194 results on '"Armin Thron"'
Search Results
2. Prospective demonstration of short-term motor plasticity following acquired central pareses.
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Marcus H. T. Reinges, Timo Krings, Veit Rohde, Franz-Josef Hans, Klaus Willmes, Armin Thron, and Joachim M. Gilsbach
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- 2005
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3. Development of the Arterial Supply of the Spinal Cord Tissue Based on Radioanatomical and Histological Studies in Cattle
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Armin Thron, Jasmin Schiessl, Peter Stoeter, and Andreas Prescher
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Anterior spinal artery ,Gestational Age ,Pregnancy ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Spinal Meninges ,Vertebral Artery ,Mammals ,Fetus ,Vascular disease ,business.industry ,Angiography ,Anatomy ,medicine.disease ,Spinal cord ,Prenatal development ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Spinal Cord ,Microangiography ,Cattle ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neurosurgery ,business - Abstract
Clinical neuroradiology 32(2), 325-343 (2022). doi:10.1007/s00062-021-01093-3, Published by Urban & Vogel, München
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- 2022
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4. Power grip disinhibits the ipsilateral sensorimotor cortex: a TMS and fMRI study.
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Henrik Foltys, Ingo G. Meister, Jürgen Weidemann, Roland Sparing, Armin Thron, Klaus Willmes, Rudolf Töpper, Mark Hallett, and Babak Boroojerdi
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- 2003
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5. Anatomically guided neuronavigation. Sample applications of the SulcusEditor in a clinical setting.
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Volker A. Coenen, Klaus Niemann, Uwe Spetzger, and Armin Thron
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- 1998
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6. Digitale 3-D Analyse der anatomischen Lokalisation von Hirntumoren: Anwendung des SulcusEditors für das Brain-Mapping kognitiver Funktionen und Implikationen für die Operationsplanung.
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B. O. Hütter, Klaus Niemann, Uwe Spetzger, Joachim M. Gilsbach, Diedrich Graf v. Keyserlingk, Wilhelm Küker, Armin Thron, and Volker A. Coenen
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- 1996
7. Manuelle Segmentierung des retrokommissuralen Hippocampus anhand eines neuroanatomischen Meßprotokolls.
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Volker A. Coenen, Klaus Niemann, Alexander Hammers, Wilhelm Küker, J. Klosterkötter, and Armin Thron
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- 1996
8. Asymmetrie des Planum temporale und Prognose von Aphasien. Methodische Probleme bei der morphometrischen Vermessung anatomischer Hirnstrukturen in dreidimensionalen MRT-Datensätzen.
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Anna de Simone, Volker Hesselmann, Axel Klusmann, Georg Polis, Armin Thron, and Walter Huber
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- 1996
9. Presumed capillary telangiectasia of the pons: MRI and follow-up
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Wilhelm Küker, Wilhelm Nacimiento, Armin Thron, and Frank Block
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Lacunar stroke ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Pons ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Vein ,Neuroradiology ,Central Nervous System Vascular Malformations ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Interventional radiology ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Radiology ,Brainstem ,Abnormality ,business - Abstract
Capillary telangiectasia is a vascular abnormality primarily of the brainstem. The clinical relevance is unclear as is the association with clearly pathologic findings such as cavernous haemangioma. We report on four cases with capillary telangiectasia proven by follow-up und describe the imaging characteristics. T2 abnormality was only observed in half of the patients as was the presence of a discernable collecting vein. Whereas two cases were incidental findings in neurologically normal persons and one had symptoms clearly attributable to lacunar stroke, one patient may have had symptoms due to the vascular abnormality in the pons.
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- 2016
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10. Comparison of dual-source CT angiography and MR angiography in preoperative evaluation of intra- and extracranial vessels: a pilot study
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G. Mommertz, Rolf W. Günther, Marco Das, Andreas H. Mahnken, Armin Thron, Meike Schaaf, Joachim E. Wildberger, Georg Mühlenbruch, Stefan Langer, Timo Krings, MUMC+: DA BV Medisch Specialisten Radiologie (9), Beeldvorming, RS: CARIM School for Cardiovascular Diseases, and RS: MHeNs School for Mental Health and Neuroscience
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pilot Projects ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,medicine ,Carotid stenosis ,Humans ,Image quality ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,cardiovascular diseases ,Aged ,Neuroradiology ,MR angiography ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Ultrasound ,Mr angiography ,Reproducibility of Results ,Interventional radiology ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Cerebral Angiography ,Stenosis ,CT angiography ,Angiography ,cardiovascular system ,Female ,Radiology ,Tomography ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Magnetic Resonance Angiography ,Carotid artery ,Calcification - Abstract
Besides the assessment of carotid artery stenosis, evaluation of the vascular anatomy and lesions within both the extra- and intracranial arteries is crucial for proper clinical evaluation, treatment choice and planning. The purpose of our study was to evaluate the potential of dual-source CTA and 3T-MRA. In 16 symptomatic CAS patients, contrast-enhanced DSCT and 3T-MRA examinations were performed. For DSCT a dual-energy protocol with a 64 x 0.6-mm collimation was applied. In 3T-MRA intracranial high-resolution unenhanced TOF and extracranial contrast-enhanced MRA were performed. All examinations were analyzed for relevant morphologic and pathologic features or anomalies, and a total of 624 vessel segments were scored. All examinations were of diagnostic image quality with good to excellent vessel visibility. Almost all intracranial arteries were significantly better visualized by MRA compared to CTA (five of six vessels, p
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- 2010
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11. Non-invasive Spinal Cord Angiography for Imaging Vascular Spinal Cord Malformations
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Armin Thron, M. Mull, Walter H. Backes, Timo Krings, J. T. Wilmink, and Robbert J. Nijenhuis
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Cord ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Non invasive ,Mr angiography ,General Medicine ,Spinal cord ,Radiological anatomy ,Mr imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Angiography ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,Major complication ,business - Abstract
On conventional (non-contrast-enhanced) MR imaging signs of increased signal intensity in the central cord and enlarged subarachnoid flow voids are suggestive for the presence of a vascular spinal cord malformation. However, they provide no predictive information on the exact location of the malformation and thus additional imaging is warranted. At present, catheter angiography is still the standard of reference to image the arteries and veins of the spinal cord 1 and the preferred technique for diagnosing, localizing, and classifying vascular spinal lesions . Although it provides superior spatial resolution and image quality, catheter angiography has, however, several major drawbacks, as it is invasive, involves exposure to ionizing radiation, and has a small risk for major complications, including spinal cord infarction . In addition, it can often be time consuming and may require multiple catheterizations to locate the vascular spinal cord malformation. For these reasons, new imaging methods were searched and developed in order to non-invasively visualize the aberrant spinal cord vasculature. Recent advances in MR and CT angiography have strongly improved the vessel-to-background contrast by using fast acquisition in combination with contrast agent bolus injection and are now able to depict and differentiate normal from abnormal spinal cord vasculature. In this paper the relevant vascular radiological anatomy of the spinal cord is first briefly outlined. Subsequently, previously used and new spinal cord MR angiography techniques as well as CT angiography techniques will be discussed. Then the MR and CT angiography techniques will be compared for spinal cord angiography. To conclude an outlook is provided on possible future developments and applications of non-invasive spinal cord angiography.
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- 2009
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12. Classification of Spinal Vascular Malformations
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Pierre Lasjaunias, Franz-Josef Hans, Marcus H. T. Reinges, Karel G. terBrugge, Armin Thron, Timo Krings, and Sasikhan Geibprasert
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Shunting ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neurology (clinical) ,General Medicine ,business ,Surgery - Abstract
Spinal vascular malformations are rare diseases with a wide variety of neurological presentations. Their classification depends on the differentiation of shunting versus non-shunting lesions, the latter being the spinal cord cavernomas. In the shunting lesions, the next step in the proposed classification scheme is related to the feeding artery which can subdivide the dural vascular shunts from the pial vascular malformations: while those shunts that are fed by radiculomeningeal arteries (i.e. the counterparts of meningeal arteries in the brain) constitute the dural arteriovenous fistulas, the shunts that are fed by arteries that would normally supply the spinal cord (i.e. the radiculomedullary and radiculopial arteries) are the pial cord arteriovenous malformations (whose cranial counterparts are the brain AVMs). Depending on the type of transition between artery and vein the latter pial AVMs can be further subdivided into glomerular (plexiforme or nidus-type) AVMs with a network of intervening vessels in between the artery and vein and the fistulous pial AVMs. The last step in the classification then describes whether the type of fistula has a high or a low shunting volume which will differentiate the “Macro-” from the “Micro-”fistulae. The proposed classification is therefore based on a stepwise analysis of the shunt including its arterial anatomy, its nidus-architecture and its flow-volume evaluation. The major advantage of this approach is that it leads to a subclassification with direct implications on the choice of treatment, thereby constituting a simple and practical approach to evaluate these rare diseases.
