The services are in a central role in e.g. brain, cancer, and virus research. Euro-BioImaging has a landmark status in Europe, and its services are used around the world. The host country of Euro-BioImaging is Finland, and its main office is located in Turku.
The newly approved Node FiBI is made up of the most notable bioimaging institutions in Finland,
FiBI stands out from other European imaging centres with its unique portfolio of technologies. FiBi has the broadest selection on PET radiotracers and it is the first Node in Euro-BioImaging also offering an open access to magnetoencephalography neuroimaging technology which maps brain activity by recording magnetic fields.
– Open access to a range of state of the art imaging technologies throughout Europe enables research that would not have been possible before, improves the prerequisites for high-quality research, and increases opportunities for international collaboration between researchers. Above all, being part of Euro-BioImaging gives us an opportunity to be in the frontline of developing the best methods and standards of biomedical imaging which will improve the quality and repeatability of research, making science more reliable, says Director of Turku PET Centre, a joint organisation of the University of Turku, Åbo Akademi University and Turku University Hospital, and Head of the Node Professor Juhani Knuuti.
– The pioneering national role of Kuopio in magnetic imaging applications has now been recognised also on the level of European infrastructures. For example, metabolic imaging using hyperpolarised tracers, advanced functional magnetic resonance imaging of the brain, and the PET/MRI in collaboration with Kuopio University Hospital are rare technologies in preclinical imaging even on the European level. Through FiBI, they are now accessible to an even greater number of researchers, explains Director of Kuopio Biomedical Imaging Unit Professor Olli Gröhn.
– Researchers at Aalto University and its predecessor Helsinki University of Technology have pioneered in the MEG imaging technique for decades. Through FiBI, internationally recognised Finnish MEG expertise related to developing methods, state-of-the-art experimental research, and clinical applications will be broadly accessible for European researchers, says Professor at Aalto University Riitta Salmelin from the NEUROIMAGING infrastructure, made up of of BioMag laboratory located at the HUS Helsinki University Hospital and Aalto Neuroimaging unit of the Aalto University.
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Finnish expertise is internationally recognised both in biological and medical imaging. The newly founded Finnish Biomedical Imaging Node is the second Euro-BioImaging node in Finland. Before it, Finnish Advanced Light Microscopy Node has already operated in Turku, Helsinki, and Oulu. It has also been able to upgrade its services recently, as the Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland FIMM was accepted as a participant in the operations of the Node.
The two Finnish Euro-BioImaging Nodes have been accepted together on
More information:
Professor Juhani Knuuti, PET Centre (University of Turku, Åbo Akademi, Turku University Hospital), +358 50 059 2998,
Professor Olli Gröhn, Kuopio Biomedical Imaging Unit (University of Eastern Finland), +358 50 359 0963,
Professor Riitta Salmelin, NEUROIMAGING (Aalto University, University of Helsinki, HUS Helsinki University Hospital), +358 50 344 2745,
Associate Professor Pipsa Saharinen, Helsinki In Vivo Animal Imaging Platform (University of Helsinki), +358 50 448 6361,