Publisher
Springer Nature Switzerland
Reference43 articles.
1. Corbett, R.J., Purdy, P.D., Laptook, A.R., Chaney, C., Garcia, D.: Noninvasive measurement of brain temperature after stroke. Am. J. Neuroradiol. 20(10), 1851–1857 (1999)
2. Weis, J., Covaciu, L., Rubertsson, S., Allers, M., Lunderquist, A., Ahlström, H.: Noninvasive monitoring of brain temperature during mild hypothermia. Magn. Reson. Imaging 27(7), 923–932 (2009)
3. Soukup, J., Zauner, A., Doppenberg, E.M., Menzel, M., Gilman, C., Young, H.F., Bullock, R.: The importance of brain temperature in patients after severe head injury: relationship to intracranial pressure, cerebral perfusion pressure, cerebral blood flow, and outcome. J. Neurotrauma 19(5), 559–571 (2002)
4. Babourina-Brooks, B., Wilson, M., Arvanitis, T.N., Peet, A.C., Davies, N.P.: MRS water resonance frequency in childhood brain tumours: a novel potential biomarker of temperature and tumour environment. NMR Biomed. 27(10), 1222–1229 (2014)
5. Sone, D., Ikegaya, N., Takahashi, A., Sumida, K., Ota, M., Saito, T., Sato, N.: Noninvasive detection of focal brain hyperthermia related to continuous epileptic activities using proton MR spectroscopy. Epilepsy Res. 138, 1–4 (2017)