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Featured researches published by A.A. Mueller.


Oral Surgery Oral Medicine Oral Pathology Oral Radiology and Endodontology | 2009

Oral bacterial cultures in nontraumatic brain abscesses: results of a first-line study.

A.A. Mueller; Belma Saldamli; Stefan Stübinger; Clemens Walter; Ursüla Flückiger; Adrian Merlo; K. Schwenzer-Zimmerer; Hans-Florian Zeilhofer; S. Zimmerer

OBJECTIVE Bacterial cultures from nontraumatic brain abscesses (BAs) frequently contain oral bacteria. We assessed bacterial cultures from BAs and oral infective sources for a bacterial match. STUDY DESIGN Bacterial samples from brain abscesses and oral abscesses, and at sites with probing depths >or=3.5 mm were taken from 11 nontraumatic BA patients and analyzed. RESULTS Brain abscess bacterial cultures were obtained in 9 of the 11 cases, which revealed 5 cases of Streptococcus milleri group bacteria and 4 cases of subgingival flora. The bacteriologic results were interpreted taking all medical and bacteriologic findings into account, which made an oral origin of the BAs most likely in 6 of the 11 cases: from an oral abscess and from the subgingival flora in 3 cases each. CONCLUSIONS Early collaboration between neurosurgeons, infectious disease specialists, and oral-maxillofacial surgeons will aid the identification and treatment of suspected oral sources of nontraumatic BAs.


Journal of Cranio-maxillofacial Surgery | 2014

Microsurgical reconstruction of the head and neck – Current concepts of maxillofacial surgery in Europe

Katinka Kansy; A.A. Mueller; Thomas Mücke; Jean-Baptiste Kopp; Friederike Koersgen; Klaus Dietrich Wolff; Hans-Florian Zeilhofer; Frank Hölzle; Winnie Pradel; Matthias Schneider; Andreas Kolk; Ralf Smeets; Julio Acero; Jürgen Hoffmann

INTRODUCTION Microvascular surgery following tumour resection has become an important field of oral maxillofacial surgery (OMFS). This paper aims to evaluate current microsurgical practice in Europe. METHODS The questionnaire of the DOESAK collaborative group for Microsurgical Reconstruction was translated into English, transformed into an online based survey and distributed to 200 OMFS units with the aid of the European Association for Cranio-Maxillo-Facial Surgery (EACMFS). RESULTS 65 complete and 72 incomplete questionnaires were returned. Hospitals from the United Kingdom, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain, Belgium, Greece, Slovenia and Lithuania participated. 71% of contributing centres were university hospitals, 87% out of these perform microvascular tumour surgery at least on a two-weekly base. Overall complication rate was at around five percent. Most frequently used transplants were the radial forearm flap and the fibular flap. The perioperative management varied widely. Success factors for flap survival, however, were uniformly rated, with the surgical skill being the most important factor, followed by the quality of postoperative management. Medication seems to play a less important role. CONCLUSION Within Europe microvascular surgery is a common and safe procedure for maxillofacial reconstructive surgery in the field of OMFS. While there is a major accordance for the surgical procedure itself and the most frequently used flaps, perioperative management shows a wide variety of protocols with low presumed impact on surgical outcome.


British Journal of Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery | 2012

One-stage cleft repair outcome at age 6- to 18-years – a comparison to the Eurocleft study data

A.A. Mueller; Irin Zschokke; Serge Brand; Claude Hockenjos; Hans-Florian Zeilhofer; K. Schwenzer-Zimmerer

The optimisation of the relation between quality of outcome and burden of care is difficult in the treatment of cleft lip and palate. We analysed long-term outcome after one-stage repair of clefts to assess the benefits and limitations of this form of treatment. Thirty-three patients aged 6-18 years who had had lip repair, two-flap palatoplasty, and corticocancellous alveolar bone grafts at 6 months of age were divided into three age groups (6-11, 12-14, and 15-18 years) and compared with mean outcome data from the Eurocleft centres and with cephalometric standards of healthy people. Fifteen of the 33 patients were assessed for nasalance. Maxillary protrusion (SNA) and intermaxillary relation (ANB) in the one-stage groups differed significantly from those of healthy people, but not from corresponding means in the Eurocleft study. In 61% the Bergland score for alveolar ossification was grade I or II, and in 15% it was grade III; 24% had secondary alveolar bone grafting. No palatal fistulas occurred and nasalance did not differ significantly from that of healthy controls. As each patient generally had a primary operation and one secondary procedure, they benefited from half the number of surgical steps of multistage procedures. However, one-stage procedures led to significant disturbance in growth, but the degree of this was similar to mean values of multistage procedures in the Eurocleft study. Primary alveolar bone grafting led to inconsistent alveolar ossification and was suspected to interfere with anterior maxillary growth so it has been abandoned.


