
探花直播next generation of imaging technology, newly installed at the 探花直播 of Cambridge, will give researchers an unprecedented view of the human body 鈥 in particular of the myriad connections within our brains and of tumours as they grow and respond to treatment 鈥 and could pave the way for development of treatments personalised for individual patients.
探花直播next generation of imaging technology, newly installed at the 探花直播 of Cambridge, will give researchers an unprecedented view of the human body 鈥 in particular of the myriad connections within our brains and of tumours as they grow and respond to treatment 鈥 and could pave the way for development of treatments personalised for individual patients.
By bringing together these scanners, the research expertise in Cambridge, and the latest in 鈥榖ig data鈥 informatics, we will be able to do sophisticated analyses that could revolutionise our understanding of the brain 鈥 and how mental health disorders and dementias arise 鈥 as well of cancers and how we treat them
Ed Bullmore
探花直播equipment, funded by the Medical Research Council (MRC), Wellcome Trust and Cancer Research UK, sits within the newly-refurbished Wolfson Brain Imaging Centre (WBIC), which today celebrates two decades at the forefront of medical imaging.
At the heart of the refurbishment are three cutting-edge scanners, of which only a very small handful exist at institutions outside Cambridge 鈥 and no institution other than the 探花直播 of Cambridge has all three. These are:
- a Siemens 7T Terra Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scanner, which will allow researchers to see detail in the brain as tiny as a grain of sand
- a GE Healthcare PET/MR scanner that will enable researchers to collect critical data to help understand how cancers grow, spread and respond to treatment, and how dementia progresses
- a GE Healthcare hyperpolarizer that enables researchers to study real-time metabolism of cancers and other body tissues, including whether a cancer therapy is effective or not
These scanners, together with refurbished PRISMA and Skyra 3T MRI scanners at the WBIC and at the Medical Research Council Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, will make the Cambridge Biomedical Campus the best-equipped medical imaging centre in Europe.
Professor Ed Bullmore, Co-Chair of Cambridge Neuroscience and Scientific Director of the WBIC, says: 鈥淭his is an exciting day for us as these new scanners will hopefully provide answers to questions that we have been asking for some time, as well as opening up new areas for us to explore in neuroscience, mental health research and cancer medicine.
鈥淏y bringing together these scanners, the research expertise in Cambridge, and the latest in 鈥榖ig data鈥 informatics, we will be able to do sophisticated analyses that could revolutionise our understanding of the brain 鈥 and how mental health disorders and dementias arise 鈥 as well of cancers and how we treat them. This will be a powerful research tool and represents a big step in the direction of personalised treatments.鈥
Dr Rob Buckle, Director of Science Programmes at the MRC, adds: 鈥 探花直播MRC is proud to sponsor this exciting suite of new technologies at the 探花直播 of Cambridge. They will play an important role in advancing our strategy in stratified medicine, ultimately ensuring that the right patient gets the right treatment at the right time.鈥
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7T Medical Resonance Imaging (MRI) scanner
探花直播Siemens 7T Terra scanner 鈥 which refers to the ultrahigh strength of its magnetic field at 7 Tesla 鈥 will allow researchers to study at unprecedented levels of detail the workings of the brain and how it encodes information such as individual memories. Current 3T MRI scanners can image structures 2-3mm in size, whereas the new scanner has a resolution of just 0.5mm, the size of a coarse grain of sand.
鈥淥ften, the early stages of diseases of the brain, such as Alzheimer鈥檚 and Parkinson鈥檚, occur in very small structures 鈥 until now too small for us to see,鈥 explains Professor James Rowe, who will be leading research using the new 7T scanner. 鈥 探花直播early seeds of dementia for example, which are often sown in middle age, have until now been hidden to less powerful MRI scanners.鈥
探花直播scanner will also be able to pick up unique signatures of neurotransmitters in the brain, the chemicals that allow its cells to communicate with each other. Changes in the amount of these neurotransmitters affect how the brain functions and can underpin mental health disorders such as depression and schizophrenia.
鈥淗ow a patient responds to a particular drug may depend on how much of a particular neurotransmitter present is currently present,鈥 says Professor Rowe. 鈥淲e will be looking at whether this new scanner can help provide this information and so help us tailor treatments to individual patients.鈥
探花直播scanner will begin operating at the start of December, with research projects lined up to look at dementias caused by changes to the brain almost undetectable by conventional scanners, and to look at how visual and sound information is converted to mental representations in the brain.
PET/MR scanner
探花直播new GE Healthcare PET/MR scanner brings together two existing technologies: positron emission tomography (PET), which enables researchers to visualise cellular activity and metabolism, and magnetic resonance (MR), which is used to image soft tissue for structural and functional details.
Purchased as part of the Dementias Platform UK, a network of imaging centres across the UK, the scanner will enable researchers to simultaneously collect information on physiological and disease-related processes in the body, reducing the need for patients to return for multiple scans. This will be particularly important for dementia patients.
Professor Fiona Gilbert, who will lead research on the PET/MR scanner, explains: 鈥淒ementia patients are often frail, which can present challenges when they need separate PET and MR scanners. So, not only will this new scanner provide us with valuable information to help improve understanding and diagnosis of dementia, it will also be much more patient-friendly.鈥
PET/MR听 will allow researchers to see early molecular changes in the brain, accurately map them onto structural brain images and follow their progression as disease develops or worsens. This could enable researchers to diagnose dementia before any symptoms have arisen and to understand which treatments may best halt or slow the disease.
As well as being used for dementia research, the scanner will also be applied to cancer research, says Professor Gilbert.
鈥淎t the moment, we have to make lots of assumptions about what鈥檚 going on in tumour cells. We can take biopsies and look at the different cell types, how aggressive they are, their genetic structure and so on, but we can only guess what鈥檚 happening to a tumour at a functional level. Functional information is important for helping us determine how best to treat the cancer 鈥 and hence how we can personalise treatment for a particular patient. Using PET/MR, we can get real-time information for that patient鈥檚 specific tumour and not have to assume it is behaving in the same way as the last hundred tumours we鈥檝e seen.鈥
探花直播PET/MR scanner will begin operation at the start of November, when it will initially be used to study oxygen levels and blood flow in the tumours of breast cancer patients and in studies of brain inflammation in patients with Alzheimer鈥檚 disease and depression.
Hyperpolarizer
探花直播third new piece of imaging equipment to be installed is a GE Healthcare hyperpolarizer, which is already up and running at the facility.
MRI relies on the interaction of strong magnetic fields with a property of atomic nuclei known as 鈥榮pin鈥. By looking at how these spins differ in the presence of magnetic field gradients applied across the body, scientists are able to build up three-dimensional images of tissues. 探花直播hyperpolarizer boosts the 鈥榮pin鈥 signal from tracers injected into the tissue, making the MRI measurement much more sensitive and allowing imaging of the biochemistry of the tissue as well as its anatomy.
鈥淏ecause of underlying genetic changes in a tumour, not all patients respond in the same way to the same treatment,鈥 explains Professor Kevin Brindle, who leads research using the hyperpolarizer. 鈥淯sing hyperpolarisation and MRI, we can potentially tell whether a drug is working, from changes in the tumour鈥檚 biochemistry, within a few hours of starting treatment. If it鈥檚 working you continue, if not you change the treatment.鈥
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