Ponentes

Mark J. Kransdorf, MD, FACR (MSK)

  • Osseous Tumors: A Review of Fundamental Concepts
  • Soft Tissue Tumors: A Systematic Approach to Imaging and Diagnosis
  • MSK Biopsy: Avoidable Pitfalls
  • Commonly Encountered Incidental Bone Lesions on CT and MR: When to Worry!
  • Commonly Encountered Incidental Soft Tissue Lesions on CT and MR: When to Worry!
  • Seminar: Unknown Musculoskeletal Cases

Biographical Sketch

Mark J. Kransdorf, M.D.

Consultant, Department of Radiology

Mayo Clinic, Phoenix, Arizona

Professor of Radiology Mayo Clinic College of Medicine

Rochester, Minnesota

Doctor Kransdorf received his Bachelor of Science degree from the United States Military Academy at West Point, and his M.D. degree from the Medical College of Virginia. He completed his internship and residency in Diagnostic Radiology at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C. and an Orthopedic Radiologic Pathology Fellowship at the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology. He concluded his army service as the Chief of Musculoskeletal Radiologic Pathology at the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology in Washington, D.C, in April 1993. Following his retirement from the Army, he entered private practice, subsequently joining the Mayo Clinic in 1999.

Doctor Kransdorf is a past President of the Society of Skeletal Radiology; the organization representing musculoskeletal radiology in North America. He is currently an Editor of Skeletal Radiology, the Journal of the International Skeletal Society and the Official Journal of the Society of Skeletal Radiology. Additionally, he was a Visiting Professor in Musculoskeletal Radiology, Department of Radiologic Pathology, Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, Washington, DC, for more than 25 years.

He is recognized as an accomplished musculoskeletal radiologist with an expertise in radiologic pathology and is the author of four textbooks, more than twenty book chapters and over 150 peer reviewed journal articles. He has extensively lectured both nationally and internationally and was inducted as a Fellow in the American College of Radiology in 2007. He is the recipient of the 2008 Distinguished Mayo Clinician Award.

Reena C. Jha, MD (GI)

  • Biliary Masses
  • Hypervascular Liver Lesions
  • Hemangiomas-Typical and Unusual Presentations
  • Hepatocellular Carcinoma
  • Portal Venous Abnormalities
  • Pancreatic Masses
  • Seminar: Practice session using LI-RADS

Dr. Jha is the Director of MRI at Medstar Georgetown University of Hospital where she is Professor of Radiology and Surgery. She has particular interest in hepatobiliary, transplant and female pelvis imaging. She completed medical school and residency at the University of Manitoba, Canada, and an Abdominal Imaging Fellowship at Georgetown University.

Deborah J. Rubens MD (GU)

  • Scrotum I (Intratesticular)
  • Scrotum 2 (Extratesticular)
  • Chronic Liver Disease
  • Renal Doppler: It Makes the Diagnosis!
  • Tumors of the Retroperitoneum
  • Acute Adnexal Masses
  • Seminar: Acute Scrotum Unknowns

Deborah Rubens, MD

University of Rochester Medical Center

Dr. Rubens is Professor and Associate Chair of Imaging Sciences at the University of Rochester Medical Center in Rochester, NY. She received her Bachelors Degree in Biology at Stanford University and her M.D. from the University of Rochester. She completed her Radiology residency at Rochester General Hospital and a Fellowship in Cross-Sectional Imaging at Strong Memorial Hospital at the University of Rochester Medical Center. At the University of Rochester Medical Center, Dr. Rubens has served as the Director of Body MRI and Ultrasound Divisions, and currently is the Associate Chair of Special Imaging (US, CT, MRI, PET) and chief of academic affairs. She holds secondary appointments in the Department of Biomedical Engineering and in Oncology and she is the Associate Director of the Rochester Center for Biomedical Ultrasound.

Her primary clinical specialties are Ultrasound, Body CT and MRI. Her research and academic interests include sonoelasticity (prostate and liver), prostate cancer/diagnostic efficacy, contrast agent development, abdominal, small parts and vascular ultrasound, three-dimensional ultrasound, and US/MR/CT fusion.

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Dr. Rubens is an active member of the National Institute of Health Diagnostic Radiology study section. As faculty for the American Institute of Radiologic Pathology in Washington DC, she teaches GI/GU courses in the Radiologic Pathology course which convenes five times annually. She is a reviewer for leading academic radiology journals including the American Journal of Roentgenology, Radiology, Radiographics, the Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine and Ultrasound Quarterly. She has authored multiple articles, chapters and monographs for Radiologic Clinics of North America and Ultrasound Clinics of North America, including Ultrasound Secrets and CT Secrets. She is the primary or contributing author of over 150 peer reviewed papers.

March, 2016

Marilyn Siegel, MD (Pediatric)

  • CT and Radiation
  • Thoracic Vascular Anomalies
  • Congenital Lung Anomalies
  • Pediatric Renal Tumors
  • Pediatric Adrenal Tumors
  • Pediatric Liver Masses
  • Seminar: Mediastinal Unknown Cases

MARILYN J. SIEGEL, M.D.

Marilyn J. Siegel, M.D. is currently Professor of Radiology and Pediatrics at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri. She is a recognized leader in pediatric radiology with a special interest in use of cross-sectional imaging techniques for evaluation of pediatric diseases. She is also an experienced thoracic radiologist. Dr. Siegel is the author of over 320 journal articles, 54 chapters, and 19 books, including the definitive textbook on pediatric ultrasonography (Pediatric Sonography), now into its 5th edition, and a comprehensive textbook on pediatric body computed tomography, (Pediatric Body CT) now in its 2nd edition. Dr. Siegel’s teaching accomplishments have been recognized by the Teacher of the Year award at the Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology and the Master Teacher Award in Radiology from the State University of New York.

Dr. Siegel has been active in pediatric radiology throughout her career and has made important contributions related to both the assessment of radiation doses from diagnostic imaging and oncologic applications of CT and MRI. Current research focuses on new technologies for dose reduction in CT and the clinical role of dual-energy CT. She is also the recipient of several National Institute of Health (NIH) grants for cancer imaging and is co-director of the NIH-funded Imaging Response Assessment Core (IRAC) at Washington University. In this role she is responsible for response assessment measurements on clinical trial studies in children and adults with cancer. For the last ten years, Dr. Siegel has been chair of the diagnostic imaging committee for the Children’s Oncology group, a clinical trials group devoted to pediatric cancer research. In addition, she has participated in numerous national and international conferences addressing optimization of sonographic, CT and MRI techniques and their clinical applications in a pediatric population

Maria del Mar García Gallardo.

  • Enchondroma, chondrosarcoma, chondroma vs low- grade chondrosarcoma

Beca FER 2018


Licenciada en Medicina y cirugía en la facultad de medicina de Granada y actualmente es MIR de Radiodiagnóstico en el Hospital Universitario Virgen de la Victoria de Málaga.