Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine SCMR/ISMRM Jointly Sponsored Workshop Accelerated CMR: Towards Comprehensive Clinical Cardiovascular Imaging Presented by the SCMR and the ISMRM Cardiac MR and Flow & Motion Quantitation Study Groups Thursday, January 16, 2014 Hilton New Orleans Riverside, New Orleans, LA www.SCMR.org www.ISMRM.org SCMR/ISMRM Jointly Sponsored Workshop Presented by the SCMR and the ISMRM Cardiac MR and Flow & Motion Quantitation Study Groups Accelerated CMR: Towards Comprehensive Clinical Cardiovascular Imaging Thursday, January 16, 2014 The Hilton New Orleans Riverside, New Orleans, Louisiana Letter from the Program Co-chairs Dear Colleagues and Friends, On behalf of the Organizing Committee, we would like welcome you to New Orleans for the SCMR / ISMRM Jointly Sponsored Workshop Accelerated CMR: Towards Comprehensive Clinical Cardiovascular Imaging presented in collaboration with the ISMRM Cardiac Imaging and Flow & Motion Quantitation Study Groups. This joint effort between the SCMR and ISMRM is the third of its kind, and we hope that this continuing cooperation enhances both research and education in cardiovascular imaging. We are thrilled to be able to offer these exciting sessions with their excellent speakers and topics, and hope that you enjoy attending the workshop as much as we enjoyed putting it together for you. The workshop is designed to provide an opportunity for researchers and clinicians to discuss recent developments in rapid imaging and their potential application to clinical cardiovascular MRI exams. The workshop features a one-day program of invited and proffered talks, plus poster presentations that explore new reconstruction algorithms and platforms, sequence modifications, and protocol improvements for cardiovascular MRI. A strong clinical focus runs throughout the workshop to demonstrate how these new methods can be used to accelerate existing cardiovascular imaging applications and enable new ways to obtain information about the cardiovascular system. The scientific program comprises an introductory session and four scientific sessions, each of which focuses on a specific technical development with its corresponding potential clinical applications. We are honored to present extraordinary speakers including MRI technology leaders and distinguished clinical experts. These speakers will present content, which is meant to encourage the imaging community to reexamine past solutions for rapid cardiovascular imaging and evaluate new emerging techniques to resolve open technical challenges and meet unmet clinical needs. Both clinicians and researchers should benefit from this program and both groups are encouraged to converse throughout the workshop to promote the development of techniques that can be used clinically. The program commences with an Opening Session featuring two Plenary Addresses by Drs. Robert Edelman and Andrew Arai, both forerunners in pioneering new technical developments for cardiovascular imaging applications. This introductory session will set the stage for the scientific sessions by reviewing past advances that have made rapid cardiovascular MRI possible and introducing open clinical questions, which could be resolved using novel rapid imaging techniques. Each scientific session will begin with two invited talks by experts in the field of rapid imaging, and will include oral presentations of proffered abstracts. Session I, Advances in Reconstruction Strategies, will focus on new techniques for rapid reconstruction, with special focus on developments in compressed sensing and parallel imaging. Session II, Advances in Rapid Sequences and Protocols, will cover strategies to shorten scan time for both individual measurements by improving MRI sequences and streamlining clinical protocols. Session III, Fast Imaging - Putting It Into Practice, will offer insight into using fast reconstructions and sequences in clinical practice, and will also discuss the use of novel platforms to accelerate computation for the rapid generation of MR images. Session IV, Clinical State-of-the-Art and What Lies Ahead, will be used as a starting point to envision new applications and even imaging paradigms, which could change how cardiovascular imaging is performed in the clinic. The oral presentations will be followed by a poster session in parallel with a Wine and Cheese Reception. This time is meant to provide attendees with an opportunity to discuss the topics presented in the workshop and meet colleagues interested in solving problems in cardiovascular imaging in an informal (and fun!) setting. We hope that this workshop will provide an exciting opportunity for you