26 results on '"Thiemann U"'
Search Results
2. Sensorische Auffälligkeiten bei Autismus-Spektrum-Störung: Validierung und Adaptation des englischsprachigen „Sensory Perception Quotient" (SPQ) von Tavassoli und Kollegen.
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Klein, Christoph, Miczuga, Teresa, Röring, Hannah, Kost, Marie, Bast, Nico, Thiemann, U., Jarczok, TomaszA., Fleischhaker, C., Tebartz van Elst, Ludger, Riedel, Andreas, and Biscaldi, Monica
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- 2024
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3. Growth and shrinkage of surface stacking faults in float-zone and Czochralski silicon
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Dammann, M., Baltes, H., Strecker, N., and Thiemann, U.
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Silicon crystals -- Research ,Dislocations in crystals -- Research ,Physics - Abstract
A model for expressing the development and shrinkage of surface stacking faults in Czochralski and float-zone silicon helps elucidate the effects of interstitial traps on the kinetic features of the faults and on the intrinsic point defect diffusion. Numerical solutions to the balance equations of the intrinsic point defects help in the model simulation of the kinetics of stacking faults. Interstitial traps do not exert strong effects on the kinetic properties of the surface stacking faults.
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- 1994
4. Analysis of the acoustic response of vascular tissue irradiated by an ultraviolet laser pulse.
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Crazzolara, H., von Muench, W., Rose, C., Thiemann, U., Haase, K. K., Ritter, M., and Karsch, K. R.
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STRESS waves ,LASER beams - Abstract
Presents information on a study which generated stress waves in sections of human vascular tissue by transmitting laser pulses from a XeCl laser source through a glass fiber. Results of the pathological examination; Measurement of the acoustic signals generated by the laser pulses; Experimental arrangement; Preparation of specimens from ten cadaver aortas.
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- 1991
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5. Integrated pyroelectric detector arrays with the sensor material PVDF.
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Ploss, B., Lehmann, P., Schopf, H., Lessle, T., Bauer, S., and Thiemann, U.
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- 1990
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6. Interface state density at the contact of ferroelectric NaNO 2 and silicon.
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Schulz, J., Koch, St., Würfel, P., Ruppel, W., Thiemann, U., and Münch, W. v.
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- 1989
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7. Transient brainstem ischemia and recurrent syncope caused by a dural arteriovenous fistula.
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Lanz M, Thiemann U, Grzyska U, Ebke M, Schwendemann G, Kraus JA, Lanz, M, Thiemann, U, Grzyska, U, Ebke, M, Schwendemann, G, and Kraus, J A
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- 2003
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8. The role of a pseudocapsula in thymic epithelial tumors: outcome and correlation with established prognostic parameters. Results of a 20-year single centre retrospective analysis
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Kayser Gian, Thiemann Ulf, Passlick Bernward, Dango Sebastian, and Stremmel Christian
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Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Anesthesiology ,RD78.3-87.3 - Abstract
Abstract Background Treatment of thymoma is often based on observation of only a few patients. Surgical resection is considered to be the most important step. Role of a pseudocapsula for surgery, its clinical significance and outcome compared with established prognostic parameters is discussed which has not been reported so far. Methods 84 patients with thymoma underwent resection and analysis was carried out for clinical features, prognostic factors and long-term survival. Results Fifteen patients were classified in WHO subgroup A, 21 in AB, 29 in B and 19 patients in C. Forty two patients were classified in Masaoka stage I, 19 stage II, 9 stage III and 14 stage IV. Encapsulated thymoma was seen in 40, incomplete or missing capsula in 44 patients. In 71 complete resections, local recurrence was 5%. 5-year survival was 88.1%. Thymomas with pseudocapsula showed a significant better survival (94.9% vs. 61.1%, respectively) (p = 0.001) and was correlated with the absence of nodal or distant metastasis (p = 0.04 and 0.001, respectively). Presence of pseudocapsula as well as the Masaoka and WHO classification, and R-status were of prognostic significance. R-status and Masaoka stage appeared to be of independent prognostic significance in multivariate analysis. Conclusion Intraoperative presence of an encapsulated tumor is a good technical marker for the surgeon to evaluate resectability and estimate prognosis. Although the presence of a capsula is of strong significance in the univariate analysis, it failed in the multivariate analysis due to its correlation with clinical Masaoka stage. Masaoka stage has a stronger relevance than WHO classification to determinate long-term outcome.
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- 2009
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9. Pyroelectric detector array with PVDF on silicon integrated circuit
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Münch, W.V. and Thiemann, U.
