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Philipp Beerbaum

Researcher at Hannover Medical School

Publications -  168
Citations -  5615

Philipp Beerbaum is an academic researcher from Hannover Medical School. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Magnetic resonance imaging. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 147 publications receiving 4769 citations. Previous affiliations of Philipp Beerbaum include St Thomas' Hospital & University of Cambridge.

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Long-term biocompatibility of a corrodible peripheral iron stent in the porcine descending aorta.

TL;DR: It is concluded that iron is a suitable metal for the production of a large-size degradable stent with no local or systemic toxicity and a faster degradation rate is desirable.
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Noninvasive quantification of left-to-right shunt in pediatric patients: phase-contrast cine magnetic resonance imaging compared with invasive oximetry.

TL;DR: Determination of �’Qp/˙Qs by PC-MRI in children is quick, safe, and reliable compared with oximetry, whereas through-plane shunt measurement within an atrial septal defect is inaccurate.
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Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Myocardial Feature Tracking: Concepts and Clinical Applications.

TL;DR: The basic principles, clinical applications, accuracy, and reproducibility of cardiovascular magnetic resonance myocardial feature tracking are reviewed, highlighting the prognostic implications and an outlook on how this field might evolve in the future are provided.
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Inter-study reproducibility of cardiovascular magnetic resonance myocardial feature tracking

TL;DR: Inter-study reproducibility of CMR-FT was relatively poor for segmental and long axis analyses of strain, which have yet to be validated, and was better for global rather than segmental analysis.
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Operator-independent isotropic three-dimensional magnetic resonance imaging for morphology in congenital heart disease: a validation study.

TL;DR: In adolescents and adults, isotropic 3D SSFP MRI allows reliable assessment of complex cardiac morphology and may substitute for conventional 2D MRI sequences to accelerate and simplify MR scanning in congenital heart disease.