to explore new ideas in rapid cardiovascular MR and to engage in interesting discussions of these topics with your clinical and research colleagues. By working together as researchers and clinicians to develop more rapid imaging techniques, we can meet our goal of improving cardiovascular MRI to improve the quality of care we offer to patients around the world. Thank you to all the presenters, organizers and attendees for the effort and support put forth to make this meeting happen. We hope you enjoy your time in New Orleans! Daniel Ennis, PhD Nicole Seiberlich, PhD TABLE OF CONTENTS ORGANIZING AND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM COMMITTEE: Welcome ..........................................2 Co-chair: Daniel Ennis, PhD University of California-Los Angeles Los Angeles, California, USA General Information ........................4 Co-chair: Nicole Seiberlich, PhD Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, Ohio, USA Agenda ............................................5 Faculty Disclosures ..........................7 Poster Directory ................................8 Committee: Michael Markl, PhD Northwestern University Chicago, Illinois, USA Reza Nezafat, PhD Harvard Medical School Boston, MA Author Index ..................................10 Hotel Floor Plan ..............................11 Jeanette Schulz-Menger, MD Charite Universitatsmedizin Berlin Berlin, Germany Orlando Simonetti, PhD The Ohio State University Columbus, Ohio, USA Shreyas Vasanawala, MD, PhD Stanford University Stanford, California, USA www.scmr.org • www.ismrm.org 3 General Information Overview GENERAL INFORMATION The purpose of the workshop is to inform academic researchers and clinical scientists about state-of-the art and emerging accelerated MRI techniques for cardiovascular imaging. Participants are expected to gain knowledge and strategies for practice that will allow them to work with existing fast imaging methods to reduce imaging time, improve spatial and temporal resolution, and promote the development of new applications. Novel image reconstruction techniques including parallel imaging and compressed sensing methods will be examined. Efficient pulse sequence techniques and methods to increase patient throughput will be explored. In addition, the workshop will provide a forum for disseminating information related to cutting-edge rapid imaging techniques for the evaluation of cardiovascular structure, function, myocardial viability and perfusion, tissue characterization, MR angiography, and flow. Emerging applications and outstanding areas of clinical need in cardiovascular MRI will be discussed in order to link technical developments with clinical practice. The multidisciplinary faculty and broad audience will ensure that technologies and methodologies are communicated and shared between cardiologists, radiologists, physicists, engineers, physiologists, trainees, and technologists. Target Audience This workshop is designed for: • Academic scientists including cardiologists, radiologists, engineers and physicists, physiologists, and those who work in fields related to these disciplines; • Clinicians looking to apply the most recent advances in rapid imaging and those interested in incorporating rapid imaging techniques in their clinical practice to increase patient throughput or take advantage of novel ways of diagnosing cardiovascular disease; • Medical, biological, and industrial researchers with an interest in emerging technology for rapid cardiovascular MRI and its implications for clinical cardiovascular MRI; • Cardiac and other MRI applications specialists and technologists who strive to gain a deeper insight into the basics of rapid MRI sequences and reconstruction techniques and their benefits for cardiovascular MRI; and • Trainees seeking to understand the capabilities and limitations of rapid cardiovascular imaging technology in order to develop improved imaging methods. This may include undergraduate and graduate students, post-doctoral trainees, residents, and fellows. Educational Objectives Upon completing this workshop, participants should be able to: • Describe current clinical challenges in cardiovascular MRI; • Explain how rapid imaging techniques can alleviate these frequent clinical problems; • Explain the basics of rapid MRI techniques for cardiovascular applications, including parallel imaging and compressed sensing; • Evaluate the advantages and disadvantages of different image reconstruction techniques for rapid cardiovascular MRI in order to select the most-appropriate method in each situation; • Assess and select efficient pulse sequences for different cardiovascular applications; • Design