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- 1990
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10. Anorexia nervosa-specific home treatment in children and adolescents and their families (the HoT study): a study protocol of a randomized, controlled, multicenter, open-label, parallel group superiority trial.
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Dahmen B, Zielinski-Gussen I, Föcker M, Hahn F, Legenbauer T, Thiemann U, Dempfle A, and Herpertz-Dahlmann B
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- Humans, Adolescent, Child, Germany, Treatment Outcome, Time Factors, Female, Adolescent Behavior, Male, Age Factors, Caregivers psychology, Family Therapy methods, Quality of Life, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Home Care Services, Home Care Services, Hospital-Based, Child Behavior, Anorexia Nervosa therapy, Anorexia Nervosa psychology, Equivalence Trials as Topic, Multicenter Studies as Topic
- Abstract
Background: New treatment approaches are urgently needed to improve the prognosis of children and adolescents with anorexia nervosa (AN). Recently, the feasibility of multidisciplinary home treatment that strongly involves the patients' parents/caregivers has been investigated. However, no RCT has yet been performed to test the efficacy and safety of this approach compared to standard treatment approaches, such as inpatient treatment., Methods: In this multicenter randomized-controlled trial, home treatment for children and adolescents with AN aged 12 to 18 years is established at 5 major treatment centers for AN in Germany. Approximately 240 patients who are admitted to the hospital for AN will be included in the trial. After a short inpatient somatic stabilization phase (5-8 weeks), patients are randomized to receive either treatment as usual (TAU), in the form of continued inpatient or day patient treatment, or the newly developed home treatment (HoT) (n = 82/arm, n = 164 in total). There are three assessments throughout treatment (admission, randomization, and discharge), as well as follow-up assessments at 9 and 12 months after admission. The BMI at 12 months after admission (primary outcome) is compared between groups (adjusted for premorbid BMI and admission BMI); secondary outcomes include eating disorder and general psychopathology, the number and duration of psychiatric rehospitalizations, quality of life, motivation for treatment and treatment satisfaction. Other secondary outcomes include the primary caregivers' burden and skills in handling the child's illness and direct treatment costs. Statistical analysis will be based on intention-to-treat principles, using mixed models for repeated measures. (Serious) adverse events are assessed throughout treatment. In addition, the feasibility and implementation of HoT as well as the satisfaction and workload of the members of the multidisciplinary treatment teams in both arms will be assessed., Discussion: In the case of a positive evaluation, HoT can be considered an effective treatment method to replace or complete established treatment methods, such as IP, for treating AN in children and adolescents. The home treatment setting might shorten inpatient stays in this patient group, increase treatment satisfaction, and help to reduce the risk of rehospitalization, which is associated with a better outcome in this vulnerable patient group., Trial Registration: The trial was registered with the German Clinical Trial Register (DRKS) under the ID DRKS00025925 on November 26, 2021 (prospectively registered): https://drks.de/search/de/trial/DRKS00025925 ., Competing Interests: Declarations Ethics approval and consent to participate Ethics approval was granted via a coordinated procedure lead by the Ethic board of the University Hospital RWTH Aachen (reference number for all centers: EK 323/21) for all ethics committees of the involved clinical centers: the Ethic boards of the University Hospital RWTH Aachen (reference: 323/21), the University Hospital Muenster (local registration number: 2021–572-b-S), the University Hospital Ruhr-University Bochum (local registration number: 21–7367-BR), and of the North Rhine State Chamber of Physicians (ÄkNo) (for LVR Hospital Viersen and LVR Hospital Bonn, local reference number: 2021346). Written informed consent is obtained from all young patients and their parents/legal guardians. The study is undertaken in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki, the ICH E6 Guidelines for Good Clinical Practice (GCP), local rules, regulations, and applicable requirements with independent data management. Consent for publication Not applicable—no identifying images or other personal or clinical details of participants are presented here or will be presented in reports of the trial results. The participant information materials and informed consent form are available from the corresponding author on request. Competing interests Tanja Legenbauer: Royalties by various publishers such as Hogrefe, Springer, and Kohlhammer for treatment manuals on eating disorders and body image disorder, research grants from the German Ministry for Research and Education.Beate Herpertz-Dahlmann: Research grants from the German Research Society, the German Ministry for Research and Education, EU/ERA NET and the Gemeinsamer Bundesausschuss (federal joint committee), author’s honorary from Kohlhammer publisher, speaker’s honorary from Infectopharm and Editor-in-Chief honorary from Wiley.The other authors declare that they have no competing interests., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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11. [Ethical Considerations of Including Minors in Clinical Trials Using the Example of the Indicated Prevention of Psychotic Disorders].
