About this event
- Date and time Sat 14 Oct 2023 from 9:55am to 12:30pm
- Location Online
- Organised by Radiology
Join us for this interactive webinar to gain a comprehensive understanding of Chest X-Rays (CXRs). Starting from the normal CXR and working through patterns of infection, in this meeting you'll learn about interstitial and pleural disease, mediastinal and hilar abnormalities.
By attending, you will:
- Learn what constitutes a normal CXR
- Understand patterns of collapse and consolidation
- Gain confidence in the interpretation of mediastinal and hilar structures
- Work through and discuss examples of all the above
Participants will have the opportunity to read through a selection of cases via an online link that will be provided by 9 October 2023. The session will comprise of short lectures and feedback sessions of images sent to each attendee prior to the event.
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Agenda
View the programme
Welcome and introduction
Dr Indrajeet Das, Cardiothoracic Radiologist, University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust
Session 1
What is a normal CXR?
Dr Sa Tran, Consultant Thoracic Radiologist, King's College Hospital NHS Trust
The silhouette sign, lobar consolidation/collapse
Dr Sa Tran
Feedback session
Dr Sa Tran and Dr Indrajeet Das
Comfort break
Session 2
Pleural effusions, pneumothorax
Dr Indrajeet Das
Feedback session
Dr Indrajeet Das
Hilar and mediastinal structures
Dr Indrajeet Das
Feedback session
Dr Indrajeet Das
Closing remarks
Dr Indrajeet Das
Close of meeting
Location
Online
Registration for this event will close at 1:00am on 13 October 2023. Late registrations will not be accepted.
The agenda is subject to change at any time
If the event is recorded, we are only able to share presentations that we have received permission to share. There is no guarantee that all sessions will be available after the event, this is at the presenter’s and RSM’s discretion.
All views expressed at this event are of the speakers themselves and not of the Royal Society of Medicine, nor the speaker's organisations.
This event will be recorded and stored by the Royal Society of Medicine and may be distributed in future on various internet channels.