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Dive into the research topics where Carsten Eggers is active.

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Featured researches published by Carsten Eggers.


Movement Disorders | 2011

Akinetic‐rigid and tremor‐dominant Parkinson's disease patients show different patterns of FP‐CIT Single photon emission computed tomography

Carsten Eggers; Deniz Kahraman; Gereon R. Fink; Matthias Schmidt; Lars Timmermann

To elucidate whether Parkinsons disease subtypes show a different pattern of Iodine‐123 fluoropropyl–;carbomethoxy‐3 β‐(FP‐CIT) single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) binding in accordance with neuropathological findings.


Cortex | 2015

A systematic review on the applications of resting-state fMRI in Parkinson's disease: Does dopamine replacement therapy play a role?

Masoud Tahmasian; Lisa M. Bettray; Thilo van Eimeren; Alexander Drzezga; Lars Timmermann; Claudia R. Eickhoff; Simon B. Eickhoff; Carsten Eggers

Functional neuroimaging techniques provide important insight into the pathophysiology of neurodegenerative disorders such as Parkinsons disease (PD) in-vivo. Recently, resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) has been applied as a non-invasive tool in many studies to assess functional abnormalities observed in PD without the effects of particular motor or cognitive tasks. In this review, we summarized 50 original PD rs-fMRI studies and subdivided them based on the medication status of the patients to highlight the impact of dopamine replacement therapy (DRT) when rs-fMRI was used to assess patients with PD. Although there are many different published approaches to analyzing rs-fMRI in PD, it seems that DRT plays a critical role in the functional reorganization of the brain throughout all of these approaches. In particular, studies that compared PD patients with and without medication demonstrated that DRT normalizes aberrant functional patterns in PD and leads to an improvement of PD symptoms. Thus, researchers should consider DRT as a confounding factor, which could result in misinterpretations. We suggest that performing rs-fMRI in de novo patients could be a method of choice to study the fundamental functional abnormalities in PD independent of the effects of DRT. However, it is necessary to carefully control for excessive involuntary head motions in the patients not receiving DRT. On the other hand, recruiting patients under daily DRT might be favorable to assess particular interventions in clinical routine.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2009

Functional brain imaging in 14 patients with dissociative amnesia reveals right inferolateral prefrontal hypometabolism

Matthias Brand; Carsten Eggers; Nadine Reinhold; Esther Fujiwara; Josef Kessler; Wolf-Dieter Heiss; Hans J. Markowitsch

Dissociative amnesia is a condition usually characterized by severely impaired retrograde memory functioning in the absence of structural brain damage. Recent case studies nevertheless found functional brain changes in patients suffering from autobiographical-episodic memory loss in the cause of dissociative amnesia. Functional changes were demonstrated in both resting state and memory retrieval conditions. In addition, some but not all cases also showed other neuropsychological impairments beyond retrograde memory deficits. However, there is no group study available that examined potential functional brain abnormalities and accompanying neuropsychological deteriorations in larger samples of patients with dissociative retrograde amnesia. We report functional imaging and neuropsychological data acquired in 14 patients with dissociative amnesia following stressful or traumatic events. All patients suffered from autobiographical memory loss. In addition, approximately half of the patients had deficits in anterograde memory and executive functioning. Accompanying functional brain changes were measured by [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET). Regional glucose utilization of the patients was compared with that of 19 healthy subjects, matched for age and gender. We found significantly decreased glucose utilization in the right inferolateral prefrontal cortex in the patients. Hypometabolism in this brain region, known to be involved in retrieval of autobiographical memories and self-referential processing, may be a functional brain correlate of dissociative amnesia.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Parkinson Subtypes Progress Differently in Clinical Course and Imaging Pattern

Carsten Eggers; David J. Pedrosa; Deniz Kahraman; Franziska Maier; Catharine J. Lewis; Gereon R. Fink; Matthias Schmidt; Lars Timmermann

Objective To elucidate whether Parkinson’s disease (PD) subtypes show a differential pattern of FP-CIT-SPECT binding during the disease course. Methods We examined 27 patients (10 female, 17 male, mean age 61.68±11.24 years, 14 tremordominant, 13 akinetic-rigid) with [123I]FP-CIT-SPECT and clinical ratings including UPDRS III after at baseline and after a mean period of 2.47 years. Patients had been classified at baseline as tremordominant or akinetic-rigid according to a “tremor score” and “non-tremor score”. These subgroups were compared for differences in disease progression. Means of clinical ratings and the quantitative analyses of FP-CIT-SPECT for ipsi- and contralateral putamen and caudate nucleus were calculated and compared between baseline and follow-up. Results There were no statistical differences concerning age, disease duration, L-Dopa equivalent dose, disease severity (UPDRS III) or dopaminergic uptake in FP-CIT-SPECT at baseline between both subgroups. At follow-up, akinetic-rigid patients showed a distinct and statistically significant reduction of the dopaminergic uptake associated with significant progression of the clinical symptoms (UPDRS III). In contrast, in tremor patients the aggravation of clinical symptoms and dopaminergic deficit was less pronounced without statistical significance among assessments. Conclusions This study shows for the first time a considerable progression of clinical symptoms and in-vivo dopaminergic deficit of akinetic-rigid compared to tremordominant PD patients over time. Our data may help to improve strategic planning of further therapeutic trials and to provide a clearer prognosis for patients regarding the perspective of their disease.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2013