faster cardiovascular MRI protocols for higher patient throughput; • Describe remaining challenges for the adoption and clinical implementation of state-of-the-art rapid imaging techniques and techniques to improve clinical image quality; • Recognize why rapid MRI techniques have not led to breakthroughs in certain aspects of cardiovascular imaging, and develop strategies to avoid similar failures in the future; and • Identify several areas where rapid imaging could be transformative for clinical imaging in the near future. Continuing Medical Education Credits This activity has been planned and implemented in accordance with the Essential Areas and policies of the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education through the joint sponsorship of the International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine (ISMRM) and the Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance (SCMR). The International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine is accredited by the ACCME to provide continuing medical education for physicians. The International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine (ISMRM) designates this live activity for a maximum of 8 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)™. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity. 4 SCMR/ISMRM Jointly Sponsored Workshop • January 16, 2014 Agenda 8:00 am – 8:10 am Welcome Workshop Co-chairs Daniel Ennis, PhD, University of California – Los Angeles Nicole Seiberlich, PhD, Case Western Reserve University 8:10 am – 9:00 am Opening Session: Rapid CMR Technology Driving Innovation Moderators: Daniel Ennis, PhD, University of California – Los Angeles Nicole Seiberlich, PhD, Case Western Reserve University At the conclusion of this session, participants will be better able to: • Understand the historical hardware and sequence developments that contributed to state-of-the-art rapid cardiac MRI techniques • Recognize obstacles for CMR and explain why current techniques limit the usage of CMR in certain patient populations • Describe clinical applications that are enabled by the implementation of recently developed fast imaging methods 8:10 am Plenary I: Technical Teaser - Historical Developments in Fast Imaging for CV Robert Edelman, MD, Evanston Hospital 9:30 am Oral Abstract Presentations W 01 A Subspace Approach to Blind Coil Sensitivity Estimation in Parallel MRI Derya Gol Gungor, MS, The Ohio State University W 02 Sub-30ms Real-time, Free-breathing Cardiac Imaging with SPIRiT Samuel Ting, The Ohio State University W 03 Improving Cardiac Cine MRI on 3T using 2D k-t Accelerated Auto-Calibrating Parallel Imaging Peng Lai, PhD, GE Healthcare W 04 Biventricular Strain Analysis at 1.5T Cardiac MR Imaging: Preliminary Results in Volunteers using an Iterative SENSE Reconstruction with L1 Regularization Peter Smith, BS, Northwestern University AGENDA Thursday, January 16, 2014 W 05 Scanner-efficient Diffusion Tensor Imaging of Human Cardiac Microstructure using the Fast Composite Splitting Reconstruction Algorithm Archontis Giannakidis, PhD, Royal Brompton Hospital 11:00 am – 11:20 am Morning Coffee Break 11:20 am – 12:50 pm 8:35 am Plenary II: Clinical Teaser - Remaining Clinical Challenges and Problems to Solve Andrew Arai, MD, NIH/NHLBI 9:00 am – 11:00 am Scientific Session I: Advances in Reconstruction Strategies Moderators: Edward DiBella, PhD, University of Utah Peter Kellman, PhD, National Institutes of Health At the conclusion of this session, participants will be better able to: • Explain the basic principles of image reconstruction techniques used for fast imaging • Apply state-of-the-art recon techniques for rapid CV imaging • Describe the advantages and challenges of several reconstruction techniques which have not yet transitioned to clinical CV imaging 9:00 am Foundations of Reconstruction Techniques for Rapid Imaging Mariya Doneva, PhD, Philips 9:15 am State-of-the-Art and Up-and-Coming Reconstruction Techniques for CV Imaging Daniel Kim, PhD, University of Utah Scientific Session II: Advances in Rapid Sequences and Protocols Moderators: Peng Hu, PhD, University of California Los Angeles Reza Nezafat, PhD, Harvard Medical School At the conclusion of this session, participants will be better able to: • Define the advantages and disadvantages of non-Cartesian rapid imaging • Evaluate the clinical value of comprehensive and rapid cardiac MRI exams • Develop strategies for faster clinical cardiac MRI exams 11:20 am Faster Imaging with Faster Sequences Holden Wu, PhD, University of California – Los Angeles 11:35 am Faster Protocols for Patient Throughput Daniel Sodickson, MD, PhD, New York University