“MRI of Coronary Artery Disease: Recent Technical Advances”

Date

May 22, 201405/22/2014 7:00am 05/22/2014 7:00am “MRI of Coronary Artery Disease: Recent Technical Advances”

Bruce Hasegawa Memorial Lecture

Debaio Li PhD


Debiao Li, PhD
Director
Biomedical Imaging Research Institute
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
Los Angeles, CA
http://www.radiology.ucsf.edu/education/lectures/hasegawa
http://cedars-sinai.edu/Research/Departments-and-Institutes/Biomedical-Imaging-Research-Institute/index.aspx

Dr. Debiao Li is Director of the Biomedical Imaging Research Institute at Cedars-Sinai in Los Angeles. The Lab's research focuses on the development of novel MRI techniques to address the research and clinical needs of cardiovascular imaging. The group has developed and optimized various MRI methods for fast imaging of the heart and blood vessels, including coronary artery MR angiography, atherosclerosis imaging, myocardial perfusion, and myocardial blood oxygenation evaluation with the goal of early detection and characterization of heart disease using magnetic resonance imaging.

America/Los_Angeles public

Type

Lecture

Time Duration

5:00 PM refreshments; 5:30 PM Lecture

Bruce Hasegawa Memorial Lecture

Debaio Li PhD


Debiao Li, PhD
Director
Biomedical Imaging Research Institute
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
Los Angeles, CA
http://www.radiology.ucsf.edu/education/lectures/hasegawa
http://cedars-sinai.edu/Research/Departments-and-Institutes/Biomedical-Imaging-Research-Institute/index.aspx

Dr. Debiao Li is Director of the Biomedical Imaging Research Institute at Cedars-Sinai in Los Angeles. The Lab's research focuses on the development of novel MRI techniques to address the research and clinical needs of cardiovascular imaging. The group has developed and optimized various MRI methods for fast imaging of the heart and blood vessels, including coronary artery MR angiography, atherosclerosis imaging, myocardial perfusion, and myocardial blood oxygenation evaluation with the goal of early detection and characterization of heart disease using magnetic resonance imaging.

Speakers