20 results on '"Wegener B"'
Search Results
2. Response: Commentary: Revised contraindications for the use of non-medical WB-electromyostimulation. Evidence-based German consensus recommendations".
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Kemmler, W., Fröhlich, M., Ludwig, O., Eifler, C., Berger, J., Micke, F., Kleinöder, H., Wegener, B., Zinner, C., Mooren, F. C., Teschler, M., Filipovic, A., Müller, S., England, K., Vatter, J., Authenrieth, S., Kohl, M., and von Stengel, S.
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HEALTH facilities ,MERGERS & acquisitions ,MUSCLE fatigue ,PHYSIOLOGY ,FEDERAL regulation - Abstract
The article discusses the safety aspects and contraindications related to whole-body electromyostimulation (WB-EMS) in commercial and medical settings. It addresses the controversy surrounding the classification of tumor and cancer as relative contraindications for WB-EMS application. The authors emphasize the importance of evidence-based and consensus-driven approaches to ensure the safety of vulnerable clients and the need for medical supervision in WB-EMS facilities. The article highlights the differences in risk assessments between commercial and medical settings and the role of medical gatekeepers in determining the eligibility of patients for WB-EMS. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
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3. Vergleich der interfragmentären Kompressionskraft und der Knochenkontaktfläche bei der Durchführung einer Sprunggelenks-Arthrodese mit unterschiedlichen Schrauben - eine biomechanische Studie an einem Sägeblock-Modell
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Weigert, A, Kistler, M, Bauer, L, Holzapfel, BM, Wegener, B, Weigert, A, Kistler, M, Bauer, L, Holzapfel, BM, and Wegener, B
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- 2023
4. Ganzkörperelektromyostimulation (WB-EMS) bei unspezifischen chronischen Rückenschmerzen: Patienten mit welcher initialen Schmerzintensität profitieren am meisten?
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Konrad, KL, Weißenfels, A, Baeyens, JP, Kemmler, W, Wegener, B, Konrad, KL, Weißenfels, A, Baeyens, JP, Kemmler, W, and Wegener, B
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- 2022
5. Vergleichende Untersuchung zur Bestimmung der Knochenmineraldichte mit quantitativem Ultraschall und DXA
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Wegener, B, Brandt, J, Müller, PE, Jansson, V, and Hein, W
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- 2024
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6. Expansion of the phenotypic spectrum of the CACNA1A T666M mutation: a German family with FHM1, cerebellar atrophy and mental retardation
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Freilinger, T, Bohe, M, Wegener, B, Dichgans, M, and Knoblauch, H
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- 2024
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7. Biomechanical comparisons of three minimally invasive Achilles tendon percutaneous repair suture techniques.
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Melcher, C., Renner, C., Piepenbrink, M., Fischer, N., Büttner, A., Wegener, V., Birkenmaier, C., Jansson, V., and Wegener, B.
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SUTURING , *MINIMALLY invasive procedures , *ACHILLES tendon rupture , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *TREATMENT failure , *BIOMECHANICS , *STATISTICAL sampling , *DEAD , *WEIGHT-bearing (Orthopedics) , *EVALUATION - Abstract
While no gold standard exists for the management of Achilles tendon ruptures, surgical repair is common in healthy and active patients. Minimally invasive repair methods have become increasingly popular, while biomechanical equivalency hasn't been proven yet. A mid-substance Achilles tendon rupture was created 6 cm proximal to the calcaneal insertion in 27 fresh-frozen cadaveric ankles. Specimens were randomly allocated to 1 of 3 repair techniques: Huttunen et al. (2014) (1) PARS Achilles Jig System, Nyyssönen et al. (2008) (2) Achilles Midsubstance SpeedBridge™, Schipper and Cohen (2017) (3) Dresdner Instrument and subsequently subjected to cyclic loading with 250 cycles each at 1 Hz with 4 different loading ranges (20–100 N, 20–200 N, 20–300 N, and 20–400 N). After 250 cycles no significant differences in elongation were observed between PARS and Dresdner Instrument(p = 1.0). Furthermore, SpeedBridge™ repairs elongated less than either Dresdner Instrument (p = 0.0006) or PARS (p = 0.102). Main elongation (85%) occurred within the first 10 cycles with a comparable elongation in between 10 and 100 and 100–250 cycles. While all repairs withstood the first 250 cycles of cyclic loading from 20 to 100 N, only the PARS (468 ± 175) and Midsubstance SpeedBridge™ (538 ± 208) survived more cycles. Within all 3 groups suture cut out was seen to be the most common failure mechanism. Within all groups early repair elongation was seen. While this was least obvious within the SpeedBridge™ technique, ultimate strengths of repairs (cycles to failure) were comparable across PARS and SpeedBridge™ with a decline in the Dresdner Instrument group. • All repairs survived the first 250 cycles, while none survived all 4 loading stages. • Dresdner Instrument repair completed significantly less cycles prior to failure. • Suture cutout at the suture-tendon interface was the primary failure mechanism. • The model presents a simplified representation of the biomechanical characteristics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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8. Real-life effects of pharmacological osteoporosis treatments on bone mineral density by quantitative computed tomography.
