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Matthias Stuber

Researcher at University of Lausanne

Publications -  388
Citations -  14724

Matthias Stuber is an academic researcher from University of Lausanne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Magnetic resonance imaging & Coronary artery disease. The author has an hindex of 59, co-authored 367 publications receiving 13620 citations. Previous affiliations of Matthias Stuber include University of Bordeaux & Brigham and Women's Hospital.

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Artifact-free coronary magnetic resonance angiography and coronary vessel wall imaging in the presence of a new, metallic, coronary magnetic resonance imaging stent.

TL;DR: The new, coronary MRI stent allows for completely artifact-free coronary MRA and vessel wall imaging and the vessel lumen and wall could be visualized without artifacts, including the stented vessel segment.
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Assessment of systolic and diastolic LV function by MR myocardial tagging

TL;DR: Heart failure is associated with profound alterations in the mechanical function of the heart which are manifested by changes in systolic ”wringing” and diastolic “untwisting” motion.
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Free-breathing 3D coronary MRA: the impact of "isotropic" image resolution.

TL;DR: The good delineation of the coronary arteries in all views suggests that isotropic 3D coronary MRA might be a preferred technique for the assessment of coronary disease, although at the expense of prolonged scan times.
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Selective three-dimensional visualization of the coronary arterial lumen using arterial spin tagging.

TL;DR: This technique allows for selective 3D visualization of the coronary lumen blood‐pool, while signal from the surrounding structures is suppressed, and analogous “luminographic” data may be obtained using MR arterial spin tagging (projection coronary MRA) techniques.
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Assessment of the carotid artery by MRI at 3T: a study on reproducibility.

TL;DR: To examine the reproducibility of carotid artery dimension measurements using 3T MRI, a large number of measurements were negative and the standard deviation in these measurements was low.