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Propelling quantitative MRI techniques from bench to bedside, Quantitative MRI in Cancer presents a range of quantitative MRI methods for assessing tumor biology. It includes biophysical and theoretical explanations of the most relevant MRI techniques as well as examples of these techniques in cancer applications.
The introductory part of the book covers basic cancer biology, theoretical aspects of NMR/MRI physics, and the hardware required to form MR images. Forming the core of the book, the next three parts illustrate how to characterize tissue properties with endogenous and exogenous contrast mechanisms and discuss common image processing techniques relevant for cancer. The final part explores emerging areas of MR cancer characterization, including radiation therapy planning, cellular and molecular imaging, pH imaging, and hyperpolarized MR. Each of the post-introductory chapters describes the salient qualitative and quantitative aspects of the techniques before proceeding to preclinical and clinical applications. Each chapter also contains references for further study.
Leading the way toward more personalized medicine, this text brings together existing and emerging quantitative MRI techniques for assessing cancer. It provides a self-contained overview of the theoretical and experimental essentials and state of the art in cancer MRI.
Show morePropelling quantitative MRI techniques from bench to bedside, Quantitative MRI in Cancer presents a range of quantitative MRI methods for assessing tumor biology. It includes biophysical and theoretical explanations of the most relevant MRI techniques as well as examples of these techniques in cancer applications.
The introductory part of the book covers basic cancer biology, theoretical aspects of NMR/MRI physics, and the hardware required to form MR images. Forming the core of the book, the next three parts illustrate how to characterize tissue properties with endogenous and exogenous contrast mechanisms and discuss common image processing techniques relevant for cancer. The final part explores emerging areas of MR cancer characterization, including radiation therapy planning, cellular and molecular imaging, pH imaging, and hyperpolarized MR. Each of the post-introductory chapters describes the salient qualitative and quantitative aspects of the techniques before proceeding to preclinical and clinical applications. Each chapter also contains references for further study.
Leading the way toward more personalized medicine, this text brings together existing and emerging quantitative MRI techniques for assessing cancer. It provides a self-contained overview of the theoretical and experimental essentials and state of the art in cancer MRI.
Show morePhysical Basis of Magnetic Resonance Imaging. Characterizing Tissue Properties with Endogenous Contrast Mechanisms. Characterizing Tissue Properties with Exogenous Contrast Agents. Image Processing in Cancer. Emerging Trends. Index.
Thomas E. Yankeelov is the director of Cancer Imaging Research at the Vanderbilt University Institute of Imaging Science. He is also an associate professor of radiology and radiological sciences, physics and astronomy, biomedical engineering, and cancer biology at Vanderbilt University.
David R. Pickens is an associate professor of radiology and radiological sciences at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine.
Ronald R. Price is a professor of radiology and radiological sciences as well as physics and astronomy at Vanderbilt University.
"… this book fills a void in the literature in this area. … The
text is well written and in particular is well organized … The text
has abundant mathematic derivations and numerous figures and
diagrams (including many pulse sequence diagrams) … the text
fulfills the goal of providing a one-volume overview of
quantitative oncologic MR imaging. It is ideally suited to
physician scientists and medical physicists working to advance
research in the field and improve future clinical MR imaging
applications."
—Michael Orsi, Radiology, July 2012"This book presents a range of
quantitative MRI methods for assessing tumor biology, including
biophysical and theoretic explanation of the most relevant MRI
techniques as well as examples of these techniques in cancer
applications. … I recommend this special book to trainees and
radiologists using advanced MRI and to basic scientists and
physician scientists using MRI."
—E. Edmund Kim, Journal of Nuclear Medicine, June 2012"… useful as
an introductory text for imaging scientists and physicians who
engage in quantitative cancer imaging methodologies with other
modalities, such as nuclear medicine. … the greatest strengths of
this book are its breadth of subject matter, the uniformly large
numbers of citations provided by the chapter authors and the
detailed index."
—Geoffrey Clarke, Medical Physics, March 2012
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