Next date
Tue, 10 November 2026
Location
Online
About this course
Neuroradiology Focus is a two-day interactive online course designed to enhance neuroradiology skills with a focused imaging update covering key topics in cranial nerves, skull base and neuro-specific spinal imaging. The course is held live and online on Tuesday 10 and Wednesday 11 November 2026, now expanded to two days for 2026 following feedback from previous attendees.
Designed for consultant general radiologists and senior trainee neuroradiologists, neurologists and neurosurgeons wishing to enhance their neuroradiology image interpretation skills. The course features very short interactive presentations, followed by practical cases on PACS with discussion and Q&A, allowing attendees to interpret real imaging alongside expert faculty members.
The course covers comprehensive topics including cranial nerves 1–12, skull base disease (tumour and non-tumour pathology), paediatric cochlear implants and orbital imaging, white matter pathology, and spinal disease (non-tumour, vascular, and tumours). All content is delivered via an interactive cloud-based DICOM viewer where you'll work through cases with immediate feedback and learning points from expert faculty.
Learning outcomes include developing pearls and avoiding common pitfalls when interpreting neuroradiology studies, building confidence in interpreting brain, cranial nerve, skull base and spine imaging, increasing knowledge of pathology and imaging correlates, and gaining confidence interpreting complex neuroradiology images that are becoming more frequent in daily reporting work.
The course includes 90 days of on-demand access to all recorded sessions after the live event, full access to DICOM cases with a comprehensive toolset to manipulate and review images, a CPD certificate of attendance with 12 CPD points awarded in accordance with the Royal College of Radiologists' CPD scheme, and the opportunity to interact directly with faculty during Q&A sessions. Faculty are leading consultant neuroradiologists from major NHS centres including the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, King's College Hospital, University College London Hospitals, and Great Ormond Street Hospital.


