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3.0t biograph mmr pet

Manufactured by Siemens

The 3.0T Biograph mMR (PET) is a medical imaging device that combines magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and positron emission tomography (PET) capabilities. It is designed to provide simultaneous acquisition of high-quality MRI and PET data, enabling comprehensive assessment of anatomical and functional information in a single examination.

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2 protocols using 3.0t biograph mmr pet

1

Longitudinal PiB-PET and MRI Brain Imaging

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All participants underwent simultaneous three-dimensional [11C] PiB-PET and three-dimensional T1-weighted MRI using a 3.0T Biograph mMR (PET-MR) scanner (Siemens) at baseline and at a 2-year follow-up visit. The details of PiB-PET image acquisition and preprocessing were previously described.28 (link) An automatic anatomic labeling algorithm29 (link) and a region combining method30 (link) were applied to determine regions of interests (ROIs) to characterize the PiB retention level in the frontal, lateral parietal, posterior cingulate-precuneus, and lateral temporal regions. A global Aβ retention value was the mean standardized uptake value ratio (SUVR) for all voxels of the four ROIs, calculated by dividing the mean uptake value of a reference region. Given the aims of the study to investigate longitudinal changes, for all PiB-PET scans (both baseline and follow-up), the SUVRs were calculated using a reference region that included the inferior cerebellar gray matter of the Spatially Unbiased Infratentorial Template for the cerebellum atlas,31 (link) cerebellar white matter (thresholded at 50%),32 (link) pons, and cerebrum white matter (threshold at 95% and eroded by three voxels).33 (link),34 (link) Extracted SUVRs were used to derive the annualized change of Aβ retention.
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2

Longitudinal PiB-PET and MRI Brain Imaging

Check if the same lab product or an alternative is used in the 5 most similar protocols
All participants underwent simultaneous three-dimensional [11C] PiB-PET and three-dimensional T1-weighted MRI using a 3.0T Biograph mMR (PET-MR) scanner (Siemens) at baseline and at a 2-year follow-up visit. The details of PiB-PET image acquisition and preprocessing were previously described.28 (link) An automatic anatomic labeling algorithm29 (link) and a region combining method30 (link) were applied to determine regions of interests (ROIs) to characterize the PiB retention level in the frontal, lateral parietal, posterior cingulate-precuneus, and lateral temporal regions. A global Aβ retention value was the mean standardized uptake value ratio (SUVR) for all voxels of the four ROIs, calculated by dividing the mean uptake value of a reference region. Given the aims of the study to investigate longitudinal changes, for all PiB-PET scans (both baseline and follow-up), the SUVRs were calculated using a reference region that included the inferior cerebellar gray matter of the Spatially Unbiased Infratentorial Template for the cerebellum atlas,31 (link) cerebellar white matter (thresholded at 50%),32 (link) pons, and cerebrum white matter (threshold at 95% and eroded by three voxels).33 (link),34 (link) Extracted SUVRs were used to derive the annualized change of Aβ retention.
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