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Christoph Grouls

Researcher at RWTH Aachen University

Publications -  16
Citations -  431

Christoph Grouls is an academic researcher from RWTH Aachen University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Content-based image retrieval & Image retrieval. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 16 publications receiving 392 citations.

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Chemokine Cxcl9 attenuates liver fibrosis-associated angiogenesis in mice.

TL;DR: The results identify direct angiostatic and antifibrotic effects of the Cxcr3 ligand Cxcl9 in a model of experimental liver fibrosis and suggest that the amelioration of liver damage by systemic application of CxCl9 might offer a novel therapeutic approach for chronic liver diseases associated with increased neoangiogenesis.
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Molecular and functional ultrasound imaging in differently aggressive breast cancer xenografts using two novel ultrasound contrast agents (BR55 and BR38)

TL;DR: BR38 and BR55 are well suited to characterising and distinguishing breast cancers with different angiogenesis and aggressiveness and allow extensive 3-dimensional examinations of larger or several organs.
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Virtual Elastic Sphere Processing Enables Reproducible Quantification of Vessel Stenosis at CT and MR Angiography

TL;DR: The virtual elastic sphere tool is applicable to CT, dual-energy CT, and MR angiography, and it improves reproducibility and efficiency over that achieved with manual stenosis measurements.
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Liver dysplasia: US molecular imaging with targeted contrast agent enables early assessment.

TL;DR: BR55 enables the distinction of early stages of liver dysplasia from normal liver in transgenic mice and targeted contrast-enhanced US signal indicated a significantly higher site-specific binding of BR55 in dysplastic than healthy livers.
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Bridging the integration gap between imaging and information systems: a uniform data concept for content-based image retrieval in computer-aided diagnosis.

TL;DR: It is suggested that CBIR systems applied to CAD should integrate their results in a picture archiving and communication systems environment such as Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine (DICOM) structured reporting documents.