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Boehm E, Sauer C, Baur-Melnyk A, Biebl JT, Harada S, Wegener B, Kraft E, Stahl R, and Feist-Pagenstert I
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Introduction: Monitoring of bone mineral density (BMD) is used to assess pharmacological osteoporosis therapy. This study examined the real-life effects of antiresorptive and osteoanabolic treatments on volumetric BMD (vBMD) of the spine by quantitative computed tomography (QCT)., Materials and Methods: Patients aged ≥ 50 years with a vBMD < 120 mg/ml had ≥ 2 QCT. For analysis of therapy effects, the pharmacological treatment and the duration of each therapy were considered. Identical vertebrae were evaluated in all vBMD measurements for each patient. A linear mixed model with random intercepts was used to estimate the effects of pharmacological treatments on vBMD., Results: A total of 1145 vBMD measurements from 402 patients were analyzed. Considering potential confounders such as sex, age, and prior treatment, a reduction in trabecular vBMD was estimated for oral bisphosphonates (- 1.01 mg/ml per year; p < 0.001), intravenous bisphosphonates (- 0.93 mg/ml per year; p = 0.015) and drug holiday (- 1.58 mg/ml per year; p < 0.001). Teriparatide was estimated to increase trabecular vBMD by 4.27 mg/ml per year (p = 0.018). Patients receiving denosumab showed a statistically non-significant decrease in trabecular vBMD (- 0.44 mg/ml per year; p = 0.099). Compared to non-treated patients, pharmacological therapy had positive effects on trabecular vBMD (1.35 mg/ml; p = 0.001, 1.43 mg/ml; p = 0.004, 1.91 mg/ml; p < 0.001, and 6.63 mg/ml; p < 0.001 per year for oral bisphosphonates, intravenous bisphosphonates, denosumab, and teriparatide, respectively)., Conclusion: An increase in trabecular vBMD by QCT was not detected with antiresorptive agents. Patients treated with teriparatide showed increasing trabecular vBMD. Non-treatment led to a larger decrease in trabecular vBMD than pharmacological therapy., (© 2024. The Japanese Society Bone and Mineral Research.)
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- 2024
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9. A biomechanical study comparing the compression force and osseous area of contact of two screws fixation techniques used in ankle joint arthrodesis model.
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Weigert A, Kistler M, Bauer L, Kussmaul AC, Keppler AM, Holzapfel BM, and Wegener B
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- Biomechanical Phenomena, Humans, Compressive Strength, Arthrodesis methods, Arthrodesis instrumentation, Bone Screws, Ankle Joint surgery
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Introduction: Arthrodesis of a (diseased) ankle joint is usually performed to achieve pain relief and stability. One basic principle of arthrodesis techniques includes rigid fixation of the surfaces until union. It seems plausible that stable anchoring and homogeneous pressure distribution should be advantageous, however, it has not been investigated yet. The aim is to achieve uniform compression, as this is expected to produce favorable results for the bony fusion of the intended arthrodesis. Numerous implants with different biomechanical concepts can be used for ankle fusion. In this study, headless compression screws (HCS, DePuy Synthes, Zuchwil, Switzerland) were compared biomechanically to an alternative fixation System, the IOFix device (Extremity Medical, Parsippany, NJ, USA) in regard to the distribution of the compression force (area of contact) and peak compression in a sawbone arthrodesis-model (Sawbones® Pacific Research Laboratories, Vashon, WA, USA). This study aims to quantify the area of contact between the bone interface that can be obtained using headless compression screws compared to the IOFix. In current literature, it is assumed, that a large contact surface with sufficient pressure between the bones brings good clinical results. However, there are no clinical or biomechanical studies, that describe the optimal compression pressure for an arthrodesis., Material and Methods: Two standardized sawbone blocks were placed above each other in a custom-made jig. IOFix and headless compression screws were inserted pairwise parallel to each other using a template for a uniform drilling pattern. All screws were inserted with a predefined torque of 0.5 Nm. Pressure transducers positioned between the two sawbone blocks were compressed for the measurement of peak compression force, compression distribution, and area of contact., Results: With the IOFix, the compression force was distributed over significantly larger areas compared to the contact area of the HCS screws, resulting in a more homogenous contact area over the entire arthrodesis surface. Maximum compression force showed no significant difference., Conclusion: The IOFix system distributes the compression pressure over a much larger area, resulting in more evenly spread compression at the surface. Clinical studies must show whether this leads to a lower pseudarthrosis rate., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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10. Distances and angles in standing long-leg radiographs: comparing conventional radiography, digital radiography, and EOS.
