9 results on '"Enzinger C"'
Search Results
2. Facing privacy in neuroimaging: removing facial features degrades performance of image analysis methods.
- Author
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de Sitter, A., Visser, M., Brouwer, I., Cover, K. S., van Schijndel, R. A., Eijgelaar, R. S., Müller, D. M. J., Ropele, S., Kappos, L., Rovira, Á., Filippi, M., Enzinger, C., Frederiksen, J., Ciccarelli, O., Guttmann, C. R. G., Wattjes, M. P., Witte, M. G., de Witt Hamer, P. C., Barkhof, F., and Vrenken, H.
- Subjects
FACE ,IMAGE analysis ,PRIVACY ,FAILURE analysis ,ALZHEIMER'S disease ,COMPUTERS in medicine ,BRAIN ,MULTIPLE sclerosis ,FERRANS & Powers Quality of Life Index ,RESEARCH evaluation ,ANTHROPOMETRY ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,GLIOMAS ,DIAGNOSTIC imaging ,MEDICAL ethics ,COMMUNICATION ,IMPACT of Event Scale ,RESEARCH funding ,NEURORADIOLOGY ,ALGORITHMS - Abstract
Background: Recent studies have created awareness that facial features can be reconstructed from high-resolution MRI. Therefore, data sharing in neuroimaging requires special attention to protect participants' privacy. Facial features removal (FFR) could alleviate these concerns. We assessed the impact of three FFR methods on subsequent automated image analysis to obtain clinically relevant outcome measurements in three clinical groups.Methods: FFR was performed using QuickShear, FaceMasking, and Defacing. In 110 subjects of Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, normalized brain volumes (NBV) were measured by SIENAX. In 70 multiple sclerosis patients of the MAGNIMS Study Group, lesion volumes (WMLV) were measured by lesion prediction algorithm in lesion segmentation toolbox. In 84 glioblastoma patients of the PICTURE Study Group, tumor volumes (GBV) were measured by BraTumIA. Failed analyses on FFR-processed images were recorded. Only cases in which all image analyses completed successfully were analyzed. Differences between outcomes obtained from FFR-processed and full images were assessed, by quantifying the intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) for absolute agreement and by testing for systematic differences using paired t tests.Results: Automated analysis methods failed in 0-19% of cases in FFR-processed images versus 0-2% of cases in full images. ICC for absolute agreement ranged from 0.312 (GBV after FaceMasking) to 0.998 (WMLV after Defacing). FaceMasking yielded higher NBV (p = 0.003) and WMLV (p ≤ 0.001). GBV was lower after QuickShear and Defacing (both p < 0.001).Conclusions: All three outcome measures were affected differently by FFR, including failure of analysis methods and both "random" variation and systematic differences. Further study is warranted to ensure high-quality neuroimaging research while protecting participants' privacy.Key Points: • Protecting participants' privacy when sharing MRI data is important. • Impact of three facial features removal methods on subsequent analysis was assessed in three clinical groups. • Removing facial features degrades performance of image analysis methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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3. Risk factors and progression of small vessel disease-related cerebral abnormalities.
- Author
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Schmidt, R., Fazekas, F., Enzinger, C., Ropele, S., Kapeller, P., and Schmidt, H.
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- 2002
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4. Differences in integrity of white matter and changes with training in spelling impaired children: a diffusion tensor imaging study.
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Gebauer, D., Fink, A., Filippini, N., Johansen-Berg, H., Reishofer, G., Koschutnig, K., Kargl, R., Purgstaller, C., Fazekas, F., and Enzinger, C.
