Affiliate elected as American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering Fellow

4/12/2018 Laura Schmitt, Illinois Bioengineering

Prof. Brad Sutton has focused on developing sensitive methods to image the physiological changes in the brain associated with age and disease.

Written by Laura Schmitt, Illinois Bioengineering

ECE ILLINOIS Affiliate Professor Brad Sutton has been elected a 2018 Fellow of the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering (AIMBE)--one of the highest professional distinctions accorded to a medical and biological engineer. Sutton was elected for outstanding contributions to image reconstruction technology for magnetic resonance imaging, enabling new applications of neuroimaging and dynamic imaging.

Professor Brad Sutton (center) was inducted as a fellow of the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering at the organization's annual meeting in Washington, DC.
Professor Brad Sutton (center) was inducted as a fellow of the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering at the organization's annual meeting in Washington, DC.
Sutton is a professor of Illinois Bioengineering and is also a faculty affiliate of the Beckman Institute and the neuroscience program on campus. He develops innovative MRI techniques to image brain structure and function. He has focused on developing sensitive methods to image the physiological changes in the brain associated with age and disease.

Working with cognitive psychology researchers at the Beckman Institute, Sutton’s group is exploring MRI-based biomarkers that indicate healthy and unhealthy aging related to a variety of interventions, including aerobic exercise and nutrition. His MRI techniques measure function, structure, blood flow, white matter health, and even mechanical properties of the brain.

Specifically, his group has developed measures of blood flow through the arterioles and capillaries in the brain, providing information about their flow rate through a combination of novel techniques, such as Flow Enhancement of Signal Intensity (FENSI), and obtaining information about the structure of the blood vessels through a technique known as intravoxel incoherent motion (IVIM). With these measures, Sutton and his collaborators have developed sensitive biomarkers reflecting the relationships between blood flow, age, cardiorespiratory fitness, and performance on cognitive tasks.

They have also developed novel methods to address the impact of magnetic field distributions inside the MRI scanner and have drastically increased the achievable spatial resolution in diffusion weighted scans that examine the integrity of white matter structures in the brain. They do this through careful modeling of the physics of the MRI experiment and combine it with high-performance computing resources available at Illinois through the Blue Waters supercomputer at NCSA.

In addition to measuring blood flow and structure in the brain, Sutton and his students have pioneered the application of magnetic resonance elastography (MRE) to measure the mechanical properties of the brain. In collaboration with researchers at Carle Hospital, they have examined changes in mechanical properties of the brain associated with tumors, hydrocephalus, and epilepsy. Additionally, they have found the mechanical properties of certain brain regions to be a sensitive biomarker for particular cognitive functions, such as the hippocampus and memory.

A faculty member since 2006, Sutton is the technical director of the Biomedical Imaging Center at the Beckman Institute, a state-of-the-art facility committed to developing cutting-edge techniques that integrate magnetic resonance methods with other imaging techniques in humans and preclinical models.

Among Sutton’s other awards are the 2017 University of Illinois College of Engineering Dean’s Award for Excellence in Research and the 2015 campus award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching.

Sutton and 156 colleagues were inducted into the AIMBE College of Fellows April 9, 2018, at the organization's annual meeting in Washington, DC.


Share this story

This story was published April 12, 2018.