Classic Lectures in Gastrointestinal Imaging with Pathology Correlation - A Video CME Teaching Activity

Release Date
08/15/22

Release Date:
08/15/22

AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)™: 39.75

Keywords: Radiology Pathology CME Gastrointestinal Imaging CT MRI Ultrasound Nuclear Medicine PET

Product ID: CLGIV22

CME Video Overview
This CME activity is a comprehensive practical review of gastrointestinal imaging including CT, MRI, Ultrasound Nuclear Medicine and PET.

PURCHASE INDIVIDUAL SUBSETS:

Radiology Only - Programs 1 - 12
Pathology Only - Programs 13 - 18

Place Your Order

Description   Price Quantity
FULL VIDEO SERIES
CME Application NOT included.
USB Video & Electronic Syllabus $2005
 
CME APPLICATION
Required for credit.
Online CME Application $95
 
GROUP DISCOUNT SAVINGS PACKAGES
Single Full Video Series purchase (above) required.
USB Video, Electronic Syllabus & Online CME Application $295
 
SYLLABUS
Printed Syllabus - Full Color $95
Introducing
Video Series and Color Syllabus
Available on

USB



Share With Your Colleagues
Video CME Packs

2 OPTIONS AVAILABLE

Multiple CME Subscribers...

CME Packs allow each participating physician to own his/her set of videos. Once the initial order for an entire set is placed, order as many CME Packs as needed at a significantly reduced price as a practical alternative to "waiting in line" to receive the next video. It really is that simple!

Each
CME Pack contains:

  • One CME application
  • Electronic Syllabus
  • And your choice of an entire set of videos available on:
USB Streaming On-Demand

To order CME Packs visit us online at http://edusymp.com/ or call (813) 806-1000.
1 Free Hour at docmedED.com and ESI On-Demand Product
ACCESS LECTURES ANYTIME, FROM ANYWHERE!

Educational Symposia now offers its CME Teaching Activities On-Demand. Purchase the entire series, or individual lectures, then view at your convenience via computer, tablet, TV - any device with internet access*. Lectures can be viewed as often as you like for five years.

Create an account to receive one free hour of CME! We encourage you to sign-up and experience the docmedED.com difference.

docmedED.com
EXPERIENCE TODAY!
  • State-of-the-art streaming technology to access medical education lectures presented by top educators and speakers in their specialty.
     
  • Professionally produced and developed, easy-to-access fitting your busy needs. 
     
  • Currently over 1000 lectures, with more added every day!

This CME teaching activity is available in its entirety, as individual lectures, as well as CME Packs. The platform will bookmark where you left off and allows you to resume when you return. Take your time and go at your own pace.

To claim CME credit complete the required CME application and short evaluation. Then print your certificate.


*On Demand lectures are not downloadable. An Internet connection is necessary.
     
About This CME Teaching Activity
This CME activity is a comprehensive practical review of gastrointestinal imaging including CT, MRI, Ultrasound Nuclear Medicine and PET. Basic applications, advanced protocols, emerging imaging technologies, pearls and pitfalls to diagnosis are included. In addition to imaging procedures a review of basic pathology of the gastrointestinal system provides a correlation to characteristics of disease and image findings.

Target Audience
The CME activity is primarily intended and designed to educate diagnostic imaging physicians and pathologists who wish to gain knowledge into imaging correlation of gastrointestinal diseases.  It should also be useful for referring physicians who order these studies so that they might gain a greater appreciation of the strengths and limitations of imaging and pathology studies.

Educational Objectives

At the completion of this CME teaching activity, you should be able to:
  • Recognize the imaging appearance of normal anatomy and common pathology of the gastrointestinal system.
  • Differentiate benign and malignant nodules in the gastrointestinal system using imaging characteristics and pathology results.
  • Optimize imaging protocols to evaluate the gastrointestinal system.
  • Correlate image and pathologic findings of gastrointestinal disorders.
No special educational preparation is required for this CME activity.

USB & DVD Cancellation Policy
We offer a 15-day evaluation period to ensure the product meets your needs. If you are not satisfied, you may receive a refund within 15 days. Cancellations must be received in writing. Please note, there will be a $125.00 processing fee as well as shipping changes applied to all refunds. No credit can be applied on returned purchases. (2+ returns voids cancellation policy.)

On-Demand Cancellation Policy
We offer a 15-day evaluation period to ensure the product meets your needs. If you are not satisfied, you may receive a refund within 15 days if you have watched less than 20% of your purchase. Cancellations must be received in writing.
 
