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Dive into the research topics where Alexis Vrachimis is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexis Vrachimis.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2015

Multimodal Imaging Reveals Temporal and Spatial Microglia and Matrix Metalloproteinase Activity after Experimental Stroke

Bastian Zinnhardt; Thomas Viel; Lydia Wachsmuth; Alexis Vrachimis; Stefan Wagner; Hans-Jörg Breyholz; Andreas Faust; Sven Hermann; Klaus Kopka; Cornelius Faber; Frédéric Dollé; Sabina Pappatà; Anna M. Planas; Bertrand Tavitian; Michael Schäfers; Lydia Sorokin; Michael T. Kuhlmann; Andreas H. Jacobs

Stroke is the most common cause of death and disability from neurologic disease in humans. Activation of microglia and matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) is involved in positively and negatively affecting stroke outcome. Novel, noninvasive, multimodal imaging methods visualizing microglial and MMP alterations were employed. The spatio-temporal dynamics of these parameters were studied in relation to blood flow changes. Micro positron emission tomography (μPET) using [18F]BR-351 showed MMP activity within the first days after transient middle cerebral artery occlusion (tMCAo), followed by increased [18F]DPA-714 uptake as a marker for microglia activation with a maximum at 14 days after tMCAo. The inflammatory response was spatially located in the infarct core and in adjacent (penumbral) tissue. For the first time, multimodal imaging based on PET, single photon emission computed tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging revealed insight into the spatio-temporal distribution of critical parameters of poststroke inflammation. This allows further evaluation of novel treatment paradigms targeting the postischemic inflammation.


Clinical Nuclear Medicine | 2016

Subacute Stroke Mimicking Cerebral Metastasis in 68Ga-PSMA-HBED-CC PET/CT.

Benjamin Noto; Alexis Vrachimis; Michael Schäfers; Lars Stegger; Kambiz Rahbar

A 65-year-old man with disseminated bone metastases of prostate cancer was referred for Ga-PSMA-HBED-CC-PET/CT (short PSMA-PET/CT) to exclude visceral metastases before treatment of bone metastases with Ra-dichloride. Apart from disseminated bone metastases, PSMA-PET/CT revealed a focal cerebral tracer uptake in the right frontal lobe highly suspicious for cerebral spread. According to patient history, a cerebral infarction occurred 14 days before PSMA imaging in corresponding localization confirmed by MRI scanning. This case demonstrates the possibility of false-positive finding of cerebral metastases in PSMA-PET early after stroke.


EJNMMI research | 2012

Intraoperative 3-D mapping of parathyroid adenoma using freehand SPECT

Kambiz Rahbar; Mario Colombo-Benkmann; Christina Haane; Christian Wenning; Alexis Vrachimis; Matthias Weckesser; Otmar Schober

BackgroundFreehand single photon emission computed tomography (fSPECT) is a three-dimensional (3-D) tomographic imaging modality based on data acquisition with a handheld detector that is moved freely, in contrast to conventional, gantry-mounted gamma camera systems. In this pilot study, we evaluated the feasibility of fSPECT for intraoperative 3-D mapping in patients with parathyroid adenomas.MethodsThree patients (range 30 to 45 years) diagnosed with hyperparathyroidism (one primary and two tertiary) underwent parathyroid scintigraphy with technetium-99m sestamibi (99mTc-MIBI) to localize parathyroid adenomas. Two patients were referred with persistent hyperparathyroidism after conventional parathyroidectomy. In all three patients, a planar scintigraphy of the neck was performed 10 min after injection (p.i.) followed by SPECT/CT (Symbia T2, Siemens Healthcare) and a correlative ultrasound 2 h p.i. 99mTc-MIBI scan was performed the day before surgery in two patients and at the same day in one patient. fSPECT images were acquired intraoperatively using declipse SPECT (SurgicEyeTM).ResultsA total of five parathyroid adenomas were successfully located with SPECT/CT. fSPECT allowed intraoperative detection of all adenomas, and successful parathyroidectomy was accomplished. Parathyroid hormone level decreased intraoperatively in all three patients, on average, by 79% (range 72% to 91%).ConclusionIn this preliminary study, we could demonstrate that intraoperative localization of parathyroid adenomas is feasible using the freehand SPECT technology, thus allowing an image-guided parathyroidectomy.


Clinical Endocrinology | 2014

No significant difference in the prognostic value of the 5th and 7th editions of AJCC staging for differentiated thyroid cancer.

Alexis Vrachimis; Joachim Gerss; Maren Stoyke; Christian Wittekind; Tobias Maier; Christian Wenning; Kambiz Rahbar; Otmar Schober; Burkhard Riemann

The seventh edition of the American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) has more detailed staging categories for differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) than the fifth edition. The aim was to compare potential alterations in the disease‐specific (DSS), event‐free (EFS) and overall survival (OS), after reclassification from the fifth to the seventh edition.


