R
Ravinder Reddy
Researcher at University of Pennsylvania
Publications - 259
Citations - 12837
Ravinder Reddy is an academic researcher from University of Pennsylvania. The author has contributed to research in topics: Magnetic resonance imaging & Cartilage. The author has an hindex of 57, co-authored 249 publications receiving 11091 citations. Previous affiliations of Ravinder Reddy include Osmania Medical College & National Institutes of Health.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Sodium and T1ρ MRI for molecular and diagnostic imaging of articular cartilage
Arijitt Borthakur,Eric A. Mellon,Sampreet Niyogi,Walter R Witschey,J. Bruce Kneeland,Ravinder Reddy +5 more
TL;DR: Both sodium magnetic resonance (MR) and T1ρ relaxation mapping aimed at measuring molecular changes in cartilage for the diagnostic imaging of osteoarthritis are reviewed.
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Single-Cell Analyses Identify Brain Mural Cells Expressing CD19 as Potential Off-Tumor Targets for CAR-T Immunotherapies
Kevin R. Parker,Denis Migliorini,Denis Migliorini,Eric Perkey,Kathryn E. Yost,Aparna Bhaduri,Puneet Bagga,Mohammad Haris,Neil E. Wilson,Fang Liu,Khatuna Gabunia,John Scholler,Thomas J. Montine,Vijay Bhoj,Ravinder Reddy,Suyash Mohan,Ivan Maillard,Arnold R. Kriegstein,Carl H. June,Howard Y. Chang,Avery D. Posey,Ansuman T. Satpathy +21 more
TL;DR: It is reported that mural cells, which surround the endothelium and are critical for blood-brain-barrier integrity, express CD19, suggesting an on-target mechanism for neurotoxicity in CD19-directed therapies and highlighting the utility of human single-cell atlases for designing immunotherapies.
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Assessment of human disc degeneration and proteoglycan content using T1ρ-weighted magnetic resonance imaging
Wade Johannessen,Joshua D. Auerbach,Andrew J. Wheaton,Alykhan Kurji,Arijitt Borthakur,Ravinder Reddy,Dawn M. Elliott +6 more
TL;DR: Results from this study suggest that T1&rgr;-weighted MRI may provide a tool for the diagnosis of early degenerative changes in the disc.
Journal ArticleDOI
In vivo mapping of brain myo-inositol.
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that MICEST detection is feasible in the human brain at ultra high fields (7 T) without exceeding the allowed limits on radiofrequency specific absorption rate and potentially opens the way to image MI in vivo and to monitor its alteration in many disease conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI
Sodium MRI of human articular cartilage in vivo
Ravinder Reddy,Erik K. Insko,Elizabeth A. Noyszewski,Rahul Dandora,J B Kneeland,John S. Leigh +5 more
TL;DR: In vivo sodium MRI of human patellar articular cartilage provides the first evidence that sodium imaging may be used to detect changes due to osteoarthritis in vivo, and the process of optimizing imaging time and signal‐to‐noise ratio is discussed.