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- 2009
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13. Spinal glomus-type arteriovenous malformations: microsurgical treatment in 20 cases
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Timo Krings, Armin Thron, Azize Boström, Franz J. Hans, Joachim M. Gilsbach, and Johannes Schramm
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Subarachnoid hemorrhage ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Vascular malformation ,Laminectomy ,Arteriovenous malformation ,General Medicine ,Microsurgery ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Myelopathy ,Hematoma ,medicine ,Embolization ,business - Abstract
Object Glomus-type spinal arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) are rare. In the literature only small series and anecdotal reports can be found, and there are no prospective series elucidating the natural course or the superiority of 1 treatment regimen over another (such as surgery versus embolization versus conservative treatment). Microsurgical treatment of spinal AVMs often seems difficult because many lesions are not anatomically suitable for primary microsurgical occlusion and are therefore treated with first-line neuroradiological interventions or not at all. Methods Between 1989 and 2005, 20 patients with glomus-type AVMs underwent microsurgical treatment at 2 major neurosurgical centers in Germany. The history of symptoms in these patients ranged from 2 days to 11 years. Four patients presented with subarachnoid hemorrhage, 2 with intramedullary hematoma, 4 with paresthesia or pain, and 10 with clinical signs of myelopathy. Seven patients underwent partial embolization prior to microsurgery. The authors only operated on AVMs accessible from a dorsal or dorsolateral approach. Neurological status was assessed with the McCormick classification scheme. Follow-up data were obtained from outpatient records. Three patients were interviewed over the telephone and 4 patients were not available for follow-up evaluation. Results Surgery was performed via a laminectomy in 14 and hemilaminectomy in 6 patients. The microsurgical technique used consisted of retrograde dissection of the AVM from the venous side in most cases. Four (20%) of 20 patients showed worsening of neurological symptoms to a worse McCormick grade, probably caused by suspected venous stasis directly after surgery, however only 1 patient (5%) suffered permanent deterioration after surgery. In 14 patients postoperative angiography proved complete occlusion in 11 patients, including the presence of a remnant requiring a second operation with complete occlusion thereafter in 1 patient. In 3 patients occlusion was incomplete: a small residual AVM remained in 1 patient, and a discrete feeding vessel without a vein was evident in 2 patients. Conclusions Spinal cord AVMs are rare. If embolization is not possible, surgery may be indicated in selected cases. Spinal AVMs behave differently after incomplete occlusion either surgically or with embolization. A postoperative reduction in symptoms is frequent despite the presence of small remnants, and the risk of neurological deficits seems relatively low even in residual AVMs. Therefore, treatment need not necessarily aim at complete occlusion if that would be associated with an unacceptably high risk of neurological deficits.
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- 2009
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14. Unusual Spinal Arteriovenous Dural Fistula: Digital Subtraction and Magnetic Resonance Angiography
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Armin Thron, Johannes Weber, and Michael Forsting
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,Radiography ,Spinal Cord Diseases ,Magnetic resonance angiography ,Arteriovenous Shunt, Surgical ,Humans ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neuroradiology ,Central Nervous System Vascular Malformations ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Middle Aged ,Spinal cord ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Spinal Cord ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neurosurgery ,Radiology ,business ,Magnetic Resonance Angiography - Published
- 2009
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15. Supraselläre Raumforderung als Erstmanifestation einer Tuberkulose im Kindesalter
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J. Reul, Vincent Ramaekers, and Armin Thron
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,General Medicine ,Pyrazinamide ,Lesion ,Cerebrospinal fluid ,medicine ,Tuberculoma ,Radiology ,medicine.symptom ,Differential diagnosis ,business ,Rifampicin ,medicine.drug ,Cerebral angiography - Abstract
Three days after having sustained a mild trauma to the head a seven-year-old boy developed seizure-like rotatory vertigo. Computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging and cerebral angiography demonstrated a suprasellar space-occupying lesion. Pulmonary tuberculosis was discovered in subsequent diagnostic work-up. Cerebrospinal fluid examination was unremarkable except for immunological tests (tuberculostearic acid) which pointed to central nervous system (CNS) involvement so that a tuberculoma was suspected. The lesion decreased in size on tuberculostatic treatment (200 mg/d isoniazid, 200 mg/d rifampicin, two times 250 mg/d pyrazinamide). In the next 12 months there merely persisted a mild abnormality of the blood-brain barrier with a little contrast-medium uptake, which regressed in the following 6 months. The differential diagnosis between CNS tuberculosis and brain tumour or pyogenic abscess can be difficult in children if there are no pulmonary signs and/or the cerebrospinal fluid is normal.
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- 2008
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16. Spinal Vascular Malformations - Typical and Atypical Findings
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Franz-Josef Hans, Armin Thron, Azize Bostroem, and Timo Krings
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Central Nervous System Vascular Malformations ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Fistula ,Meninges ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Disease ,Digital subtraction angiography ,medicine.disease ,Spinal cord ,Neurosurgical Procedures ,Spine ,Surgery ,Therapeutic approach ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Spinal Cord ,Regional Blood Flow ,Arteriovenous Fistula ,Humans ,Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Pathological - Abstract
Vascular malformations of the spinal cord and its meninges are rare diseases which comprise true inborn cavernomas and arteriovenous malformations (AVM), including perimedullary fistulae, glomerular and juvenile AVMs, and presumably acquired dural arteriovenous fistulae. This article gives an overview of the imaging features on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and digital subtraction angiography of both typical and atypical findings to describe the wide variety of possible pathological entities encountered. Clinical differential diagnoses, the neurological symptomatology and potential therapeutic approaches of these diseases, which may vary depending on the underlying pathology, are given. Although MRI constitutes the first choice diagnostic modality for suspected spinal vascular malformations, we conclude that the definite diagnosis of the disease and thus the choice of the appropriate therapeutic approach rests on selective spinal angiography which should be performed at a specialized center. Treatment in symptomatic patients offers an improvement in prognosis. Microsurgical treatment is recommended for symptomatic spinal cord cavernomas. Dural arteriovenous shunts can either be treated by microsurgical or endovascular approaches, the former being a simple, quick and secure approach to obliterate the fistula while the latter is technically demanding. In spinal arteriovenous malformations of both the fistulous and the glomerular type, the endovascular approach is the method of first choice; in selected cases, surgery or a combined therapy may be necessary.
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- 2007
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17. Value and Limitations of Contrast-Enhanced MR Angiography in Spinal Arteriovenous Malformations and Dural Arteriovenous Fistulas
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Armin Thron, Walter H. Backes, Timo Krings, J. T. Wilmink, Michael Mull, and Robbert J. Nijenhuis
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Adult ,Gadolinium DTPA ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Contrast Media ,Arteriovenous fistula ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Magnetic resonance angiography ,Arteriovenous Malformations ,Dural arteriovenous fistulas ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,cardiovascular diseases ,Aged ,Central Nervous System Vascular Malformations ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Vascular disease ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Arteriovenous malformation ,Digital subtraction angiography ,Middle Aged ,Image Enhancement ,medicine.disease ,Spinal cord ,Spine ,eye diseases ,nervous system diseases ,body regions ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Spinal Cord ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,Filum terminale ,business ,Magnetic Resonance Angiography ,circulatory and respiratory physiology - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The purpose of this work was to study the validity of MR angiography (MRA) for identification of spinal arteriovenous (AV) abnormalities. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Thirty-four consecutive patients with suspicion of spinal vascular abnormalities underwent digital subtraction angiography (DSA) after MRA. The level and side of the suspected spinal dural arteriovenous fistula (SDAVF) and the feeding arteries in spinal arteriovenous malformations (SAVMs) were determined from the MRA and compared with DSA. RESULTS: DSA revealed SDAVF in 20 abnormalities of which 19 were spinal and 1 was tentorial with spinal drainage, as well as SAVM in 11 patients. In 3 patients, MRA and DSA were both normal. For detection of spinal arteriovenous abnormalities, neither false-positive nor false-negative MRA results were obtained. The MRA-derived level of the feeding artery in SDAVF agreed with DSA in 14 of 19 cases. In 5 cases, a mismatch of 1 vertebral level (not side) was noted for the feeding artery. For the tentorial AVF, only the spinal drainage was depicted; the feeding artery was outside the MRA field of view. In intradural SAVM, the main feeding artery was identified by MRA in 10 of 11 patients. MRA could differentiate between glomerular and fistulous SAVM in 4 of 6 cases and between sacral SDAVF and filum terminale SAVM in 2 of 5 cases. CONCLUSIONS: MRA reliably detects or excludes various types of spinal AV abnormalities and localizes the (predominant) arterial feeder of most spinal AV shunts. Although classification of the subtype of SAVMs remains difficult, with MRA it greatly helps to focus subsequent DSA.
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- 2007
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18. Bridging Vein Thrombosis with and without Dural Sinus Involvement
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Armin Thron, Christian Paul Stracke, Timo Krings, and Pascal Niggemann
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Thrombosis ,Venous thrombosis ,Dural sinus ,Bridging vein ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neurosurgery ,Radiology ,business ,Lower limbs venous ultrasonography ,Neuroradiology - Abstract
Isolated bridging vein thrombosis is a rare form of cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT) or accompanying thrombosis involving the large venous sinuses. Reports in the literature and data on patients are rare. The aim of this report is to provide clinical and imaging findings of three cases of bridging vein thrombosis with and without dural sinus involvement. The signs of CVT are often discreet, and specific imaging protocols are needed to accurately diagnose the disorder. Because of its rarity, and the sole affection of a bridging vein the diagnosis of this disorder might be even more troublesome. An early diagnosis of the isolated bridging vein thrombosis should enable treatment as soon as possible in order to prevent spreading of the thrombosis into larger sinuses and worsening of the clinical course.
