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Edwin Jacques Rudolph van Beek

Researcher at University of Edinburgh

Publications -  51
Citations -  3085

Edwin Jacques Rudolph van Beek is an academic researcher from University of Edinburgh. The author has contributed to research in topics: Magnetic resonance imaging & Lung cancer. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 51 publications receiving 2662 citations.

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Journal Article

Guidelines on diagnosis and management of acute pulmonary embolism

TL;DR: Torbicki et al. as mentioned in this paper proposed a task force to investigate the role of gender discrimination in sexual harassment in the sexual harassment of women in pornography, and the task force's chairperson was Adam TorbICKi, Chairperson (Poland)*, Arnaud Perrier (Switzerland).
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Coronary Arterial 18F-Sodium Fluoride Uptake : A Novel Marker of Plaque Biology

TL;DR: 18F-NaF is a promising new approach for the assessment of coronary artery plaque biology and prospective studies with clinical outcomes are now needed to assess whether coronary 18F- NaF uptake represents a novel marker of plaque vulnerability, recent plaque rupture, and future cardiovascular risk.
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Testosterone therapy in men with moderate severity heart failure: a double-blind randomized placebo controlled trial.

TL;DR: Testosterone replacement therapy improves functional capacity and symptoms in men with moderately severe heart failure and the patch preparation was not well tolerated by the study patients.
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Cigarette smoking is associated with subclinical parenchymal lung disease: the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA)-lung study.

TL;DR: Smoking may cause subclinical parenchymal lung disease detectable by spirometric restriction and regions of high attenuation on computed tomography imaging, even among a generally healthy cohort.
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Magnetic resonance elastography (MRE) of the human brain: technique, findings and clinical applications.

TL;DR: The extent to which MRE has revealed significant alterations to the brain in patients with neurological disorders is assessed and discussed in terms of known pathophysiology, and the trends for future MRE research and applications in neuroscience are predicted.