EJNMMI research | 2013

Pulmonary vein isolation in patients with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation is associated with regional cardiac sympathetic denervation

Christian Wenning; Philipp S. Lange; Christoph Schülke; Alexis Vrachimis; Gerold Mönnig; Otmar Schober; Lars Eckardt; Michael Schäfers

BackgroundCircumferential pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) is the cornerstone of the current state-of-the-art management of atrial fibrillation (AF). However, the precise mechanisms behind AF relapses post PVI are still unknown. Since the activity of the autonomous nervous system is crucial in triggering paroxysmal AF, we hypothesized that PVI is associated with changes of cardiac sympathetic activity.MethodsSixteen patients with paroxysmal AF underwent cardiac iodine-123-meta-iodobenzylguanidine (123I-mIBG) planar cardiac imaging and single-photon emission computed tomography with low-dose computed tomography (SPECT/CT) for attenuation correction before and 4 weeks after PVI. The heart-to-mediastinum ratio (H/M ratio), washout rate (WR), regional myocardial uptake, and regional washout were analyzed.ResultsThe late H/M ratio was unchanged by PVI (pre, 2.9 ± 0.5 vs. post, 2.7 ± 0.6, p = 0.53). Four of the 16 patients (25%) displayed regional deficits before PVI. After PVI, regional deficits were present in ten patients (62.5%) with newly emerging deficits localized in the inferolateral wall. In a 6-month follow-up, four out of the ten patients (40%) with regional 123I-mIBG defects suffered from a recurrence of AF, while only one of the six patients (16.7%) without a regional 123I-mIBG defect experienced a recurrence.ConclusionA significant number of patients with paroxysmal AF show regional cardiac sympathetic innervation deficits at baseline. In addition, PVI is associated with newly emerging defects. The presence of regional sympathetic denervation after PVI may correlate with the risk of AF relapses.


Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2015

Not all DTC patients with N positive disease deserve the attribution “high risk”. Contribution of the MSDS trial

Alexis Vrachimis; Christian Wenning; Joachim Gerß; Henning Dralle; Mohammad Vaez Tabassi; Otmar Schober; Burkhard Riemann

To investigate if patients with thyroid carcinoma having N1a disease are at the same risk with N1b using the collective of the well‐defined European prospective Multicentre Study Differentiated Thyroid Cancer (MSDS).


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2016

6-hydroxydopamine-induced Parkinson's disease-like degeneration generates acute microgliosis and astrogliosis in the nigrostriatal system but no bioluminescence imaging-detectable alteration in adult neurogenesis

Inga B. Fricke; Thomas Viel; Maik M. A. Worlitzer; Franziska Melanie Collmann; Alexis Vrachimis; Andreas Faust; Lydia Wachsmuth; Cornelius Faber; Frédéric Dollé; Michael T. Kuhlmann; Klaus P. Schäfers; Sven Hermann; Jens Christian Schwamborn; Andreas H. Jacobs

Parkinsons disease is a slowly progressing neurodegenerative disorder caused by loss of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra (SN), leading to severe impairment in motor and non‐motor functions. Endogenous subventricular zone (SVZ) neural stem cells constantly give birth to new cells that might serve as a possible source for regeneration in the adult brain. However, neurodegeneration is accompanied by neuroinflammation and dopamine depletion, potentially compromising regeneration. We therefore employed in vivo imaging methods to study striatal deafferentation (N‐ω‐fluoropropyl‐2β‐carbomethoxy‐3β‐(4‐[123I]iodophenyl)nortropane single photon emission computed tomography, DaTscan™) and neuroinflammation in the SN and striatum (N,N‐diethyl‐2‐(2‐(4‐(2‐[18F]fluoroethoxy)phenyl)‐5,7‐dimethylpyrazolo[1,5‐a]pyrimidin‐3‐yl)acetamide positron emission tomography, [18F]DPA‐714 PET) in the intranigral 6‐hydroxydopamine Parkinsons disease mouse model. Additionally, we transduced cells in the SVZ with a lentivirus encoding firefly luciferase and followed migration of progenitor cells in the SVZ–olfactory bulb axis via bioluminescence imaging under disease and control conditions. We found that activation of microglia in the SN is an acute process accompanying the degeneration of dopaminergic cell bodies in the SN. Dopaminergic deafferentation of the striatum does not influence the generation of doublecortin‐positive neuroblasts in the SVZ, but generates chronic astrogliosis in the nigrostriatal system.


EJNMMI research | 2012

Systematic evaluation of 99mTc-tetrofosmin versus 99mTc-sestamibi to study murine myocardial perfusion in small animal SPECT/CT

