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Petrea Frid

Researcher at Lund University

Publications -  12
Citations -  546

Petrea Frid is an academic researcher from Lund University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Stroke & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 9 publications receiving 408 citations.

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Congo red and protein aggregation in neurodegenerative diseases.

TL;DR: Understanding mechanisms involved in dye-amyloidal fibril binding and inhibition of aggregation will provide instructive guides for the design of future compounds, potentially useful for monitoring and treating neurodegenerative diseases.
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White matter hyperintensity quantification in large-scale clinical acute ischemic stroke cohorts – The MRI-GENIE study

TL;DR: This work presents a fully automated pipeline for quantification of WMH in clinical large-scale studies of AIS, and obtains WMH volumes by building on an existing automatic WMH segmentation algorithm that delineates and distinguishes between different cerebrovascular pathologies.
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Big Data Approaches to Phenotyping Acute Ischemic Stroke Using Automated Lesion Segmentation of Multi-Center Magnetic Resonance Imaging Data

TL;DR: Both lesion volume and topography can provide insight into stroke subtypes with sufficient sample size from big heterogeneous multi-center clinical imaging phenotype data sets from the MRI-GENIE repository.
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Design and rationale for examining neuroimaging genetics in ischemic stroke: The MRI-GENIE study.

TL;DR: The MRI-GENIE study aims to develop, validate, and distribute the MRI analysis platform for scans acquired as part of clinical care for patients with AIS, which will lead to novel genetic discoveries in ischemic stroke, strategies for personalized stroke risk assessment, and personalized stroke outcome assessment.
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Detailed phenotyping of posterior vs. anterior circulation ischemic stroke: a multi-center MRI study.

TL;DR: Ischemic stroke subtypes differ between the two phenotypes and diabetes and male sex have a stronger association with PCiS than ACiS, which accounted for 47% of solitary brainstem infarctions.