Langone Medical Center 11:50 am Oral Abstract Presentations W 06 Accelerated Delayed Enhancement Imaging of Myocardial Infarction with Through-time Radial GRAPPA Ozan Sayin, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine www.scmr.org • www.ismrm.org 5 Agenda Thursday, January 16, 2014 (Cont’d) W 07 Rapid Phase Contrast MRI with Minimum Time Gradient Waveform Design Using Convex Optimization Matthew Middione, PhD, University of California – Los Angeles W 08 Unsupervised Free-Breathing 3-Dimensional Imaging of Morphology, Function and Flow in Congenital Heart Disease under 30 Minutes: Pilot Study Rajesh Krishnamurthy, MD, Texas Children’s Hospital 12:50 pm – 2:00 pm W 11 FPGA-based Acceleration of MRI Registration: An Enabling Technique for Improving MRI-guided Cardiac Therapy Ka-Wai Kwok, PhD, University of Georgia W 12 Evaluation of Through-time Radial GRAPPA for Functional Cardiac Imaging in a Patient Population Nicole Seiberlich, PhD, Case Western Reserve University W 13 Clinical Evaluation of Accelerated Cardiac Cine Imaging using Iterative k-t-sparse SENSE Bradley Allen, MD, Northwestern University Lunch (on own) and Poster Viewing 4:00 pm – 4:30 pm AGENDA Scientific Session III: Fast Imaging Putting It into Practice Moderators: Michael Hansen, PhD, NIH/NHLBI Michael Markl, PhD, Northwestern University At the conclusion of this session, participants will be better able to: • Understand the challenges involved with translating a novel fast imaging method, namely a multi-dimensional imaging acceleration technique, to clinical cardiac MRI • Describe the potential of accelerated MRI methods to enhance current clinical applications and provide comprehensive information on cardiovascular morphology and function • Understand and describe the potential of hardware acceleration for fast reconstruction of cardiovascular MRI data for efficient clinical implementation of novel imaging techniques Coffee Break 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm 2:00 pm Multi-dimensional Acceleration for Comprehensive Cardiovascular MRI: Implementation & Application in the Clinic Sebastian Kozerke, PhD, Institute for Biomedical Engineering University and ETH Zurich 2:15 pm Implementation and Clinical Application for Hardware Accelerated CMR Reconstruction Thomas Sorensen, PhD, Aarhus University 2:30 pm Oral Abstract Presentations W 09 Software Platform for Flexible Automated Reconstruction of CMR Data in a Clinically Feasible Workflow Tamer Basha, PhD, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center W 10 A Novel Platform for Comprehensive CMR Examination in a Clinically Feasible Scan Time Joëlle Barral, PhD, HeartVista, Inc. 6 4:30 pm – 6:00 pm Scientific Session IV: Clinical State-of-the-Art and What Lies Ahead Moderators: Robert Edelman, MD, Evanston Hospital Andreas Sigfridsson, PhD, Karolinska Institute At the conclusion of this session, participants will be better able to: • Describe the real-world advantages of fast cardiac imaging in the clinic • Evaluate the challenges associated with accelerating cardiac MRI • Prospectively examine techniques that may better enable future cardiac MRI exams 4:30 pm Fast Imaging - Promises and Pitfalls Matthias Friedrich, MD, Montreal Heart Institute 4:45 pm Envisioning the CMR Exam of the Future Eike Nagel, MD, PhD, King’s College London 5:00 pm Oral Abstract Presentations W 14 High-resolution, Real-time Exercise Stress Cine Samuel Ting, The Ohio State University W 15 Assessment of Cardiac Time Intervals using High Temporal Resolution Real-time Spiral Phase Contrast with UNFOLD-SENSE Grzegorz Kowalik, UCL Centre for Cardiovascular Imaging W 16 Accelerated Cine DENSE MRI using Compressed Sensing and Parallel Imaging Xiao Chen, University of Virginia 6:00 pm – 7:30 pm Poster Session and Reception SCMR/ISMRM Jointly Sponsored Workshop • January 16, 2014 Faculty Disclosures Faculty & Introduction Speakers The ISMRM is committed to: • Ensuring balance, independence, objectivity and scientific rigor in all Continuing Medical Education (CME) programs; and • Presenting CME activities that promote improvements or quality in healthcare and are independent of commercial interests. Therefore it is the policy of the Society that any person who has influence over the content of a program designated for AMA PRA Category 1 CreditsTM must disclose any real or apparent financial interest or other relationship (i.e., grants, research support, consultant, honoraria) that the individual may have with the manufacturers, distributors or providers of any commercial products or services that may be discussed in the presentation. Such financial interests or relationships must be identified in