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Item type | Location | Call Number | Status | Date Due |
---|---|---|---|---|
E-Book | AUM Main Library | 616.07548 (Browse Shelf) | Not for loan |
616.07548Bone Tumors | 616.07548Basics of PET Imaging | 616.07548Nuclear Oncology | 616.07548Whiplash Injury | 616.07548Radiation Protection in Nuclear Medicine | 616.07548Imaging in Nuclear Medicine |
Part 1 Introduction: -- General aspects -- Incidence -- Historical aspects -- Mechanics -- Diagnostic procedure in whiplash injury -- Part 2 Nuclear medicine tools: -- Introduction -- Positron emission tomography (PET) -- Single-photon emission tomography (SPET) -- Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) -- Part 3 Image analysis: -- Background -- Visual interpretation -- Region-of-interest technique -- Statistical parametric mapping (SPM) -- Image fusion -- Network analysis -- Control group -- Part 4 Current research data: -- Mild traumatic brain injury -- Whiplash injury -- Differential diagnostic list -- Whiplash trauma and the risk of Alzheimer´s disease -- Part 5 Conclusion: -- General aspects -- Clinical aspects -- References -- Legends.
In the past two decades much has been published on whiplash injury, yet both the confusion regarding the condition and the medicolegal discussion surrounding it have increased. In this scenario, a guide to recent and current international research in the field is more necessary than ever. Especially functional imaging methods – such as single-photon emission tomography, positron emission tomography, functional MRI, and hybrid techniques – have demonstrated a variety of significant brain alterations. This book accordingly offers a critical approach to the challenging interpretation of the new research data obtained using functional neuroimaging in whiplash injury. It covers all aspects, including the imaging tools themselves and the different methods of image analysis. Whiplash Injury: New Methods of Functional Neuroimaging will hopefully help patients, their relatives and friends, physicians, and others to understand this condition as a disease.
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