British Journal of Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery | 2011

Missing facial parts computed by a morphable model and transferred directly to a polyamide laser-sintered prosthesis: an innovation study

A.A. Mueller; Pascal Paysan; R. Schumacher; Hans-Florian Zeilhofer; B.-I. Berg-Boerner; J. Maurer; Thomas Vetter; E. Schkommodau; Philipp Juergens; K. Schwenzer-Zimmerer

Mirroring of missing facial parts and rapid prototyping of templates have become widely used in the manufacture of prostheses. However, mirroring is not applicable for central facial defects, and the manufacture of a template still requires labour-intensive transformation into the final facial prosthesis. We have explored innovative techniques to meet these remaining challenges. We used a morphable model of a face for the reconstruction of missing facial parts that did not have mirror images, and skin-coloured polyamide laser sintering for direct manufacture of the prosthesis. From the knowledge gleaned from a data set of 200 coloured, three-dimensional scans, we generated a missing nose that was statistically compatible with the remaining parts of the patients face. The planned prosthesis was manufactured directly from biocompatible skin-coloured polyamide powder by selective laser sintering, and the prosthesis planning system produced a normal-looking reconstruction. The polyamide will need adjustable colouring, and we must be able to combine it with a self-curing resin to fulfil the requirements of realistic permanent use.


Journal of Cranio-maxillofacial Surgery | 2015

Microsurgical reconstruction of the head and neck region: Current concepts of maxillofacial surgery units worldwide

Katinka Kansy; A.A. Mueller; Thomas Mücke; Friederike Koersgen; Klaus Dietrich Wolff; Hans-Florian Zeilhofer; Frank Hölzle; Winnie Pradel; Matthias Schneider; Andreas Kolk; Ralf Smeets; Julio Acero; Piet E. Haers; G.E. Ghali; Jürgen Hoffmann

INTRODUCTION Microvascular surgery following tumor resection has become an important field of oral maxillofacial surgery (OMFS). Following the surveys on current reconstructive practice in German-speaking countries and Europe, this paper presents the third phase of the project when the survey was conducted globally. METHODS The DOESAK questionnaire has been developed via a multicenter approach with maxillofacial surgeons from 19 different hospitals in Germany, Austria and Switzerland. It was distributed in three different phases to a growing number of maxillofacial units in German-speaking clinics, over Europe and then worldwide. RESULTS Thirty-eight units from Germany, Austria and Switzerland, 65 remaining European OMFS-departments and 226 units worldwide responded to the survey. There is wide agreement on the most commonly used flaps, intraoperative rapid sections and a trend towards primary bony reconstruction. No uniform concepts can be identified concerning osteosynthesis of bone transplants, microsurgical techniques, administration of supportive medication and postoperative monitoring protocols. Microsurgical reconstruction is the gold standard for the majority of oncologic cases in Europe, but worldwide, only every second unit has access to this technique. CONCLUSION The DOESAK questionnaire has proven to be a valid and well accepted tool for gathering information about current practice in reconstructive OMFS surgery. The questionnaire has been able to demonstrate similarities, differences and global inequalities.


Journal of Cranio-maxillofacial Surgery | 2015

Treatment of condylar fractures with an intraoral approach using an angulated screwdriver: Results of a multicentre study

André Vajgel; Thiago de Santana Santos; Igor Batista Camargo; David Moraes de Oliveira; José Rodrigues Laureano Filho; Ricardo José de Holanda Vasconcellos; Sergio Monteiro Lima; Valfrido Antonio Pereira Filho; A.A. Mueller; Philipp Juergens

BACKGROUND This multicentre study aimed to investigate long-term radiographic and functional results following the treatment of condylar fractures using an angulated screwdriver system and open rigid internal fixation with an intraoral surgical approach. METHODS Twenty-nine patients with a total of 32 condylar fractures were evaluated. The patients were investigated prospectively based on the following variables: age, sex, aetiology, side, location and classification of the fracture, degree of displacement, associated fractures, surgical approach, oral health status, type of osteosynthesis plate, duration of surgery, mouth-opening, complications, and duration of follow-up. RESULTS The fractures were classified as subcondylar (n = 25) or condylar neck (n = 7). Mean patient age was 36.38 ± 16.60 years. The median duration of postoperative follow-up was 24.39 ± 13.94 months. No joint noise, weakness of the facial nerve, joint pain, or muscle pain was observed. An additional retromandibular approach was necessary to enable the treatment of one subcondylar fracture with medial displacement. CONCLUSION Subcondylar or condylar neck fractures with medial or lateral displacement can be treated using an intraoral approach with satisfactory results with the advantages of the absence of visible scarring, the avoidance of facial nerve injury, and the ability to obtain rapid access to the fracture.


