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Dive into the research topics where Andreas Habertheuer is active.

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Featured researches published by Andreas Habertheuer.


Interactive Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery | 2016

Conventional versus rapid-deployment aortic valve replacement: a single-centre comparison between the Edwards Magna valve and its rapid-deployment successor

Martin Andreas; Stephanie Wallner; Andreas Habertheuer; Claus Rath; Martin Schauperl; Thomas Binder; Dietrich Beitzke; Raphael Rosenhek; Christian Loewe; Dominik Wiedemann; Alfred Kocher; Guenther Laufer

OBJECTIVES Sutureless and rapid-deployment valves were recently introduced into clinical practice. The Edwards INTUITY valve system is a combination of the Edwards Magna pericardial valve and a subvalvular stent-frame to enable rapid deployment. We performed a parallel cohort study for comparison of the two valve types. METHODS All patients receiving either an Edwards Magna Ease valve or an Edwards INTUITY valve system due to aortic stenosis from May 2010 until July 2014 were included. Patients undergoing bypass surgery, an additional valve procedure, atrial ablation surgery or replacement of the ascending aorta were excluded. Preoperative characteristics, operative specifications, survival, valve-related adverse events and transvalvulvar gradients were compared. RESULTS One hundred sixteen patients underwent rapid-deployment aortic valve replacement [mean age 75 years (SD: 8); 62% female] and 132 patients underwent conventional aortic valve replacement [70 years (SD: 9); 31% female; P < 0.001]. Conventional valve patients were taller and heavier. The mean EuroSCORE II was 3.1% (SD: 2.7) and 4.4% (SD: 6.0) for rapid-deployment and conventional valve patients, respectively (P = 0.085). The mean implanted valve size was higher in the conventional group [23.2 mm (SD: 2.0) vs 22.5 mm (SD: 2.2); P = 0.007], but postoperative transvalvular mean gradients were comparable [15 mmHg (SD: 6) vs 14 mmHg (SD: 5); P = 0.457]. A subgroup analysis of the most common valve sizes (21 and 23 mm; implanted in 63% of patients) revealed significantly reduced mean postoperative transvalvular gradients in the rapid-deployment group [14 mmHg (SD: 4) vs 16 mmHg (SD: 5); P = 0.025]. A significantly higher percentage received minimally invasive procedures in the rapid-deployment group (59 vs 39%; P < 0.001). The 1- and 3-year survival rate was 96 and 90% in the rapid-deployment group and 95 and 89% in the conventional group (P = 0.521), respectively. Valve-related pacemaker implantations were more common in the rapid-deployment group (9 vs 2%; P = 0.014) and postoperative stroke was more common in the conventional group (1.6 vs 0% per patient year; P = 0.044). CONCLUSIONS We conclude that this rapid-deployment valve probably facilitates minimally invasive surgery. Furthermore, a subgroup analysis showed reduced transvalvular gradients in smaller valve sizes compared with the conventionally implanted valve of the same type. The favourable haemodynamic profile and the potentially different spectrum of valve-related adverse events should be addressed in further clinical trials.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017

Tissue-specific exosome biomarkers for noninvasively monitoring immunologic rejection of transplanted tissue

Prashanth Vallabhajosyula; Laxminarayana Korutla; Andreas Habertheuer; Ming Yu; Susan Y. Rostami; Chao-Xing Yuan; Sanjana Reddy; Chengyang Liu; Varun Korutla; Brigitte Koeberlein; Jennifer Trofe-Clark; Michael R. Rickels; Ali Naji

