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Dive into the research topics where Bernhard Neumayer is active.

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Featured researches published by Bernhard Neumayer.


Forensic Science International | 2016

Quantitative MR imaging in fracture dating--Initial results.

Katharina Baron; Bernhard Neumayer; Thomas Widek; Fritz Schick; Sylvia Scheicher; Eva Hassler; Eva Scheurer

For exact age determinations of bone fractures in a forensic context (e.g. in cases of child abuse) improved knowledge of the time course of the healing process and use of non-invasive modern imaging technology is of high importance. To date, fracture dating is based on radiographic methods by determining the callus status and thereby relying on an experts experience. As a novel approach, this study aims to investigate the applicability of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for bone fracture dating by systematically investigating time-resolved changes in quantitative MR characteristics after a fracture event. Prior to investigating fracture healing in children, adults were examined for this study in order to test the methodology for this application. Altogether, 31 MR examinations in 17 subjects (♀: 11 ♂: 6; median age 34 ± 15 y, scanned 1-5 times over a period of up to 200 days after the fracture event) were performed on a clinical 3T MR scanner (TimTrio, Siemens AG, Germany). All subjects were treated conservatively for a fracture in either a long bone or in the collar bone. Both, qualitative and quantitative MR measurements were performed in all subjects. MR sequences for a quantitative measurement of relaxation times T1 and T2 in the fracture gap and musculature were applied. Maps of quantitative MR parameters T1, T2, and magnetisation transfer ratio (MTR) were calculated and evaluated by investigating changes over time in the fractured area by defined ROIs. Additionally, muscle areas were examined as reference regions to validate this approach. Quantitative evaluation of 23 MR data sets (12 test subjects, ♀: 7 ♂: 5) showed an initial peak in T1 values in the fractured area (T1=1895 ± 607 ms), which decreased over time to a value of 1094 ± 182 ms (200 days after the fracture event). T2 values also peaked for early-stage fractures (T2=115 ± 80 ms) and decreased to 73 ± 33 ms within 21 days after the fracture event. After that time point, no significant changes could be detected for T2. MTR remained constant at 35.5 ± 8.0% over time. The study shows that the quantitative assessment of T1 and T2 behaviour over time in the fractured region enable the generation of a novel model allowing for an objective age determination of a fracture.


NMR in Biomedicine | 2014

Age determination of soft tissue hematomas

Bernhard Neumayer; Eva Hassler; Andreas Petrovic; Thomas Widek; Kathrin Ogris; Eva Scheurer

In clinical forensic medicine, the estimation of the age of injuries such as externally visible subcutaneous hematomas is important for the reconstruction of violent events, particularly to include or exclude potential suspects. Since the estimation of the time of origin based on external inspection is unreliable, the aim of this study was to use contrast in MRI to develop an easy‐to‐use model for hematoma age estimation.


Journal of Molecular Histology | 2011

The spatial and temporal expression of VEGF and its receptors 1 and 2 in post-traumatic bone bridge formation of the growth plate

Eva Fischerauer; Nima Heidari; Bernhard Neumayer; Alexander Deutsch; Annelie Weinberg

Injuries to growth plates may initiate the formation of reversible or irreversible bone-bridges, may leading to bone length discrepancy or axis deviation. As vascular invasion is essential for the formation of bone tissue, the aim of our study was to investigate the kinetic expression of Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF) and its receptors R1 and R2 and the ingrowth of vessels in the formation of bone bridges in a rat physeal injury model. Quantitative Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction was performed for VEGF and its receptors. Samples from the proximal physis of the tibial bone were immunohistochemically evaluated for the expression of VEGF and its R1 and R2 receptors and Laminin. Morphologically, physeal bone bridge formation was validated by means of Magnetic Resonance Imaging. Kinetic expression of VEGF and VEGF-R1 mRNA documented a tendency towards an increase in expression on day 7. Histological analyses showed a hematoma containing bone debris on day 1 which was replaced with bony trabeculae by day 14, forming a bone bridge by day 28 which was preceded and accompanied by angiogenesis and consistent with MRI data. VEGF and VEGF-R2 was expressed on the debris within the hematoma and bone trabeculae from days 1 to 28. VEGF-R1 expression was only noted until day 14. The findings of our study suggest that physeal bone bridge formation is in part triggered by VEGF expression and associated with angiogenesis, which was shown to precede bone bridge formation and may be further stimulated through VEGF-positive bone debris.


Journal of Voice | 2012

Laryngeal electromyography: electrode guidance based on 3-dimensional magnetic resonance tomography images of the larynx.

