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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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Journal ArticleDOI

Self-Navigation with Compressed Sensing for 2D translational Motion Correction in Free-Breathing Coronary MRI: a Feasibility Study

TL;DR: CS-assisted self-navigation using 2D translational motion correction demonstrated feasibility of producing coronary MRA data with image quality comparable to that obtained with conventional navigator gating, while still allowing for 100% scan efficiency and an improved ease-of-use.
Book ChapterDOI

ZHARP: three-dimensional motion tracking from a single image plane

TL;DR: Zhang et al. as mentioned in this paper proposed a tagged magnetic resonance imaging methodology called zHARP that encodes and automatically tracks myocardial displacement in 3D. Unlike other motion encoding techniques, ZHARP encodes both in-plane and through-plane motion in a single image plane without affecting the acquisition speed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Navigator‐gated free‐breathing 3D balanced FFE projection renal MRA: Comparison with contrast‐enhanced breath‐hold 3D MRA in a swine model

TL;DR: High‐resolution, high‐contrast renal projection MRA with superior vessel length visualization compared to standard breath‐hold CE‐MRA was obtained and the present results warrant clinical studies in patients with renal artery disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Right coronary artery flow velocity and volume assessment with spiral K-space sampled breathhold velocity-encoded MRI at 3 tesla: accuracy and reproducibility

TL;DR: To evaluate accuracy and reproducibility of flow velocity and volume measurements in a phantom and in human coronary arteries using breathhold velocity‐encoded (VE) MRI with spiral k‐space sampling at 3 Tesla.