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Schultze-Lutter F, Banaschewski T, Barth GM, Bechdolf A, Bender S, Flechtner HH, Hackler S, Heuer F, Hohmann S, Holzner L, Huss M, Koutsouleris N, Lipp M, Mandl S, Meisenzahl E, Munz M, Osman N, Peschl J, Reissner V, Renner T, Riedel A, Romanos M, Romer G, Schomerus G, Thiemann U, Uhlhaas PJ, Woopen C, Correll CU, and Care-Konsortium D
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- Humans, Child, Adolescent, Minors psychology, Germany, Personal Autonomy, Patient Selection ethics, Early Diagnosis, Vulnerable Populations psychology, Social Stigma, Risk Assessment, Psychotic Disorders diagnosis, Psychotic Disorders psychology, Psychotic Disorders prevention & control, Clinical Trials as Topic ethics
- Abstract
Ethical Considerations of Including Minors in Clinical Trials Using the Example of the Indicated Prevention of Psychotic Disorders Abstract: As a vulnerable group, minors require special protection in studies. For this reason, researchers are often reluctant to initiate studies, and ethics committees are reluctant to authorize such studies. This often excludes minors from participating in clinical studies. This exclusion can lead to researchers and clinicians receiving only incomplete data or having to rely on adult-based findings in the treatment of minors. Using the example of the study "Computer-Assisted Risk Evaluation in the Early Detection of Psychotic Disorders" (CARE), which was conducted as an 'other clinical investigation' according to the Medical Device Regulation, we present a line of argumentation for the inclusion of minors which weighs the ethical principles of nonmaleficence (especially regarding possible stigmatization), beneficence, autonomy, and fairness. We show the necessity of including minors based on the development-specific differences in diagnostics and early intervention. Further, we present specific protective measures. This argumentation can also be transferred to other disorders with the onset in childhood and adolescence and thus help to avoid excluding minors from appropriate evidence-based care because of insufficient studies.
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- 2024
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12. The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on administrative eating disorder prevalence in the outpatient sector and on severity of anorexia nervosa.
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Tam FI, Ochmann R, Marschall J, Leschzinski H, Seidel M, Klink L, Föcker M, Bühren K, Dahmen B, Jaite C, Herpertz-Dahlmann B, Seitz J, Gilsbach S, Correll CU, Müller AE, Hebebrand J, Bell R, Legenbauer T, Holtmann M, Becker K, Weber L, Romanos M, Egberts K, Kaess M, Fleischhaker C, Möhler E, Wessing I, Hagmann D, Hahn F, Thiemann U, Antony G, Gramatke K, Roessner V, and Ehrlich S
- Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic appears to have had a considerable impact on the mental health of children and adolescents, particularly regarding eating disorders. However, it remains unclear whether the pandemic affected only the frequency or also the severity of eating disorders. We examined potential pandemic-related changes in the administrative prevalence of eating disorders in the outpatient sector compared with other mental disorders using German statutory health insurance data for the age group 10 to 16 years. We also examined disorder severity of anorexia nervosa using data from the multicenter German Registry of Children and Adolescents with Anorexia Nervosa in the same age group. Our results showed a marked increase in the administrative prevalence of eating disorders (based on documented diagnoses) in the outpatient sector among girls but not among boys. A similar pattern was found for internalizing disorders, whereas the administrative prevalences of externalizing disorders decreased. Regarding the severity of anorexia nervosa among inpatients, we found no pandemic-related changes in body mass index standard deviation score at admission, body weight loss before admission, psychiatric comorbidities and psychopharmacological medication. Given the administrative prevalence increase in the outpatient sector, the lack of impact of the pandemic on the inpatient sector may also be partly due to a shift in healthcare utilization towards outpatient services during the pandemic. Thus, the higher number of children and adolescents requiring specialized and timely outpatient care may be a major concern under pandemic conditions., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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13. Premorbid body weight predicts weight loss in both anorexia nervosa and atypical anorexia nervosa: Further support for a single underlying disorder.
