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.
Papers
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Differential diagnosis of chronic diffuse infiltrative lung disease on high-resolution computed tomography.
TL;DR: The differential diagnosis of chronic diffuse infiltrative lung diseases is based on the pattern and distribution of findings, which include interlobular septal thickening, irregular linear opacities, cystic airspaces, small nodules, groundglass pattern, and air-space consolidation.
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Paratracheal lymphadenopathy: radiographic findings and correlation with CT.
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the enlarged nodes were anterolateral rather than directly lateral to the trachea and also immediately posterior to the SVC, explaining the findings on the PA radiograph.
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Pleural Plaques in Asbestos-exposed Workers: Reproducibility of a New High-resolution Ct Visual Semiquantitative Measurement Method
Gustavo de Souza Portes Meirelles,Jorge Kavakama,Dany Jasinowodolinski,Luiz Eduardo Nery,Mario Terra-Filho,Reynaldo Tavares Rodrigues,José Alberto Neder,Lara Maris Nápolis,Ericson Bagatin,Giuseppe D'Ippolito,Nestor L. Müller +10 more
TL;DR: The method proposed for high-resolution CT pleural plaque quantification in asbestos-exposed workers has a high reproducibility.
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Minute pulmonary meningothelial-like nodules: a case of incidentally detected diffuse cystic micronodules on thin-section computed tomography
TL;DR: A case of multiple incidentally detected, randomly distributed, cavitating micronodules with pathologic correlation is presented and it is shown that this entity may simulate neoplastic or other nonneoplastic diseases.
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Asbestos-related disease: progression of parenchymal abnormalities on high-resolution CT.
C. Isabela S. Silva,Nestor L. Müller,J. Alberto Neder,Cristiano Rabelo Nogueira,Lara Maris Nápolis,Mario Terra-Filho,Ericson Bagatin,Luiz Eduardo Nery +7 more
TL;DR: The majority of patients with previous asbestos exposure show evidence of progression of disease on CT at 3 to 5 years follow-up but this progression is usually not detected by the 3 proposed semiquantitative scoring schemes.