S
Steffen E. Petersen
Researcher at Queen Mary University of London
Publications - 513
Citations - 26446
Steffen E. Petersen is an academic researcher from Queen Mary University of London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 58, co-authored 415 publications receiving 16004 citations. Previous affiliations of Steffen E. Petersen include Aarhus University Hospital & University of Mainz.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
The multi-modality cardiac imaging approach to the Athlete's heart: an expert consensus of the European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging
Maurizio Galderisi,Nuno Cardim,Antonello D'Andrea,Oliver Bruder,Bernard Cosyns,Laurent Davin,Erwan Donal,Thor Edvardsen,António Freitas,Gilbert Habib,Anastasia Kitsiou,Sven Plein,Steffen E. Petersen,Bogdan A. Popescu,Stephen Schroeder,Christof Burgstahler,Patrizio Lancellotti +16 more
TL;DR: The term 'athlete's heart' refers to a clinical picture characterized by a slow heart rate and enlargement of the heart, which aims to differentiate physiological changes due to intensive training in the athlete's heart from serious cardiac diseases with similar morphological features.
Journal ArticleDOI
European Society of Cardiology: cardiovascular disease statistics 2021.
Adam Timmis,Panos Vardas,Nick Townsend,Aleksandra Torbica,H. Katus,Delphine De Smedt,Chris P Gale,Aldo P. Maggioni,Steffen E. Petersen,Radu Huculeci,Dzianis Kazakiewicz,Victor de Benito Rubio,Barbara Ignatiuk,Zahra Raisi-Estabragh,Agnieszka Pawlak,Efstratios Karagiannidis,Roderick W Treskes,Dan Gaita,John F. Beltrame,Alex McConnachie,Isabel Bardinet,Ian D. Graham,Marcus Flather,Perry M. Elliott,Elias Mossialos,Franz Weidinger,Stephan Achenbach +26 more
TL;DR: Risk factors and unhealthy behaviours are potentially reversible, and this provides a huge opportunity to address the health inequalities across ESC member countries that are highlighted in this report, but present evidence suggests that most of the WHO NCD targets for 2025 are unlikely to be met.
Journal ArticleDOI
2022 ESC Guidelines on cardiovascular assessment and management of patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery.
Sigrun Halvorsen,Julinda Mehilli,Salvatore Cassese,Trygve S. Hall,Magdy Abdelhamid,Emanuele Barbato,Stefan De Hert,Ingrid de Laval,Tobias Geisler,Lynne Hinterbuchner,Borja Ibanez,Radosław Lenarczyk,Ulrich Mansmann,Paul McGreavy,Christian Mueller,Claudio Muneretto,Alexander Niessner,Tatjana S. Potpara,Arsen D. Ristić,L. Sade,Henrik Schirmer,Stefanie Schüpke,Henrik Sillesen,Helge Skulstad,Lucia Torracca,Oktay Tutarel,P. Van Der Meer,Wojciech Wojakowski,Kai Zacharowski,Juhani Knuuti,Steen Dalby Kristensen,Victor Aboyans,Ingo Ahrens,Sotiris Antoniou,Riccardo Asteggiano,Dan Atar,Andreas Baumbach,Helmut Baumgartner,Michael Böhm,Michael A. Borger,Héctor Bueno,Jelena Čelutkienė,Alaide Chieffo,Maja Cikes,Harald Darius,V. Delgado,Philip J. Devereaux,David Duncker,Volkmar Falk,Laurent Fauchier,Gilbert Habib,David Hasdai,Kurt Huber,Bernard Iung,Tiny Jaarsma,Alexandra Konradi,Konstantinos C. Koskinas,Dipak Kotecha,Ulf Landmesser,Basil S. Lewis,Aleš Linhart,Maja-Lisa Løchen,Michael Maeng,Stéphane Manzo-Silberman,R.H.S Mindham,Lis Neubeck,Jens Nielsen,Steffen E. Petersen,Eva Prescott,Amina Rakisheva,Antti Saraste,Dirk Sibbing,Jolanta M. Siller-Matula,Marta Sitges,Ivan Stankovic,Robert F. Storey,Jurrien W. ten Berg,Matthias Thielmann,Rhian M. Touyz +78 more
Journal Article
The multi-modality cardiac imaging approach to the Athlete's heart: an expert consensus of the European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging
Maurizio Galderisi,Nuno Cardim,Antonello D'Andrea,Oliver Bruder,Bernard Cosyns,Laurent Davin,Erwan Donal,Thor Edvardsen,António Freitas,Gilbert Habib,Anastasia Kitsiou,Sven Plein,Steffen E. Petersen,Bogdan A. Popescu,Stephen Schroeder +14 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a multi-modality imaging approach to the athlete's heart aims to differentiate physiological changes due to intensive training in the athletes' heart from serious cardiac diseases with similar morphological features.
Journal ArticleDOI
Resting Myocardial Blood Flow Is Impaired in Hibernating Myocardium A Magnetic Resonance Study of Quantitative Perfusion Assessment
Joseph B. Selvanayagam,Michael Jerosch-Herold,Italo Porto,David C. Sheridan,Adrian S. H. Cheng,Steffen E. Petersen,Nick Searle,Keith M. Channon,Adrian P. Banning,Stefan Neubauer +9 more
TL;DR: CMR perfusion imaging detects impaired resting MBF in hibernating myocardial segments by detecting impairment in perfusion reserve in patients with 1 or 2-vessel coronary disease and at least 1 dysfunctional myocardia undergoing PCI.