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- 2007
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19. The Transdural Course of Radicular Spinal Cord Veins--A Microangiographical and Microscopical Study
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Michael Mull, J. Otto, Armin Thron, J.M. Schroeder, and Timo Krings
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Epidural venous plexus ,Plexus ,business.industry ,Dura mater ,Venous plexus ,Venous Segment ,Anatomy ,Venous blood ,Phlebography ,Veins ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Spinal Cord ,Medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Spinal canal ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,Dura Mater ,business ,Vein - Abstract
This study focuses on the following questions: What are the morphological features at the transdural course of radiculomedullary veins? How are these short transdural segments that may harbour pathological arteriovenous shunts connected to the internal vertebral venous plexus? Is the conception of a reflux-impeding mechanism at the transdural segment indispensable and convincing? A total of 102 radiculospinal veins were studied microscopically at various levels of the spinal canal using serial paraffin and semi-thin sections. In addition, 26 vessels were investigated microangiographically following orthograde (12) or attempted retrograde (14) opacification of the intradural venous segment with barium sulphate. After paraplast-embedding, contact-microradiographs were taken using high-resolution spectroscopic plates. At their transdural course, the veins showed narrowing of their lumen accompanied by changes in the vessel wall composition and a tortuous course. Two structurally distinct arrangements of the transdural segment could be identified: A slit type was seen in 60 % of the veins studied and a bulge- or nodular type was seen in 35 % of the veins. In total, 5 % of cases could not be assigned to either one of these types. Reflux to radicular veins from the outside of the dura mater could be produced in 2 out of 14 specimens. The extradural venous plexus, which primarily receives the radicular vein, was composed more frequently of lacunar spaces rather than plexiform blood vessel convolutions. Rare observations were fibrotic, blind ending radiculomedullary veins and continuation of a distinct venous blood vessel after crossing the dura. Reflux from the epidural plexus to radicular veins is not reliably stopped at the dural level and possibly physiological. Different arrangements of the transdural course of the veins appear to be at least appropriate to modulate flow. The purpose for two different types of radicular vein exit is unclear. The clinical impact of disturbed reflux-control is uncertain, which is in stark contrast to the severe consequences resulting from dural arteriovenous shunts. The functional role of the probably predominant epidural venous plexus for the spinal cord blood circulation remains poorly understood.
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- 2015
20. Spinal epidural arteriovenous fistula with perimedullary drainage
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Juergen Otto, Timo Krings, Michael Mull, Franz J. Hans, Armin Thron, and Azize Bostroem
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Central Nervous System Vascular Malformations ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lumbar Vertebrae ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Vascular disease ,business.industry ,Dura mater ,Fistula ,Arteriovenous fistula ,Arteriovenous malformation ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Vascular anomaly ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Spinal Cord ,Regional Blood Flow ,Dural arteriovenous fistulas ,Angiography ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology ,business ,Aged - Abstract
✓ The classic angiographically demonstrated features of spinal dural arteriovenous fistulas are shunts of radiculomeningeal branches with radicular veins draining exclusively in the direction of perimedullary veins and thereby causing venous congestion. These shunts are located at the point where the radicular vein passes the dura mater. Spinal epidural arteriovenous shunts, however, normally do not drain into the perimedullary veins and are, therefore, asymptomatic, presumably because of a postulated reflux-impeding mechanism between the dural sleeves. The authors report on a patient in whom an epidural arteriovenous shunt showed delayed retrograde drainage into perimedullary veins, leading to the classic clinical (and magnetic resonance imaging–based) findings of venous congestion. Intraoperatively the angiographically established diagnosis was confirmed. Coagulation of both the epidural shunt zone and the radicular vein resulted in complete obliteration of the fistula, as confirmed on repeated angiography. This rare type of fistula should stimulate considerations on the role of valvelike mechanisms normally impeding retrograde flow from the epidural plexus to perimedullary veins and suggest that, in certain pathological circumstances, epidural fistulas can drain retrogradely into perimedullary veins as an infrequent variant of spinal arteriovenous shunts.
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- 2006
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21. Time Resolved 3D MRA. Applications for Interventional Neuroradiology
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C. P. Stracke, Peter C. Reinacher, Armin Thron, Elmar Spuentrup, and Timo Krings
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Arteriovenous fistula ,Arteriovenous malformation ,Original Articles ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic resonance angiography ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,Dynamic contrast ,0302 clinical medicine ,cardiovascular system ,medicine ,Medical physics ,cardiovascular diseases ,Radiology ,Endovascular treatment ,Parallel imaging ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,After treatment ,Interventional neuroradiology - Abstract
The decision for endovascular treatment of cranial dural AV fistulae and angiomas and their follow-up after treatment is usually based on conventional DSA. New techniques of magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) facilitate high temporal and spatial resolution images. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the applicability and clinical use of a newly developed 3D dynamic MRA protocol on a 3T scanner for neurointerventional planning and decision-making. Using a 3T whole body scanner, a three-dimensional dynamic contrast enhanced MRA sequence with parallel imaging, and intelligent k-space readout (Keyhole and “CENTRA” k-space filling) was added to structural MRI and time-of-flight MRA in seven patients. DSA was performed in each patient following MR examination. In all patients MRA allowed the identification and correct classification of the vascular lesion. Hemodynamic characteristics and venous architecture were clearly demonstrated. Larger feeding arteries could be identified in all cases. Smaller feeding vessels were overlooked in dynamic MRA and only depicted in conventional DSA High temporal and spatial resolution 3D MRA may correctly identify and classify fistulae and angiomas and help to reduce the number of pre- or post-interventional invasive diagnostic angiograms.
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- 2006
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22. Silent microemboli related to diagnostic cerebral angiography: a matter of operator’s experience and patient’s disease
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Ingo G. Meister, M. H. T. Reinges, Klaus Willmes, Timo Krings, Franz-Josef Hans, Armin Thron, Michael Mull, and R. Becker
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,Adolescent ,Disease ,Brain Ischemia ,Cohort Studies ,Risk Factors ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Aged ,Neuroradiology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Cerebral Angiography ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Intracranial Embolism ,Angiography ,Cohort ,Female ,Clinical Competence ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,Neurosurgery ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Vasculitis ,Cerebral angiography - Abstract
The aim of the present investigation was to elucidate in a large consecutive patient cohort whether the level of training has an effect on the number of microemboli detected by diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) and which additional risk factors can be identified. A total of 107 consecutive patients in whom a diagnostic cerebral angiography had been performed were prospectively investigated with DWI; 51 angiographies were performed by experienced neuroradiologists, 56 by neuroradiologists in training. In 12 patients (11.1%), a total of 17 new lesions without any clinically overt neurological symptoms were identified. Of these, 12 patients, 11 (91.7%) with 16 lesions were investigated by junior neuroradiologists. In 11 of 12 patients with DWI abnormalities (91.7%), risk factors could be identified (atherosclerotic vessel wall disease, vasculitis, hypercoagulable states). Experienced neuroradiologists performed 21 of 48 angiographies (43.8%) on patients with the above-mentioned risk factors, whereas junior neuroradiologists performed 27 angiographies in this subgroup (46.2%). The rate of diffusion abnormalities in patients with risk factors was 11/48 (22.9%)—considerably higher than in patients without risk factors (1/59; 1.7%). The level of experience and the nature of the underlying disease are predictors of the occurrence of cerebral ischemic events following neuroangiography. Alternative diagnostic modalities should be employed in patients who are investigated for diseases with the highest risk of angiographic complications (i.e., vasculitis, and arteriosclerotic vessel wall disease). If diagnostic angiography remains necessary in these patients, the highest level of practitioner training is necessary to ensure good patient outcome.
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- 2006
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23. The Hyperdense Posterior Cerebral Artery
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Armin Thron, Michael Mull, Ingo G. Meister, Timo Krings, Rudolf Töpper, Klaus Willmes, and Dagmar Nölchen
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Thalamus ,Ischemia ,Posterior cerebral artery ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine.artery ,Internal medicine ,Middle cerebral artery ,medicine ,Basilar artery ,Cardiology ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,cardiovascular diseases ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Stroke ,Neuroradiology ,Artery - Abstract
In the anterior circulation, the hyperdense middle cerebral artery sign (HMCAS) is a well established marker for early ischemia. Similarly, the hyperdense basilar artery sign may be a diagnostic clue for basilar artery thrombosis. Other hyperdense artery signs have not yet been described. The purpose of this study was to define the hyperdense posterior cerebral artery sign (HPCAS) and determine its incidence, diagnostic value, and reliability as a marker for ischemia in the territory of the posterior cerebral artery (PCA). CCTs of 69 patients with proven acute ischemia in the PCA territory were compared by three independent and blinded readers to the CCTs of 86 age-matched patients without PCA infarction. Using follow-up imaging, the correlation of the HPCAS with infarct size, thalamic infarction and bleeding were investigated. A HPCAS was found in 37.7% of all patients with PCA-infarction, typically within the ambient cistern with a specificity of 95.4%. The thalamus was affected significantly more often (p = 0.03), and the size of the infarct was significantly more often large than medium or small (p = 0.02) when a HPCAS was present. Hemorrhagic transformation tended to occur more often when the HPCAS was present. HPCAS was detected in more than one third of all patients with PCA ischemia, suiting the incidence of the HMCA. Based on our results, this sign may not only be helpful in the early diagnosis of PCA infarction but might also act as a prognostic marker in acute PCA territory ischemic stroke.
