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FINAL PROGRAM Annual Scientific Sessions Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance February 1-4, 2017 Gaylord National Resort Washington, DC USA www.scmr.org 1 2 D E A R C M R C O M M U N I T Y, TABLE OF CONTENTS The 2017 Annual Scientific Sessions of the Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance will be the 20th of its kind and take place in Washington, D.C. Our International CMR meeting brings together all aspects of CMR from newsworthy basic technical developments to clinical science. We have the chance to improve our mutual understanding and to learn more about the use of CMR in both daily routine and cutting-edge research. The program will include several new components and we are looking forward to learn which one you like best. We are hoping that whatever your favorite aspect of the meeting will be, you will enjoy the atmosphere of an enthusiastic and dynamic field, gain new insights, and benefit from all the interactions that are the beauty of such a face-to-face meeting. Educational pre-conferences will address not only physicians with a general interest in CMR, but also basic scientists, as well as clinicians and researchers interested in congenital heart disease and interventional CMR. Specific highlights of this year’s meeting will include the Outreach Sessions dedicated to Heart Failure that will be jointly presented with the Heart Failure Society of America; the presentation of a live interventional CMR case; and “Mentor’s Corners” where attendees can directly get in touch with leading figures in the field about practical aspects of CMR such as training and women’s careers. This year’s SCMR-ISMRM co-sponsored workshop will focus on the potential of “CMR for probing mechanisms of heart disease“ and follow the path from „micro to macro to model“. As another important long-standing cooperation, we are grateful for the support of EACVI/ EuroCMR with the “CMR Worldcup” on Saturday. Joint sessions with ASCI, SMRA, and ESCR will complement the program of invited lecture, focus, oral abstract, and technologist sessions. Welcome .............................................3 About SCMR ........................................4 Conference Goals/Accreditation .........7 General Information ...........................9 Thursday Schedule at a Glance .........13 PRE-CONFERENCE COURSES Engineer’s Pre-conference Course .......................................14 Interventional Pre-conference Course .......................................15 Congenital Pre-conference Course .......................................16 Physician’s Pre-conference Course .......................................17 Thursday Program .............................18 Friday Schedule at a Glance .............23 Whatever your primary interest in CMR is: With numerous case sessions complemented by introductory lectures; >500 peer-reviewed scientific abstracts presented as posters, walking posters, power-pitch talks, or oral presentations; >80 invited lectures; and a Friday night event celebrating the 20th anniversary by looking at the past and the future of SCMR, this will be your meeting. We are looking forward to meeting you in Washington D.C. and celebrate with you the 20th anniversary of the Annual Scientific Sessions of SCMR! Friday Program .................................24 Sincerely, Exhibitor Directory ............................63 Program Chair Daniel Messroghli, MD Deutsches Herzzentrum Berlin and Charité - University Medicine Berlin Abstract Chair Juliano de Lara Fernandes, MD, PhD, MBA Jose Michel Kalaf Research, Campinas SCMR President Jeanette Schulz-Menger, MD Charité - University Medicine Berlin and HELIOS Clinics www.scmr.org Saturday Schedule at a Glance .........39 Saturday Program ............................40 Poster Directory ................................51 Exhibit Hall Floor Plan .......................67 Hotel Floor Plan ................................68 3 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC M R V I S I O N STATEM ENT The expanded recognition and utilization of CMR will improve cardiovascular health and outcomes. SC M R M I S S I O N STATEM ENT To improve cardiovascular health by advancing the field of CMR. We accomplish our mission through education, advocacy, networking, research and clinical excellence. PA ST PR ES I D ENT S 1996 - 1998 Gerald Pohost 2009 - 2010 Christopher Kramer 1998 - 2000 Dudley Pennell 2010 - 2011 Eike Nagel 2000 - 2002 Nathaniel Reichek 2011 - 2012 Scott Flamm 2002 - 2004 Robert Balaban 2012 - 2013 Andrew Arai 2004 - 2006 Warren Manning 2013 - 2014 Albert de Roos 2006 - 2008 Stefan Neubauer 2014 - 2015 Orlando Simonetti 2008 - 2009 Charles Higgins 2015 - 2016 Victor Ferrari Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance FINAL PROGR AM www.SCMR.org Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance FOURTH ANNUAL SCIENTIFIC SESSIONS JANUARY 26-28, 2001 SOCIETY FOR CARDIOVASCULAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE SECOND ANNUAL MEETING GRAND HYATT ATLANTA IN BUCKHEAD THIRD ANNUAL SCIENTIFIC SESSIONS SCMR Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Fifth Annual Scientific Sessions January 25 - 27, 2002 SCMR Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SCMR Sixth Annual Scientific Sessions ATLANTA, GEORGIA JANUARY 21–23,Resonance 2000 Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic GRAND HYATT HOTEL, ATLANTA IN BUCKHEAD 19 Mantua Road GEORGIA Mt. Royal, NJ ATLANTA, 08061 USA Phone: 856-423-7222, ext. 350 Fax: 856-423-3420 [email protected] Jointly Sponsored by the www.SCMR.org Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance & FINAL PROGRAM & SCMR Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Working Group Cardiovascular MR Tenth Annual SCMR Scientific Sessions/ Ninth Annual Scientific Sessions February 7-9, 2003 Orlando, Florida Sixth Meeting of the Euro CMR Working Group January 20 – 22, 2006 February 2 - 4, 2007 Doral Golf Resort & Spa Miami, florida Rome Cavalieri Hilton ROME ITALY Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance and the University of Minnesota JANUARY 22–24, 1999 GRAND HYATT ATLANTA IN BUCKHEAD www.SCMR.org ATLANTA, GEORGIA Atlanta 2001 Jointly sponsored by the Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance and the Division of Continuing Medical Education of the University of Alabama School of Medicine. 4 Atlanta 2001 FINAL PROGRAM WYNDHAM PALACE RESORT AND SPA LAKE BUENA VISTA FLORIDA FINAL PROGRAM Final Program Seventh Annual SCMR Scientific Sessions/ Euro CMR 2004 Meeting February 13-15, 2004 Hotel Fira Palace Barcelona, Spain Eighth Annual Scientific Sessions January 21 – 23, 2005 Hyatt Regency Embarcadero San Francisco, CA The Tenth Annual SCMR Scientific Sessions/Sixth Meeting of the Euro CMR Working Group is accredited by the European Board for Accreditation in Cardiology (EBAC) for 24 hours of External CME credits. REGISTRATION INFORMATION 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Sponsored by UNIVERSITY www.scmr.org OF Sponsored by M I N N E S O TA Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance H I STO RY O F SC M R Excerpt from “History of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Imaging” published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology (JACC) Imaging by Gerald M Pohost, MD, FACC, FAHA “There was so much potential for the application of magnetic resonance approaches to the cardiovascular system that I organized several annual meetings sponsored by the American Heart Association in collaboration with Charlie Higgins, MD, a pioneer in cardiovascular radiology at the University of California at San Francisco. These meetings became increasingly more popular and after several years I brought up the concept of establishing another Society focused on cardiovascular magnetic resonance. The response was mixed. Some were very much against it, but the majority was for it. Professor Donald Longmore, MD, a highly respected surgeon and MRI physician from the Royal Brompton Hospital in London was the most supportive. Accordingly, we proceeded to organize a new Society similar to the way in which we had organized the original SMRM. We developed a Board, an Executive Committee, a Journal (the Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance or JCMR), an annual meeting and several committees. That Society is growing and has been instrumental in providing an educational and scientific mission. It has an annual meeting every January and it is truly international. It has chapters in most continents including the latest chapter in Latin America. While there aren’t any Nobel Laureates in key Society positions yet, Mansfield, Lauterbur and Ernst have been honorary members of the editorial board of the JCMR.” 67406 SCMR Program_Layout 1 1/24/12 4:17 PM Page 1 FINAL PROGRAM FINAL PROGRAM Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance final program Final Program FINAL PROGRAM FINAL PROGRAM FINAL PROGRAM Pre-conference Courses - Physicians - Congenital/Pediatric February 2, 2012 FINAL PROGRAM Technologist Workshop February 3-5, 2012 11TH ANNUAL SCIENTIFIC SESSIONS JANUARY 31– FEBRUARY 3, 2008 Hyatt Regency Century Plaza California U NIVERSITY www.scmr.org Sponsored by OF M INNESOTA Jointly sponsored by: SCMR and the University of Minnesota www.scmr.org 13th Annual Scientific Sessions Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance 12th Annual Scientific Sessions January 29 – February 1, 2009 Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance January 21– 24, 2010 16th Annual Scientific Sessions 2011 SCmr / Euro Cmr Joint Scientific Sessions 15th Annual Scientific Sessions 19th Annual Scientific Sessions Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance January 30 - February 3, 2013 From Innovation to Impact in Cardiovascular Care 17th Annual Scientific Sessions January 16 - 19, 2014 FINAL PROGRAM January 27-30, 2016 february 3 – 6, 2011 Nice Acropolis Convention Centre Nice, France Hyatt Regency Century Plaza February 2-5, 1-5, 2012 SHERATON PHOENIX DOWNTOWN HOTEL www.scmreurocmr2015.org Marriott World Center Los Angeles, California USA www.scmr.org Orlando, Florida PHOENIX ARIZONA Jointly sponsored by: SCMR and the University of Minnesota www.scmr.org www.scmreurocmr2011.org Jointly sponsored by SCMR and the University of Minnesota Hilton San Francisco Union Square San Francisco, California www.scmr.org Jointly sponsored by SCMR and the University of Minnesota Hilton New Orleans Riverside | New Orleans, Louisiana www.scmr.org www.scmr.org Jointly Sponsored by SCMR and the University of Minnesota Nice Acropolis Convention www.scmreurocmr2015.org www.scmr.org 2015 Best Image Contest Winner, Lilia Sierra-Galan, MD, FACC,FSCCT (American British Cowdray Medical Center) Centre 1 5 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance BOA R D O F TRU STEES E X EC U TI V E CO M M IT TEE President Jeanette Schulz-Menger, MD Charite Universitatsmedizin and HELIOS Clinics Berlin, Germany Vice-President Matthias G. Friedrich, MD, FESC, FACC PROGR AM CHAIRS Program Committee Chair Daniel Messroghli, MD Deutsches Herzzentrum Berlin and Charité University Medicine Program Committee Co-Chair Juliano de Lara Fernandes, MD, PhD, MBA Jose Michel Kalaf Research Institute McGill University Health Centre Montreal, Canada PROGR AM COMMITTEE MEMBERS Secretary-Treasurer Matthias Stuber, PhD Lund University Hospital Anthony Aletras, PhD Lausanne University Lausanne, Switzerland Andrew Arai, MD Vice Secretary-Treasurer Andrew Powell, MD Colin Berry, PhD, FRCP NHLBI National Institutes of Health Children’s Hospital Boston Boston, MA USA Past President Victor A. Ferrari, MD University of Pennsylvania Medical Center Philadelphia, PA USA BOA R D M E M B E R S Timothy S. Albert, MD Tanner Heat and Vascular Center Carrollton, GA USA Wiphada Patricia Bandettini, MD National Institutes of Health Bethesda, MD USA James Carr, MD University of Virginia Health System David Sosnovik, MD Massachusetts General Hospital Anne Marie Valente, MD University of Glasgow Children’s Hospital Boston, Brigham & Women’s Hospital Chiara Bucciarelli-Ducci, MD, FESC Florian von Knobelsdorff, MD Bristol Heart Institute Charite University Medicine Stephen Cheung, MBBS Katherine Wu, MD Queen Mary Hospital Johns Hopkins Medical Institution Pierre Croisille, MD, PhD Alistair Young, PhD Universite J. Monnet University Of Auckland School Of Medicine Rohan Dharmakumar, PhD Erik Schelbert, MD, MS Cedars-Sinai Medical Center University of Pittsburgh Daniel Ennis, PhD Vanessa Ferreira, MD University of California University of Oxford Matthias Gutberlet, MD Marcelo Nacif, MD, PhD, MSc, FSCCT University of Leipzig Federal Fluminense University School of Medicine Peter Kellman, PhD John Greenwood, MBChB, PhD, FRCP Northwestern University Chicago, IL USA NHLBI National Institutes of Health University of Leeds Sebastian Kozerke, PhD Anna Herrey, MD Vanessa Ferreira, MD DPhil (Oxon.) University and ETH The Heart Hospital Imaging Centre Daniel Lee, MD Han W. Kim, MD Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine Duke Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Cente Vivek Muthurangu, MD Reza Nezafat, PhD UCL Institute of Cardiovascular Science Harvard Medical School Krishna Nayak, PhD Kanishka Ratnayaka, MD University and ETH Zurich, Switzerland University of Southern California NHLBI National Institutes of Health Subha Raman, MD Adam Dorfman, MD Tim Leiner, MD, PhD The Ohio State University University of Oxford Cardiovascular Medicine Oxfordshire, United Kingdom Alison Fletcher, DCRR, PG Dip Papworth Hospital, Cardio-thoracic Radiology Southampton, United Kingdom Sebastian Kozerke, PhD Utrecht University Medical Center Utrecht, Netherlands University of Michigan Michael Salerno, MD, PhD Daniel Messroghli, MD Deutsches Herzzentrum Berlin and Charité Berlin, Germany Reza Nezafat, PhD STAFF Harvard Medical School Boston, MA USA Dudley J. Pennell, MD, Editor of JCMR Royal Brompton Hospital London, United Kingdom Steffen E. Petersen, MD, DPhil, MPH Queen Mary, University of London London, United Kingdom Robert G. Weiss, MD Chief Executive Officer Orlando Simonetti, PhD Meeting Manager Maria Ramos, CMP Chief Operating Officer Pete Pomilio, MBA Program Manager Ashley Duffy Membership Manager Lisa Colangelo Johns Hopkins Hospital Baltimore, MD USA 6 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance TH E G OA L S O F TH E SC I ENTI FI C S ES S I O N S A R E TO: • Deliver state of the art information on the translational science and clinical impact of CMR • Provide a forum for the presentation of advances in CMR • Demonstrate CMR-based solutions to unmet needs in cardiovascular care AT TH E CO N C LU S I O N O F TH E SC I ENTI FI C S ES S I O N S , PA RTI C I PA NT S S H O U LD B E B ET TER A BLE TO: • Implement CMR services to improve cardiovascular care • Develop CMR-facilitated clinical and translational research • Apply relevant MR principles to improve image quality, data reliability and patient safety CO NTI N U I N G M EDI C A L EDUC ATI O N C R ED IT I N FO R M ATI O N – SC I ENTI FI C S ES S I O N S The Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) to provide continuing medical education for physicians. The ISMRM/SCMR Workshop and 20th Scientific Sessions offers CME to eligible participants. Detailed information pertaining to CME can be found on the 2017 Meeting Website: www.scmr2017.org. TEC H N O LOG I ST WO R K S H O P The ISMRM/SCMR Workshop and SCMR’s 20 th Scientific Sessions offers CE to eligible participants. This activity is approved by the American Society of Radiologic Technologists (ASRT) for Category A continuing education credit. FU N D I N G FRO M TH E N ATI O N A L I N STITUTE O F B I O M EDI C A L I M AG I N G A N D B I O EN G I N EER I N G Funding for this conference was made possible (in part) by 1R13EB 023789-01 from the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering. The views expressed in written conference materials or publications and by speakers and moderators do not necessarily reflect the official policies of the Department of Health and Human Services; nor does mention of trade names, commercial practices, or organizations imply endorsement by the U.S. Government. www.scmr.org 7 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance PA ST SC M R G O LD M EDA L AWA R D EES 2017 SCMR GOLD MEDAL AWARD The Board of Trustees of the Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance is pleased to announce the 2017 Gold Medal Award recipient is Nathaniel Reichek MD, FACC, FAHA, Professor of Medicine and Biomedical Engineering at Stony Brook University, SUNY. This award is presented annually by the SCMR for outstanding achievement in the field of CMR as well as exemplary service to the Society. 2016 AWA R D EES: Joao Lima, MD, MBA Eike Nagel, MD, PhD 2015 AWA R D EES: Christopher M. Kramer, MD Raymond J. Kim, MD Robert M. Judd, PhD 2014 AWA R D EE: Warren J. Manning, MD 2013 AWA R D EE: Stefan Neubauer, MD 2012 AWA R D EE: Dudley Pennell, MD 2011 AWA R D EES: Charles Higgins, MD Gerald Pohost, MD Nathaniel Reichek Dr. Reickek has contributed greatly to research in CMR for three decades. He was one of the very first cardiac imagers, along with Gerry Pohost and Charley Higgins, to delve into the field in its very earliest days. He has been an expert in cardiac MRI since 1983, when technology was still in its infancy. His legacy, one of many, is his priority to fostering positive, collaborative relationships with radiologists mentoring fellows to become leaders in the field. Dr. Reichek is a founding member of our society and for many years he and the SCMR have been practically synonymous. He served as our 3rd President and led SCMR during a time when it was still finding its way. He also held numerous other roles in the society, including Chair of the Clinical Trials Committee, the Nominating Committee, the U.S. Reimbursement Subcommittee, the Publications Committee, and member of the US Chapter Executive Committee and the Mentorship Program. Reichek has also been a fixture within multiple international cardiology societies including the AHA and ACC. He has authored 180 full peer-reviewed publications, many in the highest impact cardiovascular journals, as well as 68 reviews and editorials. Dr. Nathaniel Reichek is an undeniable leader in the cardiovascular research community, but it can be argued that Dr. Reichek’s greatest contribution to the field of SCMR has been his mentorship. Having mentored two past presidents and a long list of imaging trainees and junior faculty, this list reads like a who’s who of cardiac imaging. “Nat Reichek is truly a quadruple threat in the field of CMR – a leader, researcher, clinician, and mentor. I can think of no one more deserving of the Gold Medal of the Society” - Christopher Kramer, MD 8 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance G EN ER A L I N FO R M ATIO N ADMISSION EXHIBITS Conference name badges are required for admission to all activities related to the 20th Annual Scientific Sessions, including the exhibit hall and social events. Educational and informational exhibits will be available in the Prince George’s Exhibit Hall B during the Scientific Sessions. Exhibiting company representatives will be available to answer your questions about their products and services. Please visit the exhibits and thank the representatives for their support. The complete list of exhibits can be found on pages 62-64. REGISTRATION HOURS The Registration Desk is located in the Maryland Ballroom Foyer and will be open and staffed during the following hours: Tuesday, January 31 Wednesday, February 1 Thursday, February 2 Friday, February 3 Saturday, February 4 4:00 PM 7:00 AM 7:00 AM 7:00 AM 7:00 AM – 6:30 PM – 6:30 PM – 6:00 PM – 6:30 PM – 6:00 PM Thursday, February 2 1:00 PM – 7:00 PM Friday, February 3 10:00 AM – 6:30 PM Saturday, February 4 10:00 AM – 3:30 PM PHOTOGRAPHY DISCLOSURE STATEMENT It is the policy of the Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance to insure balance, independence, objectivity and scientific rigor in all of its sponsored educational activities. All participating speakers and moderators, course directors, and planning committee members are required to disclose to the program audience any financial relationships related to the subject matter of this program. Relationships of spouse/ partner with proprietary entities producing healthcare goods or services should be disclosed if they are of a nature that may influence the objectivity of the individual in a position to control the content of the CME activity. Disclosure information is reviewed in advance in order to manage and resolve any possible conflicts of interest. Specific faculty disclosure information for each speaker, course director, and planning committee member will be shared with the audience prior to the speaker’s presentation. A complete list of disclosures is available on the website. EVALUATIONS AND CME TRACKING FORMS Any photography, filming, taping, recording or reproduction in any medium including via the use of tripod-based equipment of any of the programs and/or posters presented at the 20th Annual Scientific Sessions without the express written consent of the Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance is strictly prohibited. SPEAKER READY ROOM The 2017 Program Committee is committed to providing attendees’ cutting edge technology and coordinated presentations at the Scientific Sessions. To be fully prepared for your session, each presenter is requested to visit the Speaker Ready Room at least 24 hours prior to your presentation. The Speaker Ready Room is located in the meeting room Mezzanine Room 1 and will be open the following days and times: Tuesday, January 31 Wednesday, February 1 Thursday, February 2 Friday, February 3 Saturday, February 4 5:00 PM 7:00 AM 7:00 AM 7:00 AM 7:00 AM – 8:00 PM – 8:00 PM – 6:00 PM – 6:00 PM – 5:00 PM LEVEL 1 CERTIFICATION At the conclusion of the SCMR Scientific Sessions, you will receive an invitation to complete the meeting survey. Please take the time to complete this survey as it provides very important feedback for future programming. Thank you, in advance, for completing the evaluation, your opinion and feedback matter! The Physician’s Pre-Conference Course together with the Case Review sessions held during the main conference are designed to provide attendees with a basic understanding of CMR methods and diagnostic utility. Attendance at the Physician’s Pre-Conference and at least 5 out of the 10 Case Review sessions fulfills all requirements of Level-1 CMR certification according to SCMR/COCATS 4 except for the required 1-month of training in CMR. Individuals seeking Level-1 CMR certification who have registered for and attended the Physician’s Pre-Conference, and have attended at least 5 Case Review sessions, are welcome to fill out the form provided on the meeting app and website requesting validation of attendance. The SCMR will provide an official letter stating that the attendee has partially fulfilled Level I certification requirements by receiving training in basic CMR background information and having been exposed to at least 25 mentored cases. www.scmr.org 9 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance gratefully acknowledges the 2017 support of the following industry partners: PLATINUM LEVEL GOLD LEVEL GE Healthcare GE Healthcare SILVER LEVEL Arterys Heart Imaging Technologies Medis Medical Imaging Systems NeoSoft/NeoCoil 10 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance DESC R I P TIO N O F S ES S IO N FO R M AT S CASE REVIEWS Case review sessions present instructional cases framed by overview talks on the application of CMR during ten (10) dedicated sessions, including one focused on selecting the Best Case of the Web featured on scmr.org. INVITED LECTURES Distinguished colleagues from around the globe will provide overview lectures on the latest evidence and state-of-the-art regarding topics of clinical application and research related to CMR. ORAL ABSTRACTS (10 sessions available) The traditional oral abstract presentation session. These sessions, together with the Focus Sessions, include the abstracts that received the highest ranking during peer-review and will present the most innovative research in CMR. POSTERS (3 sessions available) The traditional poster presentation session. Authors will be asked to be available at their poster board for discussions during these sessions. Besides these sessions, posters will be allowed to stay on display throughout the meeting. POWER PITCH SESSIONS (NEW ) (2 sessions available) The Power Pitch Sessions are designed to allow attendees to rapidly overview a significant number of abstracts in a concentrated fashion. Authors will present their abstracts in 3-minute talks, highlighting only the more objective details. Immediately after the session, questions and more in-depth discussions will take place directly with the presenters during traditional poster presentations. FOCUS SESSIONS (NEW ) (10 sessions available) The Focus Sessions will combine new scientific developments from abstract presentations with educational lectures tied by a central theme. Attendees will enjoy introductory lectures providing a technical and clinical background for the subject of the Session, followed by state-of-the-art developments presented by abstract authors. The addition of novelty abstract blocks to solid baseline talks should help build a rich teaching environment for the audience. TECHNOLOGIST TRACK A dedicated track of sessions for technologists. Talks from invited speakers and abstract presenters will focus on topics specific to technologists in the field of CMR. WALKING POSTERS (8 sessions available) The walking poster sessions are feature presentations of selected high-ranking posters moderated by senior CMR experts. Presenting authors will be expected to be present at their poster and give a short (5 min) oral overview on their work to moderators and attendees with a focus on results, followed by questions from the moderators. MENTOR’S CORNER (NEW ) Location: SCMR Booth in the Exhibit Hall The mission of SCMR is To improve cardiovascular health by advancing the field of CMR. Amongst others, SCMR hosts several committees and working groups to achieve this mission. The Mentor’s Corners are meant to give attendees direct access to these committees and groups. No matter if you have a specific question regarding practical aspects of your work in CMR, or if you simply would like to find out what the SCMR committees and groups are working on: Just meet the people behind SCMR live at the Mentor’s Corner! Thursday, February 2 2:45 PM – 3:30 PM How can I get help with CMR in my country? Mentors: Scott Flamm, Daniel Messroghli, Christian HamiltonCraig, James White, Kun-cheng Li, Jeanette Schulz-Menger, Hajime Sakuma, Erasmo de la Pena Almaguer, and Ted Martin Friday, February 3 11:00 AM – 11:15 AM How do I benefit from being a member of SCMR? Mentor: Nicole Seiberlich Friday, February 3 How can I get training in CMR? Mentor: Mark Westwood 12:30 PM – 1:30 PM Friday, February 3 Technologists in CMR Mentor: Alison Fletcher 2:45 PM – 3:30 PM Saturday, February 4 How do I run a clinical CMR site? Mentor: Timothy Albert 10:45 AM – 11:15 AM Saturday, February 4 Female career in CMR Mentor: Karen Ordovas 12:30 PM – 1:30 PM Saturday, February 4 2:45 PM – 3:30 PM How do I perform and publish CMR research? Mentors: Michael Markl and Chiara Bucciarelli-Ducci www.scmr.org 11 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance D ESC R I P TIO N O F S ES S IO N FO R M AT S PRODUCT THEATER (NEW ) Learn about new product enhancements directly from our industry partners. These non-CME, 30-minute sessions will be delivered in an enclosed meeting room located in the back of the exhibit hall. Participants include: • Siemens Healthcare: Thursday, 3:00 - 3:30 PM Compressed Sensing to Expand Possibilities in Cardiac Magnetic Resonance • GE Healthcare: Saturday, 10:45 - 11:15 AM Integration and Utility of ViosWorks into Routine Clinical Practice LIVE CASE Invasive X-ray guided cardiac catheterization hemodynamic and angiographic assessment is central to management of pediatric and adult cardiology patients. Similarly, cardiac MRI is a critical diagnostic tool to evaluate cardiac anatomy and function, measure volume and flow, measure tissue infarction, evaluate perfusion and viability, and allow for three-dimensional reconstruction of cardiac and vascular anatomy. Real-time cardiac MRI can guide invasive catheterization to provide a radiation-free, robust diagnostic option combining invasive catheter hemodynamic measurements and MRI physiologic assessment. CMR ANALYSIS SOFTWARE FACE-OFF Software tools for image analysis play an important role in CMR and make the difference in every-day workflow for CMR physicians. SCMR would like to establish new avenues of interaction between its members and software vendors in order to enhance visibility of existing products and facilitate feedback from users. In this plenary face-off session, software vendors will be given the opportunity to present the use of their software in a live setting. 