References
I am convinced Synthetic MRI is the way MRI is performed in the future, I show it in all my presentations.
Dr. Anders Persson, MD. Director Center for Image Science and Visualization Linköping, Sweden
Synthetic MRI is included in our standard protocol for MS, hydrocephalus and dementia patients. It provides us reliable volumetric information in a fast and easy way.
Dr. Richard Birgander, MD, PhD, Senior consultant neuroradiologist. Umeå University Hospital, Sweden.
Quantitative MR, as provided by Synthetic MRI, holds promise for new valuable diagnostic applications of MRI and we are therefore interested in this evolution.
Dr. Per Thunberg, PhD. Department of Medical Physics, Örebro University Hospital, Sweden.
We were looking for a good method to find and quantify clinical markers of the brain that may indicate cognitive ability for an aging group. Especially interesting is to see whether there are structural differences in the brains of people who perform above compared to individuals who perform far below what can be expected on earlier cognitive tests. Synthetic MRI is a very promising method that enables us to more clearly visualize these potential structural differences.
Dr. Egill Rostrup, Chief physician, MSc, MD, DMSc. Glostrup Hospital, Denmark.
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) generally has been about looking at pictures and trying to interpret them. SyMRI finally provides us with objective numbers.
Dr Anders Svenningsson, MD, PhD, Neurologist. Umeå University Hosptial, Sweden.
Besides having also the entire soft tissue of the human body documented in a non observer-dependent manner and in 3D, which is an enormous advance in itself, the quantified nature of the data set gives new and very promising tools to work with.
Dr. C. Jackowski, MD. Institute of Legal Medicine, University of Zurich, Switzerland.
One possible advantage with Synthetic MRI is a shortening of study time as only one series of images is needed to obtain the required type of images. Another interesting potential with Synthetic MRI is that tissue characteristics, which are used to create contrast in MR images, are determined through a quantitative method. We aim to evaluate these possibilities.
Dr. Wolfgang Krauss, MD. Örebro Univeristy Hospital, Sweden.





