"I really enjoy this teaching format over the standard lecture. Looking at cases cold is so much more effective than watching someone show you pictures for hours. I love it."
Dr. Derek Archer
Toronto, Canada
"I really enjoy this teaching format over the standard lecture. Looking at cases cold is so much more effective than watching someone show you pictures for hours. I love it."
Dr. Derek Archer
Toronto, Canada
Content reviewed: August 11, 2021
"I really enjoy this teaching format over the standard lecture. Looking at cases cold is so much more effective than watching someone show you pictures for hours. I love it."
Dr. Derek Archer
Toronto, Canada
"I really enjoy this teaching format over the standard lecture. Looking at cases cold is so much more effective than watching someone show you pictures for hours. I love it."
Dr. Derek Archer
Toronto, Canada
Pediatric Neuroradiology can be a source of anxiety for many physicians. Everyone wants to figure out what is going on for the patient, their family, as well as their referring doctors. Many of the diagnoses associated with supratentorial malformation can sound similar, especially if you donโt encounter them on a daily basis. When you do encounter them you want to appropriately characterize image findings to provide the best level of care for the patient and their family. This series will review Congenital Supertentorial Malformations, not just by showing a single case from a textbook but the types of variations that you see in real life, from severe cases, to mild cases, and will discuss how to describe them.
Includes