12 WELCOME RECEPTION Kick-off the 20th Annual SCMR Scientific Sessions in the Exhibit & Poster Hall and network with our exhibit partners and poster presenters. 20TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION The upcoming Annual Scientific Sessions of the SCMR in February 2017 will be the 20th of its kind. As this 20-year history has been a remarkable success story, join us in celebrating this anniversary by going back through history together. The celebration will kick-off with opening remarks from the President, Jeanette Schulz-Menger, MD. In addition, past presidents will share the major developments, achievements, and challenges they faced during their presidency. The celebration will conclude with entertainment for all to enjoy. AWARDS RECEPTION Immediately following the Awards Ceremony, join us to congratulate this year’s award winners. 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2017 8:00 am 12:30 pm Maryland C Maryland A National Harbor 10 National Harbor 11 National Harbor 12-13 SCMR/ISMRM CO-PROVIDED WORKSHOP ENGINEER’S PRE-CONFERENCE COURSE INTERVENTIONAL PRE-CONFERENCE COURSE CONGENITAL PRE-CONFERENCE COURSE PHYSICIAN’S PRE-CONFERENCE COURSE 12:30 pm 1:30 pm Lunch (on own)/Exhibits 1:30 pm 2:45 pm Opening Plenary Session (Maryland 4-6) 2:45 pm 3:30 pm Break/Mentor’s Corner/Product Theater 3:30 pm 4:45 pm 5:00 pm 6:15 pm Maryland A National Harbor 12-13 National Harbor 10 Maryland C Maryland 1-3 INVITED LECTURE SESSION 1 FOCUS SESSION 1 ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION 1 CASE REVIEW 1 WALKING POSTER SESSION 1 Normal Ranges (ASCI) INVITED LECTURE SESSION 2 Myocardial Perfusion CMR Guidance for EP FOCUS SESSION 2 Congenital Fontan Non-Ischemic CM ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION 2 Early Career Awards 1 - Basic www.scmr.org Congenital/Pediatrics CASE REVIEW 2 Cardiac Infections PRE-CONFERENCE TH U R S DAY SC H EDU LE AT A G L A N C E Masses, Pericardial WALKING POSTER SESSION 2 Non-Ischemic CM 13 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance PR E- CO N FER EN C E S ES S IO N S THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2017 ENGINEER’S PRE-CONFERENCE COURSE Room: Maryland A Time: 8:00 AM – 12:30 PM SESSION 1: Normal Anatomy and Physiology Moderators: Daniel Lee, MD, MSc (Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine) M. Barbara Srichai-Parsia, MD, MS (Medstar Georgetown University Hospital) 8:00 AM 8:15 AM 8:30 AM 8:45 AM 9:00 AM Anatomy of the heart and great vessels Edwin Wu, MD (Northwestern University) Circulatory physiology Niti Aggarwal, MD (University of Wisconsin) Embryology: Mechanisms of congenital heart disease Lasya Gaur, MD (Johns Hopkins Children’s Center) How does the heart contract? Partho Sengupta, MD, DM, FACC, FASE (Mount Sinai Hospital) Round Table Discussion 9:15 AM – 9:30 AM Break SESSION 2: Heart Failure Pathophysiology Moderators: Amedeo Chiribiri, MD PhD (King’s College London) Subha Raman, MD (The Ohio State University) 9:30 AM 9:45 AM 10:00 AM 10:15 AM 10:30 AM Coronary artery disease Niti Aggarwal, MD (University of Wisconsin) Non-ischemic myocardial diseases Marianna Fontana, MD, PhD (UCL CMR unit Royal Free Hospital; National Amyloidosis Centre, University College London) Session 2: Heart Failure Pathophysiology: Valvular diseases Benjamin Freed, MD (Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine) Arrhythmias Aravindan Kolandaivelu, MD (Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine) Round Table Discussion 10:45 AM – 11:15 AM Break SESSION 3: Therapeutic Concepts in Heart Failure Moderators: Victor Ferrari, MD (University of Pennsylvania Medical Center) Valentina Puntmann, MD, PhD, FRCP (Goethe University Hospital Frankfurt) 11:15 AM 11:30 AM 11:45 AM 12:00 PM 12:15 PM 14 Pharmacotherapy Andreas Rolf (Kerckhoff-Heart-Center) Catheter-based interventions Anuj Gupta, Dr (University of Maryland School of Medicine) Surgical methods Gregory Rushing (The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center) Device therapy Karolina Zareba, MD (The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center) Round Table Discussion 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2017 Room: National Harbor 10 INTERVENTIONAL PRE-CONFERENCE COURSE Time: 8:00 AM – 12:30 PM CASE DISCUSSION SESSION Moderators: Toby Rogers, BM BCh, PhD (National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health) Vivek Muthurangu, MD (University College London) 8:00 AM 8:03 AM 8:21 AM 8:39 AM 8:57 AM 9:05 AM Welcome Kanishka Ratnayaka, MD (Rady Children’s Hospital) Gateway drug: X-Ray fused with MRI PRE-CONFERENCE PR E- CO N FER EN C E S ES S IO N S Brent Gordon, MD (Loma Linda University Children’s Hospital) When I could have really used ICMR! Amish Raval (University Wisconsin-Madison) MR guided interventional electrophysiology initial targets Saman Nazarian, MD, PhD (University of Pennsylvania) ICMR = One Stop Shop Toby Rogers, BM BCh, PhD (National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health) Moderated Panel Discussion 9:15 AM – 9:30 AM Break UPDATE ON PROGRESS SESSION Moderators: Mohammad Hussain, MD, PhD (Dept. of Pediatrics, UT Southwestern Medical Center) Robert Lederman, MD (National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health) 9:30 AM 9:38 AM 9:55 AM 10:03 AM 10:20 AM 10:28 AM 10:36 AM New Pediatric Cath Site Aimee Armstrong, MD (Nationwide Children’s Hospital) Old Pediatric Cath Site Joshua Kanter, MD (Children’s National Medical Center) New Pediatric Cath Site Alexander Dick (Ottawa Heart) Old Pediatric Cath Site Jaffar Khan, BM BCh (NHLBI, NIH) New EP Site Henry Chubb, MRCP MRCPCH (King’s College London) Old EP Site Philipp Sommer, MD, FHRS, FESC (Heart Center Leipzig) Moderated Panel Discussion 10:45 AM – 11:00 AM Break FUTURE SESSION Moderators: Henry Chubb, MRCP MRCPCH (King’s College London) Brent Gordon, MD (Loma Linda University Children’s Hospital) 11:03 AM 11:15 AM 11:27 AM 11:39 AM 11:51 AM 12:03 PM 12:15 PM MRI Catheterization Device Visualization Adrienne Campbell-Washburn, PhD (National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health) ICMR EP Instrumentation or Devices Bruno Quesson, PhD (Bordeaux) ICMR Cryoablation Eugene Kholmovski, PhD (University of Utah) iCMR guidance for endovascular therapy Fabio Settecase 10 year plan: MR guided fetal intervention Chris Macgowan, PhD (University of Toronto & Hospital for Sick Children) MRI guided transcatheter shunts Kanishka Ratnayaka, MD (Rady Children’s Hospital) Moderated Panel Discussion www.scmr.org 15 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance PR E- CO N FER EN C E S ES S IO N S THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2017 Room: National Harbor 11 CONGENITAL PRE-CONFERENCE COURSE Time: 8:00 AM – 12:30 PM SESSION 1: CMR Program Basics Moderators: Willem Helbing (Erasmus Medical Ctr-Sophia Children’s Hospital) Adam Dorfman, MD (University of Michigan) 8:00 AM 8:00 AM 8:15 AM 8:45 AM 9:00 AM How to write a report Ruchira Garg, MD FACC FASE (Cedars-Sinai Medical Center) Normative values for the ventricles and aorta in children Emanuela Valsangiacomo Buechel (University Childre’s Hospital Zurich) When should we do serial exams? Tal Geva, MD (Harvard Medical School and Boston Children’s Hospital) Measuring ventricular size and function Jimmy Lu, MD (University of Michigan) Special considerations for adult congenital patients Anne Valente, MD (Boston Children’s Hospital; Brigham and Women’s Hospital) 9:15 AM – 9:30 AM Break SESSION 2: Clinical Conundrums Moderators: Rajesh Krishnamurthy (Nationwide Children’s Hospital) Anne Valente, MD (Boston Children’s Hospital; Brigham and Women’s Hospital) 9:30 AM 9:45 AM 10:00 AM 10:15 AM 10:15 AM When should I use contrast? Cynthia Rigsby, MD, FACR (Ann & Robert H Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago) How to accurately assess mixed aortic valve disease Mark Fogel, MD, FAHA, FACC, FAAP (Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia) How to do complex flow calculations Oliver Tann, MD, FRCR (Great Ormand Street Hospital) When should I do late gadolinium enhancement? Michael Taylor, MD, PhD (Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center) Assessing infant anatomy- CT vs. MR B. Kelly Han, MD (Minneapolis Heart Institute) 10:30 AM – 11:15 AM Break SESSION 3: Acquired Pediatric Disease Moderators: Kan Hor, MD (Nationwide Children’s Hospital) Taylor Chung (UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital Oakland) 11:15 AM 11:30 AM 11:45 AM 12:00 PM 12:15 PM 16 Assessing ARVC in Pediatric patients Jason Christensen, MD (Vanderbilt University Medical Center) Cardiac masses and tumors Ashwin Prakash, MD (Boston Children’s Hospital) Pediatric aortopathy Shaine Morris, MD MPH (Baylor College of Medicine) Stress perfusion in pediatric heart disease Cory Noel, MD (Texas Children’s Hospital) Assessing for chemotherapy-related disease Olga Toro-Salazar, MD (Connecticut Children’s Medical Center) 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance PR E- CO N FER EN C E S ES S IO N S THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2017 PHYSICIAN’S PRE-CONFERENCE COURSE TIME: 8:00 AM – 12:30 PM SESSION 1: Basics of MRI Moderators: Merlin Fair, MRes (Royal Brompton Hospital) Susanne Schnell, PhD (Northwestern University) 8:00 AM 8:15 AM 8:30 AM 8:45 AM 9:00 AM Key Hardware Components: What’s inside? Michael Schär, PhD (Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine) MRI Safety: Biology vs. Physics PRE-CONFERENCE Room: National Harbor 12-13 Peng Hu, PhD (University of California, Los Angeles) Image Formation: From Spins to Pictures Sebastian Weingaertner, PhD (Heidelberg University) How to Decrypt a Pulse Sequence Daniel Ennis, PhD (University of California, Los Angeles) Concepts in Fast & Parallel Imaging Nicole Seiberlich, PhD (Case Western Reserve University) 9:15 AM – 9:30 AM Break SESSION 2: Applications 1 Moderators: Katherine Wu (Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions) Sebastian Kozerke, PhD (University and ETH Zurich) 9:30 AM 9:42 AM 9:54 AM 10:06 AM 10:18 AM 10:30 AM Ventricular function A - Technical methods Yuchi Han, MD (University of Pennsylvania) Ventricular function B - How to Valentina Puntmann, MD, PhD, FRCP (Goethe University Hospital Frankfurt) First pass perfusion A - Technical methods Michael Salerno, MD, PhD (University of Virginia) First pass perfusion B - How to Rolf Gebker, MD, PhD (Deutsches Herzzentrum Berlin) Late gadolinium enhancement A - Technical methods Robert Biederman, MD, FACC, FAHA (Allegheny General Hospital) Late gadolinium enhancement B - How to W. Patricia Bandettini, MD (National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health) 10:45 AM – 11:15 AM Break SESSION 3: Applications 2 Moderators: J. Paul Finn, MD (UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine) Anthony Aletras, PhD (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki/Lund University) 11:15 AM 11:27 AM 11:39 AM 11:51 PM 12:03 PM 12:15 PM T1/T2-weighted and parametric mapping A - Technical methods Giulia Ginami, PhD (King’s College London) T1/T2-weighted and parametric mapping B - How to Alexander Gotschy, MD, MSc (ETH Zurich & University Hospital Zurich) Cardiovascular flow A - Technical methods Alex Barker, PhD (Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine) Cardiovascular flow B - How to Malenka Bissell, DPhil, MD (Oxford University) Coronary artery imaging A - Technical methods Allison Hays, MD (Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine) Coronary artery imaging B - How to Hajime Sakuma, MD, PhD (Mie University Hospital) www.scmr.org 17 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2017 12:30 PM – 1:30 PM Women In CMR Section Room: Chesapeake K-L 12:30 PM – 1:30 PM Lunch (on own)/Exhibits Room: Maryland 4-6 Time: 1:30 PM – 2:45 PM OPENING PLENARY SESSION Moderators: Jeanette Schulz-Menger, MD (Charité University Medicine Berlin and Helios Clinics) Daniel Messroghli, MD (Charité University Medicine and Deutsches Herzzentrum Berlin) 1:30 PM 1:45 PM 2:00 PM 2:15 PM 2:30 PM Welcome Jeanette Schulz-Menger, MD (Charité University Medicine Berlin and Helios Clinics) Lessons learned from 20 years of SCMR Joao Lima, MD (Johns Hopkins University) Cardiovascular magnetic resonance: State-of-the-art in 2017 Eike Nagel, MD, PhD (Goethe University Frankfurt) What’s next to come in CMR? Robert Balaban, PhD (National Heart Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health) The heart failure epidemic: Diagnostic needs John Cleland, MD PhD (University of Hull and Imperial College London) 2:45 PM – 3:30 PM Product Theater - Siemens Healthcare Compressed Sensing to Expand Possibilities in Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Speakers: Juerg Schwitter, MD (University of Lausanne) Susanne von Vietinghoff (Siemens Healthcare) INVITED LECTURE SESSION 1: Room: Maryland A Time: 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM Normal Ranges and Standardized Protocols Asian Society of Cardiovascular Imaging (ASCI) Moderators: Bharath Ambale Venkatesh, PhD (Johns Hopkins University) Pierre Croisille, MD PhD (University Lyon, Jean-Monnet University-Saint-Etienne) 3:30 PM 3:45 PM 4:00 PM 4:15 PM 4:30 PM Why is it More Critical Than Ever to Have Standardized CMR Protocols and Reference Ranges: Lessons from MESA and other cohort studies David Bluemke, MD, Ph.D (National Institutes of Health) Standardization of the Assessment of Cardiac Function Calvin Chin Woon Loong, MD PhD (National Heart Centre Singapore) Parametric mapping (T1, T2, T2*,ECV): What is normal? Can we standardize measures? James Moon, MBBS, MD, MRCP (Barts Heart Centre and St. Bartholomew’s Hospital) Quality Control in 2D and 4D Flow Imaging Yasuo Takehara, MD, DMSc (Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine) What are normal reference ranges and standard CMR protocols for children? What every CMR imager should know Philipp Beerbaum, MD (Medical University Hannover) FOCUS SESSION 1: CMR Guidance for Cardiac Electrophysiology Room: National Harbor 12-13 Time: 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM Moderators: Thomas Deering, MD, FACC, FACP, FHRS (Piedmont Healthcare) Saman Nazarian, MD, PhD (University of Pennsylvania) 3:30 PM 3:40 PM 3:50 PM 18 Ventricular Tachycardia Ablation guided by Cardiac MRI Toby Rogers, BM BCh, PhD (National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health) Real-time MRI Cardiac Electrophysiology: Disease targets and device progress Bruno Quesson, PhD (Bordeaux University) F001 Non-contrast-enhanced imaging of radiofrequency ablation lesions in normal and infarcted myocardium Michael Guttman, MS (The Johns Hopkins University, School of Medicine) 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S F002 4:10 PM F003 4:20 PM F004 4:30 PM F005 Assessment of radiofrequency ablation lesions over time using non-contrast-enhanced imaging Susumu Tao, MD, PhD (Johns Hopkins University, School of Medicine) Increased efficiency catheters for MRI-guided Electro-physiology (EP); initial results Ehud Schmidt, PhD (Brigham and Women’s Hospital) Noise reduction techniques for 3D Motion Correction on intra-cardiac active MR-tracked devices Jose De Arcos Rodriguez, PhD (Brigham and Women’s Hospital) RF-induced heating of commercial guidewires in clinically relevant configurations Adrienne Campbell-Washburn, PhD (National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health) Room: National Harbor 10 Time: 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION 1: Non-Ischemic Cardiomyopathies Moderators: Anthony Aletras, PhD (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki/Lund University) Igor Klem, MD (Duke University Medical Center) 3:30 PM O001 3:40 PM O002 3:50 PM O003 4:00 PM O004 4:10 PM O005 4:20 PM O006 4:30 PM O007 ECV Imaging In Left Ventricular Hypertrophy: Cell And Matrix Expansion Have Disease-Specific Relationships THURSDAY PROGRAM 4:00 PM THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2017 Thomas Treibel, MBBS, MRCP (Barts Heart Centre) Regression of cardiac AL amyloid following chemotherapy demonstrated by cardiovascular magnetic resonance Ana Martinez-Naharro, MD (National Amyloidosis Centre, University College London) Dual Identity of the Interventricular Septum with In Vivo Diffusion Tensor Imaging Pedro Ferreira, PhD (The Royal Brompton Hospital) A MRI-based Algorithm for Pattern Recognition and Machine Learning of 3D Myocardial Strains for Classifying Disease Status in Dilated Cardiomyopathy Julia Kar, PhD (Washington University) Prediction of Adverse Cardiovascular Outcomes in Patients with Mild Dilated Cardiomyopathy using Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Brian Halliday, BSc (Hons) MBChB (Hons) (Royal Brompton Hospital and National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College London) Early changes of native T1 time predict development of subsequent anthracycline-induced cardiomyopathy with impaired systolic function Fabian Muehlberg, MD (Charité University Medicine and Helios Clinics) Burden of Trabecular and Papillary-Muscle Volume is Not Associated with Incident Adverse Cardiovascular Disease Events Michael Chuang, MD (Framingham Heart Study) Room: Maryland C Time: 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM CASE REVIEW 1: Congenital – Pediatric Moderators: Craig Broberg, MD, MCR (Oregon Health and Science University) Andrew Taylor, MD, FRCR, FRCP (University College London, Great Ormond Street Hospital) 3:30 PM Key Techniques and Standard Reporting Rajesh Krishnamurthy (Nationwide Children’s Hospital) 3:40 PM C001 3:47 PM C002 3:54 PM C003 4:01 PM C004 4:08 PM C005 The Role of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Determining Cardiac Anatomy in Surgical Planning for the Successful Separation of Thoracoomphalophagus Conjoined Twins Jennifer Co-Vu, MD (University of Florida) An Example of the Improved Diagnostic Utility of Black Blood Delayed Enhancement (FIDDLE) in a Patient with Complete Transposition of the Great Arteries Michael Campbell, MD, MHA (Duke University) Uhl’s Anomaly: Absence of right ventricular myocardium Bharti Sharma, MD (STAR Hospitals) Scimitar syndrome: An unnatural history of a baffling baffle Anuj Pareek, MD (Aarhus University Hospital) Three atrioventricular valves? Three is too much! Deepa Prasad, MBBS MD (Boston Children’s Hospital) www.scmr.org 19 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S 4:15 PM C006 4:22 PM C007 4:29 PM THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2017 Noninvasive Diagnosis of Coronary-cameral Fistula in a Child with Tricuspid and Pulmonary Atresia: Advantages of Gadofosveset-enhanced MRI Nam Ju Lee, MD, MMS (Johns Hopkins University, School of Medicine) Increased efficiency catheters for MRI-guided Electro-physiology (EP); initial results Ehud Schmidt, PhD (Brigham and Women’s Hospital) The advanced congenital MR protocol Albert de Roos, MD, PhD (Leiden University Medical Center) WALKING POSTER SESSION 1: Cardiac Masses, Pericardial Disease and Systemic Disorders Room: Maryland 1-3 Time: 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM Moderators: Carlos Rochitte, MD PhD (University of Sao Paulo Medical School) Sophie Mavrogeni (Onassis Cardiac Surgery Center) 3:30 PM WP01 WP02 3:38 PM WP03 3:46 PM WP04 3:54 PM WP05 4:02 PM WP06 4:10 PM WP07 4:18 PM WP08 4:26 PM WP09 CMR study of histologically proven primary tumours of the aorta and pulmonary arteries Monika Arzanauskaite (Royal Brompton Hospital) Withdrawn Pericardial and pleural effusions differ in native T1 mapping and quantitative contrast dynamics Simon Thalén (Karolinska Institutet) Potential utility of T1 mapping to characterize pericardial effusions Hilda Gonzalez Bonilla, MD (Houston Methodist Hospital) Ventricular Remodeling and Right Ventricular Involvement in Patients with Early Stage Breast Cancer Receiving Anthracycline Chemotherapy Mustafa Altaha, MBBS (Institute of Medical Science, University of Toronto) Quantitative multiparametric assessment of chemotherapy-associated cardiotoxicity: a cross-sectional cardiovascular magnetic resonance study in cancer survivors Willeke Naaktgeboren, BSc (University Medical Center Utrecht) Diffuse Myocardial Fibrosis In Systemic Sclerosis – Quantification Of Progression And Response To Therapy by CMR Daniel Lee, MD, MSc (Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine) DENSE CMR in tuberculous pericardial constriction reveals impaired strain which correlates with late gadolinium enhancement and pericardial thickness and is worse in those with HIV co-infection Stephen Jermy, M.Eng (University of Cape Town) Evaluation of Myocardial Inflammation and Fibrosis with Restricted Diffusion MRI in Non-Human Primate (NHP) Models of AIDS Yijen Wu, PhD (University of Pittsburgh and Rangos Research Center Imaging Core) INVITED LECTURE SESSION 2: Myocardial Perfusion Imaging and Quantification Room: Maryland A Time: 5:00 PM – 6:15 PM Moderators: Michael Salerno, MD, PhD (University of Virginia) Peter Kellman, PhD (National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health) 5:00 PM 5:15 PM 5:30 PM 5:45 PM 6:00 PM 20 Why should we quantify myocardial perfusion? Lessons from PET Marcelo Di Carli, MD (Brigham and Women’s Hospital) What are the current challenges for clinical adoption of quantitative CMR? Sven Plein, MD PhD (London; King’s College London; University of Leeds) Optimizing workflow: In- line quantification of myocardial perfusion Hui Xue, Maryland (National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health) CMR perfusion in CAD and non-ischemic heart disease Amedeo Chiribiri, MD PhD (King’s College London) The future of perfusion CMR Edward DiBella, PhD (University of Utah) 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2017 Room: National Harbor 12-13 Time: 5:00 PM – 6:15 PM FOCUS SESSION 2: The Fontan and Single-ventricle Heart Disease Moderators: Andrew Taylor (University College London, Great Ormond Street Hospital) Mark Fogel, MD, FAHA, FACC, FAAP (Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia) 5:10 PM CMR and Clinical Outcomes in Fontan Patients Rahul Rathod, MD (Boston Children’s Hospital) Computational Fluid Dynamics and CMR: Using CMR data for Interventional Planning in Single Ventricle Heart Disease Ajit Yoganathan, PhD (The Georgia Institute of Technology) 5:20 PM F006 5:30 PM F007 5:40 PM F008 5:50 PM F009 6:00 PM F010 Fontan circulation shows deranged haemodynamics with 4D flow CMR Malenka Bissell, DPhil, MD (Oxford University) Evaluation of right ventricular function in Fontan physiology using feature tracking magnetic resonance strain, strain rate and wall motion delay Akio Inage, MD (Division of Pediatric Cardiology) THURSDAY PROGRAM 5:00 PM Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Tissue Tracking In Single Ventricle Fontan Patients Stephanie Ambach (The Christ Hospital Health Network) A novel imaging method, vortex flow mapping using cine magnetic resonance imaging, revealed that vortex flow in the Fontan route is associated with supraventricular tachycardia after Fontan operation Tatsunori Takahashi, MD (Tokyo Women’s Medical University) The impact of systemic-to-pulmonary collateral flow (SPCF) in patients after Fontan operation assessed with 4D flow MRI. Abdullah AL Bulushi, MD (University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein) Room: National Harbor 10 Time: 5:00 PM – 6:15 PM ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION 2: Early Career Awards 1: Basic Science Moderators: Matthias Stuber, PhD (University of Lausanne) Sonia Nielles-Vallespin, PhD, MSc (National Institutes of Health) 5:00 PM O008 5:10 PM O009 5:20 PM O010 5:30 PM O011 5:40 PM O012 5:50 PM O013 6:00 PM O014 In vitro and in vivo effects of CMR on circulating leukocytes William Critchley, BSc MRes (University of Manchester) MRI assessment of coronary endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) function using T1 mapping Sophia Cui, B.S. (University of Virginia) Wideband late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) imaging in patients with implanted cardiac devices gives important clinical insights: robust free-breathing protocol with motion correction and 2D FLASH PSIR Anish Bhuva, MRCP MBBS (Barts Heart Centre, University College London) Scimitar syndrome: An unnatural history of a baffling baffle Anuj Pareek, MD (Aarhus University Hospital) Validation of Diffusion Tensor CMR-based Myocardial Fiber Orientation Mapping of Intact Hearts using Optically Transparent Tissue Preparation with 3D Optical Microscopy Christopher Nguyen, PhD (Cedars-Sinai Medical Center) Phase-Contrast MRI with Hybrid One- and Two-sided Flow-Encoding and Velocity Spectrum Separation (HOTSPA) Da Wang, MS (University of California, Los Angeles) Validation of Fully Automatic Absolute Myocardial Perfusion Quantification by Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging versus Invasive Fractional Flow Reserve in Swine Daniel Groves, MD (National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health) Room: Maryland C Time: 5:00 PM – 6:15 PM CASE REVIEW 2: Cardiac Infections Worldwide Moderators: Lilia Sierra-Galan, MD (American British Cowdray Medical Center) Kun-Cheng Li (Xuanwu Hospital,Capital Medical University) 5:00 PM World map of cardiac infections Carlos Rochitte, MD PhD (R: University of Sao Paulo Medical School) www.scmr.org 21 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S 5:10 PM C008 5:17 PM C009 5:24 PM C010 5:31 PM C011 5:38 PM C012 5:45 PM C013 5:52 PM C013A 5:59 PM THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2017 Infected Myocardial Calcific Deposit: Value of