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Harald Kramer

Researcher at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich

Publications -  51
Citations -  1817

Harald Kramer is an academic researcher from Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. The author has contributed to research in topics: Magnetic resonance angiography & Magnetic resonance imaging. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 50 publications receiving 1675 citations. Previous affiliations of Harald Kramer include University of Wisconsin-Madison.

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Comparison of CT colonography, colonoscopy, sigmoidoscopy and faecal occult blood tests for the detection of advanced adenoma in an average risk population.

TL;DR: High-resolution and low-dose CTC is feasible for colorectal cancer screening and reaches sensitivities comparable with OC for polyps >5 mm, and for patients who refuse full bowel preparation and OC or CTC, FS should be preferred over stool tests.
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Accuracy of Liver Fat Quantification With Advanced CT, MRI, and Ultrasound Techniques: Prospective Comparison With MR Spectroscopy.

TL;DR: Quantitative MRI proton-density fat fraction and SECT fat attenuation have excellent linear correlation with MRS measurements and can serve as accurate noninvasive biomarkers for quantifying steatosis.
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Quantitative magnetic resonance imaging of hepatic steatosis: Validation in ex vivo human livers.

TL;DR: MRI‐PDFF is an accurate, precise, and reader‐independent noninvasive imaging biomarker of liver triglyceride content, capable of steatosis quantification over the entire liver.
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High-Spatial-Resolution Multistation MR Angiography with Parallel Imaging and Blood Pool Contrast Agent: Initial Experience

TL;DR: Vessel conspicuity on the first-pass MR angiograms obtained in both volunteers and patients was rated as excellent for 93% of vessels, and vessel conspicuity at steady-state imaging was ratedAs excellent or good for 89% of Vessel conspicuity.
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Cardiovascular Screening with Parallel Imaging Techniques and a Whole-Body MR Imager

TL;DR: Using a new 32-channel whole-body imager and parallel acquisition techniques to image all relevant organ systems without compromising spatial or temporal resolution provided high-quality fast cardiovascular imaging.