di Martino 2, C. Catalano 2, M. Piga 1 ; 1 Cagliari/IT, 2 Rome/IT 14:09 B-0980 Diagnostic accuracy of dynamic gadoxetic-acidenhanced MRI and PET-CT in patients with liver metastases from neuroendocrine neoplasms W.H. Sommer 1, C. Zech 1, S. Sourbron 2, M. Armbruster 1, M.F. Reiser 1 ; 1 Munich/DE, 2 Leeds/UK 14:18 B-0981 The LiMAx test as adjunct to CT for assessing liver function after portal vein embolization A.H. Mahnken 1, A. Roeth 2, P.H. Alizai 2, C. Kuhl 2, R.M. van Dam 3, U. Neumann 2, M. Schmeding 2 ; 1 Marburg/DE, 2 Aachen/DE, 3 Maastricht/NL 14:27 B-0982 Future remnant liver function after portal vein occlusion measured with 99mTc-mebrofenin SPECT/CT I. Dudás, T. Györke, C. Korom, P. Pajor, A. Zsirka-Klein, E. Horvath, A. Bozó, P. Kupcsulik, O. Hahn; Budapest/HU 14:36 B-0983 Comparison of percutaneous portal vein embolization, portal vein ligation and portal vein occlusion combined with ipsilateral hepatic artery cannula implantation prior to major liver resection P. Pajor, I. Dudás, A. Zsirka Klein, P. Kupcsulik, J. Tamás, O. Hahn; Budapest/HU 14:45 B-0984 Hepatic parenchymal and vascular contrast improvement in super-delayed phase images of Gd- EOB-DTPA-enhanced MRI S. Kobayashi, O. Matsui, T. Gabata, W. Koda, T. Minami, K. Kozaka, A. Kitao; Kanazawa/JP 266

269 Scientific Sessions 14:54 B-0985 Estimation of liver function using T1 mapping on Gd- EOB-DTPA-enhanced MR imaging M. Haimerl, N. Verloh, C. Fellner, C. Nießen, C. Stroszczynski, P. Wiggermann; Regensburg/DE 15:03 B-0986 Liver dysfunction induced by amiodarone therapy: evaluation by sequential CT studies Y. Sonoyama, T. Tajima, T. Shiga, N. Hagiwara, S. Sakai; Tokyo/JP 15:12 B-0987 Feasibility of a volumetric measurement of the left liver lobe with 3D ultrasound compared with MRI E. Danse, O. Lebecque, N. Michoux, R. Reding; Brussels/BE 15:21 B-0988 An accurate formula for a quick estimate of liver volume in polycystic liver disease M. Chrispijn, T.J.G. Gevers, J.P.H. Drenth; Nijmegen/NL 14:00 15:30 Room L/M Physics in Radiology SS 1813 Patient dose management and dose surveys Moderators: H. Bosmans; Leuven/BE, W. Stiller; Heidelberg/DE 14:00 B-0989 European population dose and differences in radiological procedures between European countries R. Bly 1, A. Jahnen 2, H. Olerud 3, J. Vassileva 4, H. Järvinen 1, S. Vogiatzi 5 ; 1 Helsinki/FI, 2 Luxembourg/LU, 3 Østerås/NO, 4 Sofia/BG, 5 Athens/GR 14:09 B-0990 Radiation dose from multidetector CT examinations in adults in Italy: result of the first Italian survey S. Salerno 1, C. Granata 2, D. Matranga 1, F. Palorini 3, D. Origgi 3 ; 1 Palermo/IT, 2 Genoa/IT, 3 Milan/IT 14:18 B-0991 Patient-specific whole body voxel model for accurate Monte Carlo CT dose estimation N. Saltybaeva, Y. Smal, D. Kolditz, W. Kalender; Erlangen/DE 14:27 B-0992 A simple algorithm for dose estimation in CT imaging considering patient size Y. Smal, N. Saltybaeva, W. Kalender; Erlangen/DE 14:36 B-0993 Monte Carlo tool for 3D-dose simulation in computed tomography taking into account tube current modulation N. Saltybaeva 1, D. Kolditz 1, B. Schmidt 2, W. Kalender 1 ; 1 Erlangen/DE, 2 Forchheim/DE 14:45 B-0994 Evaluation of patient dose reduction after introduction of iterative reconstruction in routine MDCT D. Defez 1, P. Coulon 2, P.C. Douek 3, L. Boussel 4 ; 1 Pierre Benite/FR, 2 Suresnes/FR, 3 Bron/FR, 4 Lyon/FR 14:54 B-0995 Adjusting and measuring CT dose in severely obese patients R. Marcus, F. Bamberg, K. Neumaier, M.F. Reiser, T.R.C. Johnson; Munich/DE 15:03 B-0996 The effects of head size/shape, head positioning, and bow-tie filter selection on peak tissue doses from brain perfusion 256-slice CT K. Perisinakis 1, I. Seimenis 2, A. Tzedakis 1, A.E. Papadakis 1, J. Damilakis 1 ; 1 Iraklion/GR, 2 Alexandroupolis/GR 15:12 B-0997 Detector dose vs image quality in radiography with digital detectors: a visual grading analysis R. Decoster, H. Mol, D. Smits; Brussels/BE 15:21 B-0998 Active personal dosimeters to support optimisation of radiation protection in interventional radiology R. Padovani, F. Bonutti, A. Trianni, G. Bernardi; Udine/IT 14:00 15:30 Room N/O Vascular SS 1815 Vascular research Moderators: S. Kuribayashi; Tokyo/JP, A. Pellegrin; Trieste/IT 14:00 B-0999 Hybrid-MRA steady state VIBE imaging a delayed closer look at the vessels: evaluation of the additional diagnostic benefit in patients who undergo a peripheral magnetic resonance angiographic protocol M. Ong, K. Hausotter, S.O. Schönberg, H.J. Michaely; Mannheim/DE 14:09 B-1000 Multimodal imaging of atherosclerotic plaques using SPIO and quantum dot labelled high density lipoproteins in ApoE-/- mice C.S.L. Jung, H. Ittrich, M.G. Kaul, T. Ducic, O. Bruns, B. Freund, J. Hereren, G. Adam; Hamburg/DE 14:18 B-1001 Skin autofluorescence, a non-invasive marker for AGE accumulation, is elevated in subjects with evidence for subclinical atherosclerosis M.A.M. den Dekker, M. Zwiers, E.R. van den Heuvel, L.C. de Vos, A.J. Smit, M. Oudkerk, R. Vliegenthart, J.D. Lefrandt, D.J. Mulder; Groningen/NL 14:27 B-1002 Vascular enhancement and image quality of lowerextremity CT venography using 100 kvp and ultrahigh pitch: comparison of conventional lower-extremity CT venography using 120 kvp and standard pitch K. Choo, J. Park, J. Kim, J. Roh, C. Park; Busan/KR 14:36 B-1003 CT textural analysis of culprit lesions in transient ischaemic attack and/or stroke: correlation with immunohistochemistry E. Barden 1, L. Menezes 1, B. Ganeshan 1, M. Rodriguez-Justo 1, R. Endozo 1, C.W. Kotze 2, S.W. Yusuf 2, A.M. Groves 1 ; 1 London/UK, 2 Brighton/UK 14:45 B-1004 Non-contrast-enhanced MR angiography combined with peripheral cardiac gating at 3T: comparison of respiratory triggered and breath held technique T. Masui 1, M. Katayama 1, K. Sato 1, K. Terauchi 1, N. Takei 2, K. Tsukamoto 1, K. Mizuki 1, M. Miyoshi 2, H. Sakahara 1 ; 1 Hamamatsu/JP, 2 Hino/JP 14:54 B-1005 Low kv settings CT-angiography with ultra low contrast medium volume for the assessment of thoracic and abdominal aorta disease: a feasibility study C.R.G.L. Talei Franzesi, D. Ippolito, P.A. Bonaffini, D. Fior, O. Minutolo, S. Sironi; Monza/IT 15:03 B-1006 X-ray phase-contrast imaging of arterial vessel wall: translation from synchrotron radiation to a conventional lab-based X-ray source H. Hetterich 1, M. Willner 2, S. Fill 1, F. Bamberg 1, J. Herzen 2, M. Stockmar 2, F. Pfeiffer 2, M.F. Reiser 1, T. Saam 1 ; 1 Munich/DE, 2 Garching/DE B-0985 B-1006 Monday 267

270 Scientific Sessions B-1007 B :12 B-1007 Single contrast medium dose peripheral MR angiography is feasible without subtraction using twopoint Dixon fat saturation T. Leiner 1, J. Habets 1, B. Versluis 2, L. Geerts 3, J. Hendrikse 1, E.-J. Vonken 1, H. Eggers 4 ; 1 Utrecht/NL, 2 Maastricht/NL, 3 Best/NL, 4 Hamburg/DE 15:21 B-1008 Correlation of cardiovascular risk factors and occult atherosclerotic findings using whole body magnetic resonance imaging of the vascular system in an asymptomatic patient collective: initial results S. Mangold, E. Randrianarisoa, P. Krumm, C. Bretschneider, A. Seeger, K. Rittig, B. Balletshofer, C.D. Claussen, U. Kramer; Tübingen/DE 14:00 15:30 Room P Paediatric SS 1812 Paediatric brain Moderators: M.A. Lucic; Sremska Kamenica/RS, M. Stenzel; Jena/DE 14:00 B-1010 Ultra-low-dose CT of the inner ear with adaptive statistical image reconstruction in infants candidate to cochlear prosthesis implantation: preliminary experience L. Faggioni, E. Neri, L. Bruschini, V. Seccia, S. Sellari Franceschini, C. Bartolozzi; Pisa/IT 14:09 B-1011 Traumatic subdural hygromas in children between 0 and 2 years: a retrospective CT and MRI study M.L. Hahnemann 1, A. Schmeling 2, M. Schlamann 1, M. Forsting 1, H. Pfeiffer 2, D. Wittschieber 2 ; 1 Essen/DE, 2 Münster/DE 14:18 B-1012 Apparent kurtosis coefficient (AKC) in brain: a feasibility study in paediatric populations I. D Errico, A. Ciccarone, M. Esposito, M. Mortilla, C. Fonda; Florence/IT 14:27 B-1013 Which T1 pulse should be used to study the preterm brain with a 3 Tesla scanner? D. Tortora, V. Panara, P.A. Mattei, S. Salice, M. Tagliamonte, C. Briganti, A.R. Cotroneo, A. Tartaro, M. Caulo; Chieti/IT 14:36 B-1014 Paediatric brain tumour classification by quantitative methods of magnetic resonance imaging: combination of DTI, PWI and MRS S. Chełstowska, E. Jurkiewicz, I. Pakuła-Kościesza, K. Nowak, K. Malczyk, S. Rączkowska, M. Armata, J. Walecki; Warsaw/PL 14:45 B-1015 Perfusion parameters of pilocytic astrocytomas: additional oddities of these tumours M. Martucci, S. Gaudino, E. Gangemi, R. Colantonio, G. Di Lella, C. Colosimo; Rome/IT 14:54 B-1016 Evaluation of metabolic changes within the normal appearing grey and white matters in children with growth hormone deficiency: magnetic resonance spectroscopy and hormonal correlation J. Bladowska, A. Zimny, A. Zacharzewska, T.M. Gondek, A. Banaszek, T. Żak, A. Noczyńska, M. Sąsiadek; Wroclaw/PL 15:03 B-1017 Functional correlation of the spastic hemiplegic patients with MR findings K. Hayakawa, S. Yoshida, H. Tatekawa, Y. Yamori, T. Kanda, N. Yoshida, H. Hirota, M. Iwami, K. Nakamura; Kyoto/JP 15:12 B-1018 Diffusion tensor tractography and fractional anisotropy in paediatric cortical abnormalities evaluation with TBSS analysis A. Ciccarone, I. D Errico, M. Esposito, M. Mortilla, C. Fonda; Florence/IT 14:00 15:30 Room Q Radiographers SS 1814 Challenges of different imaging techniques Moderators: H.H. Hjemly; Olso/NO, J. McNulty; Dublin/IE 14:00 B-1019 Occupational exposition to electromagnetic fields in MR: understanding the discussion around the directive 2004/40/EC C.S.L. Santos, D.P. Rocha, M.M.C.P. Ribeiro; Lisbon/PT 14:09 B-1020 Radiographers perceptions of magnetic resonance imaging: a study of the causes that lead to the repetition of exams T.R. Filipe 1, L.P.V. Ribeiro 1, R.P.P. Almeida 1, S.I. Rodrigues 1, K.B. Azevedo 1, C.A. Silva 2, A.F.L. Abrantes 1 ; 1 Faro/PT, 2 Évora/PT 14:18 B-1021 Functional mapping of the visual word form area with frequent words of the Portuguese lexicon: an fmri study C. Ferreira 1, P. Martins 2, G. Cunha 1, N. Canário 1, C. Nunes 1, A.C. Miranda 2, J. Ribeiro 2, S. Afonso 2, M. Castelo-Branco 1 ; 1 Coimbra/PT, 2 Aveiro/PT 14:27 B-1022 A survey of the various methods and techniques employed in myocardial stress testing K. Borg Grima 1, L. Rainford 2, P. Bezzina 1, D. O Leary 2 ; 1 Msida/MT, 2 Dublin/IE 14:36 B-1023 Importance of scout imaging in neuroradiologic studies D.C. Martin, S.H. Erbay, M. Hakky, K.D. Erbay, N. Erbay, D. Marrero; Burlington, MA/US 14:45 B-1024 Comparison of a 12-channel- with a 32-channel head coil using SNR measurements C. Vandulek, D. Kaczur, E. Vinczen, I. Repa; Kaposvár/HU 14:54 B-1025 Psychological effect of chronic exposure to high magnetic field on MRI technologists N.M. Mishah, W. Hamed; Jeddah/SA 15:03 B-1026 Development and implementation of a synthetic data evaluation scenario for image fusion algorithms based on discrete wavelet transform and principal component analysis V. Weiss; Wiener Neustadt/AT 15:12 B-1027 Image registration and fusion of CT and micro-ct of a sheep s cochlea S. Leitner; Berndorf/AT 15:21 B-1028 Evaluation of image quality optimisation using VGC and ordinal regression analysis F. Zarb 1, M.F. McEntee 2, S. Foley 3, L. Rainford 3 ; 1 Msida/MT, 2 Sydney/AU, 3 Dublin/IE 268

271 Scientific Sessions 14:00 15:30 Room Z Contrast Media SS 1806 Functional studies and safety Moderators: T. Gleeson; Wexford/UK, E.M. Merkle; Basle/CH 14:00 B-1029 Measuring hepatic functional reserve using low temporal resolution Gd-EOB-DTPA dynamic contrastenhanced MRI: a comparison study with galactosylhuman serum albumin scintigraphy and indocyanine green retention K. Saito 1, J.R. Ledsam 2, S.P. Sourbron 2, T. Hashimoto 1, Y. Araki 1, S. Akata 1, K. Tokuuye 1 ; 1 Tokyo/JP, 2 Leeds/UK 14:09 B-1030 Dynamic enhancement pattern of Gd-EOB-DTPA compared to gadobutrol in patients with HCC S. Kinner, C. Kloeters, L. Umutlu, N. Sippel, T.C. Lauenstein; Essen/DE 14:18 B-1031 Gadoxetic acid-enhanced hepatobiliary phase MRI and high b-value diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) in the differential diagnosis between benign to malignant liver lesions P. Arcuri, G. Fodero, S. Roccia, S. Molica, V. Arcuri; Catanzaro/IT 14:27 B-1032 Gadoxetic acid-enhanced MRI of the liver: correlation between Gadoxetic acid uptake and serum hepatic enzymes levels E. Talakic, H. Schoellnast, T. Wimmer, J. Steiner, F. Quehenberger, U. Reiter; Graz/AT 14:36 B-1033 MRCP using hepatospecific contrast media (GD-EOB- DTPA) in biliary leaks R. Faletti, M. Fronda, F. Barisone, C. Bogetti, A. Dominguez, A. Rapellino, L. Marchisio, P. Fonio, G. Gandini; Turin/IT 14:45 B-1034 N-acetylcysteine for the prevention of contrastinduced nephropathy in rats M.F. İnci 1, I. Şalk 2, O. Solak 2, Ü. Vurdem 3, R. İnci 1 ; 1 Kahramanmaraş/TR, 2 Sivas/TR, 3 Kayseri/TR B-1029 B :54 B-1035 Evaluation of enhancement properties of gadoliniumlabelled nanoparticles for contrast-enhanced MRI in rats with experimental liver tumours at 9.4 T P. Fries 1, D. Morr 1, A. Müller 1, F. Lux 2, O. Tillement 2, J. Palm 1, G. Schneider 1, R. Seidel 1, A. Buecker 1 ; 1 Homburg/DE, 2 Lyon/FR 15:03 B-1036 Regorafenib monotherapy effects on experimental human colon carcinoma xenografts monitored by DCE- CT with immunohistochemical validation P.M. Kazmierczak, H. Hirner, L. Havla, M. Schneider, O. Dietrich, C. Bruns, M.F. Reiser, K. Nikolaou, C.C. Cyran; Munich/DE 15:12 B-1037 Contrast-induced nephropathy in patients undergoing intravenous contrast-enhanced computed tomography and the relationship with risk factors: a meta-analysis S.I. Moos, J. Stoker, S. Bipat; Amsterdam/NL 15:21 B-1038 Renal MR angiography at 7 Tesla: how much gadolinium do we need? L. Umutlu, A. Fischer, M. Forsting, M.E. Ladd, S. Maderwald, O. Kraff, T.C. Lauenstein; Essen/DE Monday 269

272

273 List of Authors & Co-Authors

274 List of Authors and Co-Authors A A. Rahman F.: B-0015 Aakil A.: B-0954 Abdel Razek N.M.: B-0957 Abdel Razek N.M.A.: B-0452 Abdel Rehim M.: A-021 AbdelShafi N.: B-0949 Abdullah B.J.J.: B-0422 Abe T.: B-0760 Abild A.-M.: B-0356, B-0357 Abolfat-h-Zadeh Ghale Joughi N.: B-0857 Abolmaali N.: B-0101 Abramyuk A.: B-0101 Abrantes A.F.C.L.: B-0136, B-0138, B-0274, B-0386, B-0602, B-0603, B-0607, B-0871, B-0875, B-0876 Abrantes A.F.L.: B-1020 Abreu V.: B-0508 Abrigo J.M.: B-0441 Acharia U.R.: B-0617 Achenbach S.: B-0665 Acosta Ruiz V.: B-0177 Adalsteisson B.: B-0967 Adam A.: A-104 Adam G.: B-0367, B-0765, B-0859, B-0879, B-0882, B-0888, B-0935, B-1000 Adam E.J.: A-280 Adams A.: B-0218, B-0734 Adiotomre E.: B-0599 Adriaensen van Roij M.E.A.P.: B-0965 Afaq A.: B-0549 Afonso S.: B-1021 Afshan I.: B-0013 Agarwal S.: A-536 Aghenitei I.: B-0141, B-0807 Ağıldere M.: B-0155 Agostini G.: B-0440, B-0712, B-0769 Agresti R.: B-0561 Aguirregoicoa I.: B-0724 Ahari H.: B-0037 Aharoni D.: B-0612 Åhlström Riklund K.: A-398, A-401 Ahmad M.E.: B-0756 Ahn H.S.: B-0210 Ahn M.-J.: B-0024, B-0025 Ahonen S.-M.: B-0135 Äikiä M.: B-0011 Airaldi S.: B-0688 Aissa J.: B-0252, B-0366, B-0522, B-0749, B-0905 Akahane M.: B-0255 Akata S.: B-1029 Akbar M.: B-0044 Akhavan F.: B-0857 Akin O.: B-0697 Akiyama Y.: B-0305 Akkerman E.A.: B-0550 Albarello L.: B-0801 Alberich-Bayarri A.: B-0403 Albers P.: B-0081 Albert T.S.E.: B-0255 Albino V.: B-0233 Albisinni U.: B-0316, B-0642 Alboni C.: B-0349 Albrecht T.: B-0232 Al-Butmeh F.: B-0290, B-0633, B-0700 Alconchel A.: B-0082 Alcorn D.: SK 27 Aldave G.: B-0514 Ale A.: B-0880 Alenius G.-M.: B-0653 Alessi S.: B-0082 Alexandre A.: B-0902 Alfayate Sáez E.: A-285 Algeri E.: B-0376 Alghamdi F.: B-0105 Aliprandi A.: B-0741 Alis H.: B-0838 Alizai H.: B-0934 Alizai P.H.: B-0981 Alkadhi H.: A-037, A-218, A-539, B-0063, B-0242, B-0482, B-0660, B-0788, B-0910, SY 10 Al-Kalbani J.: B-0549 Aleksandrova-Moiseja M.: Rising Stars Allen S.D.: A-542 Allmendinger T.: B-0372 Almeida P.: SK 27 Almeida R.P.P.: B-0136, B-0138, B-0274, B-0386, B-0602, B-0603, B-0607, B-0871, B-0875, B-0876, B-1020 Almqvist T.: B-0149 Alnabhani K.: B-0549 Altobelli S.: B-0085 Aly M.A.: B-0949 Amalou H.: B-0173 Amanakis E.: B-0223, B-0228 Ambrosetti M.C.: B-0706 Ambrosini V.: B-0555 Ambrožič A.: B-0652 Amirifeli S.: B-0037 Amoretti M.-E.: B-0307, B-0308 Amoretti N.: B-0307, B-0308 Amucano G.: B-0958 An H.S.: B-0269 Andersen F.: B-0102, B-0103 Andersen J.G.: B-0139, B-0388, B-0870 Anderson E.M.: B-0062, B-0070, B-0423, B-0624, SK 27 Andersson I.: A-507 Andersson T.: B-0825 Andikyan V.: B-0390 Ando T.: B-0338, B-0339 Andrassy J.: B-0341 Andreini D.: B-0262 Andreisek G.: B-0482 Andreone A.: B-0316, B-0640 Andronikou S.: B-0860, B-0862 Angelelli G.: B-0283 Anik Y.: B-0908 Anikin V.: B-0030 Annet L.: A-196 Annoni A.: B-0262 Antoch G.: A-383, A-458, B-0028, B-0081, B-0159, B-0252, B-0320, B-0340, B-0366, B-0486, B-0487, B-0501, B-0506, B-0522, B-0552, B-0553, B-0648, B-0651, B-0703, B-0749, B-0905 Antonicoli M.: B-0085 Antoniutti M.: B-0131, B-0382 Anzidei M.: B-0174, B-0617, B-0643, B-0644 Aoyama N.: B-0346 Apfaltrer P.: B-0022, B-0160, B-0265, B-0289, B-0352, B-0419, B-0848, B-0889 Apostolova I.: B-0879 Araki T.: B-0093 Araki Y.: B-1029 Archer V.: B-0799 Arcuri P.P.: B-1031 Arcuri V.: B-1031 Ardies P.: SY 21 Ardley N.: B-0701 Argentos S.I.: B-0530 Argyropoulou M.I.: A-119, A-252, B-0406, B-0860, B-0862 Arık B.: B-0587 Armata M.: B-1014 Armbruster M.: B-0638, B-0980 Arnaiz J.: B-0251 Aronson B.A.: B-0529 Arrebola J.P.: B-0099 Arredondo J.: B-0945 Arrieta I.: B-0724 Arrigoni F.: B-0493 Arru M.: B-0313 Arsalan Raza S.: B-0699 Arsov C.: B-0081 Artigas J.M.: B-0122 Artigas Martín J.M.: B-0124 Asbach P.: B-0324 Ascanio S.: B-0555 Aschauer M.: B-0251 Aschieri D.: B-0267 Ascioti C.: B-0467 Asenbaum U.: B-0328, B-0719 Ashoori N.: B-0578 Ashrafpoor G.: B-0007 Asp P.: B-0149 Astengo D.: B-0688 Astrakas L.: B-0860, B-0862 Astrinakis E.: B-0115 Athanasiou A.: A-028 Athelogou M.: B-0282 Attenberger U.: B-0829 Attenberger U.I.: B-0628 Attili A.F.: B-0238 Attye A.: B-0355, B-0751 Aube C.: B-0797 Aubry S.: B-0312 Auger C.: B-0222 Auriol J.: A-244 Autret G.: B-0911 Auweter S.: B-0846 Avila R.: B-0799 Avni F.E.: A-484 Awadalla H.: B-0123 Ayestaran P.: B-0370 Ayles H.: B-0761 Ayuso C.: A-111, A-360, A-564, B-0704 Azarine A.A.: B-0007 Azavedo E.: A-446 Azevedo K.B.: B-0138, B-0274, B-0602, B-0603, B-0871, B-0875, B-1020 Aznar M.: B-0103 Azzabi Zouraq F.: B-0318 B Babikir S.: B-0205 Bacigalupo L.: B-0197, B-0948 Backes W.H.: B-0012, B-0116, B-0118, B-0120, B-0622 Badea R.: B-0096 Baggen V.J.M.: B-0005 Baglio I.: B-0454 Bagnenko S.: B

275 List of Authors and Co-Authors Bagotskaya N.: B 0206 Bai Y.: B 0517 Baier U.: B 0001 Bailly P.: A 268 Bainbridge A.: B 0097 Baiocchi G.: B 0791, B 0794 Bakker C.M.M.: B 0627 Balageas P.: B 0176 Balassy C.: B 0096 Baldassari P.: B 0796 Baldisserotto M.B.: B 0590 Bale R.: SK 27 Balestri R.: B 0623 Bálint Z.: B 0639 Ballerini G.: B 0262 Balletshofer B.: B 1008 Balleyguier C.S.: A 027, A 296 Baloch E.: B 0068 Baltzer P.A.T.: A 029, B 0074, B 0075, B 0076, B 0077, B 0079, B 0457, B 0679, B 0808, B 0895, B 0953 Balvay D.: B 0911 Balzano G.: B 0769 Bamberg F.: B 0112, B 0113, B 0161, B 0411, B 0582, B 0634, B 0849, B 0995, B 1006 Banaszek A.: B 1016 Banchik E.: B 0695 Banckwitz R.: B 0290 Bandello F.: B 0712 Bandirali M.: B 0741 Banihashemi H.: B 0477 Bannas P.: B 0367, B 0882 Barantin L.: B 0105 Baratella E.: B 0762 Baratto F.: B 0585 Barbazeni G.: B 0454 Barbiani C.: B 0416, B 0662 Barbier-Brion B.: B 0312 Barbieri A.: B 0462, B 0463 Barbosa F.: B 0925 Barchetti F.: B 0089, B 0090 Barcikowska M.: B 0400 Barden E.: B 1003 Bardo G.: B 0082 Barentsz J.O.: A 136, A 427, B 0083 Bargalló N.: A 511 Bargellini I.: A 567, B 0035, B 0922 Bargy S.: B 0861 Barile A.: B 0183 Barillari M.: B 0710 Barisone F.: B 1033 Barkhausen J.: B 0584 Barkhof F.: A 165, A 421, A 614 Barnes A.: B 0549 Baron J.: B 0303 Baron R.L.: A 135 Barrau V.: A 021 Barrick T.R.: B 0359 Barrington S.F.: A 301 Barthel H.: B 0558 Bartoli J.M.: B 0460, B 0461 Bartolo V.: B 0745, B 0787, B 0832 Bartolozzi C.: A 563, B 0035, B 0577, B 0623, B 0698, B 0922, B 1010 Barton B.: B 0299 Basilico R.: B 0127 Ba-Ssalamah A.: B 0096 Bastarrika G.: A 184, A 201, B 0143, B 0668 Bastati-Huber N.: B 0096 Bastawrous S.: B 0145 Båth M.: A 236 Batouty N.M.: B 0150 Battista G.: B 0316, B 0555, B 0598 Bauer J.S.: B 0180, B 0435, B 0548, B 0937 Bauer P.: A 343 Bauer R.W.: B 0266, B 0633, B 0669, B 0723 Bauerfeind P.: A 147 Bäuerle T.: B 0434 Baum R.: B 0282 Baum T.: B 0180, B 0548, B 0937 Bauman G.: B 0766 Baumann A.B.: B 0754, B 0755 Baumann T.: B 0551 Baumeister S.: B 0445 Baumgartner C.: B 0916 Bauner K.: B 0582 Bauner K.U.: B 0913 Baur-Melnyk A.: B 0547 Baxa J.: B 0358 Bayramoglu S.: B 0838 Bazeli R.: B 0650 Bazot M.: A 553 Bazzocchi A.: B 0316, B 0555, B 0598, B 0640, B 0642 Bazzocchi M.: B 0132, B 0567, B 0568, B 0684, B 0687, B 0811, B 0834, B 0835 Beaussart P.: B 0459 Becce F.: B 0542, B 0544 Bech M.: B 0846 Bechstein W.O.: B 0034, B 0040 Beck K.S.: B 0637 Becker A.: B 0582 Becker C.D.: A 529, B 0121 Becker H.-C.: Becker M.: A 274, A 570 Beck-Popovic M.: B 0670 Becquemin J.-P.: B 0924 Beek F.J.: B 0550 Beer A.J.: B 0322 Beer M.J.: B 0001 Beeres M.: B 0031, B 0700, B 0723 Beeson J.: B 0030 Beets G.L.: B 0621, B 0622, B 0625, B 0940 Beets-Tan R.G.H.: A 007, A 141, A 175, A 437, B 0212, B 0450, B 0451, B 0621, B 0622, B 0625, B 0940 Behrendt F.F.: B 0746 Behzadi S.: B 0220 Beiderwellen K.: B 0501 Beiderwellen K.J.: B 0500 Beigelman C.: A 333 Bekiesinska-Figatowska M.: B 0671 Belcari N.: A 459 Belfiore M.P.: B 0057, B 0059 Belghiti J.: A 019 Belkacemi Y.: B 0459 Bellemann N.: B 0178 Belli A.-M.: A 388, B 0498 Bellin M.-F.: A 176 Bellini D.: B 0792, B 0793 Bellomi M.: B 0082 Belloni E.: B 0267 Bellotti M.: B 0397 Belyakov N.: B 0229 Bemi P.: B 0623 Ben Lakhdar Z.: A 021 Ben Salah Y.: B 0542, B 0544 Bendaoud S.: B 0630 Bendek M.: B 0029 Bender D.: B 0188 Beningfield S.: A 262 Benito A.: A 076, B 0778 Benjamin P.: B 0359 Beomonte Zobel B.: B 0020, B 0049, B 0179, B 0342, B 0407, B 0468, B 0469, B 0579, B 0939 Berdel W.E.: B 0805 Berendsen R.C.M.: B 0627 Berg W.A.: A 154 Bergemann C.: B 0886 Berger R.: B 0612 Beringer P.: B 0483, B 0484 Berkouk K.: A-291, EIBIR Berkovitz N.: B 0227 Bernardi B.: A 532 Bernardi D.: B 0818, SY 17 Bernardi G.: B 0998 Bernardo S.: B 0394, B 0396, B 0863, B 0868 Bernhardt D.: B 0263, B 0411 Bernhardt P.: B 0412, B 0583 Bernsen M.R.: B 0887 Berritto D.: B 0057, B 0058, B 0059 Berta L.: B 0246, B 0705 Bertaccini L.: B 0174, B 0399, B 0427, B 0490, B 0643, B 0644 Bertani V.: B 0567, B 0568 Bertella E.: B 0262 Berthezène Y.: B 0890 Bertolotto M.: A 426, B 0972, B 0974 Bertram H.H.: B 0448 Bertrand P.: B 0105 Bertugno S.: B 0462, B 0463 Besostri V.: B 0438, B 0439, B 0787, B 0827 Besseling R.: B 0012 Besutti G.: B 0231, B 0237 Bettelli G.: B 0642 Betti M.: B 0325 Beuf O.: B 0443, B 0444 Bex M.: B 0152 Beyer T.: A 457, B 0102, B 0103 Bezzi M.: A 340, B 0775 Bezzina P.: B 0604, B 1022 Bhagat N.: B 0036 Bhargava P.: B 0095, B 0145 Bhasin D.: B 0573 Bhat V.: B 0431 Bhatt S.: B 0041 Bhattacharya R.: B 0095 Biagini C.: B 0325 Bianchin A.L.: B 0454 Bibi R.: B 0105 Bick U.: A 063 Bickel H.: B 0071, B 0076, B 0213, B 0562, B 0563, B 0952 Bickelhaupt S.: B 0198, B 0242, B 0616, B 0788 Bidault F.: A 433 Bidault S.: A 433 Biederer J.: A 082, A 380, B 0162 Bielicki I.: B 0881 Bierca J.: B 0717 Bierings M.B.: B 0550 Bierma - Zeinstra S.: B