Multimodality Imaging Rajesh Janardhanan, MD, FACC (Banner University Medical Center) A complex phenomenon or plain bad luck - viral myocarditis in Becker’s Muscular Dystrophy Hao Hsu, MD (University of Nebraska Medical Center) A Case of Adhesive Mediastinopericarditis Post Orthotopic Cardiac Transplant Syed Latif, MD (Yale University) Löffler Endocarditis: Multimodality Imaging Approach (Case Review with Histopathologic Correlation) Harold Goerne (UT Southwestern Medical Center) 49 Year-Old Congolese Man with Myocardial Cysts Daniel Groves, MD (National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health) Clinical Applications of CMR in Rheumatic Cardiomyopathy, When Myocardial Fibrosis Matters. Lilia Sierra-Galan, MD (American British Cowdray Medical Center) Unexpected Cardiomyopathy Diagnosis and Outcome by CMR Bernardo Lopes, MD (University of Sao Paulo) Optimizing CMR for Infectious Diseases Ntobeko Ntusi, MD DPhil (University of Cape Town and Groote Schuur Hospital) WALKING POSTER SESSION 2: Non-ischemic Cardiomyopathies Room: Maryland 1-3 Time: 5:00 PM – 6:15 PM Moderators: Scott Flamm, MD MBA (Cleveland Clinic) Sanjay Prasad, MD (Royal Brompton Hospital and Imperial College) 5:00 PM WP10 5:08 PM WP11 5:16 PM WP12 5:32 PM WP14 5:34 PM WP13 5:40 PM WP15 5:48 PM WP16 5:56 PM WP17 6:04 PM WP18 6:15 PM – 7:30 PM 22 Cardiac Magnetic Resonance derived Extracellular Volume Fraction as a Marker for Myocardial Fibrosis – The Importance of Coexisting Pathologies Julia Lurz, MD (Heart Center Leipzig) Fabry disease is a chronic inflammatory cardiomyopathy – insights from multiparametric mapping and blood biomarkers. Sabrina Nordin, BMBS, MRCP (UK) (Barts Heart Centre) Cardiovascular magnetic resonance in transthyretin amyloidosis: an under-recognised and emerging cause of heart failure. A 230 patient prospective study Ana Martinez-Naharro, MD (National Amyloidosis Centre, University College London) Predictive role of myocardial fibrosis in thalassemia intermedia patients Antonella Meloni, PhD (Fondazione G. Monasterio CNR Regione Toscana) Extracellular volume fraction may predict outcomes among hypertrophic cardiomyopathy patients without late gadolinium enhancement Clement Cholet, MD (University of Pittsburgh Medical Center) Intermediate Signal Late Gadolinium Enhancement is Predictive of Sudden Cardiac Death and Appropriate ICD Shock in Patients With Non-Ischemic Dilated Cardiomyopathy Kai Homer (Stephenson Cardiac Imaging Centre, Libin Cardiovascular Institute of Alberta, University of Calgary) Native T1 and T2 mapping in recognition of cardiac involvement in systemic sarcoidosis Valentina Puntmann, MD, PhD (Institute of experimental and translational cardiovascular imaging) Extracellular matrix expansion as measured by cardiac MRI impacts diastolic dysfunction Akira Wada, MD (Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center) Left atrial dilatation and impaired atrial function are associated with the burden of left ventricular interstitial fibrosis in arterial hypertension Tamas Erdei, PhD (Cardiac MRI Unit, Bristol Heart Institute, Bristol) Welcome & Poster Reception with Exhibitors 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance FR I DAY SC H EDU LE AT A G L A N C E FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2017 7:15 am 8:00 am Working Groups 8:00 am 9:15 am Chesapeake DEF INVITED LECTURE FOCUS SESSION 3 SESSION 3 Multi-system Motion Compensation Disorders Chesapeake ABC ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION 3 Congenital Maryland C GCMR PRESENTATION Maryland 1-3 WALKING POSTER TECHNOLOGIST SESSION 3 TRACK 1 Experimental CMR 9:30 am 11:00 am SCMR MEMBER ASSEMBLY AND LIVE CASE ICMR (Maryland 4-6) 11:00 am 11:15 am Break Maryland A 11:15 am 12:30 pm 12:30 pm 1:30 pm INVITED LECTURE FOCUS SESSION 4 SESSION 4 Multi-modality (ESCR) Myocarditis Exhibit Hall B Maryland C POWER PITCH SESSION 1 CASE REVIEW 3 MRI and Devices Lunch (on own)/Mentor’s Corner/Exhibits/ Product Theater/Poster Group 2 Maryland A 1:30 pm 2:45 pm Chesapeake DEF Chesapeake DEF INVITED LECTURE FOCUS SESSION 5 SESSION 5 Acute Chest Pain Congenital Basics 2:45 pm 3:30 pm Chesapeake ABC ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION 4 New Techniques Chesapeake GHI Maryland 1-3 CMR Physics Chesapeake GHI WALKING POSTER TECHNOLOGIST SESSION 4 TRACK 2 Ventricular Function FRIDAY PROGRAM Maryland A CMR Acquisition Lunch Symposium (Maryland BD, 4-6) Maryland C Maryland 1-3 Chesapeake GHI WALKING POSTER TECHNOLOGIST SESSION 5 TRACK 3 Mapping the Heart CASE REVIEW 4 Flow and Vascular Cardiomyopathy Break/Mentor’s Corner/Product Theater Maryland A Chesapeake DEF 3:30 pm 4:45 pm INVITED LECTURE FOCUS SESSION 6 SESSION 6 HCM 5:00 pm 6:15 pm INVITED LECTURE FOCUS SESSION 7 SESSION 7 New Frontiers Clinical Trials Aortopathy (SMRA) Chesapeake ABC Maryland C ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION 5 CASE REVIEW 5 Early Career Awards 2 - Translational Perfusion or Flow ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION 6 CASE REVIEW 6 Clinical Outcomes Heart Failure & Arrythmia Maryland 1-3 WALKING POSTER TECHNOLOGIST SESSION 6 TRACK 4 Novel Methods Angiography WALKING POSTER TECHNOLOGIST SESSION 7 TRACK 5 Tissue Mapping 6:15 pm 7:00 pm Software Face-off (National Harbor 12-13) 7:00 pm 10:00 pm SCMR’s 20th Anniversary Celebration (Maryland BD, 4-6) www.scmr.org Chesapeake GHI Pediatric 23 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S 8:00 AM – 9:15 AM FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2017 Global CMR Registry Informational Meeting INVITED LECTURE SESSION 3: Advanced Motion Compensation Techniques Room: Maryland C Room: Maryland A Time: 8:00 AM – 9:15 AM Moderators: Matthias Stuber, PhD (University of Lausanne) Daniel Ennis, PhD (University of California, Los Angeles) 8:00 AM 8:15 AM 8:30 AM 8:45 AM 9:00 AM Prospective Respiratory Navigation Jennifer Keegan, MSc PhD (Royal Brompton Hospital) Retrospective Respiratory Motion Compensation Michael Hansen, PhD (National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health) Cardiac Motion - Do we still need ECG gating? Peng Hu, PhD (University of California, Los Angeles) How can we achieve 100% Acquisition Efficiency? Sébastien Roujol, PhD (King’s College London) Pushing The Limits Debiao Li, PhD (Cedars-Sinai Medical Center) FOCUS SESSION 3: CMR In Multi-System Disorders Room: Chesapeake DEF Time: 8:00 AM – 9:15 AM Moderators: Ali Yilmaz, MD (University Hospital Muenster) Subha Raman, MD (The Ohio State University) 8:00 AM 8:10 AM Cardiac Involvement in Neuromuscular Diseases Michael Taylor, MD, PhD (Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center) CMR findings in Kidney Disease Richard Steeds, MA MD FRCP FESC (University Hospital Birmingham) 8:20 AM F011 8:30 AM F012 8:40 AM F013 8:50 AM F014 9:00 AM F015 9:00 AM F015 Blood Oxygen Level Dependent (BOLD) Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance (CMR) as Predictor of Cardiac Prognosis in Asymptomatic Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) Patients Ranjit Shah, MBBS, FRACP (South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute) CMR T2* analysis of myocardial iron deposition and mortality in liver transplant candidates Kimberly Kallianos, MD (University of California, San Francisco) Increased myocardial native T1 and extracellular volume in Duchenne muscular dystrophy carriers Preeti Ramachandran, MD (Cincinnati Children’s Hospital and Medical Center) Facioscapulohumeral Muscular Dystrophy (FSHD) – Detection of Fat and Fibrosis in the myocardium in patients with preserved LVEF Edyta Blaszczyk, MD (Working Group on Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance, Experimental and Clinical Research Center, A joint cooperation between the ChariteÌ Medical Faculty and the Max-Delbrueck Center for Molecular Medicine HELIOS Klinikum Berlin Buch, Germany) Left ventricular systolic function and the pattern of LGE independently predict adverse cardiac events in muscular dystrophy patients – extended study results Ali Yilmaz, Prof. Dr. (University Hospital Muenster) Left ventricular systolic function and the pattern of LGE independently predict adverse cardiac events in muscular dystrophy patients – extended study results Anca Florian (University Hospital Muenster) ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION 3: Congenital Heart Disease Room: Chesapeake ABC Time: 8:00 AM – 9:15 AM Moderators: Adam Dorfman, MD (University of Michigan) Reza Razavi, MD, PhD (King’s College London) 8:00 AM 24 O015 Longitudinal Evaluation of Aortic Hemodynamics in Marfan Syndrome: New Insights from a Multi-Year 4D Flow MRI Follow-Up Study Julia Geiger, MD (Northwestern University) 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S O016 8:20 AM O017 8:30 AM O018 8:40 AM O019 8:50 AM O020 8:50 AM O020 9:00 AM O021 Extracellular volume fraction in transposition of the great arteries with a systemic right ventricle: Myocardial fibrosis may not account for clinical heart failure. Craig Broberg, MD, MCR (Oregon Health and Science University) 4D flow MRI derived kinetic energy measures are associated with disease progression in children with repaired tetralogy of Fallot Maria Joh (Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine) How Can Situs Inversus Totalis Hearts Work: From Genes, Myocardial Micro-architecture, to Cardiac Function Yijen Wu, PhD (University of Pittsburgh and Rangos Research Center Imaging Core) Impact of the Cone Operation in Ebstein Anomaly on Ventricular Size, Function, and Synchrony: a Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Study Rebecca Beroukhim, MD (Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital) The relationship between right ventricular extracellular volume measurements and clinical outcomes in patients with repaired tetralogy of Fallot Rachel Wald, MD (Toronto General Hospital) The relationship between right ventricular extracellular volume measurements and clinical outcomes in patients with repaired tetralogy of Fallot Kate Hanneman, MD (University of Toronto) Synthetic Hematocrit Derived from the Longitudinal Relaxation of Blood Can Lead to Clinically Significant Errors in Measurement of Extracellular Volume Fraction FRIDAY PROGRAM 8:10 AM FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2017 Frank Raucci, MD, PhD (Vanderbilt University Medical Center) WALKING POSTER SESSION 3: Insights into Disease Mechanisms by Experimental CMR Room: Maryland 1-3 Time: 8:00 AM – 9:15 AM Moderators: Michael Jerosch-Herold, PhD (Brigham and Women’s Hospital) Jeanette Schulz-Menger, MD (Charité - University Medicine Berlin and Helios Clinics) 8:00 AM WP19 8:08 AM WP20 8:16 AM WP21 8:24 AM WP22 8:32 AM WP23 8:40 AM WP24 8:48 AM WP25 8:56 AM WP26 9:04 AM WP27 Eplerenone, a mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist, protects the microvasculature and prevents impaired myocardial perfusion reserve in mice fed a high fat diet Daniel Auger, PhD (University of Virginia) Cardiac magnetic resonance feature tracking (CMR-FT) depicts early changes of myocardial function induced by serelaxin in a mouse model of chronic heart failure Tomas Lapinskas, MD (Lithuanian University of Health Sciences) Intramyocardial Reperfusion Hemorrhage Leads to Infarct Expansion Beyond the Area-At-Risk: Evidence from Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Dogs Andreas Kumar, MD, MSc (Northern Ontario School of Medicine) High-resolution late gadolinium enhancement MRI of ex vivo infarcted porcine hearts to characterize the three-dimensional structure of surviving myocardium Farhad Pashakhanloo, PhD (Johns Hopkins University) Characterization of left ventricular injury and remodelling using serial CMR scans in a swine model of myocardial infarction with ventricular arrhythmia John Whitaker, BM BCh (King’s College London/Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Centre) Measuring extracellular volume (ECV) fraction using T1-mapping - A validation study with radioisotope David Nordlund, MD (Lund University) In Vivo Quantification of Aortic Stiffness in Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm Porcine Model Using Magnetic Resonance Elastography Huiming Dong, MS (The Ohio State University) Strain Derived from Tagging MRI Is More Sensitive Than Ejection Fraction for Detecting Functional Effects of Myocardial Regeneration Yijen Wu, PhD (University of Pittsburgh and Rangos Research Center Imaging Core, Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC) 4D cine strategy for assessment of cardiac function and infarct size in mice on a clinical 3T MR system in a single acquisition Lindsey Crowe, PhD (Geneva University Hospital) www.scmr.org 25 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2017 Room: Chesapeake GHI Time: 8:00 AM – 9:15 AM TECHNOLOGIST TRACK SESSION 1: CMR Physics Moderator: Stephen Darty, RT-N,MR; BSRS (Duke University Medical Center) 8:00 AM 8:05 AM 8:30 AM 8:50 AM Welcome Alison Fletcher, DCRR (Acute Vascular Imaging Centre, University of Oxford) Cine and flow David Wendell, PhD (Duke University Medical Center) Black blood imaging and LGE Elizabeth Jenista, PhD (Duke University) T1/T2/T2* mapping Heerajnarain Bulluck, MBBS (University College London) Room: Maryland 4-6 Time: 9:30 AM – 11:00 AM SCMR MEMBER ASSEMBLY AND LIVE CASE ICMR Invasive X-ray guided cardiac catheterization hemodynamic and angiographic assessment is central to management of pediatric and adult cardiology patients. Similarly, cardiac MRI is a critical diagnostic tool to evaluate cardiac anatomy and function, measure volume and flow, measure tissue infarction, evaluate perfusion and viability, and allow for three-dimensional reconstruction of cardiac and vascular anatomy. Real-time cardiac MRI can guide invasive catheterization to provide a radiation-free, robust diagnostic option combining invasive catheter hemodynamic measurements and MRI physiologic assessment. ASSEMBLY MODERATORS Jeanette Schulz-Menger, MD SCMR President Matthias Friedrich, MD, SCMR Vice-President 9:30 AM President’s Update 9:45 AM Live Case: Children’s National Interventional CMR and Panel Discussion 10:10 AM Presentation: Interventional CMR Robert J. Lederman, MD (National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; National Institutes of Health) 10:35 AM Global SCMR Registry Raymond Kwong, MD, MPH (Brigham and Women’s Hospital) 10:40 AM JCMR Update Warren Manning MD (Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center) 10:50 AM Closing 10:20 AM Education and Training Mark Westwood, MD, FRCP (Barts Heart Centre) LIVE CASE MODERATORS Anthony Faranesh, PhD (National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; National Institutes of Health) Toby Rogers, MD (Washington Hospital Center) LIVE CASE LOCATION Interventional Cardiac MRI Suite, Children’s National Medical Center, Washington DC USA LIVE CASE PANEL Kanishka Ratnayaka, MD (Rady Children’s Hospital, Univ of California-San Diego) Michael Hansen, PhD (National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; National Institutes of Health) Vivek Muthurangu, MD (Great Ormond Street Hospital) Brent Gordon, MD (Loma Linda University) Aimee Armstrong, MD (Natiowide Children’s Hospital) LIVE CASE ON-SITE OPERATORS Elena Grant, MBChB (Children’s National Medical Center) Joshua Kanter, MD (Children’s National Medical Center) 26 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2017 11:00 AM – 11:15 AM Break/Mentor’s Corner Room: Maryland A Time: 11:15 AM – 12:30 PM INVITED LECTURE SESSION 4: Multi-modality Imaging (ESCR) Moderators: Matthias Gutberlet, MD (Leipzig University Heart Center) Karen Ordovas, MD, MAS (University of California, San Francisco) 11:15 AM 11:15 AM 11:30 AM 11:45 AM 12:00 PM 12:15 PM Invited Lecture Session 4: Multi-modality imaging (ESCR) Matthias Gutberlet, MD (Leipzig University Heart Center) Invited Lecture Session 4: Multi-modality imaging (ESCR) Karen Ordovas, MD, MAS (University of California, San Francisco) CMR image data in the cath lab Marco Francone, Medicine (Sapienza University of Rome) FRIDAY PROGRAM 11:15 AM CMR vs. CT in congenital heart disease Jens Bremerich, MD (University Hospital Basel) How do advanced echocardiography methods compare with CMR? Philipp Lurz, MD, PHD (Heart Center Leipzig) The role of CMR in cardiovascular modeling Luigi Natale, MD (Catholic University of Rome) PET-MRI: Tool or toy Pamela Woodard, MD (Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology, Washinton University) Room: Chesapeake DEF Time: 11:15 AM – 12:30 PM FOCUS SESSION 4: Myocarditis Moderators: Sophie Mavrogeni, MD (Onassis Cardiac Surgery Center) Stefan Ruehm, MD (University of California, Los Angeles) 11:15 AM 11:25 AM Can CMR guide endomyocardial biopsy and treatment in myocarditis? Kai Muellerleile, MD (University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf) Pediatric myocarditis - Same methodology, same results as in adults? Mark Fogel, MD, FAHA, FACC, FAAP (Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia) CMR-guided endomyocardial biopsy in an in vivo porcine model 11:35 AM F016 11:45 AM F017 11:55 AM F018 Prevalence of late gadolinium enhancement in pediatric patients with clinical myocarditis and normal ejection fraction 12:05 PM F019 Comparison of diagnostic accuracy of the Lake-Louise Criteria and a combined Mapping approach to detect active myocarditis – a direct comparison 12:15 PM F020 Patrick Behm, MD (David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System) Detection of acute myocarditis using T1- and ECV mapping does not differ between early and late post-contrast imaging Magnus Lundin, MD (Karolinska Institutet) Marc Lee, MD (University of Tennessee Health Science Center) Jeanette Schulz-Menger, MD (Charité - University Medicine Berlin and Helios Clinics) Ferumoxytol-enhanced MRI (FEMR) detects early stages of acute myocarditis Yuko Tada, MD, PhD (Stanford University School of Medicine) Room: Prince George’s Exhibit Hall B Time: 11:15 AM – 12:30 PM POWER PITCH SESSION 1: R001-R020 Moderators: Juliano Fernandes, MD, PhD, MBA (Jose Michel Kalaf Research Institute - Radiologia Clinica de Campinas) Vikas Rathi, MD, FACC (Bon Secours Richmond Health System) 11:15 AM R001 Clinical Outcomes: Prognostic Value of Blood Pressure Model in Women Receiving PCI/CABG Mark Doyle, PhD (Allegheny General Hospital) www.scmr.org 27 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S 28 11:18 AM R002 11:21 AM R003 11:24 AM R004 11:27 AM R005 11:30 AM R006 11:33 AM R007 11:36 AM R008 11:39 AM R009 11:42 AM R010 11:45 AM R011 11:48 AM R012 11:51 AM R013 11:54 AM R014 11:57 AM R015 12:00 PM R016 12:03 PM R017 12:06 PM R018 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2017 Clinical Outcomes: Associations Between pro-B-Type Natriuretic Peptide and Cardiac Troponin T with Global Systolic Function Measured by MRI: The Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA). Amir Ali Rahsepar, MD (Northwestern University) Clinical Outcomes: Left Atrial Emptying Function Predicts Malignant Ventricular Arrhythmia in Patients with Ischemic Cardiomyopathy Referred for Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillator Carmen Lydell, MD (Libin Cardiovascular Institute of Alberta, University of Calgary) Clinical Outcomes: The Diagnostic Role of CMR in Survivors of Sudden Cardiac Arrest; 14 year experience from a UK tertiary referral centre Amrit Lota, BMBCh BA (Royal Brompton Hospital and National Heart and Lung Institute) Clinical Outcomes: Structure-Function CMR Reveals Altered Myocardial T2 and Strain in Patients after Heart Transplantation Ryan Dolan, MD (Northwestern University) Non-ischemic Primary and Secondary CMP: Non-invasive assessment for cardiotoxicity from metal-on-metal hip implants using CMR Amna Abdel-Gadir, MBBS, MRCP (University College London and Barts Heart Centre) Non-ischemic Primary and Secondary CMP: Insights from T1-mapping into Left Ventricular Reverse Remodelling in Dilated Cardiomyopathy Brian Halliday, BSc (Hons) MBChB (Hons) (Royal Brompton Hospital and National Heart and Lung Institute) Non-ischemic Primary and Secondary CMP: Fractal Dimension as a Biomarker for Left-Ventricular HyperTrabeculation: Effect of Embedding Space and Spatial Resolution Jaganth Nivas Asok Kumar, M.S (University of Houston) Non-ischemic Primary and Secondary CMP: Advanced Structural And Mechanical Myocardial Assessment In Ventricular Fibrillation Cardiac Arrest Survivors Anna Baritussio, MD (Bristol Cardiovascular Biomedical Research Unit) Non-ischemic Primary and Secondary CMP: Distinguishing arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC) from athlete’s heart using cardiac magnetic resonance imaging Csilla Czimbalmos, MD (Semmelweis University) CAD/Ischemic Heart Disease: Left ventricular ejection fraction and myocardial necrosis assessed by cardiac magnetic resonance imaging correctly risk stratify patients with coronary artery disease - a multi-center follow-up trial Dominik Buckert, MD (University Hospital Ulm) CAD/Ischemic Heart Disease: Joint Native Myocardial Fat Fraction, Off-Resonance and R2*/T2* Mapping in Ischemic Cardiomyopathy James Goldfarb, PhD (St. Francis Hospital) CAD/Ischemic Heart Disease: Clinical value of absolute rest myocardial blood flow in STEMI patients in predicting left ventricular dysfunction - an Oxford Acute Myocardial Infarction (OxAMI) study Alessandra Borlotti, PhD (University of Oxford) CAD/Ischemic Heart Disease: T1 and T2 Mapping cardiovascular magnetic resonance to differentiate acute from chronic myocardial infarction Enver Tahir, MD (University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf) CAD/Ischemic Heart Disease: Prognostic value of dipyridamole stress CMR in patients with known or suspected coronary artery disease: a long term follow-up study Antonella Meloni, PhD (Fondazione G. Monasterio CNR Regione Toscana) Congenital Heart Disease: Human Heartome Project: Toward a Database of Diffusion CMR of Explanted Human Heart Failure and Autopsy Hearts Christopher Nguyen, PhD (Cedars-Sinai Medical Center) Congenital Heart Disease: Aortic biomechanics by Cardiac Magnetic Resonance in the development of stent fractures in the Coarctation of the Aorta Stent Trial (COAST) Lasya Gaur, MD (Johns Hopkins Children’s Center) Congenital Heart Disease: Tissue phase mapping detects abnormal diastolic function in children with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy but not in non-affected gene mutation carriers Kristian Mortensen, MD, PhD (Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children) 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S 12:09 PM R019 12:12 PM R020 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2017 Congenital Heart Disease: Does the Electrocardiogram Lead Us Astray in Pulmonary Hypertension; a Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging Cross-Comparison Study? Matthew Tong, D.O. (Allegheny General Hospital) Congenital Heart Disease: Associations Between Myocardial T1-Mapping and Left Ventricular Strain, Strain Rate, and Dyssynchrony in Patients with Repaired Tetralogy of Fallot Christopher Haggerty, PhD (Geisinger Health System) Room: Maryland C Time: 11:15 AM – 12:30 PM CASE REVIEW 3: MRI Pre and Post Device Implantation 11:15 AM 11:25 AM Main role CMR for guiding device implantation Gaby Weissman, MD (Medstar Washington Hospital Center) Utilization of a Wideband Protocol to Attenuate Intracardiac Device Artifact Amita Singh, MD (University of Chicago Medical Center) 11:32 AM C016 11:39 AM C017 11:46 AM C018 11:53 AM C019 12:00 PM C020 12:07 PM C020A 12:14 PM MRI-Conditional Subcutaneous ICD System: the Diagnostic Performance of Cardiac MRI is Still Preserved Santo Dellegrottaglie, MD; PhD (Clinica Villa dei Fiori) Diffuse myocardial inflammation in a young patient presenting with ventricular tachycardia FRIDAY PROGRAM Moderators: Pamela Woodard, MD (Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology, Washinton University) Peter Nordbeck, MD (University Hospital Wuerzburg) Joao Inacio, MD (The Ottawa Hospital/ University of Ottawa) Improved DENSE Strain Imaging Using a Reduced Field of View in a Patient with Heart Failure and a Cardiac Implantable Electronic Device Kenneth Bilchick, MD, MS (University of Virginia Health System) Case of Apical Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Presentiing with Ventricular Arrythmmia. Srujal Patel, MD (University of Louisville School of Medicine) An Unusual Manifestation of Cardiac Sarcoidosis: Utility of Comprehensive Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Imaging Gregory Ang, MD (Kaiser Permanente) Ferumoxytol MRA for TAVR guidance: Is it feasible? Kimberly Kallianos, MD (University of California, San Francisco) Tips and tricks imaging patients with devices Harold Litt, MD, PhD (Perelman School of Medicine of the University of Pennsylvania) Room: Maryland 1-3 Time: 11:15 AM – 12:30 PM WALKING POSTER SESSION 4: Right and Left Ventricular Function and Mass Moderators: Erik Schelbert, MD, MS (University of Pittsburgh) David Bluemke, MD, Ph.D (National Institutes of Health) 11:15 AM WP28 11:23 AM WP29 11:31 AM WP30 11:39 AM WP31 11:47 AM WP32 Sarcopenia, And Not Body Mass Index, Is Associated With Cardiac Remodeling In Elderly Subjects Angela Koh, MBBS, MPH (National Heart Centre Singapore; Duke-NUS Medical School) The leading role of the right ventricle in augmentation of cardiac output during exercise. Bram Ruijsink, MD (King’s College London) Improved workflow for quantification of right ventricular volumes and mass using free-breathing motion corrected cine imaging Anthony Merlocco, MD (Children’s National Medical Center) Association of ambulatory blood pressure and insulin resistance with cardiac remodeling in obese children Linyuan Jing, PhD (Geisinger Health System) Tricuspid valve displacement analysis using Cardiac MRI feature tracking provides a simple correlate of RV function in Tetralogy of Fallot Edythe Tham, MBBS (Stollery Children’s Hospital, University of Alberta) www.scmr.org 29 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S 11:55 AM WP33 12:03 PM WP34 12:11 PM WP35 12:19 PM WP36 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2017 A clinically applicable method for time-resolved measurements of the atrioventricular plane displacement in CMR – validated in patients with myocardial infarction, athletes, and healthy controls Felicia Seemann, MSc (Lund University) In Vivo Cardiomyocyte Strain Using Combined Cardiac DENSE and cDTI Patrick Magrath (University of California, Los Angeles) Evidence for Right Ventricular Resonance Victor Farah (Allegheny General Hospital) Biventricular Remodelling After Pulmonary Valve Replacement: Does Type Of Right Ventricular Loading Influence The Outcome? Francesca Romana Pluchinotta (IRCCS Policlinico San Donato, Milan) TECHNOLOGIST TRACK SESSION 2: CMR Aquisition Room: Chesapeake GHI Time: 11:15 AM – 12:30 PM Moderator: Ralph Gentry (William Beaumont Hospital) 11:15 AM 11:40 AM 12:05 PM Cardiothoracic Anatomy Including Variants Alexander Liu, MBBS, MRCP (University of Oxford) Slice Positioning and Trouble-Shooting Kelly Parke, Bsc diagnostic radiography (University Hospitals of Leicester Glenfield Hospital) Tips on Image Acquisition Jennifer Bryant, MSc, PhD (National Heart Centre Singapore) LUNCH SYMPOSIUM: Gadolinium-based Contrast Agents: Mechanisms and Safety Aspects (Pre-registration Required. Standby for Availability) SCMR gratefully acknowledges Guerbet for their