Choosing the Best Cases
 Residents attending the AIRP's Radiologic Pathology Correlation Course, or "rad-path" course, look forward to its final few days - not because they've nearly completed four weeks of rigorous lectures and learning but because it's when they find out which of the cases submitted during the course were selected by the faculty as the best. What they may not know, however, is how those top cases are chosen and what makes them stand out from the crowd.
Read about the course's best cases. |
 When it comes to neuroradiology education, James G. Smirniotopoulos, M.D., is passionate. "What can I say? The human brain has the most complex structure and function yet described by man," he says. "Also, Woody Allen once quipped, 'The body does all of the work, but the brain has all the fun.'"
He describes his experience teaching at the AIRP. |
Recruiting Residents in Brazil
 Since the inception of the Radiologic Pathology Correlation Course, or "rad-path" course, the number of international attendees has grown. As part of an initiative to continue promoting the importance of the rad-path course, Carl Williams, AIRP's project specialist, traveled to Brazil in May to encourage participation among radiology residents and their program coordinators.
Learn how he helped facilitate international awareness. |