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Hebebrand J, Seitz J, Föcker M, Viersen HP, Huss M, Bühren K, Dahmen B, Becker K, Weber L, Correll CU, Jaite C, Egberts K, Romanos M, Ehrlich S, Seidel M, Roessner V, Fleischhaker C, Möhler E, Hahn F, Kaess M, Legenbauer T, Hagmann D, Renner TJ, Schulze UME, Thiemann U, Wessing I, Antony G, Herpertz-Dahlmann B, Matthews A, and Peters T
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- Adolescent, Humans, Female, Body Weight, Body Mass Index, Weight Loss, Thinness, Anorexia Nervosa diagnosis, Anorexia Nervosa psychology
- Abstract
Objective: For adolescents, DSM-5 differentiates anorexia nervosa (AN) and atypical AN with the 5th BMI-centile-for-age. We hypothesized that the diagnostic weight cut-off yields (i) lower weight loss in atypical AN and (ii) discrepant premorbid BMI distributions between the two disorders. Prior studies demonstrate that premorbid BMI predicts admission BMI and weight loss in patients with AN. We explore these relationships in atypical AN., Method: Based on admission BMI-centile < or ≥5th, participants included 411 female adolescent inpatients with AN and 49 with atypical AN from our registry study. Regression analysis and t-tests statistically addressed our hypotheses and exploratory correlation analyses compared interrelationships between weight loss, admission BMI, and premorbid BMI in both disorders., Results: Weight loss in atypical AN was 5.6 kg lower than in AN upon adjustment for admission age, admission height, premorbid weight and duration of illness. Premorbid BMI-standard deviation scores differed by almost one between both disorders. Premorbid BMI and weight loss were strongly correlated in both AN and atypical AN., Discussion: Whereas the weight cut-off induces discrepancies in premorbid weight and adjusted weight loss, AN and atypical AN overall share strong weight-specific interrelationships that merit etiological consideration. Epidemiological and genetic associations between AN and low body weight may reflect a skewed premorbid BMI distribution. In combination with prior findings for similar psychological and medical characteristics in AN and atypical AN, our findings support a homogenous illness conceptualization. We propose that diagnostic subcategorization based on premorbid BMI, rather than admission BMI, may improve clinical validity., Public Significance: Because body weights of patients with AN must drop below the 5th BMI-centile per DSM-5, they will inherently require greater weight loss than their counterparts with atypical AN of the same sex, age, height and premorbid weight. Indeed, patients with atypical AN had a 5.6 kg lower weight loss after controlling for these variables. In comparison to the reference population, we found a lower and higher mean premorbid weight in patients with AN and atypical AN, respectively. Considering previous psychological and medical comparisons showing little differences between AN and atypical AN, we view a single disorder as the most parsimonious explanation. Etiological models need to particularly account for the strong relationship between weight loss and premorbid body weight., (© 2024 The Authors. International Journal of Eating Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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14. Movement initiation and preparation in subjects with schizophrenia - The amplitude of the readiness potential as a biological marker for negative symptom severity.
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Vöckel J, Thiemann U, Weisbrod M, Schröder J, Resch F, Klein C, and Bender S
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- Humans, Contingent Negative Variation, Neurologic Examination, Cognition, Biomarkers, Schizophrenia diagnosis
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Objective: Despite extensive research, the etiology of negative symptoms is not well understood. Preliminary findings are linking motor disturbances to negative symptom severity. We aimed to further the understanding to what extent motor movement preparation influences negative symptom severity., Methods: In a cohort of 31 subjects with schizophrenia and 20 control subjects we recorded the readiness potential amplitude over Cz during spontaneous movements of the right and left thumb. We further assessed negative and positive symptom severity (scale for the assessment of negative and positive symptoms) as well as neurological soft signs (NSS)., Results: In subjects with schizophrenia the severity of negative symptoms was best predicted by the readiness potential amplitude and the NSS subdomain motor coordination. The correlation between deficits in motor coordination and negative symptom severity was partially mediated by the readiness potential amplitude in subjects with schizophrenia., Conclusions: Deficits in motor processing are linked to negative symptom severity in schizophrenia. The readiness potential may represent a biological marker of these basal deficits. In combination with the assessment of NSS, the readiness potential may be a marker of the course of negative symptom severity and help clarifying interdependencies between (pre)frontal networks for action initiation and coordination, as well as negative symptoms., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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15. Attention for Emotion-How Young Adults With Neurodevelopmental Disorders Look at Facial Expressions of Affect.