Alexis Vrachimis; Sven Hermann; Domokos Máthé; Otmar Schober; Michael Schäfers

BackgroundThe “back-translation” of clinically available protocols to measure myocardial perfusion to preclinical imaging in mouse models of human disease is attractive for basic biomedical research. With respect to single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) approaches, clinical myocardial perfusion imaging protocols are established with different 99mTc-labeled perfusion tracers; however, studies evaluating and optimizing protocols for these tracers in high-resolution pinhole SPECT in mice are lacking. This study aims at evaluating two clinically available 99mTc-labeled myocardial perfusion tracers (99mTc-sestamibi vs. 99mTc-Tetrofosmin) in mice using four different imaging protocols.MethodsAdult C57BL/6 male mice were injected with 99mTc-sestamibi (MIBI) or 99mTc-Tetrofosmin (TETRO) (4 MBq/g body weight) either intravenously through the tail vein (n = 5) or retroorbitally (n = 5) or intraperitoneally (i.p.) under anesthesia (n = 3) or i.p. in an awake state (n = 3) at rest. Immediately after injection, a multi-frame single-photon emission computed tomography/computed tomography (SPECT/CT) acquisition was initiated with six subsequent time frames of 10 min each. Reconstructed images of the different protocols were assessed and compared by visual analysis by experts and by time-activity-curves generated from regions-of-interest for various organs (normalized uptake values).ResultsVisually assessing overall image quality, the best image quality was found for MIBI for both intravenous injection protocols, whereas TETRO only had comparable image quality after retroorbital injections. These results were confirmed by quantitative analysis where left ventricular (LV) uptake of MIBI after tail vein injections was found significantly higher for all time points accompanied with a significantly slower washout of 16% for MIBI vs. 33% for TETRO (p = 0.009) from 10 to 60 min post injection (PI). Interestingly, LV washout from 10 to 60 min PI was significantly higher for TETRO when applied by tail vein injections when compared to retroorbital injections (22%, p = 0.008). However, liver uptake was significant and comparable for both tracers at all time points. Radioactivity concentration in the lungs was negligible for all time points and both tracers.ConclusionIntravenous MIBI injection (both tail vein and retroorbital) results in the best image quality for assessing myocardial perfusion of the murine heart by SPECT/CT. TETRO has a comparable image quality only for the retroorbital injection route.


Deutsches Arzteblatt International | 2013

Cerebral metastases from thyroid carcinoma: complete remission following radioiodine treatment.

Alexis Vrachimis; Kurt Werner Schmid; Heribert Jürgens; Otmar Schober; Matthias Weckesser; Burkhard Riemann

BACKGROUND Brain metastases arise in roughly 0.9% of all cases of differentiated thyroid cancer. The median survival of adult patients with thyroid carcinoma that has metastasized to the brain is less than one year. Radioactive iodine treatment is only rarely given because its efficacy is not documented. In children, the situation may be different. METHOD In 2005, a 15-year-old girl underwent thyroidectomy, and an oxyphilic variant of papillary thyroid carcinoma was found in ectopic thyroid tissue. The patient underwent oral, high-dose radioactive iodine treatment. The post-therapeutic I-131 whole-body scan revealed multiple metastases in the skeleton, lungs, and the soft tissues, along with physiological uptake of the residual thyroid tissue. Magnetic resonance imaging of the head revealed two brain metastases. RESULTS When the initial treatment was completed, additional age-adapted high-dose radioactive iodine treatment was given, up to a total activity level of 35 GBq. There followed a complete remission of all metastases in the brain, bones, lungs, and soft tissues. Computed tomography of the chest revealed stable residuals. Over the ensuing 7.5 years of follow-up, the thyroglobulin values steadily declined to less than 2 ng/mL. The patient was asymptomatic at her last follow-up in May 2013. She did not develop any delayed reaction to high-dose radioactive iodine treatment (in particular, she did not develop leukemia or any other secondary malignancy). She remained fertile: after completion of the treatment, she had two healthy children. CONCLUSION In this patient with multifocal thyroid carcinoma, a rare entity, radioactive iodine treatment was successful as the single treatment. This case illustrates the point that a given therapeutic modality might succeed in an individual case despite a total or near-total lack of efficacy for most patients in the same situation.


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2015

Differentiated Thyroid Cancer Patients More Than 60 Years Old Paradoxically Show an Increased Life Expectancy

Tobias Maier; Otmar Schober; Joachim Gerß; Dennis Görlich; Christian Wenning; Michael Schaefers; Burkhard Riemann; Alexis Vrachimis

The aim of this study was to compare the overall survival of a large, single-center cohort of patients who had differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) with that of a matched general population. Methods: We analyzed 2,428 consecutive patients who had DTC and underwent treatment from 1965 to 2013 at the Department of Nuclear Medicine, University Hospital of Münster, Münster, Germany, according to international standards. Patients were classified on the basis of the current, seventh edition of the American Joint Committee on Cancer/Union for International Cancer Control classification system. Additionally, a subgroup analysis with regard to age at diagnosis was performed. The overall survival of the patients was compared with the expected survival of the general population on the basis of age and sex, as provided by the Federal Statistical Office of Germany. Results: Compared with the expected survival, the overall survival of patients with stage I disease paradoxically was significantly better (P < 0.001). In the subgroup analysis, a significantly lower mortality rate was observed in elderly patients (≥60 y old) with stage I disease. On the other hand, patients between 20 and 45 y of age and with distant metastases at diagnosis had a significantly increased standardized mortality rate. In contrast, other patients with stage II disease and more than 45 y old had a normal mortality rate. The mortality rate was significantly increased in all patients with stage IVC disease. Conclusion: Older patients with more limited disease paradoxically had better survival than would be expected on the basis of age and sex, whereas young adults as well as patients more than 45 y old and with distant metastases had increased mortality rates. For all other DTC patients, regardless of age or TNM stage, no significant survival difference was seen.

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