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Birkenmaier C, Levrard L, Melcher C, Wegener B, Ricke J, Holzapfel BM, Baur-Melnyk A, and Mehrens D
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- Humans, Standing Position, Leg diagnostic imaging, Patient Positioning methods, Radiographic Image Enhancement methods
- Abstract
Objective: Distances and angles measured from long-leg radiographs (LLR) are important for surgical decision-making. However, projectional radiography suffers from distortion, potentially generating differences between measurement and true anatomical dimension. These phenomena are not uniform between conventional radiography (CR) digital radiography (DR) and fan-beam technology (EOS). We aimed to identify differences between these modalities in an experimental setup., Materials and Methods: A hemiskeleton was stabilized using an external fixator in neutral, valgus and varus knee alignment. Ten images were acquired for each alignment and each modality: one CR setup, two different DR systems, and an EOS. A total of 1680 measurements were acquired and analyzed., Results: We observed great differences for dimensions and angles between the 4 modalities. Femoral head diameter measurements varied in the range of > 5 mm depending on the modality, with EOS being the closest to the true anatomical dimension. With functional leg length, a difference of 8.7% was observed between CR and EOS and with the EOS system being precise in the vertical dimension on physical-technical grounds, this demonstrates significant projectional magnification with CR-LLR. The horizontal distance between the medial malleoli varied by 20 mm between CR and DR, equating to 21% of the mean., Conclusions: Projectional distortion resulting in variations approaching 21% of the mean indicate, that our confidence on measurements from standing LLR may not be justified. It appears likely that among the tested equipment, EOS-generated images are closest to the true anatomical situation most of the time., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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11. Revised contraindications for the use of non-medical WB-electromyostimulation. Evidence-based German consensus recommendations.
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von Stengel S, Fröhlich M, Ludwig O, Eifler C, Berger J, Kleinöder H, Micke F, Wegener B, Zinner C, Mooren FC, Teschler M, Filipovic A, Müller S, England K, Vatter J, Authenrieth S, Kohl M, and Kemmler W
- Abstract
Whole-body electromyostimulation has proven to be a highly effective alternative to conventional resistance-type exercise training. However, due to adverse effects in the past, very extensive contraindications have been put in place for the commercial, non-medical WB-EMS market. Considering recent positive innovations e.g., federal regulation, mandatory trainer education, revised guidelines, and new scientific studies on WB-EMS application, we believe that a careful revision of the very restrictive contraindications on WB-EMS is needed. This applies all the more because many cohorts with limited options for conventional exercise have so far been excluded. During a first meeting of an evidence-based consensus process, stakeholders from various backgrounds (e.g., research, education, application) set the priorities for revising the contraindications. We decided to focus on four categories of absolute contraindications: "Arteriosclerosis, arterial circulation disorders", "Diabetes mellitus" (DM), "Tumor and cancer" (TC), "Neurologic diseases, neuronal disorders, epilepsy". Based on scientific studies, quality criteria, safety aspects and benefit/risk assessment of the category, DM and TC were moved to the relative contraindication catalogue, while arteriosclerosis/arterial circulation disorders and neurologic diseases/neuronal disorders/epilepsy were still considered as absolute contraindications. While missing evidence suggests maintaining the status of neurologic diseases/neuronal disorders as an absolute contraindication, the risk/benefit-ratio does not support the application of WB-EMS in people with arteriosclerosis/arterial circulation diseases. Despite these very cautious modifications, countries with less restrictive structures for non-medical WB-EMS should consider our approach critically before implementing the present revisions. Considering further the largely increased amount of WB-EMS trials we advice regular updates of the present contraindication list., Competing Interests: The authors declare the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest. The author(s) declared that they were an editorial board member of Frontiers, at the time of submission. This had no impact on the peer review process and the final decision., (© 2024 von Stengel, Fröhlich, Ludwig, Eifler, Berger, Kleinöder, Micke, Wegener, Zinner, Mooren, Teschler, Filipovic, Müller, England, Vatter, Authenrieth, Kohl and Kemmler.)
