Vesna Sossi, PhD, is a professor in the Physics Department at the University of British Columbia (UBC) in Canada, the director of the UBC Positron Emission Tomography (PET) Imaging Laboratory and closely associated with the Pacific Parkinson’s Research Center. She is an expert in PET imaging applied to the study of Parkinson’s disease (PD), investigating its origin and treatment-related complications. Her laboratory pioneered novel image analysis methods as applied to PET to be used in this proposal and she holds several Michael J. Fox Foundation and other grants to investigate the LRRK2-associated mechanisms leading to an increased risk of PD, both in humans and pre-clinical models.
Associated Grants
-
Investigation of Neuroinflammation in LRRK2 Mutation Carriers Using Positron Emission Tomography
2012
-
Multi-tracer positron emission tomography (PET) functional imaging as a tool to assess the relevance of rodent LRRK2 models to the human neurochemical phenotype associated with LRRK2 mutations related Parkinsonism
2011
-
Multi-tracer positron emission tomography (PET) functional imaging as a tool to assess the relevance of rodent LRRK2 models to the human neurochemical phenotype associated with LRRK2 mutations related Parkinsonism
2010