About this Research Topic
The research topic aims at providing a unique platform for addressing the role of molecular imaging in infection and inflammation. The topic intends to foster synergistic interactions between cutting-edge clinical practice, and the latest research and technical developments from medical, clinical, preclinical, molecular, and instrumentation perspectives. Stakeholders from academia, medical institutions and organizations, regulatory agencies, and industry have an opportunity to explore the current bottlenecks that need to be addressed and provide strategic directions of molecular imaging for alleviating these and enhancing detection and treatment of inflammatory and/or infectious diseases.
We invite research or review contributions in the following areas:
• Molecular imaging of inflammation and infection in research and clinical practice.
• Advances in multimodality imaging to increase our understanding of the inflammation’s role in healthy and diseased tissue.
• Role of high sensitivity / total-body scanners in imaging infection and inflammation.
• Role of dynamic imaging in separating inflammation from infection and other diseases.
• Technical advances in radiomic analysis for detecting inflammation and infection.
• Relevant tracers for inflammation and infection.
• Can artificial intelligence contribute to molecular imaging of Inflammation and Infection?
• Data harmonization and standardization.
• The role of molecular imaging in fast precision therapy of inflammation and infection.
• Role of animal models in the Investigation of inflammatory processes and infectious diseases.
• Is there need for higher resolution or lower cost scanners for accessibility to a broader global community, including developing countries?
Keywords: Infection, Inflammation, Molecular Imaging, Nuclear Medicine
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.