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- 2024
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12. The Impact of Baseline Pain Intensity on the Effectiveness of Whole-Body Electromyostimulation (WB-EMS) for Nonspecific Chronic Back Pain.
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Konrad KL, Weissenfels A, Birkenmaier C, Baeyens JP, Kemmler W, and Wegener B
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Introduction: Recent clinical studies confirmed that whole-body electromyostimulation (WB-EMS) training is a safe and time-efficient therapeutic method for patients with nonspecific chronic back pain (NSCBP). However, significant variations in initial pain intensity among subjects in these studies have been observed. This study aims to determine if patients with differing initial pain intensities experience varying degrees of benefit from WB-EMS and to assess the overall correlation between initial pain levels and pain reduction., Methods: Pain intensity datasets from two studies were combined. The pooled data included 121 NSCBP patients (38 males and 83 females) with an average age of 55.1 years (±11.8 years). Data was categorized by baseline pain intensity on the numeric rating scale (NRS) into seven groups: 0 to 2, >2 to 3, >3 to 4, >4 to 5, >5 to 6, >6 to 7, and >7. Both absolute and relative changes were analyzed. Additionally, a Spearman rho correlation test was performed on the entire dataset to evaluate the relationship between initial pain level and pain reduction., Results: Significant improvements were noted across all NRS11 categories, with strong effect sizes (p) in all classes above 2, ranging from 0.56 to 0.90. The >7 category exhibited the highest rate of clinically significant changes (80%) and an average improvement of 3.72 points. The overall group from >1 to 10 showed an average improvement of 1.33 points, with 37% of the participants experiencing clinically significant improvements. The Spearman rho correlation test revealed a moderate positive relationship between initial pain level and pain reduction (r_s = 0.531, p < 0.001), indicating that, generally, higher initial pain levels are associated with greater pain reduction., Conclusion: The findings support the hypothesis that NSCBP patients with higher baseline NRS values benefit more substantially from WB-EMS. Those with NRS values above 7 show the greatest improvement and highest rate of clinical significance. The overall positive correlation between initial pain intensity and pain reduction further underscores the efficacy of WB-EMS in managing NSCBP across different pain intensities., Competing Interests: The authors have declared financial relationships, which are detailed in the next section., (Copyright © 2024, Konrad et al.)
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- 2024
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13. Quantitative computed tomography has higher sensitivity detecting critical bone mineral density compared to dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry in postmenopausal women and elderly men with osteoporotic fractures: a real-life study.