education grant in support of this activity. Room: Maryland 4-6 Time: 12:30 PM – 1:30 PM Moderators: Erik Schelbert, MD, MS (University of Pittsburgh) David Bluemke, MD, Ph.D (National Institutes of Health) 12:30 PM 12:45 PM 1:00 PM Gadolinium deposits in the brain: the current evidence Alexander Radbruch, MD (University Hospital Heidelberg) NSF: where are we 10 years since identifying the link to Gd? Tim Leiner, MD, PhD (Utrecht University Medical Center) Basic contrast agent chemistry and physics Kenneth Maravilla, MD (University of Washington) INVITED LECTURE SESSION 5: Clinical Basics for Pediatric and Congenital Heart Disease Room: Maryland A Time: 1:30 PM – 2:45 PM Moderators: Andrew Powell, MD (Harvard Medical School and Boston Children’s Hospital) Emanuela Valsangiacomo Buechel, MD (University Children’s Hospital Zurich) 1:30 PM 1:45 PM 2:00 PM 2:15 PM 2:30 PM 30 Assessing the tricuspid valve in congenital heart disease Rachel Wald, MD (Toronto General Hospital) Using CMR for surveillance of systemic right ventricles Andrew Crean, MD MRCP (Toronto General Hospital) Tetralogy of Fallot: Assessment of the Pressure-Loaded and Volume-Loaded Right Ventricle Tim Slesnick, MD (Emory University School of Medicine) What does the surgeon need to know? CMR for complex hearts Jennifer Romano, MD, MS (University of Michigan) Best manuscripts in the past 3 years using CMR in congenital heart disease Emanuela Valsangiacomo Buechel, MD (University Childre’s Hospital Zurich) 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2017 Room: Chesapeake DEF Time: 1:30 PM – 2:45 PM FOCUS SESSION 5: Acute Chest Pain Moderators: Jeanette Schulz-Menger, MD (Charité - University Medicine Berlin and Helios Clinics) Raymond Kwong, MD (Brigham and Womens Hospital) 1:40 PM Clinical role of CMR in patients with acute chest pain Chiara Bucciarelli-Ducci, MD, PhD (Bristol Cardiovascular Biomedical Research Unit) CMR techniques for the assessment of acute myocardial injury Gunnar Lund, MD (University Hospital Hamburg Eppendorf) 1:50 PM F021 2:00 PM F022 2:10 PM F023 2:20 PM F024 2:30 PM F025 T-Wave Abnormalities as ECG Signature of Myocardial Edema in NST-Elevation Acute Coronary Syndromes Andrea Cardona, MD (The Ohio State University) Cardiac Diffusion Imaging : Quantitative assessment of Apparent Diffusion Coefficient (ADC) changes in Infarct, Border and Remote regions after acute myocardial infarction. Alban Chazot (University Hospital Saint Etienne) Non-contrast T1 CMR relaxometry technique to demonstrate widespread tissue injury during acute myocardial infarction Amardeep Ghosh Dastidar, MBBS(Hons), MRCP (Bristol Cardiovascular Biomedical Research Unit) Reperfusion Hemorrhage Leads to Crystallized Iron Deposits and Promotes M1 Macrophage Polarization in Convalescent Myocardial Infarction FRIDAY PROGRAM 1:30 PM Ivan Cokic, MD (Cedars Sinai Medical Center) Assessment of LV function and infarct in Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection Study, UK Abtehale Al-hussaini, MBBS,BSC, MRCP. (Glenfield Hospital, University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust) Room: Chesapeake ABC Time: 1:30 PM – 2:45 PM ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION 4: New Techniques Moderators: Robert Judd, PhD (Duke University Medical Center) David Firmin, PhD (Royal Brompton Hospital) 1:30 PM O022 1:40 PM O023 1:50 PM O024 2:00 PM O025 2:10 PM O026 2:20 PM O027 2:30 PM O028 Non-contrast perfusion imaging in the human heart using flow intra-voxel incoherent motion (fIVIM) Kévin Moulin, PhD (University of California, Los Angeles) Purely-systolic T1 mapping using an ungated spoiled steady-state approach: Towards reducing the confounding effect of intra-myocardial blood volume on native T1 Behzad Sharif, PhD (Cedars-Sinai Medical Center) Metal Artifact Reduction for Accurate Myocardial Scar Assessment in Patients with Cardiac Implanted Electronic Devices Using Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance El-Sayed Ibrahim, PhD (University of Michigan) CMR Validation of the Porcine Ameroid Occluder Model Matthew Van Houten, MS (University of Virginia) In Vivo Cardiomyocyte Orientation Mapping with Diffusion Tensor MRI using Convex Optimized Diffusion Encoding (CODE) Eric Aliotta, M.S. (University of California, Los Angeles) ECG Triggering at Ultra-High Field Using a Conventional 3-Lead Trigger Device Daniel Stäb, Dr. (The University of Queensland) Are synthetic haematocrit values derived from blood T1 a good substitute for blood samples to achieve accurate ECV calculation? Pierre Croisille, MD PhD (University Lyon, University Hospital-Saint-Etienne) www.scmr.org 31 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2017 CASE REVIEW 4: Mapping the Heart for Diagnosis Room: Maryland C Time: 1:30 PM – 2:45 PM Moderators: James Moon, MBBS, MD, MRCP (Barts Heart Centre and St. Bartholomew’s Hospital) Stefan Zimmerman, MD (Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine) 1:30 PM When does mapping make a difference? Andrew Arai, MD (National Institues of Health) 1:40 PM C022 1:47 PM C023 1:50 PM C024 2:00 PM C025 2:08 PM C026 2:15 PM C027 2:22 PM C028 2:29 PM 59-Year-Old Male Returning from Eritrea with Fevers and Chest Pain Daniel Groves, MD (National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health) Characterization of right atrial mass using advanced CMR imaging – mDixon and parametric mapping Tomas Lapinskas, MD (Lithuanian University of Health Sciences) A different context for microvascular obstruction: end-stage cardiomyopathies instead of acute myocardial infarction Giulia Benedetti, MD (Barts Heart Centre) Pseudo cardiac amyloidosis; where ECV map makes the difference Ana Martinez-Naharro, MD (National Amyloidosis Centre, University College London) Elevated T2 values and Microvascular Obstruction: a diagnostic challenge Manish Ramlall, BSc(Hons), MedSci, MBchB (University College London) Atypical late gadolinium enhancement pattern in hematopoietic stem cell transplant recipient: what is this? Yeseul Jo, MD (The Catholic University of Korea) Presumed viral myocarditis, utility of T1/T2 mapping? Sudip Saha, MD (Mid Atlantic Permanente Group) Future mapping strategies Peter Kellman, PhD (National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health) WALKING POSTER SESSION 5: Flow and Vascular MRI Room: Maryland 1-3 Time: 1:30 PM – 2:45 PM Moderators: Andrew Arai, MD (National Institues of Health) Malenka Bissell, DPhil, MD (Oxford University) 32 1:30 PM WP37 1:38 PM WP38 1:46 PM WP39 1:54 PM WP40 2:02 PM WP41 2:10 PM WP42 2:18 PM WP43 2:26 PM WP44 Non-invasive assessment of aortic coarctation severity using computational fluid dynamics: a feasibility study Piero Triverio, PhD (University of Toronto) Comparison of Non-Contrast Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance and Computed Tomography Angiography for Aortic Annular Sizing before Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement Yuchi Han, MD (University of Pennsylvania) The Summed Kinetic Energy of the Residual Volume 4D Flow Component Represents a Novel Imaging Biomarker in the Evaluation of Patients with Left Ventricular Thrombus Victoria Stoll, DPhil, BMBCh (Oxford University) CMR and Computational Flow Dynamics for Assessing Cardiovascular Aortic Remodeling Following Endovascular Aortic Repair El-Sayed Ibrahim, PhD (University of Michigan) Longitudinal Changes in Cardiac-MRI derived Segmental Aortic Stiffness in Children and Young Adults with Connective Tissue Disorders Anthony Merlocco, MD (Children’s National Medical Center) 4D Flow MRI Image Quality and Cardiac Volumetric Data Depends on Contrast Agent Used Kanae Mukai, MD (UCSF) Association between pulmonary artery pulse wave velocity and packyears of smoking. The Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA) COPD Study Roy Huurman, BSc (Erasmus Medical Center) Scan-rescan reproducibility of Left Ventricular Stroke Volume Assessment by 4D-Flow CMR with Retrospective Valve Tracking and Particle Tracing versus Planimetry in Healthy Volunteers. Vivian Kamphuis, MD (Leiden University Medical Center and Netherlands Heart Institute) 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S 2:34 PM WP45 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2017 Biventricular hemodynamic forces in healthy volunteers and elite athletes quantified with 4D flow MRI Per Arvidsson (Lund University and Skane University Hospital) Room: Chesapeake GHI Time: 1:30 PM – 2:45 PM TECHNOLOGIST TRACK SESSION 3: Cardiomyopathy Moderator: Ronald Williams, RT(R)(MR), B.A. (Allegheny General Hospital) 1:55 PM 2:20 PM Familial/genetic cardiomyopathy Robert Biederman, MD, FACC, FAHA (Allegheny General Hospital) Non familial/non genetic cardiomyopathy Ausami Abbas, MBBS, FRCR (University Hospitals Southampton) Pericardial disease Michael Elliott, MD (Sanger Heart and Vascular Institute) Room: Maryland A Time: 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM INVITED LECTURE SESSION 6: Clinical Outcomes Moderators: Christopher Kramer, MD (University of Virginia Health System) Steffen Petersen, MD, DPhil, MPH, FRCP (Barts Heart Center and St Bartholomew’s Hospital) 3:30 PM 3:45 PM 4:00 PM 4:15 PM 4:30 PM Adaptive vs. traditional RCTs for efficiency in CMR-guided clinical trials Rory Hachamovitch (Cleveland Clinic) FRIDAY PROGRAM 1:30 PM Imaging the area-at-risk in clinical trials in acute STEMI: Why, how, when? Håkan Arheden, MD, PhD (Lund University and Skane University Hospital) How to mitigate bias in imaging trials with controlled design Erik Schelbert, MD, MS (University of Pittsburgh) On-going large multi-center CMR trials John Greenwood, MD, PhD FRCP (University of Leeds) From trials to guidelines - Where is CMR stuck? Christopher Kramer, MD (University of Virginia Health System) Room: Chesapeake DEF Time: 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM FOCUS SESSION 6: Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Moderators: Albert van Rossum, MD, PhD (VU University Medical Center) Han Kim, MD (Duke University) 3:30 PM 3:40 PM Clinical courses of HCM: Diagnostic needs from birth to seniority Gabriella Captur, MD PhD MRCP MSc (Barts Heart Centre and University College London) What CMR can offer in the evaluation of HCM - State of the Art in 2017 Stefan Neubauer, MD, FRCP, FACC, FMedSci (University of Oxford) 3:50 PM F026 3:50 PM F027 3:50 PM F028 3:50 PM F029 3:50 PM F030 Incremental benefit of functional, volumetric and tissue characterisation techniques in the differentiation of HCM and athlete’s heart Peter Swoboda, PhD (University of Leeds) Endogenous T1rho mapping in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy Michael Solomon, BS (University of Pennsylvania) Quantification of late gadolinium enhancement in the end-stage phase of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with or without ventricular dilatation Sainan Cheng, MD (National Center for Cardiovascular Diseases of China, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College) An initial evaluation of STEAM and M012 spin echo diffusion tensor imaging in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy patients Zohya Khalique, MBBS (Royal Brompton Hospital) Evaluation of mechanisms responsible for discrepancies in maximal left ventricular wall thickness between cardiac magnetic resonance imaging and echocardiography in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy Waseem Hindieh, MD, FRCPC (Toronto General Hospital) www.scmr.org 33 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2017 ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION 5: Early Career Awards 2: Translational Room: Chesapeake ABC Time: 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM Moderators: Tim Leiner, MD, PhD (Utrecht University Medical Center) Krishna Nayak, PhD (University of Southern California) 3:30 PM O029 3:40 PM O030 3:50 PM O031 4:00 PM O032 4:10 PM O033 4:20 PM O034 4:20 PM O034 4:30 PM O035 Non-ECG, Free-Breathing Joint Myocardial T1-T2 Mapping Using CMR Multitasking Anthony Christodoulou, PhD (Cedars-Sinai Medical Center) Building Understanding Of The Myocardial Phenotype: ECV, LGE And Biopsy Measure Complementary But Overlapping Aspects – A 133 Biopsy Severe Aortic Stenosis Study Thomas Treibel, MBBS.MRCP(UK) (Barts Heart Centre) Myocardial T2* Changes Periodically over the Cardiac Cycle and is Prolonged in Patients with Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy versus Healthy Controls: A 7.0 Tesla MRI Study Till Huelnhagen, Dipl.-Ing. (Max Delbrueck Center for Molecular Medicine) Doxorubicin-associated cardiac tissue remodeling followed by CMR of myocardial extracellular volume and myocyte size in breast cancer patients. Thiago Souza, MD (State University of Campinas) Comparative Prognostic Value of Myocardial Strain Derived From Deformation-Tracking, Feature-Tracking or DENSE CMR: the British Heart Foundation MR-MI Study. Kenneth Mangion, MD (University of Glasgow) Quantification of Cardiac Output with Phase Velocity Mapping in Patients with Pulmonary Hypertension: A Comparison between Cardiac Magnetic Resonance and Right Heart Catheterization Shimaa Khidr, MD (Allegheny General Hospital) Quantification of Cardiac Output with Phase Velocity Mapping in Patients with Pulmonary Hypertension: A Comparison between Cardiac Magnetic Resonance and Right Heart Catheterization Jose Ricardo Po, M.D (Allegheny General Hospital) High-risk coronary plaque characteristics by T1-weighted CMR identify ischemia-causing lesions: comparison with invasive fractional flow reserve (FFR) Yibin Xie, PhD (Cedars-Sinai Medical Center) CASE REVIEW 5: Perfusion or Flow was Key for This Diagnosis Room: Maryland C Time: 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM Moderators: Robert Manka, MD (University Hospital Zurich) Marcus Carlsson, MD, PhD (Lund University and Skane University Hospital) 3:30 PM 34 Optimizing your perfusion and flow imaging protocol Dipan Shah, MD (Houston Methodist DeBakey Heart & Vascular Center) 3:40 PM C029 3:47 PM C030 3:54 PM C031 4:01 PM C032 4:08 PM C033 4:15 PM C034 4:22 PM C035 A Case of Lung Cancer, Myocardial Infarction and a Cardiac Mass: The Added Value of CMR Akhil Narang, MD (University of Chicago) Myocardial perfusion mapping in a patient with apical hypertrophic cardiomyopathy Kristopher Knott, MBBS MA (Barts Heart Centre) Use of MRI flow measurements to optimise heart rate in a paced patient with functional single Ventricle Srinivas Ananth Narayan, MD, MRCPCH (King’s College London) Exercise perfusion imaging in the setting of exertional chest pain Alexandra Channing, MD (Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia) “Going in Circles”- Circular Shunt Physiology in a Patient with Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome after the Fontan Operation Oluwatosin Fatusin, MD/MPH (Boston Children’s Hospital) Exercise stress perfusion imaging in an unusual case of anomalous origin of the left coronary artery from the pulmonary artery (ALCAPA) in an adolescent female Michael DiLorenzo, MD (Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia) Congenital Heart Disease Detected Based on Distorted Arterial Input Function found during Quantitative Analysis of a CMR First Pass Perfusion Study Artur Gevorgyan (National Institutes of Health) 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S 4:29 PM FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2017 Pearls and pitfalls of perfusion and flow imaging Michael Jerosch-Herold, PhD (Brigham and Women’s Hospital) Room: Maryland 1-3 Time: 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM WALKING POSTER SESSION 6: Novel CMR Methods Moderators: Nicole Seiberlich, PhD (Case Western Reserve University) Edwin Wu, MD (Northwestern University) WP46 3:38 PM WP47 3:46 PM WP48 3:54 PM WP49 4:02 PM WP50 4:10 PM WP51 4:18 PM WP52 4:26 PM WP53 4:34 PM WP54 Validation of a novel cine-derived b-spline deformable strain method against reference measurements with DENSE in a group of healthy volunteers at 1.5T. Kenneth Mangion, MD (University of Glasgow) Using a Respiratory Navigator Significantly Reduces Variability when Quantifying Left Ventricular Torsion from CMR Sean Hamlet, MS (University of Kentucky) Novel approach to CMR T1 and T2 maps based on texture analysis Nadjia Kachenoura, PhD (Sorbonne Universités, UPMC , INSERM UMRS 1146, Laboratoire d’Imagerie Biomédicale) Fat Suppressed Dark-Blood Delayed-Enhancement Elizabeth Jenista, PhD (Duke University) Contact free respiratory monitoring using the RF transmit scattering on a parallel transmit scanner Aaron Hess, PhD (OCMR, University of Oxford) FRIDAY PROGRAM 3:30 PM A novel low powered wideband inversion pulse for Delayed Enhancement Imaging at 3T David Wendell, PhD (Duke University Medical Center) Imaging Sequence for Joint Myocardial T1 Mapping and Fat/Water Separation Maryam Nezafat, MRes (King’s College London) Free-Breathing Diffusion Tensor Imaging in Patients with Severe Cardiopulmonary Disease Using Simultaneous Multislice Acceleration and Enhanced Retrospective Image Selection Choukri Mekkaoui, PhD (Harvard Medical School - Massachusetts General Hospital) 4-Dimensional Multiphase Steady State Imaging of Contrast Enhancement (MUSIC): Value-Based Imaging in Neonates with Congenital Heart Disease Kim-Lien Nguyen, MD (David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System) Room: Chesapeake GHI Time: 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM TECHNOLOGIST TRACK SESSION 4: Angiography Moderator: Ronald Williams, RT(R)(MR), B.A. (Allegheny General Hospital) 3:30 PM 3:55 PM MRA techniques Patricia Feuchter, MSc (MRI) Radiology (Barts Heart Centre) MRA applications Sebastian Kelle, MD, PhD (German Heart Institute Berlin) 4:20 PM T001 4:28 PM T002 4:36 PM T003 Pouch in the Heart Han Yiying, (National Heart Centre Singapore) CMR Unravels the Pathophysiology of Heart Block in a Young Woman Petronella Samuels (University of Cape Town) Cocaine-related Chest Pain; Presentations can be Deceptive Fiona Hamilton (Barts Heart Centre) INVITED LECTURE SESSION 7: Thoracic Aortopathy Society for Magnetic Resonance Angiography (SMRA) Room: Maryland A Time: 5:00 PM – 6:15 PM Moderators: Albert de Roos, MD, PhD (Leiden University Medical Center) James Carr, MD (Northwestern Memorial Hospital) 5:00 PM 5:15 PM Clinical spectrum and molecular basis of aortopathy Measurements of aortic dimensions – CMR vs. CT Maarten Groenink, MD PhD (Academic Medical Center) www.scmr.org 35 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S 5:30 PM 5:45 PM 6:00 PM FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2017 Aortic compliance, distensibility and function: Role of MRI vs other modalities Elie Mousseaux, MD, PhD (European Hospital Georges Pompidou APHP) 4D flow in thoracic aortopathy and aortic valve disease Alex Barker, PhD (Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine) Post-operative evaluation in aortopathy Tim Leiner, MD, PhD (Utrecht University Medical Center) Room: Chesapeake DEF Time: 5:00 PM – 6:15 PM FOCUS SESSION 7: New Frontiers In CMR Moderators: Rene Botnar, PhD (King’s College London) Kanishka Ratnayaka, MD (Rady Children’s Hospital) 5:00 PM 5:10 PM Fetal MRI: Challenges and potential applications Mike Seed, MBBS (The Hospital for Sick Children) EP studies in CMR: Current state and areas of research Tobias Schäffter, PhD (King’s College London) 5:20 PM F031 Withdrawn 5:30 PM F032 Real-time cardiovascular magnetic resonance using 60-channel acquisition for the assessment of cardiac exercise reserve 5:40 PM F033 5:50 PM F034 6:00 PM F035 Thu-Thao Le, PhD (National Heart Centre Singapore) Pulmonary vascular resistance and intracardiac shunt quantification during real-time MRI guided cardiac catheterization Toby Rogers, BM BCh, PhD (National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health) Measuring invasive blood pressure by catheters guided solely by Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance by using a new MRI conditional guidewire for post-market surveillance purposes Christian Meierhofer, Dr. Dr. (Pediatric Cardiology and Congenital Heart Disease, German Heart Center Munich) Intracardiac MR Oximetry in Patients with Cardiovascular Disease: Preliminary Comparison with Right Heart Catheterization Juliet Varghese, PhD (The Ohio State University) ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION 6: Clinical Outcomes And Trials Room: Chesapeake ABC Time: 5:00 PM – 6:15 PM Moderators: Raymond Kwong, MD (Brigham and Womens Hospital) Sven Plein, MD PhD (King’s College London and University of Leeds) 36 5:00 PM O036 5:10 PM O037 5:20 PM O038 5:30 PM O039 5:40 PM O040 5:50 PM O041 6:00 PM O042 Prevalence and Prognostic Significance of Unrecognized Myocardial Scar in 30,000 Patients Followed for Ten Years Han Kim, MD (Duke University) MRI prospective survey on heart and liver iron and cardiac function in Thalassemia Major patients treated with Deferasirox versus Deferiprone and Desferrioxamine in monotherapy Antonella Meloni, PhD (Fondazione G. Monasterio CNR Regione Toscana) Prediction of all-cause mortality from clinical CMR-derived left ventricular ejection fraction: 15 years of data from a large regional health system Gregory Wehner, BS (University of Kentucky) Physiological atrial remodelling associated with variation in physical activity level in a large-scale population study: Results from the UK Biobank Nay Aung, MD, MRCP (Barts Heart Center, The Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Imaging Unit and The Center for Rare Cardiovascular Diseases Unit, St Bartholomew’s Hospital) Myocardial T1 times vs. Extracellular Volume Fraction: A Comparison of Prognostic Significance Eric Yang, MD PhD (Houston Methodist Hospital) Prognostic Value of Extracellular Volume Fraction Quantification in Patients with Non-ischemic Non-infiltrative Cardiomyopathy. Tomas Vita, MD (Brigham and Womens Hospital) Relations of Aortic Stiffness with Cardiovascular Risk Factors and Left Ventricular Remodeling Connie Tsao, MD, MPH (Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center) 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2017 Room: Maryland C Time: 5:00 PM – 6:15 PM CASE REVIEW 6: MRI in Heart Failure and Arrhythmia Moderators: Wolfgang Rehwald, PhD (Siemens Medical Solutions USA, Inc.) Gunnar Lund, MD (University Hospital Hamburg Eppendorf) Optimizing imaging in challenging patients Robert Biederman, MD, FACC, FAHA (Allegheny General Hospital) 5:10 PM C036 5:17 PM C037 5:24 PM C038 5:31 PM C039 5:38 PM C040 5:45 PM C041 5:52 PM C042 5:59 PM Diagnostic Challenges in Cardiac Sarcoidosis Shant Manoushagian, MD (Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University) Left Dominant Arrhythmogenic Cardiomyopathy Pravin Patil, MD (Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University) Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy masquerading as cardiac amyloidosis Tushar Kotecha, MRCP(UK), MBChB (Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust) Apical variant hypertrophy in Anderson Fabry Disease Bharath Sathya, MD (National Institutes of Health) CASE: MRI characteristics of myocardial involvement in Churg-Strauss vasculitis Purvi Parwani, MBBS (University of California) A Pain in the Neck: Differentiating Between an Aneurysm and a Pseudoaneurysm of the Left Ventricle Post-Myocardial Infarction FRIDAY PROGRAM 5:00 PM Weiyi Tan, MD, MPH (David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System) 23 Year Old Male Presenting for Dilated Cardiomyopathy Evaluation Evan Nelson, MD (National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health) Creating a report that matters M. Barbara Srichai-Parsia, MD, MS (Medstar Georgetown University Hospital) WALKING POSTER SESSION 7: Tissue Mapping: New Methods and Clinical Applications Room: Maryland 1-3 Time: 5:00 PM – 6:15 PM Moderators: Martin Ugander, MD, PhD (Karolinska Institutet) Peter Kellman, PhD (National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health) 5:00 PM WP55 5:08 PM WP56 5:16 PM WP57 5:22 PM WP58 5:34 PM WP59 5:40 PM WP60 5:48 PM WP61 5:56 PM WP62 6:04 PM WP63 Correcting for off-resonance error to improve myocardial T1 mapping in patients with implanted cardiac devices Anish Bhuva, MRCP MBBS MA (Barts Heart Centre and Institute of Cardiovascular Science, UCL) Derivation and Validation of Synthetic ECV Calculation from Blood Pool T1 values at 3T MRI Ozair Rahman, MD (Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine) Improving the Optimized Sampling Point Selection for Saturation-Recovery T1 Mapping of the Heart Glenn Slavin, PhD (GE Healthcare) A Non-contrast CMR Index Can Detect Myocardial Fibrosis with Superior Sensitivity and Specificity Jiayu Sun, MS (China West Hospital) Native ShMOLLI T1 mapping to differentiate reversible vs. irreversible myocardial damage in STEMI patients Alessandra Borlotti, PhD (University of Oxford) Native T1 value in the myocardial areas without scar on LGE is independently associated with left ventricular dysfunction in patients with prior myocardial infarction Shiro Nakamori, MD, PhD (Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center) Simultaneous Multi-Slice Imaging For Myocardial T1 Mapping In A Single Breath-Hold Sebastian Weingaertner, PhD (University of Minnesota and Heidelberg University) Quantification of myocardial blood volume reserve by adenosine stress native T1 mapping – validation with adenosine stress ECV mapping Jannike Nickander, MD (Karolinska Institute) Normative Native Myocardial T1 and ECV Values in Healthy Children Joseph Pagano, MD (The Hospital for Sick Children) www.scmr.org 37 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2017 Room: Chesapeake GHI Time: 5:00 PM – 6:15 PM TECHNOLOGIST TRACK SESSION 5: Paediatric CMR Moderator: Amy Tipton (Nationwide Children’s Hospital) 5:00 PM 5:25 PM 5:50 PM RT heart and pulmonary congenital imaging Kristian Mortenson, MD, PhD (Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children) Non congenital paediatric imaging Piers Barker, MD (Duke Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Center) Tips for imaging pediatric patients Wendy Norman, DCR(R), DRI (Institute of Cardiovascular Science, University College London) CMR ANALYSIS SOFTWARE FACE-OFF Room: National Harbor 12-13 Time: 6:15 PM – 7:00 PM Moderators: Matthias Gutberlet, MD (University of Leipzig) Daniel Lee, MD (Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine) PARTICIPANTS Arterys Circle Cardiovascular Imaging, Inc. Medis Medical Imaging Systems, Inc. NeoSoft/NeoCoil, LLC 20TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION: Building on 20 years of excellence in CMR Room: Maryland 4-5 Time: 7:00 PM Moderators: Chiara Bucciarelli-Ducci, MD, PhD (Bristol Cardiovascular Biomedical Research Unit) James Carr, MD (Northwestern Memorial Hospital) 7:00 PM 8:05 PM 8:20 PM 9:20 PM 9:30 PM Reception 20-Year History of Cardiovascular MRI Research Trends Michael Markl, PhD (Northwestern University) and Daniel Lee, MD (Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine) The History of SCMR as Told by its Presidents Gerald Pohost, MD, FACC (University of Southern California) Dudley Pennell, MD (Royal Brompton Hospital) Nathaniel Reichek, MD (St. Francis Hospital-The Heart Center) Robert Balaban, PhD (National Heart Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health) Warren Manning, MD (Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center) Stefan Neubauer, MD, FRCP, FACC, FMedSci (University of Oxford) Charles Higgins, MD (University of California, San Francisco) Christopher Kramer, MD (University of Virginia Health System) Eike Nagel, MD, PhD (Goethe University Frankfurt) Scott Flamm, MD MBA (Cleveland Clinic) Andrew Arai, MD (National Institues of Health) Albert de Roos, MD, PhD (Leiden University Medical Center) Orlando Simonetti, PhD (The Ohio State University) Victor A Ferrari, MD (University of Pennsylvania Medical Center) The future role of SCMR Jeanette Schulz-Menger, MD (Charité - University Medicine Berlin and Helios Clinics) Celebration and Dancing Thank you to Siemens Healthcare and Toshiba Medical for your support of this event. 