Next date
Mon, 2 November 2026
Location
Online
About this course
An intensive two-day, case-based gynaecology MRI imaging course designed for radiologists wanting to improve their understanding and reporting of gynaecology MRI in clinical practice. The course is organised in response to suggestions from general radiologists who have attended Infomed courses and webinars over recent years.
This practical case-based course is taught by specialist gynaecological radiologists who practice in busy teaching hospitals. The format combines very short interactive presentations followed by cases reviewed on PACS (PostDICOM viewer) with live discussion and Q&A. Delegates have live, simultaneous access to all cases during the webinar and for 90 days afterwards, with the ability to review real cases alongside experienced faculty as they teach and discuss findings via Webex. The course includes MDM-style case-based discussion of common and complex cases with live polling.
- Comprehensive coverage of gynaecology MRI topics including adnexal imaging, congenital anomalies, endometriosis, mesh imaging, placental imaging, acute gynaecology, malignancy, fibroids, and pelvic floor imaging
- Live, simultaneous access to PACS cases during the webinar with full toolset to open, view and manipulate images
- 90 days of on-demand access to recorded sessions with unlimited playback after the course
- Interactive Q&A sessions with expert faculty using chat and Slido polling
- CPD Certificate of attendance with 12 CPD points accredited by the Royal College of Radiologists
- Access to published notes and references for revision
By the end of the course, delegates will have comprehensive understanding of gynaecology MRI in both specialist and district general settings, improved skills in reporting and clinical management, knowledge of tips and tricks to avoid common misses and subtle abnormalities, identification of skills and knowledge gaps relevant to their practice, greater confidence in managing patient outcomes, and better understanding of when to refer for further imaging.


