Core Curriculum: IMAGING ANATOMY FOR THE SPINE INTERVENTIONALIST
-
Register
- Member - $499
- In-Training Member - $499
- Non-member - $999
- Allied Health Professional - $499
- International Tier II - $499
Take your interventional skills to the next level with the diagnostic confidence you’ll develop from viewing the core lectures from the Imaging Anatomy for the Spine Interventionalist course. Earn CME credit at your convenience, without any time away from your practice, viewing streamed lectures and a Q&A.
Over the years IPSIS has refined the curriculum for this special course, designed to help you gain a greater perspective of anatomy by combining cross-sectional (MRI and CT) and projectional (fluoroscopy) techniques—helping you perform spine interventions with greater precision and safety.
In this clip, see how our team of expert radiologists address a question on the risk presented by gadolinium-based contrast agents, and register to unlock the complete video set.
Imaging Techniques
Cross-Sectional Imaging and Fluoroscopic Correlation
Contrast Media - Safety and Utility
Lumbar Spine
Enumeration, Anatomy Basics, and Innervation
Disc Herniations: Disc Anatomy and Nomenclature
Foraminal Stenosis: Disc, Endplate and SAP Hypertrophy, and Degenerative Spondylolisthesis
Spondylolysis, Space of Okada, Posterior Ligamentous Complex Inflammatory Syndrome
Synovial Cysts
Axial Pain: The Disc and Posterior Elements
Neurogenic Intermittent Claudication
Planning Lumbar TFESI Based on Imaging Anatomy
Pelvis
Sacroiliac Joint Anatomy, Function, and Normal Imaging
Lumbar Contrast Patterns
Spondyloarthropathies
Cervical Spine
Cranio-Cervical Junction and Cervicogenic Headache
Unique Subaxial Anatomy and Innervation
Vascular Anatomy of the Cervical Spine
Cervical Radicular Pain: Disc Herniations and Foraminal Stenosis
Holospine and Paraspinal Nerves
When Not to Inject: When Imaging Warns You of Excess Risk
Speakers
John A. Carrino, MD, MPH
Vice Chairman, Department of Radiology and Imaging, Hospital for Special Surgery
Professor of Radiology, Weill Cornell Medical College, Cornell University
New York, New York
Felix E. Diehn, MD
Associate Professor of Radiology, Mayo Clinic School of Medicine
Rochester, Minnesota
Greta B. Liebo, MD
Consultant and Assistant Professor in Radiology at Mayo Clinic School of Medicine
Rochester, Minnesota
Timothy Maus, MD
Professor Emeritus of Radiology, Mayo Clinic School of Medicine
Past President, Spine Intervention Society
Kihei, Hawai
Vinil Shah, MD
Associate Professor of Clinical Radiology, University of California, San Francisco
San Francisco, California
© 2021 International Pain & Spine Intervention Society – All Rights Reserved
Materials presented in this activity have been made available by the International Pain & Spine Intervention Society for educational purposes only.
We reserve all rights to such material.
Educational Objectives
Upon completion of this activity, participants should be able to:
- Systematically evaluate a spine imaging study and describe normal anatomy;
- Identify the specificity and sensitivity shortcomings of radiographs, CT and MRI;
- Assess normal variants that may simulate symptomatic spine disease;
- Recognize neural compressive lesions within a large spine imaging data set;
- Interpret patient radiographic findings to develop a differential diagnosis in correlation with history, physical examination, and the patient’s spine pathology;
- Explain challenges to safe injections and how to avoid pitfalls through analysis of spine imaging;
- Utilize imaging in planning transforaminal access to maximize safety and efficacy.
Disclosure Information
Activity Reviewer: David M. Sibell, MD
Nothing to disclose
References
References are provided within the speakers presentations.
Accreditation Statement
The International Pain & Spine Intervention Society (IPSIS) is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education to provide continuing medical education for physicians.
Credit Designation Statement
IPSIS designates this enduring material for a maximum of 7.0 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)™. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.
Commercial Support
No commercial support was received for this activity.
Original Release Date: 01/08/2021
None of the other planners or speakers had relevant financial relationships with ACCME-defined ineligible companies.
All relevant financial relationships have been mitigated.
Renewal Date: 01/07/2024
Expiration Date: 01/06/2027