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Image Guided Intervention Lab

Molecular Imaging Probe Laboratory (MIPL)

Molecular Biophotonics and Imaging Laboratory

Nuclear Medicine Research Lab

Imaging Radiobiology Laboratory

Molecular Imaging of Musculoskeletal Illnesses (MIMI)

Noninvasive Cardiac Imaging Lab

Magnetic Resonance Systems Research Lab (MRSRL)

Imaging and Therapeutic Platforms for Translational Medicine

Cardiovascular Gene and Cell Therapy

In Vivo Optical Imaging of the Nervous System Lab

Cellular and Molecular Imaging Lab (CMIL)

Research and Diagnosis of Disease States Using Magnetic Resonance Lab

Multimodality Molecular Imaging Lab

Cancer Molecular Imaging Chemistry Laboratory (CMICL)

Computational Cancer Research Laboratory (CCRL)

Translational Molecular Imaging Lab

Signal Transduction Imaging and Engineering (STIE)

Molecular Imaging Instrumentation Laboratory (MIIL)

Cellular Pathway Imaging Laboratory (CPIL)

Advanced Pediatric MR Imaging Laboratory


Blau Lab

Radiological Science Lab

Scott Lab

3D Medical Imaging Laboratory

Brown Lab

Nolan Lab

Clinical Molecular Imaging Research Group (CMIRG)

Interventional Radiology Translational Therapies Lab


Radiochemistry Facility
Frederick Chin


Our group's primary objectives are:

1) Novel radioligand and radiotracer development.
We will develop novel PET (Positron Emission Tomography) imaging agents with MIPS and Stanford faculty as well as other outside collaborations including academia and pharmaceutical industry. Although my personal research interests will be to discover and design of candidate probes that target molecular targets in the brain, our group focus will primarily be on cancer biology and gene therapy. In conjunction with our state-of-the-art imaging facility, promising candidates will be evaluated by PET imaging in small animals and primates. Successful radioligands and/or radiotracers will be extended towards future human clinical applications.

2) Designing new radiolabeling techniques and methodologies.
We will aim to design new radiolabeling techniques and methodologies that may have utility for future radiopharmaceutical development in our lab and the general radiochemistry community.

3) Radiochemistry production of routine clinical tracers.
Since we also have many interests with many Stanford faculty and outside collaborators, our efforts will also include the routine radiochemistry production of many existing radiotracers for human and non-human use. Our routine clinical tracers will be synthesized in custom-made or commercial synthetic modules (i.e. GE TRACERlab modules) housed in lead-shielded cells and be distributed manually or automatically (i.e. Comecer Dorothea) to our imagers.

More info about the Radiochemistry Facility.

Lab Members:

List of all MIPS Faculty and Staff

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