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Featured researches published by B. Wedmann.


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 1994

Gastrointestinal Transit Through Esophagus, Stomach, Small and Large Intestine in Patients with Progressive Systemic Sclerosis

Martin Wegener; Adamek Rj; B. Wedmann; M. Jergas; P. Altmeyer

Liquid esophageal transit and gastric emptying, mouth-to-cecum transit, and whole gut transit of a solid-liquid meal were measured in 14 patients with PSS, 16 control subjects (esophageal transit), and 20 control subjects (gastrointestinal transit), respectively, by using scintigraphic techniques, the hydrogen breath test, and stool markers. In patients with PSS, the glucose hydrogen breath test for detection of small intestinal overgrowth was performed and various gastrointestinal symptoms were determined. Esophageal transit and gastric emptying were significantly prolonged in PSS patients with 11 of 14 PSS patients (79%) disclosing delayed esophageal transit and eight of 14 PSS patients (57%) disclosing delayed gastric emptying. All PSS patients with prolonged gastric emptying also had delayed esophageal transit and there was a significant positive correlation between esophageal transit and gastric emptying (r=0.696,P<0.01). No significant differences between PSS patients and controls were detected concerning mouth-to-cecum transit and whole gut transit, but abnormally delayed mouth-to-cecum transit was found in four of 10 PSS patients (40%) and abnormally prolonged whole gut transit was detected in three of 13 PSS patients (23%). Small bacterial overgrowth was diagnosed in three of 14 PSS patients (21%). Delayed esophageal transit and gastric emptying were associated with dysphagia, retrosternal pain, and epigastric fullness, while prolonged whole gut transit was associated with constipation. It is concluded that delayed gastric emptying is frequently associated with esophageal transit disorders in PSS patients and may be one important factor for the development of gastroesophageal reflux disease in these patients.


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 1991

Gastrointestinal transit of solid-liquid meal in chronic alcoholics.

Martin Wegener; J. Schaffstein; U. Dilger; Christoph Coenen; B. Wedmann; Gabriele Schmidt

Gastric emptying, mouth-to-cecum transit, and whole-gut transit of a solid-liquid meal were measured in 46 chronic alcoholics and in 30 control subjects by using scintigraphic techniques, hydrogen breath test, and stool markers. In the alcoholics various parameters such as ethanol consumption, gastrointestinal symptoms, and alcoholic neuropathy were determined and related to gastrointestinal transit times. Although there was no significant overall difference of gastric emptying, abnormally delayed gastric emptying was detected in 23.9% of the alcoholics but no control subject (P<0.005). Mouth-to-cecum transit was significantly prolonged in the alcoholics (P<0.001) with 14 alcoholics (37.8%) disclosing delayed mouth-to-cecum transit. No significant differences between both groups were detected concerning whole gut transit. In the alcoholics there was a significant correlation of dyspeptic symptoms with delayed gastric emptying (P<0.006), and alcoholics with diarrhea had an accelerated mouth-to-cecum transit as compared to those without diarrhea (P<0.05). Neither the presence of autonomic or peripheral neuropathy nor the presence of liver cirrhosis or ascites was significantly related to gastrointestinal transit times. However, the daily ethanol ingestion significantly correlated with gastric emptying (P<0.005). It is concluded, therefore, that in chronic alcoholics the small intestine and the stomach are most likely to be affected by gastrointestinal transit disorders and that these transit abnormalities are potentially related to toxic damage of gastrointestinal smooth muscle.


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 1994

Gastrobiliary motility after liquid fatty meal in progressive systemic sclerosis : a sonographic study

B. Wedmann; Martin Wegener; Adamek Rj; S. El Gammal

Gastric emptying, antral motility, and gallbladder emptying after a liquid fatty meal were studied by ultrasound in 25 patients with progressive systemic sclerosis and in 25 sex- and age-matched controls. In patients with systemic sclerosis, the possible role of autonomic dysfunction was evaluated by four noninvasive cardiovascular reflex tests. Despite a significant delay of gastric emptying and a significant postprandial antral hypomotility in the patients with systemic sclerosis, the fat-induced gallbladder emptying was only slightly reduced, reaching no significant level when compared to the controls. The prolongation of gastric emptying correlated significantly with the duration of the disease. Although 36% of the patients in the systemic sclerosis group exhibited signs of autonomic cardiac dysfunction, there was no evidence of an association between these signs and gastric motor dysfunction. In conclusion motility disorders of the gallbladder seem to play a minor role in the upper gut involvement of systemic sclerosis, whereas motility disorders of the stomach are frequent and can be easily recognized noninvasively by real-time ultrasound.


Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology | 1988

Clinical evaluation, ultrasound, cholescintigraphy, and endoscopic retrograde cholangiography in cholestasis. A prospective comparative clinical study.