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- 2006
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24. The Hyperdense Posterior Cerebral Artery Sign
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Peter C. Reinacher, Timo Krings, Klaus Willmes, Ingo G. Meister, Michael Mull, Armin Thron, Rudolf Toepper, and Dagmar Noelchen
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ischemia ,Infarction ,Posterior cerebral artery ,Brain Ischemia ,Infarction, Posterior Cerebral Artery ,medicine.artery ,Basilar artery ,medicine ,Humans ,cardiovascular diseases ,Stroke ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,Observer Variation ,Posterior Cerebral Artery ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,business.industry ,Cerebral infarction ,Brain ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Thrombosis ,Case-Control Studies ,Middle cerebral artery ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Background and Purpose— In the anterior circulation, the hyperdense middle cerebral artery (MCA) sign is a well-established marker for early ischemia. Similarly, the hyperdense basilar artery sign or the MCA “dot” sign may be a diagnostic clue for basilar artery or distal MCA branch thrombosis. The purpose of this study was to define the hyperdense posterior cerebral artery (PCA) sign and determine its incidence, diagnostic value, and reliability as a marker for ischemia in the territory of the PCA. Methods— Cranial computed tomographies (CCTs) of 48 patients with proven acute ischemia ( Results— An HPCA was found in 35.4% of all patients with PCA infarction, typically within the ambient cistern, with a specificity of 95.4%. The thalamus was affected significantly more often ( P =0.009) and the size of the infarct was significantly more often large than medium ( P =0.018) or small ( P Conclusions— An HPCA was detected in more than one third of all patients with PCA ischemia, suiting the incidence of the hyperdense MCA. Based on our results, this sign may not only be helpful in the early diagnosis of PCA infarction but might also act as a prognostic marker in acute PCA territory ischemic stroke.
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- 2006
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25. Spatial attention: more than intrinsic alerting?
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Susanne Weis, W. Sturm, Bruno Fimm, Klaus Willmes, B Schmenk, Armin Thron, and Karsten Specht
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Adult ,Male ,Directed attention fatigue ,Precuneus ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Posterior parietal cortex ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Functional Laterality ,Superior temporal gyrus ,Mental Processes ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Reaction Time ,medicine ,Humans ,Attention ,Prefrontal cortex ,Analysis of Variance ,General Neuroscience ,Attentional control ,Oxygen ,Alertness ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Space Perception ,Fixation (visual) ,Female ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Photic Stimulation - Abstract
It has been proposed that the right hemisphere alerting network co-activates, either directly or via the brainstem, the attention system in the parietal cortex involved in spatial attention. The observation that impaired alertness and sustained attention can predict the outcome of neglect might suggest such a relationship, too. In the present fMRI study, we intended to analyse and compare the functional anatomy of two attentional conditions both involving intrinsic (endogenous) alerting and fixation but differing with respect to the degree of spatially distributed attention by using the same paradigm under two different attentional conditions. In a group of ten participants, both a focused and a distributed visuospatial attention condition evoked similar patterns of activation in dorsolateral prefrontal regions, in the anterior cingulate gyrus, in the superior and inferior parietal cortex as well as in the superior temporal gyrus and in the thalamus. These activation foci were stronger in the right hemisphere under both conditions. After subtraction of the alertness condition with focused spatial attention, distributed spatial attention with stimuli appearing at unpredictable locations within both visual fields induced additional bilateral activations only in the left and right superior parietal cortex and in the right precuneus suggesting that these regions are specific for a more widespread dispersion of spatial attention.
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- 2005
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26. Functional outcome after surgical treatment of spontaneous and nonspontaneous spinal subdural hematomas
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Ruth Thiex, Veit Rohde, Armin Thron, and Joachim M. Gilsbach
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hypesthesia ,Lesion ,Hematoma ,Risk Factors ,medicine ,Humans ,Urinary Bladder, Neurogenic ,Surgical treatment ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Muscle Weakness ,Urinary bladder ,business.industry ,Vascular disease ,Laminectomy ,Retrospective cohort study ,Recovery of Function ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Subdural Hematomas ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Anesthesia ,Hematoma, Subdural, Spinal ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Psychomotor Performance ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Object. Because of the rarity of spinal subdural hematomas (SDHs), the literature offers scarce estimates of the outcome and predictive factors in patients suffering from these lesions. In addition, single-institution surgical series are still lacking. Therefore, the authors retrospectively evaluated the early and long-term functional outcomes measured in eight patients with spontaneous and nonspontaneous spinal SDHs in whom the clot had been evacuated. Methods. The patients' charts were evaluated for origin of the lesion, risk factors, and neurological deficits at symptom onset and at 28 days after extirpation of the spinal SDH. Long-term clinical outcome (Barthel Index [BI]) was evaluated by administering a telephone questionnaire to the patient or a relative. Only one patient with a spontaneous spinal SDH was identified. Four patients were undergoing anticoagulant therapy, and three patients had undergone a previous anesthetic/diagnostic spinal procedure. Twenty-eight days postoperatively, neurological deficits improved in six of eight patients; however, in two of the six patients, the improvement did not allow the patients to become independent again. In two patients, surgery did not affect the complete sensorimotor deficits. In the long-term survivors (median 45 months) a median BI of 55 was achieved. The latency between symptom onset and surgery did not correlate with functional outcome in this series. The preoperative neurological condition and location of the hematoma correlated positively with early and long-term functional outcome. Conclusions. To the best of their knowledge, the present study is the largest single-institutional study of patients with surgically treated spinal SDHs. Despite some postoperative improvement of sensorimotor deficits in most patients, the prognosis is poor because 50% of the patients remain dependent. Their outcome was determined by the preoperative sensorimotor function and spinal level of the spinal SDH.
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- 2005
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27. Treatment of Experimentally Induced Aneurysms with Stents
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K. Scherer, W. Möller-Hartmann, Ruth Thiex, A. Brunn, Peter Verken, Armin Thron, Timo Krings, Franz J. Hans, Thomas Schmitz-Rode, Joachim M. Gilsbach, Klaus P. Stein, and Heiko Dreeskamp
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Neointima ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Aneurysm ,Occlusion ,medicine ,Animals ,cardiovascular diseases ,Embolization ,Guglielmi detachable coil ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Angiography, Digital Subtraction ,Stent ,equipment and supplies ,medicine.disease ,Embolization, Therapeutic ,Surgery ,Disease Models, Animal ,Stenosis ,Treatment Outcome ,surgical procedures, operative ,Angiography ,cardiovascular system ,Stents ,Rabbits ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,business - Abstract
Objective Although Guglielmi detachable coil systems have been widely accepted for treatment of intracranial aneurysms, primary stenting of aneurysms using porous stents, stent grafts, or implantation of coils after stent placement constitute emerging techniques in endovascular treatment. The aim of the present study was to use an animal model to investigate these different approaches to treat cerebral aneurysms with regard to the rate of closure and the histopathological changes within the aneurysm cavity and the parent vessel after stent placement. Methods We created aneurysms in 30 rabbits by distal ligation and intraluminal incubation of the right common carotid artery with elastase. Ten animals were treated with porous stents alone, 10 animals with stent grafts (covered stents), and 10 animals with stents and additional coiling via the interstices of the stent, which enabled dense packing of the coils. Five animals in each group were observed for 1 month and the other animals for 3 months. Histological analyses were performed, including immunohistochemical investigations for estimating the proliferation of the intima and possible inflammatory infiltration. Results Covered stents led to a complete and stable aneurysm occlusion with only minimal proliferative carrier vessel wall changes. One covered stent was completely occluded with old thrombus, and the other 9 remained patent. Porous stents occluded two of five aneurysms in the 1-month follow-up group and four of five after 3 months. However, progressive sprouting of neointima inside the carrier vessel that resulted in a stenosis of up to 40% was present. In the Stent + Coil group, one aneurysm showed recanalization after 1 month, and three of five aneurysms were recanalized after 3 months after coil compaction. Moreover, in-stent stenosis of up to 30% was present. Conclusion This study demonstrates the possible shortcomings and problems of emerging stent techniques to treat intracerebral aneurysms, shows where technical advances have to be made, and describes in which cases of aneurysm morphology caution has to be exercised when considering an endovascular approach using stents.
