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Graham Wright, M.A.Sc., PhD

Senior scientist

Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
2075 Bayview Ave., Room M7 611
Toronto, ON
M4N 3M5

Phone: 416-480-6785
Fax: 416-480-5714

Administrative Assistant, Imaging Research: Kimberly Allen
Phone: 416-480-5718
Email: kimberly.allen@sunnybrook.ca

Senior Administrative Assistant, Schulich Heart Research Program: Tasneem Dalal
Phone: 416-480-4975
Email: tasneem.dalal@sri.utoronto.ca

Education:

  • B.A.Sc., 1985, systems engineering, University of Waterloo, Canada
  • M.A.Sc., 1986, systems engineering, University of Waterloo, Canada
  • PhD, 1991, electrical engineering, Stanford University, U.S.

Appointments and Affiliations:

  • Senior scientist, Physical SciencesSchulich Heart Research Program, Sunnybrook Research Institute
  • Professor, medical biophysics, University of Toronto
  • Consultant, radiology department, Hospital for Sick Children
  • Consultant, departments of electrical engineering and radiology, Stanford University
  • Canada Research Chair in Imaging for Cardiovascular Therapeutics, Tier 1

Research Focus:

  • Cardiovascular imaging, particularly MRI, for disease assessment/intervention guidance

Research Summary:

Dr. Wright's research efforts include:

  • basic biophysics to characterize the relationship between MR signals and underlying physiology in blood and tissue;
  • engineering to develop more effective methods to acquire, analyze, and visualize medical images; and
  • application of these tools to assessment, treatment planning, and therapy guidance in ischemic and congenital heart diseases and neurovascular and peripheral vascular diseases.

Contributions from Dr. Wright's group have included methods to characterize effects of oxygen in blood and tissue on MRI signal behaviour in vivo, a tool to automatically detect contrast agent arrival in a vessel facilitating a rapid MR acquisition of 3-D vascular maps, and real-time adaptive tools in MRI for improving the quality of coronary artery images. Through work with many clinical collaborators, these tools are being used in a wide range of patient studies.

Current work builds on the group's central role in the Ontario Consortium for Cardiac Imaging where the focus is to develop and evaluate the role of multiple imaging modalities applied to cardiac diseases and in the Imaging Research Centre for Cardiac Intervention to design and test new imaging approaches to guide innovative minimally invasive cardiovascular therapies.

Selected Publications:

See current publications list at PubMed.

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