Patients’ expectations of deep brain stimulation, and subjective perceived outcome related to clinical measures in Parkinson's disease: a mixed-method approach

Franziska Maier; Catharine J. Lewis; Nina Horstkoetter; Carsten Eggers; Elke Kalbe; Mohammad Maarouf; Jens Kuhn; Mateusz Zurowski; Elena Moro; Christiane Woopen; Lars Timmermann

Objective To study patients’ expectations of subthalamic deep brain stimulation (STN-DBS) and their subjective perceived outcome, by using qualitative and quantitative methods in Parkinsons disease (PD). Methods PD patients were prospectively examined before and 3 months after surgery. Semistructured interviews regarding preoperative expectations and postsurgical subjective perceived outcome were conducted. These were analysed using content analysis. For statistical analyses, patients were classified according to their subjective perceived outcome, resulting in three different subjective outcome groups (negative, mixed, positive outcome). The groups were used for multiple comparisons between and within each group regarding motor impairment, quality of life (QoL), neuropsychiatric status and cognitive functioning, using standard instruments. A logistic regression analysis was conducted to find predictors of subjective negative outcome. Receiver operating characteristic curves were used to analyse cut-off scores for predictive tests. Results Of the 30 PD patients participating, 8 had a subjective negative outcome, 8 a mixed and 14 a positive outcome. All groups significantly improved in motor functioning. Patients with subjective negative outcome were characterised by preoperative unrealistic expectations, no postsurgical improvement in QoL, and significantly higher presurgical and postsurgical apathy and depression scores. Higher preoperative apathy and depression scores were significant predictors of negative subjective outcome. Cut-off scores for apathy and depression were identified. Conclusions The mixed-method approach proved useful in examining a patients subjective perception of STN-DBS outcome. Our results show that significant motor improvement does not necessarily lead to a positive subjective outcome. Moreover, PD patients should be screened carefully before surgery regarding apathy and depression. (DRKS-ID: DRKS00003221).


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2007

Evaluation of Primary Brain Tumors Using 11C-Methionine PET with Reference to a Normal Methionine Uptake Map

David Coope; Jiri Cizek; Carsten Eggers; Stefan Vollmar; Wolf-Dieter Heiss; Karl Herholz

11C-Methionine PET is a well-established technique for evaluating tumor extent for diagnosis and treatment planning in neurooncology. Image interpretation is typically performed using the ratio of uptake within the tumor to a reference region. The precise location of this reference region is important as local variations in methionine uptake may significantly alter the result, particularly for lesions at the border of gray and white matter. Selection of a reference region can be highly user dependant, and identifying a representative normal region may be complicated by midline or multifocal tumors. We hypothesized that current coregistration methods would enable interpretation of methionine PET images with reference to an averaged normal uptake map, allowing better standardization of scan analysis and increasing the sensitivity to tumor infiltration, particularly of white matter regions. Methods: A normal methionine uptake map was prepared from the normal hemispheres of 20 scans performed on patients with benign or low-grade lesions. Affine and nonlinear coregistration algorithms were evaluated for spatial normalization of the images to a previously developed PET template. A standardized method for applying the normal uptake map in brain tumors was developed and evaluated in a sample of 18 scans (6 grade II, 6 grade III, and 6 grade IV gliomas). Tumor extent was compared with that derived from a mirrored contralateral reference region method. Correlation coefficients were calculated between the uptake ratios for tumor to normal uptake map versus tumor to mirrored reference region. Results: “RatioMap” images depicting voxel-by-voxel ratios of a patient scan to the normal uptake map revealed increased methionine uptake in white matter regions that could not be identified using the standard method. Uptake ratios within the tumor varied slightly with the normalization methods used but correlated closely with the ratio to a single reference value. Nonlinear coregistration with median ratio intensity normalization gave the strongest correlation (r = 0.97, P < 0.001, n = 17). Conclusion: Evaluation of methionine PET data with reference to normal uptake data may improve sensitivity to white matter infiltration. The tumor uptake ratios obtained correlated closely with a standard reference value technique, whereas the described method allowed for better standardization of the image analysis.


Obesity | 2007

A Multimedia Tool for the Informed Consent of Patients prior to Gastric Banding

Carsten Eggers; Rainer Obliers; Armin Koerfer; Walter Thomas; Karl Koehle; Arnulf H. Hoelscher; Elfriede Bollschweiler

Objective: Severe obesity is a clear indication for appropriate, effective weight loss therapy. One option is operative intervention, e.g., gastric banding. Risks of the operation and therapeutic alternatives need to be comprehensibly presented to the patient. The literature has shown that better informed consent is obtained using information presented in a multimedia/video‐based format. The current study developed and evaluated a multimedia program aimed at obtaining informed consent from obese patients before gastric banding.