276 List of Authors and Co-Authors Biffar A.: B-0547 Bilbao J.I.: A-077, A-233, B-0778 Bilhim T.: B-0175 Bilk P.: B-0340 Bill U.: B-0616 Binaghi S.: B-0670 Bingotti B.: B-0688 Binnig G.: B-0282 Bipat S.: B-1037 Birngruber E.: B-0147 Biscaldi E.: B-0948 Bisdas S.: A-462 Bisdorff-Bresson A.: A-624 Bisogno R.: B-0785 Bittersohl B.: B-0486, B-0487 Bize P.: A-189, A-431 Björkman B.: B-0380 Björkman-Burtscher I.: B-0169 Björkman-Burtscher I.M.: B-0892 Bladowska J.: B-0401, B-0847, B-1016 Blanke P.: B-0263, B-0411 Bley T.: B-0354 Blobel J.: B-0374 Bloess K.: B-0188 Blomqvist L.C.O.: A-551, B-0149 Blondiaux E.: B-0738, B-0867, B-0911 Blondin D.: B-0081, B-0252, B-0340, B-0648 Blösser S.: B-0039 Bly R.: B-0989 Boardman P.: B-0423 Boatta E.: B-0300, B-0775 Bockeria L.: B-0916 Bockisch A.: B-0500, B-0969 Boczar M.: B-0671 Bodelle B.: B-0031, B-0170, B-0290, B-0700, B-0723 Boehm A.: B-0158 Boehm C.: B-0768 Boellaard T.N.: B-0790 Boelle P.-Y.: B-0738 Boellis A.: B-0518, B-0675 Boersma E.: B-0410, B-0415 Bogaert J.: A-092, A-370 Bogdanovic D.: B-0812 Bogetti C.: B-1033 Boggi U.: B-0577 Bogner W.: B-0071, B-0076, B-0562, B-0953 Bohlsen D.: B-0234 Böhme S.: B-0523 Bojanowski K.: B-0303 Bojarovska J.: Rising Stars Boland G.: A-270 Boll D.T.: B-0728 Bolle N.: SY 12 Bomer J.: B-0597 Bonaffini P.: B-0254 Bonaffini P.A.: B-0064, B-0235, B-0236, B-0391, B-0438, B-0439, B-0505, B-0596, B-0745, B-0783, B-0787, B-0827, B-0832, B-1005 Bonanno E.: SK 27 Bongartz G.M.: A-595 Boni F.: B-0174, B-0399, B-0414, B-0427, B-0490, B-0643, B-0644, B-0645 Bonomo L.: A-381, A-449, B-0021, B-0323, B-0395 Bonsanto M.: B-0896 Bonutti F.: B-0998 Boone D.: B-0789 Boraschi P.: B-0577 Borg Grima K.: B-1022 Borger M.: B-0260 Borges A.: A-001, A-310 Borggrefe J.: B-0436 Borghesi A.: B-0716 Borlak J.: B-0768 Borobia A.: B-0124 Borralho L.: B-0876 Borreggine C.: B-0904 Borrego Gómez J.: B-0690 Bos D.: B-0114, B-0350 Bos K.: B-0485 Bosc R.: B-0459 Bosmans H.: B-0842 Bosmans J.M.L.: A-272 Boss A.: B-0198, B-0318, B-0910 Botelho M.P.F.: B-0363, B-0524, B-0615, B-0722 Botnar R.M.: B-0881 Botturi E.: B-0478 Boubagra K.: B-0355 Bouchareb Y.: B-0104 Boulay-Coletta I.: A-494, B-0837 Boumanji J.: B-0549 Bouquet H.: B-0198, B-0616 Bourdet C.: B-0786 Bourguignon M.: B-0559 Boursi B.: B-0612 Boussel L.: B-0994 Bouvier J.: B-0355 Boyko O.B.: B-0893 Bozkurt S.: B-0055 Bozó A.: B-0982 Bozovic G.: B-0169 Bozzao A.: B-0518, B-0675 Bozzi E.: B-0035 Brachetti G.: B-0427, B-0643, B-0644, B-0645 Brader P.: A-095, B-0171, B-0213, B-0502 Brady M.: B-0624 Brahmstaedt R.: B-0426 Brambilla G.: B-0771 Brandmaier P.: B-0558 Braren R.: B-0880 Brassart N.: B-0053 Bratanova V.: B-0244 Braunagel M.: B-0344, B-0975 Brechtel K.: B-0923 Breen D.J.: A-491, SK 27 Breikss M.: Rising Stars Brekenfeld C.: B-0354 Brekkan E.: B-0177 Bremer C.: B-0805 Bremerich J.: A-324, A-574 Bremer-Streck S.: B-0886 Brendle C.: B-0504 Brenner W.: B-0879 Bretschneider C.: B-0003, B-1008 Bricault I.: B-0429 Briganti C.: B-0509, B-1013 Brkljacic B.: SK 27 Brillet P.-Y.: A-616 Bristogiannis C.: B-0904 Britton P.D.: A-374 Broadley P.: B-0599 Brocchi S.: B-0555 Broeders M.: B-0962 Broeders M.J.M.: B-0841, B-0959, B-0960, B-0961, B-0964 Broessner G.: B-0907 Brookes J.: B-0130 Brookfield H.: B-0608 Brouwer P.A.: SY 19 Brouwers B.M.W.: B-0317 Brown D.: B-0060 Bruce M.F.: B-0095 Brück B.: B-0076, B-0952 Bruners P.: B-0589 Brunner P.: B-0307, B-0308 Bruno O.: A-109 Bruns C.: B-1036 Bruns O.: B-1000 Bruschini L.: B-1010 Buccianti P.: B-0623 Bucciarelli-Ducci C.: B-0856 Bucerius J.A.: B-0120 Buchan K.: B-0701 Buchbender C.: B-0028, B-0159, B-0320, B-0500, B-0501, B-0506, B-0552, B-0553, B-0651 Buchholz M.: B-0117 Buck F.: B-0187 Buck F.M.: B-0181, B-0314 Budde R.P.J.: B-0008, B-0721 Buecker A.: B-1035 Buerke B.: B-0190 Buhk J.: B-0367 Bühler K.: B-0618 Bülow R.: B-0348 Buls N.: B-0248, B-0580 Bulski T.: B-0400 Bunck A.: B-0806 Bunke J.: B-0100 Burck I.: B-0709 Burger I.A.: B-0390 Burgkart R.: B-0548 Burke A.: B-0023 Burkholder I.: B-0188, B-0481 Burner A.: B-0281 Burrel M.: A-116, B-0251 Büsing K.A.: B-0865, B-0866 Busoni S.: B-0086, B-0087 Busse H.: B-0448 Butler M.-L.: B-0606 Buy X.: B-0309, SK 27 C Cabassa P.: B-0424 Cabibbo B.: B-0944 Cabrera T.: B-0619 Cacchiarelli E.: B-0941 Cáceres J.: A-254 Cademartiri F.: A-249 Cadonici A.: B-0620 Cadonici A.C.: B-0064, B-0254, B-0391 Cai W.: B-0069 Calabrese M.: B-0688 Calabria L.F.: B-0518, B-0675 Calamita V.: B-0127 Calandriello L.: B-0021 Calvisi V.: B-0930 Camera L.: B-0454 Campana R.: B-0786 Campari A.: B-0770 Camps Herrero J.: A-447, A-543 Canale S.: A-027 Canário N.: B

277 List of Authors and Co-Authors Cândido S.: B 0603 Canestrini S.: B 0572, B 0574 Canevari C.: B 0801 Cannaò P.: B 0741 Cannavale A.: B 0300, B 0775, B 0920 Cannavale G.: B 0466 Canniff E.M.: B 0119 Cano D.: B 0945 Canosa C.: B 0002 Cantone C.: B 0693 Canu T.: B 0239, B 0449, B 0850 Capalbo E.: B 0128, B 0956 Capitolina L.: B 0140 Caporilli Razza F.: B 0693 Cappabianca S.: B 0057, B 0059 Cappio S.: B 0769 Cappucci M.: B 0691 Capraro C.: B 0236, B 0391, B 0505, B 0620, B 0827 Capuani S.: B 0085 Capuano E.: B 0413 Capunay C.: B 0257 Caramella C.: A 433 Caramella D.: A 575 Carballido-Gamio J.: B 0043 Carbonaro L.A.: B 0687, B 0814, B 0815 Carbone I.: B 0464 Carbone S.F.: B 0392, B 0941, B 0947 Cardobi N.: B 0710 Carette M.-F.: B 0538 Carfagno T.: B 0947 Cariati M.: B 0128 Carner M.: B 0710 Carrafiello G.: B 0531 Carrascosa P.: B 0257 Carreras M.S.: B 0724 Carriço C.: B 0275 Carroll P.A.: B 0216 Cartes-Zumelzu F.W.: B 0907 Cartocci G.: B 0174, B 0414, B 0427, B 0643, B 0644, B 0645 Caruso D.: B 0193, B 0661, B 0792, B 0793 Carvalho A.: B 0278 Casali V.: B 0453 Casazza I.: B 0696 Caseiro-Alves F.: A 070, A 122 Casiraghi A.: B 0439 Casiraghi A.S.: B 0783 Casolo G.: B 0465 Cassar-Pullicino V.N.: A 149, A 275, A 585 Casselman J.W.: A 620 Castañer E.: A 476 Castelo-Branco M.: B 1021 Castiello E.: B 0642 Castrignanò A.: B 0453 Castrillo A.: B 0724 Castro C.J.G.: B 0212 Casuscelli J.: B 0066 Catala V.: B 0255 Catalano C.: A 127, A 185, A 550, B 0089, B 0090, B 0174, B 0238, B 0399, B 0414, B 0427, B 0453, B 0464, B 0466, B 0490, B 0643, B 0644, B 0645, B 0836, B 0979 Catalano O.: B 0233 Cataldo M.: B 0246 Catena V.: B 0691 Cattin R.: B 0198, B 0616 Caulo M.: B 0509, B 0930, B 1013 Caumo F.: B 0818 Cava M.: B 0850 Cavaciocchi M.: B 0642 Cavagnetto F.: B 0688 Cavallo Marincola B.: B 0399, B 0490, B 0643 Cazals X.: B 0105 Cazzato R.L.: B 0049, B 0179, B 0342, B 0939 Ceelen F.: B 0803 Cercato C.: B 0972 Cerci R.J.: B 0006 Cereser L.: B 0834, B 0835 Cerini R.: B 0710 Cervelli R.: B 0922 Çetiner S.: B 0155 Cevasco L.: B 0948 Ceyssens S.: B 0432 Chabrol A.: B 0890 Chaibi Y.: B 0512 Chakraborty S.: B 0756 Chalian H.: B 0363, B 0615, B 0722 Chamming s F.: B 0335 Chamuleau S.A.J.: B 0008 Chan A.W.-H.: B 0441 Chan H.L.-Y.: B 0441 Chan H.-P.: A 508 Chan O.: B 0184, B 0311 Chandelier F.: B 0619 Chandraharan E.: B 0498 Chao M.: B 0036 Charisiadi A.: B 0860 Chateil J.-F.: A 525 Chełstowska S.: B 1014 Chen H.-W.: B 0126 Chen M.: B 0259 Chen S.: B 0571, B 0575 Chen W.: B 0707 Chen X.: B 0270, B 0883 Chen Y.: B 0375 Chersevani R.: B 0686 Cheung Y.-C.: B 0931 Chi D.: B 0390 Chiaramida S.A.: B 0417 Chiesa A.M.: B 0763 Chin W.L.: B 0377 Chiodi E.: B 0855 Chipon E.: B 0429 Chiti A.: B 0503, B 0507 Chiti S.: B 0086, B 0087, B 0511 Chiu C.-H.: B 0931 Chiu S.H.: B 0649 Cho H.R.: B 0739 Cho H.Y.: B 0649 Cho K.R.: B 0073 Choe Y.H.: B 0418 Choi B.I.: B 0202, B 0230, B 0830 Choi B.W.: B 0418 Choi C.G.: B 0067 Choi H.J.: B 0494 Choi J.-A.: B 0046, B 0784 Choi J.H.: B 0521 Choi J.W.: B 0269, B 0446, B 0831 Choi S.H.: B 0513, B 0516, B 0739, B 0831 Choi S.I.: B 0418 Choi Y.A.: B 0826 Chondrogiorgi M.: B 0406 Choo K.S.: B 0364, B 1002 Chou P.: B 0702 Chouhan M.: B 0097 Chow H.L.: B 0649 Chowdhury F.: B 0554 Choy T.W.: B 0294 Choyke P.L.: A 014, A 440 Chrispijn M.: B 0988 Christensen A.: B 0010, B 0351, B 0356, B 0357, B 0750 Christensen H.: B 0010, B 0351, B 0356, B 0357, B 0750 Christensen L.: B 0010 Chu C.: B 0474 Chu S.: B 0893 Chu W.C.-W.: B 0441 Chuck N.C.: B 0318 Chung A.W.: B 0359 Chung D.Y.F.: B 0423 Churchill M.: B 0595 Cianciulli P.: B 0468, B 0469, B 0579 Ciatto (posthumous) S.: B 0818 Ciccarese F.: B 0598, B 0763 Ciccarone A.: B 1012, B 1018 Cicciò C.: B 0397 Cicorelli A.: B 0035, B 0922 Ciet P.: B 0737 Çifçi E.B.: B 0901 Cimmino M.: B 0654 Ciobanu L.: B 0201 Cioffi Squitieri N.: B 0058, B 0194 Ciolina F.: B 0174, B 0399, B 0490, B 0644 Ciolina M.: B 0626, B 0796 Cioni R.: B 0035, B 0922 Cionini L.: B 0325 Cirelli C.: B 0300, B 0775, B 0920 Citone M.: B 0921 Civitareale N.: B 0127 Clarijs R.: B 0627 Claßen T.: B 0782 Claudon M.: A 108, A 485, A 583 Claus F.: A 353 Clauser P.: B 0132, B 0567, B 0568, B 0684, B 0811 Claussen C.D.: B 0003, B 0004, B 0447, B 0504, B 0923, B 1008 Clavien P.-A.: A 144 Clement A.: B 0738 Clément O.: A 454, B 0335, B 0911 Clement R.G.E.: B 0780 Clevert D.-A.: B 0491, SY 23 Clingman B.: B 0955 Co S.J.: B 0632 Çoban G.: B 0901 Cobbold R.S.: B 0292 Coche E.E.J.G.: MSY 1 Cockmartin L.: B 0842 Cohen-Bacrie C.: B 0094 Colantoni C.: B 0585, B 0712 Colantonio R.: B 1015 Colas L.: B 0729, B 0731 Colin C.: B 0559 Colletti L.: B 0710 Colletti V.: B 0710 Collier Q.: B 0285, B 0286 Collin D.: B 0781 Colombo M.: B 0235, B 0832 Colombo P.: B 0492 Colosimo C.: B 1015 Colucci A.: B 0712 Como G.: B 0834, B 0835 Concari G.: B 0532 Conchiglia A.: B

278 List of Authors and Co-Authors Conlon K.: A-144, A-148 Conneely M.J.: B-0823 Connolly E.M.: B-0216 Cook V.: B-0595 Cooper R.: B-0554 Cópio R.B.J.: B-0875 Coppenrath E.M.: B-0578 Coppola V.: B-0518, B-0675 Cornalba G.: B-0771, B-0925 Cornalba G.P.: B-0770 Cornelis F.: B-0176, B-0421 Coro L.: B-0902 Coroiu R.: Rising Stars Corona M.: B-0300, B-0775 Corr A.: B-0564 Corral J.F.: B-0222 Correas J.-M.: B-0084, B-0110, SK 26 Corso R.: B-0235, B-0236 Cortines P.: B-0257 Cortinovis S.: B-0262 Corvol H.: B-0738 Cosentino M.: B-0128 Cossu E.: SK 27 Costa S.: B-0874 Costa Y.: B-0726 Costantini E.: B-0183 Costas M.: B-0185 Costello P.: B-0266, B-0849 Cotroneo A.: B-0509 Cotroneo A.R.: B-0002, B-0127, B-0930, B-1013 Cotten A.: A-314 Cottier J.-P.: B-0105 Cotton M.: A-262 Coulon P.: B-0994 Courcoutsakis N.: B-0115 Couvelard A.: B-0576 Cova L.: B-0646 Cova M.A.: B-0762, B-0944, B-0972, B-0974 Çöven I.: B-0901 Cowan N.C.: A-305, A-379, B-0820 Coy D.L.: B-0145 Cras P.: A-306 Creytens D.H.: B-0432 Crienen S.: B-0083 Crisp T.: B-0311 Crispin A.: B-0975 Cristeas N.: B-0919 Crocetti L.: SK 27 Croisille P.: A-371 Cros J.: B-0576 Crosara S.: B-0572, B-0574 Crush L.: B-0119 Crystal P.: B-0219 Csatari Z.: B-0361 Cuccia A.: B-0438 Cuenod C.-A.: B-0335, B-0911 Cuevas C.: B-0095 Culebras J.: B-0690 Cunha G.: B-1021 Cunningham J.D.: B-0564 Curcio G.: B-0020 Curda M.: B-0563 Curvo-Semedo L.: A-009 Cuttin R.: B-0762 Ćwikła J.B.: B-0400 Cyran C.C.: B-0068, B-0846, B-1036 Czarnecka A.: B-0847 Czerny C.: B-0328, B-0719 Członkowski M.: B-0153 D Da Dalt S.: B-0132 Dadnam C.: B-0256 Dadrich M.: B-0523 Daemen M.J.A.P.: B-0116, B-0118 Dahlman P.: B-0177 D Aiuto M.: B-0217 Dal Bello B.: B-0092 Dal Col A.: B-0687 Dal Corso M.: B-0479 Dalal P.: B-0030 Dallaudiere B.: B-0310 D Ambrosio I.: B-0182 Damilakis J.: A-051, B-0611, B-0996 Damm J.: B-0750 D Anastasi M.: B-0800 Daneshi M.: B-0976 Danquah W.: B-0882 Danse E.: A-196, B-0987, SY 23 Danza F.M.: A-351 Dao T.-H.: B-0459 Daouk J.: A-268 Dappa E.: Rising Stars Darai E.: A-553 D Arco F.: B-0510 Darnell A.: B-0704 Das M.: B-0029, B-0065, B-0261, B-0264, B-0746 D Assignies G.: B-0576 Dastidar P.: B-0017 David P.: B-0464, B-0466 David V.: B-0691, B-0693, B-0696, B-0921 Davies N.: B-0097 Davis Z.: B-0780 de Baere T.: A-490 De Belder F.: A-131, A-264, A-346, A-365, A-556 De Bock G.H.: B-0291, B-0560 de Boer R.: B-0014, B-0016, B-0402 de Bondt R.B.-J.: A-621 De Bondt T.: B-0285, B-0286 de Booij M.: B-0627, B-0965 de Bruijne M.: B-0163, B-0737 de Buck S.: B-0915 De Bucourt M.: B-0306 De Cecco C.N.: B-0626, B-0704, B-0792, B-0796 De Cobelli F.: B-0239, B-0369, B-0440, B-0449, B-0585, B-0712, B-0769, B-0801, B-0850 De Cobelli O.: B-0082, B-0503 de Feijter P.J.: B-0410, B-0415 de Feyter P.: B-0663 de Feyter P.J.: B-0413 De Filippo M.: B-0532 De Foer B.: A-588, A-620 De Gaetano A.M.: B-0323 de Groot M.: B-0014 de Jong P.A.: B-0027, B-0291, B-0297, B-0299, B-0610, B-0721 De Jonge M.C.: A-362 de Kerviler E.: A-103, A-298 De Keyzer F.: B-0152, B-0510, B-0804 de Koning H.J.: A-064 De la Peña E.: B-0690 de Lange C.E.: A-469 de Liguoro M.: B-0325 de Maertelaer V.: B-0053, B-0520 De Meerleer G.O.: B-0088 de Mey J.: B-0248, B-0580 de Mol B.A.J.M.: B-0008 De Oliveira D.S.: B-0645 De Paepe K.N.A.: B-0152 De Paoli L.: B-0944 de Perrot T.: B-0970 De Robertis R.: B-0572, B-0574 de Rooij M.: B-0083 de Roos A.: A-039, A-250 De Ruysscher D.: B-0065 De Santis M.: B-0231, B-0237 De Schepper A.M.: B-0432 De Vathaire F.: B-0559 de Villiers P.: B-0130 De Visschere P.J.: B-0088 De Vivo A.E.: B-0468 de Vos L.C.: B-1001 de Vries B.: B-0212 de Vries W.B.: B-0734 de Wall C.: B-0165, B-0166 De Wever L.: A-353 De Wever W.F.M.: A-382 Deák Z.: B-0243, B-0472 Deandreis D.: A-432 DeBlois F.: B-0245 debucourt M.: B-0539 Debus A.: B-0865, B-0866 Decallonne B.: B-0152 Deckert A.: B-0447 Decoster R.: B-0997 Dedic A.: B-0410 Dedouit F.: A-474 Deferme F.: B-0285, B-0286 Defez D.: B-0994 Dehghan A.: B-0402 Dekkers C.: B-0486 del Ciello A.: B-0021 del Cura J.L.: A-024, A-187 Del Maschio A.: B-0239, B-0440, B-0449, B-0585, B-0712, B-0769, B-0801, B-0850, SY 16 Del Meglio I.: B-0465 Del Monte M.: B-0238, B-0836 Del Vescovo R.: B-0049, B-0179, B-0342, B-0939 Delakis I.: B-0839 Delavaud C.: B-0576 Delgado C.: B-0631 D Elia D.: B-0392 Della Bella P.: B-0585 Delmas V.: B-0694 DeMarchi G.: B-0531 Demers V.: B-0619 Demeter Z.: Rising Stars Demirci A.: B-0908 Demozzi E.: B-0572 den Dekker M.A.M.: B-0588, B-1001 den Heeten G.: B-0962 den Heeten G.J.: B-0959, B-0960, B-0961, B-0964 Dendl L.-M.: B-0725 Denecke T.: A-056, A-318 Denjoy N.: EIBIR Denys A.: A-189, A-431 Depeursinge A.: B-0281 Deray G.: SY 14 Derchi L.E.: A-495, A-580, B-0974 Derderian V.M.: B-0209 Deroose C.M.: A

279 List of Authors and Co-Authors D Errico I.: B-1012, B-1018 Desai S.R.: A-238 Desbiolles L.: B-0660 Deschamps F.: A-433, A-490, SK 26 Deseive S.D.C.: B-0372 Deserno W.: B-0625 Desgranges P.: B-0924 desouza N.M.: A-096 Detante O.: B-0355 Dettmer S.: B-0165, B-0166, B-0768 Dettori E.: B-0791 Deux J.-F.: B-0924 Devaraj A.: B-0299 Dewan S.: B-0041 Dhar A.: B-0331 Dharampal A.: B-0413, B-0663 Dharampal A.S.: B-0410, B-0415, B-0661 Di Benedetto F.: B-0231, B-0237 Di Biase L.: B-0407 Di Cesare E.: B-0378 Di Clemente L.: B-0930 Di Gaetano E.: B-0567 Di Giammarco G.: B-0002 Di Giampietro I.: B-0468, B-0469, B-0579 Di Gianfrancesco E.: B-0002 Di Girolamo M.: B-0691, B-0693, B-0696 Di Lelio A.: B-0439 Di Lella G.M.: B-1015 Di Leo G.: B-0545, B-0654, B-0687, B-0814, B-0815, EuroAIM Di Luzio M.: B-0378 di Maggio C.: B-0686 Di Marco D.: B-0268 DI Mare L.: B-0427 Di Martino M.: B-0238, B-0836, B-0979 Di Miscio R.: B-0238, B-0836 Di Mizio R.: B-0057 Di Nicola M.: B-0712 Di Paolo P.L.: B-0689 Di Perri C.: A-422 Di Pietro E.: B-0598 Di Rosa E.: B-0769 Di Sibio A.: B-0378 Di Stasio F.: B-0378 Diano D.: B-0316 Dias M.: B-0138 Dibenedetto A.: B-0397 Dichgans M.: B-0113, B-0117, B-0353 Diciotti S.: B-0465 Diebold B.: B-0007 Diederich S.: A-003 Diederichs G.: B-0936 Dietrich C.F.: B-0232 Dietrich O.: B-1036 Dietrich S.: B-0366, B-0522, B-0703 Dietzel M.: B-0074, B-0075, B-0077, B-0079, B-0457, B-0614, B-0679, B-0808, B-0895 Díez-Valle R.: B-0514 Dijkstra A.E.: B-0164 Dijkstra H.: B-0442 Dijkstra J.: B-0208 Dill K.: B-0524 Ding S.: B-0277 Ding Z.-X.: B-0271, B-0276, B-0742 Dinter D.: B-0628 Dirksen A.: B-0163 Djemai B.: B-0201 Djilas D.: B-0812 Djuric N.: B-0273 Do S.: B-0917 Dobritz M.: B-0525 Dobryinina L.: B-0365 Doeswijk G.: B-0887 Doğan Ö.T.: B-0587 Dohi K.: B-0581 Dolman K.M.: B-0593 Dombrovsky V.: B-0695 Domengie F.: B-0105 Domey J.: B-0886 Domingo Montañana M.L.: B-0168 Dominguez A.: B-1033 Dominguez O.: B-0211 Dominguez P.D.: B-0514 Donagh C.: B-0823 Donati F.: B-0577 Donati O.F.: B-0390, B-0697 Dong S.: B-0368 Dönmez F.Y.: B-0155 Donner R.: B-0147 D Onofrio M.: B-0572, B-0574 Donoso L.: A-279 Doo K.W.: B-0433, B-0528 Doratiotto S.: B-0131, B-0382 Dores R.: B-0607 Dörfler A.: A-308, B-0614, B-0895 Dormont D.: B-0512 Dornbluth N.C.: B-0955 Dorr K.: B-0858 Dorrius M.: B-0295, B-0298 Doss M.: B-0669 Dou S.: B-0517 Douek P.C.: B-0994 Dousset V.: A-166 Dowlatshahi D.: B-0756 Doyan F.: B-0628 Draenkow C.: B-0766 Dragean A.: A-196 Drapé J.-L.: B-0650, B-0786 Drenth J.P.H.: B-0988 Dreval M.: B-0365 Driessen M.M.P.: B-0005 Dromain C.: A-027, A-433 Drop A.: B-0153 Drougia A.: B-0860, B-0862 Drumm O.M.: B-0184, B-0437 Duarte S.: B-0822 Düber C.: B-0420 Duchatelle V.: B-0837 Ducic T.: B-1000 Ducou Le Pointe H.: B-0738, B-0867, B-0911 Dudás I.: B-0982, B-0983 Duerr H.R.: B-0547 Dugar N.: A-577 Duijm L.E.M.: B-0960, B-0961, B-0963 Duke D.: B-0564 Dumortier J.: B-0094, B-0444 Duprez T.P.J.: A-309 Duran C.: B-0141 Durand P.: B-0429 Durmus T.: B-0374 Dustler M.: A-507 Duvivier K.M.: B-0072 E Eastham J.A.: B-0697 Eben E.B.: B-0817 Eberhardt K.M.: B-0927, B-0928 Eberl S.: B-0790 Eberli D.: B-0318 Ebersberger U.: B-0263, B-0411, B-0417, B-0419, B-0849 Echano J.: B-0809 Eckersly R.J.: B-0973 Eckstein F.: B-0483 Edjlali-Goujon M.: A-283 Edward S.: B-0431 Efendi H.: B-0908 Egbers N.: B-0172 Ege M.R.: B-0587 Eggers H.: B-1007 Eggesbø H.B.: A-519 Eibel R.: A-033 Eiber M.: B-0322 Eichinger M.: B-0162 Eichler K.: B-0033, B-0170, B-0398 Ekseth U.: B-0817 El Ghazaly H.A.: B-0452 Elandoy C.: B-0277 Elangovan S.: B-0692 Elbadawy M.: B-0949 Elgert M.: B-0740 Elhai M.: B-0650 Elias S.G.: B-0218 Elie C.: B-0110 Elie S.: B-0841 Elizalde A.: B-0685, B-0813, B-0966 El-Koussy M.: B-0752 Elmahdy M.H.I.: B-0906 El-Rabadi K.: B-0802 ElShafaey A.: B-0713 Emanuele E.: B-0267 Emich H.: Rising Stars Endozo R.: B-1003 Enescu I.: A-043, A-442, A-557, B-0309 Enescu M.: B-0070 Engelhorn T.: A-206, B-0895 Engelke C.: A-560 England A.: A-466, B-0608 Enskär K.: B-0380 Entezari P.: B-0363 Epifanio M.E.: B-0590 Erb K.: B-0324 Erbay K.D.: B-1023 Erbay N.: B-1023 Erbay S.H.: B-1023 Erbel R.: B-0584 Erdogan Sendur B.: B-0899 Erhard K.: B-0843 Errante Y.: B-0020, B-0407 Ertl-Wagner B.: A-085 A-278, B-0106 Eskola H.: B-0017 Espinosa N.: B-0181, B-0314 Espinoza-Boireau S.: B-0473, B-0714 Esposito A.: B-0239, B-0449, B-0585, B-0850 Esposito M.: B-1012, B-1018 Essig M.: A-203, A-347, B-0151 Eteiba S.: B-0150 Etxano J.: B-0143, B-0514, B-0685, B-0778, B-0813, B-0900, B-0945, B-0966 Eun B.: B