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Boehm E, Kraft E, Biebl JT, Wegener B, Stahl R, and Feist-Pagenstert I
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- Aged, Male, Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Bone Density, Absorptiometry, Photon methods, Retrospective Studies, Postmenopause, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods, Lumbar Vertebrae diagnostic imaging, Osteoporotic Fractures diagnostic imaging, Fractures, Spontaneous, Osteoporosis complications, Osteoporosis diagnostic imaging
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Introduction: Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) is considered the gold standard for the diagnosis of osteoporosis and assessment of fracture risk despite proven limitations. Quantitative computed tomography (QCT) is regarded as a sensitive method for diagnosis and follow-up. Pathologic fractures are classified as the main clinical manifestation of osteoporosis. The objective of the study was to compare DXA and QCT to determine their sensitivity and discriminatory power., Materials and Methods: Patients aged 50 years and older were included who had DXA of the lumbar spine and femur and additional QCT of the lumbar spine within 365 days. Fractures and bone mineral density (BMD) were retrospectively examined. BMD measurements were analyzed for the detection of osteoporotic fractures. Sensitivity and receiver operating characteristic curve were used for calculations. As an indication for a second radiological examination was given, the results were compared with control groups receiving exclusively DXA or QCT for diagnosis or follow-up., Results: Overall, BMD measurements of 404 subjects were analyzed. DXA detected 15 (13.2%) patients having pathologic fractures (n = 114) with normal bone density, 66 (57.9%) with osteopenia, and 33 (28.9%) with osteoporosis. QCT categorized no patients having pathologic fractures with healthy bone density, 14 (12.3%) with osteopenia, and 100 (87.7%) with osteoporosis. T-score DXA, trabecular BMD QCT, and cortical BMD QCT correlated weakly. Trabecular BMD QCT and cortical BMD QCT classified osteoporosis with decreased bone mineral density (AUC 0.680; 95% CI 0.618-0.743 and AUC 0.617; 95% CI 0.553-0.682, respectively). T-score DXA could not predict prevalent pathologic fractures. In control groups, each consisting of 50 patients, DXA and QCT were significant classifiers to predict prevalent pathologic fractures., Conclusion: Our results support that volumetric measurements by QCT in preselected subjects represent a more sensitive method for the diagnosis of osteoporosis and prediction of fractures compared to DXA., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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14. Corrigendum: Position statement and updated international guideline for safe and effective whole-body electromyostimulation training-the need for common sense in WB-EMS application.
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Kemmler W, Fröhlich M, Ludwig O, Eifler C, Von Stengel S, Willert S, Teschler M, Weissenfels A, Kleinöder H, Micke F, Wirtz N, Zinner C, Filipovic A, Wegener B, Berger J, Evangelista A, D'ottavio S, Sara JDS, Lerman A, Perez De Arrilucea Le Floc'h UA, Carle-Calo A, Guitierrez A, and Amaro-Gahete FJ
- Abstract
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2023.1174103.]., (Copyright © 2023 Kemmler, Fröhlich, Ludwig, Eifler, Von Stengel, Willert, Teschler, Weissenfels, Kleinöder, Micke, Wirtz, Zinner, Filipovic, Wegener, Berger, Evangelista, D’ottavio, Sara, Lerman, Perez De Arrilucea Le Floc’h, Carle-Calo, Guitierrez and Amaro-Gahete.)
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- 2023
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15. Position statement and updated international guideline for safe and effective whole-body electromyostimulation training-the need for common sense in WB-EMS application.
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Kemmler W, Fröhlich M, Ludwig O, Eifler C, von Stengel S, Willert S, Teschler M, Weissenfels A, Kleinöder H, Micke F, Wirtz N, Zinner C, Filipovic A, Wegener B, Berger J, Evangelista A, D'Ottavio S, Sara JDS, Lerman A, Perez de Arrilucea Le Floc'h UA, Carle-Calo A, Guitierrez A, and Amaro-Gahete FJ
- Abstract
Whole-Body Electromyostimulation (WB-EMS) is a training technology that enables simultaneous stimulation of all the main muscle groups with a specific impulse intensity for each electrode. The corresponding time-efficiency and joint-friendliness of WB-EMS may be particularly attractive for people unable or unmotivated to conduct (intense) conventional training protocols. However, due to the enormous metabolic and musculoskeletal impact of WB-EMS, particular attention must be paid to the application of this technology. In the past, several scientific and newspaper articles reported severe adverse effects of WB-EMS. To increase the safety of commercial non-medical WB-EMS application, recommendations "for safe and effective whole-body electromyostimulation" were launched in 2016. However, new developments and trends require an update of these recommendations to incorporate more international expertise with demonstrated experience in the application of WB-EMS. The new version of these consensus-based recommendations has been structured into 1) "general aspects of WB-EMS", 2) "preparation for training", recommendations for the 3) "WB-EMS application" itself and 4) "safety aspects during and after training". Key topics particularly addressed are 1) consistent and close supervision of WB-EMS application, 2) mandatory qualification of WB-EMS trainers, 3) anamnesis and corresponding consideration of contraindications prior to WB-EMS, 4) the participant's proper preparation for the session, 5) careful preparation of the WB-EMS novice, 6) appropriate regeneration periods between WB-EMS sessions and 7) continuous interaction between trainer and participant at a close physical distance. In summary, we are convinced that the present guideline will contribute to greater safety and effectiveness in the area of non-medical commercial WB-EMS application., 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 © 2023 Kemmler, Fröhlich, Ludwig, Eifler, von Stengel, Willert, Teschler, Weissenfels, Kleinöder, Micke, Wirtz, Zinner, Filipovic, Wegener, Berger, Evangelista, D’Ottavio, Sara, Lerman, Perez de Arrilucea Le Floc’h, Carle-Calo, Guitierrez and Amaro-Gahete.)
