News | Radiopharmaceuticals and Tracers | September 12, 2025

A new PET tracer can provide insights into how spinal cord injuries affect not only the spinal cord, but also the brain.

New Research Shows Novel PET Tracer Can Detect Synaptic Changes in Spinal Cord and Brain After Spinal Cord Injury

[18F]SynVesT-1 PET imaging reveals synapse loss at the spinal cord injury epicenter and in related brain regions.


Sept. 11, 2025 — A new PET tracer can provide insights into how spinal cord injuries affect not only the spinal cord, but also the brain, according to new research published in The Journal of Nuclear Medicine. By identifying synapse loss, the PET approach provides molecularly unique and complementary information to other structural imaging methods, offering a promising objective metric to evaluate novel therapeutics for spinal cord injuries.

According to the National Spinal Cord Injury Statistical Center, the annual incidence of traumatic spinal cord injury is about 54 cases per one million people, and approximately 308,600 people in the United States live with a spinal cord injury. Clinical outcomes vary based on injury severity and location, potentially leading to partial or complete loss of sensory or motor function below the injury level. Current clinical spinal cord injury diagnosis relies on anatomic techniques such as x-ray and CT, which assess spinal integrity but provide limited physiologic and pathologic information.

“There is an urgent need for a quantitative and non-invasive imaging method for neural network changes after spinal cord injury,” said Jason Cai, PhD, associate professor of radiology and biomedical imaging and of pharmacology at Yale School of Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut. “By offering a non-invasive quantitative method to visualize and quantify synapse loss in the whole central nervous system, SV2A PET could become an essential tool for evaluating and monitoring the progression of spinal cord injury or predict recovery.”

Researchers used the newly developed 18F-labeled SV2A radiotracer, [18F]SynVesT-1, to assess changes in synaptic density in a rat model of T7 contusion. Nine rats with T7 spinal cord injuries and seven sham controls were imaged with [18F]SynVesT-1 PET on day one and on days nine through 11 after injury. Imaging findings of the injury site and of the brain were compared with ex vivo diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and molecular biologic analyses.

[18F]SynVesT-1 PET effectively identified synapse loss in the contusion SCI rat model. Uptake at the spinal cord injury epicenter was found to be reduced by 58 percent and 52 percent on day one and days nine through 11 after injury, respectively, compared with the sham control rats. The uptake of 18F-SynVesT-1 in the amygdala and cerebellum was also lower in spinal cord injury rats, and ex vivo DTI analysis revealed fiber damage in the internal capsule and somatosensory cortex.

“Our work has potential to revolutionize the way spinal cord injury is diagnosed and monitored in the clinic,” noted Cai. “SV2A PET could be used to evaluate the effects of new treatments objectively and quantitatively, supporting more precise and personalized therapeutic strategies for patients with spinal cord injuries.”

 

The authors of [18F]SynVesT-1 PET Detects SV2A Changes in the Spinal Cord and Brain of Rats with Spinal Cord Injury include Baosheng Chen, Tutukhanim Balayeva, Takuya Toyonaga, Jie Tong, William Mennie, Jelena Mihailovic,Daniel Coman and Yiyun Huang, Department of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut; Chao Zheng, Department of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, and Azrieli Centre for Neuro-Radiochemistry, Brain Health Imaging Centre, CAMH, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and Departments of Psychiatry, Chemistry, Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Xingxing Wang and Stephen M. Strittmatter, Departments of Neuroscience and Neurology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut; Fahmeed Hyder and Richard E. Carson, Department of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, and Department of Biomedical Engineering, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut; and Zhengxin Cai, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, and Department of Pharmacology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut.


Related Content

News | Radiology Imaging | UC San Diego Health

Oct. 16, 2025 — A strategic collaboration between UC San Diego Health and GE HealthCare will focus on bringing advanced ...

Time October 20, 2025
arrow
News | Prostate Cancer

Sept. 26, 2025 — A new fast and convenient approach to scintigraphy-based monitoring allows physicians to efficiently ...

Time October 03, 2025
arrow
News | Radiopharmaceuticals and Tracers

Sept. 20, 2025 — A promising new PET tracer can visualize a protein that is commonly overexpressed in triple-negative ...

Time September 18, 2025
arrow
News | Artificial Intelligence

July 22, 2025 — GE HealthCare has topped a U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) list of AI-enabled medical device ...

Time July 23, 2025
arrow
News | PET Imaging

May 30, 2025 — GE HealthCare recently announced that the NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology (NCCN Guidelines) ...

Time May 30, 2025
arrow
News | Prostate Cancer

July 30, 2024 — Blue Earth Diagnostics, a Bracco company and recognized leader in the development and commercialization ...

Time July 30, 2024
arrow
News | PET-CT

July 25, 2024 — Positron Corporation, a leading molecular imaging medical device company offering PET & PET-CT imaging ...

Time July 25, 2024
arrow
News | PET-CT

July 16, 2024 — A new research paper was published in Oncotarget's Volume 15 on June 20, 2024, titled, “Comparison of ...

Time July 16, 2024
arrow
News | Nuclear Imaging

June 20, 2024 — GE HealthCare joined the world’s top medical and academic institutions at the Society of Nuclear ...

Time June 20, 2024
arrow
News | PET-CT

June 13, 2024 — Positron Corporation, a leading molecular imaging medical device company offering PET and PET-CT ...

Time June 13, 2024
arrow
Subscribe Now