280 List of Authors and Co-Authors Euringer W.: B-0361 Eustace S.J.: A-361, B-0437 Evans A.: B-0332 Evert M.: B-0445 Ewing F.: B-0060 F Fabbro E.: B-0186 Facchetti L.: B-0705 Facchini G.: B-0555, B-0598, B-0642 Fachechi R.: B-0268 Faggioni L.: A-607, B-0623, B-0698, B-1010 Faiella E.: B-0179 Faivre J.-B.: B-0376, B-0519, B-0630, B-0731 Faivre S.: A-020, A-358 Falaschi F.: B-0577 Faletti C.: A-598 Faletti R.: B-1033 Falini A.: A-423 Falk V.: B-0660 Fallenberg E.: A-027 Fallenberg E.M.: Falzon C.: B-0873 Fanelli F.: A-246, B-0300, B-0775, B-0920 Fanti S.: B-0555 Fantozzi L.M.: B-0518, B-0675 Farghaly H.R.S.: B-0906 Farina D.: A-521, B-0203, B-0204, B-0478 Farouil G.: A-490 Farras Roca J.A.: B-0459 Farrell T.P.: B-0216 Fascetti E.: B-0493 Faulhaber P.: B-0326 Fausto A.: B-0682 Fedeli M.P.: B-0814 Federici M.: B-0518 Feenstra T.: B-0560 Feier D.S.: B-0096 Feigenberg S.: B-0023 Feignoux J.: B-0370 Feletti F.: B-0763 Felli V.: B-0378 Fellner C.: B-0903, B-0985 Feng S.S.J.: B-0840 Feragen A.: B-0163 Ferda J.: B-0358 Ferencik M.: B-0917 Ferguson D.: B-0823 Fernandes C.L.D.C.: B-0274 Fernandes L.: B-0175 Fernandes T.: B-0877 Fernandez del Valle A.: B-0631 Fernandez Fabrellas E.: B-0168 Fernández L.: B-0185 Fernandez-Bayó J.: A-606 Fernando S.: B-0051 Ferraioli G.: B-0092, SY 23 Ferranti C.: B-0561, B-0956 Ferrari F.: B-0493 Ferrari P.: B-0108 Ferrari V.: A-049 Ferraro S.: B-0267 Ferraroni F.: B-0203 Ferré R.: B-0786 Ferreira C.: B-1021 Ferrero G.: B-0186 Ferretti G.R.: A-240 Ferri A.: B-0127 Ferrière J.-M.: B-0176 Feuchtner G.M.: B-0907 Feydy A.: B-0650, B-0786 Feygin T.: B-0864 Fiehler J.: B-0354 Fierens Y.: B-0580 Figueiral A.: B-0970 Fijnheer R.: B-0550 Filatov A.: B-0206 Filice C.: B-0092, SY 23 Filice S.: B-0217 Filipe T.R.: B-1020 Filippiadis D.: B-0530 Fill S.: B-0112, B-1006 Fingerle A.A.: B-0525 Fink C.: B-0022, B-0160, B-0265, B-0352, B-0889 Finkenzeller T.: B-0903 Fiocchi F.: B-0349, B-0462, B-0463 Fior D.: B-0505, B-0783, B-1005 Firouznia K.: B-0220 Fischer A.: B-0347, B-0708, B-1038 Fischer M.A.F.: B-0314 Fischer R.: B-0315, B-0578 Fischer T.: Fishman E.K.: A-123 Fitoussi V.: B-0335 FitzGerald R.: A-293 Fitzke H.: B-0207 Flaction L.: B-0869 Flavian A.: B-0460, B-0461 Flechsig P.: B-0200 Fleming R.: B-0219 Fleming S.: B-0554 Flohr T.: B-0263, B-0372 Floridi C.: B-0531 Foderà E.: B-0058 Fodero G.: B-1031 Fodor C.: B-0503 Fokin V.: B-0833 Foldyna B.: B-0260 Foley S.: A-392, B-0272, B-1028 Folio L.R.: B-0209 Fonda C.: B-1012, B-1018 Fondevila J.J.: B-0724 Fonio P.: B-1033 Fontana F.: B-0531 Foray N.: B-0559 Foresti D.: B-0925 Formenti A.: B-0262 Fornari S.: B-0128 Fornasa F.: B-0397 Forner Giner J.: B-0403 Förnvik D.: A-507 Forrai G.: A-297 Forsting M.: B-0028, B-0320, B-0347, B-0456, B-0501, B-0506, B-0552, B-0553, B-1011, B-1038 Forstner R.: A-410 Forte V.: B-0089, B-0090 Foschi M.: B-0002 Foti G.: B-0045 Foti P.: B-0307, B-0308 Fouad R.M.K.: B-0949 Fournier L.S.: B-0335 Fraile Moreno E.: A-113 Franchi-Abella S.: B-0110 Franco O.H.: B-0111 Francone M.: A-202, B-0464, B-0466, Rising Stars Frandon J.: B-0429 Franiel T.: B-0172 Franklin J.M.: B-0062, B-0070, B-0624 Franquet T.: A-335 Fransen H.: SY 19 Franzoni E.: B-0598 Fratto P.: B-0925 Fredenberg E.: B-0843 Frei P.: B-0198 Freire V.: B-0650 Freitas V.: B-0219 Freling H.G.: B-0005 Frellesen C.: B-0633, B-0700, B-0723 Freund B.: B-1000 Freyschmidt J.: A-589 Friedrich K.M.: B-0488 Fries P.: B-1035 Frigerio A.: A-155 Frindel C.: B-0890 Fritsche K.H.: B-0151 Frittoli B.: B-0791, B-0794 Fritz S.: B-0178 Froehlich J.M.: B-0198, B-0616, B-0819 Fronda M.: B-1033 Frouin F.: A-216 Frustaci A.: B-0466 Fu J.-H.: B-0225 Fucentese S.F.: B-0938 Fuchs S.: B-0189 Fuchsjäger M.H.: A-610, B-0667, B-0858, B-0914, SK 27 Fugazzola C.: B-0531 Füger B.: B-0502 Fujii K.: B-0338, B-0339 Fujii T.: B-0674 Fujisawa Y.: B-0293 Fujita M.: B-0581 Fukutomi T.: B-0338, B-0339 Fung V.K.: B-0474 Furmanek M.: B-0852 Furtner J.: B-0328, B-0719 Fusco R.: B-0217, B-0942 Fütterer J.J.: A-378, A-424 G Gabata T.: B-0984 Gabrylewicz T.: B-0400 Gadda D.: B-0511 Gaens M.E.: B-0116 Galanaud D.: A-503, B-0512 Gale A.G.: A-271 Galea N.: B-0464 Gallagher F.A.: A-015 Gallix B.: A-592 Gallucci M.: A-042 Gallusi G.: B-0238 Galvez M.: A-406 Gamhewage G.: A-387 Ganai B.: Rising Stars Gandini G.: B-1033 Ganeshan B.: B-0205, B-0943, B-1003 Gangemi E.: B-1015 Gangi A.: A-043, A-442, A-557, B-0309 Ganter C.: B-0098, B-0435 Gao H.: B-0883 Garambois K.: B

281 List of Authors and Co-Authors Garcarek J.: B 0744 García del Barrio L.: B 0143 Garcia Lallana A.: B 0809, B-0810 Garcia Marti G.: B 0403 García P.: B 0900 Garcia Parra C.: B 0785 García-Eulate R.: B 0514 Garcia-Valiente A.: B 0122 Gardelli G.: B 0763 Garel C.: A 121, B 0867 Garello I.: B 0197 Garlaschi A.: B 0197, B 0948 Garlaschi G.: B 0654 Garnon J.: A 043, A 442, A 557, B 0309 Garnov N.: B 0448 Gartland N.: B 0299 Garzillo G.: B 0640 Garzón G.: B 0124 Gasparini A.: B 0397 Gasparotti R.: A 074 Gaßmann P.: B 0125 Gatidis S.: B 0504 Gaubert J.Y.: B 0460, B 0461 Gaudino S.: B 1015 Gawlitza M.: B 0158, B 0558 Ge M.: B 0897 Gebauer B.: A 320, B 0189, B 0306 Gee A.H.: B 0658 Geers-van Gemeren S.: A 191 Geerts L.: B 1007 Geertse T.D.: B 0964 Geffroy F.: B 0201 Geiger B.: B 0028, B 0320 Geiger D.: B 0836 Geiger J.: B 0736 Geijer H.: B 0825 Geijer M.: B 0653, B 0781 Geith T.: B 0547 Geldof M.: B 0285, B 0286 Gelot A.: B 0867 Gencturk M.: B 0908 Gennarelli A.: B 0378 Gennari A.: B 0944 Gennaro G.: A 505, B 0686 Gennisson J.-L.: B 0335 George R.T.: B 0006 Georgoulis A.: B 0929 Gerevini S.: A 161 Germann T.: B 0265 Geschwind J.-F.: A 273 Gevenois P.A.: B 0053, B 0520 Gevers T.J.G.: B 0988 Gey S.: B 0694 Geyer L.: B 0411, B 0472 Geyer L.L.: A 221, A 413, B 0849 Ghai S.: B 0219 Ghanaati H.: B 0220 Ghaye B.: A 561 Ghedi M.: B 0791 Gherarducci G.: B 0577 Ghoncheh Z.: B 0477 Giani G.: B 0100 Gianolli L.: B 0801 Giardina G.G.: B 0902 Giardino A.: B 0545 Gibaud B.: A 050 Gibon E.: B 0786 Gibson R.N.: A 023 Gidding C.: B 0672 Gielen J.L.: B 0480 Gielen J.L.M.A.: B 0432 Giesel F.L.: B 0200 Giganti F.: B 0801 Giglio M.: B 0268 Gigoni R.: B 0577 Gil A.R.: B 0724 Gil R.: B 0852 Gilbert F.J.: A 156, A 225 Gilca G.-E.: Rising Stars Gilhuijs K.G.A.: B 0218 Gillams A.R.: A 489 Gillard J.H.: A 241 Giona A.: B 0020, B 0407 Gioppo A.: B 0770 Giordano A.V.: B 0378, B 0493 Giordano G.P.: B 0511 Giravent S.: B 0436 Girometti R.: B 0132, B 0567, B 0568, B 0684, B 0811, B 0834, B 0835 Giuffrida G.: B 0855 Giuliani P.: B 0182 Giurazza F.: B 0049, B 0179, B 0342, B 0939 Gjesteby L.: B 0036 Glaser C.: A 152 Glatz J.: B 0853 Gleeson F.: A 004, A 443 Gleeson F.V.: B 0062, B 0070, B 0423, B 0624 Glick Y.: B 0129 Glowacki M.: B 0489 Glüer C.C.: B 0436 Glynne- Jones R.: B 0943 Gockner T.: B 0178 Goffette P.P.: A 341 Goh K.L.: B 0422 Goh V.: B 0943 Goh V.J.: A 010, A 171, B 0946 Göke B.: B 0795 Golay S.: B 0373 Goldberg N.S.: B 0646 Golding S.J.: A 022 Goldman D.: B 0697 Golsäter M.: B 0380 Golubnitschaja O.: A 326 Gombos E.: B 0080 Gomes F.V.: B 0726 Gómez-Ansón B.: A 222, Rising Stars Gonçalves C.: B 0872 Gondek T.M.: B 1016 Gong Q.: B 0018 Gonzalez Crespo I.: B 0945 Gonzalez Graniel K.: B 0737 Gonzalez-Calvin J.L.: B 0099 Gonzalez-Guindalini F.D.: B 0363, B 0524, B 0615, B 0722 Goo J.M.: B 0026 Gooßen A.: B 0843 Goraj B.: B 0672 Gorbunov N.: B 0764 Gore R.M.: A 090 Gori C.: B 0086, B 0087 Göthlin J.H.: B 0781 Gottlieb I.: B 0006 Gottlieb P.: B 0227 Gouda I.: B 0949 Gourtsoyianni S.: A 008, A 071, B 0943 Gourtsoyiannis N.: A 138 Gräbeldinger M.: B 0548 Grabellus F.: B 0782 Grabherr S.: A 473 Gradkowski W.: B 0489 Graef A.: B 0161, B 0634, B 0638 Gräfe S.: B 0885 Graham J.W.: B 0051 Graif M.: A-282 Gralla J.: B 0752 Gramer B.: B 0586, B 0912 Granata C.: B 0730, B 0990 Granata R.: B 0907 Granata V.: B 0233, B 0942 Grande Garcia E.: B 0548 Grant D.: Rising Stars Graser A.: A 481, B 0066, B 0288, B 0795, B 0800 Grass M.: A 337 Grassedonio E.: B 0854, B 0855 Grassi R.: B 0057, B 0059 Grasso D.: B 0904 Grasso R.F.: B 0049, B 0179, B 0342, B 0939 Graw M.: B 0727 Grazioli L.: B 0791, B 0794 Green S.M.: B 0932 Greiner M.: A 624 Greiser A.: B 0667, B 0858, B 0914 Gremizzi C.: B 0440 Grenacher L.: B 0629 Grenier N.: B 0176 Greuter M.J.W.: B 0291, B 0560, B 0664, B 0666, B 0918 Greutmann M.: A 322 Griffin M.: B 0216 Griffith J.F.: B 0042 Grimm J.: B 0144, B 0243, B 0472 Grischenko V.I.: SY 20 Grisi G.: B 0762 Griswold M.A.: B 0668 Gritzmann N.: A 579 Groen H.J.M.: B 0164, B 0291 Groen J.M.: B 0666, B 0918 Groth M.: B 0367 Grothoff M.: B 0851, B 0909 Groves A.M.: B 0205, B 1003 Gruber S.: B 0071, B 0076, B 0953 Gruber-Rouh T.: B 0031, B 0033, B 0398, B 0536, B 0774 Grueneisen J.S.: B 0456 Grünhagen T.: B 0924 Gruszczynska K.: B 0413 Grutters J.P.C.: B 0083 Guenoun J.: B 0887 Guerini H.: B 0786 Guermazi A.: B 0656, B 0932 Guerrini S.: B 0058, B 0194 Guggenberger R.: B 0187, B 0482 Guglielmi G.: A 471 Gui B.: B 0323, B 0395 Guibal A.: B 0094 Guidotti L.G.: B 0239 Guillaud O.: B 0444 Guindani M.: B 0319 Gul K.: B 0718 Gullien R.: B 0139, B 0388, B 0817, B 0870 Gulsun M.A.: B 0667, B

282 List of Authors and Co-Authors Gümüş C.: B-0587 Günther A.: B-0436 Guo C.-Y.: B-0954 Guo J.: B-0896 Guo W.: B-0368 Guo W.Y.: B-0543 Guo X.: B-0806 Gupta A.: A-552, B-0199 Gupta H.: B-0431, B-0779 Gupta R.: B-0573 Gupta R.T.: B-0728 Gusenburg J.: B-0656 Gutberlet M.: A-091, A-321, B-0260, B-0851, B-0909 Guven K.: B-0838 Guzinski M.: B-0744, B-0847 Gwon D.-I.: B-0499 Györke T.: B-0982 H Ha Y.R.: B-0052 Haab F.: A-553 Haag F.: B-0882 Haakenaasen U.: B-0817 Haakull A.E.: B-0139, B-0388, B-0870 Haberkorn U.: B-0200 Haberland U.: B-0022, B-0240, B-0676 Habets J.: B-0008, B-1007 Habib N.: B-0773 Habrecht H.: B-0077, B-0808 Habs M.: B-0353 Hadamitzky M.: B-0372 Hadaschik B.A.: A-059 Haddad S.: B-0538 Haedicke K.: B-0885 Haensig M.: B-0260 Hagelstein C.: B-0865, B-0866 Hågemo K.: B-0967 Hagiwara N.: B-0986 Hahn D.: B-0001 Hahn G.: A-397 Hahn O.: B-0982, B-0983 Hahnemann M.L.: B-1011 Haimerl M.: B-0985 Hakky M.: B-0037, B-1023 Halder J.L.: B-0074, B-0075 Halimi P.: B-0473, B-0714 Halliburton S.: B-0371 Halligan S.: B-0789 Halligan W.T.: B-0417 Halpern Z.: B-0978 Halter R.: B-0768 Hambly N.: B-0564 Hamed W.: B-1025 Hamidavi Y.: B-0034, B-0040 Hamilton M.: A-512 Hamilton M.C.K.: B-0527, B-0856 Hamm B.: A-207, A-316, B-0172, B-0189, B-0306, B-0324, B-0539 Hammadouche M.: B-0786 Hammel P.: B-0576 Hammerstingl R.: B-0031 Hammond R.L.: B-0870 Hampshire T.E.: B-0789 Hamy V.: B-0207 Hamza H.: B-0123 Han D.H.: B-0637 Han J.: B-0025 Han J.H.: B-0296 Han J.K.: B-0202, B-0230, B-0830 Handayani A.: B-0442 Handler M.: B-0916 Handschel J.: B-0159 Haneder S.: B-0343, B-0345 Hanelore H.A.: Rising Stars Hannaford N.: B-0144 Hanning U.: B-0125, B-0898 Hannon M.J.: B-0932 Hansen A.E.: B-0102 Hansen C.: B-0351, B-0356, B-0357 Hansmann A.: B-0199 Hansmann J.: B-0829 Hany T.F.: A-158 Hara T.: B-0777 Hardy M.: B-0134, B-0383, B-0389 Hari S.: B-0331 Harirchian M.H.: B-0220 Harmath C.B.: B-0524 Harris G.: B-0069 Harth M.: B-0033, B-0709, B-0711, B-0723 Hartmann A.: SY 4 Hartung H.-P.: B-0905 Hartung-Knemeyer V.: B-0028, B-0500, B-0501, B-0506, B-0552, B-0553 Hartwig T.: B-0306, B-0539 Hasdemir D.B.: B-0038 Hashemi Amroabadi S.: B-0292 Hashemi H.: B-0220 Hashimoto T.: B-1029 Hassan C.: A-481 Hatzidakis A.A.: A-339, A-445 Hauben E.: B-0152 Haubenreisser H.: B-0022, B-0160, B-0352, B-0889 Hauge M.: B-0870 Hauger O.: B-0307, B-0308 Hausegger K.A.: A-441, B-0224 Hauser T.: B-0151 Hausleiter J.: B-0372 Hausmann D.: B-0628 Hausmann R.: Hausotter K.: B-0999 Haustermans K.: A-174 Hauth E.A.: B-0456 Havla L.: B-1036 Havsteen I.: B-0351, B-0356, B-0357 Hawkes D.J.: B-0789 Hayakawa K.: B-1017 Hayashi D.: B-0656, B-0932 Hayirlioglu A.: B-0362 He B.: B-0375 Hedges W.P.: B-0385 Heeneman S.: B-0116 Hegenscheid K.: B-0348, B-0445, B-0681 Heidbuchel H.: B-0915 Heijnen L.: B-0940 Heijnen L.A.: B-0625 Heikkilä P.: B-0135 Heilmeier U.R.: B-0483, B-0484, B-0529 Heindel W.: B-0125, B-0898 Heindel W.L.: B-0190, B-0805 Heinemann V.: B-0800 Heinz-Peer G.: A-030, A-302 Helal M.H.: B-0949 Helbich T.: B-0076, B-0953 Helbich T.H.: A-064, A-228, B-0071, B-0171, B-0502, B-0562, B-0563, B-0950, B-0951, B-0952 Helbren E.: B-0789 Helck A.: B-0117, B-0288 Helck A.D.: B-0344 Hélénon O.: A-032, B-0084 Hellenthal F.A.M.V.: B-0253 Heller M.: B-0436 Helmberger T.: SK 27 Hemke R.: B-0593 Hendrick E.R.: B-0686 Hendrikse J.: B-1007 Henes F.O.: B-0367 Henes F.O.G.: B-0765, B-0935 Henner A.: B-0135 Hennig J.: EIBIR Henninger B.: B-0343 Henninger M.: B-0525 Henriksson L.: B-0287 Henry S.: B-0519, B-0630, B-0731 Hensor E.: B-0431 Henzler T.: B-0022, B-0160, B-0265, B-0289, B-0352, B-0848, B-0889 Herbreteau D.: B-0105 Herbrik M.C.: B-0028 Herédia V.: B-0822, B-0971 Hereren J.: B-1000 Herh S.J.: B-0715 Hermans J.: SY 18 Hermans R.: A-118, B-0152 Hermeling E.: B-0118 Hernando D.: B-0445 Herold C.J.: A-089, B-0719 Herrero J.I.: B-0778 Herrmann K.: B-0326 Herten M.: B-0487 Hertin U.: B-0149 Herzen J.: B-0112, B-1006 Herzog C.: B-0266 Herzog D.: B-0955 Herzog P.: B-0491 Hesselink M.K.C.: B-0317, B-0853 Hesselmann V.: B-0898 Hetterich H.: B-0112, B-0113, B-1006 Heusch P.: B-0159, B-0252, B-0320, B-0340, B-0366, B-0501, B-0522, B-0552, B-0553, B-0648, B-0703 Heusner T.: B-0456, B-0552 Heusner T.A.: B-0028, B-0159, B-0320, B-0366, B-0501, B-0506, B-0553 Heussel C.-P.: A-334, B-0162, B-0200, B-0766 Heuts E.M.: B-0212 Heuvelmans M.: B-0295 Heuvelmans M.A.: B-0291 Hewlett R.: A-259 Hey C.: B-0711 Heye T.: B-0728 Heywang-Köbrunner S.H.: SY 5 Hietschold V.: B-0101 Hildebrandt K.: B-0582 Hilger I.: B-0885, B-0886 Hill E.J.: B-0062, B-0070 Hillengass J.: A-300 Hiller N.: B-0591 Hillman B.J.: A-277 Himmelreich U.: B-0510 Hindricks G.: B-0909 Hinzer C.: B

283 List of Authors and Co-Authors Hipp A.: B-0112 Hirai T.: B-0336 Hirner H.: B-1036 Hirota H.: B-1017 Hirsch J.: B-0523 Hirschmann A.: B-0048, B-0181 Hirtler D.: B-0736 Hitendu D.: A-322 Hiwatashi A.: B-0515, B-0673, B-0678 Hizhnyak A.: Rising Stars Hladuvka J.: B-0618 Ho G.F.: B-0422 Hoare T.: SY 24 Hodek R.: B-0938 Hodgkinson J.: B-0299 Hoffmann C.: A-087 Hoffmann E.: B-0586 Hoffmann J.: B-0909 Hoffmann P.: A-245 Hoffmann R.-T.: B-0195, B-0491 Hoffmann U.: B-0917 Hoffmann V.: B-0113 Hofman A.: B-0014, B-0016, B-0111, B-0114, B-0350 Hofmann B.: B-0878 Hogenauer H.: B-0629 Hogeweg L.: B-0761 Hogg P.: A-524 Höglund P.: B-0892 Hohmann J.: B-0130, B-0232 Höink A.J.: B-0805 Hojgaard L.: B-0102 Holc T.: B-0273 Holland R.: B-0964 Holli K.K.: B-0017 Hollmann M.W.: B-0790 Holm S.: B-0102, B-0275 Holscher H.C.: B-0597 Holzapfel K.: B-0098 Holzer M.: B-0147 Holzhey D.: B-0260 Homann G.: B-0125, B-0898 Homolka P.: B-0950, B-0951 Hompes D.: A-353 Honda H.: B-0515, B-0673, B-0678 Hong S.H.: B-0046 Hoppe H.: A-538 Horasanlı B.: B-0901 Horner K.: A-338 Hörnig M.: B-0950, B-0951 Horvath E.: A-404, B-0982 Hosten N.: B-0146, B-0348, B-0445, B-0681 Hou D.: B-0632 Houssami N.: A-130, B-0560, B-0818 Houston G.C.: B-0894 Howarth N.: A-419 Howe T.S.: B-0659 Hribar D.: B-0273 Hricak H.: A-061, A-124, B-0390, B-0689 Hrynchyshyn N.: B-0007 Hsieh K.W.-V.: B-0752 Hsu S.-H.: B-0225 Huang D.: B-0976 Huang D.Y.: B-0973 Huang X.: B-0018, B-0883 Huber A.: B-0912 Huber A.M.: B-0586, B-0881 Huber R.M.: B-0578 Hübler M.: A-322 Hueper K.: B-0768 Huete A.: A-408 Hüllner M.: B-0156, B-0157 Hummel N.: B-0288 Hünerbein R.: B-0740 Hung S.C.: B-0543 Hunink M.G.M.: EuroAIM Hunold P.: B-0584 Hunter D.J.: B-0656 Husmark T.: B-0653 Hutt A.: B-0376 Huwart L.: B-0307, B-0308 Hwang H.K.: B-0269 Hwang J.: B-0428 Hwang J.-H.: B-0100 Hwang K.-W.: B-0073 Hwang S.M.: B-0494 I Iacoban C.G.: Rising Stars Iacobellis F.: B-0057, B-0059 Iacobucci M.: B-0323 Iacopi E.: B-0922 Iacucci I.: B-0464 Iafrate F.: B-0626, B-0796 Iannitti M.: B-0796 Ibarburen C.: B-0810 Ibrahim M.I.M.A.: B-0425 Ichikawa S.: B-0093 Ichikawa T.: B-0093, B-0777, B-0977 Ierace T.: B-0646 Ierardi A.M.: B-0531 Iero L.: B-0598 Iershova I.: B-0735 Iezzi R.: A-355, B-0369 Ifeakor E.: B-0299 Iima M.: B-0201 Ikram M.A.: B-0014, B-0016, B-0114, B-0350, B-0402 Ikuye K.: B-0412, B-0583 Ilangovan R.: B-0199 Illing R.: SK 27 Illomei G.: B-0313 Ilyas S.: B-0821 Im T.S.: B-0046 Imai Y.: B-0777, B-0977 Imanzadeh A.: B-0069 Imbriaco G.: B-0058 Imlau U.: B-0034, B-0040 Imura M.: B-0470 in t Hout J.: B-0959 Inácio M.: B-0275 İnci M.F.: B-0055, B-0587, B-0718, B-1034 İnci R.: B-1034 Indovina L.: B-0772 Ingorokva S.: B-0907 Ingrisch M.: B-0344, B-0846, B-0975 Inokawa H.: B-0526 Invernizzi I.: B-0492 Ionasec R.: B-0263 Iotti V.: B-0349 Ippolito D.: B-0064, B-0235, B-0236, B-0254, B-0391, B-0438, B-0439, B-0505, B-0596, B-0620, B-0745, B-0783, B-0787, B-0827, B-0832, B-1005 Ironi G.: B-0449 Irzyk M.: B-0009 Isaacs A.: B-0114 Isberg B.: B-0109 Iselin C.: B-0970 Ishida M.: B-0581 Ishiguchi T.: B-0338, B-0339 Islim F.: B-0838 Italiano A.: B-0421 Ito M.: B-0760 Ito T.: B-0336, B-0581 Itou C.: B-0777 Ittrich H.: B-0882, B-0888, B-1000 Ivanac G.: SY 2, SK 27 Iwadate Y.: B-0570 Iwami M.: B-1017 Iwata T.: B-0720 Izadi M.: B-0817 Izuka T.: B-0760 Izzillo R.: B-0251 Izzo F.: B-0233 Izzo G.: B-0902 J Jackson M.R.: B-0594 Jackson S.A.: A-229 Jacobi V.: B-0774 Jacobs C.: B-0297, B-0610 Jacobs J.: B-0842 Jacquet L.: A-196 Jacquier A.: B-0460, B-0461 Jafarov H.: B-0160 Jäger H.R.: A-046, Rising Stars Jäger M.: B-0487 Jager P.L.: B-0664 Jahnen A.: B-0989 Jain A.K.: B-0041 Jairam P.M.: B-0027 Jakicic J.M.: B-0932 Jakubowski W.S.: B-0717 Jalali A.H.: B-0220 Jalan R.: B-0097 Jana M.: B-0331 Janevska V.: B-0430 Janezic A.: B-0273 Jang H.-J.: B-0699 Jang M.: B-0210 Janicijevic M.: B-0967 Jankharia B.: B-0641 Janne d Othée B.: B-0777 Janse van Rensburg P.: A-259 Jansen F.: B-0964 Jansen J.: B-0012 Jansen L.: B-0560 Janssens R.: B-0887 Janu A.K.: B-0641 Jara H.: B-0954 Jarboui L.: A-553 Jargiello T.: A-044 Jarraya M.: B-0932 Järvinen H.: B-0989 Jaspers K.: B-0666 Jaspers R.M.J.J.: B-0588 Jauch K.-W.: B-0195 Jayne D.G.: B-0196 Jebsen I.N.: B-0817 Jensen A.: B-0151 Jeon G.S.: B-0494, B-0495 Jeong C.J.: B-0025 Jeong J.Y.: B