In transplantation, there is a critical need for noninvasive biomarker platforms for monitoring immunologic rejection. We hypothesized that transplanted tissues release donor-specific exosomes into recipient circulation and that the quantitation and profiling of donor intra-exosomal cargoes may constitute a biomarker platform for monitoring rejection. Here, we have tested this hypothesis in a human-into-mouse xenogeneic islet transplant model and validated the concept in clinical settings of islet and renal transplantation. In the xenogeneic model, we quantified islet transplant exosomes in recipient blood over long-term follow-up using anti-HLA antibody, which was detectable only in xenoislet recipients of human islets. Transplant islet exosomes were purified using anti-HLA antibody–conjugated beads, and their cargoes contained the islet endocrine hormone markers insulin, glucagon, and somatostatin. Rejection led to a marked decrease in transplant islet exosome signal along with distinct changes in exosomal microRNA and proteomic profiles prior to appearance of hyperglycemia. In the clinical settings of islet and renal transplantation, donor exosomes with respective tissue specificity for islet &bgr; cells and renal epithelial cells were reliably characterized in recipient plasma over follow-up periods of up to 5 years. Collectively, these findings demonstrate the biomarker potential of transplant exosome characterization for providing a noninvasive window into the conditional state of transplant tissue.


Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery | 2014

A rare case of primary cardiac B cell lymphoma

Andreas Habertheuer; Marek Ehrlich; Dominik Wiedemann; Bruno Mora; Claus Rath; Alfred Kocher

Primary cardiac lymphomas represent an extremely rare entity of extranodal lymphomas and should be distinguished from secondary cardiac involvement of disseminated lymphomas belonging to the non-Hodgkin’s classification of blood cancers. Only 90 cases have been reported in literature. Presentation of cardiac lymphomas on imaging studies may not be unambiguous since they potentially mimic other cardiac neoplasms including myxomas, angiosarcoma or rhadomyomas and therefore require multimodality cardiac imaging, endomyocardial biopsy, excisional intraoperative biopsy and pericardial fluid cytological evaluation to establish final diagnosis.Herein we report the case of a 70 y/o immunocompetent Caucasian female with a rapidly progressing superior vena cava syndrome secondary to a large primary cardiac diffuse large B cell lymphoma (NHL lymphoma) almost completely obstructing the right atrium, right ventricle and affecting both mitral and tricuspid valve. The patient had no clinical evidence of disseminated disease and was successfully treated with extensive debulking during open-heart surgery on cardiopulmonary bypass and 6 cycles of rituximab, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine and prednisone chemotherapy (R-CHOP).


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2016

Evidence That Cingulin Regulates Endothelial Barrier Function In Vitro and In Vivo

Klaudia Schossleitner; Sabine Rauscher; Marion Gröger; Heinz Peter Friedl; Richard Finsterwalder; Andreas Habertheuer; Maria Sibilia; Christine Brostjan; Dagmar Födinger; Sandra Citi; Peter Petzelbauer

Objective— Cingulin is a cytoplasmic component of tight junctions. Although modulation of cingulin levels in cultured epithelial model systems has no significant effect on barrier function, evidence from cingulin knockout mice suggests that cingulin may be involved in the regulation of the behavior of epithelial or endothelial cells. Here, we investigate the role of cingulin in the barrier function of endothelial cells. Approach and Results— We show that cingulin is expressed in human endothelial cells of the skin, brain, and lung in vivo and in vitro. Endothelial cingulin colocalizes and coimmunoprecipitates with the tight junction proteins zonula occludens-1 and guanine nucleotide exchange factor-H1. Cingulin overexpression in human umbilical vein endothelial cell induces tight junction formation, increases transendothelial electric resistance, and strengthens barrier function for low and high molecular weight tracers. In contrast, cultured endothelial cells lacking cingulin are more permeable for low molecular weight tracers. In cingulin knockout mice, neurons of the area postrema and Purkinje cells show an increased uptake of small molecular weight tracers indicating decreased barrier function at these sites. Conclusions— We demonstrate that cingulin participates in the modulation of endothelial barrier function both in human cultured cells in vitro and in mouse brains in vivo. Understanding the role of cingulin in maintaining tight barriers in endothelia may allow developing new strategies for the treatment of vascular leak syndromes.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2017

Fate of remnant sinuses of Valsalva in patients with bicuspid and trileaflet valves undergoing aortic valve, ascending aorta, and aortic arch replacement

Rita K. Milewski; Andreas Habertheuer; Joseph E. Bavaria; Mary Siki; Wilson Y. Szeto; Eric Krause; Varun Korutla; Nimesh D. Desai; Prashanth Vallabhajosyula