Gereon Börsch; Martin Wegener; B. Wedmann; Maria Kissler; Manfred Glocke

The accuracy of clinical evaluation (CE), ultrasonography (US), and cholescintigraphy (CS) was prospectively compared in a group of 72 cholestatic patients, using the results of endoscopic retrograde cholangiography (ERC) as the true standard. Forty-six cases (63.9%) had a final diagnosis of extrahepatic biliary obstruction. Clinical evaluation had a sensitivity of 82.6% and a specificity of 46.2% for the identification of mechanical obstruction. Ultrasonography was the single most powerful noninvasive diagnostic procedure, with a sensitivity of 65.2%, a specificity of 92.3%, a positive likelihood ratio of 8.5, and a positive predictive value (PVpos) of 93.8%, which was superior to the diagnostic power of CS (0.05 less than p less than 0.1). Inconclusive results or technical failures were counted as diagnostic errors. Contingency table analyses in an extended group of 112 patients, complete for CE, US, and CS, revealed that concordant results of CE and US had a high probability of correctness (combined PVpos 92.6%, PVneg 98.0%). Contradictory ratings of these two tests were unlikely to be clarified reliably by additional CS. We conclude that the combined evaluation of CE and US allows an accurate differentiation between intrahepatic cholestasis and extrahepatic biliary obstruction. When both give contradictory results, direct cholangiography, rather than further noninvasive procedures, appears to be the diagnostic strategy of choice.


Deutsche Medizinische Wochenschrift | 2008

Diagnostic value of ultrasonographic testing of the gallbladder function in cholelithiasis

B. Wedmann; Sonnleitner E; Kemen M; L. Kalthoff; Schmidt-Heinevetter G; Martin Wegener

Decrease in gall-bladder volume after intake of a test meal was assessed by ultrasound in 30 patients (24 females, 6 males; mean age 55 [22-82] years) with indications for elective or early elective cholecystectomy for cholelithiasis. Patients were assigned to three groups, based on intraoperative and histological gall-bladder changes: group 1 (n = 17), without changes or with mild chronic cholecystitis; group 2 (n = 4), with severe chronic inflammatory changes; group 3 (n = 9), with acute cholecystitis or cystic duct occlusion. A volume decrease of at least 30% after the test meal excluded only acute wall inflammation (negative predictive value 95.5%), while a volume reduction of at least 50% made it possible in a high percentage of cases (negative predictive value 88.2%) to predict correctly an absence of severe chronic wall changes. Before organ-preserving treatment (extracorporeal lithotripsy or local litholysis) is undertaken, gall-bladder volume reduction of at least 50% should be documented.


Deutsche Medizinische Wochenschrift | 2008

Endoskopische Diagnose einer Kolontuberkulose

B. Wedmann; Martin Wegener; R. J. Adamek; K. M. Müller

A 67-year-old woman had developed weakness, fatigue and a 10 kg weight loss over the past year. On examination a cylindrical mass was palpated in the right middle abdominal cavity. Erythrocyte sedimentation rate was increased to 87/126 mm, there was an hypochromic anaemia (haemoglobin 9.1 mg/dl) and an hypoalbuminaemia (32 g/l) with an increase in alpha 2-globulins (9.4 g/l), Cholinesterase activity was decreased to 588 U/l. X-ray film of the abdomen revealed a calcified mesenteric lymph-node and coloscopy demonstrated polypoid tumorous changes with ulcerations, extending from the pole of the caecum to the right flexure. Histological examination showed epithelioid-cell granulomas with Langhans giant cells. Culture grew Mycobacterium tuberculosis, confirming the diagnosis of intestinal tuberculosis. She was treated with oral doses of isoniazid (300 mg daily), rifampicin (600 mg daily) and pyrazinamide (2 g daily) for 2 months, followed by isoniazid and rifampicin for a further 4 months. After this the laboratory tests were within normal limits and urine as well as stool samples contained no acid-fast bacilli. As the patient felt so well she declined another coloscopy.


Journal of Clinical Ultrasound | 1987

Gallbladder wall thickening: a frequent finding in various nonbiliary disorders. A prospective ultrasonographic study

Martin Wegener; Gereon Börsch; Jost Schneider; B. Wedmann; Ralf Winter; Johannes Zacharias


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 1992

Effect of Hyperthyroidism on the Transit of a Caloric Solid-Liquid Meal Through the Stomach, the Small Intestine, and the Colon in Man*

Martin Wegener; B. Wedmann; T Langhoff; J. Schaffstein; R Adamek


Journal of Clinical Ultrasound | 1991

Sonographic evaluation of gallbladder kinetics: In vitro and in vivo comparison of different methods to assess gallbladder emptying

B. Wedmann; Gabriele Schmidt; Martin Wegener; Christoph Coenen; Dieter Ricken; Cornelia Dröge


Journal of Clinical Ultrasound | 1988

Effect of cholecystectomy on common bile duct diameters: A longitudinal prospective ultrasonographic study

B. Wedmann; Gereon Börsch; Christoph Coenen; Andreas Paassen

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Adamek Rj

Ruhr University Bochum

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