Body MRI Fellowship Preparation: What You Need to Know
Preparing for body MRI fellowship? Here's what to study, which pathologies to focus on, and how to build a strong foundation.
Why Body MRI Matters — Even If You're Not Doing a Fellowship
Body MRI fellowship is one of the most popular subspecialty tracks in radiology. But here's the reality: most residents get very limited body MRI exposure during training. Rectal MRI, prostate MRI, gynecological MRI, pancreas MRI — many residents finish residency having seen only a handful of each.
And many radiologists don't do a body MRI fellowship at all — yet they're still expected to read these studies as staff. That's overwhelming when you haven't built a systematic approach to LI-RADS, PI-RADS, rectal cancer staging, or IPMN surveillance.
Navigating Radiology's body MRI mini-fellowship is built for exactly this gap. It covers all the most important things you need to know across:
Whether you're prepping for fellowship or building staff-level confidence, this is your roadmap.
How to Prepare Before You Start
Don't wait until fellowship — or your first staff job — to learn MRI physics and protocols. Start with:
Key Pathologies by Organ
Liver
HCC, metastases, hemangiomas, FNH, adenomas. Master LI-RADS categorization. For a more comprehensive look, see our Liver MRI course.
Biliary System
Cholangiocarcinoma, choledocholithiasis, PSC, biliary anatomy variants. For a more comprehensive look, see our Biliary MRI course.
Pancreas
Pancreatic adenocarcinoma, IPMN, neuroendocrine tumors, pancreatitis. For a more comprehensive look, see our Pancreas MRI course.
Gynecological
Endometrial cancer staging, cervical cancer, ovarian masses, fibroids. For a more comprehensive look, see our Gyne MRI course.
Rectal
Primary staging, mesorectal fascia involvement, EMVI, restaging after neoadjuvant therapy. For a more comprehensive look, see our Rectal MRI course.
Prostate
PI-RADS scoring, transition zone vs peripheral zone lesions, staging. For a more comprehensive look, see our Prostate MRI course.
Renal
RCC subtypes, Bosniak classification, indeterminate cystic lesions. For a more comprehensive look, see our Renal MRI course.
Adrenal
Adenomas vs metastases, pheochromocytoma, myelolipoma. For a more comprehensive look, see our Adrenal MRI course.
Study Resources
Combine structured courses with daily practice. Use RadLingo for spaced repetition and the AI Attending for Socratic case review.
Ready to start reading like a radiologist?
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