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- 2023
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16. A new minimal-invasive approach for total hip replacement in sheep.
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Melcher C, Gottschalk O, Mazoochian F, Pieper K, Wegener V, Pellengahr CS, Teske W, and Wegener B
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- Humans, Animals, Sheep, Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures methods, Hip Joint, Muscles surgery, Treatment Outcome, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip methods
- Abstract
Background: Over the last 50 years arthroplasty became the gold-standard treatment for disabling conditions of the coxofemoral joint. Variations of anterior, lateral, and dorsal incision have been applied, but as each approach requires the incision and reflection of various muscles to gain adequate exposure of the joint results are still controversial., Objective: The purpose of this study was to develop a minimal-invasive, tissue-sparing approach in sheep with reduced risks in animal testing., Methods: 12 mature sheep underwent hip surgery as part of a study to evaluate a hip resurfacing system. In line with the preliminary cadaveric tests a modified, minimal-invasive, musclepreserving surgical approach was sought after., Results: We developed a surgical approach to the coxofemoral joint in sheep using only blunt tissue dissection after skin incision without any limitations in joint exposure or increased blood loss/duration of surgery., Conclusion: Even though limitations occur and femoral orientation in sheep differs from man, joint forces have similar relative directions to the bone with similar bony and vascular anatomy. Therefore, this minimal-invasive muscle preserving approach might be a safe and comparable alternative in still inevitable animal testing.
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- 2023
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17. Experimental measurements of micromotions of the cementless intervertebral disc prostheses in the cadaver bone.
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Klein A, Wegener B, Büttner A, Melcher C, Jansson V, and von Schulze Pellengahr C
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- Cadaver, Humans, Prosthesis Design, Weight-Bearing, Intervertebral Disc, Prosthesis Implantation
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Background: Sufficient primary stability is mandatory for successful bony prosthetic incorporation. Therefore, defined micromotion values of 150 μm should not be exceeded as higher values might compromise the ingrowth of bone trabeculae to the implant surface. The aim of this study was to evaluate the primary stability of different cementless disc prosthesis in a cadaver model., Methods: Four different implants with different anchoring and bearing concept were tested with a target level of L4/5. 26 specimens were randomly allocated to 1 of the 4 different implants with 6 speciments in each group. Two groups were formed depending on the anchoring (spikes vs. fin) and bearing concept (non-/semi- vs. constrained). Each implant was tested regarding primary stability in a hydraulic simulator allowing simultaneous polyaxial segment movements and axial loading. The measurements were recorded on the lower plate of the prosthesis., Findings: The majority of the implants showed micromotion values below 200 μm in all planes. Only one prosthesis presented borderline longitudinal amplitudes that were significant higher than the other planes. Furthermore, significant differences were observed in the sagittal plane when comparing spike and keel anchoring. Spike anchoring implants showed superior tresults to keel anchoring implants (40 μm vs. 55 μm; p = .039), while the non-/semi-constrained bearing concept was more advantageous compared to constrained group (40 μm vs. 63 μm; p = .001)., Interpretation: Spike anchoring and non-constrained implants might provide better primary stability., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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18. Modular Operator for Null Plane Algebras in Free Fields.
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Morinelli V, Tanimoto Y, and Wegener B
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We consider the algebras generated by observables in quantum field theory localized in regions in the null plane. For a scalar free field theory, we show that the one-particle structure can be decomposed into a continuous direct integral of lightlike fibres and the modular operator decomposes accordingly. This implies that a certain form of QNEC is valid in free fields involving the causal completions of half-spaces on the null plane (null cuts). We also compute the relative entropy of null cut algebras with respect to the vacuum and some coherent states., (© The Author(s) 2022.)
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- 2022
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19. Lumbar spinal stenosis - surgical outcome and the odds of revision-surgery: Is it all due to the surgeon?
