- Basic Principles of Stress Echocardiography: Why, When and How?
- Stress and Stressors: Applied Pathophysiology
- Facilities, Environment, Staff, Accreditation
- Stress Echocardiography Exam: Imaging, Reading, Quantification
- Stress Echocardiography Protocols
- Detection of Myocardial Ischemia
- Detection of Myocardial Viability
- Contrast in Stress Echocardiography
- Stress Echocardiography in Valvular Heart Disease
- Stress Echocardiography in Dilated Cardiomyopathy
- Risk Stratification in Non-Cardiac Surgery
- Stress Echocardiography vs Radionuclide Imaging
- Training Process and Requirements
- Landmark Articles with Short
- Comments
- Aleksander N. Neskovic
Chief of the Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory and Emergency Cardiology Programme, the Clinical Hospital Center Zemun-Belgrade at Belgrade University School of Medicine; Deputy Chairman of the Clinical Hospital Center Zemun-Belgrade; and Associate Professor of Medicine and Cardiology, Belgrade University School of Medicine, Belgrade, Serbia.He received both his Ph.D. and M.D. from Belgrade University Medical School, Belgrade, Serbia. Dr. Neskovic is Assistant Editor of Kardiologija (official journal of the Yugoslav Society of Cardiology), Editorial Director of JAMA Serbia and Montenegro, and Associate Editor of Materia Medica. He is also President of the Serbian Society of Echocardiography and a member of national organizations that include Serbian Medical Society, the Yugoslav Society of Cardiology, and the Serbian Medical Society. Internationally, he is a member of the European Association of Echocardiography and the Association of Clinical Research Professionals. Dr. Neskovic is the author of 60 peer-reviewed international journal articles, 3 book chapters, and co-edited Informa Healthcare’s 2005 title, Emergency Echocardiography.

