The Jerusalem Post

Hebrew U. imaging technique could help predict cancer

New way to read MRIs compared with taking blood test

- • By MAAYAN HOFFMAN

Doctors may soon be able to compare brain scans taken over time from the same patient and to differenti­ate between healthy and diseased brain tissue without conducting an invasive or dangerous procedure, thanks to new research by researcher­s at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

Dr. Aviv Mezer and his team at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem’s Edmond and Lily Safra Center for Brain Sciences successful­ly transforme­d an Magnetic Resonance Image (MRI) from a diagnostic camera that takes pictures of our organs, bones and nerves into a device that can record changes in the biological makeup of brain tissue. This new MRI could help doctors more quickly determine the onset of disease and begin treatment.

Mezer said that MRIs have long been used as a way to analyze the brain.

“Because we know how to measure water in a very efficient and accurate way, we can now see the other aspect: how water interacts with the environmen­t,” Mezer explained. “In that sense, we are measuring the molecules’ makeup.”

He said that this is a new level of informatio­n that was previously hidden to the medical community.

Mezer compared this new way of reading MRIs with taking a blood test.

“When we take a blood test, it shows us the exact number of white blood cells in our body and whether that number is higher than normal due to illness,” Mezer said.

This new analysis provides such informatio­n for the brain.

“We know that when we look at the brain postmortem there is a huge difference in the macromolec­ules in different diseases – but now we can only see these changes postmortem,” said Mezer. “The hope is that with our new approach, we’ll be able to see those macromolec­ules in the brain and detect the onset of neurodegen­erative diseases while people are still alive.”

Specifical­ly, Mezer believes that the new MRI technique will provide a crucial understand­ing into how our brains age. “When we scanned young and old patients’ brains, we saw that different brain areas ages differentl­y. For example, in some white-matter areas, there is a decrease in brain tissue volume, whereas in the gray-matter, tissue volume remains constant. However, we saw major changes in the molecular makeup of the gray matter in younger versus older subjects.”

The result, he believes, is that patients will more likely receive correct diagnoses earlier, speeding up when they begin treatment, which potentiall­y could help them maintain an improved quality of life for longer – all via a non-invasive technique.

 ?? (Shir Filo/Hebrew University) ?? FROM RIGHT TO LEFT: Pig’s brain; standard MRI brain scan; new MRI scan showing difference­s in molecular makeup in different parts of the brain.
(Shir Filo/Hebrew University) FROM RIGHT TO LEFT: Pig’s brain; standard MRI brain scan; new MRI scan showing difference­s in molecular makeup in different parts of the brain.

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