Objective In patients presenting with aortic valvulopathy with concomitant ascending aortic aneurysm, surgical management of the sinus of Valsalva segment remains undefined, especially for moderately dilated aortic roots. In patients with this pathology undergoing aortic valve replacement with supracoronary ascending aorta replacement, we assessed the fate of the remnant preserved sinus of Valsalva segment stratified by aortic valve morphology and pathology. Methods From 2002 to 2015, 428 patients underwent elective aortic valve replacement with supracoronary ascending aorta replacement. Patients were stratified on the basis of valvular morphology (bicuspid aortic valve [n = 254] and tricuspid aortic valve [n = 174]), valvular pathology (bicuspid aortic valve with aortic stenosis [n = 178], bicuspid aortic valve with aortic insufficiency [n = 76], tricuspid aortic valve with aortic stenosis [n = 61], tricuspid aortic valve with aortic insufficiency [n = 113]), and preoperative sinus of Valsalva dimensions (<40, 40‐45, >45 mm). Results Kaplan–Meier analysis revealed no significant difference in freedom from reoperation in tricuspid aortic valve versus bicuspid aortic valve (P = .576). Multivariable Cox regression model performed with sinus of Valsalva dimensions at baseline and follow‐up as time‐varying covariates did not adversely affect survival. A repeated‐measure, mixed‐effects model constructed to assess longitudinal sinus of Valsalva trends revealed that the retained sinus of Valsalva dimensions remain stable over long‐term follow‐up (discharge to ≥10 years), irrespective of valvular morphology/pathology (bicuspid aortic valve with aortic insufficiency, tricuspid aortic valve with aortic insufficiency, tricuspid aortic valve with aortic stenosis) and preoperative sinus of Valsalva groups (<40, 40‐45, >45 mm). Conclusions In patients with nonaneurysmal sinuses of Valsalva undergoing aortic valve replacement with supracoronary ascending aorta replacement, the sinus segment can be preserved irrespective of the type of valvular pathology (aortic stenosis vs aortic insufficiency) or valvular morphology (bicuspid aortic valve vs tricuspid aortic valve). Aortic valve replacement with supracoronary ascending aorta replacement may have a stabilizing effect on the sinus segment over long‐term follow‐up in patients with tricuspid aortic valves or bicuspid aortic valves.


BioMed Research International | 2014

Cardioprotection: A Review of Current Practice in Global Ischemia and Future Translational Perspective

Andreas Habertheuer; Alfred Kocher; Günther Laufer; Martin Andreas; Wilson Y. Szeto; Peter Petzelbauer; Marek Ehrlich; Dominik Wiedemann

The idea of protecting the heart from ischemic insult during heart surgery to allow elective cardiac arrest is as old as the idea of cardiac surgery itself. The current gold standard in clinical routine is a high potassium regimen added either to crystalloid or blood cardioplegic solutions inducing depolarized arrest. Ongoing patient demographic changes with increasingly older, comorbidly ill patients and increasing case complexity with increasingly structurally abnormal hearts as morphological correlate paired with evolutions in pediatric cardiac surgery allowing more complex procedures than ever before redefine requirements for cardioprotection. Many, in part adversarial, regimens to protect the myocardium from ischemic insults have entered clinical routine; however, functional recovery of the heart is still often impaired due to perfusion injury. Myocardial reperfusion damage is a key determinant of postoperative organ functional recovery, morbidity, and mortality in adult and pediatric patients. There is a discrepancy between what current protective strategies are capable of and what they are expected to do in a rapidly changing cardiac surgery community. An increased understanding of the molecular players of ischemia reperfusion injury offers potential seeds for new cardioprotective regimens and may further displace boundaries of what is technically feasible.


