N
Nestor L. Müller
Researcher at University of British Columbia
Publications - 548
Citations - 49118
Nestor L. Müller is an academic researcher from University of British Columbia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Lung & Respiratory disease. The author has an hindex of 111, co-authored 547 publications receiving 45508 citations. Previous affiliations of Nestor L. Müller include St. Paul's Hospital & Vancouver Hospital and Health Sciences Centre.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Follicular Bronchiolitis: Thin-Section CT and Histologic Findings
Sarah J. Howling,David M. Hansell,Athol U. Wells,Andrew G. Nicholson,Julia Flint,Nestor L. Müller +5 more
TL;DR: The cardinal CT feature of follicular bronchiolitis consists of small centrilobular nodules variably associated with peribronchial nodules and areas of ground-glass opacity.
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Mediastinal nodes in bronchogenic carcinoma: comparison between CT and mediastinoscopy.
TL;DR: Computed tomography (CT) and mediastinoscopy were compared in 151 patients with bronchogenic carcinoma and found that 80% of patients with false-negative findings at CT had surgically resectable stage IIIa disease.
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Thrombotic and nonthrombotic pulmonary arterial embolism: spectrum of imaging findings.
Daehee Han,Kyungsoo Lee,Tomás Franquet,Nestor L. Müller,Taesung Kim,Hojoong Kim,O Jung Kwon,Hong Sik Byun +7 more
TL;DR: Nonthrombotic pulmonary embolism is an uncommon condition but is sometimes associated with specific imaging findings, including discrete nodules with cavitation (septic embolist), widespread homogeneous and heterogeneous areas of increased opacity or attenuation that typically appear 12-24 hours after trauma (fat embolisms), and fine miliary nodules that subsequently coalesce into large areas ofIncreased opacity orattenuation (talcosis).
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Diffuse pulmonary hemorrhage: clinical, pathologic, and imaging features.
TL;DR: This review summarizes the clinical, pathologic, and imaging features of DPH and the treatment of its more common causes and the differential diagnosis and diagnostic approach.
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Eosinophilic lung diseases: diagnostic accuracy of thin-section CT in 111 patients.
Takeshi Johkoh,Nestor L. Müller,Masanori Akira,Kazuya Ichikado,Moritaka Suga,Masayuki Ando,Takeshi Yoshinaga,Teisou Kiyama,Naoki Mihara,Osamu Honda,Noriyuki Tomiyama,Hironobu Nakamura +11 more
TL;DR: Although eosinophilic lung diseases often can be differentiated by means of thin-section CT, correlation between CT findings and careful clinical evaluation are required for a definitive diagnosis.