A Mpotsaris
RWTH Aachen University
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Publication
Featured researches published by A Mpotsaris.
Frontiers in Neurology | 2018
Volker Maus; Nuran Abdullayev; Henrik Sack; Jan Borggrefe; A Mpotsaris; Daniel Behme
Background: Clinical outcome in patients undergoing mechanical thrombectomy (MT) due to intracranial large vessel occlusion (LVO) in the anterior circulation is influenced by several factors. The impact of a concomitant extracranial carotid artery stenosis (CCAS) contralateral to the intracranial lesion remains unclear. Methods: Retrospective analysis of 392 consecutive patients treated with MT due to intracranial LVO in the anterior circulation in two comprehensive stroke centers between 2014 and 2017. Clinical (including demographics and NIHSS), imaging (including angiographic evaluation of CCAS via NASCET criteria), and procedural data were evaluated. Primary endpoint was an unfavorable clinical outcome defined as modified Rankin Scale 3–6 at 90 days. Results: In 27/392 patients (7%) pre-interventional imaging exhibited a CCAS (>50%) contralateral to the intracranial lesion compared to 365 patients without relevant stenosis. Median baseline NIHSS, procedural timings, and reperfusion success did not differ between groups. Median volume of the final infarct core was larger in CCAS patients (176 cm3, IQR 32-213 vs. 11 cm3, 1-65; p < 0.001). At 90 days, unfavorable outcome was documented in 25/27 CCAS patients (93%) vs. 211/326 (65%; p = 0.003) with a mortality of 63 vs. 19% (p = 0.001), respectively. Presence of CCAS was associated with an unfavorable outcome at 90 days independent of age and baseline NIHSS in multivariate logistic regression (OR 2.2, CI 1.1-4.7; p < 0.05). Conclusion: For patients undergoing MT due to intracranial vessel occlusion in the anterior circulation, the presence of a contralateral CCAS >50% is a predictor of unfavorable clinical outcome at 90 days.
European Journal of Radiology | 2018
David Zopfs; Simon Lennartz; K Laukamp; Nils Große Hokamp; A Mpotsaris; David Maintz; Jan Borggrefe; Victor Neuhaus
OBJECTIVES To compare virtual monoenergetic images (VMI) reconstructed from venous phase Dual-Layer CT (DLCT) with polyenergetic images (PI) of DLCT-Angiography (DLCT-A) regarding vessel contrast and image quality especially in sight to atherosclerotic carotid artery stenosis. METHODS & MATERIALS 25 DLCT-A and 55 venous phase DLCT were analyzed in this retrospective study. For objective analysis PI and VMI (40-120 keV) were assessed comparing attenuation, standard deviation, signal-/contrast- to noise ratios (SNR, CNR) in the common carotid artery (CCA), vertebral artery, sternocleidomastoid muscle and air. For subjective analysis, vessel contrast, delineation of the superficial temporal artery, depiction of calcified plaque as well as vessel patency within the atherosclerotic stenosis of the internal carotid artery were rated and the extent of the calcified plaque and remaining vessel lumen were measured in venous phase DLCT. RESULTS In venous phase DLCT, attenuation, SNR and CNR in the CCA increased with lower keV. Attenuation, SNR and CNR at 40 keV in the CCA were comparable to PI of DLCT-A (all: p > 0.05). Subjective image contrast, assessment of vessel patency within a stenosis as well as delineation of the superficial temporal artery were rated superior at 40-60 keV in comparison to PI of venous phase DLCT (all: p ≤ 0.05). Slightly more blooming of the atherosclerotic plaque was found in VMI at 40-60 keV. There was no difference of NASCET-criteria of carotid stenosis between VMI at different keV-levels and PI (p = 1.0). CONCLUSION VMI at 40 keV reconstructed from venous phase DLCT yield an image quality equal to CT-Angiography, especially regarding vessel contrast. Perception and assessment of the carotid artery within an atherosclerotic stenosis are not impaired at low keV.
Clinical Neuroradiology-klinische Neuroradiologie | 2018
Christoph Kabbasch; A Mpotsaris; Volker Maus; J. C. Altenbernd; C. Loehr
Clinical Neuroradiology-klinische Neuroradiologie | 2018
Robert Forbrig; Hannah Lockau; Fabian Flottmann; Tobias Boeckh-Behrens; Christoph Kabbasch; Maximilian Patzig; A Mpotsaris; Jens Fiehler; T. Liebig; Goetz Thomalla; Oezguer A. Onur; Silke Wunderlich; Kornelia Kreiser; Moriz Herzberg; Frank Arne Wollenweber; Sascha Prothmann; Franziska Dorn
Radiologie verbindet | 2018
David Zopfs; Simon Lennartz; K Laukamp; N Große Hokamp; A Mpotsaris; D Maintz; Jan Borggrefe; V Neuhaus
Neurointervention | 2018
Volker Maus; A Mpotsaris; Jan Borggrefe; Nuran Abdullayev; Thomas Liebig; Franziska Dorn; Pantelis Stavrinou; De-Hua Chang; Christoph Kabbasch
Journal of Clinical Radiology and Case Reports | 2018
Nuran Abdullayev; Volker Maus; Victor Neuhaus; Christoph Kabbasch; Jan Borggrefe; A Mpotsaris
Rofo-fortschritte Auf Dem Gebiet Der Rontgenstrahlen Und Der Bildgebenden Verfahren | 2017
Volker Maus; S You; A Kalkan; Jan Borggrefe; Christoph Kabbasch; Franziska Dorn; C Dohmen; Thomas Liebig; G Fink; A Mpotsaris
Rofo-fortschritte Auf Dem Gebiet Der Rontgenstrahlen Und Der Bildgebenden Verfahren | 2017
Jan Borggrefe; J Kottlors; M Mirza; Volker Maus; Christoph Kabbasch; V Neuhaus; Nuran Abdullayev; D Maintz; A Mpotsaris
Rofo-fortschritte Auf Dem Gebiet Der Rontgenstrahlen Und Der Bildgebenden Verfahren | 2017
Simon Lennartz; K Laukamp; V Neuhaus; N Große Hokamp; Nuran Abdullayev; D Maintz; A Mpotsaris; Jan Borggrefe