38 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance S ATU R DAY SC H EDU LE AT A G L A N C E SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2017 7:15 am 8:00 am Working Groups 8:00 am 9:15 am 9:30 am 10:45 am CMR OUTREACH PROGRAM CASE REVIEW 7 CMR OUTREACH PROGRAM ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION 8 Heart Failure Part 2 Vascular CASE REVIEW 8 Masses Cost Effectiveness Break/Mentor’s Corner/Product Theater Chesapeake DEF INVITED LECTURE FOCUS SESSION 8 SESSION 8 Valvular Disease Parametric Mapping 12:30 pm 1:30 pm Exhibit Hall B Maryland C POWER PITCH SESSION 2 PRO-CON IN CMR Maryland 1-3 Chesapeake GHI WALKING POSTER TECHNOLOGIST SESSION 8 TRACK 6 Stress Imaging Adult Congenital Lunch (on own)/Mentor’s Corner/Exhibits/Product Theater/Poster Group 3 Maryland A Chesapeake DEF INVITED LECTURE FOCUS SESSION 9 SESSION 9 Metabolic Disease Congenital Advanced 2:45 pm 3:30 pm Chesapeake ABC Maryland C ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION 9 CASE REVIEW 9 Early Career Awards 3 - Clinical Maryland 1-3 Chesapeake GHI TECHNOLOGIST TRACK 7 Best Cases of the Web Stress CMR Break/Mentor’s Corner/Product Theater Maryland A 3:30 pm 4:45 pm ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION 7 Heart Failure Part 1 Maryland A 1:30 pm 2:45 pm Maryland C Coronary Heart Disease 10:45 am 11:15 am 11:15 am 12:30 pm Chesapeake ABC SATURDAY PROGRAM Maryland A Chesapeake DEF Chesapeake ABC INVITED LECTURE ORAL ABSTRACT FOCUS SESSION 10 SESSION 10 SESSION 10 Coronary Imaging Sports Medicine Cardiac Function Maryland C Maryland 1-3 CASE REVIEW 10 BEST OF WALKING Adult Congenital POSTERS 4:45 pm 5:00 pm Break/Mentor’s Corner/Product Theater 5:00 pm 6:45 pm Closing Plenary/Awards Ceremony (Maryland BD, 4-6) 6:45 pm 8:00 pm Awards Reception (Maryland Foyer) www.scmr.org Chesapeake GHI TECHNOLOGIST TRACK 8 Advanced CMR 39 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2017 OUTREACH: CMR in Heart Failure: Joint Sessions with the Heart Failure Society of America Part I Room: Maryland A Time: 8:00 AM – 9:15 AM Moderators: John Cleland, MD PhD (University of Hull and Imperial College London) Matthias Friedrich, MD (Montreal Heart Institute and University of Heidelberg) 8:00 AM 8:15 AM 8:30 AM 8:45 AM 9:00 AM Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) Julio Chirinos, MD (University of Pennsylvania) Non-hypertrophic cardiomyopathies Michael Givertz, MD (Brigham and Womens Hospital) Ventricular interaction in advanced heart failure Ravi Shah, MD (Massachusetts General Hospital) CMR to monitor response to therapy Sanjay Prasad, MD (Royal Brompton Hospital and Imperial College, London) Panel discussion ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION 7: Coronary Artery Disease Room: Chesapeake ABC Time: 8:00 AM - 9:15 AM Moderators: Raymond Kim, MD (Duke University Medical Center) Christopher Kramer, MD (University of Virginia Health System) Resting perfusion is not needed for clinical interpretation of adenosine perfusion CMR 8:00 AM O043 8:10 AM O044 8:20 AM O045 8:30 AM O046 Adenosine stress and rest native splenic T1 predicts the “splenic switch-off” sign without the need for gadolinium – a novel method to assess stress adequacy before first-pass perfusion imaging 8:40 AM O047 Prognostic Utility of Circumferential Strain on Left Ventricular Outcomes in Patients with an Acute ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction (STEMI): the British Heart Foundation MR-MI Study. 8:50 AM O048 Assessment Of Myocardial Viability By Native T1 Mapping: Comparison With Late Gadolinium Enhancement Technique 9:00 AM O049 A Porcine Model of Hemorrhagic Myocardial Infarction Leads to Persistent Iron Deposition in the Chronic Post-MI Setting: Serial Cardiac MRI Studies with Ex-vivo Histological Validation Eike Nagel, MD, PhD (Goethe University Frankfurt) Iron-Induced Foam Cell Formation is the Hallmark of Early Fat Infiltration in Healing Hemorrhagic Myocardial Infarction Ivan Cokic, MD (Cedars Sinai Medical Center) Extracellular Volume as a Risk Marker for Mortality in Patients With Ischemic Coronary Artery Disease Vinay Acharya, DO (Houston Methodist Hospital) Alexander Liu, MBBS, MRCP (University of Oxford) Kenneth Mangion, MD (University of Glasgow) Amardeep Ghosh Dastidar, MBBS(Hons), MRCP (Bristol Cardiovascular Biomedical Research Unit) Ivan Cokic, MD (Cedars Sinai Medical Center) CASE REVIEW 7: Vascular Imaging and Beyond Room: Maryland C Time: 8:00 AM – 9:15 AM Moderators: Joachim Lotz, MD (Göttingen University Medical Center) Hajime Sakuma, MD, PhD (Mie University Hospital) 8:00 AM 8:10 AM 40 Benefits of Novel Contrast Media David Saloner, PhD (University of California, San Francisco) C043 8:17 AM C044 8:24 AM C045 Multimodality imaging of protracted complications of aortopathy in Ehlers Danlos syndrome Zohya Khalique, MBBS (NIHR Cardiovascular Biomedical Research Unit, Royal Brompton Hospital) CMR Images Dictate and Help Execute Treatment Plan in Catheterization Lab Nimisha Aggarwal, MD (Children’s National Health System) Primary aortic intimal sarcoma initially presenting as low extremity thromboembolism Yeseul Jo, MD (Seoul St. Mary’s Hospital, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea) 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2017 8:31 AM C046 Non malignant superior venacava syndrome and utility of gadofoveset in imaging of superior venacava and bypass grafts. 8:38 AM C047 Infiltrative aortitis causing sinus of Valsalva pseudoaneurysm in a patient with lymphocytic variant hypereosinophilic syndrome 8:45 AM C048 8:52 AM C049 8:59 AM Vimalkumar Veerappan Kandasamy, MD (University of Louisville) Tushar Acharya, MD (National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health) Acute Aortic Syndrome Diagnosed with Noncontrast Magnetic Resonance Imaging Piyush Sovani, MD (Medstar Georgetown University Hospital) A case of midaortic syndrome due to Neurofibromatosis Type 1 Satyam Veean, BS (Augusta University) Are we ready for vascular imaging without contrast? J. Paul Finn, MD (University of California, Los Angeles David Geffen School of Medicine) OUTREACH: CMR in Heart Failure: Joint Sessions with the Heart Failure Society of America Part II Room: Maryland A Time: 9:30 AM – 10:45 AM 9:30 AM 9:45 AM 10:00 AM 10:15 AM 10:30 AM SATURDAY PROGRAM Moderators: Erik Schelbert, MD, MS (University of Pittsburgh) Victor Ferrari, MD (University of Pennsylvania Medical Center) Exercise CMR Subha Raman, MD (The Ohio State University) Metabolic imaging Sebastian Kozerke, PhD (University and ETH Zurich) Visualization and quantification of intracardiac hemodynamics Johannes Töger, PhD (Lund University and Skane University Hospital) CMR in patients with devices J. Paul Finn, MD (University of California, Los Angeles David Geffen School of Medicine) CMR before and after heart transplantation Chris Miller, MBChB PhD MRCP (University of Manchester) Room: Maryland C Time: 9:30 AM – 10:45 AM CASE REVIEW 8: Masses Involving the Heart Moderators: Bernhard Gerber (Université Catholique de Louvain) Garrick Viallon (Université Lyon) 9:30 AM Quick and comprehensive protocol Ana Barac, MD, PhD (Medstar Heart and Vascular Institute) 9:47 AM C051 9:54 AM C052 10:01 AM C053 10:08 AM C054 10:15 AM C055 10:22 AM C056 10:29 AM Atrial Mass Post-Percutaneous Coronary Intervention: Diagnosis and Management Andrew Kott, MD (Medical College of Wisconsin) Primary Cardiac Leiomyoma presenting as a Large Left Ventricular Mass Madhusudan Ganigara, MD (Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai) An unusual cause of Right Atrial mass Luke Dancy, MD (King’s College London) An intracardiac presentation of hepatocellular carcinoma Harjot Singh, MD (St. Francis Hospital) A zebra or a horse of a different color? Hanita Shai, MD (Boston Children’s hospital) Cardiovascular CT and MR Imaging of Cardiac Lymphangioma Ruma Madhu Sreedharan, DNB,MNAMS (GMC, Trivandrum) New methods: getting closer to histology Andrew Crean, MD MRCP (Toronto General Hospital) www.scmr.org 41 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2017 ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION 8: Cost-Effectiveness And Efficient Imaging Room: Chesapeake ABC Time: 9:30 AM – 10:45 AM Moderators: James Moon, MBBS, MD, MRCP (Barts Heart Centre and St. Bartholomew’s Hospital) Thoralf Niendorf, PhD (Berlin Ultrahigh Field Facility, Max Delbrueck Center for Molecular Medicine) 9:30 AM O050 9:40 AM O050 9:40 AM O051 9:50 AM O052 10:00 AM O053 10:10 AM O054 10:20 AM O055 10:30 AM O056 Cardiac MRI Practice: An Analysis of 2012-2014 Medicare Provider Utilization and Payment Data James Goldfarb, PhD (St. Francis Hospital) Unusual case of a young male with a large thrombus in the heart Naveen Rajpurohit, MD (Sanford Cardiovascular Institute) Motion-compensated spiral simultaneous multi-slice myocardial perfusion Yang Yang, PhD (University of Virginia) Free-Breathing, Non-ECG-Gated, Continuous Myocardial T1 Mapping with Cardiac MR Multitasking Jaime Shaw, MS (Cedars-Sinai Medical Center) Semi-automated quantification of aortic arch length and stiffness in CMR using a 3D cylindrical active surface Thomas Dietenbeck, PhD (Sorbonne Universités) To screen or not to screen? Long-term cost effectiveness of CMR screening for unrecognised myocardial infarctions Jonathan Siverskog, M.Sc. (Linköping University) Cardiac MR Fingerprinting with Simultaneous Multi-Slice Imaging for T1 and T2 Quantification Jesse Hamilton, B.S. (Case Western Reserve University) Arrhythmia insensitive LGE with REPAIR: stabilizing variable signal regrowth by variable flip angles Chenxi Hu, PhD (Yale University) 10:45 AM – 11:15 AM Product Theater - GE Healthcare Integration and Utility of ViosWorks into Routine Clinical Speaker: Dr. Melany Atkins, MD (Fairfax Radiological Consultants) INVITED LECTURE SESSION 8: Parametric Mapping Techniques Room: Maryland A Time: 11:15 AM – 12:30 PM Moderators: Erik Schelbert, MD, MS (University of Pittsburgh) Vanessa Ferreira, MD, DPhil (University of Oxford) 11:15 AM 11:30 AM 11:45 AM 12:00 PM 12:15 PM Technical Foundation of Myocardial T1 and ECV Mapping Richard Thompson, PhD (University of Alberta) Technical Foundation of Myocardial T2, T2*, and T1rho Mapping David M. Higgins, MSc PhD (Philips) Parametric mapping in ischemic heart disease Colin Berry, PhD FRCP (University of Glasgow) Parametric mapping in non-ischemic cardiomyopathies Marianna Fontana, MD, PhD (Royal Free Hospital; National Amyloidosis Centre, University College London) Application of parametric mapping to pediatric and congenital patients Lars Grosse-Wortmann, MD (The Hospital for Sick Children) Room: Chesapeake DEF Time: 11:15 AM – 12:30 PM FOCUS SESSION 8: Valvular Disease Moderators: Michael Hope, MD (University of California, San Francisco) Oliver Wieben, PhD (University of Wisconsin-Madison) 11:15 AM 11:25 AM 42 The value of CMR to risk stratisfy patients with aortic stenosis Clerio Azevedo, MD, PhD (CDPI - Clinical Diagnostic Imaging) Transcatheter valve interventions - combining MR and bioengineering Andrew Taylor (University College London, Great Ormond Street Hospital) 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2017 11:35 AM F036 Multiyear 4D flow MRI Follow-up Suggests Associations of Baseline Aortic Hemodynamics with Progressive Aortic Dilation with Bicuspid and Trileaflet Aortic Valve Patients 11:45 AM F037 Impact of Aortic Valve Stenosis on the Expression of Aortic 3D Wall Shear Stress: New Insights from 4D Flow MRI in 618 subjects 11:55 AM F038 Quantification of Ischemic Mitral Regurgitation with Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance and Its Association with Outcomes 12:05 PM F039 Isolated pulmonary regurgitation causes decreased right ventricular longitudinal function and compensatory increased septal pumping in a porcine model. 12:15 PM F040 Model-Based Therapy Planning accurately predicts postoperative Blood Flow Profiles in the Ascending Aorta after Aortic Valve Replacement Ozair Rahman, MD (Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine) Alex Barker, PhD (Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine) João Cavalcante, MD (University of Pittsburgh) Sascha Kopic, MD, PhD (Lund University and Skane University Hospital) Room: Prince George’s Exhibit Hall B Time: 11:15 AM – 12:30 PM POWER PITCH SESSION 2: R001-R020 (Please see poster directory for full listing) Moderators: Stefan Zimmerman, MD (Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine) Kevin Steel, LtCol, USAF, MC (San Antonio Military Medical Center) Rapid, Efficient Imaging: A comparison of spiral and EPI trajectories for in-vivo cardiac DTI 11:15 AM R021 11:18 AM R022 11:21 AM R023 11:24 AM R024 Rapid, Efficient Imaging: Blipped Multiband SSFP: towards band free cine imaging of the whole heart within a single breath-hold 11:27 AM R025 Rapid, Efficient Imaging: Free-breathing 3D whole-heart stress myocardial perfusion using reordered compressed sensing 11:27 AM R025 Rapid, Efficient Imaging: Free-breathing 3D whole-heart stress myocardial perfusion using reordered compressed sensing 11:30 AM R026 Pre-Clinical Validation of an Existing Technique: Typical Readout Durations in Spiral Cine DENSE Produce Blurred Images and Underestimate Radial Strain at Both 3.0T and 1.5T 11:33 AM R027 Pre-Clinical Validation of an Existing Technique: Quantification of myocardial extracellular volume fraction for differentiating between amyloidosis and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy 11:36 AM R028 Pre-Clinical Validation of an Existing Technique: USPIO-enhanced CMR: comprehensive methodological investigation and application in acute MI 11:39 AM R029 Pre-Clinical Validation of an Existing Technique: Early Alterations in Myocardial Strain and Native T1 Signal in Patients Receiving Anthracycline, Trastuzumab or Combined Chemotherapeutic Regimens 11:40 AM R031 11:40 AM R031 Margarita Gorodezky, M. Sc. (National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College) Rapid, Efficient Imaging: Contact free cardiac gating using the transmit RF coil by monitoring the scattering matrix on a parallel transmit scanner Sven Jaeschke (University of Oxford) SATURDAY PROGRAM Sarah Nordmeyer, MD (Deutsches Herzzentrum Berlin) Rapid, Efficient Imaging: Non-ECG First-Pass Myocardial Perfusion T1 Mapping Using CMR Multitasking Anthony Christodoulou, PhD (Cedars-Sinai Medical Center) Anthony Price, PhD (King’s College London) Merlin Fair, MRes (Royal Brompton Hospital) Rick Wage, DCR (R) (Royal Brompton Hospital) Gregory Wehner, BS (University of Kentucky) Lu Lin, MD (Peking Union Medical Collge Hospital) Jakub Lagan, LEKARZ MRCP (University Hospital of South Manchester) Alessandro Satriano, PhD (Libin Cardiovascular Institute of Alberta, University of Calgary) New Techniques Ready for Clinical Application: T1 mapping inducible ischemia: pathophysiological insights? Bashir Alaour, MD, MRCP(UK) (University Hospital Southampton) New Techniques Ready for Clinical Application: T1 mapping inducible ischemia: pathophysiological insights? Christina Menexi, MBBS (University Hospital Southampton) www.scmr.org 43 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S 11:40 AM R031 11:42 AM R030 11:48 AM R032 11:51 AM R033 SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2017 New Techniques Ready for Clinical Application: T1 mapping inducible ischemia: pathophysiological insights? Andrew Flett, MBBS, MD (res) (University Hospital Southampton) New Techniques Ready for Clinical Application: Visualization of Acute Edema in the Left Atrial Myocardium after Radiofrequency Ablation: Application of a Novel High-Resolution 3D MRI Sequence (3D-SPACE). Tarek Zghaib, MD (Johns Hopkins University) Withdrawn New Techniques Ready for Clinical Application: Diagnostic performance of T1-mapping, T2-mapping and bright blood oedema imaging (ACUT2E) in an unselected population of patients with acute STEMI: The British Heart Foundation MR-MI study. Aidan Morgan, BSc (Med Sci) Hons (University of Glasgow) 11:54 AM R034 New Techniques Ready for Clinical Application: Diagnostic performance of T1-mapping, T2-mapping and bright blood oedema imaging (ACUT2E) in an unselected population of patients with acute STEMI: The British Heart Foundation MR-MI study. Aidan Morgan, BSc (Med Sci) Hons (University of Glasgow) 11:57 AM R036 12:00 PM R037 12:03 PM R038 12:06 PM R039 12:09 PM R040 Miscellaneous: Have we reached Status Quo with Contemporary Pacemaker/ICD in the MRI Environment; a Focused MRI Variability Study Loretta Gevenosky, R.N. (Allegheny General Hospital) Miscellaneous: Ferumoxytol MRI Across the Age Spectrum: Acute and Short-term Single Center Safety Experience Kim-Lien Nguyen, MD (David Geffen School of Medicine and VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System) Miscellaneous: Pacemaker Lead-tip Heating During MRI Exams Depends on Patient Orientation Jessica Martinez Martinez, (University of California, Los Angeles) Miscellaneous: Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging to Diagnose Orthotopic Heart Transplant Rejection Diego Medvedofsky, MD (University of Chicago) Miscellaneous: Diagnostic Yield of Cardiac MRI for Patients with Ventricular Tachycardia or Premature Ventricular Complexes with Preserved Left Ventricular Function Ross Roberts-Thomson, MBBS, BMedSci(Hons) (Royal Adelaide Hospital) Room: Maryland C Time: 11:15 AM – 12:30 PM PRO-CON IN CMR Moderators: Scott Flamm, MD MBA (Cleveland Clinic) Andrew Arai, MD (National Institues of Health) 11:15 AM 11:33 AM 11:51 AM 12:09 PM Contrast agents should be part of routine CMR protocols for myocardial disease Pro: Rolf Gebker, MD, PhD (German Heart Institute Berlin), Con: Erica Dall’Armellina, MD, PhD (Oxford University) The race for coronary imaging is lost to CT Pro: Sebastian Kelle, MD, PhD (Deutsches Herzzentrum Berlin), Con: Jens Bremerich, MD (University Hospital Basel) Parametric mapping should be performed in every patient with cardiomyopathy Pro: Martin Ugander, MD, PhD (Karolinska Institutet), Con: Massimo Lombardi, MD FESC (Gruppo Ospedaliero San Donato) A blinded core-lab imaging analysis is essential in multi-center clinical trials Pro: John Greenwood, PhD FRCP (University of Leeds), Con: Raymong Kwong, MD, MPH (Brigham and Women’s Hospital) WALKING POSTER SESSION 8: Stress Imaging Room: Maryland 1-3 Time: 11:15 AM – 12:30 PM Moderators: Michael Markl, PhD (Northwestern University) Matthias Friedrich, MD (Montreal Heart Institute and University of Heidelberg) 44 11:15 AM WP64 11:23 AM WP65 11:31 AM WP66 Qualitative perfusion assessment by CMR and invasive coronary angiography is not enough when evaluating patients with coronary artery disease - a cardiac positron emission tomography study Shahnaz Akil (Lund University Hospital) Prognostic significance of heart rate response to regadenoson during stress cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging Jennifer Jue, MD (University of Illinois at Chicago) Safety and Feasibility of Breathing Maneuvers to detect Inducible Ischemia in Patients with Coronary Artery Disease - A Pilot Study using Oxygenation-Sensitive CMR Dominik Guensch, MD (Bern University Hospital) 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S WP67 11:47 AM WP68 11:55 AM WP69 12:03 PM WP70 12:11 PM WP71 12:19 PM WP72 Multi-fold Amplification of Myocardial BOLD Sensitivity Through Coronary Relaxation Mapping Following Regadenoson Injection: Early Findings Hsin-Jung Yang, PhD (Cedars Sinai Medical Center) Prognostic value of perfusion cardiovascular magnetic resonance Eva Sammut, MD (King’s College London / Bristol Heart Institute) Whole-Heart Quantitative Adenosine Stress CMR with Motion-Compensated CS Reconstruction Accurately Detects CAD: Initial Clinical Evaluation Michael Salerno, MD, PhD (University of Virginia) Contrast free assessment of vasodilator response using myocardial T2 BOLD and Arterial Spin Labeled CMR Nilesh Ghugre, PhD (Sunnybrook Research Institute, University of Toronto) Stress Cardiac MRI for Evaluation of Nonspecific Allograft Dysfunction in Heart-Transplant Patients Paul Kim, MD (University of California, San Diego) Splenic ‘switch-off’ as a marker of inadequate adenosine stress using fractional flow reserve to define flow-limiting coronary artery disease and its relationship with serum caffeine levels David Corcoran, BSc (Hons), MBChB, MRCP (University of Glasgow) Room: Chesapeake GHI Time: 11:15 AM – 12:30 PM TECHNOLOGIST TRACK SESSION 6: Adult Congenital Heart Imaging Moderator: Jennifer Bryant, MSc, PhD (National Heart Centre Singapore) 11:15 AM 11:40 AM 12:05 PM Congenital aortic imaging in adults Tim Leiner, MD, PhD (Utrecht University Medical Center) The adult tetralogy of fallots patient Anna Lisa Crowley, MD (Duke University) Systemic right heart imaging in adults SATURDAY PROGRAM 11:39 AM SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2017 John Grizzard, MD (VCU Health Systems) 12:30 PM – 1:30 PM US Working Group Speakers: Julius Torelli, MD (Evicore) Henry McCants (American College of Cardiology) 12:30 PM – 1:30 PM Pediatric & Congenital Section INVITED LECTURE SESSION 9: Advanced Techniques in Congenital CMR: Ready for Wide Clinical Use? Memorial to Sohrab Fratz, MD Room: Chesapeake ABC Room: Chesapeake K-L Room: Maryland A Time: 1:30 PM – 2:45 PM Moderators: Lars Grosse-Wortmann, MD (The Hospital for Sick Children) Gerald Greil, MD, PhD (UT Southwestern/Children’s Medical Center Dallas) 1:30 PM 1:44 PM 1:58 PM 2:12 PM 2:26 PM 2:40 PM Exercise CMR in congenital heart disease Vivek Muthurangu, MD (UCL) Interventional CMR in congenital heart disease Elena Grant, MBChB (Children’s National Health System) 4-D flow in congenital heart disease Shreyas Vasanawala (Stanford University) 3-D printing in congenital heart disease Shi-Joon Yoo, MD (Hospital for Sick Children) Tissue characterization in congenital heart disease Sonya Babu-Narayan (Imperial College London, Royal Brompton) Sohrab Fratz, In Memorium Heiko Stern, MD (Deutsches Herzzentrum München) www.scmr.org 45 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2017 FOCUS SESSION 9: MRI Of Metabolic Disease Room: Chesapeake DEF Time: 1:30 PM – 2:45 PM Moderators: Damian Tyler, PhD (University of Oxford) Colin Berry, PhD FRCP (University of Glasgow) 1:30 PM 1:40 PM Hyperpolarized MRI of myocardial metabolism Charles Cunningham, PhD (Sunnybrook Reaearch Institute) Fat metabolism in the heart Hildebrandus Lamb, MD, PhD (Leiden University Medical Center) Cardiac CEST MRI with Dual-Echo Readout for B0 Correction: A Preliminary Reproducibility Study for Assessment of Metabolic Activity in the Heart 1:50 PM F041 2:00 PM F042 2:10 PM F043 Obesity is Associated with a Compensatory Increase in the Pseudo-First-Order Rate Constant of the Creatine Kinase Reaction 2:20 PM F044 The Pseudo-First-Order Rate Constant of the Creatine Kinase Reaction is More Closely Related to Functional Capacity than Resting Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction 2:30 PM F045 2:30 PM F045 Zhengwei Zhou, MS (Cedars-Sinai Medical Center) Hyperpolarized magnetic resonance imaging of cardiac inflammation and repair following myocardial infarction Andrew Lewis, MRCP (University of Oxford Centre for Clinical Magnetic Resonance) Jennifer Rayner, BMBCh, BA(Hons) (University of Oxford) Jennifer Rayner, BMBCh, BA(Hons) (University of Oxford) Diastolic Dysfunction in Obesity is More Related to Metabolic Processes than to Concentric Hypertrophy Oliver Rider, DPhil (University of Oxford) Diastolic Dysfunction in Obesity is More Related to Metabolic Processes than to Concentric Hypertrophy Jennifer Rayner, BMBCh, BA(Hons) (University of Oxford) ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION 9: Early Career Awards 3: Clinical Room: Chesapeake ABC Time: 1:30 PM – 2:45 PM Moderators: Dudley Pennell, MD, F Med Sci (Royal Brompton Hospital) W. Patricia Bandettini, MD (National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health) 46 1:30 PM O057 1:40 PM O058 1:50 PM O059 2:00 PM O060 2:10 PM O061 2:20 PM O062 2:30 PM O063 Prognostic Implication of First Pass Stress Perfusion Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Imaging Alexander Ivanov, MD (New York Methodist Hospital) T1, extracellular volume and myocardial blood flow mapping: a multiparametric mapping approach in cardiac amyloidosis Ana Martinez-Naharro, MD (National Amyloidosis Centre, University College London) CMR Perfusion Imaging Objectively Diagnoses Microvascular Ischaemia – Novel Validation against Invasive Index of Microvascular Resistance (IMR) Alexander Liu, MBBS, MRCP (University of Oxford) Persistent Long-term Impairment of Cardiac Energetics after Tako-tsubo Cardiomyopathy Caroline Scally, MBChB (University of Aberdeen) Right ventricular function changes in Pectus Excavatum after vacuum bell correction: a CMR study Orsola Montini, MD (Humanitas Research Institute) Noninvasive Functional Evaluation of Coronary Stenosis Using MR Instantaneous wave-Free Ratio (MR-iFR): Initial Patient Study Zixin Deng, MS (Cedars-Sinai Medical Center) Myocardial oedema in AL amyloidosis: new insight into pathogenesis Tushar Kotecha, MRCP(UK) MBChB (Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust) 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2017 Room: Maryland C Time: 1:30 PM – 2:45 PM CASE REVIEW 9: Best Cases of the Web Moderators: Karen Ordovas, MD, MAS (University of California, San Francisco) Michael Campbell, MD, MHA (Duke University) M. Barbara Srichai-Parsia, MD, MS (Medstar Georgetown University Hospital) Kevin Steel, LtCol, USAF, MC (San Antonio Military Medical Center) 1:40 PM 1:50 PM 2:00 PM 2:10 PM 2:20 PM 2:30 PM Uhl’s anomaly: You’ll recognize it when you see it Fateh Ali Tipoo Sultan, FCPS (Aga Khan University Hospital) Organization of intracardiac thrombus: insight from inside a giant left ventricular pseudoaneurysm Felipe Kazmirczak, MD (University of Minnesota) CMRI-Ventricular Tachycarda: Search for the Culprit Wisam Yassi, MD (Noordwest Ziekenhuisgroep) Magentic Resonance Late Gadolinium Enhancement detect acute aortic intramural haematoma Santiago del Castillo, MD (Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires) Large aneurysmal coronary artery fistula: utility of CMR in diagnosis Jason Johnson, MD, MHS (Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital, University of Tennessee Health Science Center) Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Presenting and an Inflammatory Myocardial Disease Tomas Zaremba, MD (Aalborg Hospital) Subarachnoid hemorrhage unmasks aortic coarctation in a young man Tayeb Rahim (Medical College of Georgia) Room: Chesapeake GHI Time: 1:30 PM – 2:45 PM TECHNOLOGIST TRACK SESSION 7: Stress CMR SATURDAY PROGRAM 1:30 PM Moderator: Patricia Feuchter, MSc (MRI) Radiology (Barts Heart Centre) 1:30 PM 1:55 PM 2:20 PM Pharmacological stress Anna Baritussio, MD (Bristol Cardiovascular Biomedical Research Unit) Exercise stress Calvin Chin Woon Loong, MD PhD (National Heart Centre Singapore) Tips for scanning stress patients Chris Lawton, BSc Hons / PGC (Bristol Heart Institute) Room: Maryland A Time: 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM INVITED LECTURE SESSION 10: Sports Medicine Moderators: Bucciarelli-Ducci, MD, PhD (Bristol Cardiovascular Biomedical Research Unit) Matthias Friedrich, MD (Montreal Heart Institute and University of Heidelberg) 3:30 PM 3:45 PM 4:00 PM 4:15 PM 4:30 PM The role of cardiac imaging modalities to screen athletes Frederic Schnell, MD PhD (University Hospital Rennes) Athletic heart and LV overlapping phenotypes Jan Bogaert, MD, PhD (UZ Leuven - KU Leuven) CMR to assess the RV in athletes: ARVD or RV remodelling? Guido Claessen, MD, PhD (KU Leuven) Exercise physiology with CMR in athletes Katarina Steding-Ehrenborg, PhD (Lund University and Skane University Hospital) Cardiac impact of ultra-endurance running: CMR findings Pierre Croisille, MD PhD (University Lyon, University Hospital-Saint-Etienne) www.scmr.org 47 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2017 FOCUS SESSION 10: Coronary MRI In Adults And Pediatrics Room: Chesapeake DEF Time: 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM Moderators: Debiao Li, PhD (Cedars-Sinai Medical Center) Dilachew Adebo, MD (University of Texas Medical School at Houston) 3:30 PM 3:40 PM Clinical utility of MRI in Imaging of coronary vessels in adults and pediatrics Gerald Greil, MD, PhD (UT Southwestern/Children’s Medical Center Dallas) Technical foundations of Coronary MRI in adults and pediatrics Mehdi Hedjazi-Moghari, PhD (Harvard Medical School/ Boston Children’s Hospital) Self-Gated Golden Angle Spiral CINE MRI for Coronary Endothelial Function Assessment 3:50 PM F046 4:00 PM F047 A patient-specific MRI-based 3D computational modeling study of right coronary flow changes during vasodilator therapy in pulmonary hypertension 4:10 PM F048 Diagnostic performance of comprehensive 3.0T CMR with stress in detecting coronary artery disease: High additive value of free-breathing coronary MRA. 4:20 PM F049 4:30 PM F050 Gabriele Bonanno, PhD (Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine) Miguel Vieira, MD (King’s College London) Mineka Yamazoe, MD (Mie University Hospital) Lipid insensitive free-breathing self-navigated coronary MR angiography at 3T using a novel water excitation method Jessica Bastiaansen, PhD (University Hospital and University of Lausanne) Magnetic Resonance Angiography to Assess Anomalous Coronary Arteries in Children at 3-Tesla: Diagnosis, Risk Stratification, and Interobserver Reliability. Steve Muyskens, MD, FACC (Cook Children’s Medical Center) ORAL ABSTRACT SESSION 10: Cardiac Function And Vascular Assessment In Health And Disease Room: Chesapeake ABC Time: 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM Moderators: Elie Mousseaux, MD, PhD (European Hospital Georges Pompidou) Frederick Epstein, PhD (University of Virginia) 3:30 PM 48 O064 Chronic right ventricular remodeling in veteran endurance athletes: novel CMR insights into exercise-induced arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy Abbas Zaidi, MBBS, MD (Barts Heart Centre) Derivation of reference ranges for cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging at 1.5 Tesla from 5,065 CMR examinations in the UK Biobank. 