advance so that potential conflicts can be resolved before the program, and participants at the CME activity may have these facts fully disclosed at the outset. The ISMRM does not imply that such financial interests or relationships are inherently improper or that such interests or relationships would prevent the speaker or organizer from making an objective contribution. However, it is imperative that such financial interests or relationships be identified so that potential conflicts can be resolved before the program, and participants at the CME activity may have these facts fully disclosed in advance. It then remains for the audience to determine whether an individual’s outside interests may reflect a possible bias in either the exposition or the conclusions presented Program Committee Oral Abstract Presenters: Ennis, Daniel: Grant/Research Support: Siemens Allen, Bradley: Nothing to disclose Markl, Michael: Nothing to disclose Barral, Joëlle: Full-time Employee: HeartVista, Inc. Nezafat, Reza: Nothing to disclose Basha, Tamer: Nothing to disclose Schulz-Menger: Jeanette: Nothing to disclose Chen, Xiao: Nothing to disclose Seiberlich, Nicole: Grant/Research Support: Siemens Gol Gungor, Derya: Nothing to disclose Simonetti, Orlando: Consultant- Vannevar Group; Grant/Research Support: Siemens; Stock Shareholder: EXCMR, Inc. Giannakidis, Archontis: Nothing to disclose Vasanawala, Shreyas: Grant/Research Support: GE Healthcare Krishnamurthy, Rajesh: Nothing to disclose Baumer, Kathy (SCMR Staff): Nothing to disclose Kwok, Ka-Wai: Nothing to disclose Coverstone, Jacob (ISMRM Staff): Nothing to disclose Lai, Peng: Full-time Employee: GE Healthcare Faculty Middione, Matthew: Full time employee: GE Healthcare; Grant/Research Support: Siemens Medical Solutions Arai, Andrew: Grant/Research Support: Bayer Healthcare, Siemens DiBella, Edward: Nothing to disclose Doneva, Mariya: Full-time Employee: Philips FACULTY DISCLOSURES Following are the names of all presenters, committee members and other organizers who had influence over the program content. If individuals have disclosed real or apparent financial interests or relationships, the interests or relationships are described. Kowalik, Grzegorz: Grant/Research Support: Siemens Sayin, Ozan: Nothing to disclose Smith, Peter: Nothing to disclose Ting, Samuel: Nothing to disclose Edelman, Robert: Grant/Research Support: Siemens Friedrich, Matthias: Consultant and Stock Shareholder: Circle CV Imaging Hansen, Michael: Nothing to disclose Hu, Peng: Nothing to disclose Kellman, Peter: Nothing to disclose Kim, Daniel: Nothing to disclose Kozerke, Sebastian: Nothing to disclose Nagel, Eike: Grant/Research Support: Bayer Healthcare, Philips; Speaker’s Bureau: Bayer Sigfridsson, Andreas: Nothing to disclose Sodickson, Daniel: Patent Royalties: GE Healthcare, Bruker Biospin Sorensen, Thomas: Nothing to disclose Wu, Holden: Grant/Research Support: Siemens www.scmr.org • www.ismrm.org 7 Posters Poster Directory SCMR/ISMRM Jointly Sponsored Workshop - Posters W17 Segmented CMR Acquisition with Iterative SENSE Reconstruction Using L1-regularization in the Evaluation of Right Ventricular Systolic Function Abraham Bogachko, Northwestern University W18 Accelerated 4D Flow Imaging using Randomly Undersampled Echo Planer Imaging with Compressed-Sensing Reconstruction Tamer Basha, PhD, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center W19 State of the Art: 3D Printing for Creating Compliant Patient-specific Congenital Heart Defect Models Todd Pietila, Materialise W20 Application of Through-time Spiral GRAPPA to Phase Velocity Mapping (PVM) Robin Simpson, MPhys, Imperial College W21 Accelerated Radially Encoded Tissue Phase Mapping Jan Paul, University Hospital of Ulm W22 PLR-TV: Patch-based Low Rank with Spatio-temporal Total Variation Constraints for Ungated Myocardial Perfusion CMR Ganesh Adluru, PhD, University of Utah W23 A Generalized Motion Compensated Compressed Sensing Scheme for Highly Accelerated Myocardial Perfusion MRI Mathews Jacob, The University of Iowa W24 Self-gated 4D Whole-heart Imaging Jianing Pang, MS, Northwestern University W25 Highly Accelerated 3D Myocardial Late Gadolinium Enhancement MRI using ESPIRiT Compressed Sensing: Initial Feasibility Peng Lai, PhD, GE Healthcare W26 Synchronized Cardiac and Respiratory Sparsity for Rapid Free-Breathing Cardiac Cine MRI Li Feng, New York University School of Medicine W27 Accelerating Dynamic Imaging of the Lung Using Blind Compressed Sensing Mathews Jacob, The University of Iowa W28 Efficient Calculation of g-factors for CG-SENSE in High Dimensions: Noise Amplification in Random Undersampling POSTERS Mehmet