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- 2005
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28. Fifteen-year follow-up of a patient with beta thalassaemia and extramedullary haematopoietic tissue compressing the spinal cord
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Pascal Niggemann, Armin Thron, Timo Krings, and Franz-Josef Hans
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Thoracic Vertebrae ,Lesion ,Spinal cord compression ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neuroradiology ,business.industry ,beta-Thalassemia ,medicine.disease ,Spinal cord ,Surgery ,Radiation therapy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Hematopoiesis, Extramedullary ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neurosurgery ,medicine.symptom ,Differential diagnosis ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Spinal Cord Compression ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
A long-term follow-up of a patient with beta thalassaemia with intra- and extraspinal extramedullary haematopoietic tissue compressing the spinal cord is presented. Extramedullary haematopoietic nodules are a rare cause of spinal cord compression and should be included in the differential diagnosis, especially in patients from Mediterranean countries. Treatment with radiation therapy solely failed, giving rise to the need of surgical intervention. Surgical decompression of the spine and the removal of the culprit lesion compressing the spine were performed. Postinterventional radiation therapy was applied to the spine. A relapse had to be treated again by surgical means combined with postinterventional radiation therapy. A complete relief of the symptoms and control of the lesion could be obtained.
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- 2005
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29. The neural correlate of very-long-term picture priming
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Timo Krings, H. Foltys, Armin Thron, Jürgen Weidemann, Henning Brand, Rudolf Töpper, Ingo G. Meister, Klaus Willmes, and Babak Boroojerdi
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Temporal cortex ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,General Neuroscience ,Repetition priming ,Posterior parietal cortex ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Functional imaging ,medicine ,Implicit memory ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Psychology ,Priming (psychology) ,Neuroscience ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Repetition priming denotes a behavioural change caused by prior exposure to a stimulus. The effect is known to last for weeks. This study addresses the underlying neural mechanisms for very-long-term picture priming by using event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging complemented by a behavioural paradigm. Previous functional imaging studies with shorter retention intervals have shown that priming is associated with changes in the activity of both the occipital and posterior temporal cortex. In this study we compared retention intervals of 1 day and 6 weeks after initial exposure to a picture stimulus. Priming-related decreases in cortical activity in posterior extrastriate and dorsal left inferior frontal areas were found only for the shorter retention interval. In contrast, fMRI activation in the inferior posterior temporal and anterior left inferior frontal cortex was reduced following priming for both retention intervals. In the behavioural paradigm, the priming effect was stable over time. We conclude that the left inferior frontal and inferior posterior temporal cortex play a key role in the very-long-term priming effect.
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- 2005
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30. Effects of long-term practice and task complexity in musicians and nonmusicians performing simple and complex motor tasks: Implications for cortical motor organization
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Timo Krings, Babak Boroojerdi, Armin Thron, Rudolf Töpper, Ingo G. Meister, Mareike Müller, and H. Foltys
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Adult ,Male ,Time Factors ,Movement ,Muscle memory ,Functional Laterality ,Premotor cortex ,Cognition ,Parietal Lobe ,Motor system ,medicine ,Humans ,Learning ,Attention ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Research Articles ,Motor skill ,Brain Mapping ,Neuronal Plasticity ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,Supplementary motor area ,Motor Cortex ,Motor control ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,Motor Skills ,Physical Fitness ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Nerve Net ,Anatomy ,Psychology ,Motor learning ,Neuroscience ,Music ,Motor cortex - Abstract
Motor practice induces plastic changes within the cortical motor system. Whereas rapidly evolving changes of cortical motor representations were the subject of a number of recent studies, effects of long‐term practice on the motor system are so far poorly understood. In the present study pianists and nonmusicians were investigated using functional magnetic resonance imaging. Both groups performed simple and complex movement sequences on a keyboard with the right hand, the tasks requiring different levels of ordinal complexity. The aim of this study was to characterize motor representations related to sequence complexity and to long‐term motor practice. In nonmusicians, complex motor sequences showed higher fMRI activations of the presupplementary motor area (pre‐SMA) and the rostral part of the dorsal premotor cortex (PMd) compared to simple motor sequences, whereas musicians showed no differential activations. These results may reflect the higher level of visuomotor integration required in the complex task in nonmusicians, whereas in musicians this rostral premotor network was employed during both tasks. Comparison of subject groups revealed increased activation of a more caudal premotor network in nonmusicians comprising the caudal part of the PMd and the supplementary motor area. This supports recent results suggesting a specialization within PMd. Furthermore, we conclude that plasticity due to long‐term practice mainly occurs in caudal motor areas directly related to motor execution. The slowly evolving changes in M1 during motor skill learning may extend to adjacent areas, leading to more effective motor representations in pianists. Hum Brain Mapp, 2005. © 2005 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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- 2005
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31. White-matter disease in 18q deletion (18q?) syndrome: magnetic resonance spectroscopy indicates demyelination or increased myelin turnover rather than dysmyelination
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W. Moller-Hartmann, Klaus Zerres, Martin Häusler, H. Schuler, D. Anhuf, Armin Thron, and Vincent Ramaekers
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Neurology ,Glutamic Acid ,Disease ,Deletion 18q Syndrome ,Choline ,White matter ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Myelin ,Nuclear magnetic resonance ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Myelin Sheath ,Aspartic Acid ,Brain Diseases ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Infant ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Chromosome Deletion ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 18 ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Inositol ,Demyelinating Diseases ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopic data ((1)H-MR spectroscopy) of patients with 18q deletion syndrome have not yet been reported. (1)H-MR spectroscopy, performed in an affected 2-year-old girl with markedly delayed neuromotor development and typical supratentorial white-matter disease (WMD), showed an increase of choline and alpha-glutamate concentrations. Eight months later, simultaneously with clinical improvement, alpha-glutamate had normalised whereas choline remained slightly increased. Active demyelination or increased myelin turnover might contribute to the hitherto unexplained WMD of this rare disorder.
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- 2005
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32. Frame-based and frameless stereotactic hematoma puncture and subsequent fibrinolytic therapy for the treatment of spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage
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Joachim M. Gilsbach, L. Mayfrank, Ruth Thiex, Veit Rohde, Armin Thron, Zeliha Zeki, Eberhard Uhl, and Ina Rohde
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Blood volume ,Punctures ,Infections ,Stereotaxic Techniques ,Hematoma ,Recurrence ,Fibrinolysis ,medicine ,Humans ,Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures ,Thrombolytic Therapy ,Aged ,Cerebral Hemorrhage ,Retrospective Studies ,Neuroradiology ,Intracerebral hemorrhage ,business.industry ,Glasgow Outcome Scale ,Retrospective cohort study ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Catheter ,Treatment Outcome ,Neurology ,Anesthesia ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business - Abstract
Comparison of two minimally invasive procedures for the treatment of intracerebral hemorrhage and subsequent lysis with regard to technical implications and clinical outcome of the patients. Retrospective analysis of 126 patients with spontaneous supratentorial intracerebral hemorrhage treated by frame-based (n=53) or frameless (n=75) hematoma aspiration and subsequent fibrinolysis with recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rt-PA). Data were analysed for the whole group as well as for the two subsets of patients with regard to hematoma reduction, procedure-related complications, and the early and long term clinical outcome of the patients. Functional outcome was rated using the Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS) and Barthel-Index (median follow-up 178 weeks). The prognostic impact of patient related covariates on the GOS was analysed using logistic regression analysis. 49 out of 126 patients (38.9 %) died, 25 of them in the early postoperative period. Only 22/126 (17.5 %) had a favorable long term outcome (GOS >3). Age > 65 years was significantly (p
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- 2004
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33. Clinical hypnosis modulates functional magnetic resonance imaging signal intensities and pain perception in a thermal stimulation paradigm
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Timo Krings, Sebastian Schulz-Stübner, Rolf Rossaint, Stefen Rex, Armin Thron, and Ingo G. Meister
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Pain Threshold ,Hypnosis ,Hot Temperature ,Thalamus ,Precuneus ,Pain ,Brain mapping ,Basal ganglia ,medicine ,Humans ,Brain Mapping ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Echo-Planar Imaging ,business.industry ,Brain ,General Medicine ,Oxygen ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Nociception ,Visual cortex ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Anesthesia ,Perception ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,business ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Objective This study was designed to describe regional changes in blood oxygenation level dependent signals in functional magnetic resonance images (fMRI) elicited by thermal pain in hypnotized subjects. These signals approximately identify the neural correlates of the applied stimulation to identify neuroanatomic structures involved in the putative effects of clinical hypnosis on pain perception. Methods After determination of the heat pain threshold of 12 healthy volunteers, fMRI scans were performed at 1.5 Tesla by using echoplanar imaging technique during repeated painful heat stimuli. Activation of brain regions in response to thermal pain during hypnosis (using a fixation and command technique of hypnosis) was compared with responses without hypnosis. Results With hypnosis, less activation in the primary sensory cortex, the middle cingulate gyrus, precuneus, and the visual cortex was found. An increased activation was seen in the anterior basal ganglia and the left anterior cingulate cortex. There was no difference in activation within the right anterior cingulate gyrus in our fMRI studies. No activation was seen within the brainstem and thalamus under either condition. Conclusion Our observations indicate that clinical hypnosis may prevent nociceptive inputs from reaching the higher cortical structures responsible for pain perception. Whether the effects of hypnosis can be explained by increased activation of the left anterior cingulate cortex and the basal ganglia as part of a possible inhibitory pathway on pain perception remains speculative given the limitations of our study design.