3:40 PM O065 3:50 PM O066 4:00 PM O067 4:10 PM O068 Right and left atrial volume measured with cardiac magnetic resonance is associated with clinical outcome in patients with precapillary pulmonary hypertension 4:20 PM O069 Genotype-phenotype correlations in ARVD/C: CMR reveals differences in LV function between PKP2 and non-PKP2 mutation carriers 4:30 PM O070 Steffen E. Petersen, MD DPhil MPH FRCP (Barts Heart Center and The Center for Rare Cardiovascular Diseases Unit, St Bartholomew’s Hospital) Assessment of arterial stiffness in patients undergoing renal sympathetic denervation as predictor for blood pressure response Karl Fengler, MD (University of Leipzig - Heart Center) Left and right ventricular CMR strain changes in athletes after extreme mountain ultra-long exercise Florian Espinosa, MD (University of Lyon, University Hospital-Saint-Etienne) Anna Bredfelt (Lund University) Mounes Aliyari ghasabeh, MD (John Hopkins Hospital) Association of left atrial volumes and all-cause mortality in a large cohort of subjects with preserved ejection fraction. Mohammad Khan, MBBS (Houston Methodist DeBakey Heart & Vascular Center) 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2017 Room: Maryland C Time: 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM CASE REVIEW 10: Adult Congenital Heart Disease Moderators: Anurag Sahu, MD (Emory University) Margaret Samyn, MD (Medical College of Wisconsin) A Time-sensitive Optimized Protocol Karen Ordovas, MD, MAS (University of California, San Francisco) 3:40 PM C057 3:40 PM C057 3:47 PM C058 3:54 PM C059 4:01 PM C060 4:08 PM C061 4:15 PM C062 4:22 PM C063 4:29 PM Patient-specific 3D printing enables biventricular surgical repair in a complex case of heterotaxy syndrome Mari Velasco Forte, MD (King’s College London) Patient-specific 3D printing enables biventricular surgical repair in a complex case of heterotaxy syndrome Nick Byrne, MPhys, MSc (Guy’s and St. Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust / King’s College London) Ruptured Sinus of Valsalva aneurysm: Incremental value of Cardiac Magnetic Resonance imaging in Diagnosis and Management Anub John, MD (University of Louisville) Late presentation of atrial tachyarrhythmia in a patient with Fontan revision Nilanjana Misra, MBBS, FAAP (Cohen Children’s Medical Center of New York) Unexplained shortness of breath following surgical repair of partial anomalous pulmonary venous return Rukmini Komarlu, MD (Cleveland Clinic Children’s Hospital) The unusual suspect of a pulmonary hypertension referral for ‘low gradient left to right shunting patent ductus arteriosus’ Bram Ruijsink, MD (King’s College London) From Tunisia to New York City: Uncontrolled Hypertension in an Adult with Repaired Coarctation Lynn Zaremski, MD (Montefiore Medical Center) Late presentation of a common congenital condition: why TOF should be always in your differential SATURDAY PROGRAM 3:30 PM Marta Alhama-Belotto, MD (Scripps Clinic) Getting the Numbers Out There: When Quantification is Important Anne Valente, MD (Boston Children’s Hospital; Brigham and Women’s Hospital) 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM Best of the Walking Posters Room: Maryland 1-3 Room: Chesapeake GHI Time: 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM TECHNOLOGIST TRACK SESSION 8: Advanced applications Moderator: Chris Lawton, BSc Hons / PGC (Bristol Heart Institute) 3:30 PM 3:55 PM 4:20 PM CMR of the Transplanted Heart Anna Kydd, MD (Papworth Hospital NHS Trust) Thallaseamia Imaging Giulia Vinco, MD (McGill University Health Centre) New Developments in Clinical Imaging Vassilis Vassiliou, MA, MBBS, MRCP (Royal Brompton Hospital) Room: Maryland 4-6 Time: 5:00 PM – 6:50 PM CLOSING PLENARY CEREMONY 5:00 PM 5:07 PM Late-breaking clinical trials: What’s in the pipeline? Sonia Nielles-Vallespin, PhD, MSc (National Institutes of Health) Outcome in asymptomatic aortic stenosis: the Prognostic Importance of MIcrovascular Dysfunction in Aortic Stenosis (PRIMID AS) study Anvesha Singh, MBChB (University of Leicester) www.scmr.org 49 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2017 SCMR/EuroCMR Worldcup Moderators: W. Patricia Bandettini, MD (National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health) Mark Westwood, MD (Barts Heart Centre) TEAM EUROPE: 5:15 PM Chiara Bucciarelli-Ducci, MD, PhD (Bristol Cardiovascular Biomedical Research Unit) Tim Leiner, MD, PhD (Utrecht University Medical Center) Francesca Pluchinotta, MD (IRCCS Policlinico San Donato) TEAM USA: Christopher Kramer, MD (University of Virginia Health System) Adam Dorfman, MD (University of Michigan) Tony Fuisz, MD (Westchester Medical Center and New York Medical College) 6:00 PM 6:10 PM 6:40 PM Takeaway messages from SCMR 2017 Daniel Messroghli, MD (Charité University Medicine and Deutsches Herzzentrum Berlin) Awards Ceremony Closing remarks from the incoming president Matthias Friedrich, MD (Montreal Heart Institute and University of Heidelberg) 6:50 PM – 8:00 PM Awards Reception SC I ENTI FIC S ES S IO N S 9:30 AM – 12:30 PM 50 Room: Maryland Foyer SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2017 Cardiac Diffusion Special Interest Group 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2016 Room: Camellia 2-3 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance POSTER S POSTER VIEWING SESSIONS This activity will not be CME accredited. Posters are in Prince George’s Exhibit Hall B. You are invited to meet the poster presenters during the following times: POSTER GROUP 1 POSTER GROUP 2 P128-P153 P154-P157 P158-P162 P163-P170 P171-P212 P213-P250 T004-T012 Friday, February 3, 2017 | 12:30 PM – 1:30 PM Congenital Heart Disease Cost Effectiveness and Comparison to Other Modalities Interventional Applications Ischemic Heart Disease New Techniques Ready for Clinical Application Non-ischemic Primary and Secondary CMP Technologist Track Posters POSTER GROUP 3 P251-P254 P255-P258 P259-P262 P263-P297 P298-P316 P317-P332 P333-P354 P355-P369 Thursday, February 2, 2017 | 6:15 PM – 7:30 PM Arrhythmias CAD Other CAD/ Ischemic Heart Disease Cardiac Masses and Pericardial Disease Cardiomyopathies Clinical Outcome and Prognosis Miscellaneous Saturday, February 4, 2017 | 12:30 PM – 1:30 PM Acute Chest Pain Syndromes Molecular Imaging; Contrast Agents Cases -Other Post-Processing and Workflow Pre-Clinical Validation of an Existing Technique Rapid, Efficient Imaging Valvular Heart Disease Vascular MRI POSTERS P001 - P013 P014 - P019 P020 - P046 P047 - P064 P065 - P086 P088 - P108 P109 - P127 ARRHYTHMIAS P001 John Oshinski, PhD Evaluation of Pulmonary Vein Scar Encirclement Patterns After Cryoballoon Ablation for Treatment of Atrial Fibrillation P002 Liliana Ma Using 4D Flow MRI to Evaluate Atrial Fibrillation Patients with Different Clinical Outcomes P003 Rohan Wijesurendra, MB BChir, MRCP Extracellular Volume Fraction in “Lone” Atrial Fibrillation Patients is Similar to Controls and Unaffected by Ablation: Atrial Fibrillation Alone Does Not Cause Diffuse Left Ventricular Fibrosis P004 Daniel Herzka, PhD Assessment of RF Ablation Lesions with T1 Mapping P005 Abbas Nasiraei Moghaddam, PhD Rotational Motion of the Left Ventricle: the Robust Normal Pattern P006 Lei Zhao, MD, Ph.D Altered Mechanics of Left Ventricle in Patients with Atrial Fibrillation and Normal Ejection Fraction P007 Evangelia Nyktari, MD Detection of Ablation Related Complications in Patients with Peristent Atrial Fibrillation Using Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance: Thoracoscopic Surgical Ablation Versus Catheter Ablation P008 Shimaa Khidr, MD Pulmonary Veins Following Pulmonary Vein Isolation Procedure in Patients with Atrial Fibrillation: Remodeling and Prediction of Outcome; a Cardiac MRI Study P009 Amardeep Ghosh Dastidar, MBBS(Hons), MRCP The Ratio of Left Atrial Volume/ Left Ventricular End Systolic Volume by CMR as a Predictor of Atrial Fibrillation in Patients with Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy P010 Julio Garcia, PhD Left Atrial inflow and Vortex Imaging Using 4D Flow MRI in Patients with Paroxysmal Atrial Fibrillation: Exploration for Novel Markers of Atrial Disease and Thrombo-Embolic Risk P011 Esra Gucuk Ipek, MD Improved Reproducibility in Assessment of Left Atrial Late Gadolinium Enhancement with the Guidance of SPACE 3D T2 Sequence www.scmr.org 51 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance POSTER S P039 Corcoran, David The Glasgow MRI Rotational Atherectomy Study (GlaMoRoS): HSRA PCI is associated with a low rate of periprocedural MI and a significant improvement in ischemic burden P040 Puntmann, Valentina T1 mapping at rest and adenosine stress - comparison of T1 mapping sequences for feasibility and effect size P041 Burke, Nicole Global Longitudinal Strain Predicts the Transmural Extent of Infarction Revealed by Late Gadolinium Enhancement in Patients with Recent Non ST-Segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction. P043 Burke, Nicole Global Longitudinal Strain is Independently Associated with Left Ventricular Infarct Characteristics in Patients with Recent Non ST-Segment Myocardial Infarction P043 Varga-Szemes, Akos T1-based Synthetic Inversion Recovery Imaging for Quantitative Inversion Time Prescription for Late Gadolinium Enhancement – Eliminating the Subjective Estimation of Inversion Time P044 Vinco, Giulia Myocardial oxygenation changes during breathing maneuvers in patients with Syndrome-X. P045 Jiang, Bo The Occurrence and Characteristics of Right Ventricular Dysfunction after Acute Anterior Myocardial Infarction by Cardiac Magnetic Resonance P046 Jeelani, Haris Evaluation of k-Space and Image-Space Motion Correction Schemes for CMR Perfusion. CARDIAC MASSES AND PERICARDIAL DISEASE P047 Stephanie Reiter, MD Impact of Post-Processing for Motion Correction On the Evaluation of Stress Perfusion CMR P048 Angel Chan, MD, PhD Prognostic Utility of Delayed Enhancement CMR for Evaluation of Cardiac Masses Among Patients with Advanced Systemic Cancer P049 Yue-Hin Loke, MD Constrictive Pericarditis Mimicking Left Ventricular Apical Ballooning Syndrome (Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy) P050 Clement Wu, MBBS, MRCP Left Ventricular Metastasis of Adenosquamous Lung Cancer P051 Alekhya Potluri, M.D Left Atrial Bronchogenic Cyst Diagnosed On Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging P052 Felipe Kazmirczak, MD Caseous Calcification of the Mitral Annulus P053 Edward Passen, MD Cardiac MRI with Tagging is a Key Imaging Modality for Guiding Successful Treatment of Pericardial Constriction with Totally Robotic Thoracosopic Pericardiectomy P054 Felicity Lee, MBBS Asymptomatic Cardiac Mass - Thrombosed Aneurysm of a Coronary Fistula P055 Syed Latif, MD Pericardial Constriction Secondary to An Unusual Presentation of a Post-Operative Complication From Aortic Valve Surgery P056 Deepa Prasad, MBBS MD An Unusual Right Ventricular Mass in a Teenager Diagnosed by Cardiac Magnetic Resonance P057 Rajeev Fernando, MD Right Ventricular Tumor with Associated Thrombus: A Case Report P058 Supriya Gupta, MBBS MD Recurrent Biatrial Myxomas: Unusual Case with Underlying Carneys Complex P059 Madhusudan Ganigara, MD Primary Pericardial Synovial Sarcoma in a Young Child - A Rare Tumor P060 Fateh Ali Sultan, MBBS, FCPS Right Atrial Myxoma in a Patient with Budd Chiari Syndrome P061 Joyce Schroeder, MD Iatrogenic Right Atrial Compression & Collapse P062 Pelbreton Balfour, MD, ScM Caseous Calcification of the Mitral Annulus P063 Ross Roberts-Thomson, MBBS, BMedSci (Hons) Cardiac MRI for Diagnosis of Right Hilar Mass with Cardiac invasion P064 Richard Lombardi, RT(R)(MR) The Emblematic Role of CMR in Constrictive Pericarditis; A 57 yo Male with Equivocal Findings. CARDIOMYOPATHIES 52 P065 Paul Scully, MBBS MRes Ockham’s Razor Put to the Test P066 Sainan Cheng, MD Left Dominant Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Cardiomyopathy P067 Shivani Patel, MBBS A Teenager with Dry Skin, Wooly Hair, and Tachycardia. P068 Fateh Ali Sultan, MBBS, FCPS Isolated Right Ventricular Endomyocardial Fibrosis in a Young Male with Chronic Myeloid Leukemia P070 Vedant Gupta, MD Fatty Rv…Thinking Beyond ARVC P071 Marc Lee, MD Elevated Troponin and Ventricular Tachycardia One Year After Coronary Unroofing for Anomalous Aortic Origin of the Right Coronary Artery: Role of Cardiac MRI P072 Alexander Ivanov, MD A Late Phenotypic Debut of Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy. P073 Tushar Acharya, MD Myocardial Fibrosis in Two Siblings with Limb-Girdle Muscular Dystrophy Type 2E P074 Rajesh Janardhanan, MD, FACC Extensive Idiopathic Myocardial Calcification in An Octogenarian Female P075 Sony Wicaksono, MD, FIHA 2 Cases with Fibrofatty Replacement of Apical Left Ventricle in CMR Findings Diagnosed as Arrhtyhmogenic Right Ventricular Cardiomyopathy 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance POSTER S P012 Amita Singh, MD Burden of Premature Ventricular Contractions and Myocardial Fibrosis as Measured by Native Myocardial T1 Time: Is the re An Association? P013 Shiro Nakamori, MD, PhD Impact of Left Ventricular Geometry in Predicting Ventricular Tachyarrhythmia in Patients with Left Ventricular Dysfunction: a Comprehensive Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Study CAD OTHER P014 Christoph Jensen, MD Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Acute Decompensated Heart Failure with Reduced Ejection Fraction P015 Ke Wan, MD Characteristics of Myocardial Mechanics Evaluated by Feature-Tracking MRI and Its Relationship with Myocardial Amyloid Burden in AL Amyloidosis P016 James Foley, MBChB BSc (Hons) Differences in CMR Global Strain Assessment in Ischaemic and Non-Ischaemic Cardiomyopathy: Sub-Group Analysis of the VINDICATE Trial. P017 Lena Matthews, MD Gender Related Differences in Coronary Endothelial Function Measured with MRI P018 Travis DeSa, B.A. Comparison of Cardiac Perfusion Between Healthy Volunteers and Cardiac Transplant Patients with Various Degrees of Cardiac Allograft Vasculopathy P019 Akhil Narang, MD Mechanisms of Abnormal Myocardial Perfusion in Post-Heart Transplant Patients P020 Enver Tahir, MD Microvascular Obstruction Following Acute Reperfused Myocardial Infarction Characterized by Multiparametric CMR P021 Malgorzata Wamil, MD PhD Prognostic Significance of Combined Native T1 Mapping and Tissue Tracking Analysis in the Assessment of Adverse LV Remodeling Following Acute STEMI- An Oxford Acute Myocardial Infarction (OxAMI) Study P022 Tina Khan, MRCP, MBChB Improvements in Quantitative Myocardial Perfusion and Carotid Atheroma in Patients with Refractory Angina and Raised Lipoprotein(A) Treated with Lipoprotein Apheresis P023 Hsin-Jung Yang, PhD Heart-Rate independent T2 Mapping for Overcoming Loss of BOLD Sensitivity in Conventional T2 CMR Acquired Under Vasodilator Stress P024 Matthieu Lepetit-Coiffe, PhD Late Gadolinium-Enhanced Compressed Sensing 3D IR FLASH Sequence to Assess Focal Myocardial Fibrosis: Comparison to Standard Breath-Held and Free-Breathing Methods P025 Yeonyee Yoon, MD Differential Prognostic Value of Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Tissue Tracking After St-Segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction P026 Christoph Kolbitsch, PhD 3D High-Resolution LGE MRI Using Shearlet-Based Compressed-Sensing Image Reconstruction P027 Tomas Lapinskas, MD intramyocardial Fat Deposition in Patients with Previous Myocardial Infarction Assessed Using Advanced CMR Imaging – Feature Tracking, Fat Water Separation and Parametric Mapping P028 Thomas Athey Glasgow MRI Rotational Atherectomy Study: Semi-Quantitative Analysis of Stress Perfusion CMR Reveals Changes in Myocardial Perfusion Following Percutaneous Coronary intervention with Adjunctive Hsra P029 Sven Plein, MD PhD Comparison of Two-Dimensional (2D) Versus Three-Dimensional (3D) Whole Heart Myocardial Perfusion CMR in the Diagnosis of CAD and in the Estimation of Myocardial Ischaemic Burden P030 Ulrika Pahlm, MD The Effect of Myocardial infarct Size and Location On Longitudinal and Radial Left Ventricular Function in STEMI Patients. P031 John Whitaker, BM BCh Identification of Right Ventricular Infarction Using Dark-Blood Late Gadolinium Enhanced LGE-CMR in a Swine Ischemia-Reperfusion Model P032 Ziqian Xu The Interplay Between Myocardial Edema and Hemorrhage After Myocardial Infarction Reperfusion in Rats, Continuously Evaluated by T2 Mapping at 7.0T MR P033 Akhil Narang, MD Abnormalities in Myocardial Perfusion Are Associated with Subclinical Systolic Dysfunction in Post-Heart Transplant Patients P034 Dongaolei An, MD Multiparametric Cardiac MR Imaging in the Distinction of Salvaged and Infarcted Myocardium within the Ischemic Area-At-Risk. P035 Kenneth Mangion, MD Segmental Circumferential Strain and the Transmural Extent of Infarction Are Closely Associated in Patients with a Recent Non St-Segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction P036 Ashley Morgan, MD Papillary Muscle Ischemia as Identified by Stress Perfusion CMR – A Novel Marker of Advanced Ischemic MR and Degenerative Mitral Apparatus Remodeling P037 Yushu Chen, MD Early LGE May Severely Underestimate Salvaged Myocardium After Acute Myocardial Infarction Verified by MRI and Histology P038 Sharif, Behzad Vasodilator-induced Myocardial Perfusion Gradients as a Surrogate Marker of Coronary Endothelial Function: Initial Results in Women with Suspected Microvascular Dysfunction www.scmr.org POSTERS CAD/ ISCHEMIC HEART DISEASE 53 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance POSTER S P076 Sudip Saha, MD Fabry Disease P077 Rujuta Katkar, MBBS A Rare Case of Cardiac Amyloidosis Presenting with New Onset Heart Failure P078 Qurat-ul-ain Jelani, MD Role of CMR in Cardiac Amyloidosis: How Far Have We Come? P079 Rashid AL Umairi, MD, FRCR Eosinophilic Granulomatosis with Polyangitis involving the Heart: Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging P080 Purvi Parwani, MBBS Case Session: MRI Characterization of Myocardial involvement in Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD) P081 Rajesh Janardhanan, MD, FACC Peripartum Cardiomyopathy: Comprehensive Evaluation by Cardiac MRI P082 Arun Nagabandi, MBBS Utility of Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Diagnosing Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy in Obese Patients P084 Rajesh Janardhanan, MD, FACC Late Gadolinium Enhancement in Patients with Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy: Is That a Predictor for Ventricular Arrhythmias? P085 Estefania De Garate, MD Differential Diagnosis of Apical HCM Discovered with Cardiac Magnetic Resonance P086 Mit Patel, MD A Firefighter with Sudden Cardiac Death: a Case of ARVC CLINICAL OUTCOME AND PROGNOSIS P088 Antonella Meloni, PhD Association Between Male Sex and CMR Abnormalities and Cardiac Complications in Thalassemia Major Patients P089 Antonella Meloni, PhD The Prognostic Role of Hypertrabeculation by Cardiac Magnetic Resonance in Thalassemia intermedia Patients P090 Linyuan Jing, PhD Cardiac Mechanics Derived From Three-Dimensional Feature Tracking independently Correlate with Changes in Ventricular Size and Function Over Time in Patients with Repaired Tetralogy of Fallot P091 Leena Vimala, DMRD, MD(Radiology) Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging Characteristics and Clinical Outcomes in Adults with Repaired Truncus Arteriosus P092 Mark Nolan, MBBS Myocardial T2 Mapping in Women with Early Stage Breast Cancer Receiving Anthracyclines P093 Geeshath Jayasekera, MBChB MRCP Novel Left Ventricular Segmentation for Identifying Myocardial Histological Changes by Cardiac Magnetic Resonance(CMR) in Pulmonary Hypertension P094 Daniel Knight, MBBS MRCP(UK) Simple Functional Parameters by CMR Are the Most Powerful Prognostic Predictors in the Multimodality Assessment of Cardiac Amyloidosis P095 Huma Samar, MD Pacemakers and AICD’s in the Magnet; Have We Turned the Corner? P096 Louise Niklasson, MS Electrocardiographic Left Ventricular Electrical Remodeling - Incremental Prognostic Value and Relation to Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Measures of Function and Tissue Characterization P097 Ingo Eitel, MD Prognostic Significance of Remote Myocardium Alterations Assessed by Quantitative Non-Contrast T1 Mapping Cardiac Magnetic Resonance in ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction P098 Kenneth Bilchick, MD, MS Comparative Effectiveness of CMR and 3D Echocardiography for Optimizing Left Ventricular Pacing Site Selection and Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy Response P099 Lingyu Xu, MD, MSc. Right Ventricular Remodeling Predicts Outcome in Patients with Symptomatic and Asymptomatic Heart Failure P100 Nay Aung, MD, MRCP Effects of Environmental Noise Pollution On Cardiac Chamber Size and Function in UK Biobank Participants P101 Anthony Lindholm Right and Left Atrioventricular Plane Displacement as a Predictor of Survival in Precapillary Pulmonary Hypertension. P102 Shimaa Khidr, MD Predictors of Success of PVI post-Atrial Fibrillation. Can their be a Pulmonary Vein Resonance Phenomenon; Insights from Cardiac Magnetic Resonance P103 Masliza Mahmod, MBChB, DPhil Presence of Late Gadolinium Enhancement Predicts All-Cause Mortality and Cardiovascular Hospitalization in Patients with Known Or Suspected Heart Failure P104 Amrit Lota, BMBCh BA Prevalence and Prognostic Significance of Left Atrial Dilatation and Right Ventricular Systolic Dysfunction Assessed by CMR in Patients with Suspected Acute Myocarditis P105 Ryan Dolan, MD Regional Myocardial Velocities and Dyssynchrony influenced by Donor and Recipient Characteristics After Heart Transplantation P106 Mun Cheang, MBBS Systemic Vascular Resistance Is the Main Determinant of Hypertension in Pediatric Chronic Kidney Disease P107 Yaron Fridman, MD Myocardial Fibrosis Is Prevalent in Smokers and Associated with Hospitalization for Heart Failure Or Death P108 Iacopo Carbone, Medicine Relationship Between Myocardial Fibrosis and Left Ventricular Functional Impairment in Diabetes Mellitus Type-II Using T1-Mapping Technique. MISCELLANEOUS 54 P109 Jordan Ray, MD Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Strain Imaging to Determine Disease Progression in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension P110 Jennifer Bryant, MSc, PhD Reference Values for Native Myocardial T1 Mapping: insights From a 101-Chinese Healthy Volunteers Cohort P111 Heerajnarain Bulluck, MBBS infarct Size by CMR in STEMI Patients in Clinical Cardioprotection Studies : What Lessons Can We Learn? P112 Estefania De Garate, MD Assessment of Cardiovascular Changes and Correlation with Lung Function in Patients with COPD Using Cardiac Magnetic Resonance 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance POSTER S P113 Mustafa Altaha, MBBS Prevalence of Late Gadolinium Enhancement in 53 Middle-Aged, Sub-Elite Athletes P114 Deepa Prasad, MBBS MD CMR Strain Analysis Using Feature-Tracking in Children with Transfusion Related Iron Overload P115 Niti Dham, MD Correlation of Early Markers in Childhood Cancer Survivors P116 Kelly Jarvis, MS Improved Depiction of Cardiac Anatomy Using 4D Flow MRI with k-t GRAPPA Accelerated 3D CINE bSSFP P117 Arichanah Pulenthiran, BS Right Ventricular Strain From Displacement Encoding with Stimulated Echoes CMR Is Reduced in Overweight and Obese Children P118 Alexander Ivanov, MD Temporal Changes in Left Ventricular Trabeculation Assessed by Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Hypertensive Patients P119 Mariam Al-Mashat, MSc Pulmonary Blood Volume Variation Is Higher in Patients with Heart Failure Compared to Healthy Controls. P120 Jorge Gonzalez, MD CMR Endpoints Show the ir Merit in Trial of Exercise Therapy in PAD P121 Gaetano Nucifora, MD, PhD Quantification of infarct Size in Acute and Chronic Ischemic and Non-Ischemic Heart Diseases: Reproducibility of Different Techniques P122 Caroline Scally, MBChB Optimal Dosing of USPIO to Detect Myocardial