پنج شنبه ٠١ آذر ١٤٠٣

 

Professor Hossein Mozdarani currently holds the position of Professor of the Medical Genetics Department at the Faculty of Medical Sciences of Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, Iran, where he has been teaching at post-graduate level and supervising more than 130 MSc and PhD students since 1989. He is the author or co-author of some 330 papers and the author/translator of several books in the field of radiobiology and cytogenetics. He is also a leading pioneer in the field of radiobiology in Iran. His research interests include the mechanisms of radiation induced carcinogenesis, radioprotection, radioadaptaion and radiogenomics.




Dr. Ali Pashazadeh is a postdoctoral fellowship at the Institute for Medical Technology of Otto von Guericke University in Germany. He received his BSc (Physics) from Tabriz University, MSc (Medical Physics) from Tehran University of Medical Sciences, and Ph.D. (Medical Physics) from Otto-von-Guericke University. Dr. Pashazadeh worked for about 10 years as an academic researcher in nuclear medicine and an R&D engineer in MedTech in Iran, Germany, and Australia. His scientific output includes a book and several academic papers. He’s also been the reviewer of scientific journals in the field. With research and work experience in medical physics and engineering, his interest has focused on developing solutions for unmet clinical problems.

My interest in Medical Physics has begun since the final year of my undergraduate degree in Physics, when I had a big question; how a radiation beam can penetrate the human body and create an image of the internal organs. I am certain that my interest increased by taking the ''project'' as an elective course in the final semester of my undergraduate program and has grown with each passing year. During that semester, I eagerly studied the physical principles of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and my basic and primitive findings have fascinated me ever since. In fact, during that self-study course, I found that magnetic resonance is the dance of the whirling protons in the human body and we can exhibit the difference between the dance style of normal and abnormal tissues, which results in magnetic resonance imaging. When I studied the MRI fundamentals, I almost decided that Medical Physics is a career for me. I hold a Bachelor’s degree in Solid-State Physics and a Master’s degree in Medical Physics. I am currently a Ph.D. student of Medical Physics at Western Sydney University in Australia and working on new methods of electron density extraction from MRI images to be used in radiotherapy treatment planning

 

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