Looking Beyond Axons: Imaging the Immune System in White Matter
Member-Initiated Symposium
Wednesday, 19 May 2021
Concurrent 8 |
16:00 - 18:00 |
Moderators: Els Fieremans & Shannon Kolind |
Session Number: MIS-09
Parent Session: Looking Beyond Axons: Imaging the Immune System in White Matter
Session Number:MIS-09
Organizers
Julien Cohen-Adad, Francesco Grussu, Shannon Kolind
Overview
This Symposium was proposed by the White Matter study group. Over the past decades, the magnetic resonance (MR) imaging community has largely focused on developing MR biomarkers sensitive and specific to white matter, but focusing mainly on axon morphometry (density, size, orientation) and myelin. But the white matter is much more than that! It also includes numerous glial cells (astrocytes and oligodendrocytes), which are gaining attention in the study of neurodegenerative pathologies and normal development. This symposium provides a neurobiological perspective of non-neural white matter, highlighting the clinical relevance of monitoring this component non-invasively with state-of-the-art MR techniques, with a particular emphasis on its use for imaging the immune system and its interplay with the brain.
Target Audience
Neurologists, radiologists, and physicists interested in imagining non-axonal components in white matter to study the link brain-immune system.
Educational Objectives
As a result of attending this course, participants should be able to:
Upon completion of this course, participants should be able to: - Describe the composition of human white matter, with a focus on non-axonal components; - Name white matter disease conditions that affect the non-neuronal cellular component; - Identify in-vivo MRI techniques for the quantification of non-axonal components in white matter; and - List the advantages, limitations and opportunities of current MRI technology in regard to imaging the immune response.
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The Non-Axonal Component of Human White Matter: What It Is & Why to Image It
Caterina Mainero
Harvard Medical School
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Imaging Neuroinflammation with Hyperpolarized 13C MRS
Myriam M. Chaumeil
University of California, San Francisco
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Diffusion-Weighted Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy: A Tool to Look at Glial Cytomorphology
Itamar Ronen
Leiden University Medical Centre
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Non-Axonal Contribution to the Diffusion MRI Signal
Ileana Jelescu
École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
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Quantitative Magnetisation Transfer Imaging: Not Only Myelin
Mara Cercignani
Brighton & Sussex Medical School
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