Akcakaya. PhD, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center W29 The Use of k-t PCA Accelerated Dual-Venc 3D Flow MRI To Assess Hemodynamics Before and After Flow Diverting Stent Implantation in Cerebral Aneurysm Models Daniel Giese, University Hospital Cologne W30 Tissue Phase Mapping using Breath-hold 4D PCMR Jennifer Steeden, MEng, PhD, UCL Centre for Cardiovascular Imaging 8 SCMR/ISMRM Jointly Sponsored Workshop • January 16, 2014 Posters W31 Accelerating Spiral Tissue Phase Velocity Mapping without Affecting Peak Velocity Measurements Robin Simpson, MPhys, Imperial College W32 Selection of Sampling Points for Saturation Recovery Based Myocardial T1 Mapping Mehmet Akcakaya, PhD, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center W33 Highly Accelerated Real-time T2-weighted Imaging with Through-time Radial GRAPPA and Low-latency GPU Reconstruction Di Xu, The Johns Hopkins School of Medicine W34 Pencil Beam Excitation using a 2D Spatially Selective Adiabatic T2-Prep for Imaging the Left Coronary Arterial System Andrew Coristine, Vaudois University Hospital Centre (CHUV) / University of Lausanne (UNIL) W35 Dynamic Tracking of Manganese Uptake in Mouse Hearts by Rapid Multi-Slice T1 Mapping Xin Yu, Sc.D, Case Western Reserve University W36 Convex Gradient Optimization for Increased Spatiotemporal Resolution and Improved Accuracy in Phase Contrast MRI Daniel Ennis, PhD, University of California - Los Angeles W37 Inter-observer Variability of LV Mass and Volumes with Compressed Sensing Brett Cowan, BE(Hons) BHB MBChB, University of Auckland W38 Accelerating the Acquisition of the 3D Dual Cardiac Phase Technique using RPE Trajectories Karis Letelier, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile W39 Hemodynamic Study of TCPC Using In Vivo and In Vitro 4D Flow MRI and Numerical Simulation Alejandro Roldán-Alzate, PhD, University of Wisconsin High Spatial and Temporal Resolution Black-blood Dynamic Contrast-enhanced Carotid Artery Wall MRI using Compressed Sensing Zheng-Wei Zhou, University of California – Los Angeles POSTERS W40 www.scmr.org • www.ismrm.org 9 Author Index A H Aandal, Gunhild ....................................................W 12 Adluru, Ganesh ......................................................W 22 Ahmad, Rizwan ................................W 01, W 02, W 14 Akcakaya, Mehmet ......................................W 28, W 32 Allen, Bradley D. ..............................W 04, W 13, W 17 Almeida-Jones, Myriam E. ....................................W 08 Anagnostopoulos, Petros V. ..................................W 39 Andia, Marcelo E. ..................................................W 38 Atkinson, David ....................................................W 15 Axel, Leon ..............................................................W 26 Halperin, Henry ..........................................W 06, W 33 Han, Shuo ..............................................................W 33 Hansen, Michael ....................................................W 31 Hedderich, Dennis ................................................W 29 Herzka, Daniel A. ........................................W 06, W 33 Hu, Bob S. ..............................................................W 10 B Jacob, Mathews............................................W 23, W 27 Jenkins, Trevor........................................................W 12 Jiang, Kai ................................................................W 35 Jin, Ning ......................................................W 02, W 14 Johnson, Kenneth O...............................................W 10 Jolly, Marie-Pierre ..................................................W 04 Babu-Narayan, Sonya V. ........................................W 05 Barral, Joelle K. ......................................................W 10 Basha, Tamer A. ................................W 09, W 18, W 28 Berg, Sophie............................................................W 18 Bernhardt, Peter ......................................................W 21 Bogachkov, Abraham ............................................W 17 Bolin, Elijah............................................................W 08 Brau, Anja ....................................................W 03, W 25 Bunck, Alexander ..................................................W 29 C Campione, Karissa ......................................W 04, W 17 Carr, James C. ..................................W 04, W 13, W 17 Carr, Maria ........................................W 04, W 13, W 17 Chau, Thomas CP ..................................................W 11 Chen, Xiao..............................................................W 16 