Claudio Storck; Raphael Gehrer; Michael Hofer; Bernhard Neumayer; Rudolf Stollberger; Ralf Schumacher; Markus Gugatschka; Gerhard Friedrich; Markus Wolfensberger

OBJECTIVES/HYPOTHESIS Laryngeal electromyography (LEMG) is an important tool for the assessment of laryngeal nerve and muscle functioning. The purpose of the study was to determine electrode insertion angle and insertion depth for the various laryngeal muscles. METHODS Twenty-three cadaver larynges were examined with magnetic resonance tomography (MRT) and Materialize Interactive Medical Image Control System (Leuven, Belgium) 3-dimensional (3D) imaging software. Geometrical analysis was used to calculate the electrode insertion angles. RESULTS All laryngeal muscles could be identified and 3D visualized on MRT scans. Although the insertion angles were the same in male and female larynges, the insertion depth was significantly larger in male than in female larynges (P<0.05). Of particular clinical importance is the fact that the electrode has to be directed lateral and upward for the thyroarytenoid muscle but lateral and downward for the lateral cricoarytenoid muscle (insertion point=midline lower border of the thyroid). CONCLUSIONS This is the first study that analyzes electrode insertion angles and insertion depths for each laryngeal muscle using 3D imaging. We hope that the information gained from this study will help clinicians performing LEMG to localize the individual laryngeal muscles.


NMR in Biomedicine | 2014

Positive contrast of SPIO‐labeled cells by off‐resonant reconstruction of 3D radial half‐echo bSSFP

Clemens Diwoky; Daniel Liebmann; Bernhard Neumayer; Andreas Reinisch; Florian Knoll; Dirk Strunk; Rudolf Stollberger

This article describes a new acquisition and reconstruction concept for positive contrast imaging of cells labeled with superparamagnetic iron oxides (SPIOs). Overcoming the limitations of a negative contrast representation as gained with gradient echo and fully balanced steady state (bSSFP), the proposed method delivers a spatially localized contrast with high cellular sensitivity not accomplished by other positive contrast methods. Employing a 3D radial bSSFP pulse sequence with half‐echo sampling, positive cellular contrast is gained by adding artificial global frequency offsets to each half‐echo before image reconstruction. The new contrast regime is highlighted with numerical intravoxel simulations including the point‐spread function for 3D half‐echo acquisitions. Furthermore, the new method is validated on the basis of in vitro cell phantom measurements on a clinical MRI platform, where the measured contrast‐to‐noise ratio (CNR) of the new approach exceeds even the negative contrast of bSSFP. Finally, an in vivo proof of principle study based on a mouse model with a clear depiction of labeled cells within a subcutaneous cell islet containing a cell density as low as 7 cells/mm3 is presented. The resultant isotropic images show robustness to motion and a high CNR, in addition to an enhanced specificity due to the positive contrast of SPIO‐labeled cells. Copyright


PLOS ONE | 2016

Time-Dependent Changes in T1 during Fracture Healing in Juvenile Rats: A Quantitative MR Approach

Katharina Baron; Bernhard Neumayer; Eva E. Amerstorfer; Eva Scheurer; Clemens Diwoky; Rudolf Stollberger; Hanna Sprenger; Annelie Weinberg

Quantitative magnetic resonance imaging (qMRI) offers several advantages in imaging and determination of soft tissue alterations when compared to qualitative imaging techniques. Although applications in brain and muscle tissues are well studied, its suitability to quantify relaxation times of intact and injured bone tissue, especially in children, is widely unknown. The objective observation of a fracture including its age determination can become of legal interest in cases of child abuse or maltreatment. Therefore, the aim of this study is the determination of time dependent changes in intact and corresponding injured bones in immature rats via qMRI, to provide the basis for an objective and radiation-free approach for fracture dating. Thirty-five MR scans of 7 Sprague-Dawley rats (male, 4 weeks old, 100 ± 5 g) were acquired on a 3T MRI scanner (TimTrio, Siemens AG, Erlangen, Germany) after the surgical infliction of an epiphyseal fracture in the tibia. The images were taken at days 1, 3, 7, 14, 28, 42 and 82 post-surgery. A proton density-weighted and a T1-weighted 3D FLASH sequence were acquired to calculate the longitudinal relaxation time T1 of the fractured region and the surrounding tissues. The calculation of T1 in intact and injured bone resulted in a quantitative observation of bone development in intact juvenile tibiae as well as the bone healing process in the injured tibiae. In both areas, T1 decreased over time. To evaluate the differences in T1 behaviour between the intact and injured bone, the relative T1 values (bone-fracture) were calculated, showing clear detectable alterations of T1 after fracture occurrence. These results indicate that qMRI has a high potential not only for clinically relevant applications to detect growth defects or developmental alterations in juvenile bones, but also for forensically relevant applications such as the dating of fractures in cases of child abuse or maltreatment.


