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Franz Fazekas

Researcher at Medical University of Graz

Publications -  634
Citations -  59050

Franz Fazekas is an academic researcher from Medical University of Graz. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hyperintensity & Stroke. The author has an hindex of 101, co-authored 629 publications receiving 49775 citations. Previous affiliations of Franz Fazekas include Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania & University of Graz.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Contents Vol. 35, 2013

Jorge Pagola, +124 more
TL;DR: This poster presents a poster presented at the 18th Meeting of the European Society of Neurosonology and Cerebral Hemodynamics and 3rd meeting of the Cerebral Autoregulation Network (CARNet) Porto, Portugal, May 24–27, 2013 with a focus on the role of EEG in the development of cerebral palsy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Unusual deterioration in a patient with multiple sclerosis on natalizumab therapy

TL;DR: A case of MS is reported in which unusual symptoms in the context of 5 years of natalizumab treatment and seroconversion to JCV antibody positivity led to the initial suspicion of PML and a final diagnosis of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD).
Book ChapterDOI

Demyelinating Diseases of the Spinal Cord

TL;DR: Current possibilities for a quantitation of spinal cord damage from demyelinating diseases especially in relation to function are reviewed, and future prospects for the evaluation of this important part of the central nervous system by MRI are speculated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comment on the letter to the editor entitled "Brain iron deposition in patients with white matter hyperintensities of presumed vascular origin" by D. Zhou.

TL;DR: This study set out to test if more extensive white matter hyperintensities (WMHs) of presumed vascular origin are associated with increased iron deposition in the deep graymatter as shown for increasing white matter lesion load in multiple sclerosis and it was appropriate to focus on patients with a transient ischemic attack who were selected for different severity of WMHs.