284 List of Authors and Co-Authors Jereczek-Fossa B.A.: B-0503 Jeromel M.: B-0652 Jerowski C.: B-0077, B-0808 Jeukens C.: B-0621 Jeukens C.R.L.P.: B-0622 Jevtič V.: B-0652 Ji S.K.: B-0050 Jiang L.: B-0141 Jin Z.: B-0496, B-0497 Jin Z.Y.: B-0255 Jingu K.: B-0674 Job-Deslandre C.: B-0650 Joeckel K.-H.: B-0584 Joeres A.: B-0819 Johnson A.: B-0207 Johnson C.A.: B-0051 Johnson K.J.: A-526 Johnson T.: B-0582 Johnson T.R.C.: A-357, B-0161, B-0288, B-0634, B-0638, B-0639, B-0995 Jomier A.: B-0285, B-0286 Jones E.C.: B-0209 Jones L.: B-0557 Jones R.: B-0326 Joo I.: B-0202, B-0230 Jorulf H.: B-0109 Joseph G.: B-0484 Joseph G.B.: B-0483 Jost G.: B-0167, B-0747, B-0913 Jouannic J.-M.: B-0867 Juan Y.-H.: B-0931 Jung B.: B-0361, B-0736 Jung C.S.L.: B-1000 Jung E.M.: SY 24 Jung G.S.: B-0776 Jung J.-Y.: B-0330 Jung K.-S.: B-0330 Jung S.C.: B-0516 Jung T.: B-0936 Jungmann P.: B-0180 Jungmann P.M.: B-0435, B-0655 Juras V.: B-0345, B-0488 Jurca M.: B-0141, B-0807 Jurencak T.: B-0261, B-0264 Jurkiewicz E.: B-1014 K K.Kunovska S.: B-0430 Kabala J.E.: A-460 Kabasawa H.: B-0570 Kachelrieß M.: A-336 Kaczur D.: B-1024 Kaelin-Lang A.: B-0405 Kaemmerer D.: B-0282 Kahan A.: B-0650 Kahl S.: B-0100 Kahn T.: B-0158, B-0448, B-0558 Kainberger F.: B-0613 Kaireit T.: B-0166 Kaiser C.G.: B-0214, B-0683 Kaiser W.A.: A-128, B-0074, B-0075, B-0077, B-0079, B-0457, B-0679, B-0683, B-0808, B-0885, B-0886 Kalafut J.F.: B-0746 Kalashnikova L.: B-0365 Kalender W.: B-0991, B-0992, B-0993 Kalender W.A.: A-106 Kallifatidis A.: B-0460, B-0461 Kalnins A.: B-0341 Kälviäinen R.: B-0011 Kamm K.: B-0106 Kammerer S.: B-0190 Kan W.K.: B-0474 Kanazawa S.: B-0336 Kanda T.: B-1017 Kang A.: B-0095 Kang B.C.: B-0776 Kang D.M.: B-0844, B-0845 Kang E.G.: B-0844, B-0845 Kang E.Y.: B-0210 Kang E.-Y.: B-0433, B-0528 Kang H.: B-0024 Kang H.S.: B-0046, B-0784 Kang J.-W.: B-0418 Kang K.W.: B-0475 Kang M.: B-0573 Kang S.J.: B-0067 Kang T.W.: B-0428 Kannan R.R.: B-0056 Kannengiesser S.: B-0540 Kannivelu A.: B-0294 Kanz F.: B-0613 Kanz K.-G.: B-0727 Kappert P.: B-0442 Karaarslan E.: B-0327 Karampinos D.: B-0043 Karani J.B.: A-470 Karanikas G.: B-0213, B-0328, B-0502, B-0802 Karantanas A.: B-0223, B-0228, B-0541 Karantanas A.H.: A-597 Karatzoglou I.: B-0115 Karlson B.-M.: B-0426 Karmazanovsky G.: B-0250 Karnabatidis D.: B-0919 Károlyi M.: B-0917 Karpinska A.: B-0117 Karpitschka M.: B-0066 Karssemeijer N.: B-0968 Kartje K.: B-0589 Kashani H.: B-0379 Kassarjian A.: A-002 Kassem H.M.H.: B-0906 Kastler A.: B-0312 Kastler B.: B-0312 Katabathina V.: B-0255 Kataeva G.: B-0229 Katayama M.: B-0570, B-1004 Katsanos K.: B-0919 Kau T.: B-0224 Kauczor H.-U.: A-080, A-181, A-234, B-0044, B-0162, B-0188, B-0200, B-0241, B-0481, B-0523, B-0629, B-0766 Kaufmann P.A.: A-013 Kaul M.G.: B-0879, B-1000 Kaul S.: B-0030 Kavaliauskiene G.: B-0790 Kawada S.: B-0977 Kayani I.: B-0205 Kaye T.L.: B-0196 Kazmierczak P.M.: B-1036 Keeling A.: A-389 Kehl S.: B-0865, B-0866 Kelekis A.: B-0530 Kelekis A.D.: A-040 Kelekis N.L.: A-038, B-0530 Keller S.: B-0102 Kelliher E.: B-0564 Kellner-Weldon F.: B-0752 Kemmling A.: B-0898 Kemp M.: A-053 Kenis C.: B-0480 Kerbaol A.: A-109 Kerl J.: B-0723 Kerl J.M.: B-0266, B-0669 Kerl M.: B-0633 Kerl M.J.: B-0290 Kerr J.: B-0564 Kersten M.J.: B-0550 Keyhanian K.: B-0756 Keymeulen K.B.M.I.: B-0212 Keyzer C.: A-035, B-0053 Khairoune A.: B-0084 Khalifa O.: B-0148 Khalil A.: B-0538 Khalil M.: B-0595 Khan A.: B-0943 Khan S.H.: B-0385 Khan S.M.: B-0601 Khandelwal N.: B-0573 Khettab I.: B-0473, B-0714 Khouri Chalouhi K.: B-0815 Kiefer B.: B-0446 Kiefer C.: B-0405 Kienle P.: B-0628 Kiessling F.M.A.: A-016, A-328 Kietselaer B.: B-0261, B-0264 Kikinis R.: B-0284 Kikuchi K.: B-0515, B-0673, B-0678 Kilborn T.: A-261 Kılıc K.: B-0899 Kim B.T.: B-0296 Kim B.-T.: B-0025 Kim C.K.: B-0826 Kim D.H.: B-0026 Kim E.-G.: B-0739 Kim E.-K.: B-0715 Kim E.Y.: B-0521 Kim H.J.: B-0052 Kim H.K.: B-0296 Kim H.L.: B-0637 Kim H.S.: B-0067, B-0521 Kim I.H.: B-0513 Kim I.S.: B-0446 Kim J.H.: B-0296, B-0830 Kim J.-H.: B-0024, B-0513 Kim J.W.: B-0364, B-1002 Kim K.: B-0221 Kim K.A.: B-0446, B-0831 Kim K.H.: B-0052 Kim K.M.: B-0475 Kim K.W.: B-0091 Kim M.D.: B-0494 Kim M.S.: B-0210 Kim M.Y.: B-0428 Kim S.C.: B-0516 Kim S.J.: B-0067 Kim S.M.: B-0210 Kim S.-W.: B-0210 Kim S.Y.: B-0091 Kim T.K.: B-0699 Kim T.M.: B-0513 Kim Y.K.: B

285 List of Authors and Co-Authors Kimura T.: B-0346, B-0828 Kind M.: B-0421 King J.: B-0311 Kinkel K.: A-409, A-587 Kinner S.: B-0347, B-1030 Kircher J.: B-0486 Kirchhoff S.: B-0727 Kiritsi O.: B-0933 Kist K.: B-0955 Kitagawa K.: B-0581 Kitahara S.: B-0759 Kitajima K.: B-0346 Kitao A.: B-0984 Kitrou P.M.: B-0919 Kitslaar P.H.: B-0663 Kiura Y.: B-0305 Klammer G.: B-0181 Klasen J.: B-0252 Klatka J.: B-0153 Klavžar R.: B-0476 Kleijnen J.-P.J.E.: B-0622 Klein K.-G.: B-0749 Klein S.: B-0014 Klement D.: B-0290 Klepacka T.: B-0671 Klerx F.: B-0597 Kling-Hassler C.: B-0149 Klink T.: B-0354 Kloeckner R.: B-0420 Kloeters C.: B-1030 Kloth J.K.: B-0044 Klotz E.: B-0240, B-0413, B-0676, B-0755 Klueppelholz B.: B-0100 Kluge R.: B-0158, B-0558 Klumpp B.: B-0003, B-0004 Kluza E.: B-0621, B-0622 Kluzer A.: B-0128 Knauer A.: B-0190 Knauth M.: B-0676 Knogler T.: B-0680, B-0802, B-0950, B-0951 Knollema S.: B-0664 Ko C.-W.: B-0225 Ko G.-Y.: B-0499 Ko S.M.: B-0269, B-0418 Koay H.T.: B-0294 Kobayashi S.: B-0984 Koch P.: B-0187 Koch-Nolte F.: B-0882 Kocsis P.: B-0619 Koda W.: B-0984 Koehl L.: B-0970 Koehler C.: B-0915 Kofoed K.F.: B-0918 Kogan M.: B-0695 Koh D.-M.: ESOR Course Koh J.S.B.: B-0659 Koh S.H.: B-0330 Kohan A.: B-0326 Köhlitz T.: B-0936 Koizumi J.: B-0777, B-0977 Kokhanovsky N.: B-0129 Kolb M.: B-0341 Kolditz D.: B-0991, B-0993 Kollias S.S.: B-0156, B-0157 Kolligs F.T.: B-0795 Kolokythas O.: B-0095, B-0145 Kolossvary M.: Rising Stars Komljenovic D.: B-0434 Kommata S.: B-0502 Komuta M.: B-0804 Kondrachuk O.: B-0735 Kondratyev E.: B-0250 Konen E.: B-0458, B-0612 König D.: B-0487 Koning G.A.: B-0887 Konitsiotis S.: B-0406 Könönen M.: B-0011 Konovalov R.: B-0365 Kooi E.M.: B-0253 Kooi M.E.: B-0116, B-0118, B-0120, B-0317, B-0853 Kooijman H.: B-0859 Kool D.R.: A-066 Kopf H.: SK 26 Koprivsek K.: B-0812 Korkusuz H.: B-0034, B-0040 Körner M.: A-065 Kornprobst S.: B-0491 Korom C.: B-0982 Korotkov A.: B-0229 Korporaal J.G.: B-0482 Kortesniemi M.: B-0249 Kosanke K.: B-0880, B-0881 Koskenkorva P.: B-0011 Kosta P.: B-0406, B-0860, B-0862 Kostkiewicz B.: B-0303 Köstler H.: B-0001 Kostron H.: B-0907 Kotek G.: B-0485, B-0887 Kotze C.W.: B-1003 Kouklakis G.: B-0115 Kousaka J.: B-0338, B-0339 Kovacic M.: B-0273 Kovacs G.: B-0639, B-0667, B-0914 Koyama H.: B-0293, B-0329, B-0526, B-0767 Koyanagi N.: B-0760 Kozaka K.: B-0984 Koziolek E.J.: B-0879 Kraff O.: B-0347, B-0708, B-0782, B-1038 Krager M.: B-0817 Krainik A.: B-0355, B-0751 Kramer J.: A-600 Kramer U.: B-0003, B-0004, B-1008 Krammer J.: B-0214 Kraśnicki T.: B-0847 Kratochwil C.: B-0200 Krause D.: B-0251 Krause J.: B-0426 Krauspe R.: B-0486, B-0487 Krauss A.: B-0788 Krazinski A.: B-0849 Kremser C.: B-0907 Krestin G.P.: A-137, A-325, B-0350, B-0410, B-0413, B-0415, B-0485, B-0661, B-0663, B-0887 Krestinich I.: B-0916 Kreuzberg B.: B-0358 Krings T.: A-504 Krissak R.: B-0740 Kristiansen A.: B-0275 Kroep J.R.: B-0208 Krokidis M.: A-339, A-445, A-545 Kröpil P.: B-0252, B-0340, B-0366, B-0522, B-0648, B-0703 Krotenkova M.: B-0365 Krug R.: B-0043 Krumbein I.: B-0886 Krumm P.: B-0003, B-0004, B-1008 Krupinski M.: B-0009 Krzymyk K.: B-0632 Kubiessa K.: B-0158 Kuchta J.: B-0546 Kudou S.: B-0760 Kuehl H.: B-0500 Kuemmel S.: B-0456, B-0506 Kuhl C.: B-0981 Kuhl C.K.: A-227 Kühl H.: B-0028, B-0553 Kühn A.: B-0158 Kuhn F.P.: B-0156, B-0157 Kühn J.P.: B-0445 Kühn J.-P.: B-0348 Kuhnigk J.-M.: B-0165, B-0297, B-0610 Kuijpers T.W.: B-0593 Kulama E.: B-0839 Kulkarni C.B.: B-0056 Kulkarni S.: B-0219 Kullnig P.: B-0639 Kumabe T.: B-0674 Kumar D.: B-0657 Kunick V.: B-0882 Kuniewicz M.: B-0009 Kuo C.-M.: B-0931 Kupatt C.: B-0634 Kupcsulik P.K.: B-0982, B-0983 Kupfer J.: B-0481 Kural F.: B-0155 Kurcz J.: B-0744 Kuriakopoulou M.: B-0919 Kurisu K.: B-0305 Kurobe Y.: B-0581 Kurosaki A.: B-0760 Kuru I.: B-0362 Kurzidem S.: B-0487 Kus S.: B-0762, B-0972 Kusch B.: B-0740 Kuwabara M.: B-0759 Kwak J.Y.: B-0715 Kwee R.M.: B-0116, B-0120, B-0965 Kwee T.C.: A-299, B-0550 Kwoh C.K.: B-0932 Kwon O.J.: B-0296 Kyriakou Y.: B-0915 L La Grassa M.: B-0686 La Marra A.: B-0183 Lacan Melki A.: B-0714 Lacan-Melki A.: B-0473 Lacelli F.: B-0186 Ladd M.E.: B-0347, B-0708, B-1038 Ladefoged C.: B-0103 Ladefoged C.N.: B-0102 Laghi A.: A-478, B-0193, B-0626, B-0661, B-0704, B-0792, B-0793, B-0796 Lai A.: B-0043, B-0319, B-0483, B-0657 Lai B.M.: B-0474 Lai P.-H.: B-0225 Lalam R.: A-435 Laleman W.: B-0804 Lalji U.C.: B-0029 Lam C.H.S.: B-0649 Lam M.G.E.H.: B

286 List of Authors and Co-Authors Lamalle L.: B 0751 Lamb H.J.: A 213 Lambin P.: B 0065 Lambrecht V.: B 0480 Lambregts D.M.J.: B 0625, B 0940 Lammering G.: B 0627 Lamot U.: B 0476 Landgraeber S.: B 0782 Lane N.E.: B 0657 Lang I.: B 0599 Lång K.: A 507 Lang R.A.: B 0195 Lang S.: B 0895 Langdon B.: B 0409 Lange C.: B 0888 Langer M.: B 0263, B 0361, B 0551, B 0736, B 0890 Langs G.: B 0147, B 0281, B 0950, B 0951 Laniado M.: A 548, B 0101 Lantuejoul S.: A 240 Lanza E.: B 0785 Lanzi R.: B 0850 Lanzman R.S.: B 0081, B 0252, B 0340, B 0366, B 0522, B 0552, B 0648, B 0703 Laptev V.: B 0764 Laqmani A.: B 0765 Laqua R.: B 0681 Lardo A.C.: B 0006 Larici A.R.: B 0021 Larrache J.: B 0900 Larsen M.: B 0275 Larsen R.: B 0103 Larsson P.T.: B 0653 Lasek W.: B 0304 Laskowicz B.: B 0009 Laterre P.-F.: A 196 Latifoltojar A.: B 0207 Latorre-Ossa H.: B 0335 Lau K.: B 0701 Lau K.C.H.: B 0192 Lau S.: B 0649 Laubender R.: B 0106 Laubender R.P.: B 0800 Laue H.: B 0891 Laue H.O.A.: B 0758 Lauenstein T.: B 0320, B 0501, B 0552, B 0553, B 0969 Lauenstein T.C.: B 0347, B 0456, B 0500, B 0708, B 0782, B 1030, B 1038 Lauer L.: B 0481 Laufs A.: B 0100 Laun F.B.: B 0151 Laureys S.: A 422 Laurino F.: B 0921 Lauvin M.A.: B 0105 Lavin P.: B 0955 Law M.: A 330 Lawler L.P.: A 488 Lawrence A.J.: B 0359 Layritz C.: B 0665 Lazik A.: B 0782 Le Bas J.-F.: B 0751 Le Bihan D.: B 0201 Le Bras Y.: B 0176 Le Coultre R.: B 0869 Le Frère-Belda M.A.: B 0335 Le O.: B 0824 Leander P.: A 594 Leão M.: B 0602 Lebecque O.: B 0987 Leber A.: B 0586 Leber V.: B 0586 Lebret T.: B 0694 Leclercq D.: B 0512 Lecouvet F.E.: B 0542, B 0544 Ledsam J.R.: B 1029 Lee B.Y.: B 0637 Lee C.H.: B 0446, B 0831 Lee C.-H.: B 0844, B 0845 Lee E.: B 0784 Lee G.Y.: B 0046, B 0784 Lee H.J.: B 0495 Lee H.-J.: B 0026 Lee H.Y.: B 0024, B 0025, B 0296 Lee J.: B 0831, Rising Stars Lee J.H.: B 0024, B 0050 Lee J.L.: B 0446 Lee J.M.: B 0202, B 0230, B 0830 Lee J.T.: B 0494 Lee K.L.R.: B 0042 Lee K.S.: B 0024, B 0025, B 0296 Lee K.Y.: B 0433, B 0528 Lee M.: B 0107, B 0926 Lee M.H.: B 0428 Lee M.W.: B 0428 Lee N.: B 0221 Lee N.J.: B 0475 Lee S.: B 0043, B 0319, B 0484, B 0529, B 0657 Lee S.-H.: B 0513 Lee S.M.: B 0026 Lee W.: B 0418 Lee Y.: B 0221 Lee Y.H.: B 0475 Lee Y.-H.: B 0844, B 0845 Lefere P.: A 480 Lefort T.: B 0094, B 0444 Lefrandt J.D.: B 1001 Legrand L.: B 0837 Lehmann F.: B 0885 Lehmann H.C.: B 0905 Lehmann P.: B 0387 Lehmkuhl L.: B 0260 Lehnert T.: B 0290, B 0393, B 0536, B 0537, B 0633, B 0669, B 0711, B 0723, B 0774 Leifland K.: B 0967 Leijtens J.W.A.: B 0625, B 0940 Leiner T.: A 243, A 487, B 0005, B 0253, B 0721, B 1007 Leithner R.: B 0950, B 0951 Leitner S.: B 0171, B 0502, B 1027 Leitz W.: B 0109 Lelakowski J.: B 0009 Lelieveldt B.P.F.: B 0208 Lell M.: B 0665 Lella A.: B 0127 Lemasle P.: A 624 Lembcke A.: B 0374 Lemke A.: B 0829 Lemke H.U.: A 047 Lemmerling M.M.: A 520 Lemos P.: B 0006 Lempicki M.: B 0310 Lenz A.: B 0882 Leonard P.: B 0594 Leong L.: B 0215 Leong L.C.H.: B 0080 Leporq B.: B 0443, B 0444 Lermite E.: B 0797 Lesaru M.: A 373 Leschka S.: B 0660 Leszek J.: B 0401 Leung K.Y.E.: B 0142 Leung M.W.: B 0377 Lévai A.: B 0154 Levit-Kantor A.: B 0129 Lewis E.: B 0134, B 0389 Lewis M.: B 0946 Leyendecker J.R.: B 0728 Leyh R.: B 0001 Li D.: B 0369 Li J.-R.: B 0201 Li L.: B 0656, B 0674 Li X.: B 0496, B 0497 Li Y.: B 0369, B 0575 Liang T.: B 0632 Liao Q.: B 0169 Lidén M.: B 0825 Liebl H.: B 0483, B 0484, B 0655, B 0934 Ligabue G.: B 0462, B 0463 Liguori C.: B 0468, B 0469, B 0579 Lim H.: B 0428 Lim H.K.: B 0428 Lim S.: B 0428 Lim S.K.J.: B 0294 Lim S.Y.Y.: B 0404 Lim T.-H.: B 0418 Lima J.A.C.: B 0006 Lin C.-J.: B 0543 Lin M.: B 0036, B 0924 Lin W.: B 0934 Lin Y.-C.: B 0931 Linda A.: B 0567, B 0568 Lindeboom L.: B 0317 Lindner E.: B 0795 Lindner T.: A 523 Lindqvist U.: B 0653 Link T.: B 0043, B 0319 Link T.M.: A 125, B 0483, B 0484, B 0548, B 0655, B 0657 Linn J.: B 0353 Linsenmaier U.: A 197, A 221, A 413 Lions C.: A 244 Liou I.W.: B 0095 Lioubashevsky N.: B 0591 Lippa N.: B 0421 Lipponer C.: B 0969 Lirette M.-P.: B 0594 Lissandrin R.: B 0092 Liu F.: B 0483 Liu J.: B 0369 Liu Y.: A 095 Livingstone R.: B 0100 Ljungqvist G.: B 0943 Llopis E.: A 584 Llorente C.: B 0690 Lobbes M.: B 0450, B 0451 Lobbes M.B.I.: B 0212 Lockhat Z.: A 258, A 260 Loeckx D.: B 0280 Loewe C.: A 183, A 513, B 0251 Löfgren J.: B 0102, B 0103 Loft A.: A

287 List of Authors and Co-Authors Logager V.: A-534 Lohan D.G.: A-625 Lombard C.: A-262 Lombardi M.: B-0251, B-0855 Lombardo C.V.: B-0238, B-0836 Londero V.: B-0132, B-0567, B-0568, B-0684, B-0687, B-0811 Long N.M.: B-0437 Longoni L.: B-0596 Lönnemark M.: B-0177 Lönnfors-Weitzel T.M.L.: B-0405 Loo C.E.: B-0218 Lopater J.: B-0694 Lopci E.: B-0503, B-0507 Lopera J.E.: B-0255 Lorentzen T.: A-581 Lorenzen M.: B-0315 Losa M.: B-0850 Lossev I.: B-0206 Lotan E.: B-0209, B-0612 Lou X.: B-0897 Lourenço C.: B-0871 Louwen F.: B-0398 Lovblad K.-O.: A-366 Löve A.: B-0892 Lovisatti M.: B-0128 Lu J.: B-0571, B-0575 Luca A.: B-0772 Lucarini S.: B-0086, B-0087 Lucas R.: B-0043 Lucatelli P.: B-0775, B-0920 Lucchesi P.: B-0793 Luceri A.M.: B-0392 Luciani A.: B-0459, B-0924 Luciani M.L.: B-0453 Lucidarme O.: A-216 Lücke C.: B-0260 Luepke M.: B-0768 Luerken L.: B-0725 Lugli R.: B-0462, B-0463 Luhur R.: B-0374 Lui S.: B-0018 Lukianchenko A.: Lumen N.: B-0088 Lundqvist M.: B-0843 Lung P.F.C.: B-0199 Luo X.: B-0259 Lupp A.: B-0282 Luppi G.: B-0179 Lux F.: B-1035 Luypaert R.: B-0580 Lynch J.: B-0655, B-0934 Lythgoe M.: B-0097 M Ma C.: B-0571, B-0575 Ma C.B.: B-0043 Ma L.: B-0897 Ma X.: B-0368 Maas M.: A-102, A-253, A-498, B-0593, B-0621, B-0622, B-0625, B-0940 Macarini L.: B-0904 Macaskill P.: B-0818 Maccabelli G.: B-0585 Maccagni D.: B-0600 Maccioni F.: A-230 Maceroni M.M.: B-0193, B-0626, B-0793 Macho J.: A-112 Macias N.: B-0704 Macioszek A.: B-0401 Mack M.G.: A-126 Mackinnnon A.D.: B-0359 Macron L.: B-0007 Maderthaner R.: B-0743, B-0858 Maderwald S.: B-0347, B-0456, B-1038 Madureira A.J.B.S.: A-036, Rising Stars Maduskar P.: B-0761 Madzik J.: B-0671 Maeda K.: B-0759 Maffi P.: B-0440, B-0449, B-0769 Maffulli N.: B-0184, B-0311 Magnusson A.: A-304, B-0177 Magomatschnigg H.F.: B-0563 Magometschnigg H.: B-0213 Magometschnigg H.F.: B-0952 Maher M.M.: B-0119 Mahnken A.H.: B-0167, B-0589, B-0981 Mahon B.: A-547 Maieron M.: B-0834, B-0835 Mainprize J.G.: A-506 Maintz D.: B-0806 Majoie C.B.L.M.: B-0894 Major D.: B-0618 Majós C.: A-159 Majumdar S.: B-0657 Makarenko V.: B-0916 Mäkelä T.: B-0249 Malagari K.: B-0530 Malago R.: B-0416, B-0662 Malakhova E.: B-0229 Malczyk K.: B-1014 Maleux G.: B-0804 Mali W.P.T.M.: B-0008, B-0027, B-0032, B-0218, B-0565, B-0721 Malich A.: SK 27 Malikova M.A.: B-0954 Malkowski B.: B-0321 Mall M.A.: B-0162 Malliaras P.: B-0184 Malliaropoulos N.: B-0933 Mallio C.A.: B-0020, B-0407 Maltese L.S.: B-0392 Maltzeff N.: B-0921 Maly Sundgren P.C.: A-072, A-194, A-332 Mamboury N.: B-0387 Mamone G.: B-0772 Mandel C.: B-0144 Manenti G.: A-376, B-0085 Manfredi R.: A-110 Mang T.: A-479 Manganaro L.: B-0394, B-0396, B-0863, B-0868 Manghat N.E.: B-0527, B-0856 Mangold S.: B-0003, B-0004, B-1008 Manickam S.: B-0595 Manka R.: B-0910 Mann A.: B-0180 Mann R.M.: A-448, B-0072, B-0565, B-0968 Manniesing R.: B-0758, B-0891 Manning-Stanley A.S.: B-0608 Mansour S.: B-0949 Månsson C.: B-0426 Mantarro A.: B-0623 Mantini C.: B-0002 Mantovani L.: B-0682 Marano R.: A-451 Marchesi G.: B-0267 Marchesini M.: B-0561, B-0956 Marchisio L.: B-1033 Marcon M.: B-0567, B-0568 Marcus R.: B-0582, B-0995 Marcus R.P.: B-0411 Marcy P.-Y.: B-0307, B-0308 Marginet-Mangas C.: B-0810 Margreiter M.: B-0502 Mariani S.: B-0183, B-0696 Marigliano C.: B-0697 Marinelli D.: B-0002 Marinelli S.: A-582 Marinescu M.: B-0890 Marini M.: B-0122 Marino M.: B-0395 Maris T.: B-0223, B-0228 Markl M.: B-0361, B-0736 Markonis D.: B-0147, B-0281 Markota J.: B-0652 Markstaller K.: B-0523 Markus C.: B-0525 Markus H.S.: B-0359 Marletta M.: B-0698 Maroldi R.: A-461, A-571, B-0203, B-0204, B-0246, B-0424, B-0478, B-0479, B-0705, B-0716 Marquina T.: B-0724 Marra P.: B-0239 Marrelli D.: B-0194 Marrero D.: B-1023 Marrosu M.G.: B-0313 Marsecano C.: B-0645 Marshall M.: B-0199 Marshall N.W.: B-0842 Martegani A.: B-0232, SY 23 Martel Villagrán J.: B-0690 Marten-Engelke K.: A-239 Martens D.: B-0749 Martens M.H.: B-0621, B-0622, B-0625, B-0940 Marti Bonmati L.: B-0251 Martí De Gracia M.: B-0122, B-0124 Martí-Bonmatí L.: A-115, A-139, A-416, B-0403, ESOR Course, EIBIR Martin D.C.: B-1023 Martin D.F.: A-342 Martinez de Vega V.: SY 13 Martinez E.: B-0810 Martinez L.: B-0724 Martínez P.: B-0809 Martínez Rodrigo J.J.: A-114 Martini C.: B-0186 Martinoff S.: B-0372 Martinoli C.: A-163 Martin-Rodriguez J.L.: B-0099 Martins P.: B-1021 Martirosian P.: B-0098 Martucci M.: B-1015 Maruzzelli L.: B-0772 Mascarenhas V.: B-0822, B-0971 Mascaretti G.: B-0493 Mascaro L.: B-0246, B-0705 Masciocchi C.: B-0183, B-0378, B-0493 Masetto A.: B-0254, B-0438, B-0596, B-0783 Maso C.: B-0131 Masoomi M.: B-0104 Mastorodemos V.: B-0223, B

