Bram F. Coolen

Bram F. Coolen

Department of Biomedical Engineering & Physics, University of Amsterdam

Affiliated withUniversity of Amsterdam

Research Area

Biography

I am an assistent professor in the 'Biomedical Engineering and Physics' group at the Amsterdam University Medical Center (Amsterdam UMC). I am working on the development of different kinds of Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) tools in both the clinical and preclinical setting with focus on cardiovascular diseases. I also teach basic MRI physics and applications to both physics and medical students at the BSc, MSc and PhD level.

JoVE Journal Publications

ArticleTotal : 1
Year
Quantification of Mouse Heart Left Ventricular Function, Myocardial Strain, and Hemodynamic Forces by Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Publication title

Cited by 8

2021

Other Publications

Article
Year
Magnetic Resonance Imaging-Derived Renal Oxygenation and Perfusion During Continuous, Steady-State Angiotensin-II Infusion in Healthy Humans.

Journal of the American Heart Association| PubMed ID: 27021686

2016
2019
Regional assessment of carotid artery pulse wave velocity using compressed sensing accelerated high temporal resolution 2D CINE phase contrast cardiovascular magnetic resonance.

Journal of cardiovascular magnetic resonance : official journal of the Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance| PubMed ID: 30567566

2018
2019
Emerging Magnetic Resonance Imaging Techniques for Atherosclerosis Imaging.

Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, and vascular biology| PubMed ID: 30917678

2019
2019
2020
2019
2020
2020
Highly accelerated 4D flow cardiovascular magnetic resonance using a pseudo-spiral Cartesian acquisition and compressed sensing reconstruction for carotid flow and wall shear stress.

Journal of cardiovascular magnetic resonance : official journal of the Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance| PubMed ID: 31959203

2020
2020
Altered brain fluid management in a rat model of arterial hypertension.

Fluids and barriers of the CNS| PubMed ID: 32590994

2020
2020
2020
2021
The Antibiotic Doxycycline Impairs Cardiac Mitochondrial and Contractile Function.

International journal of molecular sciences| PubMed ID: 33921053

2021