Inflammation P123 Julius Weinrich, M.D Assessment of Congenital Vascular Anomalies in People Affected by Thalidomide Using Non-Contrast MR-Angiography. P124 Edythe Tham, MBBS Stress Cardiac MRI Strain Parameters in the Diagnosis of Perfusion Defects in Pediatrics P125 Laura Wandelt Quantification of Left Atrial Volume and Phasic Function Using Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance - Comparison of Biplane Area-Length Method and Simpson´S Method in Transversal Slices P126 Weihao Li, BMSci Reference Value of Left and Right Atrial Dimension, Volume and Phasic Function by Steady State Free Procession Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging at 3.0T in a Chinese Healthy Adult Population P127 Gerald McCann, MBChB, MD Inter-Study Reproducibility of Traditional and Novel Cardiac MRI Measures of Structure, Function and Tissue Characterization in Hemodialysis Patients P128 Carlos Alberto Figueroa, PhD Surgical Correction of Fontan Using Mr-Based Computational Fluid Dynamics P129 Aswathy Vaikom House, MD Can Abbreviated CMR Adequately Support Clinical Decision Making After Repair of Tetralogy of Fallot? P130 Xiao Li, MD Late Gadolinium Enhancement in Ebstein Anomaly and Its Association with Ventricular Function and Disease Severity P131 Animesh Tandon, MD, MS Accurate 3D Prints for RVOT Interventions: A Quantitative Study P132 François Pontana, MD, PhD Compressed Sensing Real-Time CINE Imaging: Right Ventricle Evaluation in Congenital Heart Disease. P133 Bengt Johansson, MD, PHD High Prevalence of increased Left Ventricular Myocardial Extracellular Volume Fraction in Adult Women with Coarctation of the Aorta P134 Davide Marini, MD, PhD Similar Patterns of Brain Growth and Prevalence of Pre- and Post-Operative Brain injury in infants with Single Ventricle Physiology and Transposition of Great Arteries P135 Elles Dijkema, Bsc Preserved Myocardial Deformation After Coarctation Repair, a CMR Feature Tracking Study. P136 Sanjeet Hegde, MD, PhD Patient-Specific Modeling of Cardiac Biomechanics in Repaired Tetralogy of Fallot P137 Sushitha Surendran, MD Degree of Agreement Between Aortic Root Measurements by Cardiac MRI and 2D-Echocardiogram in Patients with Repaired Tetralogy of Fallot P138 Milou van Poppel, MD 4D Flow CMR in Assessment of Neo-Aortic Root Dilatation After the Arterial Switch Operation P139 Srinivas Ananth Narayan, MD, MRCPCH Ventricular Volume Assessment in Congenital Heart Disease using k-t BLAST Cine SSFP P140 Barbara Burkhardt, MD High Afterload Supports Ventricular Synchrony in Discordant Ventriculo-Arterial Connections and in Normal Subjects P142 Jimmy Lu, MD Predictors of Missed Appointments in Patients Referred for Congenital Cardiac Magnetic Resonance P143 Yue-Hin Loke, MD Use of a Novel Data Warehouse Tool to Compare Left Ventricular Size Between Echocardiography and MRI in Children with Mitral and Aortic Regurgitation: Echocardiography Underestimates LV Size P144 Zahra Belhadjer Postoperative Pulmonary Stenosis Assessment in Transposition of the Great Arteries Repaired by Arterial Switch.A 4D Flow Resonance Study P145 Aurelio Secinaro, MD High-Resolution 3D Black-Blood Turbo Spin Echo Sequence with Variable Flip Angles (SPACE) for the Evaluation of Cardio-Thoracic Anatomy in infants with Congenital Heart Disease P146 Keisuke Sato, MD 3D Localization Technique for Congenital Heart Disease with Double Console Machine: Reduction in Examination Time But Preserve Validity P147 Jennifer Co-Vu, MD Pulmonary insufficiency After Isolated Pulmonic Stenosis Repair. Can Cardiac MRI Help Predict How Long We Can Wait? a Pilot Study. P148 Sudip Saha, MD Unusual Case of Syncope P149 Wilson King, MD Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy in An Asymptomatic Adult Woman with Repaired Tetralogy of Fallot. www.scmr.org POSTERS CONGENITAL HEART DISEASE 55 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance POSTER S P150 Nikki Singh, MD Cardiac MRI Aids Diagnosis for Cardiac Arrest in a Previously Healthy Child P151 Pankaj Gupta, MD First Report of Congenital Right Ventricular Aneurysm with Transmural Late Gadolinium Enhancement P152 Christopher Francois, MD Free-Breathing, Swaddled, Non-Contrast-Enhanced CMR in 1-Day Old with Cervical Circumflex Right Aortic Arch P153 Supriya Gupta, MBBS, MD Case-Based Approach to Demonstrate Utility of Cardiac MRI for Planning Biventricular Repair with inconclusive Echo Results COST EFFECTIVENESS AND COMPARISON TO OTHER MODALITIES P154 Robi Goswami, MD Real World Comparison of 2D-Biplane Echocardiography Based Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction and Volumes to Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging: Results From a Tertiary Care Community Hospital P155 Michelle Wu, BS Clinical Operating Points for Non-invasive Cardiac Imaging Modalities Lead to Low Detection of Coronary Artery Disease P156 Björn Wieslander, MD The Ability of the Electrocardiogram in Left Bundle Branch Block to Detect Myocardial Scar Determined by Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance P157 Michael Hall, MD, MS Safety of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Regadenoson Stress Imaging without Pre- and Post-Test 12-Lead Electrocardiography INTERVENTIONAL APPLICATIONS P158 Mari Velasco Forte, MD P159 P160 P161 P162 Reza Razavi, MD, PhD Rajiv Ramasawmy, PhD Mari Velasco Forte, MD Adrienne Campbell-Washburn, PhD MRI-Guided Cardiac Catheterisation Using a Partial Saturation (pSAT) Approach in Patients with Congenital Heart Disease Passive Catheter Tracking with Positive Contrast Using Partial Saturation (pSAT) for Mr-Guided Cardiac Catheterisation Estimation of Circulating Blood Volume Using Ferumoxytol Interventional Planning Through 3D Printing Techniques High Frame Rate Multislice Golden Angle Radial Imaging with GIRF Distortion Correction ISCHEMIC HEART DISEASE P163 Arlene Sirajuddin, MD 53 Year-Old Female with Recurrent Chest Pain and a Coronary Ct Angiogram Three Years Earlier Which Showed Mild, Non-Obstructive Coronary Artery Disease. P164 Asmaa Elsayed Ahmed, MD, MSc. Myocardial Edema Assessed by CMRI in Non-Culprit Artery Bed in STEMI Setting? P165 Arun Nagabandi, MBBS Clinical Dilemma in a Subset of St Elevation Myocardial Infarction: “Door to Balloon or Door to Magnet”?? P166 Noreen Nazir, MD Utility of Cardiovascular MRI in Sudden Cardiac Death Survivors P167 Noreen Nazir, MD Improved Assessment of Ischemia: a Comparison of intermediate Dose Dobutamine Strain Encoded Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Against Single Photon Emission Computed tomography P168 Mayil Krishnam, MD, MBA Utility of CMR in Detecting Clinically and Angiographically Missed Acute Myocardial Infarction P169 Felicity Lee, MBBS Delayed Myocardial Infarction Complicated by Massive Left Ventricular Aneurysm and Thrombus. P170 Manoj Joseph LV Pseudoaneurysm NEW TECHNIQUES READY FOR CLINICAL APPLICATION 56 P171 Yanjie Zhu, PhD Single-shot T2STIR Preparation bSSFP for Myocardial Edema Imaging P172 Sebastian Weingärtner, PhD Cine T1 Mapping: B1 Corrected Look-Locker Inversion Recovery for Phase Resolved T1-Mapping at 3T P173 Elizabeth Jenista, PhD Low Power Wideband Dark-Blood Delayed-Enhancement Imaging P174 Lindsey Crowe, PhD Cardiac MRI with Spatially Resolved Mr-Compatible Ultrasound Doppler Triggering for Function and Flow Quantification at 3T. P175 Shiro Nakamori, MD, PhD Changes in Myocardial Native T1 and T2 After Physical Exercise: A Feasibility Study P176 Wolfgang Rehwald, PhD A Novel Single-Cardiac-Cycle Phase Sensitive Inversion Recovery (PSIR) Method Improves Free Breathing Single Shot Flow Independent Dark Blood Delayed Enhancement (FIDDLE) P177 Dana Peters, PhD T1-refBlochi: High Resolution 3D Cardiac T1 Mapping Methods Based on 3D Late Gadolinium Enhancement, Bloch Equations, and a Reference T1. P178 Nayla Chaptini, MD FACC Initial Experience with the New Dark Blood LGE Images for Detecting Left Ventricular Fibrosis- A Comparison of the Novel TRAMINER Sequence to Gold-Standard Delayed Enhancement Images. P179 Ha Vo, MSc Normal Ranges of Myocardial Strains by 4 Different Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Methods: Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses From 1254 Healthy Subjects P180 Amol Pednekar, PhD Clinical Validation of Free Breathing CArdioREspiratory Synchronized (CARESynch) Balanced Steady-State Free Precession (bSSFP) Cine Imaging 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance P181 Bram Ruijsink, MD Retrospectively Gated 2D CINE and Phase Contrast Flow Imaging for Accurate Assessment of Cardiac Volumes, Wall Motion and Blood Flow During Strenuous Exercise. P182 Adrian Huber, MD CMR Feature Tracking: a Useful Surrogate of Myocardial Fibro-Fatty Tissue Replacement in Left Atrial Cardiomyopathy? P183 Li-Yueh Hsu, DSc Assessment of Myocardial Blood Flow with Fully Automated CMR Perfusion Pixel Maps in Patients with Coronary Artery Disease P184 Chenxi Hu, PhD Cardiac Motion-insensitive Black-Blood TSE Based On Reverse Double Inversion and Diastolic Preparation P185 Lu Lin, MD 3T Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Quantification of Myocardial Extracellular Volume and Left Ventricular Strain in Amyloidosis Patients without Late Gadolinium Enhancement P186 Mary Mahrous, MD, MSc T2 Mapping by Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging: From the oretical Validation to Clinical Implication P187 Graham Fent, MBChB, BSc (Hons) Radial and Circumferential Strain of the Thoracic Aorta Measured by Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Feature Tracking: a Novel Marker of Aortic Stiffness P188 Betty Raman, MBBS, FRACP Segmental Variation of Native Myocardial T1 in Healthy Volunteers and Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy at 3T Using ShMOLLI. P189 Liang Zhong, PhD Fast Assessment of Left Atrial Function by Novel CMR Feature Tracking Derived Long-Axis Strain P190 Liang Zhong, PhD Right Atrial Function Assessed with Novel CMR Feature Tracking Based Long-Axis Strain in Patients with Pulmonary Hypertension P191 Alexandru Fredriksson, MD Right Ventricular Turbulent Kinetic Energy: a Potential Marker for Risk Stratification of Adults with Repaired Tetralogy of Fallot P192 Mehdi Hedjazi Moghari, PhD Simultaneous Myocardial and Fat Signal Suppression for Late Gadolinium Enhancement P193 Eric Aliotta, M.S. Joint Estimates of Myocardial T2 and Apparent Diffusion Coefficient Using Motion Compensated Spin Echo Diffusion Weighted Imaging P194 Jiaxin Shao, PhD Accuracy and Precision of Four T1 Estimation Algorithms for the MOLLI Sequence P196 Pauline Ferry, PhD T1 Mapping in Healthy Subjects Using Smart1Map at 3T: a Comparison with MOLLI. P197 Qizhi Chen, MD, PHD Comparisons of Myocardial Mechanical Properties of the Right Ventricle and Atrium in Patients with Left Ventricular Systolic and Diastolic Dysfunction with and without Clinical Heart Failure P198 Arlene Sirajuddin, MD Synthetic Magnitude and Phase Sensitive Inversion Recovery Images Derived From MOLLI Acquisitions Accurately Determine Size of Myocardial Infarction Compared to Conventional CMR Methods in Patients. P199 Dina Radenkovic, BSc; MD Candidate Community Delivery of the First Semi-Automated Fractal Analysis tool in CMR P200 Tomas Lapinskas, MD Inter- and Intra-Observer Reproducibility of Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Feature Tracking and Sample Size Calculation in Small Animals P201 Mary Mahrous, MD, MSc T1 Mapping as a New Technique in Detection of Fractional Flow Reserve and Developing Ischemia P202 Céline Smekens, MSc Myocardial T1 Mapping Using Free Breathing MOLLI with Real-Time Slice Tracking P203 Jeanette Soon, MBBS (Hons) FRANZCR Single Point Technique Smart1Map On 1.5T CMR: initial Single Centre Experience of Normative Reference Values and Measurement Technique P204 Jan Bogaert, MD, PhD Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Myocardial Feature Tracking Using a Novel Non-Rigid, Elastic Image Registration Algorithm. Assessment of Reproducibility in a Real Clinical Setting. P205 Matthias Stuber, PhD Push-Button Solution for Fully Self-Gated Functional and Anatomical 3D Assessment of the Heart: Preliminary Results P206 Lu Lin, MD Can Quantitative Tissue-Tracking Cardiac Magnetic Resonance (CMR) of Left-Ventricular Deformation Be Used to Diagnose Cardiac Amyloidosis? P207 Alessandra Scatteia, MD The Impact of Age and Gender On Right Ventricle Myocardial Systolic Strain Evaluated by Tissue-Tracking Cardiac Magnetic Resonance P208 Henrique Moreira, MD, PhD Comparison of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Feature Tracking with Harmonic Phase for the Assessment of Left Ventricular Strain in Patients Post Myocardial Infarction P209 Liang Zhong, PhD Assessment of Right Atrioventricular Junction (RAVJ) Motion Using Radially Rotational Long-Axis CMR P210 Stanley Swat, MD A Novel MRI Technique to Quantify Diffuse interstitial Fibrosis in the Right Ventricle P211 Rizwan Ahmad, PhD Fully Automated Online Compressive Recovery for Real-Time, Free-Breathing CINE P212 Masoud Edalati in Vivo Cardiac Diffusion Imaging with High-Speed Single-Shot TSE POSTERS POSTER S NON-ISCHEMIC PRIMARY AND SECONDARY CMP P213 Mark Cartoski, MD, FAAP Risk Stratification for Ventricular Arrhythmia in Patients with Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy (Hcm) Via MRI-Based Computational Simulations: A Pilot Study P214 Anna Reid, MBChB (Hons) MRCP Detailed Left Atrial Assessment in Left Ventricular Hypertrophy P215 Maximilian von Roeder, MD Right Atrial Booster Pump Function Compensates for Impaired Diastolic Right Ventricular Filling in Heart Failure with Preserved Ejection Fraction www.scmr.org 57 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance POSTER S P216 Mihir Sanghvi, MB BS, BSc The Impact of Diabetes On Left and Right Ventricular Structure and Function: insights From the UK Biobank P217 Gaurav Gulsin, MBChB(Hons) MRCP(UK) Does Stress Perfusion Imaging Improve the Diagnostic Accuracy of Late Gadolinium Enhanced Cardiac Magnetic Resonance for Establishing the Etiology of Heart Failure? P218 Magnus Lundin, MD A Simplified Left Ventricular End-Diastolic Mean Wall Thickness-to-Volume Ratio Estimated From Left Ventricular Mass and End-Diastolic Volume Distinguishes Physiological from Pathological Hypertrophy P219 Brian Halliday, BSc (Hons) MBChB (Hons) Gender Difference in Dilated Cardiomyopathy Phenotype as Determined by Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance P220 Christopher Francois, MD Right Ventricular Strain in Acute Thromboembolic Pulmonary Hypertension: a CMR Study in a Pre-Clinical Model P221 Hang Zhao, MD Non-Contrast Multi-Parametric Myocardial Mapping in Patients with Pulmonary Artery Hypertension P222 Shuo Zhang, PhD Native T1 Mapping for Detection of Cardiac Iron Overload in Patients with Thalassemia P223 Jonathan Soslow, MD, M.S.C.I. Myocardial Strain, Not Native T1 Mapping, Corresponds with Presence and Severity of Late Gadolinium Enhancement in Patients with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy P224 Kan Hor, MD Early and Serial Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Studies in Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy Patients Allows Early Detection of Myocardial Fibrosis and Global Ventricular Dysfunction P225 Jimmy Axelsson Ejection Fraction in Left Bundle Branch Block Is Disproportionately Reduced by Small Amounts of Myocardial Scar P226 Betty Raman, MBBS, FRACP Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy is Characterized by Both increased Native T1 and Absolute Reduction in Myocardial Blood Flow. P227 Nivedita Naresh, PhD Regional Structure-Function Cardiac MRI to Assess Cardiotoxicity in Breast Cancer Patients P228 Yuchi Han, MD Systolic Vortices in the Pulmonary Artery: Energy Conservation or Wasting? P229 Ali Yilmaz, MD Relationship Between Electrical and Myocardial Abnormalities in Patients with Myotonic Dystrophy Type 1 P230 Emmanuelle Vermes, MD Segmental Analysis of T2 and T1 Mapping in Patients with Clinical Acute Myocarditis: Evidence of Diffuse Myocardial Process P231 El-Sayed Ibrahim, PhD Harmonic Phase Versus Feature Tracking for Evaluating Regional Myocardial Function in Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy P232 Thomas Johnston, MD Adolescence with Duchenne and Becker Muscular Dystrophy: A Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Comparison Study P233 Yoshitaka Goto, MD The Association Between Coronary Flow Reserve, Extracellular Volume Fraction and Left Ventricular Function in Patients with Non-Ischemic Dilated Cardiomyopathy P234 Magnus Lundin, MD Diffuse Myocardial Pathology Determined by Extracellular Volume Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Imaging Is Clinically Common and independent of Focal Myocardial Scar P235 Antonella Meloni, PhD Biopsy-Based Calibration of T2* Magnetic Resonance for Estimation of Cardiac Iron Concentration P236 Patrizia Pedrotti, MD Evolution of Late Gadolinium Enhancement Burden in the Early Phase of Acute Myocarditis P237 Lazaro Hernandez, MD Regadenoson-induced Microvascular Dysfunction in Children with Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy. P238 Jennifer Bryant, MSc, PhD Left Ventricular Trabeculation Extent Is Associated with Reduced Myocardial Strain in Healthy Individuals P239 Eri Watanabe, MD, PhD Detection of Myocardial Fibrosis and Geometrical Dysfunction in Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy: Assessment by 3T High Temporal Tagged CMR P240 Stephanie Ambach Left Ventricular Strain in Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy: a Cardiac MRI Tissue Tracking Study P241 Vass Vassiliou, MA, MD T1 Mapping Reproducibility in HFpEF: Is Native T1 or ECV More Reproducible and Comparison with Healthy Controls. P242 Erasmo De La Pena-Almaguer, MD CMR in the Detection of Potential Causes of Sudden Cardiac Death in Professional Soccer Players P243 Stefania Rosmini, MD, PhD Age and Gender Influences T2 Mapping in Healthy Volunteers P244 Emily Li, BA Non-invasive Quantification of Right Ventricular Diffuse interstitial Fibrosis in Heart Failure with Preserved Ejection Fraction P245 Antonia Camporeale, MD Geometrical Characterization of Left Ventricular Hypertrophy in Fabry Cardiomyopathy: Insight into Pathogenesis P246 Yeon Hyeon Choe, MD, PhD Variations in Late Gadolinium Enhancement in the Interventricular Septum in Asymptomatic Subjects P247 Yuchi Han, MD Native T1 and T2 Mapping in Left and Right Pressure Overloaded Hearts P248 Stephanie Ambach Circumferential Rv Strain Is Reduced in Patients with Pectus Excavatum P249 Naveen Rajpurohit, MD Assessing the Myocardial Structure-Function Relationship by Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging: Relationship of Extracellular Volume and Myocardial Strain in Normal and in Patients with Cardiomyopathy P250 Thomas Stiermaier, MD Assessment of Right Ventricular Myocardial Deformation in Takotsubo Syndrome Using Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Myocardial Feature Tracking ACUTE CHEST PAIN SYNDROMES 58 74 Year Old Male with Chest Pain After Recent Percutaneous Coronary Intervention P251 Evan Nelson, MD P252 Abtehale Al-hussaini, MBBS, BSC, MRCP A Novel Case of Occult Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection, Identified by CMR P253 Rajesh Janardhanan, MD, FACC Acute Myocardial Infarction with Angiographically Normal Coronary Arteries: Accurate Diagnosis by Cardiac MRI 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance POSTER S P254 Harjot Singh, MD Use of Cardiac MRI to Recognize Myocardial Infarction with Normal Coronary Angiogram MOLECULAR IMAGING; CONTRAST AGENTS P255 Marc Dweck, MD PhD Manganese-Enhanced T1 Mapping: Novel infarct Quantification and Detection of Calcium-Handling Dysfunction in Cardiomyopathy P256 Parmanand Singh, MD Aortic Wall inflammation Occurs independently of Anatomic Dilation in Marfan Syndrome: A Multimodality Study via Integrated MRI-PET Imaging P257 Amir Ali Rahsepar, MD Detection of Myocardial Scar by Late Gadolinium Enhancement Cardiac MR Using Gadoterate Meglumine P258 Jonathan Weir-McCall, MBChB, FRCR Effects of intravenous Contrast Administration On Ventricular Quantification. CASES -OTHER P259 Bharath Sathya, MD Characterization of a Recurrent Sub-Aortic Membrane Utilizing Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Imaging P260 Zohya Khalique, MBBS Unusual Cardiac Sarcoidosis; The Benefits of a Multi-Modality Approach P261 Rashid AL Umairi, MD, FRCR Idiopathic Left Ventricular Outflow Tract Pseudoaneurysm P262 Harold Goerne Multimodality Imaging of Paravalvular Pseudoaneurysms Associated with Prosthetic Mitral Valvular Replacement P263 Amir Fathi, MSc, BSc The Effects of intravenous Contrast Administration On Automated and Semi-Automated Left Ventricular Quantification P264 Ibolya Csecs, MD Determining Left and Right Ventricular Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Parameters Using Threshold-Based Trabecula Quantification Method by Three independent Observers P265 Rebecca Kozor, MBBS The Effect of Magnetization Transfer On Myocardial Native T1 in Health and Disease – Implications for Phantom Calibration of T1 Results P266 Sébastien Roujol, PhD Motion-insensitive Reconstruction of Parametric Map: Application to Myocardial T1 Mapping P267 Clement Daviller, engineer Improved Quantitative Evaluation of Cardiac Perfusion Using Bayesian Estimation: Accuracy and Reproducibility Against Conventional Post-Processing Techniques On Digital and Clinical Data. P268 Jannike Nickander, MD Blood Correction Reduces Variability in Native Myocardial T1 Values at 1.5T Cardiac Magnetic Resonance P269 Akos Varga-Szemes, MD, PhD Non-Binary Technique Accounting for Partial Volume Averaging for the Quantification of Myocardial Late Gadolinium Enhancement P270 Dana Peters, PhD A Fast Semi-Quantitative Assessment of Atrial Fibrosis Strongly Correlates to Fully Quantitative Segmentation P271 Matthew Robson, PhD Visualization Methods to Reduce the Opportunities in the Clinic for User Error with Cardiac T1 Mapping P272 Christopher Lam, MD Comparing Myocardial T1 Relaxometry Post-Processing Techniques for Pediatric and Congenital Heart Disease: Interchangeability and Reproducibility. P273 Filipe Carvalho, MD Quantitative Evaluation of Myocardial Fibrosis by CMR in Non-Ischemic Heart Disease Using a Semi-Quantitative Visual Analysis Technique: Comparison with Standard Semi-Automated Thresholding Techniques P274 Matthew Jacobs, MSc Automated Detection of Myocardial Pixels in First-Pass CMR Perfusion Maps P275 Abbas Nasiraei Moghaddam, PhD Sinmod Method for Quantification of LV Rotational Motion P276 Leonora Zange, MD Same Sequence – Different Software Provider: Different Results? a Post-Processing Comparison of Flow, T1 and T2 Mapping. P277 Judith Zimmermann, MS Advancing Quantitative 4D Flow MRI: Assessment of Manual Versus Automatic Boundary Definition in the Aorta P278 Livia Castro, MD Comparison of Myocardial Fibrosis Quantification Using Magnitude and Phase-Sensitive Inversion Recovery Late Gadolinium Enhancement Images in Patients with Non-Ischemic Heart Disease P279 Ilkay Oksuz, M.sc. Fully Automated Myocardial Segmentation of Cardiac BOLD MRI P280 Takegawa Yoshida, M.D. Ferumoxytol MRA and Non-Contrast CT Fusion in TAVR Patients with Implantable Cardiac Device P281 Ahmed Fahmy, PhD Multiple-2D Dual Active Shape Model Framework for Right-Ventricle Segmentation in CMR Images P282 Habib Rebbah A New Approach to Manage the Absence of Full Recovery of the Longitudinal Magnetization Between the Look-Locker Blocs in MOLLI Sequence: Temporal Registration P283 Jonathan Suever, PhD Polar Processing of Cine Displacement Encoding with Stimulated Echoes (DENSE) Data Provides More Accurate Quantification of Cardiac Mechanics Than Traditional Cartesian Analysis P284 Daniel Swarbrick, MBBS, BMedSci Optimisation of Post Processing Analysis of Circumferential Strain and Strain Rate Using Novel Cine-Based Tissue Tracking at Different Field Strengths www.scmr.org POSTERS POST-PROCESSING AND WORKFLOW 59 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance POSTER S P285 Shi-Jun Zhang, MD, PhD Physiological Variation and Correction of Myocardial Extracellular Volume Fraction (ECV) - Calculation and Preliminary Application of Expected ECV Value P286 Asik Ali Mohamed Ali, MD Quantification of Ventricular Function with MRI, CT and Echocardiography P287 Rahil Shahzad, PhD Automated Beat to Beat Cardiac Function Assessment From Real-Time Cardiac MRI P288 Agnieszka Töpper, MD Factors Influencing the Reproducibility of Right Ventricular Volume Measurement P289 Aiden Abidov, MD, PHD The Effects of interventricular Uncoupling in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension on MRI-Derived Metrics on Right and Left Ventricular Volumes and Function: Comparison with invasive Hemodynamics P290 Ryan Avery, MD Semi-Automated Segmentation of the Right Ventricular Short Axis Derived From Identification of Four Anatomic Landmarks in Long Axis P291 Ling Lin, Master of Medicine The Value of Feature/Contour-Based Registration in Quantification of Myocardial Extracellular Volume Fraction Based On T1 Mapping Technique P292 Aurelien Bustin, MSc Saturation-Based Myocardial T1 Mapping with Denoising: initial Comparative Study with MOLLI P293 Teodora Chitiboi, PhD influence of Breathing On Septum Motion From Multi-Dimensional Cardiac MRI P294 Markus Huellebrand, M.Sc. Validation of Multiple T1 Mapping Algorithms P295 Stig Samnøy, MSc Visualization and Quantification of Right Ventricular Wall Velocities and Blood Flow by 3T 4D P-MRI P296 Yan Wang, PhD Shape-Based Segmentation On 3D Cardiac Cine MRI for Cardiac Functional Measurements P297 Inês Bagulho Optimization of LV Flow Component Quantification From 4D Flow MRI - Parameter Sensitivity Analysis PRE-CLINICAL VALIDATION OF AN EXISTING TECHNIQUE P298 Raquel Themudo, MD, PhD Validation of Fully Automated Quantitative Myocardial Perfusion by Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Compared to Coronary Sinus Flow P299 Amrit Lota, BMBCh BA T1 Mapping and Extracellular Volume in Patients with Healed Myocarditis P300 Tarik Hafyane, MSC Bringing the T1 Mapping Sequences together: A Study of the T2 Effects in Ex Vivo Pig Hearts P301 Yoko Mikami, MD, Ph.D Non-Contrast T1 Mapping at 3 Tesla Identifies Regional Replacement Fibrosis in Ischemic, Dilated and Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy: Comparison of Quantitative Analyses Versus Late Gadolinium Enhancement P302 Valentina Puntmann, MD, PhD T1 Mapping Sequence Comparison - Normal Ranges and Reproducibility in Healthy Human Myocardium P303 Pedro Ferreira, PhD Study On the Impact of Strain Correction On the Secondary Eigenvector of Diffusion with in Vivo and Ex Vivo Porcine Hearts P304 Ling Lin, Master of Medicine Myocardial Extracellular Volume Fraction of the Left Ventricle in Healthy Adults Based On MOLLI T1 Mapping: Segmental Quantification and influence Factors P305 Shaw Hua (Anthony) Kueh, MBChB, FRACP Smart1Map in Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy (HCM): Initial Experience P306 Roel van der Palen, M.D. Reproducibility of Aortic Wall Shear Stress as Assessed by Multiphase Segmentation with 4D Flow CMR in Healthy Volunteers P307 Arlene Sirajuddin, MD Histopatholologic Validation of Synthetic Inversion Recovery CMR in Canine Acute Myocardial Infarction. P308 Nivedita Naresh, Ph.D. Repeatability of Myocardial Tissue Phase Mapping in Mice P309 Yan Wen Feasibility Study of Free-Breathing in Vivo Cardiac Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping P310 Anja CS Brau, Ph.D. Accurate and Reliable 2D and 4D Flow Measurements in Pulmonary Branch Pulsatile Phantom P311 Mari Velasco Forte, MD Visualization of Coronary Arteries in Patients with Congenital Heart Disease Using Whole-Heart Image Navigated Coronary MR Angiography P312 Christos Xanthis, PhD How to Obtain Accurate MOLLI Measurements by Means of Advanced MR Simulations (Squaremr) P313 Chia-Ying Liu, Ph.D Chemotherapy Effect On the Myocardial interstitium: CMR T1 Mapping in a Preclinical Model P314 Tazim Merchant Assessment of Myocardial Contractility Using Strain Imaging P315 Yuchi Han, MD The Reproducibility of T1 and T2 Measurements Varies in Different Sites of the Heart and Correlates with Wall Thickness P316 Rominder Grover, MBBS (Hons) FRACP Smart1Map in Non-Ischaemic Cardiomyopathy: initial Single-Centre Experience RAPID, EFFICIENT IMAGING 60 P317 Robert Edelman, MD Improved Black Blood Imaging of the Heart Using Radial Balanced Steady-State Free Precession P318 Ming-Yen Ng, BMBS, FRCR Comparison of PSIR Motion Correction Late Gadolinium Enhancement Sequence with TurboFLASH and TrueFISP Late Gadolinium Enhancement Sequences P319 François Pontana, MD, PhD Compressed Sensing Real-Time Cine Imaging: Can It Accurately Assess Ventricular and Valvular Function in Clinical Routine? 