288 List of Authors and Co-Authors Masui T.: B 0570, B 1004 Mátéka I.: A 026 Mathers S.: A 464 Mathys C.: B 0749, B 0905 Matias J.M.: B 0278 Matos A.: B 0822, B 0971 Matos C.: A 554, A 601 Matranga D.: B 0730, B 0990 Matsui O.: B 0984 Matsumoto S.: B 0293, B 0329, B 0526, B 0767 Matsushige T.: B 0305 Mattace-Raso F.U.S.: B 0111 Mattei P.A.: B 0509, B 1013 Mattiuz C.A.: B 0654 Matzko M.: B 0491 Maurel B.: B 0460, B 0461 Maurer M.: B 0189, B 0306 Maurer M.H.: B 0539 Mauri G.: B 0646, B 0771, SK 26 Maurovich-Horvat P.: B 0917 Mavrogenis A.F.: B 0640 Maxeiner A.: B 0172 Maxien D.: B 0927, B 0928 May A.: B 0003, B 0004 Mayer J.L.: B 0523 Mayerhoefer M.E.: B 0328, B 0680, B 0802 Mayo J.: B 0632 Mazioti A.: B 0530 Mazonakis M.: B 0611 Mazza E.: B 0801 Mazza G.: B 0791, B 0794 Mazzei F.G.: B 0058, B 0194 Mazzei M.A.: B 0057, B 0058, B 0059, B 0194 Mazzoni L.: B 0511 Mazzoni L.N.: B 0086, B 0087 Mbalisike E.: B 0039, B 0471, B 0748 Mc Laughlin P.D.: B 0119 McCarthy P.: B 0823 McCulloch C.: B 0934 McCulloch C.E.: B 0484, B 0655 McEntee M.F.: B 0272, B 1028 McHale T.: B 0823 McHugo J.: A 411 McKillop G.: B 0373 McLaren C.: A 465 McNulty J.: A 344, B 0604 McQuiston A.D.: B 0411 McRobbie D.: B 0839 Medici M.: B 0429 Medvedev S.: B 0229 Mehrez H.: B 0292, B 0379 Meier A.K.: B 0482 Meier R.: B 0880 Meijboom F.J.: B 0005 Meijboom W.B.: B 0415 Meinel F.: B 0288 Meinel F.G.: B 0161, B 0556, B 0634, B 0638, B 0754, B 0757 Méjean A.: B 0084 Mejia-Bustamante V.: B 0840 Mekiš N.: B 0609 Melchionda D.: B 0904 Melchiorre F.: B 0770, B 0771 Melgari J.M.: B 0407 Melis L.: B 0533, B 0535, B 0958 Meloni A.: B 0467, B 0854, B 0855 Meloni G.B.: B 0533, B 0535, B 0958 Melzer A.: B 0795 Menchi I.: B 0086, B 0087 Mendes C.M.: B 0386 Mendes Pereira V.: A 366 Menezes L.: B 1003 Menges A.-L.: B 0372 Menovsky T.: A 306, B 0301, B 0302 Mensel B.: B 0348, B 0445, B 0681 Menu Y.: A 068, A 134, A 157, A-281 Mercer D.: B 0702 Merchant M.S.: B 0209 Merckel L.G.: B 0072, B 0565 Mercuri P.: B 0058, B 0194, B 0682 Merhemic Z.: A 414 Merkle E.M.: B 0728 Merran S.: A 352 Mershina E.: A 515 Mershina E.A.: Mertelmeier T.: SY 5 Mesa J.: B 0724 Mess W.H.: B 0120 Messa C.: B 0505 Mesters R.M.: B 0805 Metivier-Cesbron E.: B 0797 Meuli R.: B 0542, B 0544, B 0670 Mews J.: B 0374 Meyblum E.: B 0459 Meyer B.: B 0047, B 0244 Meyer B.C.: B 0038 Meyer E.: B 0044 Meyer M.: B 0160, B 0265, B 0352 Meyer M.-E.: A 268 Meyer P.: B 0310 Meyer S.: B 0191 Meyer zu Hörste G.: B 0905 Miccò M.: B 0323, B 0395 Miccoli A.: B 0493 Michaely H.J.: A 242, B 0343, B 0345, B 0540, B 0999, SY 12 Michalak E.: B 0671 Michałek A.: B 0852 Michelozzi C.: B 0770, B 0771 Michieletti E.: B 0267 Michielsen K.: B 0804, B 0842 Michoux N.: B 0987 Midiri M.: B 0855 Miese F.: B 0340, B 0366, B 0651, B 0703 Miese F.R.: B 0486, B 0487 Migda B.: B 0717 Miglio E.: B 0453 Migliorisi C.: B 0925 Mihl C.: B 0261, B 0264, B 0746 Mildenberger P.: A 576 Miles K.: B 0943 Milner S.: B 0680 Milosevic Z.C.: B 0455, B 0566 Minami T.: B 0984 Minar E.: A 212 Minarikova L.: B 0953 Mindjuk I.: B 0491 Minguillon C.: B 0809 Minhas K.: B 0856 Minighin E.: B 0834, B 0835 Mintzer J.E.: B 0408 Minutolo O.: B 0064, B 0391, B 1005 Miraglia R.: B 0772 Miranda A.C.: B 1021 Miranda I.: B 0211 Mirsadraee S.: B 0373 Mischen B.T.: B 0417 Mishah N.M.: B 1025 Missonnier S.: A 525 Mitjana R.: B 0222 Mitsumori L.M.: B 0095 Mitulescu A.: B 0512 Mitusov V.: B 0695 Miyamoto Y.: B 0336 Miyazaki Y.: B 0720 Miyoshi M.: B 1004 Mizandari M.: B 0773 Mizoguchi M.: B 0673 Mizuki K.: B 0570, B 1004 Mngomezulu V.: A 257 Modorati G.: B 0712 Mohan P.C.: B 0659 Mohan S.: B 0604 Mohd Nor H.: B 0404 Mohd Ramli N.: B 0015 Mohr F.W.: B 0260 MohyElDien R.: B 0713 Mokbel K.: B 0680 Mokrane F.: A 244 Mokry T.: B 0178 Mol H.: B 0997 Molenschot M.C.: B 0734 Molgaard C.: B 0037 Molica S.: B 1031 Molinari C.: B 0132, B 0684, B 0811 Molinari F.: B 0376 Molinié V.: B 0837 Mollet N.R.: A 249 Moltz J.: B 0200 Monguzzi L.: B 0620 Monnin P.: B 0277 Mono M.-L.: B 0752 Montaser A.: B 0529 Monteiro M.: B 0278 Montemezzi S.: B 0454 Montet X.: A 596 Mookerjee R.: B 0097 Moon H.J.: B 0715 Moon J.H.: B 0330 Moore C.E.: B 0932 Moorthy S.: B 0056 Moos S.I.: B 1037 Moosbauer H.: B 0953 Morana G.: A 006 Morassi M.: B 0203, B 0204 Morcos S.K.: A 537 Moreau-Gaudry A.: B 0429 Moretti M.: B 0511 Morgan R.: A 247, A 540, Rising Stars Mori E.: B 0674 Mori N.: B 0777 Mori T.: B 0720 Mori Y.: B 0338, B 0339 Morimoto R.: B 0828 Morini V.: B 0462, B 0463 Morisaka H.: B 0093 Moriyasu F.: B 0336 Morone M.: B 0791, B 0794 Morr D.: B 1035 Morris P.B.: B 0417 Morris R.: B

289 List of Authors and Co-Authors Morrison G.: B-0599 Morrissey D.: B-0184, B-0311 Morsbach F.: B-0063, B-0242, B-0660, B-0788 Mortilla M.: B-1012, B-1018 Morton S.L.: B-0311 Morvay Z.: A-026 Moscano F.: B-0598 Moschetta M.: B-0283 Moschouris H.: A-623 Moser M.: B-0068 Mostbeck G.: B-0148, B-0636, B-0635, SK 26 Motevalli M.: B-0857 Motohashi N.: B-0760 Motosugi U.: B-0093 Mouden M.: B-0664 Moulin G.: B-0460, B-0461 Moussa S.: A-303 Mousseaux E.: B-0007 Moutard M.-L.: B-0867 Mowinckel-Nilsen M.L.: B-0381 Mpampali A.: B-0115 Much C.: B-0859 Mück F.: B-0243 Mück F.G.: B-0472 Muehlenbruch G.: B-0746 Mueller H.: B-0147, B-0281 Mueller-Lisse U.G.: A-177, A-354, B-0578 Mueller-Mang C.: B-0281 Mugikura S.: B-0674 Mulder D.J.: B-1001 Müller A.: B-0232, B-0537, B-1035 Müller-Bierl B.M.: B-0580 Müllerleile K.: B-0367 Mundinger A.: SY 13 Mungai F.: B-0325 Munier F.: B-0670 Münter M.: B-0151 Murata T.: B-0674 Murchison J.T.: B-0060 Mus R.D.M.: B-0968 Muscogiuri G.: B-0626, B-0691, B-0696, B-0704 Mushtaq S.: B-0262 Musi G.: B-0082 Muto M.: A-501, A-558 Mutsaerts H.-J.M.M.: B-0894 Myeong W.-J.: B-0739 Myojin K.: B-0777 N Nabuurs C.I.H.C.: B-0317 Nachtigal A.: B-0129 Nada O.M.: B-0949 Nadrljanski M.M.: B-0455, B-0566 Naga S.: B-0331 Nagata M.: B-0581 Naguib N.N.N.: B-0031, B-0033, B-0170, B-0393, B-0534, B-0536, B-0711, B-0774 Nagy E.: A-026 Nagy J.: B-0840 Nagy N.N.: B-0709 Nahama-Allouche C.: B-0867 Nair A.: B-0299 Nakamura K.: B-1017 Nakano S.: B-0338, B-0339 Nakano Y.: B-0759 Nakazaki M.: B-0720 Nance J.W.: B-0419 Napoli A.: B-0174, B-0399, B-0414, B-0427, B-0490, B-0643, B-0644, B-0645 Nardo L.: B-0043, B-0319, B-0483, B-0484, B-0529, B-0657, B-0934 Nasar M.: B-0713 Nascimento J.H.H.R.N.: B-0590 Nassenstein K.: B-0584 Natale L.: A-372, B-0325 Natilla T.: B-0791, B-0794 Navarro U.: B-0478 Navarro Vilar L.: B-0168 Nechaev V.: Rising Stars Nederend J.: B-0960, B-0961 Nederveen A.J.: B-0894 Neff K.W.: B-0865, B-0866 Negus I.: B-0527 Nelemans P.: B-0264 Nensa F.: B-0708, B-0969 Neri E.: A-605, B-0623, B-1010 Nestle U.: A-099 Neubauer B.J.: Rising Stars Neuhaus P.: A-317 Neumaier K.: B-0995 Neumann C.: B-0148, B-0635, B-0636 Neumann U.: B-0981 Neurohr C.: B-0161, B-0634, B-0638 Neuzillet Y.: B-0694 Nevens F.: B-0804 Nevitt M.: B-0655, B-0934 Nevitt M.C.: B-0484 Newby D.E.: B-0373 Newell M.: B-0104 Newerla C.: B-0130 Nezzo M.: B-0085 Ng W.H.A.: B-0042 N Guyen Bui B.: B-0421 Nguyen V.L.L.: B-0253 Nica I.: A-196 Nichelatti M.: B-0925 Nicolai P.: A-571 Nicolaou S.: B-0632 Nieboer K.: B-0248 Niederstadt T.: B-0898 Nielsen J.: B-0351, B-0356, B-0357, B-0750 Nieman K.: B-0410, B-0415, B-0661 Niemann T.: B-0519, B-0729, B-0731 Nießen C.: B-0985 Niessen W.J.: B-0014, B-0016, B-0142, B-0402 Nievelstein R.A.J.: B-0550 Niggemann P.: B-0546 Nijsen J.F.W.: B-0032 Nikitin V.: B-0206 Nikolaou K.: A-012, B-0068, B-0117, B-0341, B-0344, B-0353, B-0582, B-0754, B-0755, B-0757, B-0846, B-0913, B-0975, B-1036 Nilsson A.: B-0426, SY 9 Nimish S.: B-0042 Ninivaggi V.: B-0395 Nishio M.: B-0293, B-0329, B-0526, B-0767 Niskanen E.: B-0011, B-0017 Nittka M.: B-0435 Nitzsche S.: B-0260 Nöbauer-Huhmann I.: B-0488 Nocchi-Cardim L.: B-0531 Noce V.: B-0174, B-0399, B-0414, B-0427, B-0490, B-0643, B-0644, B-0645 Nocetti L.: B-0349, B-0462, B-0463 Noczyńska A.: B-1016 Noël P.B.: B-0525 Noelte I.: B-0898 Nordberg A.: B-0508 Normoyle B.: B-0119 Notohamiprodjo M.: B-0341, B-0344, B-0975 Nour Eldin N.E.: B-0031 Nour-Eldin N.-E.A.: B-0033, B-0393, B-0534, B-0536, B-0711 Nowak C.: B-0651 Nowak K.: B-1014 Nowotny B.: B-0100 Ntoulia A.: B-0929 Ntziachristos V.: B-0880 Nunes C.: B-1021 Nunziata A.: B-0233 Nusman C.M.: B-0593 Nussberger F.: B-0819 Nuyens D.: B-0915 Nuyts S.: B-0152 Nygren P.: B-0426 O O Gorman P.: B-0437 Obara M.: B-0678 Oberhofer N.: B-0108 Oca R.: B-0185, B-0631 Occleshaw C.J.: B-0856 O Connor O.: B-0119 O Connor P.J.: A-363 O Connor S.: A-192 Odedra D.: B-0699, B-0702 Odyniec-Nowacka M.: B-0852 Oei E.: B-0485 Oei M.: B-0758, B-0891 Offiah A.: B-0599 Offiah A.C.: A-527 Ofner J.: B-0281 Ogata H.: B-0760 Oh J.H.: B-0046 Oh Y.-W.: B-0433, B-0528 Ohno Y.: B-0293, B-0329, B-0526, B-0767 Oikonomou A.: A-237, B-0115 Okada T.: SY 19 Okazaki T.: B-0305 O Keeffe M.: B-0119 O Keeffe S.A.: B-0216 Okuno T.: B-0336 Olbricht T.: B-0969 Oleaga Zufiría L.: A-549 O Leary D.: B-1022 Olerud H.: B-0989 Oliboni E.: B-0045 Oliveira E.: B-0874 Olivier C.: B-0890 Olschewski A.: B-0639 Olschewski H.: B-0639, B-0667, B-0914 Omar K.: B-0933 O Meara C.: B-0549 Omelchenko O.M.: B-0019 Omoto K.: B-0336 Omoumi P.: B-0542, B-0544 O Neill F.: B-0119 O Neill S.: B-0119 Ong M.: B-0999 Ono Y.: B-0828 Oosterlinck W.: B

290 List of Authors and Co-Authors Oosterwijk J.C.: B-0560 Oostveen L.J.: B-0758, B-0891 Op de Beeck B.J.: A-055 Opherk C.: B-0353 Oppermann E.: B-0034, B-0040 Oraevsky A.: B-0955 Orecchia R.: B-0503 Orgera G.: B-0921 Origgi D.: B-0730, B-0990 Orlandini L.C.: B-0325 Orsenigo E.: B-0801 Orsi F.: A-188, A-444 Ortori S.: B-0698 Orzada S.: B-0708 O Shea A.: B-0564 Osinger K.: B-0635, B-0636 Osman S.: B-0145 Ostendorf B.: B-0651 Ostrowska M.: B-0489 O Sullivan G.: A-625 Ota H.: B-0828 Otten O.: B-0165 Ottervanger J.P.: B-0664 Otto P.: B-0955 Ottonello C.: B-0182, B-0545 Oudkerk M.: B-0164, B-0291, B-0295, B-0298, B-0442, B-0588, B-1001 Ourednicek P.: B-0916 Ovesen C.: B-0351, B-0356, B-0357, B-0750 Owens C.: A-105, A-107, A-267 Oyen R.H.: A-353 Ozcan C.: B-0899 Ozdamarlar U.: B-0362 Ozdoba C.: A-142 Ozgen Mocan B.: A-251 Özkan F.: B-0055, B-0718 Özsunar Y.: A-331 Öztürk F.U.: B-0155 P Pace A.: B-0089, B-0090 Pace I.: B-0279 Paci E.: A-062 Padhani A.R.: A-060, A-329, ESOR Course Padovani R.: B-0998 Padrón M.: SY 8 Paglialunga S.: B-0853 Pagonidis K.: B-0611 Pahn G.: B-0241, B-0523 Paik S.Y.: B-0052 Painho L.: B-0877 Pajor P.: B-0982, B-0983 Pak A.: B-0221 Pakuła-Kościesza I.: B-1014 Palas J.: B-0822, B-0971 Palkó A.: A-193, A-430 Palm J.: B-1035 Palmisano A.: B-0239, B-0440, B-0449, B-0507, B-0585 Palorini F.: B-0730, B-0990 Palumbo M.: B-0392, B-0941, B-0947 Palumbo P.: B-0930 Pałys A.: B-0304 Pameijer F.A.: A-117, A-569 Pan C.: B-0571 Pan H.-B.: B-0225 Panara V.: B-0509, B-0930, B-1013 Pandolfi E.M.: B-0693 Panebianco V.: B-0089, B-0090, B-0174 Panicek D.M.: A-088 Panizza P.: B-0561, B-0956, SY 16 Panjnosh M.: B-0477 Panou T.: B-0223, B-0228 Pantalone F.: B-0397 Papadaki E.: B-0223, B-0228 Papadakis A.E.: B-0996 Papadopoulou S.L.: B-0410, B-0415, B-0663 Paparo F.: B-0197, B-0948 Papathanasiou M.A.: A-265 Papavasilopoulou M.: B-0541 Papini G.D.E.: B-0545 Pappas E.: B-0929 Pappot T.W.F.: B-0137 Paprottka P.: B-0068, B-0803 Páramo M.: B-0900, B-0966 Pardo F.: A-078 Pareto D.: B-0222 Parienty I.: B-0255 Parizel P.: A-264, B-0302 Parizel P.M.: A-055, A-131, A-205, A-306, A-346, A-365, A-556, B-0285, B-0286, B-0432, B-0480 Parizel P.N.M.: B-0301 Park B.K.: B-0826 Park C.K.: B-1002 Park C.-K.: B-0513 Park C.M.: B-0026, B-0446, B-0831 Park H.J.: B-0428 Park J.: B-0739 Park J.H.: B-0364, B-1002 Park K.: B-0025 Park S.-H.: B-0513 Park S.Y.: B-0210, B-0826 Park Y.S.: B-0446, B-0831 Parker R.: B-0408, B-0409 Parodi J.C.: B-0257 Parraga J.: B-0770 Parrilla P.: B-0122 Parrinello A.: B-0194 Parrot A.: B-0538 Partington K.J.: B-0779 Partovi S.: B-0326 Patak M.: B-0198 Patak M.A.: B-0616 Patel B.: B-0359 Patel C.: B-0554 Patel K.: B-0976 Patel S.K.: B-0524 Patrick K.: B-0409 Patsch J.: B-0548 Paul D.: B-0044, B-0540 Paul J.: B-0471 Paul N.: B-0379 Paul N.S.: B-0292 Paulo C.: Rising Stars Paulo G.: A-284, A-467, B-0272, B-0275, B-0605 Pauwels P.: B-0432 Pavageau A.H.: B-0797 Pavlica P.: B-0974 Pazahr S.: B-0198, B-0910 Pecchi A.: B-0231, B-0237, B-0349 Pedicini V.: B-0771 Pediconi F.: B-0453 Peeters M.: B-0432 Peeters P.H.M.: B-0072, B-0565 Peeters R.: B-0510 Peeters R.R.: A-386 Pekarovic D.: A-167 Peker O.: B-0055 Pelage J.-P.: A-390 Pelc N.: A-517 Peldschus K.: B-0888 Peli M.: B-0128 Pellegrino C.: B-0531 Pelliccia L.: B-0941 Pellot Barakat C.: A-216 Pellow A.: B-0668 Pelte M.-F.: B-0970 Peltonen J.I.: B-0249 Peña Fernández M.P.: A-286 Peña J.: B-0436 Peng C.: B-0884 Pengel K.E.: B-0218 Penzel J.: B-0937 Pepe A.: B-0855 Pepe G.: B-0503 Pepi M.: B-0262 Perdrix L.: B-0007 Pereira J.: B-0175 Pereira P.L.: SK 27 Perez-Rodrigo S.: A-375 Peri A.: A-049 Peringa J.: B-0790 Peris Sanchez R.: B-0168 Perisinakis K.: B-0996 Perkins A.: A-402 Perks F.: B-0780 Perri M.: B-0378 Perry N.: B-0680 Persechino R.: B-0691, B-0693 Perseghin G.: B-0850 Persigehl T.: B-0805, B-0806 Persson A.: B-0287 Pescarini L.: B-0686 Peschel O.: B-0727 Pesquer L.: B-0310 Peter V.: B-0448 Peters N.H.G.M.: B-0072, B-0565 Petersen C.: B-0892 Petersen D.: B-0896 Petersen J.: B-0163 Petersen S.E.: B-0413, B-0663 Petralia G.: B-0082 Petrillo A.: B-0217, B-0233, B-0942 Petrillo M.: B-0942 Petrone G.: B-0021 Peynircioglu B.: A-178 Peyrin F.: B-0890 Pezzato A.: B-0416, B-0662 Pfammatter T.: B-0063 Pfannenberg C.: B-0447, B-0504 Pfefferkorn T.: B-0353 Pfeiffer F.: B-0112, B-0846, B-1006 Pfeiffer H.: B-1011 Pfirrmann C.W.: B-0187 Pfirrmann C.W.A.: A-496, A-599, B-0048, B-0181, B-0314, B-0938 Pflederer T.: B-0665 Pham T.T.: B-0145 Phillips G.S.: B-0145 Piaggesi A.: B-0922 Piano M.: A

291 List of Authors and Co-Authors Pianta L.: B-0479 Piccazzo R.: B-0197 Piccolo C.L.: B-0342, B-0939 Pichi A.: B-0796 Pidial L.: B-0335, B-0911 Pieles G.: B-0856 Pienn M.: B-0639 Pieper S.: B-0284 Pierot L.: A-132 Pietrabissa A.: A-049 Pietrapertosa A.: B-0855 Pietsch H.: B-0167, B-0747, B-0913 Piga M.: B-0617, B-0979 Pigneur F.: B-0459 Pijl M.E.J.: B-0137 Pijnappel R.: B-0962, B-0964 Pijnappel R.M.: B-0959 Pilania K.: B-0641 Piliszek A.J.: B-0852 Pilleri S.: B-0958 Pilleul F.: B-0443, B-0444 Pilz L.R.: B-0022 Pina Insausti L.: B-0810 Pina Insausti L.J.: B-0685, B-0966 Pina L.: B-0809 Pina L.J.: B-0813 Pinheiro J.: B-0138, B-0602, B-0603, B-0876 Pinker-Domenig K.: B-0071, B-0076, B-0171, B-0213, B-0502, B-0562, B-0680, B-0950, B-0951, B-0952, B-0953 Pinker-Domenig K.J.: B-0563 Pinochet M.A.: A-403 Pinto dos Santos D.: B-0420 Pinto P.: B-0173 Piorkowski C.: B-0909 Pirinen M.: B-0135 Pirovano G.: B-0369 Pirtoli L.: B-0947 Pisanec I.: B-0652 Piscaglia F.: A-582 Pisco J.M.: B-0175 Pistolesi D.: B-0698 Pitcher R.: A-262 Pitici A.: B-0141, B-0807 Pitocco F.: B-0020, B-0407, B-0468, B-0469, B-0579 Pittiani F.: B-0705, B-0716 Pitton M.: B-0420 Plaitakis A.: B-0223, B-0228 Plass A.: B-0660 Platon A.: B-0121 Plug G.: A-170 Plumb A.: B-0789 Png M.A.: B-0659 Podgórski P.: B-0847 Podo F.: B-0569 Poeppel T.D.: B-0500 Pohlig F.: B-0435 Poillucci G.: B-0762 Pokieser P.: A-415 Pokieser W.: SK 26 Polanec S.: B-0171, B-0502 Poletti P.-A.: B-0121 Polico I.: B-0686 Pollo C.: B-0405 Pollock A.: B-0864 Pomar-Nadal A.: B-0403 Pomschar A.: B-0106 Pontana F.: B-0519, B-0630 Ponti F.: B-0316 Pontone G.: B-0262 Poole K.E.S.: B-0658 Popovici C.: B-0141, B-0807 Poppert H.: B-0113 Poretti D.: B-0771 Portelli J.L.: B-0604 Porto A.: B-0217 Postema S.: SY 1 Poxton I.R.: B-0060 Pozzi G.: B-0785 Pozzi Mucelli R.: B-0416, B-0572, B-0574, B-0662, B-0706, B-0710 Pozzi-Mucelli R.: A-031 Prabhu A.D.: B-0013 Prada R.: B-0185 Prasad V.: B-0282 Prassopoulos P.: B-0115 Pravata E.: B-0408, B-0409 Precht H.: A-393 Prevos R.: B-0450, B-0451 Prieto J.M.: A-054 Prince J.F.: B-0032 Probst P.J.: B-0819 Proietti A.: B-0686 Prokop M.: A-429, B-0297, B-0299, B-0610, B-0758, B-0891 Pronin I.N.: A-510 Prosch H.: B-0635, B-0636 Provenzale J.: SY 6 Pruvo J.-P.: A-364 Prvulovic M.: B-0812 Prvulovic N.: B-0812 Puchner S.: B-0917 Puderbach M.: B-0162, B-0766 Puderbach M.U.: A-083, A-618 Pueyo J.C.: B-0143, B-0900 Pugliese F.: A-514, B-0413, B-0663 Pugliese L.: A-049 Pugliese S.: A-346, B-0675 Pujol S.: B-0284 Puliti D.: A-062 Pullara S.K.: B-0056 Pullini S.: B-0834, B-0835 Puntel G.: B-0572 Punwani S.: B-0097, B-0207, SY 15 Puppala S.: B-0256 Puppo C.: B-0197 Puri S.: B-0557 Puri S.K.: B-0013 Purz S.: B-0158, B-0558 Pusceddu C.: B-0533, B-0535, B-0958 Pusztaszeri M.: B-0970 Pwint T.: B-0062 Q Qian J.: B-0034, B-0040 Qiao M.: B-0368 Qiu L.: B-0018 Quaia E.: B-0762, B-0944 Quan Q.: B-0883 Quattrocchi C.C.: B-0020, B-0407 Quehenberger F.: B-0234, B-0743, B-1032 Quentin M.: B-0081 Querques G.: B-0440 Quinlan M.: B-0823 R Raatschen H.-J.: B-0191 Rabenalt R.: B-0081 Rączkowska S.: B-1014 Radler E.: B-0975 Radulovic O.S.: B-0566 Radwan S.: B-0906 Raetzer S.: B-0242 Ragab Y.: B-0123 Rager O.: B-0970 Rahali L.: B-0770 Rahmat K.: B-0015, B-0404 Rahmouni A.: B-0459, B-0924 Raible S.: B-0616 Raimondi S.: B-0082 Rainford L.: B-0272, B-0384, B-0604, B-0606, B-1022, B-1028 Raissaki M.: B-0541 Rajandran Nair S.: B-0404 Ramalho M.: B-0822, B-0971 Ramchandran P.V.: B-0056 Ramírez Fuentes C.: B-0168 Ramli N.: B-0404 Rampoldi A.: B-0925 Rana S.: B-0573 Randrianarisoa E.: B-1008 Ranschaert E.R.: A-290, A-609 Rapellino A.: B-1033 Raptis D.A.: B-0314 Raskin S.: B-0612 Rasper M.: B-0912 Rassokhin V.: B-0229 Ratib O.: A-210, A-608, B-0970 Raupach J.: A-245 Rauscher I.: B-0098 Ravanelli M.: B-0203, B-0204, B-0478, B-0479 Ravaud A.: B-0176 Raymond E.: A-358 Rayón-Aledo J.C.: B-0403 Razek A.A.: B-0150 Rechl H.: B-0435 Reddy S.N.: B-0060 Redel T.: B-0482 Redheuil A.: B-0007 Reding R.: B-0987 Reeder S.B.: B-0445 Reekers J.A.: A-100, A-101 Regier M.: B-0367, B-0765, B-0935 Regina U.M.V.: B-0763 Rehani M.M.: A-384 Rehman H.: B-0780 Rehnitz C.: B-0481 Reich C.: B-0683 Reichelt D.C.: B-0749, B-0905 Reichenbach J.R.: B-0886 Reichert M.: B-0343 Reid J.: B-0373 Reiffers S.: B-0664 Reijman M.: B-0485 Reimer P.: A-453 Reina V.: B-0512 Reindorp N.: B-0129 Reiner C.S.: B-0063 Reinert M.: B-0752 Reinhardt M.: B-0558 Reis C.I.S.: B-0872, B-0874, B