Scientific Sponsor
Educational Symposia

Accreditation Statement
Physicians: Educational Symposia is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) to provide continuing medical education for physicians.

Educational Symposia designates this enduring material for a maximum of 39.75 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)TM. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.

All activity participants are required to complete the credit application in order to be awarded credit. Course participants will also have the opportunity to critically evaluate the program as it relates to practice relevance and educational objectives.

AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)TM for this activity may be claimed until August 14, 2025.

This program is planned and organized by Educational Symposia, a leader in accredited continuing education since 1975.

This activity was planned and produced in accordance with the ACCME Essential Areas and Elements.

Radiology Faculty
Fergus Coakley, M.D.
Professor and Chair, Department of Diagnostic Radiology
Oregon Health and Science University
Portland, OR
 
Michael P. Federle, M.D.
Professor and Associate Chair for Education
Department of Radiology
Stanford University Medical Center
Stanford, CA
 
John F. Feller, M.D.
Medical Director
Desert Medical Imaging
Indian Wells, CA
Assistant Clinical Professor of Radiology 
Loma Linda University School of Medicine 
Loma Linda, CA
 
Elliot K. Fishman, M.D., FACR
Professor of Radiology, Surgery, Oncology, and Urology
Director of Diagnostic Imaging and Body CT
Johns Hopkins Hospital, Department of Radiology
The Russell H. Morgan Department of Radiology and Radiological Science
The Johns Hopkins University
Baltimore, MD
 
Joseph S. Fotos, M.D.
Assistant Professor
Penn State Health
Milton S. Hershey Medical Center
Hershey, PA
 
Edward G. Grant, M.D., FACR
Professor of Radiology
University of Southern California
Los Angeles, CA
 
Mindy H. Horrow, M.D., FACR, FSRU, FAIUM
Vice Chair of Radiology
Einstein Healthcare Network
Professor of Radiology  
Sidney Kimmel Medical School of Thomas Jefferson University
Philadelphia, PA
 
Douglas S. Katz, M.D., FACR, FASER, FSAR
Vice Chair for Research, Department of Radiology, NYU Winthrop Mineola, Long Island, New York
Professor of Radiology, Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony 
Brook University
Mineola, NY
 
Sherelle L. Laifer-Narin, M.D.
Associate Professor of Radiology
Division of Abdominal Imaging 
Director of Ultrasound and Fetal MRI
Columbia University / NY Presbyterian Hospital 
New York, NY
 
Erik S. Mittra, M.D., Ph.D.
Associate Professor, Diagnostic Radiology
Division Chief, Nuclear Medicine & Molecular Imaging
Oregon Health & Science University 
Portland, OR
 
Courtney C. Moreno, M.D.
Associate Professor of Radiology
Emory University School of Medicine
Atlanta, GA
 
Harriet Paltiel, M.D.
Associate Professor of Radiology
Department of Radiology
Boston Children’s Hospital
Boston, MA
 
Perry Pickhardt, M.D.
Professor of Radiology
Chief, Gastrointestinal Imaging
Medical Director, Cancer Imaging
University of Wisconsin 
School of Medicine & Public Health
Madison, WI
 
Eric M. Rohren, M.D., Ph.D.
Professor and Chair
Department of Radiology
Baylor College of Medicine
Houston, TX
 
Steven P. Rowe, M.D.
Assistant Professor of Radiology and Radiological Science
Johns Hopkins University
Baltimore, MD
 
Dushyant V. Sahani, M.D.
Director of Computed Tomography/Assistant Radiologist
Massachusetts General Hospital
Associate Professor of Radiology
Harvard Medical School
Boston, MA
 
Clint W. Sliker, M.D. FASER
Associate Professor
Diagnostic Radiology and Nuclear Medicine
University of Maryland School of Medicine
Baltimore, MD
 
Mark Tulchinsky, M.D., FACNM
Professor of Radiology and Medicine
Associate Director, Nuclear Medicine
Penn State University
Milton S. Hershey Medical Center
Hershey, PA
 
Eric E. Williamson, M.D.
Consultant & Chair
Division of Cardiovascular Radiology
Department of Radiology
Mayo Clinic
Associate Professor of Radiology 
Mayo Clinic College of Medicine
Rochester, MN
 
Stephanie R. Wilson, M.D. 
Clinical Professor of Radiology
Clinical Professor of Medicine, Division of Gastroenterology
University of Calgary
Calgary, AB 
CANADA
 
