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Neuroradiology: Page 233
Brain cancer research grants available
By
AuntMinnie.com staff writers
The National Brain Tumor Foundation is now accepting applications from U.S.- and Canada-based researchers for its 2002 grant funding cycle.
December 9, 2001
Java junkies exhibit different cerebral blood flow
By
Jonathan S. Batchelor
CHICAGO - If youโre a radiologist planning a cerebral perfusion or functional MR imaging (fMRI) study, you need to know if the patient is a java junkie, according to research conducted at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, NC.
November 27, 2001
Half-dose CT works fine for some neuro applications
By
Eric Barnes
CHICAGO - For standard head CT applications such as initial screening, standard exposure protocols help ensure the best possible image quality when it's needed. But for non-critical applications such as routine follow-up, minimizing patients' radiation exposure makes more sense.
November 26, 2001
Hyperintensity of white matter on MRI indicates stroke risk
By
Leslie Farnsworth
CHICAGO โ The presence of white matter hyperintensity on T2-weighted MRI and the risk of clinical stroke are directly related, independent of traditional risk factors, said Dr. Norman Beauchamp in a presentation Monday at RSNA 2001. And by combining white-matter grade with other known risk factors, researchers have defined a subset of particularly high-risk individuals.
November 25, 2001
New fMRI studies show learning and judging in action
By
Tracie L. Thompson
Functional MRI is living up to its promise as a window on the brain at work, as exemplified by two recently published studies that used fMRI to track neurological activity associated with learning and ethical decision-making.
November 14, 2001
Alzheimer's disease Part III: Donepezil's benefits may not endure
By
Eric Barnes
Researchers at this year's Society of Nuclear Medicine meeting used SPECT and digital autoradiography to measure cerebral blood flow in patients undergoing drug treatment for Alzheimer's disease. The benefits are only temporary, one group concluded.
October 17, 2001
P.E.T.Net licenses beta-amyloid plaque-labeling technology
By
AuntMinnie.com staff writers
P.E.T.Net Pharmaceuticals has licensed a technology portfolio from the University of California, Los Angeles for labeling beta-amyloid plaques, which may be useful in detecting and treating Alzheimer's disease.
October 9, 2001
Alzheimer's researchers tackle progression, prediction
By
Eric Barnes
PET images of Alzheimer's disease patients show a typical pattern of hypometabolism in the temporal and parietal regions of the brain. However, metabolic patterns vary widely among AD patients. Researchers at the 2001 Society of Nuclear Medicine meeting in Toronto offered important insight into this issue.
October 1, 2001
NeuroPhysics installs first European system
By
AuntMinnie.com staff writers
SPECT developer NeuroPhysics has installed its first NeuroFocus functional brain imaging system in Europe.
September 24, 2001
MRI study finds that Ecstasy use may lead to axonal brain injury
By
Eric Barnes
Users may rave about the effects of ecstasy, but the popular club drug could damage the brain's serotonin axons, according to Dutch researchers writing in the latest issue of
Radiology
.
September 17, 2001
Alzheimer's disease, Part I: PET yields surprising findings in hippocampus
By
Eric Barnes
Predicting who will get Alzheimer's disease is an important question that nuclear medicine is beginning to answer. In Part I of our series on AD, researchers from UCLA find an unexpected link between perceived cognitive decline and reduced FDG metabolism in the hippocampus.
September 6, 2001
4-D Neuroimaging opens first Magnes site
By
AuntMinnie.com staff writers
Magnetic source imaging developer 4-D Neuroimaging's first Magnes 3600 system has opened for operation at the Veterans Administration Medical Center in Minneapolis, MN.
August 26, 2001
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