CNS Neuroscience & Therapeutics | 2012

Hallucinations in Neurodegenerative Diseases

Lothar Burghaus; Carsten Eggers; Lars Timmermann; Gereon R. Fink; Nico J. Diederich

Patients with neurodegenerative disease frequently experience hallucinations and illusionary perceptions. As early symptoms, hallucinations may even have diagnostic relevance (i.e., for the diagnosis of Lewy Body Dementia). In the later course of the disease, hallucinations may appear as characteristic symptoms and often constitute a particular challenge for therapeutic endeavors. Here, the distinction of disease‐inherent hallucinations from medication‐associated perceptual disturbances is particularly relevant.
Synucleinopathies and tauopathies have different risk profiles for hallucinations. In synucleinopathies hallucinations are much more frequent and phenomenology is characterized by visual, short‐lived hallucinations, with insight preserved for a long time. A “double hit” theory proposes that dysfunctionality of both associative visual areas and changes of limbic areas or the ventral striatum are required. In contrast, in tauopathies the hallucinations are more rare and mostly embedded in confusional states with agitation and with poorly defined or rapidly changing paranoia. The occurrence of hallucinations has even been proposed as an exclusion criterion for tauopathies with Parkinsonian features such as progressive supranuclear palsy. To date, treatment remains largely empirical, except the use of clozapine and cholinesterase inhibitors in synucleinopathies, which is evidence‐based. The risk of increased neuroleptic sensitivity further restricts the treatment options in patients with Lewy Body Dementia. Coping Strategies and improvement of visual acuity and sleep quality may be useful therapeutic complements.


Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2009

High resolution positron emission tomography demonstrates basal ganglia dysfunction in early Parkinson's disease

Carsten Eggers; Rüdiger Hilker; Lothar Burghaus; Birgit Schumacher; Wolf-Dieter Heiss

High resolution positron emission tomography (PET) with the newly developed HRRT scanner (Siemens/CTI) permits the reliable quantification of 18-Fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) uptake as a marker of neuronal activity in small subcortical nuclei which are involved in the pathophysiology of Parkinsons disease (PD). We investigated the normalized cerebral metabolic rates of glucose (nCMRGlc) with HRRT PET in basal ganglia (BG) nuclei of 10 early-stage PD patients and in 9 healthy volunteers. PET data were co-registered to magnetic resonance images and analyzed in a three-dimensional volume-of-interest (VOI) approach. After normalization for global brain activity, PD patients showed a significantly higher nCMRGlc than controls bilaterally in the BG output nuclei (pallidum, substantia nigra) and unilateral in the caudate and putamen. The metabolic activity of the nucleus accumbens, the subthalamic nucleus, the corpus amygdaloideum and the red nucleus was normal. These first HRRT PET data in living parkinsonian humans extend previous brain imaging findings of abnormal network activity in the BG and confirm output nuclei and striatal overactivation also in early stage PD patients.


Neuroscience Letters | 2006

Cortical acetylcholine esterase activity and ApoE4-genotype in Alzheimer disease

Carsten Eggers; Karl Herholz; Elke Kalbe; Wolf-Dieter Heiss

Positron emission tomography (PET) studies have demonstrated reduced acetylcholine esterase (AChE) activity as an indicator of cholinergic impairment, which is a main pathogenic process in Alzheimers disease (AD). The E4 allele of apolipoprotein epsilon (ApoE4) is a major risk factor for AD. We examined the relation between ApoE-genotype and cortical AChE activity. In 19 patients (mean age 64) with mild to moderate AD (mean MMSE 22) PET with C-11-labeled N-methyl-4-piperidyl-acetate (MP4A) was performed and the ApoE4-genotype was determined. Parametric images of AChE hydrolysis were generated using a non-invasive technique and analysed globally and regionally. A neuropsychological battery testing memory, attention, executive functions, visuoconstruction, and language was administered. The mean cortical AChE activity was reduced significantly in both groups compared to reference values. The ApoE4 positive subjects (two homozygotes, nine heterozygotes) had significantly higher (p<0.05) AChE levels (MP4A hydrolysis rate 0.0753+/-0.0088min(-1)) than the ApoE4 negative subjects (n=8, 0.0654+/-0.0090min(-1)). Both groups were comparable with regard to age (63 versus 65) and dementia severity (MMSE 20 versus MMSE 22). AChE-impairment correlated significantly with the word fluency task (r=0.041, p<0.05) in the ApoE4 negative group only. These results indicate that cortical AChE activity is relatively well preserved in ApoE4 carriers, either by preservation of its cellular expression or as AChE activity in amyloid plaques.

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