Multimodality molecular imaging: Paving the way for personalized medicine

Journal Title: UNKNOWN - Year 2017, Vol 1, Issue 3

Abstract

Early diagnosis and therapy increasingly operate at the cellular, molecular or even at the genetic level. As diagnostic techniques transition from the systems to the molecular level, the role of multimodality molecular imaging becomes increasingly important. Positron emission tomography (PET), x-ray CT and MRI are powerful techniques for in vivo imaging. The inability of PET to provide anatomical information is a major limitation of standalone PET systems. Combining PET and CT proved to be clinically relevant and successfully reduced this limitation by providing the anatomical information required for localization of metabolic abnormalities. However, this technology still lacks the excellent soft-tissue contrast provided by MRI. Standalone MRI systems reveal structure and function, but cannot provide insight into the physiology and/or the pathology at the molecular level. The combination of PET and MRI, enabling truly simultaneous acquisition, bridges the gap between molecular and systems diagnosis. MRI and PET offer richly complementary functionality and sensitivity; fusion into a combined system offering simultaneous acquisition will capitalize the strengths of each, providing a hybrid technology that is greatly superior to the sum of its parts. This talk also reflects the tremendous increase in interest in quantitative molecular imaging using PET as both clinical and research imaging modality in the past decade. It offers a brief overview of the entire range of quantitative PET imaging from basic principles to various steps required for obtaining quantitatively accurate data from dedicated standalone PET and combined PET/CT and PET/MR systems including algorithms used to correct for physical degrading factors and to quantify tracer uptake and volume for radiation therapy treatment planning. Future opportunities and the challenges facing the adoption of multimodality imaging technologies and their role in biomedical research will also be addressed.

Authors and Affiliations

Habib Zaidi

Keywords

Related Articles

Research Excellence: The Imperative Primers

Research excellence characteristics are comprehensively delineated, encompassing creativity through transnationality and translation-capability. The research iterative primers of “Re†and “search†as the underlying...

Report on the International Congress on Health Sciences and Medical Technologies

The International Congress on Health Sciences and Medical Technologies is a periodical congress. It held three times regrouping several researchers and organization active in technology and medical research. With the con...

Bioactive molecule of essential oil of Cuperssus sempervirence Mill – in vitro other treatment against microbial pathogenesis

Background: Each year, many million people attract infections caused by bacteria, fungi, virus,and parasite, infectious diseases reached at high rate, and the problem of emerging and reemerginginfections becomes a seriou...

Multicriteria decision making with ELECTRE III, SOLAP and GIS for spatiotemporal tuberculosis analytics

Background: Epidemic spread is a major public health problem. Rapid detection of the agent, identification of factors promoting spread of epidemic and effective treatment are important parameters in controlling the disea...

Modeling collaborative learning: case of clinical reasoning

Background: Collaborative learning is an important pedagogical strategy which gained a huge interest in critical domains such as the medical field. However, to ensure the quality of this learning method, it is necessary...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP261238
  • DOI 10.26415/2572-004X-vol1iss3p44-46
  • Views 53
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Habib Zaidi (2017). Multimodality molecular imaging: Paving the way for personalized medicine. UNKNOWN, 1(3), -. https://europub.co.uk./articles/-A-261238