Don C. Yoo, M.D., FACR
Professor, Clinical Educator 
Diagnostic Imaging
Director of Nuclear Medicine, The Miriam Hospital
Director of Medical Student Radiology Education
The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University
Providence, RI

 
Pathology Faculty
N. Volkan Adsay, M.D.
Professor, Vice-Chair, and Director of Anatomic Pathology
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine
Emory University Hospital
Atlanta, GA
 
Wendy L. Frankel, M.D.
Kurtz Chair and Distinguished Professor
Chair, Department of Pathology
Director of GI/Liver Pathology Fellowship
The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center
Columbus, OH
 
John R. Goldblum, M.D. 
Chairman, Department of Pathology, Cleveland Clinic
Professor of Pathology, Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine
Cleveland, OH
 
John Hart, M.D.
Professor
Sections of Surgical Pathology & Hepatology
University of Chicago Medical Center  
Chicago, IL
 
Jason L. Hornick, M.D.
Director of Surgical Pathology
Director, Immunohistochemistry Laboratory
Brigham and Women's Hospital
Associate Professor of Pathology
Harvard Medical School
Boston, MA
 
Robert D. Odze, M.D., FRCPc
Chief, Gastrointestinal Pathology 
Professor of Pathology 
Brigham and Women's Hospital 
Harvard Medical School 
Boston, MA
 
Rish K. Pai, M.D., Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology
Senior Associate Consultant
Mayo Clinic
Scottsdale, AZ
 
Marie E. Robert, M.D.
Professor of Pathology and Medicine
Yale University School of Medicine
New Haven, CT
 

CT: 14.5 Hours • MR: 3.0 Hours • Nuclear Medicine (NM): 3.25 Hours • PET: 1.5 Hours • Ultrasound (US): 7.25 Hours • Safety: 0.5 Hours
 

Session 1


NM
Hepatobiliary Scintigraphy in Acute Conditions
Joseph S. Fotos, M.D.
MR
MR Screening for Hepatocellular Carcinoma
Courtney C. Moreno, M.D.
NM
Hepatobiliary Scintigraphy in Non-Acute Conditions
Joseph S. Fotos, M.D.
CT
CT for Non-invasive Staging of Liver Fibrosis: Beyond Elastography
Perry Pickhardt, M.D.
   

Session 2


CT
CT Imaging of NAFLD, NASH and the Metabolic Syndrome
Perry Pickhardt, M.D.
CT
Expert Differential Diagnosis: The Cystic Hepatic Mass
Michael P. Federle, M.D.
US
Contrast Enhanced Ultrasound of the Liver
Edward G. Grant, M.D., FACR
US
CEUS: The Fundamentals of Liver Mass Interpretation
Stephanie R. Wilson, M.D.
   

Session 3


US LR-5 and LR-M: Do They Adequately Look After Malignant Masses in an At Risk Liver?
Stephanie R. Wilson, M.D.
US
Test Your Knowledge : Some Unusual Liver Pathology on CEUS
Stephanie R. Wilson, M.D.
US
Imaging of Kidney and Liver Transplantation
Edward G. Grant, M.D., FACR
CT
Update on Pancreatic Cancer Imaging
Dushyant V. Sahani, M.D.
   

Session 4


CT
Differential Diagnosis: Cystic Pancreatic
Michael P. Federle, M.D.
MR
MR Evaluation of Biliary Disease
Courtney C. Moreno, M.D.
CT/MR
Acute Pancreatitis: Multimodality Imaging
Douglas S. Katz, M.D., FACR, FASER, FSAR
US
Pitfalls in Ultrasound of the Gallbladder
Mindy H. Horrow, M.D., FACR, FSRU, FAIUM
   

Session 5


CT
Expert Differential Diagnosis: Dilated Bowel
Michael P. Federle, M.D.
CT
Approach to a Thick Colonic Wall on CT
Dushyant V. Sahani, M.D.
CT
CT Evaluation of GI Bleeding
Elliot K. Fishman, M.D., FACR
NM
Gastric Emptying and Gastrointestinal Bleeding Scintigraphy
Mark Tulchinsky, M.D., FACNM
   

Session 6


PET
PET/CT in Gastrointestinal Malignancies
Eric M. Rohren, M.D., Ph.D.
CT
Right Lower Quadrant Pain
Michael P. Federle, M.D.
MR
MR Staging of Rectal Cancer
Courtney C. Moreno, M.D.
CT
CT Imaging of Peritoneal Disease
Perry Pickhardt, M.D.
   