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- 2004
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34. Memory-related hippocampal dysfunction in poly-drug ecstasy (3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine) users
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Euphrosyne Gouzoulis-Mayfrank, Karsten Heekeren, Thomas Fischermann, Jörg Daumann, Katharina Henke, Armin Thron, University of Zurich, and Gouzoulis-Mayfrank, E
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Adult ,Male ,Substance-Related Disorders ,N-Methyl-3,4-methylenedioxyamphetamine ,Ecstasy ,Hippocampus ,610 Medicine & health ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Hippocampal formation ,Brain mapping ,Reaction Time ,medicine ,Humans ,Episodic memory ,Cannabis ,Pharmacology ,Brain Mapping ,Memory Disorders ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,MDMA ,Cognition ,11359 Institute for Regenerative Medicine (IREM) ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Oxygen ,Amphetamine ,3004 Pharmacology ,Hallucinogens ,Female ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,medicine.drug - Abstract
3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA, ecstasy) is neurotoxic in animal studies and its use has been associated with cognitive impairments in humans. To study hippocampal activation during the retrieval from episodic memory in polyvalent users of ecstasy. Twelve polyvalent ecstasy users and twelve matched controls were examined by means of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) while they retrieved face-profession associations from episodic memory. Ecstasy users had a normal structural MRI scan without focal brain lesions or anatomical abnormalities. They exhibited equal retrieval accuracy during memory retrieval to that of the matched controls. Yet, their retrieval-related activity was lower and more spatially restricted in the left anterior hippocampus than that of the controls. These results provide evidence for abnormal hippocampal functioning in MDMA users even at the presence of normal memory performance. This finding may be linked to MDMA-induced neurotoxicity and suggests that diminished hippocampal activation during memory retrieval might be a more sensitive or earlier index of MDMA-related neurotoxicity than neuropsychological performance.
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- 2004
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35. Functional and Diffusion-Weighted Magnetic Resonance Imaging for Visualization of the Postthalamic Visual Fiber Tracts and the Visual Cortex
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Timo Krings, M. H. T. Reinges, Armin Thron, F. J. Hans, H. Kränzlein, and Joachim M. Gilsbach
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Adult ,Male ,Neuronavigation ,Visual perception ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,White matter ,Reference Values ,medicine ,Humans ,Contrast (vision) ,Visual Pathways ,Visual Cortex ,media_common ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Middle Aged ,Functional imaging ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Visual cortex ,Visual Perception ,Female ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Diffusion MRI - Abstract
Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) offers the possibility to study the course of the cerebral white matter tracts whereas functional MRI (fMRI) provides information about the specific functions of cortical areas. We evaluated the combination of fMRI and diffusion-weighted MRI to detect cortical visual areas with their corresponding visual fiber tracts in 15 healthy controls (age: 23 - 53 years, male : female = 8 : 7). We demonstrated activation within the primary visual cortex and white matter bundles connecting the lateral geniculate body and the striate cortex in all subjects investigated. Additional activation could be appreciated in some subjects within the lateral geniculate bodies (n = 2) and the motion-sensitive area V5 (n = 3). The combination of diffusion-weighted and functional imaging allows visualization of the origin, direction and functionality of large white matter tracts. This will prove helpful for imaging structural connectivity within the brain during functional imaging. Moreover, this technique might provide important information for neurosurgical patients presenting with space-occupying lesions close to the cortical and subcortical visual system since this technique can -- in contrast to diffusion tensor imaging -- easily be adopted into a neuronavigation system and can be performed on all MR scanners capable of diffusion-weighted imaging without specific post-processing programs.
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- 2004
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36. Contrast-Enhanced MR Angiography of the Spinal Arteries: Current Possibilities and Limitations
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Armin Thron, M. Mull, J. T. Wilmink, Walter H. Backes, and Robbert J. Nijenhuis
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Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Mr angiography ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Contrast (vision) ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neurology (clinical) ,Current (fluid) ,business ,Nuclear medicine ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,media_common - Published
- 2004
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37. Playing piano in the mind—an fMRI study on music imagery and performance in pianists
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Ingo G. Meister, Armin Thron, Timo Krings, M Müller, H. Foltys, Babak Boroojerdi, and Rudolf Töpper
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Adult ,Male ,Musical notation ,genetic structures ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Precuneus ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Motor imagery ,medicine ,Humans ,Temporal dynamics of music and language ,Motor skill ,Cognitive neuroscience of music ,Brain ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,humanities ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Imagination ,Auditory imagery ,Female ,Nerve Net ,Primary motor cortex ,Psychology ,human activities ,Neuroscience ,Music ,Psychomotor Performance ,psychological phenomena and processes ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Reading of musical notes and playing piano is a very complex motor task which requires years of practice. In addition to motor skills, rapid and effective visuomotor transformation as well as processing of the different components of music like pitch, rhythm and musical texture are involved. The aim of the present study was the investigation of the cortical network which mediates music performance compared to music imagery in 12 music academy students playing the right hand part of a Bartok piece using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). In both conditions, fMRI activations of a bilateral frontoparietal network comprising the premotor areas, the precuneus and the medial part of Brodmann Area 40 were found. During music performance but not during imagery the contralateral primary motor cortex and posterior parietal cortex (PPC) bilaterally was active. This reflects the role of primary motor cortex for motor execution but not imagery and the higher visuomotor integration requirements during music performance compared to simulation. The notion that the same areas are involved in visuomotor transformation/motor planning and music processing emphasizes the multimodal properties of cortical areas involved in music and motor imagery in musicians.
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- 2004
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38. Functional MRI in healthy subjects during acupuncture: different effects of needle rotation in real and false acupoints
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Armin Thron, J. Weidemann, Timo Krings, J. L. Fang, and Ingo G. Meister
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Rotation ,Thalamus ,Acupuncture Therapy ,Stimulation ,Somatosensory system ,Reference Values ,Acupuncture ,medicine ,Humans ,Single-Blind Method ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Dry needling ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Foot ,business.industry ,Brain ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Middle Aged ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Surgery ,Functional imaging ,Needles ,Anesthesia ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,business - Abstract
The cerebral activation pattern due to acupuncture is not completely understood. Although the effect of acupuncture on cerebral haemodynamics has been studied, no previous report has focused on different puncture and stimulation methods. We used functional MRI (fMRI) in 15 healthy subjects to investigate cortical activation during stimulation of two real acupoints (Liv3 and G40) and one sham point, needled in a random and, for the subjects, blinded order employing rotating and non-rotating methods, using a blocked paradigm on a 1.5 tesla imager. Compared to the non-rotating stimulation method, during rotating stimulation of the real acupoints, we observed an increase in activation in both secondary somatosensory cortical areas, frontal areas, the right side of the thalamus and the left side of the cerebellum; no such effects of the needling technique were seen while stimulating the sham point. The observation that rotating the needle strengthened the effects of acupuncture only at real acupoints suggests that, as claimed in Chinese traditional medicine, stimulation of these acupoints has a specific effect on cortical neuronal activity, absent with sham acupoints. These specific cerebral activation patterns might explain the therapeutic effects of acupuncture in certain subjects.
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- 2004
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39. Double spinal dural arteriovenous fistulas: case report and review of the literature
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Timo Krings, Michael Mull, Armin Thron, and M. H. T. Reinges
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Male ,Reoperation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Fistula ,Arteriovenous fistula ,Spinal Cord Diseases ,Dural arteriovenous fistulas ,Humans ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neuroradiology ,Central Nervous System Vascular Malformations ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Vascular malformation ,Lumbosacral Region ,Angiography, Digital Subtraction ,Arteriovenous malformation ,Digital subtraction angiography ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Surgery ,Angiography ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Spinal dural arteriovenous fistula (SDAVF) is the most common spinal vascular malformation. It mainly affects men after the fifth decade and is usually an acquired lesion with an unknown etiology. We report on a patient with the unusual finding of two separate SDAVFs at the level of L1 on the right and L2 on the left side. Initial selective spinal digital subtraction angiography (DSA) was terminated with demonstration of a SDAVF at the level of L1 but incomplete demonstration of all segmental arteries. Due to a recurrent deterioration of the patient's neurological status, and persistent pathological vessels seen on MRI, a second spinal DSA was performed 6 years later, demonstrating the second fistula at the level of L2 on the left side with a separate venous drainage pattern. A retrospective analysis of the angiographic films suggested that both fistulas had already been present 6 years previously. This conclusion is justified because of a transient and faint opacification of the left L2 fistula demonstrated on the films after injection of the right L2 segmental artery. We conclude that in the case of incomplete angiography and persistent clinical and MR findings not only reopening of the treated SDAVF has to be taken into account but also the existence of a second fistula. Since this is the first case of a double fistula in our series of 129 SDAVFs, and given the few reported cases of double SDAVFs, we do not think that completion of selective spinal DSA has to be postulated routinely after a fistula has been found. However, repeat angiography should be performed in patients who continue to deteriorate, fail to improve with persisting MRI pathologies, or demonstrate delayed deterioration after a period of improvement.