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Bretthauer J, Canu D, Thiemann U, Fleischhaker C, Brauner H, Müller K, Smyrnis N, Biscaldi M, Bender S, and Klein C
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While Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and Schizophrenia (SCZ) differ in many clinically relevant features such as symptomatology and course, they may also share genetic underpinnings, affective problems, deviancies in social interactions, and are all characterized by some kind of cognitive impairment. This situation calls for a joint investigation of the specifics of cognitive (dys-)functions of the three disorders. Such endeavor should focus, among other domains, on the inter-section of processing cognitive, affective and social information that is crucial in effective real-life interactions and can be accomplished when attentional preferences for human facial expressions of emotions is studied. To that end, attention to facial expressions of basic emotions was examined in young adults with ASD, ADHD, or SCZ in the present study. The three clinical groups were compared with an age-matched group of typically-developing participants (TD) during the free contemplation of five different facial emotions presented simultaneously, by varying identities, through the registration of eye movements. We showed, that dwell times and fixation counts differed for the different emotions in TD and in a highly similar way in ADHD. Patients with ASD differed from TD by showing a stronger differentiation between emotions and partially different attentional preferences. In contrast, the SCZ group showed an overall more restricted scanning behavior and a lack of differentiation between emotions. The ADHD group, showed an emotion-specific gazing pattern that was highly similar to that of controls. Thus, by analyzing eye movements, we were able to differentiate three different viewing patterns that allowed us to distinguish between the three clinical groups. This outcome suggests that attention for emotion may not tap into common pathophysiological processes and argues for a multi-dimensional approach to the grouping of disorders with neurodevelopmental etiology., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Bretthauer, Canu, Thiemann, Fleischhaker, Brauner, Müller, Smyrnis, Biscaldi, Bender and Klein.)
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- 2022
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16. An German Short-Version of the "Sensory Perception Quotient" for Adults With Autism Spectrum Disorder.
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Klein C, Miczuga T, Kost MS, Röring H, Jarczok TA, Bast N, Thiemann U, Fleischhaker C, Tebartz Van Elst L, Riedel A, and Biscaldi M
- Abstract
Sensory features in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) have received increasing interest in clinical work and research during the recent years. With the Sensory Perception Quotient (SPQ), Tavasolli and colleagues have produced a self-rating scale for adults with ASD that measures sensory hyper-sensitivity in different sensory modalities, without also tapping cognitive or motivational aspects that precede or follow autistic sensory experiences. Here, we present the results of a translation of the SPQ to German and its short version as well as their validation in samples of autistic or neuro-typical participants. We, furthermore, present the psychometric properties and validities of Tavasolli's original SPQ-short version as well as an alternative short version based on different psychometric item-selection criteria. We can show here that our alternative SPQ-short version, overlapping with the original short-version in 61% of its items, exhibits superior reliabilities, reasonable concurrent validities with other related measures. It, furthermore, exhibits excellent differentiation between autistic and non-autistic samples, underscoring its utility as a screening instrument in research and a clinical instrument to supplement the ASD diagnostic process., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Klein, Miczuga, Kost, Röring, Jarczok, Bast, Thiemann, Fleischhaker, Tebartz Van Elst, Riedel and Biscaldi.)
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- 2022
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17. Bereitschaftspotential and lateralized readiness potential in children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder: altered motor system activation and effects of methylphenidate.
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Jarczok TA, Haase R, Bluschke A, Thiemann U, and Bender S
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- Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity drug therapy, Brain drug effects, Central Nervous System Stimulants therapeutic use, Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Electroencephalography, Electromyography, Female, Humans, Male, Methylphenidate therapeutic use, Motor Activity drug effects, Motor Activity physiology, Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity physiopathology, Brain physiopathology, Contingent Negative Variation drug effects
- Abstract
Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) has been linked to abnormal functioning of cortical motor areas such as the supplementary motor area, the premotor cortex and primary motor cortex (MI). The Bereitschaftspotential (BP) and lateralized readiness potential (LRP) are movement-related potentials generated by cortical motor areas. We hypothesized that the BP and LRP would be altered in children with ADHD. A group of 17 children with ADHD (mean age: 11.5 ± 1.9 years) and a control group of 16 typically developing children (mean age: 12.2 ± 2.0 years) performed movements at self-chosen irregular intervals while a 64-channel DC-EEG was registered. BP and LRP were calculated from the EEG. The ADHD group had significantly lower and on average positive BP amplitudes at Cz. In agreement with age-dependent maturation effects the LRP had a positive polarity in both groups, but lower amplitudes were found in the ADHD group without medication. The control group showed a mid-central negativity and a positivity over motor areas contra-lateral to the side of movement, whereas no negativity over Cz and a more diffuse positivity was found in the ADHD group. LRP group differences diminished after MPH administration as indicated by an interaction between group and time of measurement/medication. The cortical motor system shows altered functioning during movement preparation and initiation in children affected by ADHD. Positive Bereitschaftspotential polarities may represent delayed cortical maturation. Group differences of LRP were pharmacologically modulated by the catecholaminergic agent MPH., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. and ECNP. All rights reserved.)
