S
Sujata M Shanbhag
Researcher at National Institutes of Health
Publications - 60
Citations - 2193
Sujata M Shanbhag is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Coronary artery disease. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 50 publications receiving 1658 citations. Previous affiliations of Sujata M Shanbhag include Indiana University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
MultiContrast Delayed Enhancement (MCODE) improves detection of subendocardial myocardial infarction by late gadolinium enhancement cardiovascular magnetic resonance: a clinical validation study
W. Patricia Bandettini,Peter Kellman,Christine Mancini,Christine Mancini,Oscar J Booker,Oscar J Booker,Sujethra Vasu,Steve W. Leung,Joel R. Wilson,Sujata M Shanbhag,Marcus Y. Chen,Andrew E. Arai +11 more
TL;DR: While both PSIR L GE and MCODE were good in identifying MI, MCODE demonstrated more subendocardial MI’s than LGE and identified a larger number of infarcted sectors.
Journal ArticleDOI
Alterations in Atrial Electrophysiology and Tissue Structure in a Canine Model of Chronic Atrial Dilatation Due to Mitral Regurgitation
Sander Verheule,Emily E. Wilson,Thomas H. Everett,Sujata M Shanbhag,Catherine Golden,Jeffrey E. Olgin +5 more
TL;DR: In the dilated MR left atrium, areas of increased interstitial fibrosis and chronic inflammation were accompanied by increased glycogen ultrastructurally, leading to an increased vulnerability to AF that is not based on a decrease in wavelength.
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Extracellular volume fraction mapping in the myocardium, part 2: initial clinical experience
Peter Kellman,Joel R. Wilson,Hui Xue,W. Patricia Bandettini,Sujata M Shanbhag,Kirk M. Druey,Martin Ugander,Andrew E. Arai +7 more
TL;DR: The ability to display ECV maps in units that are physiologically intuitive and may be interpreted on an absolute scale offers the potential for detection of diffuse disease and measurement of the extent and severity of abnormal regions.
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Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Stress Perfusion Imaging for Evaluation of Patients With Chest Pain
Raymond Y. Kwong,Yin Ge,Kevin Steel,Scott Bingham,Shuaib M Abdullah,Kana Fujikura,Wei Wang,Ankur Pandya,Yi Yun Chen,J. Ronald Mikolich,Sebastian Boland,Andrew E. Arai,W. Patricia Bandettini,Sujata M Shanbhag,Amit R. Patel,Akhil Narang,Afshin Farzaneh-Far,Benjamin Romer,John F. Heitner,Jean Ho,Jaspal Singh,Chetan Shenoy,Andrew Hughes,Steve W. Leung,Meera Marji,Jorge A. Gonzalez,Sandeep Mehta,Dipan J. Shah,Dany Debs,Subha V. Raman,Avirup Guha,Victor A. Ferrari,Jeanette Schulz-Menger,Rory Hachamovitch,Matthias Stuber,Orlando P. Simonetti +35 more
TL;DR: In a multicenter U.S. cohort with stable chest pain syndromes, stress CMR performed at experienced centers offers effective cardiac prognostication.
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Submillisievert median radiation dose for coronary angiography with a second-generation 320-detector row CT scanner in 107 consecutive patients.
TL;DR: The combination of a gantry rotation time of 275 msec, wide volume coverage, iterative reconstruction, automated exposure control, and larger x-ray power generator of the second-generation CT scanner provides excellent image quality over a wide range of body sizes and heart rates at low radiation doses.