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance POSTER S P320 Dan Zhu, PhD student Accelerated Whole-Heart 3D T2 Mapping: Comparison of Reconstruction Strategies P321 Michael Schär, PhD Golden-Angle Spiral Sparse Parallel-Imaging for Coronary Lumen Area Measurements in Short Breath-Holds P322 Richard Eames Developing An Analysis Pipeline for Global T1 Mapping Quality Control in the T1 Mapping and ECV Standardization in CMR (T1MES) Program P323 Simon Lee, M.D. Validation of Rapid Real-Time Cine MRI with Radial K-Space Sampling and Compressed Sensing in Children and Young Adults P324 Carmel Hayes, Ph.D. Automatic Isocenter Positioning with Deep Learning P325 El-Sayed Ibrahim, PhD Evaluation of Regional Right-Ventricular Function in Patients with Tetralogy of Fallot Using Real-Time Strain-Encoding CMR P326 Betty Raman, MBBS, FRACP The One Minute Short-Axis Stack: Cardiac Assessment with Ultra-Fast Real Time Imaging Compared to Cine at 1.5 T. P327 Marcus Carlsson, MD, PhD Multi-Vendor Whole-Heart 4D Flow Validation Study with and without Respiratory Gating P328 Jakub Lagan, LEKARZ MRCP Combined Heart Lung MRI Protocol for Simultaneous interrogation of Heart and Lung Structure and Function P329 Keigo Kawaji, Ph.D. A Single Breath-Hold Simultaneous Acquisition Approach of Both Cine-CMR and Strain-Encoded CMR for a Combined Assessment of Myocardial Wall Motion P330 Stuart Moir, FRACP PhD Should We Correct MAPSE for LV Length When Evaluating LV Long Axis Function with CMR? P331 Jing Liu, Ph.D. Free-Breathing Whole-Heart T2* Cine Mapping at 3T P332 Keigo Kawaji, Ph.D. Scan-Time Reduction by Improved Utilization of Idle Times by Permuting Pre-Scan Ordering: Feasibility Demonstration of a Single Breath-Hold Strain-Encoded CMR P333 Hae jin Kim, Dr. Assessment of Reverse Remodeling Predicted by Myocardial Deformation On Feature Tracking as New Technique in the Patients with Severe Aortic Stenosis: Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study P334 Julia Geiger, MD Ventricular-Arterial Coupling in Patients with Bicuspid Aortic Valve P335 Gaetano Nucifora, MD, PhD Myocardial Deformation Properties in Patients with Isolated Bicuspid Aortic Valve Disease: a Tissue-Tracking Magnetic Resonance Study P336 Paul Scully, MBBS MRes off-Resonance Error Following Aortic Valve Replacement: the Effect On Myocardial T1. P337 Aaron Long, BSc Science Use of Novel, Ssfp Cine-Based Tissue-Tracking to Assess Myocardial Strain in Aortic Stenosis P338 Sofia Kvernby, MSc Evolution of Myocardial Relaxation Times with 3D-QALAS in Aortic Stenosis Patients: Before, 3- and 12- Months After Aortic Valve Replacement P339 Amir Ali Rahsepar, MD Microscopic Myocardial Scarring Is Present in Patients with Bicuspid Aortic Valves with Preserved Systolic Function P340 Masliza Mahmod, MBChB, DPhil Assessment of Left Ventricular Shape and Remodelling Pattern in Severe Aortic Stenosis Before and After Aortic Valve Replacement P341 Bettina Baeßler, M.D. Novel Ways to Characterize Systolic and Diastolic Function in Severe Aortic Stenosis Using Left Atrial CMR Feature Tracking P342 Vass Vassiliou, MA, MD Can Blood Biomarkers Substitude ECV for Estimation of Diffuse Fibrosis? P343 Kenichiro Suwa, MD Aortic Valve Stenosis and Regurgitation Does Not Change Extra Cellular Volume Fraction in Bicuspid Aortic Valve P344 Mareike Gastl, MD T2 Mapping CMR for the Assessment of Myocardial Remodelling After TAVI P345 Matthew Roby, DO Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging Improves Assessment of Paradoxical Low Flow-Low Gradient Aortic Stenosis P346 Karl Rommel, MD Early Hemodynamic Effects of Transcatheter Tricuspid Valve Therapy - insights From Cardiac Magnetic Resonance P347 Kanae Mukai, MD 4D Flow Tracking Improves Assessment of Mitral Regurgitation Severity P348 Rajesh Janardhanan, MD, FACC A Rare Case of Progressive Pulmonary Valve Disease Post Radiation Therapy P349 Santo Dellegrottaglie, MD; PhD Bad Childhood Memories: Traumatic Tricuspid Regurgitation Revealed by Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance. P350 Rahul Dhawan, M.B.B.S. An Unusual Cause of Aortic Regurgitation: incremental Value of CMR in Diagnostic Workup P351 Sudip Saha, MD Unicuspid Aortic Valve P352 Christopher Scelsi, DO Unusual Case of infundibular Pulmonic Stenosis- Cardiac MRI Findings P353 Michael Stokes, MBBS FRACP Massive Pulmonary Arterial Dilatation Visualized On Cardiac MRI in a Patient with Long Term Idiopathic Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension. P354 Jacob Macdonald, MS 4D Flow Cardiovascular MRI During Exercise www.scmr.org POSTERS VALVULAR HEART DISEASE 61 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance POSTER S VASCULAR MRI P355 Alexander Knorr, MD Getting Rid of the Grind: Automated Analysis of Large Quantity Data and intraindividual Stability On MRI Aortic Blood Flow Measurements for Vascular Age Assessment. P356 Alexander Knorr, MD Is the re More to Aortic Flow Curves Than Meets the Eye? MRI Blood Flow Analysis of Large Quantity Data as a Substitute Marker for Vascular Age Assessment. P357 Monica Mukherjee, MD, MPH Non-invasive Assessment of Pulmonary Artery Vasoreactivity at Rest in Healthy Subjects Using 3T MRI P358 Sreeja Sanampudi, BS Determinants of Thoracic Aortic Volume: Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis P359 Yan Wang, PhD Quantitative investigation of Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm Growth Using Registration-Based Segmentation of 3D BlackBlood MR Images P360 Jing Liu, Ph.D. Efficient Pipeline for Patient-Specific Analysis of intracranial Aneurysm Geometric Parameters Using a Novel LatticeBoltzmann-Method-Based Segmentation P361 Michal Schäfer, MSc Hemodynamic Differences in Children with Bicuspid and Unicuspid Aortic Valves P362 Bharath Ambale-Venkatesh, PhD Arterial Flow Reserve in Patients with Peripheral Artery Disease Is Related to Skeletal Muscle Capillary Density and Arterial Stenosis P363 Andrew Comerford, PhD Computer Assisted Assessment of Plaque Vulnerability P364 Gilles Soulat, MD Thoracic Aorta Pwv Assessment by Using 4D Phase Contrast P365 Robert Edelman, MD Highly Efficient Pulmonary MR Venography Using Undersampled Radial Qiss: Comparison with Ct Angiography P366 Galen Reed, PhD Mixed Multiple T2 Preparation Modules for High Contrast Oxygen-Sensitive Cardiac MRI P367 Lizhen Cao, M.D. Thoracic Aorta Flow Sensitive 4D MR Imaging in Hypertension P368 Madhur Roberts, MD Recognizing Arrhythmic Mitral Valve Prolapse Syndrome On Cardiac MRI P369 Jing Wang, MD New Techniques Ready for Clinical Application: Free breathing motion-corrected single shot phase sensitive inversion recovery sequence in the detection of late gadolinium enhancement in heart failure patients with atrial fibrillation TECHNOLOGIST TRACK POSTERS 62 T004 Rick Wage, DCR (R) Hypertension vs Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy: How to distinguish the two by Cardiac MRI T005 George Mathew, BA Real time technologist measured T1 values for estimation of diffuse fibrosis. T006 Joana Leal, BSc Real time imaging: A new approach in patients in Atrial Fibrillation? T007 Fiona McMillan, BSc (Hons) Diagnostic Radiography Improving Efficiency in Stress Perfusion CMR with the Use of Regadenoson T008 Britt-Marie Ahlander, PhD Video information prior to cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging improves patient experience which still remains more challenging than in myocardial perfusion scintigraphy T009 Joanne Wormleighton, DCR(R) Novel technique for assessing total anatomic coverage of aorta in two short breath-holds with a single contrast injection. T010 Hong Liu, MS Comparison of two cardiovascular magnetic resonance feature tracking measurements for the assessment of left ventricular strain T011 Ronald Williams, RT(R)(MR), BA Gadolinium-Based Contrast Agents: A View from the Dark Side T012 Loretta Gevenosky, RN Is the Contemporary Pacemaker/ICD Now Inert in the Magnetic Field; A Focused MRI Variability Study 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance E X H I BITO R DI R EC TO RY Booth #110 Circle Cardiovascular Imaging Inc. 1401 Rockville Pike, Suite 600 Calgary, AB T2P 3P2 Canada Rockville, MD 20852 USA Phone (403) 338-1870 Phone800-943-1709 Fax (403) 338-1895 Webwww.apca.org [email protected] The Certification Board of Nuclear Cardiology (CBNC) and the Certification Board of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography (CBCCT) assessments are now a part of the Alliance for Physician Certification and Advancement™ (APCA™). APCA has over 21,000 certified physicians throughout the world and is part of the non-profit Inteleos™ family of certification alliances. The CBNC and CBCCT certification programs were established to develop and administer practice-related examinations in the field of Nuclear Cardiology and Cardiovascular Computed Tomography and to award certification to those physicians who successfully complete the examination process. Webwww.circlecvi.com Arterys Booth #113/212 51 Federal St., Suite 305 Circle Cardiovascular Imaging Inc. develops and markets cardiac post-processing software that allows for the evaluation and analysis of MR and CT images. Available for clinical and research use, the stand-alone software provides full DICOM and PACS connectivity. Circle operates worldwide and its products (cvi42, cmr42, ct42, and report42) have been approved for the Canadian, American, Australian, Korean and European markets. Circle’s goal is to contribute to quality in cardiovascular imaging and research. European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging (EACVI) Booth #115 2035, route des colles San Francisco, CA 94109 USA Sophia Antipolis 06903 FRANCE Phone (661) 301-1637 Phone +33 6 8987 2038 [email protected] Fax +33 6 9296 8646 Web www.arterys.com Arterys is the first cloud-based medical imaging analytics platform with an FDA cleared deep learning technology. Our first product is a cardiac MRI suite with 4D Flow, automatic RV/LV segmentation, 2D PC, 2D SSFP, 3D Cine and standard research modules (perfusion, delayed enhancement). The platform is compatible with all vendors and protects patient privacy through our PHI Service. Using the platform, we can quickly develop new predictive analytics and AI applications. Cardiovascular Imaging Solutions Ltd Booth #301/307 #250 815 8th Ave SW Booth #403 Incubator, Imperial College London London SW7 2AZ UK [email protected] Webwww.escardio.org The EACVI is the leading international network in Cardiovascular Imaging worldwide. Its mission is “to promote excellence in clinical diagnosis, research, technical development and education in Cardiovascular Imaging in Europe”. It is a unified platform of experts and a knowledge provider in CMR, Echo-cardiography Nuclear Cardiology and Cardiac CT: live events and distance learning – certification - Journal membership – Grants - EuroCMR congress - recommendations. Learn more at www. escardio.org/EACVI. GE Healthcare Phone +44(0)7885 906770 Booth #313 3200 North Grandview Boulevard [email protected] Waukesha, WI 53188 USA Webwww.cmrtools.com Phone (866) 281-7545 Cardiovascular Imaging Solutions develops and distributes the software CMRtools that is used at leading Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Imaging centres around the world. The software provides DICOM image viewing and analysis and has a range of specialist plug-in packages for ventricular assessment, 3D Visualisation, T2* analysis and first pass perfusion assessment. The software is easy-to-use and provides fast, accurate and reproducible analyses. Webwww.gehealthcare.com GE Healthcare provides transformational medical technologies and services to meet the demand for increased access, enhanced quality and more affordable healthcare. From medical imaging, software & IT, patient monitoring & diagnostics to drug discovery, biopharmaceutical manufacturing technologies and performance improvement, GE Healthcare helps medical professionals focus on delivering better outcomes. Call your sales representative or visit www.gehealthcare.com for more information. www.scmr.org EXHIBITOR DIRECTORY Alliance for Physician Certification & Advancement (APCA) 63 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance E X H I BITO R DI R EC TO RY Heart Imaging Technologies, LLC 5003 Southpark Drive, #130 Intersocietal Accreditation Commission (IAC) Durham, NC 27713 USA 6021 University Boulevard Phone (919) 323-3001 Suite 500 Fax (866) 457-3694 Ellicott City, MD 21043 USA [email protected] Phone (800) 838-2110 Webwww.heartit.com Fax (866) 663-5663 For over 10 years, Heart Imaging Technologies has offered worldwide access to diagnostic-quality DICOM images using nothing but a web browser. Now your web browser is also your CMR workstation (volumes, VENC, T1/T2, etc.), your structured reporting system (382 data elements), and your admission ticket to a searchable database, real-time collaboration, and multi-center trial organization tools. Share your de-identified images, and reports, with your colleagues across the country and around the world! [email protected] HeartVista, Inc. Booth #101 Booth #405 4984 El Camino Real, Suite 102 Los Alto, CA 94022 USA [email protected] HeartVista develops high-end acquisition solutions with modern user interfaces and remote access features to perform robust, comprehensive cardiac MRI examinations. Its real-time and advanced acquisition and reconstruction methods significantly reduce overall exam time and enable imaging difficult patients. Many of these imaging methods do not require breath-holds or cardiac gating. The included real-time sequences have high temporal and spatial resolution and can be used to visualize the motion of anatomy or blood flow. Booth #110 400 Gateway Blvd. / Pauwelsstrasse 17 Burnsville, MN 55337 USA / Aachen, 52074, Germany Phone (952) 818-8417 / +49-241 53528261 Email [email protected] / [email protected] Web www.imricor.com / www.nano4imaging.com Imricor is a privately held company that specializes in developing medical devices and systems that are compatible with MRI. Its unique MR-enabled interventional products are designed to provide doctors the ability to perform interventional procedures while taking advantage of the superior soft tissue imaging capabilities of MRI. Imricor is the world leader in the development of MR-enabled devices for electrophysiology applications. Imricor also licenses its technology to help make implanted medical devices compatible with MRI. Nano4Imaging develops and sells products that enable MRI-guided diagnostics procedures. Our MRWire guidewires have both CE and FDA510 K approval and are used clinically to guide pressure measurements in and around the heart. We are currently developing a second generation of guidewires, as well as diagnostic kits for complete MRI guided pressure measurements. 64 A nonprofit organization highly regarded for its accreditation programs since 1990, the IAC offers accreditation for vascular testing, echocardiography, nuclear/PET, MRI, diagnostic CT, dental CT, carotid stenting, vein treatment and management and cardiac electrophysiology. The IAC programs are each dedicated to one common mission: Improving health care through accreditation®. To date, the IAC accrediting bodies have granted accreditation to more than 14,000 sites throughout the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico. Learn more about the IAC by visiting intersocietal.org. Booth# 214 c/w Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center Webwww.heartvista.com Imricor / Nano4Imaging GmnH Webintersocietal.org Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance (JCMR) Phone (650) 800-7937 Booth# 411 330 Brookline Avenue Boston, MA 02215 [email protected] Web jcmr-online.biomedcentral.com JCMR, the official journal of the Society for Cardiovascular MR, is an open access, online journal that publishes articles on all aspects of basic and clinical research on the design, development, manufacture, and evaluation of magnetic resonance methods applied to the cardiovascular system. The only journal devoted exclusively to cardiovascular MR, JCMR aims to provide an international forum for communicating the latest findings and reviews on the burgeoning field of cardiovascular MR imaging and spectroscopy. Medis Medical Imaging Systems, Inc. Booth #112 & 114 9360 Falls of Neuse Rd, Suite 103 Raleigh, NC 27615 USA Phone (919) 278-7888 Fax (919) 847-8817 [email protected] Webwww.medis.nl Since 1989 Medis medical imaging systems has been a leading provider of analytical software for the quantification of cardiovascular images. At this year’s SCMR we will demonstrate our new workflow-centric imaging platform Medis Suite, a multimodality, single reporting patient analysis platform, from which our well-known and high-quality analysis solutions (Apps) can be launched. These include the further extended QMass and QFlow, as well as solutions for myocardial characterization, strain imaging, CT-volumetric plaque analysis, image-based physiologic assessment of coronary lesions, etc. Please visit booth #112 & #114 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance E X H I BITO R DI R EC TO RY MR Solutions Ltd Booth# 413 Pie Medical Imaging Booth #209 Ashbourne House, The Guildway, Old Portsmouth Rd Philipsweg 1 Guildfrod, Surrey GU3 1LR, England Maastricht, 6227AJ, Netherlands Phone 01483 906305 Phone+31433281327 [email protected] [email protected] Webwww.mrsolutions.com Webwww.piemedicalimaging.com MR SOLUTIONS is the worldwide leader of superconducting cryogenfree, preclinical MRI systems with multiple proven installations of its 3T, 4.7T, 7T and PET/MRI. Recently, MR Solutions has pushed further up its technology and has introduced a new 9.4T cryogenfree. ALL MRI are multimodality imaging compatible for PET/MR, PET/CT, SPECT/MR and SPECT/CT. MR SOLUTIONS’ has over 30 years of imaging technology development and is a key supplier of Spectrometers for clinical MR system. Pie Medical Imaging is the leading provider of software solutions for diagnosis, pre-procedural planning and intra-procedural guidance of cardiovascular diseases and interventions through CAAS and 3mensio product lines. Booth #100 & 102 N27 W23910 Paul Rd, Suite A Precision Image Analysis Pewaukee, WI 53072 USA 8760 122nd Ave NE Phone (262) 347-1250 Kirkland, WA 98033 USA Fax (262) 347-1251 Phone (425) 822-8199 [email protected] [email protected] Webwww.neocoil.com Webwww.piamedical.com NeoSoft’s suiteHEART software is a fast, comprehensive, and intuitive analysis tool for structured reporting of cardiac MRI examinations including function, flow, tissue characterization, and T2*. Learn from cardiac MRI Industry leaders via mini fellowship training, onsite training, or remote support. Since 2004, NeoCoil and NeoSoft have led the industry with many first-to-market products: 16 element flexible coils, MR conditional android tablet, and wireless MRI hearing protection – entertainment system. Please visit www. neosoftllc.com PIA provides an innovative remote image post-processing service for use in the diagnostic medical studies, so you can deliver Healthcare at a lower cost with greater consistency and better quality. PIA offers an excellent opportunity to incorporate previously elusive advances imaging at reduces cost and increased quality with exceptional standardization and turnaround times. Philips Healthcare Booth #107 Vennpluis 4-6 Siemens Healthineers Booth #104 Booth #201 40 Liberty Boulevard Malvern, PA 19355 USA Phone (610) 448-4500 Webhttp://usa.healthcare.siemens.com/ Best, 5684 PC, The Netherlands Email [email protected] Web http://www.usa.philips.com/healthcare/solutions/ magnetic-resonance Royal Philips (NYSE: PHG, AEX: PHIA) is a leading health technology company focused on improving people’s health and enabling better outcomes across the health continuum from healthy living and prevention, to diagnosis, treatment and home care. Philips leverages advanced technology and deep clinical and consumer insights to deliver integrated solutions. The company is a leader in diagnostic imaging, image-guided therapy, patient monitoring and health informatics, as well as in consumer health and home care. Philips’ wholly owned subsidiary Philips Lighting is the global leader in lighting products, systems and services. Headquartered in the Netherlands, Philips posted 2015 sales of EUR 24.2 billion and employs approximately 104,000 employees with sales and services in more than 100 countries. News about Philips can be found at www. philips.com/newscenter. Siemens Healthineers is committed to becoming the trusted partner of healthcare providers worldwide, enabling them to improve patient outcomes while reducing costs. Driven by our long legacy of engineering excellence and our pioneering approach to developing the latest advancements, we are a global leader in medical imaging, laboratory diagnostics, clinical IT, and services. To learn more about Siemens Healthineers, please visit usa.siemens.com/Healthineers. www.scmr.org EXHIBITOR DIRECTORY NeoSoft/NeoCoil, LLC At the SCMR Pie Medical Imaging will present the latest developments on CAAS MR 40 Flow. CAAS MR 40 Flow is designed for visualization and quantification of blood flow in arteries, valves and ventricles and assists in diagnosing (congenital) heart diseases. Additionally hemodynamic parameters can be quantified. 65 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance E X H I BITO R DI R EC TO RY Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance (SCMR) Booth# 213 19 Mantua Road Mt. Royal, NJ 08061 Tel: (856) 423-8955 Email: [email protected] Web:www.scmr.org The Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance (SCMR) is the recognized representative and advocate for physicians, scientists, and technologists who work in the field of cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR). Our mission is to improve cardiovascular health by advancing the field of CMR. We accomplish our mission through education, advocacy, networking, research and clinical excellence. Visit the booth for a free SCMR product and to view historical documents from our archives. TeraRecon, Inc. Booth# 401 4000 E. 3rd Ave., #200 Foster City, CA 94404 USA Phone650-653-4321 Fax650-653-4321 [email protected] Webwww.terarecon.com TeraRecon’s flexible iNtuition viewing capabilities and advanced postprocessing tools can change the way you use images in your daily practice. iNtuition is vendor-neutral, so it can support various types and brands of image acquisition devices. iNtuition can also support multi-monitor diagnostic review, allowing iNtuition to serve as your Overlay PACS™ viewer with these world-class advanced visualization tools right at your fingertips. Toshiba America Medical Systems, Inc. Booth# 207 2441 Michelle Dr. Tustin, CA 92780 USA Tel: (800) 421-1968 Email:[email protected] Web:www.medical.toshiba.com An innovator in medical imaging technology, Toshiba America Medical Systems, Inc. markets, sells, distributes and services diagnostic imaging systems throughout the U.S. Toshiba Medical is committed to providing customers with the patient-focused technology and optimum system performance needed to succeed in today’s healthcare marketplace. 66 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance E X H I BITO R FLOO R PL A N SCMR Annual Scientific Sessions February 2-4, 2017 Gaylord National Hotel & Convention Center Prince George's Exhibition Hall B National Harbor, MD 170 = Seats F&B F&B 114 115 112 113 214 213 313 110 413 411 107 209 308 207 F&B 307 F&B F&B 405 104 403 100 101 201 ENTRANCE 301 401 ENTRANCE www.scmr.org 67 Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance G AY LO R D N ATIO N A L R ESO RT FLOO R PL A N S 68 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Expanded view in cardiology Work efficiently and feel confident in your diagnosis with support from a rich suite of cardiology applications on Philips IntelliSpace Portal. MR advanced analysis capabilities join other rich tools for CT and MR to give you a comprehensive view. MR 4D Flow FDA 510(k) cleared Complete assesment of your MR 4D flow data - Visualize Stream- & Pathlines - Measurement of Wall Shear Stress - Calculate Pressure Drop Visit us at booth #209 www.piemedicalimaging.com MR SOLUTIONS The future of preclinical imaging Superconducting cryogen-free MR Worldwide leader in cryogen free high field MR & PET/MR up to 9.4T Reference sites and publications available Simultaneous and Sequential PET/MR imaging MR SOLUTIONS international recognition for its revolutionary technology SCMR 2017 Flyer.indd 1 THE QUEEN’S AWARDS FOR ENTERPRISE: INNOVATION 2016 Imaging INNOVATIONS www.mrsolutions.com [email protected] 2017-01-03-FC/DT/ND 05/01/2017 17:13 We are EXPERTS in the ART OUTSOURCE YOUR IMAGE POST-PROCESSING ANALYSIS TO US Visit: PIAMedical.com Building on 20 Years of Excellence in Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance N OTES ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 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____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 74 20 th Annual Scientific Sessions • February 1-4, 2017 Visit the CMR innovation leader at booth #201 Compressed Sensing Beyond speed. MRI provides great diagnostic value. However, it is still considered too slow to visualize fast physiological processes in high quality. With our disruptive speed technology – Compressed Sensing – overcome these challenges and go beyond speed by accelerating MRI acquisition at a factor of up to 10, with no loss in image quality. 1 2 510(k) pending Sudarski et. al., Radiology. 2016 Jul 11:151002 siemens.com/compressed-sensing Discover the 1st clinical application – Compressed Sensing Cardiac Cine1: • Acquire free-breathing, high-resolution Cardiac Cine images. • Capture the whole cardiac cycle for precise quantification. • Expand patient population eligible for cardiac MRI. CMR 2018 A Joint EuroCMR/SCMR Meeting January 31 – February 3, 2018 BA RCELON A , SPA IN