Recommendations for Preclinical Renal MRI: A Comprehensive Open-Access Protocol Collection to Improve Training, Reproducibility, and Comparability of Studies
Recommendations for Preclinical Renal MRI: A Comprehensive Open-Access Protocol Collection to Improve Training, Reproducibility, and Comparability of Studies(87 views) Pohlmann A, Back SJ, Fekete A, Friedli I, Hectors S, Jerome NP, Ku MC, Longo DL, Meier M, Millward JM, Periquito JS, Seeliger E, Serai SD, Waiczies S, Sourbron S, Laustsen C, Niendorf T
Paper type: Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U. S. Gov'T,
Impact factor: 1.17, 5-year impact factor: 4.197
Url: Not available.
Keywords: Biomarkers Analysis, Disease Progression, Humans, Kidney Physiopathology, Kidney Diseases Classification Pathology Therapy, Magnetic Resonance Imaging Methods, Practice Guidelines As Topic Standards, Reproducibility Of Results, Acute Kidney Injury, Animals, Chronic Kidney Disease, Magnetic Resonance Imaging (mri), Standardization, Training,
Affiliations: *** IBB - CNR ***
Berlin Ultrahigh Field Facility (B.U.F.F.), Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine (MDC) in the Helmholtz Association, Berlin, Germany. a.pohlmann.phd@gmail.com.
Siemens Healthcare, Berlin, Germany. a.pohlmann.phd@gmail.com.
Department of Radiology, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
1st Department of Pediatrics, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary.
Antaros Medical, BioVenture Hub, Mölndal, Sweden.
Translational and Molecular Imaging Institute, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA.
Institute for Circulation and Diagnostic Imaging, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Trondheim, Norway.
Institute of Biostructures and Bioimaging (IBB), Italian National Research Council (CNR), Torino, Italy.
ZTL-Imaging Center, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany.
Institute of Physiology, Charité University Medicine Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
Department of Infection, Immunity & Cardiovascular Disease, The University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK.
Department of Clinical Medicine, The MR Research Center, Aarhus, Denmark.
References: Not available.
Recommendations for Preclinical Renal MRI: A Comprehensive Open-Access Protocol Collection to Improve Training, Reproducibility, and Comparability of Studies
Renal MRI holds incredible promise for making a quantum leap in improving diagnosis and care of patients with a multitude of diseases, by moving beyond the limitations and restrictions of current routine clinical practice. Clinical and preclinical renal MRI is advancing with ever increasing rapidity, and yet, aside from a few examples of renal MRI in routine use, it is still not good enough. Several roadblocks are still delaying the pace of progress, particularly inefficient education of renal MR researchers, and lack of harmonization of approaches that limits the sharing of results among multiple research groups.Here we aim to address these limitations for preclinical renal MRI (predominantly in small animals), by providing a comprehensive collection of more than 40 publications that will serve as a foundational resource for preclinical renal MRI studies. This includes chapters describing the fundamental principles underlying a variety of renal MRI methods, step-by-step protocols for executing renal MRI studies, and detailed guides for data analysis. This collection will serve as a crucial part of a roadmap toward conducting renal MRI studies in a robust and reproducible way, that will promote the standardization and sharing of data.This chapter is based upon work from the COST Action PARENCHIMA, a community-driven network funded by the European Cooperation in Science and Technology (COST) program of the European Union, which aims to improve the reproducibility and standardization of renal MRI biomarkers.
Recommendations for Preclinical Renal MRI: A Comprehensive Open-Access Protocol Collection to Improve Training, Reproducibility, and Comparability of Studies
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Recommendations for Preclinical Renal MRI: A Comprehensive Open-Access Protocol Collection to Improve Training, Reproducibility, and Comparability of Studies
Testino G, Leone S, Fagoonee S, Del Bas JM, Rodriguez B, Puiggros F, Marine S, Rodriguez MA, Morina D, Armengol L, Caimari A, Arola L, Cimini FA, Barchetta I, Carotti S, Bertoccini L, Baroni MG, Vespasiani-gentilucci U, Cavallo MG, Morini S, Nelson JE, Roth CL, Wilson LA, Yates KP, Aouizerat B, Morgan-stevenson V, Whalen E, Hoofnagle A, Mason M, Gersuk V, Yeh MM, Kowdley KV, Lee SM, Jun DW, Cho YK, Jang KS, Kucukazman M, Ata N, Dal K, Yeniova AO, Kefeli A, Basyigit S, Aktas B, Akin KO, Agladioglu K, Ure OS, Topal F, Nazligul Y, Beyan E, Ertugrul DT, Catena C, Cosma C, Camozzi V, Plebani M, Ermani M, Sechi LA, Fallo F, Goto Y, Ray MB, Mendenhall CL, French SW, Gartside PS Serum vitamin A deficiency and increased intrahepatic expression of cytokeratin antigen in alcoholic liver disease(692 views) Hepatology (ISSN: 1827-1669electronic, 0026-4806linking), 1988 Sep; 83120693611123109(5): 1019-1026. Impact Factor:0.913 ViewExport to BibTeXExport to EndNote
103 Records (100 excluding Abstracts). Total impact factor: 345.019 (338.683 excluding Abstracts). Total 5 year impact factor: 370.344 (362.873 excluding Abstracts).