Forensic Science International | 2017

Forensic age estimation by morphometric analysis of the manubrium from 3D MR images

Naira P. Martínez Vera; Johannes Höller; Thomas Widek; Bernhard Neumayer; Thomas Ehammer; Martin Urschler

Forensic age estimation research based on skeletal structures focuses on patterns of growth and development using different bones. In this work, our aim was to study growth-related evolution of the manubrium in living adolescents and young adults using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), which is an image acquisition modality that does not involve ionizing radiation. In a first step, individual manubrium and subject features were correlated with age, which confirmed a statistically significant change of manubrium volume (Mvol:p<0.01, R2¯=0.50) and surface area (Msur:p<0.01, R2¯=0.53) for the studied age range. Additionally, shapes of the manubria were for the first time investigated using principal component analysis. The decomposition of the data in principal components allowed to analyse the contribution of each component to total shape variation. With 13 principal components, ∼96% of shape variation could be described (Mshp:p<0.01, R2¯=0.60). Multiple linear regression analysis modelled the relationship between the statistically best correlated variables and age. Models including manubrium shape, volume or surface area divided by the height of the subject (Y∼MshpMsur/Sh:p<0.01, R2¯=0.71; Y∼MshpMvol/Sh:p<0.01, R2¯=0.72) presented a standard error of estimate of two years. In order to estimate the accuracy of these two manubrium-based age estimation models, cross validation experiments predicting age on held-out test sets were performed. Median absolute difference of predicted and known chronological age was 1.18 years for the best performing model (Y∼MshpMsur/Sh:p<0.01, Rp2=0.67). In conclusion, despite limitations in determining legal majority age, manubrium morphometry analysis presented statistically significant results for skeletal age estimation, which indicates that this bone structure may be considered as a new candidate in multi-factorial MRI-based age estimation.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Reducing acquisition time for MRI-based forensic age estimation

Bernhard Neumayer; Matthias Schloegl; Christian Payer; Thomas Widek; Sebastian Tschauner; Thomas Ehammer; Rudolf Stollberger; Martin Urschler

Radiology-based estimation of a living person’s unknown age has recently attracted increasing attention due to large numbers of undocumented immigrants entering Europe. To avoid the application of X-ray-based imaging techniques, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has been suggested as an alternative imaging modality. Unfortunately, MRI requires prolonged acquisition times, which potentially represents an additional stressor for young refugees. To eliminate this shortcoming, we investigated the degree of reduction in acquisition time that still led to reliable age estimates. Two radiologists randomly assessed original images and two sets of retrospectively undersampled data of 15 volunteers (N = 45 data sets) applying an established radiological age estimation method to images of the hand and wrist. Additionally, a neural network-based age estimation method analyzed four sets of further undersampled images from the 15 volunteers (N = 105 data sets). Furthermore, we compared retrospectively undersampled and acquired undersampled data for three volunteers. To assess reliability with increasing degree of undersampling, intra-rater and inter-rater agreement were analyzed computing signed differences and intra-class correlation. While our findings have to be confirmed by a larger prospective study, the results from both radiological and automatic age estimation showed that reliable age estimation was still possible for acquisition times of 15 seconds.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2018

Reproducibility of relaxometry of human lumbar vertebrae at 3 Tesla using 1H MR spectroscopy: Reproducibility of Relaxometry at 3T

Bernhard Neumayer; Thomas Widek; Rudolf Stollberger; Eva Scheurer

MR spectroscopy is widely used for fat fraction quantification of human lumbar vertebrae. However, the measurements need to be corrected for relaxation effects.


International Journal of Legal Medicine | 2015

Contrast of artificial subcutaneous hematomas in MRI over time

Eva Hassler; Kathrin Ogris; Andreas Petrovic; Bernhard Neumayer; Thomas Widek; Kathrin Yen; Eva Scheurer

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Rudolf Stollberger

Graz University of Technology

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Martin Urschler

Graz University of Technology

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Thomas Ehammer

Medical University of Graz

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Christian Payer

Graz University of Technology

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Eva Hassler

Medical University of Graz

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Andreas Petrovic

Graz University of Technology

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Clemens Diwoky

Graz University of Technology

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