Fabian Kiessling Explained

Fabian Kiessling (born 16 August 1972) is a German radiologist, university lecturer and author as well as a scientist in the field of molecular imaging.

Academic career

Fabian Kiessling was born Mannheim and graduated high school in 1992 in Heidelberg and studied medicine at Heidelberg University. After his elective period at the district hospital in Schwetzingen, he completed his studies with the second state examination and was awarded his doctorate in 2001 in Internal Medicine.[1]

From 2001 he worked in the Dept. of Oncological Diagnostics and Therapy at the German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) in Heidelberg and stayed there as an intern until 2002.

In 2003 he moved to the Dept. of Oncology at the Thorax Clinic Heidelberg and in parallel became head of the Molecular Diagnostics group in the Dept. of Medical Physics in Radiology at the DKFZ.In 2006, he became the Junior Group Leader for 'Molecular Imaging' at the DKFZ and habilitated in Experimental Radiology at the Heidelberg University.

2007 he completed his education as a medical specialist in diagnostic radiology.

In March 2008 he was appointed as full professor and director of the Institute for Experimental Molecular Imaging (ExMI) at RWTH Aachen (Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule Aachen). He is also one of the directors of the RWTH Helmholtz Institute for Biomedical Engineering.

Boards and Chairs

Research

The research of Fabian Kiessling focusses on the development of new imaging methods and probes, with a particular focus on oncology and diseases that go along with angiogenesis and vascular remodeling. He worked on the imaging technique volumetric area detector computed tomography[2] and published the new ultrasound technique Motion Model Ultrasound Localization Microscopy together with his colleague Georg Schmitz. The ultrasound technique was preclinically tested and used in a first clinical application.[3] Both methods allow non-invasive imaging of hair-thin blood vessels in tumors and other tissues. In his translational research, imaging-guided therapy plays an important role including the investigation of biological barriers for drug delivery and the development of strategies to overcome these barriers by the use of nanomedicines, drug delivery systems, and other therapeutics.

Awards

Honors

Selected publications

Books edited

Most-cited peer-reviewed journal articles

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://archiv.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/volltextserver/volltexte/2001/1548/pdf/dissfabiankieling.pdf Abstract of the dissertation "ECV 304: a polar human endothelial cell line?") (PDF; 9 kB)
  2. Volumetric computed tomography (VCT): A new technology for noninvasive, high-resolution monitoring of tumor angiogenesis. 15361864. 2004. Kiessling. F.. Greschus. S.. Lichy. M. P.. Bock. M.. Fink. C.. Vosseler. S.. Moll. J.. Mueller. M. M.. Fusenig. N. E.. Traupe. H.. Semmler. W.. Nature Medicine. 10. 10. 1133–1138. 10.1038/nm1101. 7868388.
  3. T. Opacic, S. Dencks and others: Motion model ultrasound localization microscopy for preclinical and clinical multiparametric tumor characterization. In: Nature Communications. Volume 9, Number 1, April 2018, p. 1527,,, {{.
  4. Web site: Cancer Researchers Quartet receives Richtzenhain and Dr. Emil Salzer Prizes . 2020-09-04 . 2016-03-04 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160304063016/http://www.uni-protokolle.de/nachrichten/id/132173/ . dead .