Targeted Radioprobe Delivery in Neurology

Authors

  • Denis Larrivee Mind and Brain Group, University of Navarra Medical School, Spain Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33425/2692-7918.1098

Keywords:

Nuclear medicine, PET

Abstract

Nuclear medicine has established an irreplaceable role in the biomedical research and management of brain diseases. Its unique capacity to visualize molecular events in vivo as they unfold provides diagnostic clarity into functional performance and the option for therapeutic intervention. Limitations on access to brain tissue, however, have traditionally restricted nuclear medicine procedures to use of low molecular weight radioligands confined to the extracellular space of the brain, e.g., neurotransmitter receptors, which has precluded the interrogation of many cellular processes likely to be causal in disease etiology. Developments in radioprobe features and targeted delivery over the past two decades are overcoming these limitations, expanding the domain within which dysfunctional processes can be examined. These developments afford the prospect not only of a systemic view of brain diseases but also one likely to be more proximal to the unfolding dysfunctional events

Published

2025-08-01

Issue

Section

Articles