TY - BOOK ID - 216479 TI - Nanoparticles in biomedical imaging : emerging technologies and applications AU - Bulte, Jeff W. M. AU - Modo, Michel Mathias Jeannot Joseph. PY - 2008 VL - 102 SN - 128113354X 9786611133542 0387720278 038772026X 1441924620 PB - New York : Springer, DB - UniCat KW - Imaging systems in medicine. KW - Nanoparticles. KW - Nanostructured materials KW - Particles KW - Medical imaging systems KW - Medical instruments and apparatus KW - Radiology, Medical. KW - Medicine. KW - Nanotechnology. KW - Biomedical engineering. KW - Imaging / Radiology. KW - Biomedicine general. KW - Biomedical Engineering and Bioengineering. KW - Clinical engineering KW - Medical engineering KW - Bioengineering KW - Biophysics KW - Engineering KW - Medicine KW - Molecular technology KW - Nanoscale technology KW - High technology KW - Clinical sciences KW - Medical profession KW - Human biology KW - Life sciences KW - Medical sciences KW - Pathology KW - Physicians KW - Clinical radiology KW - Radiology, Medical KW - Radiology (Medicine) KW - Medical physics KW - Health Workforce KW - Radiology. KW - Biomedicine, general. KW - Radiological physics KW - Physics KW - Radiation UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:216479 AB - About the Series: Fundamental Biomedical Technologies features titles in multidisciplinary, technology-driven areas, providing the foundations for breakthrough advances in medicine and biology. The term technology refers, in a vigorously unrestrictive sense, to a broad array of engineering disciplines, the sciences of computation and informatics, mathematical models exploiting and advancing methods of mathematical physics, and the development of novel, experimental discovery devices. Titles in this series are designed and selected to provide high-level visionary input for specialists, while presenting overviews of emerging fields for those in related areas. Volumes in this series aim to provide technologists with the material to gain competent entry into biomedical research and biomedical researchers to understand and embrace novel technological foundations and tools. About the Series Editor: Mauro Ferrari is a professor in the Brown Institute of Molecular Medicine, a professor of internal medicine in the division of cardiology, and the chairman of the department of biomedical engineering at the University of Texas Health Science Center in Houston, Texas. He holds concurrent professor appointments at the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center as professor of experimental therapeutics, and at Rice University in bioengineering. Dr. Ferrari is the current President of the Alliance for NanoHealth and he has spearheaded the development of the National Cancer Institute’s nanotechnology programs. Dr. Ferrari is also the founder and Editor-in-Chief of Springer’s archival journal Biomedical Microdevices. Nanoparticles in Biomedical Imaging Jeff W.M. Bulte and Michel M.J.J. Modo, Editors Nanoparticles in Biomedical Imaging focuses on the use of nanoparticles as chemically engineered small entities that now have emerged as widely used diagnostic agents in biomedicine. The book is logically organized by the specific imaging modalities that are currently central in pre-clinical research and clinical routine, including magnetic resonance imaging, radionuclear imaging, ultrasound imaging, computed tomography, and optical imaging. This comprehensive title provides an expert opinion on the latest developments in biomedical imaging using nanoparticles. Key topics: Use of superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles in magnetic resonance imaging Radiolabeled liposomes and their applications in nuclear medicine Ultrasound bubbles as acoustically reflective medium Exploiting iodinated nanoparticles with computed tomography Quantum dots: the bright future of semiconducting optical agents Nanoparticles in Biomedical Imaging will serve as a useful and valuable resource on the fundamental science of diagnostic nanoparticles in their interactions with biological targets, providing a platform technology for clinical implementation and improved detection of disease. About the Editors: Jeff W.M. Bulte is currently a Professor of Radiology and a Professor of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, USA. He serves as the Director of Cellular Imaging in the JHU Institute for Cell Engineering. Michel M.J.J. Modo is the Wolfson Lecturer in Stem Cell Imaging at the Centre for the Cellular Basis of Behaviour and the MRC Centre for Neurodegeneration Research at the Institute of Psychiatry, King’s College London. ER -