Refunds, minus a $15 processing fee, will be granted for cancellations received at least 3 days prior to the program. Cancellations received within 3 days of the webinar will receive a credit toward a future MTMI program, minus the $15 processing fee. No refunds will be made after the webinar starts. MTMI reserves the right to cancel any scheduled program because of low advance registration or other reasons. MTMI’s liability is limited to a refund of any program tuition paid. WEBINAR ATTENDEES that cannot log in due to unsolvable technical issues beyond their control will be eligible for a full refund.

FREE Webinar - Implementing Low-Field, Point-of-Care MR Imaging in Critical Care
All webinars are held in Central Time, see Time Zone Map Below
Overview
About this Webinar
This webinar will provide insight and education on a hospital’s early experience with ultra-low-field, point-of-care MRI technology and an overview of how it has impacted patients in critical care and neuro-interventional neurosurgery.
Additionally, the presenters will discuss the impact of imaging at the patient’s bedside, neuroradiology’s interpretation of patient scans, and how point-of-care imaging can influence the course of care for critical patients.
*This presentation is for informational purposes only for Physicians and is not a CME-earning session.
Educational Objectives
To provide insight and expertise on how ultra-low-field, point-of-care MRI can support decision-making by providing access to neuroimaging at a time when:
- A patient’s condition may present adverse event risks that make transport a challenge
- Imaging is unavailable due to staffing or scanner availability
- Imaging is an option that clinicians would not have previously considered
At the conclusion of this webinar, attendees will be able to:
- Understand how point-of-care MRI can impact critical decision-making for ICU patients or patients transported to the ICU for postoperative observation
- Understand the value of easily accessible imaging and its role in physician decision-making
- Understand how point-of-care MRI provides different information than seen with CT scans and why this matters to ICU patients
Schedule
- Introduction
- Presentation from Andrew Baker, MD
- Neurocritical care monitoring
- Rationale for POC MRI Brain
- Review of initial experience
- Lessons learned in introducing POC MRI into the ICU workflow
- Future directions and related questions
- Q & A moderated by Eddie Knopp, MD, Senior Medical Director, Hyperfine
Audience
Physicians and Technologists interested in learning about ultra-low-field, point-of-care MRI technology and its impact on patients in critical care and neuro-interventional neurosurgery.
Faculty

Name
Dr. Edmond Knopp, MD
Hyperfine Senior Medical Director, Edmond “Eddie” Knopp, M.D.is an internationally respected neuroradiologist with three decades of clinical care and research experience in radiology, neuroradiology, and MR imaging. Dr. Knopp is widely recognized as a pioneer in the field for his numerous accomplishments and thought leadership. Dr. Knopp is a senior member of the American Society of Neuroradiology and an American Board of Radiology examiner and sits on the editorial boards of many of the industry’s leading peer-reviewed publications. He was awarded the American Board of Radiology’s Lifetime Service Award in 2015. Dr. Knopp also serves as an advisor to the International Diagnostic Course Davos, which is the largest medical imaging training course in the world. He is the author of over 80 publications and has given hundreds of international and national presentations.
Dr. Knopp has over 29 years’ experience in academia and private practice, including serving on the faculty at the New York University School of Medicine for more than 20 years. While at NYU, Dr. Knopp held multiple roles, including Director of Neuroradiology, Director of MRI Education and most recently, Associate Chairman for Quality, Technology and Safety.

Name
Dr. Andrew Baker, MD
Andrew Baker has been on staff at St. Michael’s Hospital since 1990 practicing anesthesia and critical care. He is the Chief of the Department of Critical Care, Chief of the Department of Anesthesia, and the Medical Director of the Trauma and Neurosurgery Program at St. Michael’s – part of Unity Health Toronto. He is the inaugural Cara Phelan Chair of Critical Care Medicine, Professor and Vice Chair Clinical Affairs, Department of Anesthesiology at the University of Toronto, and Adjunct Professor in the Department of Physics at the Ryerson University. He is the Vice President of PSI Foundation. He has been involved in provincial organizations, such as Trillium Gift of Life Network as a director for ten years, and as a subject matter expert for Critical Care Services Ontario on ethical issues of access. He has been involved in several aspects of end of life care including death diagnosis guidelines, development of donation practices, provincial policy development and related translational research. Dr. Baker directs a brain injury laboratory and supervises graduate several graduate students in the Keenan Research Centre and he publishes and speaks internationally on his clinical and laboratory research.
Credits
ASRT Pending

Category A/A+ CE credit is pending approval by the ASRT. An application for 1 hours of credit for radiologic technologists recognized by the ARRT and various licensure states has been filed.
Tuition
Audience | Price |
---|---|
Physician | $0.00 |
Technologist | $0.00 |