J
Julia Welzel
Researcher at Augsburg College
Publications - 142
Citations - 4044
Julia Welzel is an academic researcher from Augsburg College. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Optical coherence tomography. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 112 publications receiving 3415 citations. Previous affiliations of Julia Welzel include University of Lübeck.
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Optical coherence tomography in dermatology: a review
TL;DR: OCT is used as a diagnostic tool in ophthalmology for examination of a highly scattering tissue like the skin and early studies on the value of OCT for skin diagnosis gave promising results.
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Optical coherence tomography of the human skin
TL;DR: OCT is a promising new imaging method for visualization of morphologic changes of superficial layers of the human skin that may be useful for noninvasive diagnosis of bullous skin diseases, skin tumors, and in vivo investigation of pharmacologic effects.
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Optical coherence tomography in dermatology
TL;DR: Optical coherence tomography enables evaluation of skin lesions, especially nonmelanoma skin cancers and inflammatory diseases, quantification of skin changes, visualization of parasitic infestations, and examination of other indications such as the investigation of nails.
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Dynamic Optical Coherence Tomography in Dermatology
Martina Ulrich,Lotte Themstrup,Nathalie De Carvalho,Marco Manfredi,Costantino Grana,Silvana Ciardo,Raphaela Kästle,J. Holmes,Richard Whitehead,Gregor B.E. Jemec,Giovanni Pellacani,Julia Welzel +11 more
TL;DR: Dynamic OCT (D-OCT) based on speckle variance OCT is of special interest as it allows the in vivo evaluation of blood vessels and their distribution within specific lesions, providing additional functional information and consequently greater density of data.
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Clinical performance of the Nevisense system in cutaneous melanoma detection: an international, multicentre, prospective and blinded clinical trial on efficacy and safety.
Joseph Malvehy,Axel Hauschild,Clara Curiel-Lewandrowski,Peter Mohr,Rainer Hofmann-Wellenhof,Richard Motley,Carola Berking,Douglas Grossman,John Paoli,Carmen Loquai,Judit Oláh,Uwe Reinhold,H. Wenger,Thomas Dirschka,S. Davis,Catriona Henderson,H. Rabinovitz,Julia Welzel,Dirk Schadendorf,Ulrik Birgersson +19 more
TL;DR: The Nevisense electrical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) system (SciBase AB) was designed and shown to have the potential to be used as an adjunct diagnostic tool for melanoma detection.