Role of the Multimodal Imaging Modalities in the Pre-Clinical Animal Model Research

A.Y. 2024/2025
Course offered to students on the PhD programme in
Visit the PhD website for the course schedule and other information
2
ECTS
12
Overall hours
Lesson period
March 2025
Language
English
Lead instructor: Davide Danilo Zani
Pre-clinical imaging techniques consent to study diseases in real time, presenting the possibility to repeatedly and non invasively monitor the disease progression and/or the response to treatment, without interfering with the biological process under investigation. Thanks to this qualities, the application of different imaging modalities effectively fulfils the recent European directives about replacement, reduction and refinement of animals in research. This course provides an introduction on advanced imaging modalities, including high-resolution modalities (CT, MRI, micro-MRI and micro-CT) and functional techniques (fMRI, PET, SPECT and targeted optical imaging), and their application in pre-clinical animal model research.
Compulsory for PhD students enrolled in the first year of 'Veterinary and Livestock Sciences' - 38th cycle
'Please be advised that the course previously offered has been modified and is now integrated into a new course. Students are required to register for this new course.
Students in the 38th cycle can choose to take either the compulsory teaching module or the entire course. If they decide to take only the compulsory module, they are advised to contact the teacher after registration.'
Assessment methods
Giudizio di approvazione
Assessment result
superato/non superato
How to enrol

Deadlines

The course enrolment deadline is usually the 27th day of the month prior to the start date.

How to enrol

  1. Access enrolment on PhD courses online service using your University login details
  2. Select the desired programme and click on Registration (Iscrizione) and then on Register (Iscriviti)

Ignore the option "Exam session date” that appears during the enrolment procedure.

Contacts

For help please contact [email protected]

Professor(s)