Prospects of molecular imaging in neurology

Molecular imaging aims towards the non‐invasive kinetic and quantitative assessment and localization of biological processes of normal and diseased cells in vivo in animal models and humans. Due to technological advances during the past years, imaging of molecular processes is a rapidly growing fiel...

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Published inJournal of cellular biochemistry Vol. 87; no. S39; pp. 98 - 109
Main Authors Jacobs, A.H., Winkeler, A., Dittmar, C., Hilker, R., Heiss, W.D.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company 2002
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ISSN0730-2312
0733-1959
1097-4644
DOI10.1002/jcb.10414

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Summary:Molecular imaging aims towards the non‐invasive kinetic and quantitative assessment and localization of biological processes of normal and diseased cells in vivo in animal models and humans. Due to technological advances during the past years, imaging of molecular processes is a rapidly growing field, which has the potential of broad applications in the study of cell biology, biochemistry, gene/protein function and regulation, signal transduction, characterization of transgenic animals, development of new treatment strategies (gene or cell‐based) and their successful implementation into clinical application. Most importantly, the possibility to study these parameters in the same subject repeatedly over time makes molecular imaging an attractive technology to obtain reliable data and to safe recourse; for example, molecular imaging enables the assessment of an exogenously introduced therapeutic gene and the related alterations of endogenously regulated gene functions directly in the same subject. Therefore, molecular imaging will have great implications especially when molecular diagnostic and treatment modalities have to be translated from experimental into clinical application. Here, we review the three main imaging technologies, which have been developed for studying molecular processes in vivo, the disease models, which have been studied so far, and the potential future applications. J. Cell. Biochem. Suppl. 39: 98–109, 2002. © 2002 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
Bibliography:istex:EA00B7ED653031D90CCB5CC5CEA695081F29BF70
Ministerium für Schule, Wissenschaft und Forschung - No. NRW (MSWF 516-40000299)
Center of Molecular Medicine Cologne - No. ZMMK-TV46
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft - No. DFG JA 981/1-2
ArticleID:JCB10414
Max Planck-Society, Germany
ark:/67375/WNG-H3GJVFT3-0
ISSN:0730-2312
0733-1959
1097-4644
DOI:10.1002/jcb.10414