Posts Tagged ‘brain imaging’

andrew peet

June 10th, 2010

The clinical treatment of brain tumours in children is undergoing a revolution because of new scanning techniques; i.e. ever more illuminating non-invasive brain imaging of several kinds. The medics caring for these children now have a far better understanding of what the tumour is and where it is — and so can provide far more effective treatments.

Dr Andrew Peet is at the forefront of research in this area, and is a clinician too, being both a Clinical Research Fellow and Honorary Consultant Paediatric Oncologist at the University of Birmingham and the Oncology Department at Birmingham Children’s Hospital.

His research is on new scanning techniques and, in his contribution to The New Optimists, he explains how CT scans provided the first breakthrough, and now how magnetic resonance spectroscopy and other complementary functional imaging techniques are revolutionising both our understanding and the treatment of brain tumours.

gina rippon

June 5th, 2010

Imagine being able to make running repairs to the brain itself . . . Gina Rippon is Professor of Cognitive Neuroimaging at Aston University, and is acutely aware of the possibilities of this, and of the very plasticity of our brains.

Her research involves the application of brain imaging techniques, particularly electroencephalography (EEG) and Magnetoencephalography (MEG), to studies of normal and abnormal cognitive processes, most recently in the study of Autism Spectrum Disorders.

Professor Rippon is one of the panelists for the British Science Festival event on 15th September 2010, chaired by broadcaster Sue Beardsmore. Please do come, or participate on-line — more information about how to do so will be posted shortly.