J
James C. Carr
Researcher at Northwestern University
Publications - 362
Citations - 8772
James C. Carr is an academic researcher from Northwestern University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Magnetic resonance imaging & Bicuspid aortic valve. The author has an hindex of 40, co-authored 340 publications receiving 7105 citations. Previous affiliations of James C. Carr include University of Miami.
Papers
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Journal Article
Abstract 17900: Analysis of Left Atrial Flow Velocity Distribution by 4D Flow MRI in Patients With Atrial Fibrillation
Daniel C. Lee,Jeffrey J. Goldberger,Jacob U. Fluckiger,Jason Ng,James C. Carr,Jeremy D. Collins,Michael Markl +6 more
TL;DR: Evaluating LA 3D flow patterns may improve understanding of stroke risk in atrial fibrillation patients with high stroke risk and assess differences in LA flow velocity distribution in AF patients and controls by 4D flow MRI.
Journal ArticleDOI
Impact of beta-blockade premedication on image quality of ECG-gated thoracic aorta CT angiography.
Pegah Entezari,Jeremy D. Collins,Hamid Chalian,Hüseyin Gürkan Töre,James C. Carr,Vahid Yaghmai +5 more
TL;DR: Beta-blocker premedication may not be necessary for imaging of ascending aorta with ECG-gated DSCTA in electrocardiography (ECG)-gated dual-source CTA (DSCTA) images.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging Feature Tracking Demonstrates Altered Biventricular Strain in Obese Subjects in the Absence of Clinically Apparent Cardiovascular Disease.
Kevin Kalisz,Michael Scott,Ryan Avery,Roberto Sarnari,Alex J. Barker,James C. Carr,Michael Markl,Bradley D. Allen +7 more
TL;DR: The hypothesis that MRI feature tracking (MRI-FT)derived biventricular strain parameters in a cohort of obese volunteers without known cardiovascular disease are different from that of a cohort with normal body mass index (BMI) is tested.
Book ChapterDOI
Imaging Approaches for Aortic Disease
TL;DR: This chapter will discuss certain disease processes affecting the thoracic and abdominal aorta, with a focus on different imaging modalities used to diagnose, follow up, and monitor these respective conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI
Quantitative Assessment of Regional Pulmonary Transit Times in Pulmonary Hypertension
J. Moore,John W Cerne,Ashitha Pathrose,M. B. Van't Veer,Roberto Sarnari,Ann B. Ragin,James C. Carr,Michael Markl +7 more
TL;DR: Noninvasive assessment of PH using standard-of-care time-resolved contrast-enhanced MR Angiography (CE-MRA) can detect increased rPTT in PH patients of varying phenotypes compared to controls.