Chen, Yue ................................................................W 11 Chow, Gary CT........................................................W 11 Collins, Jeremy D. ............................W 04, W 13, W 17 Cordts, Marius........................................................W 04 Coristine, Andrew J. ..............................................W 34 Cowan, Brett R. ......................................................W 37 Craft, Jason ............................................................W 14 I Ingle, R Reeve..........................................................W 10 Irarrazaval, Pablo ..................................................W 38 J K Kabbasch, Christoph..............................................W 29 Keegan, Jennifer ..........................................W 20, W 31 Kilner, Philip J. ......................................................W 05 Kissinger, Kraig V. ........................................W 09, W 18 Knight, Daniel S. ....................................................W 15 Kolandaivelu, Aravindan ......................................W 33 Kollasch, Peter ........................................................W 27 Kowalik, Grzegorz T. ..................................W 15, W 30 Krishnamurthy, Rajesh ..........................................W 08 Krishnamurthy, Ramkumar ..................................W 08 Kwok, Ka-Wai..........................................................W 11 L DiBella, Edward V. ......................................W 22, W 23 Ding, Yu ..................................................................W 02 Lai, Peng ......................................................W 03, W 25 Letelier, Karis ..........................................................W 38 Li, Debiao ....................................................W 24, W 40 Liebig, Thomas ......................................................W 29 Lingala, Sajan Goud ....................................W 23, W 27 Luk, Wayne..............................................................W 11 Lydiard, Suzanne....................................................W 37 E M Ennis, Daniel B. ..........................................W 07, W 36 Epstein, Frederick H...............................................W 16 Maintz, David ........................................................W 29 Malone, LaDonna ..................................................W 08 Manning, Warren J. ....................................W 28, W 32 Meyer, Craig H. ......................................................W 16 Middione, Matthew J...................................W 07, W 36 Mohsin, Yasir..........................................................W 27 Muthurangu, Vivek......................................W 15, W 30 D F Fan, Zhaoyang ........................................................W 40 Feng, Li ..................................................................W 26 Feng, Xue ................................................................W 10 Ferreira, Pedro ........................................................W 05 Firmin, David ....................................W 05, W 20, W 31 Francois, Christopher J. ........................................W 39 Freed, Benjamin H. ................................................W 04 G Garcia-Rodriquez, Sylvana ....................................W 39 Gatehouse, Peter ....................................................W 31 Ghedin, Piero ........................................................W 25 Giannakidis, Archontis ..........................................W 05 Giese, Daniel ..........................................................W 29 Gilkeson, Robert ....................................................W 12 Giri, Shivraman ..........................................W 02, W 14 Goddu, Beth ................................................W 09, W 18 Gol Gungor, Derya ................................................W 01 Greiser, Andreas ....................................................W 37 Griswold, Mark A. ............................W 06, W 12, W 33 Guetter, Christoph ................................................W 04 Gulani, Vikas ..........................................................W 12 10 N Potter, Lee C. ..........................................................W 01 Prieto, Claudia ......................................................W 38 R Rajiah, Prabhakar ..................................................W 12 Raman, Subha V. ....................................................W 14 Rasche, Volker ........................................................W 21 Rivera, Leonardo ....................................................W 39 Roldan-Alzate, Alejandro ......................................W 39 Rottbauer, Wolfgang ..............................................W 21 Roujol, Sebastien....................................................W 09 S Sahu, Anurag ..........................................................W 19 Salerno, Michael ....................................................W 16 Santos, Juan M. ......................................................W 10 Saybasili, Haris ............................................W 06, W 33 Sayin, Ozan ............................................................W 06 Schmidt, Ehud J. ....................................................W 11 Schmidt, Michaela ................W 04, W 13, W 17, W 37 Schrot, Janelle ........................................................W 19 Scott, Andrew D. ....................................................W 05 Seiberlich, Nicole ..................W 06, W 12, W 20, W 33 Sharif, Behzad ........................................................W 40 Sieren, Jessica C. ....................................................W 27 Simonetti, Orlando P. ................................W 02, W 14 Simpson, Robin ..........................................W 20, W 31 Smith, Peter M. ......................................................W 04 Sodickson, Daniel K...............................................W 26 Spottiswoode, Bruce S. ....................W 04, W 13, W 17 Steeden, Jennifer A. ....................................W 15, W 30 Stuber, Matthias ....................................................W 34 T Tann, Oliver............................................................W 15 Taylor, Andrew ............................................W 15, W 30 Tejos, Cristian ........................................................W 38 Thedens, Daniel ....................................................W 27 Ting, Samuel T. ............................................W 02, W 14 Tse, Zion T. ..............................................................W 11 U Uribe, Sergio ..........................................................W 38 W Wasielewski, Marie ......................................W 04, W 17 Weingartner, Sebastian ..........................................W 32 Wieben, Oliver ......................................................W 39 Wu, Holden H. ............................................W 07, W 36 Wundrak, Stefan ....................................................W 21 Nadar, Mariappan S. ..............W 04, W 13, W 17, W37 Newell, John D.......................................................W 27 Nezafat, Reza..........................W 09, W 18, W 28, W 32 Nielles-Vallespin, Sonia ........................................W 05 Nystrom, Michelle M. ............................................W 10 X O Odille, Freddy ........................................................W 15 Otazo, Ricardo ......................................................W 26 Overall, William R. ................................................W 10 Yang, Yang ..............................................................W 16 Yeh, Victoria ..........................................................W 12 Young, Alistair ........................................................W 37 Yu, Xin ....................................................................W 35 P Z Pang, Jianing ..........................................................W 24 Paul, Jan ..................................................................W 21 Pednekar, Amol ......................................................W 08 Pennell, Dudley J. ..................................................W 05 Pietila, Todd ..........................................................W 19 Pontone, Gianluca ................................................W 25 Zenge, Michael O. ............................W 04, W 13, W 17 Zhang, Shelley H. ..................................................W 11 Zhou, Zheng-Wei ..................................................W 40 Zviman, Menekhem ....................................W 06, W 33 Xie, Yibin ................................................................W 40 Xu, Di......................................................................W 33 Xu, Jian ..................................................................W 26 Y SCMR/ISMRM Jointly Sponsored Workshop • January 16, 2014 Hotel Floor Plan The Hilton New Orleans Riverside FIRST FLOOR THIRD FLOOR www.scmr.org • www.ismrm.org 11 Save the Date! 2015 SCMR/EuroCMR* Joint Scientific Sessions *a meeting of the European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging (EACVI) - Section CMR February 5-7, 2015 Nice Acropolis Convention Centre | Nice, France
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