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SPELLING ability ,DIFFUSION tensor imaging ,CEREBRAL hemispheres ,ANISOTROPY ,COMPARATIVE studies ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MORPHEMICS - Abstract
While the functional correlates of spelling impairment have been rarely investigated, to our knowledge no study exists regarding the structural characteristics of spelling impairment and potential changes with interventions. Using diffusion tensor imaging at 3.0 T, we here therefore sought to investigate (a) differences between children with poor spelling abilities (training group and waiting group) and controls, and (b) the effects of a morpheme-based spelling intervention in children with poor spelling abilities on DTI parameters. A baseline comparison of white matter indices revealed significant differences between controls and spelling-impaired children, mainly located in the right hemisphere (superior corona radiata (SCR), posterior limb of internal capsule, superior longitudinal fasciculus). After 5 weeks of training, spelling ability improved in the training group, along with increases in fractional anisotropy and decreases of radial diffusivity in the right hemisphere compared to controls. In addition, significantly higher decreases of mean diffusivity in the right SCR for the spelling-impaired training group compared to the waiting group were observed. Our results suggest that spelling impairment is associated with differences in white-matter integrity in the right hemisphere. We also provide first indications that white matter changes occur during successful training, but this needs to be more specifically addressed in future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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5. A search for new MRI criteria for dissemination in space in subjects with a clinically isolated syndrome.
- Author
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Korteweg T, Tintore M, Uitdehaag BM, Knol DL, Vrenken H, Rovira A, Frederiksen J, Miller DH, Fernando K, Filippi M, Agosta F, Rocca MA, Fazekas F, Enzinger C, Parry A, Polman CH, Montalban X, Barkhof F, Korteweg, T, and Tintore, M
- Abstract
The International Panel on the Diagnosis of Multiple Sclerosis (MS) incorporated the Barkhof/Tintoré (B/T) magnetic resonance criteria into their diagnostic scheme to provide evidence of dissemination in space of central nervous system lesions, a prerequisite for diagnosing MS in patients who present with clinically isolated syndromes (CIS). Although specific for MS, the B/T criteria were criticised for their low sensitivity and relative complexity in clinical use. We used lesion characteristics at onset from 349 CIS patients in logistic regression and recursive partitioning modelling in a search for simpler and more sensitive criteria, while maintaining current specificity. The resulting models, all based on the presence of periventricular and deep white matter lesions, performed roughly in agreement with the B/T criteria, but were unable to provide higher diagnostic accuracy based on information from a single scan. Apparently, findings from contrast-enhanced and follow-up magnetic resonance scans are needed to improve the diagnostic algorithm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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6. Walking performance and its recovery in chronic stroke in relation to extent of lesion overlap with the descending motor tract.
- Author
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Dawes, H., Enzinger, C., Johansen-Berg, H., Bogdanovic, M., Guy, C., Collett, J., Izadi, H., Stagg, C., Wade, D., and Matthews, P.
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CEREBROVASCULAR disease , *EFFERENT pathways , *PYRAMIDAL tract , *MEDICAL imaging systems , *TREADMILL exercise tests - Abstract
We investigated the association between the degree of lesion overlap with the corticospinal tract and walking performance before and after 4-weeks of partial body weight support (PBWS) treadmill training in 18 individuals (ten male, eight female) with a mean age 59 ± 13 years (mean ± SD), range 32–74 years, who were ambulant and 6 months from a subcortical ischaemic stroke. Lesion volumes were manually defined on high resolution T1-weighted 3T-MRI scans and a probabilistic map of the corticospinal tract created using diffusion tensor imaging data collected previously in healthy subjects. The percentage overlap between the lesion and the corticospinal tract was calculated for each patient. Walking performance was determined by measures of 10 m speed, spatiotemporal parameters, percentage recovery of centre of mass (CoM), walking symmetry and 2-min endurance walk prior to and following 4 weeks of treadmill training with PBWS that emphasised normal fast walking. Lesion overlap measures weakly correlated with walking performance measures. Spatiotemporal and performance measures changed in response to training, but spatial symmetry and mechanical energy recovery did not. Walking speed at entry to the study predicted change in response to training of 10 m walk time and swing time asymmetry. Age and lesion overlap did not add to prediction of outcome models. The extent of lesion overlap with the corticospinal tract was not strongly associated with either walking performance or response to gait retraining, despite the correlation of these parameters with upper limb recovery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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7. MRI characteristics of atypical idiopathic inflammatory demyelinating lesions of the brain.
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Seewann, A., Enzinger, C., Filippi, M., Barkhof, F., Rovira, A., Gass, A., Miller, D., Montalban, X., Thompson, A., Yousry, T., Tintore, M., Stefano, N., Palace, J., Rovaris, M., Polman, C., and Fazekas, F.