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- 2019
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18. Time-resolved neuroimaging of visual short term memory consolidation by post-perceptual attention shifts.
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Hecht M, Thiemann U, Freitag CM, and Bender S
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- Adult, Cues, Electroencephalography, Evoked Potentials physiology, Female, Humans, Male, Attention physiology, Brain physiology, Memory Consolidation physiology, Memory, Short-Term physiology, Neuroimaging methods
- Abstract
Post-perceptual cues can enhance visual short term memory encoding even after the offset of the visual stimulus. However, both the mechanisms by which the sensory stimulus characteristics are buffered as well as the mechanisms by which post-perceptual selective attention enhances short term memory encoding remain unclear. We analyzed late post-perceptual event-related potentials (ERPs) in visual change detection tasks (100ms stimulus duration) by high-resolution ERP analysis to elucidate these mechanisms. The effects of early and late auditory post-cues (300ms or 850ms after visual stimulus onset) as well as the effects of a visual interference stimulus were examined in 27 healthy right-handed adults. Focusing attention with post-perceptual cues at both latencies significantly improved memory performance, i.e. sensory stimulus characteristics were available for up to 850ms after stimulus presentation. Passive watching of the visual stimuli without auditory cue presentation evoked a slow negative wave (N700) over occipito-temporal visual areas. N700 was strongly reduced by a visual interference stimulus which impeded memory maintenance. In contrast, contralateral delay activity (CDA) still developed in this condition after the application of auditory post-cues and was thereby dissociated from N700. CDA and N700 seem to represent two different processes involved in short term memory encoding. While N700 could reflect visual post processing by automatic attention attraction, CDA may reflect the top-down process of searching selectively for the required information through post-perceptual attention., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2016
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19. The optic radiation and the cerebellar peduncles in adolescents with first-admission schizophrenia--a diffusion tensor imaging study.
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Henze R, Brunner R, Thiemann U, Parzer P, Klein J, Resch F, and Stieltjes B
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- Adolescent, Diffusion Tensor Imaging methods, Female, Gray Matter pathology, Humans, Male, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Young Adult, Geniculate Bodies pathology, Middle Cerebellar Peduncle pathology, Nerve Fibers, Myelinated pathology, Optic Tract pathology, Visual Cortex pathology, Visual Pathways pathology, White Matter pathology
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: Previous studies have found gray matter alterations in the cerebellum and in the visual system in both adults and adolescents with schizophrenia. The present study was conducted to investigate whether white matter tracts associated with these regions are also affected in the early stages of the disorder., Methods: Using a 1.5 Tesla magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanner and fiber tracking, the optic radiations and the middle cerebellar peduncles were examined in 13 adolescents with first-admission schizophrenia and 13 healthy controls matched for age, gender, school type, and handedness., Results: Patients with schizophrenia displayed significantly decreased fractional anisotropy in the optic radiations, but no differences in the middle cerebellar peduncles compared to healthy controls., Conclusions: Our findings of altered fiber integrity in the optic radiations in adolescents with schizophrenia are in line with gray matter alterations in the visual cortices previously reported in the same sample and are in accordance with other studies that found decreased fractional anisotropy in these regions. These findings support the view that the visual system plays an important role in the pathogenesis of schizophrenia and may enhance our understanding of associations between the visual cortex and symptoms of the disorder., (Copyright © 2012 by the American Society of Neuroimaging.)
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- 2014
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20. Neurological soft signs and brainstem morphology in first-episode schizophrenia.
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Hirjak D, Wolf RC, Stieltjes B, Hauser T, Seidl U, Thiemann U, Schröder J, and Thomann PA
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Male, Neuroimaging, Severity of Illness Index, Brain Stem pathology, Diagnostic Techniques, Neurological, Schizophrenia diagnosis, Schizophrenia pathology
- Abstract
Background: Minor motor and sensory deficits or neurological soft signs (NSS) have frequently been reported in patients with schizophrenia at any stage of their illness. NSS have been demonstrated to correlate with neuroanatomical abnormalities in various brain regions. Despite its important role in the integration and coordination of automatic motor actions, the brainstem has so far rather been ignored in previous neuroimaging studies on NSS in schizophrenia., Method: We investigated 21 right-handed first-episode schizophrenia patients using high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging at 3 T. The severity of NSS was measured with the Heidelberg Scale. Associations between NSS and both brainstem volume and shape changes were examined., Results: Higher NSS scores were significantly associated with structural alterations in the brainstem. According to volume measurements higher NSS scores correlated with global changes of the brainstem. Using shape analyses these associations referred to regionally specific morphometric alterations predominantly in the midbrain and pons., Conclusion: The findings suggest that brainstem morphometric alterations are associated with the severity of NSS in patients with first-episode schizophrenia. They further indicate the involvement of the brainstem in the pathogenesis of schizophrenia., (Copyright © 2013 S. Karger AG, Basel.)