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- 2004
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40. Haemorrhagic tracheal necrosis as a lethal complication of an aneurysm model in rabbits via endoluminal incubation with elastase
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Franz-Josef Hans, W. Möller-Hartmann, Ruth Thiex, Joachim M. Gilsbach, K. Scherer, A. Brunn, Armin Thron, and Timo Krings
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Necrosis ,Carotid Artery, Common ,Carotid arteries ,Hemorrhage ,Aneurysm ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,cardiovascular diseases ,Incubation ,Tracheal Diseases ,Pancreatic Elastase ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Elastase ,Intracranial Aneurysm ,Interventional radiology ,Balloon Occlusion ,respiratory system ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Radiography ,Disease Models, Animal ,Instillation, Drug ,cardiovascular system ,Female ,Rabbits ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Complication - Abstract
We describe a lethal complication of an aneurysm model in rabbits for saccular aneurysmal creation via endoluminal incubation with elastase.In 24 anaesthetized female New Zealand White rabbits, the right common carotid artery (CCA) was ligated distally to the arteriotomy. A 4F sheath was then placed retrograde into the CCA, and its origin was occluded endoluminally using a 2F Fogarty balloon. Elastase was incubated above the balloon in the separated vessel lumen for the duration of 20 minutes. Two weeks later, digital subtraction angiography was performed for aneurysm control. Two animals were then sacrificed and the aneurysm studied on histology. All animals that died within the experiment were examined post-mortem.Following this protocol, an aneurysm with a mean size of 7.6 x 3.2 mm could be created in 11 out of 24 animals. 9 out of 13 animals with lethal outcome died from haemorrhagic necrosis of the trachea with subsequent pulmonary complications. DSA releaved an arterial branch originating from the proximal CCA in a near 90 degree-angle aiming at the trachea.The endoluminal incubation with elastase is suitable for aneurysm creation of reproducible size that are suited to test new endovascular devices such as stents and new coils. One should always be aware of an arterial branch of the CCA supplying the trachea. In case of elastase instillation into this branch, lethal haemorrhagic necrosis of the trachea occurs. Bearing this complication in mind, we have experienced a minimal loss of animals in subsequent studies.
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- 2004
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41. Endovascular Creation of Saccular Aneurysms in Rabbits via Intraluminal Incubation with Elastase
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Ruth Thiex, A. Brunn, Armin Thron, Franz-Josef Hans, Timo Krings, W. Möller-Hartmann, and Joachim M. Gilsbach
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,business.industry ,Elastase ,medicine.disease ,Saccular aneurysm ,Surgery ,Aneurysm ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,Endovascular treatment ,business ,Incubation - Published
- 2003
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42. A refined method for creating saccular aneurysms in the rabbit
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Ruth Thiex, Joachim M. Gilsbach, W. Möller-Hartmann, Franz-Josef Hans, Klaus-Peter Stein, Heiko Dreeskamp, K. Scherer, A. Meetz, A. Brunn, Armin Thron, and Timo Krings
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Carotid Artery, Common ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Balloon ,Magnetic resonance angiography ,Catheterization ,Aneurysm ,Right Common Carotid Artery ,medicine ,Animals ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,cardiovascular diseases ,Embolization ,Ligation ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Models, Cardiovascular ,Angiography, Digital Subtraction ,Intracranial Aneurysm ,Digital subtraction angiography ,Elastic Tissue ,Internal elastic lamina ,medicine.disease ,Embolization, Therapeutic ,Disease Models, Animal ,Angiography ,cardiovascular system ,Female ,Rabbits ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Magnetic Resonance Angiography - Abstract
We describe a refined animal model of human intracerebral aneurysms for testing endovascular devices for interventional neuroradiological procedures. Saccular aneurysms resulting from a stump of the right common carotid artery (CCA) were created in 15 New Zealand White rabbits by intraluminal incubation of elastase that was applied to the CCA after distal ligation of the CCA and proximal occlusion of the vessel using a pliable balloon. Subsequently a microcatheter was advanced to a position cranial to the balloon and the elastase was infused under fluoroscopic guidance to avoid retrograde flow to the trachea via aberrant vessels. Contrast-enhanced (CE) MRA at 1.5 T and conventional digital subtraction angiography was performed to test for aneurysm size, morphology and neck anatomy. In all 15 animals aneurysms resulted from the stump of the right CCA, ranging in size from 2.0 to 9.9 mm (mean 6.3 mm) in craniocaudal direction, 1.0 to 5.5 mm (mean 3.8 mm) in mediolateral direction and 1.0 to 3.8 mm (mean 2.4 mm) in neck diameter. Aneurysm morphology could be adequately demonstrated using CE MRA. On histological evaluation a loss of the internal elastic lamina was noted. The described method represents an easy, reliable, and reproducible method of aneurysm creation in the rabbit in an area of high shear stress. These aneurysms can be used for testing new endovascular devices for embolization of intracranial aneurysms.
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- 2003
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43. Cerebral activation in abstinent ecstasy (MDMA) users during a working memory task: a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study
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Bruno Fimm, Klaus Willmes, Euphrosyne Gouzoulis-Mayfrank, Jörg Daumann, and Armin Thron
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Adult ,Male ,N-Methyl-3,4-methylenedioxyamphetamine ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Ecstasy ,Posterior parietal cortex ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Functional Laterality ,Education ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Cognition ,Parietal Lobe ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Reaction Time ,medicine ,Humans ,Cerebral Cortex ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Working memory ,MDMA ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Functional imaging ,Memory, Short-Term ,Hallucinogens ,Female ,Psychology ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Neurocognitive ,Neuroscience ,Psychomotor Performance ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The popular recreational drug ecstasy (3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine=MDMA and related congeners) is neurotoxic upon central serotonergic systems in animal studies. So far, the most convincing evidence for neurotoxicity-related functional deficits in humans derives from neurocognitive studies demonstrating dose-related long-term learning and memory problems in ecstasy users. In our study we used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and a working memory task to investigate cerebral activation in eleven heavy, but currently abstinent MDMA users and two equally sized groups of moderate users and non-users. There were no significant group differences in working memory performance and no differences in cortical activation patterns for a conservative level of significance. However, for a more liberal statistical criterion, both user groups showed stronger activations than controls in right parietal cortex. Furthermore, heavy users had a weaker blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) response than moderate users and controls in frontal and temporal areas. Our results may indicate subtle altered brain functioning associated with prior MDMA use, although alternative interpretations of these group differences must be considered.
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- 2003
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44. Endovascular treatment of experimental aneurysms in rabbits using Guglielmi detachable coils - a feasibility study
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Franz-Josef Hans, A. Meetz, Ruth Thiex, Timo Krings, Heiko Dreeskamp, W. Möller-Hartmann, Armin Thron, Klaus-Peter Stein, and Joachim M. Gilsbach
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Aneurysm ,Right Common Carotid Artery ,Occlusion ,Animals ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,cardiovascular diseases ,Embolization ,Interventional neuroradiology ,Neuroradiology ,Guglielmi detachable coil ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Embolization, Therapeutic ,Cerebral Angiography ,Disease Models, Animal ,cardiovascular system ,Feasibility Studies ,Rabbits ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Ligation - Abstract
The Guglielmi detachable coil (GDC) has been generally accepted for treatment of intracranial aneurysms. Preclinical testing of new coil developments requires animal models of aneurysms which imitate human aneurysms in size, configuration and neck morphology. We assessed in detail the technical requirements and steps for transfemoral treatment of experimentally induced aneurysms at the top of the brachiocephalic trunk (TBC) in rabbits. We created aneurysms in five rabbits by distal ligation and intraluminal incubation of the right common carotid artery with elastase. All animals were treated successfully 2-3 weeks after induction of the aneurysm, with dense packing of the coils. No complications related to the procedures occurred. The study demonstrates that our animal model can be a suitable method for testing the biocompatibility and occlusion rate of new embolic materials.
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- 2002
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45. Preoperative assessment of motor cortex and pyramidal tracts in central cavernoma employing functional and diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging
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Volker A. Coenen, Heidi Kränzlein, W. Möller-Hartmann, Timo Krings, Jürgen Weidemann, L. Mayfrank, and Armin Thron
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Adult ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neuronavigation ,Pyramidal Tracts ,White matter ,Central nervous system disease ,Cortex (anatomy) ,Preoperative Care ,Motor system ,medicine ,Humans ,Pyramidal tracts ,Rupture, Spontaneous ,Brain Neoplasms ,business.industry ,Motor Cortex ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Paresis ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Hemangioma, Cavernous ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,business ,Diffusion MRI ,Motor cortex - Abstract
BACKGROUND Functional MRI (fMRI) combines anatomic with functional information and has therefore been widely used for preoperative planning of patients with mass lesions affecting functionally important brain regions. However, the courses of functionally important fiber tracts are not visualized. We therefore propose to combine fMRI with diffusion-weighted MRI (DWI) that allows visualization of large fiber tracts and to implement this data in a neuronavigation system. METHODS DWI was successfully performed at a field strength of 1.5 Tesla, employing a spin-echo sequence with gradient sensitivity in six noncollinear directions to visualize the course of the pyramidal tracts, and was combined with echo-planar T2* fMRI during a hand motor task in a patient with central cavernoma. RESULTS Fusion of both data sets allowed visualization of the displacement of both the primary sensorimotor area (M1) and its large descending fiber tracts. Intraoperatively, these data were used to aid in neuronavigation. Confirmation was obtained by intraoperative electrical stimulation. Postoperative MRI revealed an undisrupted pyramidal tract in the neurologically intact patient. CONCLUSION The combination of fMRI with DWI allows for assessment of functionally important cortical areas and additional visualization of large fiber tracts. Information about the orientation of fiber tracts in normal appearing white matter in patients with tumors within the cortical motor system cannot be obtained by other functional or conventional imaging methods and is vital for reducing operative morbidity as the information about functional cortex. This technique might, therefore, have the prospect of guiding neurosurgical interventions, especially when linked to a neuronavigation system.
