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
Dynamic MRI of Solitary Pulmonary Nodules: Comparison of Enhancement Patterns of Malignant and Benign Small Peripheral Lung Lesions
Rei Kono,Kiminori Fujimoto,Hiroshi Terasaki,Nestor L. Müller,Seiya Kato,Junko Sadohara,Naofumi Hayabuchi,Shinzo Takamori +7 more
TL;DR: Dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI is helpful in differentiating benign from malignant solitary pulmonary nodules, and absence of significant enhancement is a strong predictor that a lesion is benign.
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High-resolution computed tomographic characteristics in acute farmer's lung and in its follow-up.
TL;DR: In farmer's lung, contact avoidance allows a better resolution of computed tomography abnormalities than continued exposure; emphysema is a more frequent finding than interstitial fibrosis; and the presence of mediastinal lymphadenopathy has no negative diagnostic value.
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Pulmonary cryptococcosis: CT and pathologic findings.
TL;DR: Pulmonary cryptococcosis should be considered in the differential diagnosis of solitary or multiple pulmonary nodules (with or without associated CT halo sign), particularly in immunocompromised patients.
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End-stage lung disease: CT findings in 61 patients.
TL;DR: The pattern and distribution of abnormalities in end-stage lung disease are determined by the underlying cause and in most cases, a specific diagnosis can be made on the basis of the CT findings.
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Thoracic manifestations of systemic autoimmune diseases: radiographic and high-resolution CT findings.
TL;DR: The systemic autoimmune diseases include collagen vascular diseases, the systemic vasculitides, Wegener granulomatosis, and Churg-Strauss syndrome as discussed by the authors, which can cause a variety of thoracic abnormalities that are influenced by the pathophysiologic characteristics of the underlying disease process.