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Ingolf Sack is a Heisenberg professor of the German Research Foundation for Experimental Radiology and Elastography at Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Germany. He received a PhD in Chemistry from Freie Universität Berlin for the development of methods in NMR spectroscopy. He then worked at the Weizmann Institute in Rehovot, Israel and at the Sunnybrook Hospital, Toronto. Since 2003 he has led an interdisciplinary team of physicists, engineers, chemists, and physicians who have pioneered pivotal developments in time-harmonic elastography of both MRI and ultrasound for many medical applications. Tobias Schaeffter is the head of division of Medical Physics and metrological IT at the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB) in Berlin, Germany. He is also a Professor in Biomedical Imaging at TU Berlin and the Einstein Centre Digital Future. Tobias Schaeffter studied electrical engineering at TU-Berlin and did his PhD in magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) under supervision of Prof. Leibfritz at University Bremen in 1996. From 1996-2006, he worked as a Principal Scientist at the Philips Research Laboratories in Hamburg, Germany, where he managed MR-research projects , their clinical evaluation and product integration. In April 2006, he took up the Philip Harris Professorship of Imaging Sciences at King's College London. In 2012 he became department head of biomedical engineering. Since 2015 he moved to PTB as head of division. A major aim of his research is the investigation of fast and quantitative MR-techniques for cardiovascular applications.
1. Introduction.- Part 1. Biological and Physical Fundamentals.- 2. The fundamentals of transport in living tissues quantified by medical imaging technologies.- 3. Mathematical modeling of blood flow in the cardiovascular system.- 4. Equations of motion for biphasic tissue.- 5. Physical Properties of Single Cells and Collective Behavior.- 6. The extracellular matrix as a target for molecular and biophysical magnetic resonance imaging.- Part 2. Medical Imaging Technologies.- 7. Mathematical Methods in Medical Image Processing.- 8. Acceleration strategies for data sampling in MRI.- 9. Machine Learning for Quantitative MR Image Reconstruction.- 10. 4D flow MRI.- 11. New chapter with the tentative title: Quantitative multiparametric mapping MRI.- 12. CEST MRI.- 13. Innovative PET and SPECT Tracers.- 14. Methods and approaches in ultrasound elastography.- 15. Photoacoustic imaging: Principles and Applications.- 16. Fundamentals of X-Ray Computed Tomography: Acquisition and Reconstruction.- Part 3. Applications.- 17. Quantification of Myocardial Effective Transverse Relaxation Time with Magnetic Resonance at 7.0 Tesla for a Better Understanding of Myocardial (Patho)physiology.- 18. Extracellular-matrix-specific molecular MR imaging probes for the assessment of aortic aneurysms.- 19. Diffusion based MRI - imaging basics and clinical applications.- 20. Tumor characterization by ultrasound elastography and contrast-enhanced ultrasound.- 21. Quantitative Bone Ultrasound.- 22. New chapter with the tentative title: Mechanical imaging of the abdonimal aorta.- 23. Sensitivity of tissue shear stiffness to pressure and perfusion in health and disease.- 24. Radionuclide imaging of cerebral blood flow.- 25. Cardiac perfusion MRI.- 26. Myocardial Perfusion Assessment by 3D and 4D Computed Tomography.- 27. Roadmap on the use of artificial intelligence for imaging of vulnerable atherosclerotic plaque in coronary arteries.- 28. Clinical quantitative coronary artery stenosis and coronary atherosclerosis imaging: a Consensus Statement from the Quantitative Cardiovascular Imaging Study Group.
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