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MULTIPLE sclerosis , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *BRAIN imaging , *DIFFERENTIAL diagnosis , *PROGNOSIS - Abstract
Idiopathic inflammatory demyelinating lesions (IIDL) of the brain usually present with a morphologic pattern characteristic of multiple sclerosis (MS). Atypical appearances of IIDLs also exist, however, and can pose significant diagnostic problems and uncertainty regarding prognosis and adequate therapy. We attempted to improve upon this situation by reviewing the literature. We performed a PubMed search from January 1984 through December 2004 for articles in English reporting on IIDLs which had been considered as morphologically atypical (66 articles; 270 cases reported). From these publications 69 individual patient reports allowed the extraction of adequate information on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and associated disease characteristics. Reported atypical IIDLs most frequently manifested as large ring-like lesions (n = 27) which are now considered quite suggestive of an antibodymediated form of MS. Truly atypical IIDLs were less common and exhibited appearances which we termed megacystic (n = 8), Balolike (n = 11) and diffusely infiltrating (n = 11). Despite limitations imposed by the absence of original data the inter-rater agreement in defining these subtypes of atypical IIDLs was moderate to substantial (kappa 0.48–0.68) and we noted trends for their association with certain demographic, clinical and paraclinical variables. We suggest that IIDLs reported as atypical in the literature can be segregated into several distinct subtypes based on their MRI appearance. The recognition of these patterns may be useful for the differential diagnosis and for a future classification. Because of the limitations inherent in our review this will have to be confirmed by a prospective registry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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8. Discrimination of white matter lesions and multiple sclerosis plaques by short echo quantitative 1H—magnetic resonance spectroscopy.
- Author
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Kapeller, P., Ropele, S., Enzinger, C., Lahousen, T., Strasser-Fuchs, S., Schmidt, R., and Fazekas, F.
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VIRUS diseases ,MULTIPLE sclerosis ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,DEMYELINATION ,MYELIN sheath diseases ,MEDICAL imaging systems ,PROTON magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,NUCLEAR magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,PROTON magnetic resonance - Abstract
Multiple sclerosis (MS) plaques and age related white matter lesions (WML) are of similar morphological appearance on T2 weighted MRI. Therefore their differentiation is sometimes crucial. Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (
1 H–MRS) adds metabolic information to conventional imaging and may help to distinguish inflammatory MS plaques from vascular related WML. This study was performed to evaluate the metabolite pattern in MS plaques and WML. 15 MS patients, 14 elderly individuals with WML and 16 controls were investigated by conventional MRI and short echo quantitative1 H–MRS (TE: 30ms, TR: 3000ms). The mean metabolite concentrations in normal control white matter (NCWM), MS plaques and WML were: t–NAA: 8.96 mmol/l (SD:0.93) vs 6.79 mmol/l (SD: 1.99) vs 7.18 mmol/l (SD: 1.41); Cho: 1.66 mmol/l (SD: 0.4) vs 1.49 mmol/l (SD: 0.45) vs 1.46 mmol/l (SD: 0.34); PCr: 5.64 mmol/l (SD: 0.83) vs 4.9mmol/l (SD: 1.3) vs 4.95 mmol/l (SD: 0.86); myo– Ins: 4.57 mmol/l (SD:1.05) vs 6.34 mmol/l (SD: 2.03) vs 4.5 mmol/l (SD: 0.96). t–NAA reduction in MS plaques and WML was significant compared with controls (p ≤ 0.001). MS plaques showed significantly elevated myo– Ins concentrations compared with controls (p = 0.002) and to WML (p = 0.003). In summary MS plaques and WML show a decrease in their t–NAA concentrations compared with controls. Elevated concentrations of myo–Ins in MS plaques but not in WML makes this metabolite of special interest for their differentiation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2005
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9. P-277: An exploratory study on the effects of mobility training in chronic stroke patients using repeated fMRI.
- Author
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de Campo, A., Landsmann, B., Pinter, D., Pichler, G., Pirker, E., Schippinger, W.M., Gattringer, T., Fazekas, F., and Enzinger, C.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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