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  • Exterior of the new Department of Clinical and Movement Neurosciences in London, United Kingdom. The new UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology Department of Clinical and Movement Neurosciences is a world-leading group that brings together expertise across the clinical and basic science spectrum of the physiology and pathology of human movement and movement disorders.
    20190306_department of neuroscience_...jpg
  • Exterior of the new Department of Clinical and Movement Neurosciences in London, United Kingdom. The new UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology Department of Clinical and Movement Neurosciences is a world-leading group that brings together expertise across the clinical and basic science spectrum of the physiology and pathology of human movement and movement disorders.
    20190306_department of neuroscience_...jpg
  • A plastic model of a human brain used to teach students at the Royal Neurological Hospital, London, United Kingdom.
    UK-Health-Human-Brain-Model-4925_1.jpg
  • A side view of a plastic model of a human brain used to teach students at the Royal Neurological Hospital, London, United Kingdom.
    UK-Health-Human-Brain-Model-4929_1.jpg
  • From a hospital light box, we see a detail of a Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scan. Sections of a patient’s skull and brain illustrate to doctors, potential abnormalities. Dyes used in X-ray and CT scans in the same way because both areas use X-rays (ionizing radiation). Agents work by blocking the X-ray photons from passing through the area where they locate and reach the X-ray film. This results in differing levels of density on the X-ray/CT film but the dyes have no direct physiologic impact on the tissue in the body. MRI contrast works by altering the local magnetic field in the tissue being examined. Normal and abnormal tissue will respond differently to this slight alteration, yielding differing signals. Varied signals are transferred to the images, visualizing many different types of tissue abnormalities and diseases.
    hospital_surgery02-20-05-1994_2.jpg
  • A cross-section model of a human brain showing the inner and outer components of the cerebellum.
    UK-Health-Human-Brain-Model-4938_1.jpg
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