Refresher Course: Cardiac

RC 2203 - Guidelines and patient management for stable coronary artery disease

Lectures

1
Chairperson's introduction

Chairperson's introduction

05:00Michelle Claire Williams, Edinburgh / UK

2
Guidelines for non-invasive imaging of stable coronary artery disease

Guidelines for non-invasive imaging of stable coronary artery disease

15:00Ricardo P. J. Budde, Rotterdam / NL

3
CT for risk prediction and patient management in stable coronary artery disease

CT for risk prediction and patient management in stable coronary artery disease

--:--Marc Dewey, Berlin / DE

4
MRI for risk prediction and patient management in stable coronary artery disease

MRI for risk prediction and patient management in stable coronary artery disease

15:00Eike Nagel, Eschborn / DE

5
Panel discussion: For patients with stable chest pain, when should we use CT and when should we use MRI?

Panel discussion: For patients with stable chest pain, when should we use CT and when should we use MRI?

10:00Panel discussion: For patients with stable chest pain, when should we use CT and when should we use MRI?

5 min
Chairperson's introduction
Michelle Claire Williams, Edinburgh / United Kingdom
15 min
Guidelines for non-invasive imaging of stable coronary artery disease
Ricardo P. J. Budde, Rotterdam / Netherlands
1. To know the most important guidelines for non-invasive imaging of stable coronary artery disease.
2. To discuss when non-invasive imaging (CT and MRI) is indicated in the diagnosis of stable coronary artery disease.
3. To become familiar with how the findings on non-invasive imaging dictate patient management.
15 min
CT for risk prediction and patient management in stable coronary artery disease
Marc Dewey, Berlin / Germany
1. To understand in which patients' CT has the highest diagnostic accuracy.
2. To get a systematic review overview of CT trial evidence.
3. To learn about the unmet needs in coronary CT imaging.
15 min
MRI for risk prediction and patient management in stable coronary artery disease
Eike Nagel, Eschborn / Germany
1. To understand the strengths and limitations of MRI for stable coronary artery disease.
2. To learn about research evidence for MRI in stable coronary artery disease.
3. To elucidate the potential role of MRI in the management of the management of patients with stable coronary artery disease.
10 min
Panel discussion: For patients with stable chest pain, when should we use CT and when should we use MRI?

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