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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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Single breath-hold slice-following CSPAMM myocardial tagging.

TL;DR: A combination of slice-following CSPAMM myocardial tagging with a segmented EPI imaging sequence enables to acquire as many as 20 systolic and diastolic grid-tagged images per cardiac cycle with a high tagging contrast during a short period of sustained respiration.
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Transfer insensitive labeling technique (TILT): application to multislice functional perfusion imaging.

TL;DR: The magnetization transfer insensitive labeling technique (TILT) has been used for mapping blood flow changes at a microvascular level under motor activation in a multislice mode with a recently proposed perfusion sequence using inversion of water spins as an endogenous tracer without magnetizationTransfer artifacts.
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Selective coronary artery plaque visualization and differentiation by contrast-enhanced inversion prepared MRI.

TL;DR: The potential utility of CE-IR MRI for selective plaque visualization and differentiation of plaque types is demonstrated and the observed contrast uptake may be associated with endothelial dysfunction, neovascularization, inflammation, and/or fibrosis.
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Cardiac rotation and relaxation after anterolateral myocardial infarction.

TL;DR: The wringing motion of the myocardium might be an important mechanism involved in maintaining normal cardiac function with minimal expenditure of energy and could explain the occurrence of diastolic dysfunction in patients with anterolateral infarction.
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Comparison of aortic elasticity determined by cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging in obese versus lean adults

TL;DR: In clinically healthy young adult obese men, obesity is associated with increased cross-sectional aortic area and decreased aorta elasticity, and the vascular properties of large vessels in the obese have not been adequately studied.