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- 2013
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21. White matter alterations in the corpus callosum of adolescents with first-admission schizophrenia.
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Henze R, Brunner R, Thiemann U, Parzer P, Klein J, Resch F, and Stieltjes B
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- Adolescent, Anisotropy, Axons pathology, Diffusion Tensor Imaging, Female, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Corpus Callosum pathology, Nerve Fibers, Myelinated pathology, Schizophrenia pathology
- Abstract
Several diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) studies involving adults and adolescents with schizophrenia have examined fractional anisotropy (FA) in the corpus callosum (CC) with conflicting findings. This may be due to confounding factors such as the chronicity of the disorder, long-term medication with psychotropics or methodological differences. To provide a clearer picture of early alterations, we examined 13 adolescents with first-admission schizophrenia and 13 healthy controls using a region-of-interest approach based on probabilistic voxel classification. We quantified FA in four subdivisions of the CC and hypothesized that adolescents with schizophrenia display a reduced FA in the genu associated with 'hypofrontality' and a reduced FA in the body of the CC linked to the heteromodal association cortex. Fiber integrity measurements revealed significant FA decreases in the genu and body of the CC in adolescents with schizophrenia compared to healthy controls. These findings emphasize the central role of the CC in even the early stages of schizophrenia and lend weight to hypotheses about frontal alterations and the central role of the heteromodal association cortex in the aetiopathogenesis of the disorder., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2012
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22. Cortical post-movement and sensory processing disentangled by temporary deafferentation.
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Thiemann U, Bluschke A, Resch F, Teufert B, Klein C, Weisbrod M, and Bender S
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- Adult, Biofeedback, Psychology physiology, Female, Humans, Male, Cues, Movement physiology, Nerve Block, Proprioception physiology, Psychomotor Performance physiology
- Abstract
Motor system calibration depends crucially on the adjustment to the consequences of a movement, which often occur when the movement itself is already completed. The mechanisms by which reafferent feedback information is compared to the programmed movement remain unclear. In the current study, the hypothesis of a short term memory trace in the motor cortex which outlasts quick movements and is generated independently from reafferent feedback was challenged by temporal deafferentation. Post-movement cortical potentials were recorded by high-resolution EEG during a reaction time task which required speeded unilateral right-hand or left-hand button presses. We analysed lateralized motor N700 (motor post-imperative negative variation), a post-movement component, under temporary deafferentation achieved through application of a blood pressure tourniquet in ten healthy adult subjects. Motor N700 persisted under deafferentation in the absence of reafferent tactile and proprioceptive feedback input into the sensorimotor cortex, which was abolished under deafferentation. Source analysis pointed towards continuing activation in the pre-/primary motor cortex. Thus, motor post-processing can be dissociated from reafferent sensory feedback. Motor cortex activation outlasts quick movements for about a second also in the absence of a reafferent signal. Continuing motor cortex activation could act as an internal motor model in motor learning and allow better adjustment of movements according to the evaluation of their consequences., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
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23. Gray matter alterations in first-admission adolescents with schizophrenia.
- Author
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Henze R, Brunner R, Thiemann U, Parzer P, Richterich A, Essig M, Resch F, and Stieltjes B
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Female, Functional Laterality, Humans, Male, Nerve Fibers, Myelinated pathology, Young Adult, Brain pathology, Nerve Fibers, Unmyelinated pathology, Schizophrenia pathology
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: Imaging studies of patients with schizophrenia have described a variety of cerebral alterations. However, long-term medication and the chronicity of the disorder may have contributed substantially to these alterations. Studies examining patients in the early stages of the disorder reduce the possibility of such confounding factors but are rare. In light of this, the aim of the present study was to examine adolescents in the early stages of the disorder to observe primary structural brain abnormalities., Methods: Gray and white matter were measured in 13 adolescents with schizophrenia and 13 healthy controls matched for age, gender, handedness, and school type using voxel-based morphometry., Results: Subjects with schizophrenia displayed decreased gray matter in the cerebellar vermis, and alterations in the left putamen and in several parts of the visual system., Conclusions: These findings support cerebellar involvement in the pathogenesis of schizophrenia, and the alterations observed in several parts of the visual system may provide insights into the nature of hallucinations and delusional interpretations., (© 2010 by the American Society of Neuroimaging.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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24. The role of a pseudocapsula in thymic epithelial tumors: outcome and correlation with established prognostic parameters. Results of a 20-year single centre retrospective analysis.
