Literature DB >> 3039664

Functional imaging of the brain.

P J Ell, P H Jarritt, D C Costa, I D Cullum, D Lui.   

Abstract

The radionuclide tracer method is unique amongst all other imaging methodologies in its ability to trace organ or tissue function and metabolism. It derives this advantage from the nature of the signal used for image generation, and its single interaction with the organ or system under examination. Physical processes such as electron or proton density assessment or resonance, edge identification, electrical or ultrasonic impedence, do not pertain to the image generation process in nuclear medicine, and if so, only in a rather secondary manner. The nuclear medicine imaging study is primarily a study of the chemical nature, distribution and interaction of the tracer/radiopharmaceutical utilised with the cellular system which requires investigation: the thyroid cells with sodium iodide, the recticular endothelial cells with colloidal particles, the adrenal medulla cells with metaiodobenzylguanidine, and so on. In the two most recent areas of nuclear medicine expansion, oncology (with labelled monoclonal antibodies) and neurology and psychiatry (with a whole new series of lipid soluble radiopharmaceuticals), specific cell systems can also be targeted and hence imaged and investigated. The study of structure as masterly performed by Virchow and all his successors over more than a century, is now definitely the prerogative of such imaging systems which excel with spatial and contrast resolution (x-ray computed transmission tomography, nuclear magnetic resonance imaging, diagnostic ultrasound). However the investigation of function and metabolism (as performed by Claude Bernard, Georg von Hevesy, and so many others), has clearly passed from the laboratory animal protocol and experiment to the direct investigation in man, this being the achievement of the radionuclide tracer methodology. In this article, we review present interest and developments in that part of nuclear medicine activity which is aimed at the study of the neurological or psychiatric patient.

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Year:  1987        PMID: 3039664     DOI: 10.1016/s0001-2998(87)80035-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Semin Nucl Med        ISSN: 0001-2998            Impact factor:   4.446


  4 in total

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Authors:  G Stillhard; T Landis; R Schiess; M Regard; G Sialer
Journal:  J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry       Date:  1990-04       Impact factor: 10.154

Review 2.  Clinical applications of SPECT.

Authors:  J W Keyes
Journal:  Int J Card Imaging       Date:  1989

3.  KOREAN PEDIATRIC AND ADULT HEAD COMPUTATIONAL PHANTOMS AND APPLICATION TO PHOTON SPECIFIC ABSORBED FRACTIONS CALCULATIONS.

Authors:  Daphnée Villoing; Dayton McMillan; Kwang Pyo Kim; Ae-Kyoung Lee; Hyung-do Choi; Choonsik Lee
Journal:  Radiat Prot Dosimetry       Date:  2017-11-01       Impact factor: 0.972

Review 4.  PET in clinical oncology.

Authors:  R A Hawkins; M E Phelps
Journal:  Cancer Metastasis Rev       Date:  1988-06       Impact factor: 9.264

  4 in total

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