Journal of Cranio-maxillofacial Surgery | 2017

A worldwide comparison of the management of T1 and T2 anterior floor of the mouth and tongue squamous cell carcinoma – Extent of surgical resection and reconstructive measures

Katinka Kansy; A.A. Mueller; Thomas Mücke; Friederike Koersgen; Klaus Dietrich Wolff; Hans-Florian Zeilhofer; Frank Hölzle; Winnie Pradel; Matthias Schneider; Andreas Kolk; Ralf Smeets; Julio Acero; Piet E. Haers; G.E. Ghali; Jürgen Hoffmann

INTRODUCTION Microvascular surgery following tumor resection has become an important field of oral maxillofacial surgery (OMFS). Following the results on general aspects of current reconstructive practice in German-speaking countries, Europe and worldwide, this paper presents specific concepts for the management of resection and reconstruction of T1/T2 squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the anterior floor of the mouth and tongue. METHODS The DOESAK questionnaire was distributed in three different phases to a growing number of maxillofacial units worldwide. Within this survey, clinical patient settings were presented to participants and center-specific treatment strategies were evaluated. RESULTS A total of 188 OMFS units from 36 different countries documented their treatment strategies for T1/T2 anterior floor of the mouth squamous cell carcinoma and tongue carcinoma. For floor of mouth carcinoma close to the mandible, a wide variety of concepts are presented: subperiosteal removal of the tumor versus continuity resection of the mandible and reconstruction ranging from locoregional closure to microvascular bony reconstruction. For T2 tongue carcinoma, concepts are more uniform. CONCLUSION These results demonstrate the lack of evidence and the controversy of different guidelines for the extent of safety margins and underline the crucial need of global prospective randomized trials on this topic to finally obtain evidence for a common guideline based on a strong community of OMFS units.


Journal of Cranio-maxillofacial Surgery | 2018

A worldwide comparison of the management of surgical treatment of advanced oral cancer

Katinka Kansy; A.A. Mueller; Thomas Mücke; Friederike Koersgen; Klaus Dietrich Wolff; Hans-Florian Zeilhofer; Frank Hölzle; Winnie Pradel; Matthias Schneider; Andreas Kolk; Ralf Smeets; Julio Acero; Piet E. Haers; G.E. Ghali; Jürgen Hoffmann

INTRODUCTION Microvascular surgery following tumor resection has become an important field of oral and maxillofacial surgery (OMFS). Following the results from management of T1/T2 floor-of-mouth and tongue squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) in German-speaking countries, Europe, and worldwide, this paper presents specific concepts for the management of resection and reconstruction of T3/T4 SCC of the maxillary and mandibular alveolar process and tongue. METHODS The DÖSAK questionnaire was distributed in three different phases to a growing number of maxillofacial units worldwide. Within this survey, clinical patient settings were presented to participants and center-specific treatment strategies were evaluated. RESULTS A total of 188 OMFS units from 36 different countries documented their treatment strategies for T3/T4 maxillary and mandibular alveolar process and tongue SCC. The extent of surgical resections and subsequent reconstructions is more consistent than with T1/T2 tumors, although the controversy surrounding continuity resections and mandible-sparing procedures remains. For continuity resection of the mandible the fibula free flap is the most frequently used bone replacement, whereas maxilla reconstruction concepts are less consistent, ranging from locoregional coverage concepts and different microvascular reconstruction options to treatment via obturator prosthesis. CONCLUSION Results from treatment strategies for T3/T4 tumors underline the limited evidence for the appropriate amount of resection and subsequent reconstruction process, especially in cases involving the mandible. Prospective randomized trials will be necessary in the long term to establish valid treatment guidelines.


Archive | 2009

Multimodal visualization of craniofacial tumors of large dimensions

C. Kober; B.-I. Berg; A.A. Mueller; Philipp Juergens; Hans-Florian Zeilhofer; S. Zimmerer; K. Schwenzer-Zimmerer

A special visualization approach for tumors in the cranio-maxillofacial region, e.g. skull base infiltrating tumors of large dimensions, was developed for diagnosis support as well as surgery and therapy planning.


International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2007

Central nervous malformations in presence of clefts reflect developmental interplay

A.A. Mueller; Robert Sader; K. Honigmann; Hans-Florian Zeilhofer; K. Schwenzer-Zimmerer

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Matthias Schneider

Dresden University of Technology

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Winnie Pradel

Dresden University of Technology

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Julio Acero

Complutense University of Madrid

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