Forum for Science, Industry and Business
  • Sponsored by:
  • Siemens
  • Siemens
  • Siemens
Search our Site:

Topic (optional):

 

Home Reports Health and Medicine Content

Cardiac imaging in 2020

next article
03.09.2008

New molecular imaging techniques aim at detection of earliest steps of disease development and therapy response

 

Molecular imaging aims at the use of imaging probes to visualize specific cellular or sub cellular processes that occur before changes in morphology and function. This is highly relevant because impairments of such processes often are precursors or earliest stages of cardiovascular disease.


They are also involved in the early response to therapy or may identify candidates most suitable for a specific therapy. Probes for multiple molecular pathways, including cardiac metabolism, cell death, neurotransmission, receptors, cell-matrix interaction and cell trafficking have been developed in early experimental work and are increasingly translated into the clinical arena.

Several different imaging techniques can be used for detection of molecular probes, including nuclear imaging, magnetic resonance imaging, ultrasound and optical imaging, although nuclear imaging techniques, and especially positron emission tomography (PET) are currently most promising because of their superior sensitivity for detection of small amounts of highly specific radioactive molecular probes in the body. The new generation of hybrid imaging system, which integrate PET with X-ray computed tomography (CT) will further refine the application of molecular imaging probes, because co registration with a high-resolution CT will allow for better localization of the specific molecular signal from PET.

Applications that are currently being tested in early clinical stages include the identification of individuals at risk for atherosclerotic plaque rupture, identification of risk for development of heart failure and/or fatal ventricular arrhythmia, and monitoring of novel therapies such as stem cell therapy or gene delivery.

The field is still in its infancy and strong translational efforts need to continue to make it a clinical reality in the next years. But there is a strong notion that, in the future era of personalized molecular medicine, molecular imaging will play a key role for guidance of clinical decision making based on individual disease biology.

ESC Press Office | Source: EurekAlert!
Further information: www.escardio.org

next article

More articles from Health and Medicine:

nachricht UCLA assessment technique lets scientists see brain aging before symptoms appear
08.01.2009 | University of California - Los Angeles

nachricht Metabolic syndrome risk for veterans with PTSD
08.01.2009 | BioMed Central Limited

B2B Search

Product / Service
Company / Organisation

Latest News

P2P traffic control

08.01.2009 | Information Technology

Polarized light pollution leads animals astray

08.01.2009 | Ecology, The Environment and Conservation

HWI scientist first in world to unravel structure of key breast cancer target enzyme

08.01.2009 | Life Sciences

Event News

Annual Congress European Association of Urology: highlights in Stockholm

18.12.2008 | Event News

PRACE hosts First Scientific Conference

16.12.2008 | Event News

USM Conference Explores Issues And Challenges In The Global Construction Sector

10.12.2008 | Event News