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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.

Papers
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Neuroendocrine carcinomas of the lung.

TL;DR: Preoperative differential diagnosis is difficult and often misleading because of the overlap between the three subtypes and their similar cytologic features; however, accurate preoperative diagnosis is critical.
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Ultrasonic refraction by the rectus abdominis muscles: the double image artifact.

TL;DR: The authors were able to reproduce an artifact caused by refraction of the sound passing through the medial edges of both rectus abdominis muscles in vitro using isolated human cadaver rectus muscles and imaging a single object in a water bath.
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Alveolar adenoma of the lung: computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging findings.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the contrastenhanced computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging features of alveolar adenoma of lung and demonstrate the presence of a cystic space with central fluid and thin-rim enhancement.
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Chest radiographic and CT manifestations of chronic granulomatous disease in adults.

TL;DR: The pulmonary radiologic findings of chronic granulomatous disease include consolidation, nodules, areas of scarring, traction bronchiectasis, emphysema, air trapping, mediastinal and hilar lymphadenopathy, pulmonary artery enlargement, and pleural effusion.
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Unusual manifestations of metastatic pulmonary calcification: high-resolution CT and pathological findings.

TL;DR: It is concluded that metastatic calcification may present with dense bilateral consolidation, may improve spontaneously, and may rarely present in patients with no apparent underlying biochemical abnormality.