292 List of Authors and Co-Authors Reiser M.F.: A-180, A-492, B-0066, B-0068, B-0106, B-0112, B-0113, B-0117, B-0161, B-0195, B-0243, B-0288, B-0341, B-0344, B-0353, B-0472, B-0491, B-0547, B-0556, B-0578, B-0634, B-0638, B-0727, B-0754, B-0755, B-0757, B-0795, B-0800, B-0803, B-0846, B-0913, B-0927, B-0928, B-0975, B-0980, B-0995, B-1006, B-1036 Reiter G.: B-0667, B-0858, B-0914 Reiter U.: B-0667, B-0858, B-0914, B-1032 Reitter A.: B-0398 Remedios D.: A-292 Rémy J.: B-0376, B-0519, B-0630, B-0729, B-0731 Rémy-Jardin M.: A-559, B-0376, B-0519, B-0630, B-0729, B-0731 Renc O.: A-245 Rengo M.: B-0193, B-0661, B-0792, B-0793 Renne G.: B-0082 Renne S.: B-0467 Renosi G.: B-0094 Renoux J.: A-160 Renz D.: B-0189, B-0306 Rep S.: A-522 Repa I.: B-1024 Reponen J.: A-048 Retico A.: A-266 Revel M.-P.: A-562 Revelli M.: B-0197, B-0948 Reymen B.: B-0065 Reynaud O.: B-0201 Ribeiro A.M.: B-0603 Ribeiro J.: B-1021 Ribeiro L.P.V.: B-0136, B-0138, B-0274, B-0386, B-0602, B-0603, B-0607, B-0871, B-0875, B-0876, B-1020 Ribeiro M.M.C.P.: B-1019 Ribeiro R.T.: A-169 Riccabona M.: A-482 Ricchi P.: B-0854 Ricci V.: B-0392, B-0941, B-0947 Richli Meystre N.: B-0387, B-0869 Richter S.: B-0109 Ricke J.: A-566 Ridereau-Zins C.: B-0797 Riebisch M.: B-0101 Rieger M.: A-067 Riegger C.: B-0506 Rienmüller R.: B-0916 Rienmüller T.: B-0916 Riess H.: A-319 Riffel P.: B-0540 Rimola J.: A-593 Rimondi E.: B-0640 Rindi G.: B-0021 Ring J.: B-0805 Ringe K.I.: B-0191 Ringl H.: B-0328, B-0719 Rio Tinto H.A.M.R.: B-0175 Ripkens S.: B-0447 Risser D.U.: B-0613 Risson J.-R.: B-0312 Rist C.: B-0556 Ristanis S.: B-0929 Ritter C.O.: B-0001 Rittig K.: B-1008 Rizzatto G.: A-611 Rizzi P.B.: B-0006 Robben S.G.F.: A-531, A-627 Robinson P.: A-497, B-0431, B-0779 Roca E.: B-0204 Roccia S.: B-1031 Rocha A.: B-0185 Rocha D.P.: B-1019 Rochitte C.E.: B-0006 Rockall A.G.: A-377 Rodari M.: B-0503 Roden M.: B-0100 Roditi G.: A-182 Rodrigues J.C.L.: B-0527, B-0856 Rodrigues S.I.: B-0136, B-0274, B-0386, B-0602, B-0607, B-0871, B-1020 Rodriguez-Justo M.: B-1003 Rodt T.: B-0038, B-0244, B-0768 Roebuck D.: A-394, A-396 Roemer F.W.: B-0656, B-0932 Roeth A.: B-0981 Rogalla P.: A-231, A-428, B-0699, B-0702 Rogler G.: B-0198 Roh J.: B-0364, B-1002 Rohan V.: B-0358 Rokytska N.: B-0735 Rollandi G.A.: B-0197, B-0948 Rollandi L.: B-0197 Romanini L.: B-0705 Romaniuk-Doroszewska A.: B-0671 Romano A.: B-0518, B-0675 Romano L.: B-0045 Romano S.: A-349 Romero L.: B-0211 Rominger A.: B-0117, B-0556 Ron Y.: B-0978 Ronconi P.: B-0182 Ronot M.: A-109, A-358 Roobottom C.: B-0798, B-0821 Ros J.: B-0143 Rosati R.: B-0466 Rosen B.R.: A-209 Rosendahl K.: A-533 Rosenthal H.: B-0038, B-0047 Rositi H.: B-0890 Roskams T.: B-0804 Rossi A.: A-086, A-120, A-514, A-626, B-0410, B-0413, B-0415, B-0663 Rossi C.: B-0532 Rossi Espagnet M.C.: B-0518, B-0675 Rossi G.: B-0640 Rossi M.: B-0921 Rossini A.: B-0424, B-0850 Rossini P.: B-0203 Roßpunkt S.: B-0068 Rostad E.: B-0870 Rosu R.: B-0141, B-0807 Rotellar F.: B-0778 Roth H.R.: B-0789 Rotini R.: B-0642 Rotondo A.: B-0057, B-0059 Rottbauer W.: B-0412, B-0583 Rousseau H.: A-244 Rovelli A.: B-0596 Rovers M.M.: B-0083 Rovira-Cañellas A.: A-500, A-613 Rozhkova Z.Z.: B-0019 Rozovsky K.: B-0591 Rübben H.: B-0969 Rubbert C.: B-0326 Rubens M.B.: A-572 Ruder T.D.: A-475 Rüfenacht D.A.: A-133 Ruggieri P.: B-0640 Ruggiero A.: B-0887 Ruiz Blanco C.: A-284, A-287 Rummeny E.J.: B-0098, B-0180, B-0322, B-0435, B-0525, B-0548, B-0586, B-0880, B-0881, B-0912, B-0937 Rundstein A.: B-0458 Runge J.H.: B-0790 Runge M.: B-0312 Runnebaum I.B.: B-0077, B-0808 Ruscheweyh R.: B-0106 Russe M.F.: B-0361 Russo B.: B-0663 Ruszniewski P.: A-604, B-0576 Rutten M.J.C.M.: SY 4 Rybacki K.: B-0749 Ryoo I.: B-0516 S Saa J.: B-0103 Saake M.: B-0895 Saam T.: B-0112, B-0113, B-0117, B-0353, B-1006 Saba L.: B-0057, B-0059, B-0532, B-0617, B-0979 Sablayrolles J.-L.: B-0370 Sabri O.: A-208, B-0558 Sacco P.: A-607 Sack I.: B-0896 Sacrini A.: B-0770 Sadeghi M.: B-0927, B-0928 Sadegi M.: B-0536 Saez F.: A-628 Sagarduy M.I.: B-0257 Sagniez A.: B-0370 Sah B.-R.: B-0063 Sahin M.: B-0718 Saini S.: B-0069 Sainz M.: B-0809 Sairanen V.: B-0249 Saito K.: B-1029 Saiz-Mendiguren R.: B-0810 Sajadidhekrodi F.: B-0128 Sakahara H.: B-0570, B-1004 Sakai S.: B-0986 Sakamoto S.: B-0305 Sakuma H.: B-0581 Sala A.: B-0596 Sala E.: A-412, A-586, B-0390 Sala G.: B-0416, B-0662 Salamon J.: B-0888 Salazar J.P.: B-0222 Saldari M.: B-0394, B-0396, B-0863, B-0868 Salem R.: A-359 Salem U.: B-0141 Salerno S.: B-0730, B-0990 Salgado R.: A-055, A-205, A-365, B-0285, B-0286 Salice S.: B-0509, B-1013 Salik A.E.: B-0838 Şalk I.: B-1034 Salmi A.: B-0424 Saltybaeva N.: B-0991, B-0992, B-0993 Salvador R.: A-612, B-0211 Salvador X.: B-0211 Salvagnini E.: B-0842 Salvatori F.M.: B-0300, B-0775, B

293 List of Authors and Co-Authors Salvatori L.: B 0465 Salvini N.: B 0194 Salvioni M.: B 0769 Samadi A.R.: B 0007 Samargiski M.: B 0430 Sancho L.: B 0136 Sandborg M.: B 0287 Sander T.: B 0913 Sandman D.: B 0319 Sangro B.: A 075, A 079 Sano K.: B 0093 Sansone M.: B 0942 Santamaria V.: B 0467 Santangelo T.: B 0729, B 0731 Santo E.: B 0978 Santodirocco M.: B 0854 Santoro F.: B 0569 Santos A.: B 0140 Santos C.S.L.: B 1019 Santos J.: B 0272, B 0275, B 0278, B 0605 Saraiva A.: B 0140 Sardanelli F.: A 130, B 0217, B 0545, B 0569, B 0654, B 0687, B 0741, B 0814, B 0815 Sargos P.: B 0421 Sarpi D.: B 0130 Sasiadek M.: B 0744, B 0847, B 1016 Sasiadek M.J.: B 0401 Sassen S.: B 0627 Sassi C.: B 0316 Satani N.: B 0828 Sato F.: B 0828 Sato K.: B 0570, B 1004 Sato S.: B 0346 Satou S.: B 0329, B 0767 Sauerschnig M.: B 0180, B 0937 Sauvanet A.: A 604 Savastano M.: B 0930 Savchenkov Y.: B 0833 Savoca V.: B 0972 Sawicka E.: B 0671 Scaglione M.: A 220, B 0059 Scagnelli P.: B 0267 Scandiffio R.: B 0623 Scaperotta G.: B 0561 Scaperrotta G.P.: B 0956 Scaranelo A.: B 0219 Scarciolla L.: B 0407, B-0020 Scardapane A.: B 0283 Scarsbrook A.: B 0554 Schaafsma B.E.: B 0208 Schaefer-Prokop C.: B 0169, B 0297, B 0610 Schaefer-Prokop C.M.: A 195, A 477 Schaeffeler C.: B 0435 Schäfer A.-O.: B 0551 Schäfer F.K.W.: SY 2 Schäfer L.C.: B 0708 Schäfer N.: B 0063 Schäfer P.: B 0039 Schäffeler C.: B 0180 Schaible T.: B 0865, B 0866 Scharer S.: B 0635 Schatteman J.: B 0088 Scheffler S.: B 0936 Scherer A.: B 0159, B 0651 Scherer D.: B 0629 Scherrer A.: B 0694 Schidt T.M.: B 0315 Schild H.H.: B 0546 Schilham A.M.R.: B 0721 Schillinger M.: A 486 Schima W.: A 005, A 438, B 0719 Schimmoeller L.: B 0081 Schimmöller L.: B 0366, B 0522, B 0703 Schindera S.T.: B 0699, B 0702 Schindler A.: B 0419 Schipper R.J.: B 0212 Schipper R.-J.: B 0451 Schlamann M.: B 1011 Schleder S.: B 0725 Schleich C.: B 0648, B 0651 Schlemmer H.-P.: A 058, A 211, B 0241, B 0766 Schlett C.: B 0917 Schlichting M.: B 0800 Schlosser T.: B 0584 Schmadl M.: B 0447 Schmeding M.: B 0981 Schmehl J.: B 0923 Schmeling A.: B 1011 Schmid-Bindert G.: B 0022 Schmidmaier G.: B 0188 Schmidt B.: B 0240, B 0242, B 0372, B 0589, B 0660, B 0788, B 0889, B 0993 Schmidt C.: B 0556 Schmidt C.O.: B 0681 Schmidt G.: B 0547 Schmidt H.: B 0504 Schmidt S.: A 591 Schmid-Tannwald C.: B 0556 Schmitt B.: A 153, B 0481 Schmitt P.: B 0252 Schmitz M.: B 0578 Schmitz-Rixen T.: B 0258 Schnabel J.A.: A 235, B 0070 Schneider D.: B 0289, B 0352, B 0848 Schneider G.: B 1035 Schneider J.F.: A 224 Schneider K.: B 0732, B 0733 Schneider M.: B 0651, B 1036 Schnitzer A.: B 0214 Schoder H.: A 179, B 0390 Schoellnast H.: B 0743, B 1032 Schoenaers J.: B 0248 Schoenmeyer R.: B 0282 Schoepf U.J.: A 450, B 0263, B 0266, B 0411, B 0417, B 0419, B 0849, Rising Stars Schoierer O.: B 0188 Schollenberger A.: B 0398 Schöllnast H.: B 0234, SK 27 Scholten E.T.: B 0297, B 0610 Schönberg S.O.: B 0022, B 0160, B 0214, B 0265, B 0289, B 0343, B 0345, B 0352, B 0540, B 0628, B 0683, B 0829, B 0848, B 0865, B 0866, B 0889, B 0999 Schonenberg D.: B 0593 Schönfelder M.: B 0224 Schönnagel B.P.: B 0859 Schouman-Claeys E.: B 0310 Schraml C.: B 0504 Schramm N.: B 0556 Schramm P.: B 0676 Schramm R.: B 0676 Schrauwen P.: B 0317, B 0853 Schrauwen-Hinderling V.B.: B 0317, B 0853 Schreutelkamp I.L.: B 0965 Schreyer A.: B 0725 Schroefel H.: B 0265 Schroth G.: B 0752 Schuelke C.: B 0190 Schueller G.: A 219, B 0719 Schukro C.: B 0107 Schultz T.: B 0144 Schulz B.: B 0290, B 0393, B 0700, B 0723, B 0774 Schulze F.: B 0618 Schulz-Menger J.: SY 6 Schumacher U.: B 0879, B 0888 Schurink G.W.W.H.: B 0253 Schuster H.: SK 26 Schütz T.: B 0448 Schuur K.H.: B 0964 Schwabe P.: B 0189 Schwaiger M.: B 0322 Schwartz L.: B 0806 Schwarz D.: B 0765 Schwarz F.: B 0066, B 0582 Schweiger M.: A 322 Schweitzer N.: B 0038 Schweizer A.: B 0048 Schwenke C.: B 0172 Schwenzer N.F.: B 0504 Schwöppe C.: B 0805 Schymik G.: B 0265 Scoazec J.Y.: B 0094 Sconfienza L.M.: B 0654, B 0741, EuroAIM Scorsetti M.: B 0507 Scott S.: B 0423 Scrascia F.: B 0020 Scrimieri A.: B 0716 Sdao S.: B 0741 Secchi A.: B 0440, B 0449 Seccia V.: B 1010 Sechopoulos I.: B 0840 Secil M.: B 0974 Sedlacek S.: SY 5 Sedlmair M.: B 0290, B 0889 Seeger A.: B 0004, B 1008 Seiberlich N.: B 0668 Seidel R.: B 1035 Seidenbusch M.C.: B 0732, B 0733 Seiji K.: B 0828 Seimenis I.: B 0996 Seipel R.: B 0681 Seker F.: Rising Stars Seki S.: B 0293, B 0329, B 0526, B 0767 Sekiguchi R.: B 0336 Sekiguchi T.: B 0777 Sellari Franceschini S.: B 1010 Sellars M.: B 0976 Sellars M.E.: B 0973 Selwaness M.: B 0111 Semmler W.: B 0434 Semturs F.: B 0950, B 0951 Sengel C.: B 0429 Senol U.: A-294 Senyurt H.: B 0486 Seo B.K.: B 0073 Seo H.: B 0221 Seo H.S.: B 0475 Seo J.M.: B 0826 Seol H.: B 0221 Seol H.Y.: B 0475 Serafin Z.: B

294 List of Authors and Co-Authors Serafini G.: B 0186 Serém S.: B 0605 Serfaty J.-M.: B 0310 Sergi M.E.: B 0394, B 0396, B 0863, B 0868 Serranheira F.: B 0874 Serša, I.: B 0652 Sersar R.: B 0103 Settles M.: B 0881, B 0912 Seuntjens J.: B 0245 Sewerin P.: B 0651 Shaaban M.A.: B 0816 Shah A.: B 0256 Shaheed M.A.: B 0150 Shakiba M.: B 0220 Shalmon A.: B 0458 Sharifi H.: B 0065 Sharipova A.: B 0545 Sharma R.A.: B 0062, B 0070 Sharoubim N.: B 0245 Sharp P.: A 233 Sheikh K.A.: B 0905 Shen M.-W.: B 0884 Shi D.: B 0517 Shi H.: B 0368 Shi J.: B 0022 Shi X.-Y.: B 0884 Shiga T.: B 0986 Shim Y.M.: B 0296 Shin H.-O.: B 0165, B 0166, B 0244 Shin H.S.: B 0516 Shin J.H.: B 0499 Shin J.K.: B 0269 Shinagawa K.: B 0305 Shiraishi Y.: B 0581, B 0760 Shmueli K.: B 0207 Shrimpton P.C.: A 516 Shum J.S.: B 0474 Shweel M.: B 0713 Siablis D.: B 0919 Sibert A.: A 021 Sibileau E.: B 0797, B 0837 Sidek S.: B 0015 Sidhu P.S.: A 425, B 0973, B 0976 Siebenhandl P.: B 0398, B 0700 Siemonsen S.: B 0354 Siemund R.: A 204, B 0169, B 0892 Siesling S.: B 0560 Sieswerda G.T.: B 0005 Sievers B.: B 0584 Sijbers J.: A 518 Sijens P.E.: B 0442 Silecchia G.: B 0193 Sileo C.: B 0738, B 0867 Silva C.A.: B 0136, B 0138, B 0274, B 0875, B 0876, B 1020 Silva I.: B 0140 Silva N.: B 0631 Silverman J.R.: B 0849 Silvers R.: A 090 Sim J.Y.: B 0052 Sim L.: B 0215 Sima D.: B 0510 Simanovsky N.: B 0591 Simeone A.: B 0376, B 0729 Simeonsson R.J.: B 0380 Simon I.: B 0809 Simon M.: B 0896 Simonetti G.: A 376, B 0085 Simon-Yarza I.: B 0685, B 0813, B 0900, B 0966 Simos P.: B 0223, B 0228 Singh A.K.: B 0069 Sinitsyn V.E.: A 094 Sipola P.: A 093 Sippel N.: B 1030 Sirlin C.B.: A 217 Sironi S.: B 0064, B 0235, B 0236, B 0254, B 0268, B 0391, B 0438, B 0439, B 0492, B 0505, B 0596, B 0620, B 0745, B 0783, B 0787, B 0827, B 0832, B 1005 Sitia G.: B 0239 Sjöberg T.: B 0169 Sjövall A.: B 0149 Skaane P.: B 0817, SY 17 Skehan S.: A 146 Sklair-Levy M.: A 541, B 0458 Škrk D.: B 0609 Skrok J.: B 0232 Slabaugh G.: B 0789 Slanetz P.J.: B 0954 Slapa R.Z.: B 0717 Slenter J.: B 0853 Slon P.: B 0143, B 0514, B 0685, B 0778, B 0813, B 0900, B 0945 Slotboom J.: B 0405 Slowinska-Srzednicka J.: B 0717 Sluimer J.C.: B 0116 Smal Y.: B 0991, B 0992 Smeets D.: B 0280 Smets A.M.J.B.: A 395 Smidt M.: B 0450, B 0451 Smidt M.L.: B 0212 Smit A.J.: B 1001 Smith A.: SY 17 Smits D.: B 0997 Smits M.: A 098, B 0894 Smits M.L.J.: B 0032 Snaith B.: B 0133, B 0383, B 0389 Sneddon K.: B 0780 Snijder R.J.: B 0005 Snoeckx A.: A 055 So M.C.: B 0377 Soares J.: B 0607 Soder R.B.S.: B 0590 Soens J.: SY 1 Soffia P.: A 403 Sogaro F.: B 0716 Sohn C.-H.: B 0513 Solak O.: B 1034 Solbiati L.: B 0646, SK 26 Solcia M.: B 0925 Sollazzo P.: B 0394, B 0396, B 0863, B 0868 Solyanik O.: B 0166 Sommer C.M.: B 0178 Sommer G.: B 0766 Sommer P.: B 0909 Sommer S.P.: B 0001 Sommer W.H.: B 0754, B 0755, B 0757, B 0803, B 0980 Somville J.: B 0432 Son G.: B 0221 Son J.Y.: B 0296 Son K.R.: B 0475 Song K.: Rising Stars Song M.G.: B 0269 Song S.E.: B 0073 Sonoyama Y.: B 0986 Soria Jerez J.A.: A 288 Sosef M.N.: B 0627 Soto García M.R.: A 289 Soto Giordani G.: A 405, A 407 Soto J.A.: B 0122, B 0124 Sottocornola L.: B 0424, B 0479 Sourbron S.: B 0547, B 0980 Sourbron S.P.: B 1029 Sousa A.: B 0605 Sousa P.: B 0607, B 0871 Souvatzoglou M.: B 0322, B 0912 Souza R.: B 0319 Souza R.B.: B 0657 Spagnolli F.: B 0710 Spagnolo P.: B 0268 Spampinato M.V.: B 0408, B 0409 Spelsberg F.W.: B 0195 Sperryn C.W.: A 256 Spiliopoulos S.: B 0919 Spinhoven M.: A 055 Spinicci G.: B 0313 Spinnato P.: B 0640 Spira E.-M.: B 0263 Spiro A.: B 0935 Spoerl M.C.: B 0146 Sproll C.: B 0159 Srinivasan S.: B 0056, B 0294 Srutek E.: B 0321 Stabile Ianora A.A.: B 0283 Stacul F.: A 456 Stadler A.: A 248 Staehler M.: B 0066, B 0344, B 0975 Staffa J.: B 0629 Stahl R.: B 0491 Stahlhut L.: B 0806 Stajgis M.: A 143 Stalder A.: B 0667, B 0914 Stampfl U.: B 0178 Staniuk T.: B 0321 Stankovic Z.: B 0361 Stanton M.T.: A 168 Staudacher C.: B 0801 Stavros T.: B 0955 Steen M.: B 0806 Steen S.: B 0169 Stef I.: B 0447 Stefan N.: B 0447 Stehlin L.: B 0361 Stein J.: B 0864 Stein L.: B 0619 Steiner J.: B 0234, B 1032 Steinhoff K.G.: B 0158 Steketee R.M.E.: B 0894 Stelter L.: B 0189 Stenberg L.: B 0892 Stenson M.: B 0216 Stephan C.: B 0172 Sterzaj S.: B 0273 Sterzik A.: B 0066, B 0068 Stiassny F.: B 0719 Stick S.: B 0737 Stieber P.: B 0795 Stiefsohn E.: B 0635 Stieltjes B.: B 0151 Stift J.: B

295 List of Authors and Co-Authors Stiller B.: B-0736 Stiller W.: B-0241, B-0523 Stocker D.: B-0743 Stockmar M.: B-1006 Stoeckle E.: B-0421 Stojanov D.A.: B-0677 Stoker J.: B-0790, B-1037 Stollberger R.: B-0639 Stolzmann P.: B-0660, B-0910 Stoppino L.P.: B-0904 Stork A.: SY 13 Stotts G.: B-0756 Stöver T.: B-0709 Strang J.: B-0557 Straube A.: B-0106, B-0353 Streich N.: B-0481 Streicher J.: B-0613 Streitparth F.: B-0189, B-0306, B-0539 Strengers J.L.M.: B-0734 Strieth S.: B-0709 Strobl F.F.: B-0757, B-0923 Stroszczynski C.: B-0725, B-0903, B-0985 Strube H.A.: B-0578 Struelens L.: B-0842 Struffert T.: B-0895 Studniarek M.: A-399, B-0321 Stumpp P.: B-0158, B-0558 Sturkenboom M.C.J.M.: B-0142 Subhani S.: B-0621 Sudarski S.: B-0289, B-0352, B-0848 Sugihara N.: B-0526 Sugimura K.: B-0329, B-0346, B-0526, B-0767 Sugiyama K.: B-0305 Suh B.S.: B-0052 Suh C.: B-0091 Suh S.: B-0221 Suh S.I.: B-0475 Suman L.: B-0561, B-0956 Summers L.: B-0599 Sun F.: B-0517 Sun J.: B-0259 Sunaert S.: A-420, A-502, B-0510 Sundqvist R.: B-0149 Sung Y.M.: B-0521 Sunwoo L.: B-0513 Suoranta S.: B-0011, B-0017 Suri J.S.: B-0617 Šurlan Popovič K.: B-0476 Suryanarayanan S.: SY 16 Sussman M.: B-0668 Sutter R.: B-0048, B-0938 Suzuki S.O.: B-0673 Svahn U.: B-0109 Sverzellati N.: A-617 Swift S.: B-0554 Syed R.: B-0549 Syrgiamiotis V.: A-345 Szabó E.: A-026 Szabó G.: B-0523 Szczerbo-Trojanowska M.: A-391 Szczygielski O.: B-0671 Szewcyk-Bieda M.: B-0332 Szewczyk P.: B-0401 Szucs-Farkas Z.: B-0699, B-0702 T Tacelli N.: B-0630 Tacher V.: B-0036, B-0924 Tack D.: A-419, B-0053, B-0520 Tacke J.: SK 27 Tagliafico A.: A-163, B-0688 Tagliamonte M.: B-1013 Tahon F.: B-0355 Tai C.W.: B-0377 Taibi A.: B-0684, B-0811 Taioli G.: B-0416 Tajima T.: B-0986 Takada E.: B-0336 Takahashi S.: B-0346, B-0674, B-0828 Takahashi Y.: B-0720 Takamura T.: B-0093 Takase K.: B-0828 Takei N.: B-1004 Tal S.: B-0227 Talakic E.: B-0743, B-1032 Talanow R.: B-0200 Talei Franzesi C.R.G.L.: B-0064, B-0254, B-0745, B-0827, B-1005 Tali E.T.: A-164 Tamás J.: B-0983 Tamboli P.: B-0824 Tammo R.: B-0735 Tan C.-F.: B-0931 Tan C.H.A.: B-0294 Tan L.K.K.: B-0404 Tan T.: B-0968 Tan Y.: B-0806 Tanaka K.: B-0580 Tandon A.: B-0041 Tandon R.: B-0199 Tanghe H.: A-311 Tanis W.: B-0008 Tanner L.: B-0624 Taori S.: B-0060 Taourel P.: A-350 Tapfer A.: B-0846 Tarantino G.: B-0231, B-0237 Tardáguila G.: B-0185, B-0631 Tardivon A.: A-156 Tarján Z.: A-544 Tarkowska A.: B-0879 Tartaro A.: B-0002, B-0251, B-0509, B-0930, B-1013 Taschwer M.: B-0224 Taşkın F.: SY 5 Tassart M.: B-0538 Tatekawa H.: B-1017 Täubl P.: B-0743 Taupitz M.: B-0324 Tavanti F.: B-0518, B-0675 Tavares de Sousa M.: B-0859 Tavernier J.: B-0408 Tawfik A.M.: B-0150 Taylor A.M.: A-323 Taylor K.: B-0870 Taylor S.: B-0520 Taylor S.A.: A-232, A-590, B-0097 Tee L.M.F.: B-0192 Teh H.S.: B-0294 Teichgräber U.: B-0306 Teixidor Viñas M.: B-0498 Tejada S.: B-0514 Telegrafo M.: B-0283 Teleman A.: B-0653 Telesca M.: B-0453 Tenkanen-Rautakoski P.: B-0135 Tepe G.: B-0923 Terauchi K.: B-0570, B-1004 Terjung J.: B-0159 Terzi E.: A-582 Tessa C.: B-0465 Tessitore P.: B-0203, B-0716 Tetsuka R.: B-0338, B-0339 Teusch V.: B-0733 Texter J.: B-0006 Tezza M.: B-0416, B-0662 Thakrar P.: B-0641 Thalhammer A.: B-0258, B-0774 Thali M.: A-472 Tham S.-C.: B-0655 Theander E.: B-0653 Theisen D.: B-0582, B-0803, B-0913 Theysohn J.M.: B-0782 Thiele H.: B-0851 Thieme S.F.: B-0161, B-0288, B-0634 Thierfelder C.: B-0372 Thierfelder K.M.: B-0754, B-0755, B-0757 Thipphavong S.: B-0702 Thoeny H.C.: A-069, A-439, A-535, B-0819 Thomassin-Naggara I.: A-553 Thomé C.: B-0907 Thompson C.: B-0371 Thomsen F.: B-0436 Thomsen H.S.: A-455 Thomsen L.H.: B-0163 Thomson K.: B-0332 Thörmer G.: B-0448 Thorneman K.: B-0967 Thurnher M.M.: A-263, A-615, Rising Stars Ticca C.: B-0492 Tiddens H.A.W.M.: B-0737 Tielbeek J.A.W.: B-0790 Tielliu I.F.J.: B-0588 Tille M.: B-0851 Tillement O.: B-1035 Tillich M.: B-0743 Timberg P.: A-507 Timmer J.R.: B-0664 Timmers J.: B-0959, B-0962 Timmers J.M.H.: B-0964 Tinelli C.: B-0092 Tingberg A.: A-507 Tinozzi F.P.: A-049 Tintore M.: B-0222 Tio R.A.: B-0588 Tiomni E.: B-0978 Tissier A.-M.: B-0084 Tjan-Heijnen V.: B-0450, B-0451 Tkacz J.N.: B-0954 Todoroki T.: B-0470 Toepker M.: B-0328, B-0719 Togao O.: B-0515, B-0673, B-0678 Tokgoz N.: B-0899 Tokuuye K.: B-1029 Tolan D.J.M.: A-348, A-528, B-0196 Toledano A.: B-0686 Tomà P.: A-530 Tomás C.: B-0872 Tombolini V.: B-0089, B-0090, B-0645 Tomic N.: B