Journal of Surgical Research | 2013

Innovative, simplified orthotopic lung transplantation in rats

Andreas Habertheuer; Alfred Kocher; Guenther Laufer; Peter Petzelbauer; Martin Andreas; Seyedhossein Aharinejad; Marek Ehrlich; Dominik Wiedemann

BACKGROUND Various techniques of orthotopic single lung transplantation in rats have been reported; however, their widespread use has been limited owing to the complexity of the procedure. We report a novel microsurgical lung transplantation model in rats with a high survival rate that can be performed by one surgeon alone. METHODS A total of 90 left lung allografts were transplanted from Fischer to Wistar Kyoto rats. We developed a triple axis precision system to place and stabilize the vascular clips intrathoracically to clamp the bronchovascular structures, thereby avoiding interference with the heart and contralateral lung movement. A single-suture bronchial anastomosis technique and proximal cuffing approach for vascular anastomosis was used, rendering surgical assistance unnecessary. RESULTS In our recent series, both short-term (12 h) and long-term (21 d) survival was 100%. The lungs showed excellent perfusion and ventilation immediately on transplantation. Blood gas samples drawn from the left pulmonary vein and the histologic sections revealed excellent graft function. The donor operation lasted 20 ± 2 min, donor left lung dissection required 20 ± 2 min, and implantation required 90 ± 5 min. CONCLUSIONS The present innovative method of left orthotopic single lung transplantation can be performed by one experienced surgeon alone, with excellent results and a high degree of reproducibility.


Journal of Cardiac Surgery | 2017

The role of extracorporeal membrane oxygenator therapy in the setting of Type A aortic dissection

Ibrahim Sultan; Andreas Habertheuer; Tyler Wallen; Mary Siki; Wilson Y. Szeto; Joseph E. Bavaria; Matthew L. Williams; Prashanth Vallabhajosyula

Patients presenting with type A aortic dissection (TAAD) present with a wide clinical spectrum ranging from hemodynamic stability to multiorgan malperfusion with cardiovascular collapse. Extracorporeal membrane oxygenator (ECMO) therapy is increasingly being utilized as salvage therapy in patients with acute cardiopulmonary failure and for post‐cardiotomy shock. We sought to determine the utility of ECMO implementation post‐TAAD repair.


Journal of Cardiac Surgery | 2017

Concomitant antegrade stent grafting of the descending thoracic aorta during transverse hemiarch reconstruction for acute DeBakey I aortic dissection repair improves aortic remodeling

Ibrahim Sultan; Tyler Wallen; Andreas Habertheuer; Mary Siki; George J. Arnaoutakis; Joseph E. Bavaria; Wilson Y. Szeto; Rita K. Milewski; Prashanth Vallabhajosyula

Concomitant endovascular stent grafting of the descending thoracic aorta during open repair for acute DeBakey I aortic dissection can be performed in patients with extensive dissection and malperfusion. We analyzed the effects of this strategy on distal aortic remodeling.


Journal of Biomechanics | 2016

Letter to the editor regarding “In vitro flow investigations in the aortic arch during cardiopulmonary bypass with stereo-PIV”

Martin Andreas; Dominik Wiedemann; Barbara Messner; Doris Hutschala; Andreas Habertheuer; David Bernhard; Peter Petzelbauer; Guenther Laufer

This project was funded by the Medical Scientific Fund of the Mayor of the City of Vienna We read the report by Buesen et al. regarding in-vitro flow measurements in patients on cardiopulmonary bypass with great interest (Busen et al., 2015). We do see the clinical need for cannula optimization and believe that there are several obstacles for the correct assessment of flow patterns in patients undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass. MR-based flow-assessment is not possible in patients on cardiopulmonary bypass due to the metallic components of a heartlung machine. Animal experiments may help to assess the effect of flow patterns on the aortic wall and on circulation. However, human anatomy cannot be assessed in these models. Therefore, in-vitro experiments may present the only tool for this crucial question to reduce embolic stroke or aortic dissection. These novel methods have to be validated. We studied a novel setup to measure endothelial leakage in pigs undergoing on-pump cardiac surgery by in-vivo Evans blue administration andmay provide an additional method to validate in-vitro results regarding the stress applied to the aortic wall.

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Alfred Kocher

Medical University of Vienna

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Dominik Wiedemann

Medical University of Vienna

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Martin Andreas

Medical University of Vienna

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Claus Rath

Medical University of Vienna

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Joseph E. Bavaria

University of Pennsylvania

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Wilson Y. Szeto

University of Pennsylvania

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Peter Petzelbauer

Medical University of Vienna

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Mary Siki

University of Pennsylvania

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Rita K. Milewski

University of Pennsylvania

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