Speaker Profile
Frederick William Kremkau

Frederick William Kremkau PhD, FACR, FAIMBE, FAIUM, FASA

Radiological Sciences
Winston Salem, North Carolina, United States of America

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Frederick Kremkau, Ph.D., earned his master’s and doctoral degrees in electrical engineering from the University of Rochester. He served as a lieutenant in the United States Navy from 1963 to 1967, working with sonar and ultrasound for submarine detection. His career focus on medical ultrasound began early, stemming from this experience and joint interests in acoustics, medicine, and electrical technology.

In 1972, he joined Wake Forest School of Medicine as a research instructor to study the use of ultrasound in cancer therapy. After a brief role as associate professor of diagnostic radiology at Yale University School of Medicine, he returned to Wake Forest in 1985, where he has worked ever since as the director of the Program for Medical Ultrasound.

Kremkau’s career focuses on the application of ultrasound to medicine and biology, with research efforts concentrated on ultrasonic molecular absorption mechanisms, the acoustic properties of tissue, ultrasonic cancer therapy and sonographic artifacts and safety of diagnostic ultrasound. In 1975, he co-founded the Center for Medical Ultrasound (now called the Program for Medical Ultrasound) at Wake Forest School of Medicine, which is today one of only two ultrasound training centers in the nation based at a medical institution.
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