- Author
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Dango S, Passlick B, Thiemann U, Kayser G, and Stremmel C
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neoadjuvant Therapy, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local epidemiology, Neoplasm Staging, Prognosis, Retrospective Studies, Survival Analysis, Thymoma mortality, Thymoma therapy, Thymus Neoplasms mortality, Thymus Neoplasms therapy, Young Adult, Thoracic Surgical Procedures mortality, Thymoma pathology, Thymoma surgery, Thymus Neoplasms pathology, Thymus Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Background: Treatment of thymoma is often based on observation of only a few patients. Surgical resection is considered to be the most important step. Role of a pseudocapsula for surgery, its clinical significance and outcome compared with established prognostic parameters is discussed which has not been reported so far., Methods: 84 patients with thymoma underwent resection and analysis was carried out for clinical features, prognostic factors and long-term survival., Results: Fifteen patients were classified in WHO subgroup A, 21 in AB, 29 in B and 19 patients in C. Forty two patients were classified in Masaoka stage I, 19 stage II, 9 stage III and 14 stage IV. Encapsulated thymoma was seen in 40, incomplete or missing capsula in 44 patients. In 71 complete resections, local recurrence was 5%. 5-year survival was 88.1%. Thymomas with pseudocapsula showed a significant better survival (94.9% vs. 61.1%, respectively) (p = 0.001) and was correlated with the absence of nodal or distant metastasis (p = 0.04 and 0.001, respectively). Presence of pseudocapsula as well as the Masaoka and WHO classification, and R-status were of prognostic significance. R-status and Masaoka stage appeared to be of independent prognostic significance in multivariate analysis., Conclusion: Intraoperative presence of an encapsulated tumor is a good technical marker for the surgeon to evaluate resectability and estimate prognosis. Although the presence of a capsula is of strong significance in the univariate analysis, it failed in the multivariate analysis due to its correlation with clinical Masaoka stage. Masaoka stage has a stronger relevance than WHO classification to determinate long-term outcome.
- Published
- 2009
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25. Buchbesprechung.
- Author
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Thiemann U
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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26. [Thymoma--incidence, classification and therapy].
- Author
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Stremmel C, Dango S, Thiemann U, Kayser G, and Passlick B
- Subjects
- Chemotherapy, Adjuvant, Humans, Lymph Node Excision, Lymphatic Metastasis, Neoadjuvant Therapy, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local mortality, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local pathology, Neoplasm Staging, Prognosis, Radiotherapy, Adjuvant, Thymoma classification, Thymoma mortality, Thymoma pathology, Thymoma surgery, Thymus Neoplasms classification, Thymus Neoplasms mortality, Thymus Neoplasms pathology, Thymus Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Thymomas are a rare tumor entity. However, they represent 50 % of all tumors of the anterior mediastinum. There are no specific early symptoms. Overall in 10 - 15 % of patients with myasthenia gravis a thymoma is evident. Two major classifications are relevant in clinical practise: the Masaoka-classification and the WHO-classification. For their clinical and prognostic significance both classifications should be used for patients with thymomas. Additional, only resection status (RO) is known as a significant prognostic factor. Thymomas are compulsory malignant tumors. Distant metastasis is found as well as local recurrence in all stages of the disease. The 5-year-mortality rate constitutes about 80 %, not meaning any healing because local recurrences occur as late as five years after surgery. 60 % of all patients die from tumor-independent reasons making a clear prognostic statement difficult. Surgical treatment remains the gold standard and must be performed whenever possible. The most common approach is a median sternotomy. When dealing with a thymuscarcinoma, radical lymph node dissection is advisable. With respect of treatment only adjuvant radiation can possibly improve long term survival and reduces local recurrence rates for incomplete resected patients. There is no evidence for a benefit in patients with thymoma receiving adjuvant chemotherapy. A neo-adjuvant chemotherapy in combination with an adjuvant radiotherapy improves outcome after surgical resection in stage III and IV and goes along with better survival rates. Larger studies have not been performed so far. A multimodal therapy strategy is advised when dealing with thymomas in stage III and IV.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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