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- 2002
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46. Functional MRI and 18F FDG-Positron Emission Tomography for Presurgical Planning: Comparison with Electrical Cortical Stimulation
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Joachim M. Gilsbach, M. Schreckenberger, Veit Rohde, M. H. T. Reinges, Uwe Spetzger, Franz-Josef Hans, Philipp T. Meyer, W. Möller-Hartmann, Osama Sabri, Armin Thron, Timo Krings, and Udalrich Buell
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Stereotaxic Techniques ,Central nervous system disease ,Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 ,medicine ,Humans ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Aged ,Neuroradiology ,Cerebral Cortex ,Brain Mapping ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Brain Neoplasms ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Electric Stimulation ,Oxygen ,Functional imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Positron emission tomography ,Stereotaxic technique ,Female ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Tomography ,Artifacts ,Energy Metabolism ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,Tomography, Emission-Computed ,Motor cortex - Abstract
Background: In patients with mass lesions near “eloquent” cortical areas different preoperative mapping techniques can be used. Two of the most widely used approaches include positron emission tomography (PET) and functional MRI (fMRI). We employed both methods in the same patients undergoing presurgical evaluation and compared the results to those obtained by direct electrical cortical stimulation (DECS). Method: 22 patients with tumours of different aetiology near the central region were investigated. FMRI was performed using a T2*-weighted gradient-echo BOLD sequence at 1.5 T, PET was performed after injection of 122–301 MBq 18F-Fluorodeoxyglucose (18-FDG) under rest and activation conditions. DECS was performed in all patients with recordings of muscles primarily involved in the investigated tasks. Findings: In 19 patients all three modalities could be compared, 1 patient demonstrated discordance between fMRI and PET with DECS speaking in favour of fMRI, 6 patients had neighbouring results of PET and fMRI (between 1–2 cm distance), 12 patients had overlapping results. Interpretation: The high incidence of neighbouring results is presumably related to fMRI specific artefacts. Advantages of fMRI are: Higher spatial and temporal resolution, more and different functional runs, shorter examination time, wider availability, longitudinal examinations, non-invasiveness and cost-effectiveness, easy registration to anatomical images. Advantages of PET are: higher signal-to-noise ratio, lesser susceptibility to artefacts (motion, draining veins), evaluation of tumour metabolism. It is our opinion that the neurosurgeon has to decide on a case-by-case basis which study suits his specific needs in the presurgical evaluation of his patient.
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- 2002
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47. Mehrschicht-Spiral-CT und MRT in der Diagnostik einer komplexen Diastematomyelie
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Andreas Kochs, Timo Krings, Stephan Dammert, and Armin Thron
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Gynecology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neurology (clinical) ,business - Abstract
Hintergrund: Die Diastematomyelie ist zumeist Teil einer komplexen Fehlbildung der Wirbelsaule und ist haufig mit Wirbelkorperanomalien, einer Spina bifida oder einem intraspinalen Lipom assoziiert. Methode: Zur kompletten Charakterisierung der Fehlbildung sollte deshalb neben der MRT als Methode der Wahl die Mehrschicht-Spiral-CT zur uberlagerungsfreien Darstellung der knochernen Strukturen und Festlegung des therapeutischen Procedere eingesetzt werden. Fallbeschreibung: Wir berichten uber eine Patientin, die neben multisegmentalen Diastematomyelien und Wirbelkorperfehlbildungen zwei intraspinale Lipome aufwies.
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- 2002
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48. Time-of-flight-, phase contrast and contrast enhanced magnetic resonance angiography for pre-interventional determination of aneurysm size, configuration, and neck morphology in an aneurysm model in rabbits
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Heiko Dreeskamp, Timo Krings, Edward Allery, Franz-Josef Hans, Klaus-Peter Stein, A. Brunn, Armin Thron, Ruth Thiex, K. Scherer, A. Meetz, and W. Möller-Hartmann
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Carotid Artery Diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Carotid Artery, Common ,Balloon ,Magnetic resonance angiography ,Aneurysm ,Right Common Carotid Artery ,medicine ,Animals ,cardiovascular diseases ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Digital subtraction angiography ,medicine.disease ,Disease Models, Animal ,Angiography ,cardiovascular system ,Female ,Rabbits ,Radiology ,business ,Ligation ,Magnetic Resonance Angiography - Abstract
We describe three different magnetic resonance (MR)-angiography techniques to evaluate aneurysm size, configuration, and neck morphology of experimentally created aneurysms in a rabbit model. In five New Zealand White rabbits an aneurysm was created by endovascular occlusion of the right common carotid artery (CCA) using a pliable balloon and subsequent endoluminal incubation of elastase within the proximal CCA above the balloon and distal ligation of the vessel. In all animals, time-of-flight (TOF), phase contrast and contrast enhanced (CE) MR angiographies (MRA) were performed and compared to conventional digital subtraction angiography results. We found, that aneurysms are best visualized employing CE MRA, however, neck morphology was also found to demonstrate interpretable results when evaluating the axial source data of the TOF MRA. The animal model we used can be employed for testing endovascular devices such as new coil material, or covered stents. The described MRA techniques might then be helpful for pre-interventional planning and maybe even for the follow-up of the thus treated aneurysms.
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- 2002
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49. Virtual endoscopy combined with intraoperative neuronavigation for planning of endoscopic surgery in patients with occlusive hydrocephalus and intracranial cysts
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Markus Kilbinger, Armin Thron, Veit Rohde, Patrick Haage, Gabriele A. Krombach, and T Struffert
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neuronavigation ,Adolescent ,Endoscope ,Cerebral Ventricles ,Stereotaxic Techniques ,Intraoperative Period ,User-Computer Interface ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Child ,Aged ,Brain Diseases ,Third ventricle ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Cysts ,business.industry ,Endoscopic third ventriculostomy ,Infant ,Endoscopy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Surgery ,Hydrocephalus ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Child, Preschool ,Stereotaxic technique ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,Neurosurgery ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
We assessed the clinical value of MR ventriculoscopy (virtual endoscopy, VE) combined with image-guided frameless stereotaxy for endoscopic surgery of occlusive hydrocephalus and intracranial cysts. VE was obtained in 20 patients with hydrocephalus and three with intracranial cysts. All surgical operations were endoscopic. The path of the rigid endoscope to the target point was planned using neuronavigation. VE was carried out along the same trajectory retrospectively in 20 cases and prospectively in three. The results were analysed for demonstration of anatomical landmarks and structures at risk. VE was successful in all patients. Possible obstacles to endoscopic access to the lamina terminalis and the basal cisterns and structures at risk, such as the basilar artery, were clearly shown in relation to the direction of the endoscope. However, the floor of the third ventricle and septum pellucidum were not clearly seen and possible abnormalities could therefore not be appreciated. VE can provide realistic simulation of endoscopic third ventriculostomy and cystostomy. The appropriate trepanation point and trajectory of the endoscope can be assessed with regard to the size of the foramen of Monro and the position of vulnerable structures. This simulated trajectory can be adapted to the field of operation by image-guided neuronavigation. This regime may potentially reduce the risk of damage to intracranial structures.
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- 2002
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50. [Untitled]
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Armin Thron, Franz-Josef Hans, M. H. T. Reinges, Timo Krings, M. Hoeller, and Joachim M. Gilsbach
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Sensory stimulation therapy ,Fist ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Movement (music) ,business.industry ,Body movement ,Sensory system ,Audiology ,body regions ,Functional imaging ,Medicine ,Surgery ,sense organs ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Sensorimotor cortex - Abstract
The authors evaluated the impact of motion artefacts on presurgical mapping of the sensorimotor cortex with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Different mapping paradigms were compared with regard to the frequency of motion artefacts and the resulting signal increase. 94 surgical candidates with mass lesions near the central region were investigated using BOLD1-contrast T2* weighted multislice multi-echo EPI gradient echo sequences on a 1,5 T Philips Gyroscan. Three functional paradigms were performed: a) repetitive self-paced clenching of the hand to a fist (68 runs); b) repetitive finger-to-thumb opposition (46 runs); c) sensory stimulation by repetitive brushing of the palm (15 runs). Task-related haemodynamic changes were identified by statistical analysis with the Kolmogorov-Smirnov-test. MR signal increase in percent was calculated for each of the paradigms. Motion artefacts were rated on a scale from 1 to 3. Severe motion artefacts occurred in 8 hand clenching runs and in 2 finger opposition runs. Artefacts were more pronounced in hand clenching than in finger opposition. There were no motion artefacts in any of the sensory stimulation runs. Concerning the percent MR signal change there was no significant difference between hand clenching and finger opposition (T-test: p>0,5) but a highly significant difference (p
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- 2002
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