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Imaging And The Aging Brain Book

Imaging And The Aging Brain
Imaging And The Aging Brain, Advances in imaging are occurring at a brisk pace, and imaging techniques have great potential to act as pre-symptomatic predictors of disease as well as to chart the course of a disease. Neuroimaging has greatly advanced the understanding of brain functi, Imaging And The Aging Brain has a rating of 3 stars
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Imaging And The Aging Brain, Advances in imaging are occurring at a brisk pace, and imaging techniques have great potential to act as pre-symptomatic predictors of disease as well as to chart the course of a disease. Neuroimaging has greatly advanced the understanding of brain functi, Imaging And The Aging Brain
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  • Imaging And The Aging Brain
  • Written by author De Leon
  • Published by Wiley, John & Sons, Incorporated, August 2007
  • Advances in imaging are occurring at a brisk pace, and imaging techniques have great potential to act as pre-symptomatic predictors of disease as well as to chart the course of a disease. Neuroimaging has greatly advanced the understanding of brain functi
  • Advances in imaging are occurring at a brisk pace, and imaging techniques have great potential to act as pre-symptomatic predictors of disease as well as to chart the course of a disease. Neuroimaging has greatly advanced the understanding of brain functi
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Authors

Foreword: Mony J. De Leon.

Part I: In Vivo Imaging of Molecules, Cells, and Networks in Aging and Animal Models of Alzheimer's:.

1. Making New Memories: The Role of the Hippocampus in New Associative Learning: Wendy A. Suzuki.

2. Anatomical and Functional Phenotyping of Mice Models of Alzheimer’s Disease by MR Microscopy: Helene Benveniste, Yu Ma, Jasbeer Dhawan, Andrew Gifford, S. David Smith, Igor Feinstein, Congwu Du, Samuel C. Grant, and Patrick R. Hof.

3. Various Dendritic Abnormalities Are Associated with Fibrillar Amyloid Deposits in Alzheimer's Disease: Jaime Grutzendler, Kathryn Helmin, Julia Tsai, and Wen-Biao Gan.

4. Two-Photon Imaging of Astrocytic Ca2+ Signaling and the Microvasculature in Experimental Mice Models of Alzheimer’s Disease: Takahiro Takano, Xiaoning Han, Rashid Deane, Berislav Zlokovic, and Maiken Nedergaard.

5. Synaptic and Mitochondrial Morphometry Provides Structural Correlates of Successful Brain Aging: Carlo Bertoni-Freddari, Patrizia Fattoretti, Belinda Giorgetti, Yessica Grossi, Marta Balietti, Tiziana Casoli, Giuseppina Di Stefano, and Gemma Perretta.

6. Impaired Recognition Memory and Decreased Prefrontal Cortex Spine Density in Aged Female Rats: Maureen Wallace, Maya Frankfurt, Adolfo Arellanos, Tomoko Inagaki, and Victoria Luine.

7. Alzheimer Amyloid β-Peptide A-β25−35 Blocks Adenylate Cyclase-Mediated Forms of Hippocampal Long-Term Potentiation: Blaine E. Bisel, Kristen M. Henkins, and Karen D. Parfitt.

8. Age-Related Changes in Neuronal Susceptibility to Damage: Comparison of the Retinal Ganglion Cells of Young and Old Mice Before andAfter Optic Nerve Crush: Ai Ling Wang, Ming Yuan, and Arthur H. Neufeld.

Part II: In Vivo Imaging of Human Aging and the Transition to Cognitive Impairment:.

9. Top-Down Modulation and Normal Aging: Adam Gazzaley and Mark D'Esposito.

10. Brain Aging and Its Modifiers: Insights from in Vivo Neuromorphometry and Susceptibility Weighted Imaging: Naftali Raz, Karen M. Rodrigue, and E. Mark Haacke.

11. Linking Brain Imaging and Genomics in the Study of Alzheimer's Disease and Aging: Eric M. Reiman.

12. Imaging and CSF Studies in the Preclinical Diagnosis of Alzheimer’s Disease: M. J. De Leon, L. Mosconi, K. Blennow, S. Desanti, R. Zinkowski, P. D. Mehta, D. Pratico, W. Tsui, L. A. Saint Louis, L. Sobanska, M. Brys, Y. Li, K. Rich, J. Rinne, and H. Rusinek.

13. Functional MRI Studies of Associative Encoding in Normal Aging, Mild Cognitive Impairment, and Alzheimer's Disease: Reisa Sperling.

14. Quantitative EEG and Electromagnetic Brain Imaging in Aging and in the Evolution of Dementia: Leslie S. Prichep.

15. [123I]5-IA-85380 SPECT Imaging of β2-Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor Availability in the Aging Human Brain: Effie M. Mitsis, Kelly P. Cosgrove, Julie K. Staley, Erin B. Frohlich, Frederic Bois, Gilles D. Tamagnan, Kristina M. Estok, John P. Seibyl, and Christopher H. Van Dyck.

16. Role of Aerobic Fitness and Aging on Cerebral White Matter Integrity: Bonita L. Marks, David J. Madden, Barbara Bucur, James M. Provenzale, Leonard E. White, Roberto Cabeza, and Scott A. Huettel.

17. Age-Related Changes in Nociceptive Processing in the Human Brain: Raimi L. Quiton, Steven R. Roys, Jiachen Zhuo, Michael L. Keaser, Rao P. Gullapalli, and Joel D. Greenspan.

18. Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy and Environmental Toxicant Exposure: Marc G. Weisskopf.

Part III: Diagnostic Applications of Imaging to Alzheimer's Disease:.

19. Tracking Alzheimer's Disease: Paul M. Thompson, Kiralee M. Hayashi, Rebecca A. Dutton, Ming-Chang Chiang, Alex D. Leow, Elizabeth R. Sowell, Greig De Zubicaray, James T. Becker, Oscar L. Lopez, Howard J. Aizenstein, and Arthur W. Toga.

20. Shifting Paradigms in Dementia: Toward Stratification of Diagnosis and Treatment Using MRI: Wiesje M. Van Der Flier, Frederik Barkhof, and Philip Scheltens.

21. Imaging-Guided Microarray: Isolating Molecular Profiles That Dissociate Alzheimer's Disease from Normal Aging: Ana Carolina Pereira, William Wu, and Scott A. Small.

22. Fibrillar and Oligomeric β-Amyloid as Distinct Local Biomarkers for Alzheimer's Disease: Michael C. Montalto, Gill Farrar, and Cristina Tan Hehir.

23. Diffusion Tensor Imaging of Normal Appearing White Matter and Its Correlation with Cognitive Functioning in Mild Cognitive Impairment and Alzheimer's Disease: Juebin Huang and Alexander P. Auchus.

24. Enhanced Ryanodine-Mediated Calcium Release in Mutant PS1-Expressing Alzheimer's Mouse Models: Grace E. Stutzmann, Ian Smith, Antonella Caccamo, Salvatore Oddo, Ian Parker, and Frank Laferla.

25. Prospects for Prediction: Ethics Analysis of Neuroimaging in Alzheimer's Disease: J. Illes, A. Rosen, M. Greicius, and E. Racine.

Index of Contributors.


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