Session 7


CT
Acute Bowel and Mesenteric Injuries
Clint W. Sliker, M.D., FASER
CT
Incidental Findings at Abdominal CT
Perry Pickhardt, M.D.
CT
Acute Abdominal and Pelvic Trauma: Pitfalls and Diagnostic Pearls
Douglas S. Katz, M.D., FACR, FASER, FSAR
CT/US
Abdominal Pelvic Pain in Pregnancy: Minor Pain or Major Trouble
Sherelle L. Laifer-Narin, M.D.
   

Session 8


CT/MR/US
Abdominopelvic Case Based Review
Sherelle L. Laifer-Narin, M.D.
CT/US
Emergency Pelvic Pain in the Acute Setting
Sherelle L. Laifer-Narin, M.D.
CT
CT of Appendicitis in Adults: Problematic Scans and Scenarios
Douglas S. Katz, M.D., FACR, FASER, FSAR
US
Contrast Enhanced Ultrasound - Intracavitary Applications in Children
Harriet Paltiel, M.D.
   

Session 9


NM
Nuclear Medicine Studies for Abdominal Conditions
Don C. Yoo, M.D., FACR
CT
CT of the Acute Abdomen: GU Applications
Elliot K. Fishman, M.D., FACR
CT
CT of Renal Masses: A Practical Approach
Fergus Coakley, M.D.
US
Contrast Enhanced Ultrasound of the Kidneys
Edward G. Grant, M.D., FACR
   

Session 10


US
Pediatric Genitourinary Ultrasound
Harriet Paltiel, M.D.
NM
Molecular Renal Imaging and Diuretic Renography
Steven P. Rowe, M.D.
US
Pitfalls in Renal Ultrasound
Mindy H. Horrow, M.D., FACR, FSRU, FAIUM
CT/SA
Contrast Induced Nephropathy
Eric E. Williamson, M.D.
   

Session 11


CT
Dual Energy CT: Science and Practice
Dushyant V. Sahani, M.D.
PET
PET/CT in Prostate Cancer
Erik S. Mittra, M.D., Ph.D.
MR
Multiparametric MRI of the Prostate: Beyond Prostate Cancer What Else Do We See?
John F. Feller, M.D.
CT
Pearls and Pitfalls in Body CT
Fergus Coakley, M.D.
   

Session 12


CT
Understanding and Avoiding Malpractice in Body CT
Fergus Coakley, M.D.
CT
Tips, Tricks and Pitfalls in Body Oncology CT
Dushyant V. Sahani, M.D.
CT
Challenging Cases of the Acute Abdomen and Pelvis on CT
Douglas S. Katz, M.D., FACR, FASER, FSAR
US
Problem Solving with CEUS in the Abdomen
Stephanie R. Wilson, M.D.
   

Session 13


 
Biopsy Interpretation of Liver Tumors
Rish K. Pai, M.D., Ph.D.
 
Cholestatic Liver Disease
Rish K. Pai, M.D., Ph.D.
   

Session 14


 
Acute and Chronic Hepatitis: Still Important
John Hart, M.D.
 
The Steatotic Liver Biopsy
Rish K. Pai, M.D., Ph.D.
   

Session 15


 
Update on Pancreas Pathology
Wendy L. Frankel, M.D.
 
Differential Diagnosis of Pancreatic Tumors
N. Volkan Adsay, M.D.
   

Session 16


 
Practical Gastritis
Wendy L. Frankel, M.D.
 
Update on Ampulla and Gallbladder Pathology
N. Volkan Adsay, M.D.
 
Challenges in Colorectal Cancer
Wendy L. Frankel, M.D.
   

Session 17


 
Nomenclature of Colorectal Polyps: Confusion and Controversy
John R. Goldblum, M.D.
 
Diagnosis and Management of Dysplasia in Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Marie E. Robert, M.D.
 
A Contemporary Update of Colitis-associated Dysplasia
Robert D. Odze, M.D., FRCPc
   

Session 18


 
The Extremes of Celiac Disease: Normal Villous Architecture and Refractory Sprue
Marie E. Robert, M.D.
 
Neuroendocrine Tumors of the Gastrointestinal and Pancreatobiliary Tracts
N. Volkan Adsay, M.D.
 
Metastatic Carcinoma of Unknown Primary: Diagnostic Approach Using
Immunohistochemistry
Jason L. Hornick, M.D., Ph.D.