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Christian Kremser

Researcher at Innsbruck Medical University

Publications -  114
Citations -  3046

Christian Kremser is an academic researcher from Innsbruck Medical University. The author has contributed to research in topics: White matter & Pulse wave velocity. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 114 publications receiving 2585 citations.

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Diffusion-weighted imaging discriminates progressive supranuclear palsy from PD, but not from the parkinson variant of multiple system atrophy

TL;DR: Results show that DWI detects basal ganglia abnormalities in PSP patients within few years of disease onset, discriminating patients with PSP from those with PD, but not fromThose with MSA-P.
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Diffusion-weighted MRI differentiates the Parkinson variant of multiple system atrophy from PD

TL;DR: The increased putaminal rADC values in Parkinson variant of multiple system atrophy are likely to reflect ongoing striatal degeneration, whereas most neuropathologic studies reveal intact striatum in PD.
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A developmental fMRI study of nonsymbolic numerical and spatial processing.

TL;DR: The results are first evidence for an age-dependent neurofunctional link between areas supporting finger use and nonsymbolic number processing and might be suggestive of a special role of fingers for the development of number magnitude representations and early arithmetic.
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Numerical and non-numerical ordinality processing in children with and without developmental dyscalculia: Evidence from fMRI

TL;DR: In this article, the authors employed functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to investigate numerical and non-numerical ordinality knowledge in children with and without developmental dyscalculia.
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Dorsolateral nigral hyperintensity on 3.0T susceptibility-weighted imaging in neurodegenerative Parkinsonism.

TL;DR: Absence of a hyperintense, ovoid area within the dorsolateral border of the otherwise hypointense pars compacta of the substantia nigra on iron‐sensitive high‐field magnetic resonance imaging sequences seems to be a typical finding for patients with Parkinson's disease.