296 List of Authors and Co-Authors Tomšič M.: B-0652 Tondolo T.: B-0646 Tong M.P.: B-0042 Tonkin C.J.: B-0658 Töre H.G.: B-0524 Tornow A.P.: B-0145 Torres-Tabanera M.: A-375 Torricelli P.: B-0231, B-0237, B-0349, B-0463 Tortora D.: B-0509, B-0930, B-1013 Torzilli G.: B-0507 Toscano W.: B-0972 Toschke C.M.: B-0125 Tosto S.: B-0688 Toth D.F.: B-0328 Toyama T.: B-0759 Tramarin M.: B-0771 Tran A.: B-0034 Trattenero C.: B-0235, B-0236, B-0620, B-0745, B-0787, B-0832 Trattnig S.: A-140, A-150, A-151, ESOR Course, B-0071, B-0345, B-0488, B-0953 Trecate G.: B-0561 Treece G.M.: B-0658 Treffert J.: B-0028, B-0320 Trefois P.: A-196 Treitl M.: B-0113, B-0243, B-0927, B-0928 Trepel M.: B-0882 Trianni A.: B-0998 Triantopoulou C.: A-057 Trimboli R.M.: B-0217, B-0569, B-0687, B-0814, B-0815, EuroAIM Trofimova A.: B-0229 Trofimova T.: B-0229 Trojanowska A.: A-418, A-619, B-0153 Trojanowski P.: B-0153 Tropres I.: B-0751 Trucchi A.: B-0696 Trufanov G.: B-0833 Truijman M.T.B.: B-0118, B-0120 Trumm C.G.: B-0195, B-0491 Trypka E.: B-0401 Tscherner M.: B-0639 Tscholakoff D.: A-464, B-0148 Tse D.M.L.: B-0423 Tsehmaister Abitbol V.: B-0458 Tsimberidou A.: B-0807 Tsitas K.: B-0933 Tsoumakidou G.: A-043, A-442, A-557, B-0309 Tsukamoto K.: B-0570, B-1004 Tsurugizawa T.: B-0201 Tudisca C.: B-0467, B-0854, B-0855 Tulloh R.: B-0856 Tupikowski K.: B-0847 Tupý R.: B-0358 Turhan A.N.: B-0838 Turini F.: B-0035 Turini F.M.: B-0922 Turmel-Rodrigues L.: A-198 Turmezei T.D.: B-0658 Turowski B.: B-0749, B-0905 Tyrrell A.P.: B-0384 Tzarouchi L.C.: B-0406, B-0860, B-0862 Tzedakis A.: B-0996 U Uberoi R.: A-200 Ucar M.: B-0899 Uder M.: B-0665 Ueberle F.: B-0859 Ueno Y.: B-0346 Uhlenbrock D.: SY 4 Uliasz M.: B-0671 Ulrich C.: B-0629 Ulus S.: B-0327 Umutlu L.: B-0347, B-0456, B-0708, B-1030, B-1038 Urbach H.: B-0546 Urbanczyk M.: B-0009 Uren N.: B-0373 Urigo C.: B-0130 Ursani A.: B-0379 V Vagli P.: B-0623 Vahrmeijer A.L.: B-0208 Vaiani M.: B-0492 Valdo M.: B-0454 Válek V.: A-186, A-546 Valentini A.L.: B-0323, B-0395 Valentini V.: A-172 Valentino M.: B-0974 Valette J.: B-0285, B-0286 Valette P.J.: B-0094 Valette P.-J.: B-0559 Vallée J.-P.: A-369, B-0970, ESOR Course Vallejos J.: B-0257 Vallone P.: B-0233 Valvassori L.: A-045 van Beek E.J.R.: A-084, A-452, B-0373 Van Beers B.: A-097, A-215, ESOR Course van Buchem M.A.: SY 15 Van Cauter S.: B-0510 van Cauteren T.: B-0580 van Dalen J.A.: B-0664 van Dalen T.: B-0072, B-0565 van Dam R.M.: B-0981 Van de Giessen M.: B-0208 Van de Velde C.J.H.: B-0208 van de Weijer T.: B-0317 van den Berg J.M.: B-0593 van den Boom R.: B-0758, B-0891 van den Bosch M.A.A.J.: B-0032, B-0072, B-0565, Rising Stars van den Bouwhuijsen Q.: B-0111 van den Brink R.B.A.: B-0008 van den Dungen J.J.A.M.: B-0588 van den Hauwe L.: A-131, A-205, A-264, A-346, A-365, A-556, B-0672 van den Heuvel E.R.: B-1001 van der Geest R.J.: B-0118, B-0253 van der Graaf Y.: B-0027 Van der Lijn F.: B-0142 van der Lugt A.: A-214, A-368, B-0014, B-0016, B-0111, B-0114, B-0350, B-0402 van der Paardt M.P.: B-0790 Van der Zijden T.: A-131, A-205, A-306, A-346, A-365, B-0301, B-0302 van Duijn C.M.: B-0114 Van Dyck P.: A-313, B-0432, B-0480 van Elmpt W.: B-0065 van Engen R.E.: B-0841 van Ewijk P.A.: B-0853 van Garsse L.: B-0261, B-0264 van Ginneken B.: B-0297, B-0610, B-0758, B-0761, B-0891 Van Goethem J.: A-131, A-264, A-365, A-555 Van Goethem J.W.: A-205, A-346, A-556 van Goethem M.: B-0450, B-0451 Van Gompel G.: B-0248 Van Gool S.: B-0510 Van Hecke W.: B-0280, B-0285, B-0286 van Herwerden L.A.: B-0008 van het Schip A.D.: B-0032 van Hoof R.H.M.: B-0116, B-0118, B-0120 van Landsveld-Verhoeven C.G.C.M.: B-0964 van Leeuwen M.S.: B-0550 van Lindert E.: B-0672 van Mourik J.H.: Rising Stars Van Ommen V.: B-0261, B-0264 Van Ongeval C.: SY 1 van Ooijen P.: B-0295, B-0298 Van Ooijen P.M.A.: B-0291 van Oostenbrugge R.J.: B-0118, B-0120 van Osch J.A.C.: B-0664, B-0666 van Rijswijk C.: A-434 van Rikxoort E.M.: B-0297, B-0610 van Roozendaal L.M.: B-0212 van Rossum M.A.J.: B-0593 Van Steen A.: SY 1 Van straten M.: B-0737 van Tiel J.: B-0485 van Westen D.: B-0892 van Zelst J.C.M.: B-0968 Vande Berg B.C.: B-0542, B-0544 Vandecaveye V.: A-568, B-0152, B-0804 Vander Poorten V.: B-0152 Vandulek C.: B-1024 Vanel D.: B-0640, B-0797 Vanhoenacker F.M.H.M.: A-312, A-417, B-0480 Vanninen R.: B-0011, B-0017 Vaño E.: A-385, A-578 Varano G.M.: B-0921 Vardhanabhuti V.: B-0798, B-0821 Vargas H.A.: B-0390, B-0689 Varnay G.: B-0121 Varol K.: B-0587 Varveris C.: B-0611 Vasaturo S.: B-0462, B-0463 Vasilevska Nikodinovska V.: B-0430 Vasselli F.: B-0453 Vassilev D.: B-0852 Vassileva J.: B-0989 Vassiliu V.: B-0084 Vasudevan R.: B-0573 Vaudano E.: EIBIR Vavro H.: B-0408 Vázquez E.: A-468 Vecchiato N.: B-0131 Vecchietti F.: B-0193, B-0792, B-0793 Vecchio S.: B-0684, B-0811 Vedrilla D.: B-0636 Veillon F.: A-073 Veit-Haibach P.: B-0156, B-0157 Veldhuis W.B.: B-0072, B-0565 Veldkamp W.J.H.: B-0841 Velonakis G.: B-0530 Veloso Gomes F.: B-0822, B-0971 Veloza L.-S.: B-0241 Velroyen A.: B

297 List of Authors and Co-Authors Veltman J.: A-226 Vembar M.: B-0586 Venkatesan A.M.: B-0209 Venstermans C.: A-131, A-264, A-346, A-365, A-556 Vente M.A.D.: B-0032 Ventura E.S.: B-0726 Venturini M.: B-0440, B-0712, B-0769 Venugopal V.: B-0013 Veraart J.: B-0510 Verardi N.: B-0814, B-0815 Verbeek A.: B-0962 Verbeek A.L.M.: B-0959 Verbeke C.: A-145 Verbist B.: A-463 Vercelli R.: B-0925 Vercher Conejero J.L.: B-0326 Verdolotti T.: A-532 Verdun F.R.: B-0542, B-0544 Vergnaghi D.: B-0561 Verhaar J.: B-0485 Verhaaren B.F.J.: B-0014, B-0016, B-0114, B-0402 Verkooijen H.M.: B-0072, B-0565 Verloh N.: B-0985 Verma R.: B-0752 Vermeulen K.M.: B-0560 Vermoolen M.A.: B-0550 Vernieri F.: B-0020 Vernooij M.: A-327 Vernooij M.W.: B-0014, B-0016, B-0114, B-0350, B-0402 Verschakelen J.: B-0169 Versluis B.: B-1007 Verslype C.: B-0804 Verstraete K.L.A.: A-025 Verwoert G.: B-0111 Vicente A.: B-0124 Victoria T.: B-0864 Viegas S.: B-0874 Vieth V.: B-0125 Viganò S.: B-0561 Vigano S.: B-0956 Vignali C.: B-0465 Vikram R.: B-0824 Vilanova J.C.: A-315 Vilar J.: A-255 Vilar Samper J.: B-0168 Vilcot L.: A-433 Vilela P.: A-367 Vilgrain V.: A-017, A-018, A-021, A-109, A-167, A-358, A-604, B-0576 Villani G.Q.: B-0267 Villanueva A.: B-0143 Villeirs G.M.: B-0088 Villien M.: B-0355 Vinci V.: B-0394, B-0396, B-0863, B-0868 Vinczen E.: B-1024 Vining D.J.: B-0141, B-0807 Vinnicombe S.: B-0332 Virayavanich W.: B-0319 Viry F.: B-0512 Viteri G.: B-0514, B-0685, B-0778, B-0809, B-0900, B-0966 Vivier P.-H.: A-483 Vizza C.D.: B-0464 Vlcek A.: B-0613 Vliegen R.F.A.: B-0627 Vliegenthart R.: B-0164, B-0291, B-0295, B-0298, B-0299, B-0419, B-0588, B-0918, B-1001 Vock P.: A-052, A-384 Voelckel S.: A-067 Vogel A.: B-0038 Vogiatzi S.: B-0989 Vogl T.J.: B-0031, B-0033, B-0034, B-0039, B-0040, B-0150, B-0170, B-0258, B-0266, B-0290, B-0393, B-0398, B-0471, B-0534, B-0536, B-0537, B-0633, B-0669, B-0700, B-0709, B-0711, B-0723, B-0748, B-0774, SY 12 Vogl W.-D.: B-0562 Volbers B.: B-0895 Vollherbst D.: B-0178 Vollnberg B.: B-0936 Volterrani L.: B-0058, B-0194, B-0392, B-0682, B-0941, B-0947 Völzke H.: B-0445, B-0681 von Baumgarten L.: B-0754, B-0755, B-0757 von Falck C.: B-0038, B-0047, B-0244, B-0768 von Roden M.: B-0748 von Schneider-Egestorf A.: B-0047 von Schulthess G.K.: A-400, B-0156, B-0157 von Spiczak J.: B-0482 Vonend O.: B-0648 Vonk J.M.: B-0164 Vonken E.-J.: B-1007 Voormolen M.: A-131, A-205, A-306, A-346, A-365 Voormolen M.H.J.: B-0301, B-0302 Vorwerk D.: A-199 Voulgaris C.: B-0541 Vrabec M.: B-0476 Vrooman H.: B-0402 Vrooman H.A.: B-0142 Vullierme M.-P.: A-604, B-0576 Vurdem Ü.E.: B-1034 Vymazal J.: A-307 W Wachter M.F.: B-0178 Wacker F.: B-0038, B-0047, B-0165, B-0166, B-0191, B-0244, B-0768 Wafae A.A.S.W.: B-0906 Wagner A.: B-0341 Wagner M.: A-216 Waitzbauer M.: B-0950, B-0951 Walcher T.: B-0412, B-0583 Wald C.: B-0037 Waldeck S.: B-0244 Walecki J.: B-0303, B-0400, B-0489, B-0852, B-1014 Walfridsson H.: B-0149 Walker-Samuel S.: B-0097 Walleyo A.: B-0865, B-0866 Wallis M.G.: A-129, SY 16 Wals J.: B-0627 Walter T.: B-0306 Wambsganss J.: B-0829 Wang H.: B-0571, B-0575, B-0884 Wang J.: B-0369, B-0571 Wang L.-J.: B-0126 Wang M.: B-0517 Wang P.-C.: B-0225 Wang Q.: B-0375 Wang X.: B-0334, B-0337, B-0369 Wang Y.: B-0334, B-0337, B-0411, B-0893 Wang Z.: B-0271, B-0276, B-0496, B-0497, B-0742 Wang Z.J.: B-0315 Wanke I.: A-133 Wanner G.: B-0788 Warnking J.: B-0355 Wasser K.: B-0214, B-0683 Wasser M.N.J.M.: B-0208 Wasserman J.K.: B-0756 Webb M.J.: B-0978 Weber F.: B-0348 Weber J.R.: B-0224 Weber M.: B-0328, B-0635, B-0636, B-0802 Weber M.-A.: B-0044, B-0188, B-0481 Weber N.: B-0277 Wedegärtner U.: B-0859 Weidenhagen R.: B-0195 Weidner A.M.: B-0061 Weidner M.: B-0865, B-0866 Weinans H.: B-0485 Weinheimer O.: B-0162 Weir N.W.: B-0373 Weishaupt D.: A-162 Weismann C.F.: A-611 Weiss V.: B-1026 Weisser P.: B-0033 Weitzel T.: B-0405 Welsch G.: A-151 Welzel J.: B-0629 Wendl C.M.: B-0903 Wengert G.: B-0952 Wengert G.J.: B-0213, B-0562, B-0563 Weninger W.: B-0613 Wenkel E.: SY 1 Wentzel J.J.: B-0111 Werner M.K.: B-0447 Wessam R.: B-0949 Wesseling N.: B-0734 Wesseling P.: B-0672 Wessling J.: B-0190 West D.J.: A-622 West N.P.: B-0196 Wetter A.: B-0969 Weustink A.: B-0410 Whelehan P.: B-0332 White T.O.: B-0780 Wi J.Y.: B-0026 Wiart M.: B-0890 Wichmann J.A.: B-0633 Wichmann J.L.: B-0669 Wickings N.: B-0030 Wicklein D.: B-0888 Wiebel M.: B-0162 Wiedenmann B.: A-602 Wiegert J.: B-0371 Wielpütz M.O.: B-0162 Wiener E.: B-0936 Wiersma H.: B-0963 Wiest R.: B-0405 Wiggermann P.: B-0725, B-0985 Wilczek B.: B-0967 Wild J.M.: A-081, A-269 Wildberger J.: B-0261, B-0264, B-0450, B-0451 Wildberger J.E.: A-034, B-0029, B-0065, B-0116, B-0118, B-0120, B-0317, B-0746, B-0853, SY 10 Wildgruber M.: B-0880, B-0881 Wille M.M.W.: B-0163 Willekens I.: B-0580 Willemink M.J.: B-0721 Willems T.P.: B-0005, B

298 List of Authors and Co-Authors Willerding G.: B-0324 Williams M.: B-0373 Willner M.: B-0112, B-1006 Wilson D.J.: A-041 Wimmer J.: B-0488 Wimmer T.: B-0234, B-1032 Winant C.: B-0053 Winklhofer S.: B-0482, B-0910 Winter H.: B-0195 Winter S.: B-0344 Wintersperger B.J.: A-011, B-0668, B-0913 Winterstein M.: B-0044 Wipff J.: B-0650 Wirth S.: A-413, A-492, B-0243, B-0472 Wise R.: B-0839 Wishaupt M.C.J.: B-0253 Witjes J.A.: B-0083 Witteman J.: B-0111 Witteman J.C.M.: B-0114, B-0350 Wittsack H.-J.: B-0340, B-0486, B-0648 Wittschieber D.: B-1011 Witwit A.: B-0595 Wlderk A.: B-0920 Woehrle J.: B-0412, B-0583 Woertler K.: B-0435 Wojtynska R.: B-0401 Wolf F.: A-356, A-573 Wolf K.-J.: B-0232 Wong C.M.: B-0377 Wong G.L.-H.: B-0441 Wong V.W.-S.: B-0441 Wong Y.-C.: B-0126 Woo O.H.: B-0073, B-0433, B-0528 Woo S.: B-0230 Wood B.: B-0173 Wood C.: B-0824 Wood P.: A-190 Woods L.: B-0595 Worst T.S.: B-0534 Wörtler K.: A-499, B-0180, B-0937 Wouters K.: B-0480 Wu B.: B-0897 Wu C.-H.: B-0126 Wu J.: B-0259 Wu T.H.: B-0543 Wu X.: B-0897 Wuest W.: B-0665 Wulff A.: B-0436 Wulz-Horber S.: SY 5 Würfel J.: B-0896 Würslin C.: B-0447 Wurster T.H.: B-0003, B-0004 Wurz C.: B-0258 Wüstner M.: SY 24 Wyatt C.R.: B-0657 X Xie J.: B-0883 Xie X.: B-0164, B-0291 Xu L.: B-0023, B-0656 Xu P.: B-0334, B-0337 Xu S.: B-0173 Xue H.: B-0255 Xv F.: B-0893 Xyda A.: B-0676 Y Yaddanapudi K.: B-0371 Yaffe M.J.: A-506 Yaghmai V.: B-0363, B-0524, B-0615, B-0722 Yaghoobi M.: B-0220 Yalynska T.: B-0735 Yamamura J.: B-0315, B-0859 Yamashita K.: B-0515, B-0673, B-0678 Yamori Y.: B-1017 Yan F.: B-0369 Yan Y.: B-0883 Yang F.: B-0368 Yang X.: B-0018 Yang Z.: B-0893 Yankelevitz D.: B-0799 Yanniello M.: B-0746 Yanof J.H.: B-0371 Yasunaga K.: B-0519 Yazıcı C.A.: B-0901 Ye X.: B-0707 Yeh W.-L.: B-0931 Yellin N.: B-0255 Yeom J.A.: B-0516 Yeon J.W.: B-0052 Yeong C.H.: B-0422 Yeow K.K.: B-0294 Yeung D.K.-W.: B-0441 Yıldırım E.: B-0901 Yilmabasar M.G.: B-0362 Yim C.: B-0422 Yong H.S.: B-0433, B-0528 Yoo R.-E.: B-0739, B-0830 Yoon H.-K.: B-0499 Yoon J.H.: B-0494, B-0830 Yoon J.-H.: B-0230 Yoon K.-H.: B-0844, B-0845 Yoon Y.C.: B-0050 Yoong B.K.: B-0422 Yoong P.: B-0051 Yoshida M.: B-0338, B-0339 Yoshida N.: B-1017 Yoshida S.: B-1017 Yoshikawa T.: B-0293, B-0329, B-0526, B-0767 Yoshimoto K.: B-0515, B-0673 Yoshiura T.: B-0515, B-0673, B-0678 Yousef O.Z.: B-0452 Yousry T.A.: A-223, A-509 Yuan C.: B-0113, B-0117 Yue Q.: B-0018 Yüksel M.: B-0055, B-0718 Yun B.L.: B-0210 Yusuf S.W.: B-1003 Z Zaccagna F.: B-0399, B-0414, B-0427, B-0490 Zacharzewska A.: B-1016 Zacho M.: B-0918 Zackrisson S.: A-507 Zahel T.: B-0525 Zahlmann G.: B-0799 Zaidi S.: B-0145 Żak T.: B-1016 Zalazar R.: B-0143, B-0813 Zalev J.: B-0955 Zamboni G.A.: B-0706 Zampa V.: B-0698 Zampeli F.: B-0929 Zanetti M.: A-436 Zangos S.: B-0031, B-0033, B-0039, B-0170, B-0258, B-0393, B-0398, B-0537, B-0748, B-0774 Zappa M.: A-358 Zar H.: A-262 Zarb F.: B-0279, B-1028 Zaric O.: B-0953 Zawadzki M.: B-0303 Zbýň Š.: B-0345, B-0488 Zech C.: B-0980 Zech C.J.: A-493, A-565 Zee N.: B-0786 Zegarski W.: B-0321 Zeina A.-R.: B-0129 Zelber-Sagi S.: B-0978 Zeller T.: B-0923 Zengel P.: B-0068 Zerbi A.: B-0785 Zerini D.: B-0503 Zerlauth J.-B.: B-0670 Zezos P.: B-0115 Zhang G.: B-0883 Zhang G.-X.: B-0884 Zhang H.: B-0571 Zhang J.: B-0018 Zhang L.: B-0319 Zhao B.: B-0806 Zhao Y.R.: B-0295, B-0298 Zheng L.-F.: B-0884 Zhorzholiani S.: B-0916 Zhou C.: B-0707 Zicchetti M.: B-0092 Zikou A.: B-0406, B-0860, B-0862 Zilkens C.: B-0486, B-0487 Zimny A.: B-0401, B-1016 Zini C.: B-0775 Zins M.: A-494, B-0837 Zizka J.: A-245 Zolovkins A.: B-0921 Zompatori M.: B-0763 Zonnenberg B.A.: B-0032 Žontar D.: B-0609 Zorlu A.: B-0587 Zou L.: B-0018 Zoubi R.: B-0077, B-0808 Zoumpoulis P.S.: SY 2 Zsirka Klein A.: B-0983 Zsirka-Klein A.: B-0982 Zubieta J.L.: B-0514 Zubler C.: B-0752 Zucconi F.: B-0492 Zuern C.S.: B-0003, B-0004 Zuiani C.: B-0132, B-0567, B-0568, B-0684, B-0811, B-0834, B-0835 Zwiers M.: B

299 List of Moderators This part lists all moderators followed by the session number in italic letters.

Oncologic Imaging. Oncologic Imaging. Special Focus Sessions. Recommended sessions by topic

Oncologic Imaging. Oncologic Imaging. Special Focus Sessions. Recommended sessions by topic Special thanks to the Scientific Subcommittee Chairman: Rodney H. Reznek, London/UK Friday, March 2, 16:00 17:30 ESR meets Radiation Oncologists EM 2: Imaging and tailored radiation therapy in rectal cancer

More information

European Society of Urogenital Radiology Newsletter

European Society of Urogenital Radiology Newsletter European Society of Urogenital Radiology Newsletter Spring & Summer 2008 Dear Colleagues, the ESUR Board met in Vienna during the ECR on March 6, 2008. Here is a summary of the different issues discussed

More information

ASKLEPIOS Course SYMPOSIUM ON IMAGING HALLMARKS OF CANCER. Education in partnership. October 18 19, 2018 Lisbon/Portugal. myesr.

ASKLEPIOS Course SYMPOSIUM ON IMAGING HALLMARKS OF CANCER. Education in partnership. October 18 19, 2018 Lisbon/Portugal. myesr. ON IMAGING HALLMARKS OF CANCER Education in partnership Course information The Symposium is designed for scientist, radiologists, nuclear medicine physicians and other experts in cancer imaging interested

More information

European Society of Urogenital Radiology Newsletter

European Society of Urogenital Radiology Newsletter European Society of Urogenital Radiology Newsletter Spring & Summer 2007 Dear Colleagues, This newsletter has been written after the Abdominal Radiology Course (ARC) meeting in Bonita Springs, Florida,

More information

ASKLEPIOS Course SYMPOSIUM ON IMAGING HALLMARKS OF CANCER. Education in partnership. October 18 19, 2018 Lisbon/Portugal. myesr.

ASKLEPIOS Course SYMPOSIUM ON IMAGING HALLMARKS OF CANCER. Education in partnership. October 18 19, 2018 Lisbon/Portugal. myesr. ON IMAGING HALLMARKS OF CANCER Education in partnership Course information The course is designed for radiologists and all those professionals interested in acquiring knowledge on cutting-edge methods

More information

GALEN ADVANCED Course

GALEN ADVANCED Course GALEN ADVANCED Course Education in partnership Course information The course is aimed at senior residents, board-certified radiologists and fellows, as well as practising radiologists interested in recent

More information

EUSOBI Annual Scientific Meeting 2018 October 11-13, 2018 Preliminary Programme

EUSOBI Annual Scientific Meeting 2018 October 11-13, 2018 Preliminary Programme Thursday, October 11, 2018 14:20 Opening remarks G. Forrai, Budapest/HU A. Athanasiou, Athens/GR 14:30 BI-RADS Multimodality Case Session Moderators: P. Clauser, Vienna/AT; G. Esen, Istanbul/TR K. Kinkel,

More information

CALL FOR A EUROPEAN ACTION PLAN FOR MEDICAL IMAGING TO IMPROVE QUALITY OF CARE AND PATIENT SAFETY

CALL FOR A EUROPEAN ACTION PLAN FOR MEDICAL IMAGING TO IMPROVE QUALITY OF CARE AND PATIENT SAFETY CALL FOR A EUROPEAN ACTION PLAN FOR MEDICAL IMAGING TO IMPROVE QUALITY OF CARE AND PATIENT SAFETY myesr.org QUALITY & SAFETY Improving and harmonising quality and safety in medical imaging across Europe

More information

JUNE 28 30, 2018 DUBROVNIK/HR

JUNE 28 30, 2018 DUBROVNIK/HR BEST PRACTICES AND FUTURE TRENDS IN CANCER IMAGING: OPTIMUM RESULTS + YOUNG RADIOLOGISTS SPECIAL SESSION JUNE 27, 2018 JUNE 28 30, 2018 DUBROVNIK/HR www.oncoic.org www.esoi-society.org COURSE ORGANISERS

More information

GALEN ADVANCED Course

GALEN ADVANCED Course YEAR OF ESOR YEAR OF ESOR GALEN ADVANCED Course Education in partnership Course information This course introduces advances and new perspectives of state-of-the-art paediatric imaging to young radiologists

More information

Who we are. We envision a world where high quality eye health and vision care is accessible to all people.

Who we are. We envision a world where high quality eye health and vision care is accessible to all people. Who we are The World Council of Optometry (WCO) is an international optometric association founded in 1927. The WCO represents over 200,000 optometrists in more than 60 countries, through almost 300 Country,

More information

Advances in gastric cancer

Advances in gastric cancer ESMO Asia 2016 Industry Satellite Symposium 16 19 December 2016, Singapore Advances in gastric cancer Chair: Ian Chau With Mitsuru Sasako, Kei Muro and Yung-Jue Bang Saturday 17th December, 12:45-14:15

More information

JUNE 28 30, 2018 DUBROVNIK/HR BEST PRACTICES AND FUTURE TRENDS IN CANCER IMAGING: OPTIMUM RESULTS + YOUNG RADIOLOGISTS SPECIAL SESSION JUNE 27, 2018

JUNE 28 30, 2018 DUBROVNIK/HR BEST PRACTICES AND FUTURE TRENDS IN CANCER IMAGING: OPTIMUM RESULTS + YOUNG RADIOLOGISTS SPECIAL SESSION JUNE 27, 2018 BEST PRACTICES AND FUTURE TRENDS IN CANCER IMAGING: OPTIMUM RESULTS + YOUNG RADIOLOGISTS SPECIAL SESSION JUNE 27, 2018 JUNE 28 30, 2018 DUBROVNIK/HR www.oncoic.org www.esoi-society.org WED JUNE 27, 2018

More information

GRAZ TUTORIAL. Education in partnership. October Graz/Austria. myesr.org/esor

GRAZ TUTORIAL. Education in partnership. October Graz/Austria. myesr.org/esor Education in partnership Programme Monday, October 16, 2017 08:00 08:30 Registration 08:30 09:00 Opening H. Samonigg, Graz/AT Rector of Medical University Graz G. Brunner, Graz/AT Medical Director of University

More information

PRELIMINARY PROGRAMME

PRELIMINARY PROGRAMME PRELIMINARY PROGRAMME ECR 017 will be a green meeting designed to meet environmental sustainability criteria set by the Österreichisches Umweltzeichen (Austria s national eco-friendly certificate). The

More information

CITY WELCOME TO ECR ECR CITY PLAN

CITY WELCOME TO ECR ECR CITY PLAN FINAL PROGRAMME WELCOME TO ECR CITY The sessions and delegates at the ECR just keep on increasing, so we have spread out into some other amazing spaces around the Austria Center and created our very own

More information

School of Improvement Supporting trainees from Students to Consultants

School of Improvement Supporting trainees from Students to Consultants School of Improvement Supporting trainees from Students to Consultants 2018 Prospectus Welcome to the School of Improvement Guy s and St Thomas NHS Foundation Trust is one of the largest teaching hospitals

More information

ASKLEPIOS Course CARDIAC IMAGING. Education in partnership. October 17 19, 2018 Graz/Austria. myesr.org/esor

ASKLEPIOS Course CARDIAC IMAGING. Education in partnership. October 17 19, 2018 Graz/Austria. myesr.org/esor Education in partnership Course information This course is mainly aimed at residents in their late years of training as well as board-certified radiologists interested in updating their knowledge on cardiac

More information

Who we are. We envision a world where high quality eye health and vision care is accessible to all people.

Who we are. We envision a world where high quality eye health and vision care is accessible to all people. Who we are The World Council of Optometry (WCO) is an international optometric association founded in 1927. The WCO represents over 200,000 optometrists in more than 60 countries, through almost 300 Country,

More information

JUNE 28 30, 2018 DUBROVNIK/HR BEST PRACTICES AND FUTURE TRENDS IN CANCER IMAGING: OPTIMUM RESULTS + YOUNG RADIOLOGISTS SPECIAL SESSION JUNE 27, 2018

JUNE 28 30, 2018 DUBROVNIK/HR BEST PRACTICES AND FUTURE TRENDS IN CANCER IMAGING: OPTIMUM RESULTS + YOUNG RADIOLOGISTS SPECIAL SESSION JUNE 27, 2018 BEST PRACTICES AND FUTURE TRENDS IN CANCER IMAGING: OPTIMUM RESULTS + YOUNG RADIOLOGISTS SPECIAL SESSION JUNE 27, 2018 JUNE 28 30, 2018 DUBROVNIK/HR www.oncoic.org www.esoi-society.org WED JUNE 27, 2018

More information

ASKLEPIOS Course MULTIMODALITY COURSE. Education in partnership. May 19 20, 2016 Dublin/Ireland. myesr.org/esor

ASKLEPIOS Course MULTIMODALITY COURSE. Education in partnership. May 19 20, 2016 Dublin/Ireland. myesr.org/esor YEAR OF ESOR YEAR OF ESOR Education in partnership Course information This course is aimed at last year residents, general radiologists and general practitioners who want to update their knowledge on new

More information

STRATEGIC PLAN

STRATEGIC PLAN STRATEGIC PLAN 2016 2020 Promoting and supporting excellence in research www.immunology.org BSI STRATEGY 2016 2020 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OUR MISSION Our mission is to promote excellence in immunological research,

More information

ECR 2017 Sessions for Medical Physicists

ECR 2017 Sessions for Medical Physicists ECR 2017 Sessions for Medical Physicists NEW HORIZONS SESSION Thursday, March 2, 08:30 10:00, Studio 2017 NH 5 Hyperpolarised MRI: imaging tissue metabolism in real time J.M. Gomori; Jerusalem/IL» Hyperpolarised

More information

Mark K. Wax, MD. Candidate for President Elect

Mark K. Wax, MD. Candidate for President Elect Mark K. Wax, MD Candidate for President Elect How would you lead our Academy in adapting to healthcare reform through advocacy, quality initiatives, and member engagement? In what ways could the Academy

More information

Link and Lead A look in the future and the role of transplant coordinators.

