Nuclear-Cardiology
Team
Prof. Dr. rer. nat.
Ulrike Hendgen-Cotta
Leitung Forschungslabore
CardioScienceLabs
Dr.
Zohreh Varasteh
PhD
Dr. med.
Stephan Settelmeier
Atefeh Hosseini
MSc, PhD Student
Topics and Vision
Nuclear-Cardiology
is a dynamic and rapidly growing subspecialty that is evolving from assessing myocardial perfusion and physiological function, or visualising the size and location of myocardial infarction, to interrogating molecular pathways and pathophysiological changes at the cellular level.
We aim to develop imaging strategies with diagnostic and prognostic values for cardiac disorders.
Projects
- Establishing novel nuclear molecular imaging strategies for the visualisation of cardiac remodelling (e.g. profiling of the extent of inflammation and fibrosis)
- Developing image-guided approaches to cardiac repair (e.g. identifying the therapeutic window for specific interventions)
- Assessing the therapeutic efficacy of novel interventions by means of established imaging strategies
Methods
- Different myocardial infarction mouse models (permanent myocardial infarction and ischemia/reperfusion inury), different pressure overload mouse models (chemically or mechanically induced hypertrophy)
- Small-animal nuclear imaging: We use commercially available preclinical Molecubes β-Cube (PET), γ-Cube (SPECT) and X-Cube (CT) scanners, specifically designed for rodent imaging.
- Small-animal cardiac ultrasound (Fujifilm VisualSonics Vevo 3000 Preclinical Imaging System)
Honors / Talks
•Post-doctoral research grant from The Swedish Society for Medical Research (SSMF)
•Research grant from German research fundation (DFG)
•Alavi-Mandell Publication Awards
Funding
- Dr. Zohreh Varasteh is supported by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG): VA 1183/2-1
- Prof. Dr. rer. nat Ulrike Hendgen-Cotta is supported by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG): HE 6317/2-1
- Dr. med. Stephan Settelmeier is supported by Wandel durch Innovation in der Region (WIR)
- Atefeh Hosseini is supported by Deutsche Akademische Austauschdienst (DAAD)
Publications
Collaborations
- Department of Nuclear Medicine, Klinikum rechts der Isar, Munich, Germany
- Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology (IPT), TUM, Munich, Germany