ABSTRACT

Over the past decade, fluorine (19F) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has garnered significant scientific interest in the biomedical research community owing to the unique properties of fluorinated materials and the 19F nucleus. Fluorine has an intrinsically sensitive nucleus for MRI. There is negligible endogenous 19F in the body and thus there is no background signal. Fluorine-containing compounds are ideal tracer labels for a wide variety of MRI applications. Moreover, the chemical shift and nuclear relaxation rate can be made responsive to physiology via creative molecular design.

This book is an interdisciplinary compendium that details cutting-edge science and medical research in the emerging field of 19F MRI. Edited by Ulrich Flögel and Eric Ahrens, two prominent MRI researchers, this book will appeal to investigators involved in MRI, biomedicine, immunology, pharmacology, probe chemistry, and imaging physics.

part |2 pages

Part 1: Technical Issues

part |2 pages

Part 2: [sup(19)]F Imaging Agents

part |2 pages

Part 3: Inflammation Imaging

chapter 7|28 pages

Cardiac Disease

part |2 pages

Part 4: Monitoring of Specific Cell Populations

chapter 8|22 pages

Tracking Lymphocytes in vivo

chapter 9|40 pages

Tracking of Dendritic Cells

chapter 10|26 pages

Neural Stem Cells

part |2 pages

Part 5: Pharmacology

part |2 pages

Part 6: Other Biomedical Applications

part |2 pages

Part 7: Perspectives