scholarly journals SAT0310 IDENTIFICATION OF FACTORS ASSOCIATED WITH MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGES CHANGES SUGGESTIVE OF AXIAL SPONDYLOARTHRITIS IN THE AXIAL SKELETON OF INDIVIDUALS <45 YEARS – EVALUATION OF DATA FROM A LARGE COMMUNITY STUDY

Author(s):  
Xenofon Baraliakos ◽  
Adrian Richter ◽  
Daniel Feldmann ◽  
Anne Ott ◽  
Robin Bülow ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alan Le Goallec ◽  
Samuel Diai ◽  
Sasha Collin ◽  
Jean-Baptiste Prost ◽  
Theo Vincent ◽  
...  

With age, abdominal organs and tissues undergo important changes. For example, liver volume declines, fatty replacement increases in the pancreas, and patients become more vulnerable to age-related diseases such as non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, alcoholic liver disease, hepatitis, fibrosis, cirrhosis, type two diabetes, cancer, gallstones and inflammatory pancreatic disease. Detecting early abdominal aging and identifying factors associated with this phenotype could help delay the onset of such diseases. In the following, we built the first abdominal age predictor by training convolutional neural networks to predict age from 45,552 liver magnetic resonance images [MRIs] and 36,784 pancreas MRIs (R-Squared=73.3+-0.6; root mean squared error=3.70+-0.03). Attention maps show that the prediction is driven not only by liver and pancreas anatomical features, but also by surrounding organs and tissue. We defined accelerated abdominal aging as the difference between abdominal age and chronological age, a phenotype which we found to be partially heritable (h_g2=26.3+-1.9%). Accelerated abdominal aging is associated with seven single nucleotide polymorphisms in six genes (e.g PNPT1, involved in RNA metabolic processes). Similarly, it is associated with biomarkers (e.g body impedance), clinical phenotypes (e.g chest pain), diseases (e.g hypertension), environmental (e.g smoking) and socioeconomic (e.g education) variables, suggesting potential therapeutic and lifestyle interventions to slow abdominal aging. Our predictor could be used to assess the efficacy or emerging rejuvenating therapies on the abdomen.


2005 ◽  
Vol 100 (4) ◽  
pp. 905-909 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carline R. Quander ◽  
Martha Clare Morris ◽  
Joshua Melson ◽  
Julia L. Bienias ◽  
Denis A. Evans

Author(s):  
M.J. Hennessy ◽  
E. Kwok

Much progress in nuclear magnetic resonance microscope has been made in the last few years as a result of improved instrumentation and techniques being made available through basic research in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technologies for medicine. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) was first observed in the hydrogen nucleus in water by Bloch, Purcell and Pound over 40 years ago. Today, in medicine, virtually all commercial MRI scans are made of water bound in tissue. This is also true for NMR microscopy, which has focussed mainly on biological applications. The reason water is the favored molecule for NMR is because water is,the most abundant molecule in biology. It is also the most NMR sensitive having the largest nuclear magnetic moment and having reasonable room temperature relaxation times (from 10 ms to 3 sec). The contrast seen in magnetic resonance images is due mostly to distribution of water relaxation times in sample which are extremely sensitive to the local environment.


Author(s):  
Alan P. Koretsky ◽  
Afonso Costa e Silva ◽  
Yi-Jen Lin

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has become established as an important imaging modality for the clinical management of disease. This is primarily due to the great tissue contrast inherent in magnetic resonance images of normal and diseased organs. Due to the wide availability of high field magnets and the ability to generate large and rapidly switched magnetic field gradients there is growing interest in applying high resolution MRI to obtain microscopic information. This symposium on MRI microscopy highlights new developments that are leading to increased resolution. The application of high resolution MRI to significant problems in developmental biology and cancer biology will illustrate the potential of these techniques.In combination with a growing interest in obtaining high resolution MRI there is also a growing interest in obtaining functional information from MRI. The great success of MRI in clinical applications is due to the inherent contrast obtained from different tissues leading to anatomical information.


2004 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 315-326 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lori Marino ◽  
Keith Sudheimer ◽  
D. Ann Pabst ◽  
William A. Mclellan ◽  
Saima Arshad ◽  
...  

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