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Melcher C, Paulus AC, Roßbach BP, Gülecyüz MF, Birkenmaier C, Schulze-Pellengahr CV, Teske W, and Wegener B
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- Humans, Male, Female, Reoperation, Lumbar Vertebrae surgery, Retrospective Studies, Decompression, Surgical, Constriction, Pathologic surgery, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Treatment Outcome, Hematoma surgery, Spinal Stenosis surgery, Spinal Fusion, Spinal Diseases surgery, Surgeons
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Background: Surgical decompression is the intervention of choice for lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS) when non-operative treatment has failed. Apart from acute complications such as hematoma and infections, same-level recurrent lumbar stenosis and adjacent-segment disease (ASD) are factors that can occur after index lumbar spine surgery., Objective: The aim of this retrospective case series was to evaluate the outcome of surgery and the odds of necessary revisions., Methods: Patients who had undergone either decompressive lumbar laminotomy or laminotomy and spinal fusion due to lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS) between 2000 and 2011 were included in this analysis. Demographic, perioperative and radiographic data were collected. Clinical outcome was evaluated using numeric rating scale (NRS), the symptom subscale of the adapted version of the german Spinal Stenosis Measure (SSM) and patient-sreported ability to walk., Results: Within the LSS- cohort of 438 patients, 338 patients underwent decompression surgery only, while instrumentation in addition to decompression was performed in 100 cases (22.3%). 38 patients had prior spinal operations (decompression, disc herniation, fusion) either at our hospital or elsewhere. Thirty-five intraoperative complications were documented with dural tear with CSF leak being the most common (33/35; 94.3%). Postoperative complications were defined as complications that needed surgery and differentiated between immediate postoperative complications (⩽ 3 weeks post operation) and complications that needed revisions surgery at a later date. Within all patients 51 revisions were classified as immediate complications of the index operation with infections, neurological deficits and hematoma being the most common. Within this group only 22 patients had fusion surgery in the first place, while 29 were treated by decompression. Revision surgery was indicated by 53 patients at a later date. While 4 patients decided against surgery, 49 revision surgeries were planned. 28 were performed at the same level, 10 at the same level plus an adjacent level, and 10 were executed at index level with indications of adjacent level spinal stenosis, adjacent level spinal stenosis plus instability and stand-alone instability. Pre- operative VAS score and ability to walk improved significantly in all patients., Conclusions: While looking for predictors of revision surgery due to re-stenosis, instability or same/adjacent segment disease none of these were found. Within our cohort no significant differences concerning demographic, peri-operative and radiographic data of patients with or without revision wer noted. Patients, who needed revision surgery were older but slightly healthier while more likely to be male and smoking. Surprisingly, significant differences were noted regarding the distribution of intraoperative and early postoperative complications among the 6 main surgeons while these weren't obious within the intial index group of late revisions.
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- 2022
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20. Primary stability of the Activ L® intervertebral disc prosthesis in cadaver bone and comparison of the keel and spike anchoring concept.
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von Schulze Pellengahr C, Teske W, Kapoor S, Klein A, Wegener B, Büttner A, and Lahner M
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- Biomechanical Phenomena, Cadaver, Humans, Lumbar Vertebrae surgery, Prostheses and Implants, Range of Motion, Articular, Intervertebral Disc
- Abstract
Background: High primary stability is the key prerequisite for safe osseointegration of cementless intervertebral disc prostheses. The aim of our study was to determine the primary stability of intervertebral disc prostheses with two different anchoring concepts - keel and spike anchoring., Methods: Ten ActivL intervertebral disc prostheses (5 x keel anchoring, 5 x spike anchoring) implanted in human cadaver lumbar spine specimens were tested in a spine movement simulator. Axial load flexion, extension, left and right bending and axial rotation motions were applied on the lumbar spine specimens through a defined three-dimensional movement program following ISO 2631 and ISO/CD 18192-1.3 standards. Tri-dimensional micromotions of the implants were measured for both anchor types and compared using Student's T-test for significance after calculating 95 % confidence intervals., Results: In the transverse axis, the keel anchoring concept showed statistically significant (p < 0.05) lower mean values of micromotions compared to the spike anchoring concept. The highest micromotion values for both types were observed in the longitudinal axis. In no case the threshold of 200 micrometers was exceeded., Conclusions: Both fixation systems fulfill the required criteria of primary stability. Independent of the selected anchorage type an immediate postoperative active mobilization doesn't compromise the stability of the prostheses., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2021
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