Link and Lead A look in the future and the role of transplant coordinators. TRANSPLANTATION LEARNING JOURNEY Munich, Germany 6-10 2018 Second announcement 6-7 10 th ELITA 6-7 VCA 7 3 rd ETAHP 7-8 27 th 27 th Congress 3 rd Congress & Workshops Workshops 8 9-10 3 rd 9-10 Link and

More information

2017 Society of Skeletal Radiology. Exhibitor and Sponsorship Prospectus SOCIETY OF SKELETAL RADIOLOGY. 40th Anniversary MEETING MARCH 19-22, 2017

2017 Society of Skeletal Radiology. Exhibitor and Sponsorship Prospectus SOCIETY OF SKELETAL RADIOLOGY. 40th Anniversary MEETING MARCH 19-22, 2017 2017 Society of Skeletal Radiology Exhibitor and Sponsorship Prospectus SOCIETY OF SKELETAL RADIOLOGY 40th Anniversary MEETING MARCH 19-22, 2017 The Bacara ~ Santa Barbara, California 2017 Society of

More information

GALEN COURSES 2018 GALEN FOUNDATION COURSE. NEURORADIOLOGY April 26 28, 2018 Paris/France GALEN ADVANCED COURSES

GALEN COURSES 2018 GALEN FOUNDATION COURSE. NEURORADIOLOGY April 26 28, 2018 Paris/France GALEN ADVANCED COURSES GALEN COURSES 2018 GALEN FOUNDATION COURSE NEURORADIOLOGY April 26 28, 2018 Paris/France GALEN ADVANCED COURSES IMAGING IN VASCULAR DISEASES May 17 18, 2018 Lublin/Poland ONCOLOGIC IMAGING OF THE ABDOMEN

More information

TOLUCA, ESTADO DE MEXICO, MEXICO. OCTOBER

TOLUCA, ESTADO DE MEXICO, MEXICO. OCTOBER TOLUCA, ESTADO DE MEXICO, MEXICO. OCTOBER 2010. The World Cultural Council will celebrate the twentyseventh Award Ceremony on Wednesday December 8 th, at 11:00hrs, in the Universidad Autónoma del Estado

More information

Application Pack. Endometriosis UK Trustees

Application Pack. Endometriosis UK Trustees Application Pack Endometriosis UK Trustees RECRUITING FOR THREE NEW TRUSTEES WITH A BACKGROUND IN: MARKETING AND COMMUNICATIONS CHARITY INCOME GENERATION AND FUNDRAISING HEALTH POLICY Contents 1. Welcome

More information

GRAZ TUTORIAL. Education in partnership. October 15 19, 2018 Graz/Austria. myesr.org/esor

GRAZ TUTORIAL. Education in partnership. October 15 19, 2018 Graz/Austria. myesr.org/esor Education in partnership Programme Venue Lecture Hall Medical University Graz Auenbruggerplatz 9 8036 Graz Austria Monday, October 15, 2018 08:00 08:30 08:30 09:00 09:00 10:00 10:00 12:00 12:00 13:00 13:00

More information

Getting Emerging Planning Professionals Started: What We re All About. Draft for Discussion

Getting Emerging Planning Professionals Started: What We re All About. Draft for Discussion Getting Emerging Planning Professionals Started: What We re All About Draft for Discussion Table of Contents Introduction...2 Background...2 Membership...2 Vision and Mission Statements...3 Goals and Objectives...3

More information

10 Pediatric Infectious Diseases Congress

10 Pediatric Infectious Diseases Congress allied academies 10 Pediatric Infectious Diseases Congress th September 20-22, 2017 Toronto, Canada Theme: Promulgating the innovative challenges and novel technologies in Pediatric Infectious Diseases

More information

European Society of Radiology

European Society of Radiology European Society of Radiology the world s biggest radiological society Luis Donoso ESR 1 st Vice-President Congress of the Danish Society of Radiology January 29, 2015, SAS Radisson Blu Scandinavia Hotel

More information

GALEN ADVANCED Course

GALEN ADVANCED Course YEAR OF ESOR YEAR OF ESOR GALEN ADVANCED Course Education in partnership Course information This course is aimed at senior residents, board-certified radiologists and fellows interested in abdominal imaging.

More information

EUSOBI Annual Scientific Meeting 2018 October 11-13, 2018 Congress Programme

EUSOBI Annual Scientific Meeting 2018 October 11-13, 2018 Congress Programme Thursday, October 11, 2018 14:20 Opening remarks G. Forrai, Budapest/HU A. Athanasiou, Athens/GR 14:30 BI-RADS Multimodality Case Session Moderators: P. Clauser, Vienna/AT; M.A. Marino, Messina/IT K. Kinkel,

More information

Digestive & Metabolic Diseases

Digestive & Metabolic Diseases 4 th World Congress on Digestive & Metabolic Diseases October 29-30, 2018 San Francisco, California, USA Invitation Dear Attendees, We are glad to announce the 4 th World Congress on Digestive & Metabolic

More information

Cardiology and Heart Diseases November 5-6, 2018 Amsterdam, Netherlands

Cardiology and Heart Diseases November 5-6, 2018 Amsterdam, Netherlands C a r d i o l o g y W o r l d 2 0 1 8 28 th World Congress on Cardiology and Heart Diseases November 5-6, 2018 Amsterdam, Netherlands Theme: A Vivid innovations in the field of Cardiology conferenceseries.com

More information

We are a network of successful REALTORS, advancing women as professionals and leaders in business, the industry and the communities we serve.

We are a network of successful REALTORS, advancing women as professionals and leaders in business, the industry and the communities we serve. We are a network of successful REALTORS, advancing women as professionals and leaders in business, the industry and the communities we serve. Dear Business Professional: It is a pleasure to invite you

More information

Breast Cancer. allied. Theme: Explore New Discoveries in Breast Cancer: Health Promotion and Awareness. 7 th World Congress on

Breast Cancer. allied. Theme: Explore New Discoveries in Breast Cancer: Health Promotion and Awareness. 7 th World Congress on 7 th World Congress on allied academies Breast Cancer November 1-2, 2017 Toronto, Canada Theme: Explore New Discoveries in Breast Cancer: Health Promotion and Awareness Dear Prospective Sponsor/Exhibitor,

More information

Friday 20 April 2018 Pre congress meetings

Friday 20 April 2018 Pre congress meetings Programme Overview *7 March 2018 20-24 April 2018 Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre, Australia Friday 20 April 2018 Pre congress meetings * Room allocations are subject to change 0070 2030 Registration

More information

ESGAR 2016 JUNE PRAGUE CZECH REPUBLIC PRELIMINARY PROGRAMME POCKET VERSION. European Society. of Gastrointestinal and Abdominal Radiology

ESGAR 2016 JUNE PRAGUE CZECH REPUBLIC PRELIMINARY PROGRAMME POCKET VERSION. European Society. of Gastrointestinal and Abdominal Radiology JUNE 14-17 ESGAR 2016 PRAGUE CZECH REPUBLIC European Society of Gastrointestinal and Abdominal Radiology www.esgar.org PRELIMINARY PROGRAMME POCKET VERSION PRELIMINARY PROGRAMME AND CALL FOR ABSTRACTS

More information

GALEN ADVANCED Course

GALEN ADVANCED Course GALEN ADVANCED Course Education in partnership Course information The course is aimed at senior residents, board-certified radiologists and fellows and is designed to advance the knowledge of an array

More information

We are a network of successful REALTORS, advancing women as professionals and leaders in business, the industry and the communities we serve.

We are a network of successful REALTORS, advancing women as professionals and leaders in business, the industry and the communities we serve. We are a network of successful REALTORS, advancing women as professionals and leaders in business, the industry and the communities we serve. Dear Business Professional: It is a pleasure to invite you

More information

FIPLV News Update June 2017

FIPLV News Update June 2017 London, 9 th June 2017 Dear friends and colleagues, FIPLV News Update June 2017 I must once again apologise for not writing for a while. I had been planning to send you a News Update in April but it turned

More information

ASKLEPIOS Course ADVANCED ONCOLOGIC IMAGING. Education in partnership. September 30 October 1, 2016 Kazan/Russia. myesr.org/esor

ASKLEPIOS Course ADVANCED ONCOLOGIC IMAGING. Education in partnership. September 30 October 1, 2016 Kazan/Russia. myesr.org/esor YEAR OF ESOR YEAR OF ESOR ADVANCED ONCOLOGIC IMAGING This is implemented with Education in partnership Course information The course is designed for last year residents and recently board-certified radiologists.

More information

Friday 20 April Pre-congress meetings

Friday 20 April Pre-congress meetings Programme Overview *8th February 2018 Friday 20 April 2018 - Pre-congress meetings * Room allocations are subject to change 0070-2030 Registration open Exhibition Concourse, MCEC Room Plenary 2 Room 216

More information

Friday 20 April Pre-congress meetings

Friday 20 April Pre-congress meetings Programme Overview *27th February 2018 12th Congress of the World Federation of Nuclear Medicine and Biology 20-24 April 2018 Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre, Australia Friday 20 April 2018

More information

EXHIBITOR PROSPECTUS & SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITIES. November 8 11, 2017

EXHIBITOR PROSPECTUS & SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITIES. November 8 11, 2017 EXHIBITOR PROSPECTUS & SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITIES November 8 11, 2017 We are excited to announce that The First Tee s 2017 Network Meeting will be held in Orlando, FL at the beautiful Omni Orlando Resort

More information

ADEXILIS ACADEMY. Radiology Courses Calendar

ADEXILIS ACADEMY. Radiology Courses Calendar ADEXILIS ACADEMY Radiology Courses Calendar January - June 2017 Oncologic Imaging Date: 16-18 February 2017 Salzburg, Austria Prim. Univ.-Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Schima, MSc President, Austrian Society of Radiology

More information

About the Modern Language Association

About the Modern Language Association Strategic Plan 2016 20 Contents Since its founding in 1883, the MLA has continually recast its mission to meet new challenges and to shape the best practices for members professional lives. In this spirit,

More information

RADIOGRAPHERS PROGRAMME

RADIOGRAPHERS PROGRAMME RADIOGRAPHERS PROGRAMME ECR 2017 will be a green meeting designed to meet environmental sustainability criteria set by the Österreichisches Umweltzeichen (Austria s national eco-friendly certificate).

More information

James K. Stoller, MD, MS

James K. Stoller, MD, MS James K. Stoller, MD, MS Chair, Education Institute at Cleveland Clinic Cleveland, OH, US Cleveland Clinic's leading expert on physician leadership development offers provocative ideas and new perspectives

More information

Cardiac CT Course Part A First step towards level 2 SCCT registration

Cardiac CT Course Part A First step towards level 2 SCCT registration 11-14 September 2015 Philips Customer Education Center Business Central Towers, Dubai Internet City, Sheikh Zayed Road, Dubai, UAE The use of Multi-Detector CT (MDCT) in the diagnosis of various cardiac

More information

Hull Truck Theatre Board Candidate Brief

Hull Truck Theatre Board Candidate Brief Hull Truck Theatre Board Candidate Brief About Hull Truck Theatre Hull Truck Theatre Ltd is a registered charity and consists of the Theatre which produces and presents theatre in two auditoria (The Heron

More information

Cardiac CT Course Part A November 2014 Mohammed Bin Rashid Academic Medical Center Dubai Healthcare City, Dubai, UAE

Cardiac CT Course Part A November 2014 Mohammed Bin Rashid Academic Medical Center Dubai Healthcare City, Dubai, UAE Cardiac CT Course Part A 14-17 November 2014 Mohammed Bin Rashid Academic Medical Center Dubai Healthcare City, Dubai, UAE The use of Multi-Detector CT (MDCT) in the diagnosis of various cardiac diseases

More information

GALEN COURSES esor.org EDUCATION IN PARTNERSHIP GALEN FOUNDATION COURSE GALEN ADVANCED COURSES. NEURORADIOLOGY May 23 25, 2019 Lisbon/Portugal

GALEN COURSES esor.org EDUCATION IN PARTNERSHIP GALEN FOUNDATION COURSE GALEN ADVANCED COURSES. NEURORADIOLOGY May 23 25, 2019 Lisbon/Portugal GALEN COURSES 2019 GALEN FOUNDATION COURSE NEURORADIOLOGY May 23 25, 2019 Lisbon/Portugal GALEN ADVANCED COURSES WOMEN S IMAGING June 13 14, 2019 Malmö/Sweden CARDIO-THORACIC CROSS-SECTIONAL IMAGING July

More information

R e s e a r c h S t r a t e g y

R e s e a r c h S t r a t e g y Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust Academic Directorate of Specialised Cancer R e s e a r c h S t r a t e g y Academic Directorate of Specialised Cancer Research Strategy Executive Summary

More information

COORDINATION. Barbara Biegl. Unless otherwise indicated all pictures ESR European Society of Radiology. Photo Credits:

COORDINATION. Barbara Biegl. Unless otherwise indicated all pictures ESR European Society of Radiology. Photo Credits: FINAL PROGRAMME ECR 017 will be a green meeting designed to meet environmental sustainability criteria set by the Österreichisches Umweltzeichen (Austria s national eco-friendly certificate). The ECR is

More information

MINORITY ACTION PKAVS Minority Communities Hub Quarterly Update March 2018

MINORITY ACTION PKAVS Minority Communities Hub Quarterly Update March 2018 MINORITY ACTION PKAVS Minority Communities Hub Quarterly Update March 2018 Welcome! Welcome to the first PKAVS Minority Communities Hub newsletter of 2018! Inside, you will find information & updates from

More information

Ronald D. Miller M.D., M.S.

Ronald D. Miller M.D., M.S. Ronald D. Miller M.D., M.S. The Pursuit of Excellence By James E. Caldwell, M.B., Ch.B. Introduction Ronald D. Miller, M.D. In October 2008 Dr. Ronald D. Miller received the prestigious Distinguished Service

More information

SES Indicator. The. Issue No. 1, Spring In This Issue. A Publication of APA s Office on Socioeconomic Status. News CSES.

SES Indicator. The. Issue No. 1, Spring In This Issue. A Publication of APA s Office on Socioeconomic Status. News CSES. A Publication of APA s Office on Socioeconomic Status The SES Indicator Newsletter Issue No. 1, Spring 2008 In This Issue - Welcome from the Director of APA s Office on SES News OSES Builds Communication

More information

Mental Health Network Annual conference & exhibition March, The King s Fund, 11 Cavendish Square

Mental Health Network Annual conference & exhibition March, The King s Fund, 11 Cavendish Square Mental Health Network Annual conference & exhibition 2018 15 March, The King s Fund, 11 Cavendish Square Partnership, commercial and exhibition opportunities The Mental Health Network annual conference

More information

Visit aahpm.org to learn more about these programs. We appreciate your continued support and look forward to serving you in the coming year.

Visit aahpm.org to learn more about these programs. We appreciate your continued support and look forward to serving you in the coming year. AAHPM Member Guide Your guide to making the most of your membership in the only national medical specialty society for hospice and palliative medicine. Thank you for your membership in AAHPM. This Member

More information

The Pennsylvania Society of Physician Assistants. Welcomes You!

The Pennsylvania Society of Physician Assistants. Welcomes You! The Pennsylvania Society of Physician Assistants Welcomes You! Membership Dues: $30.00/year for Physician Assistant Program Students $50.00/ 2 years for Physician Assistant Students $60.00 for Sustaining

More information

SS2015 ANNUAL REGISTER AT SSO2015.ORG BY JANUARY 10 AND SAVE. March Houston, TX CANCER SYMPOSIUM #SSO2015TX

SS2015 ANNUAL REGISTER AT SSO2015.ORG BY JANUARY 10 AND SAVE. March Houston, TX CANCER SYMPOSIUM #SSO2015TX SS2015 ANNUAL CANCER SYMPOSIUM March 25-28 Houston, TX REGISTER AT SSO2015.ORG BY JANUARY 10 AND SAVE. #SSO2015TX JOIN THE TOP MINDS IN SURGICAL ONCOLOGY AT SSO 2015 On behalf of SSO President Ronald J.

More information

Cardiac CT Course Part A First step towards level 2 SCCT registration

Cardiac CT Course Part A First step towards level 2 SCCT registration 29 September 2 October 2016 Philips Customer Education Center Business Central Towers, Dubai Internet City, Sheikh Zayed Road, Dubai, UAE The use of Multi-Detector CT (MDCT) in the diagnosis of various

More information

New Member Orientation

New Member Orientation New Member Orientation Comments? We hope that this publication proves to be a valuable tool for developing your club s new member orientation program. As always, we welcome any questions, comments, or

More information

European Society of Urogenital Radiology Newsletter. Autumn & Winter 2008

European Society of Urogenital Radiology Newsletter. Autumn & Winter 2008 European Society of Urogenital Radiology Newsletter Autumn & Winter 2008 Dear Colleagues, This newsletter has been written after the ESUR symposium in Munich, Germany. The Society also had its general

More information

Friday 20 April pre-congress meetings

Friday 20 April pre-congress meetings Programme Overview * 8 January 2018 12th Congress of the World Federation of Nuclear Medicine and Biology 20-24 April 2018 Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre, Australia Friday 20 April 2018 - pre-congress

More information

Multilingual Manchester Volunteer Handbook

Multilingual Manchester Volunteer Handbook http://mlm.humanities.manchester.ac.uk Multilingual Manchester Volunteer Handbook 2017-2018 Contents Background... 1 Activities... 2 Contact information...5 Training... 6 Frequently Asked Questions...

More information

Transforming health through IT

Transforming health through IT @himsseurope HIMSS Europe 02 HIMSS Europe www.himss.eu The Leading Health IT Knowledge Organisation HIMSS Europe is a voice, advisor and thought leader of transformation through health IT. As an independent

More information

Message from the Chair

Message from the Chair Message from the Chair I am honoured to be assuming the role of Chair of the Alberta Music Education Foundation (AMEF), following in the legacy set forth by leaders who have led this organization over

More information

Sponsorship Pack YOUR ONCE IN A LIFETIME OPPORTUNITY TO LEARN, CELEBRATE, AND COME TOGETHER.

Sponsorship Pack YOUR ONCE IN A LIFETIME OPPORTUNITY TO LEARN, CELEBRATE, AND COME TOGETHER. YOUR ONCE IN A LIFETIME OPPORTUNITY TO LEARN, CELEBRATE, AND COME TOGETHER. Down s Syndrome Scotland will host the 13th World Down Syndrome Congress 25th - 27th July 2018, SEC, Glasgow @WorldDSCongress

More information

2010 International lectures and 2011 Symposium at NTUT

2010 International lectures and 2011 Symposium at NTUT NTUT Education of Disabilities 2012 Vol.10 2010 International lectures and 2011 Symposium at NTUT International Relations Committee Members, Chairperson Masahiko SUTO Research and Support Center on Higher

More information

Hull Truck Theatre Board Candidate Brief

Hull Truck Theatre Board Candidate Brief Hull Truck Theatre Board Candidate Brief Vision A pioneering theatre with a unique Northern Voice, locally rooted, global in outlook, inspiring artists, audiences and communities to reach their greatest

More information

IADR, San Diego, 6-9 March 2002

IADR, San Diego, 6-9 March 2002 IADR, San Diego, 6-9 March 2002 Undersigned was instructed by the Executive director to represent FDI at the annual congress of IADR March, in San Diego, California, USA. My assignment during the four

More information

AAHPM Member Guide Your guide to making the most of your membership in the only national medical specialty society for hospice and palliative medicine

AAHPM Member Guide Your guide to making the most of your membership in the only national medical specialty society for hospice and palliative medicine AAHPM Member Guide Your guide to making the most of your membership in the only national medical specialty society for hospice and palliative medicine NETWORK WITH YOUR PEERS Expanding your network with

More information

SPR Annual Meeting & Postgraduate Course May 15-19, 2018

SPR Annual Meeting & Postgraduate Course May 15-19, 2018 Tuesday, May 15, 2018 - Postgraduate Course 7:00 AM 8:00 AM Continental Breakfast 7:00 AM 5:30 PM Registration 7:50 AM 8:00 AM Course Overview Categorical Course Directors 8:00 AM 8:20 AM General Pediatric

More information

Table Of Content. Page 1/8

Table Of Content. Page 1/8 Table Of Content 22nd Conference: Changing perceptions, practice and policy... 2 Summary... 3 Coordinator, Leader contact and partners... 6 Outputs... 7 D04-00 - Programme and book of abstracts (EN)...

More information

SPR Annual Meeting & Postgraduate Course May 15-19, 2018

SPR Annual Meeting & Postgraduate Course May 15-19, 2018 Tuesday, May 15, 2018 - Postgraduate Course 7:00 AM 8:00 AM Continental Breakfast 7:00 AM 5:30 PM Registration 7:50 AM 8:00 AM Course Overview Postgraduate Course Directors 8:00 AM 8:20 AM General Pediatric

More information

Costa Rica International Rotation Blog

Costa Rica International Rotation Blog Costa Rica International Rotation Blog July 10 th, 2014 I m off to a great start here in Costa Rica. As part of our residency curriculum, the Radiation Medicine and Applied Sciences Department here at

More information

COBCOE MEMBERSHIP INFORMATION PACK

COBCOE MEMBERSHIP INFORMATION PACK THE COUNCIL OF BRITISH CHAMBERS OF COMMERCE IN EUROPE COBCOE MEMBERSHIP INFORMATION PACK Join the international chamber community Help your members reach new markets Access new opportunities and support

More information

5 OCTOBER LEARNING FROM ERRORS IN RADIOLOGY Organised by the BIR East of England branch Venue: Robinson College, Cambridge CPD: 5 CREDITS

5 OCTOBER LEARNING FROM ERRORS IN RADIOLOGY Organised by the BIR East of England branch Venue: Robinson College, Cambridge CPD: 5 CREDITS Bronze sponsor 5 OCTOBER 2018 LEARNING FROM ERRORS IN RADIOLOGY Organised by the BIR East of England branch Venue: Robinson College, Cambridge CPD: 5 CREDITS Bayer have part funded this event BIR WELCOMES

More information

Cardiac CT Course Part A First step towards level 2 SCCT registration

Cardiac CT Course Part A First step towards level 2 SCCT registration 29 September 2 October 2017 Philips Customer Education Center Business Central Towers, Dubai Internet City, Sheikh Zayed Road, Dubai, UAE The use of Multi-Detector CT (MDCT) in the diagnosis of various

More information

EXHIBITOR AND SPONSORSHIP PROSPECTUS. HTRS 2015 Scientific Symposium April 16-18, 2015 Hilton New Orleans Riverside New Orleans, LA

EXHIBITOR AND SPONSORSHIP PROSPECTUS. HTRS 2015 Scientific Symposium April 16-18, 2015 Hilton New Orleans Riverside New Orleans, LA EXHIBITOR AND SPONSORSHIP PROSPECTUS HTRS 2015 Scientific Symposium April 16-18, 2015 Hilton New Orleans Riverside New Orleans, LA Jointly Provided by Hemedicus, Inc. and HTRS This activity has been submitted

More information

April 2, Dear Arizona Mental Health Criminal Justice Coalition Partner,

April 2, Dear Arizona Mental Health Criminal Justice Coalition Partner, Reducing Incarceration through Prevention, Intervention, and Treatment April 2, 2018 Dear Arizona Mental Health Criminal Justice Coalition Partner,, a 501 (c)(3) nonprofit organization, was created in

More information

Update in Breast Imaging

Update in Breast Imaging Update in Breast Imaging 26-28 April 2018 Site Oud Sint-Jan Bruges, Belgium Final Programme Visiting President: Debra M. Ikeda Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, USA www.update-medical-imaging.be

More information

Harry Stevenson, President, Social Work Scotland. Annual Conference and Exhibition 18 and 19 June 2014

Harry Stevenson, President, Social Work Scotland. Annual Conference and Exhibition 18 and 19 June 2014 Harry Stevenson, President, Social Work Scotland Annual Conference and Exhibition 18 and 19 June 2014 It is a great privilege to give the address to conference as first president of Social Work Scotland

More information

European Society of Urogenital Radiology Newsletter

European Society of Urogenital Radiology Newsletter European Society of Urogenital Radiology Newsletter Spring & Summer 2015 Dear Members, This year the ESUR Board met in Vienna during the ECR 2015 on the 3 rd of March. Many topics were addressed: ESUR

More information

Sevenoaks Sports Camps. Easter holidays and May half term 2018

Sevenoaks Sports Camps. Easter holidays and May half term 2018 Sevenoaks Sports Camps Easter holidays and May half term 2018 Welcome Sevenoaks Sports Camps at The Sennocke Centre promote sports performance, participation and wellbeing. Our camps for 2018 include Junior

More information

A Special Remembrance of Professor Man-Fong Mei

A Special Remembrance of Professor Man-Fong Mei A Special Remembrance of Professor Man-Fong Mei 1946-2014 Professor Man-Fong Mei ( ), a pioneer in Chinese Medicine and East West integration, passed away from a sudden heart attack on 8th January, 2014

More information

NHS Youth Forum Coordinator

NHS Youth Forum Coordinator Closing date: Monday 7 May 2018 23:59 NHS Youth Forum Coordinator 24,171-32,486 (Pro Rata) Welcome I am so pleased that you are interested in joining our team. This is a really exciting time for the British

More information

ASKLEPIOS Course MULTIDISCIPLINARY APPROACH TO CANCER IMAGING. Education in partnership. November 5 6, 2018 Rome/Italy. myesr.

ASKLEPIOS Course MULTIDISCIPLINARY APPROACH TO CANCER IMAGING. Education in partnership. November 5 6, 2018 Rome/Italy. myesr. ASKLEPIOS Course APPROACH TO CANCER IMAGING Education in partnership myesr.org/esor myesr.org/esor ASKLEPIOS Course APPROACH ASKLEPIOS Course Course information This course is designed for radiologists,

More information

ESMO FELLOWSHIP PROGRAMME & LEADERS GENERATION PROGRAMME

ESMO FELLOWSHIP PROGRAMME & LEADERS GENERATION PROGRAMME ESMO FELLOWSHIP PROGRAMME & LEADERS GENERATION PROGRAMME Christoph Zielinski Chair of the ESMO Fellowship & Award Committee esmo.org ESMO FELLOWSHIP PROGRAMME Exclusive to ESMO members under 40 years old

More information

Volume 14 - Issue 4, Management Matrix

Volume 14 - Issue 4, Management Matrix Volume 14 - Issue 4, 2014 - Management Matrix The Modern Radiology Department Prof. Christoph Becker ******@***hcuge.ch R -?pitaux Universitaires Key Points A central, integrated radiology department offers

More information

12+ Interactive Sessions. 5+ Workshops. 5+ Keynote Lectures. 20+ Exhibitors. Control and Prevention of HIV/AIDS, STDs & STIs. 50+ Plenary Lectures

12+ Interactive Sessions. 5+ Workshops. 5+ Keynote Lectures. 20+ Exhibitors. Control and Prevention of HIV/AIDS, STDs & STIs. 50+ Plenary Lectures 6 th World Congress on Control and Prevention of HIV/AIDS, STDs & STIs conferenceseries.com October 29-30, 2018 Valencia, Spain Dear Attendees, Invitation We are glad to announce the 6 th World Congress

More information

EPILEPSY: THE CARE PROVIDERS. Epilepsy: the care providers

EPILEPSY: THE CARE PROVIDERS. Epilepsy: the care providers EPILEPSY: THE CARE PROVIDERS Epilepsy: the care providers 49 15 MEDICAL PROFESSIONALS Introduction The respondents were asked about the number of specialist medical professionals such as neurologists,

More information

5 th SPA VISIONING WORKSHOP

5 th SPA VISIONING WORKSHOP 5 th SPA VISIONING WORKSHOP LEADERSHIP TRANSITIONS - PROVIDING CONTINUITY AND MAINTAINING PROGRESS FOR THE PROFESSION IN SINGAPORE March 2016 FOREWORD It has been our tradition, since 1995, that the council,

More information

SPONSORSHIP CANADIAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY. 38th Annual Scientific Meeting April 19-21, 2018 Hotel Bonaventure, Montreal, QC CONTACT

SPONSORSHIP CANADIAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY. 38th Annual Scientific Meeting April 19-21, 2018 Hotel Bonaventure, Montreal, QC CONTACT CANADIAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY 38th Annual Scientific Meeting April 19-21, 2018 Hotel Bonaventure, Montreal, QC SPONSORSHIP 2018 PACKAGE CONTACT Andrea Smith, Conference Manager events@secretariatcentral.com

More information

PRELIMINARY PROGRAMME SPECIAL ISSUE FOR RADIOGRAPHERS

PRELIMINARY PROGRAMME SPECIAL ISSUE FOR RADIOGRAPHERS PRELIMINARY PROGRAMME SPECIAL ISSUE FOR RADIOGRAPHERS ECR 2017 will be a green meeting designed to meet environmental sustainability criteria set by the Österreichisches Umweltzeichen (Austria s national

More information