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Dive into the research topics where Christoph Ebner is active.

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Featured researches published by Christoph Ebner.


PLOS ONE | 2007

Melanoma screening with cellular phones.

Cesare Massone; Rainer Hofmann-Wellenhof; Verena Ahlgrimm-Siess; Gerald Gabler; Christoph Ebner; H. Peter Soyer

Background Mobile teledermatology has recently been shown to be suitable for teledermatology despite limitations in image definition in preliminary studies. The unique aspect of mobile teledermatology is that this system represents a filtering or triage system, allowing a sensitive approach for the management of patients with emergent skin diseases. Methodology/Principal Findings In this study we investigated the feasibility of teleconsultation using a new generation of cellular phones in pigmented skin lesions. 18 patients were selected consecutively in the Pigmented Skin Lesions Clinic of the Department of Dermatology, Medical University of Graz, Graz (Austria). Clinical and dermoscopic images were acquired using a Sony Ericsson with a built-in two-megapixel camera. Two teleconsultants reviewed the images on a specific web application (http://www.dermahandy.net/default.asp) where images had been uploaded in JPEG format. Compared to the face-to-face diagnoses, the two teleconsultants obtained a score of correct telediagnoses of 89% and of 91.5% reporting the clinical and dermoscopic images, respectively. Conclusions/Significance The present work is the first study performing mobile teledermoscopy using cellular phones. Mobile teledermatology has the potential to become an easy applicable tool for everyone and a new approach for enhanced self-monitoring for skin cancer screening in the spirit of the eHealth program of the European Commission Information for Society and Media.


Journal of Telemedicine and Telecare | 2008

Mobile teledermatology: A feasibility study of 58 subjects using mobile phones

Christoph Ebner; Elisabeth Wurm; Barbara Binder; Harald Kittler; Gian Piero Lozzi; Cesare Massone; Gerald Gabler; Rainer Hofmann-Wellenhof; H. Peter Soyer

Summary We investigated the diagnostic agreement between teledermatology based on images from a mobile phone camera and face-to-face (FTF) dermatology. Diagnostic agreement was assessed for two teledermatologists (TD) in comparison with FTF consultations in 58 subjects. In almost three-quarters of the cases (TD1: 71%; TD2: 76%), the telediagnosis was fully concordant with the FTF diagnosis. Furthermore, the diagnosed diseases were almost all in the same diagnostic category (TD1: 97%; TD2: 90%). If mobile teledermatology had been used for remote triage, TD1 could have treated 53% subjects remotely and 47% subjects would have had to consult a dermatologist FTF. TD2 could have treated 59% subjects remotely, whereas 41% subjects would have had to consult a dermatologist FTF. Forty-eight subjects responded to a questionnaire, of whom only 10 had any concerns regarding teledermatology. Thirty-one subjects stated that they would be willing to pay to use a similar service in future and suggested an amount ranging from €5 to €50 per consultation (mean €22) (€ = £0.7, US


PLOS ONE | 2016

Depression-Burnout Overlap in Physicians

Walter Wurm; Katrin Vogel; A.K. Holl; Christoph Ebner; Dietmar Bayer; Sabrina Mörkl; Istvan-Szilard Szilagyi; Erich Hotter; Hans-Peter Kapfhammer; Peter Hofmann

1.4). These results are encouraging as patient acceptance and reimbursement represent potential obstacles to the implementation of telemedicine services.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2013

Clinical effects of electroconvulsive therapy in severe depression and concomitant changes in cerebral glucose metabolism—An exploratory study

Eva Z. Reininghaus; Bernd Reininghaus; Rottraut Ille; Werner Fitz; Rosa-Maria Lassnig; Christoph Ebner; Painold Annamaria; Peter Hofmann; Hans-Peter Kapfhammer; Aigner Reingard; Franz Fazekas; Stefan Ropele; Christian Enzinger

Background Whether burnout is a distinct phenomenon rather than a type of depression and whether it is a syndrome, limited to three “core” components (emotional exhaustion, depersonalization and low personal accomplishment) are subjects of current debate. We investigated the depression-burnout overlap, and the pertinence of these three components in a large, representative sample of physicians. Methods In a cross-sectional study, all Austrian physicians were invited to answer a questionnaire that included the Major Depression Inventory (MDI), the Hamburg Burnout Inventory (HBI), as well as demographic and job-related parameters. Of the 40093 physicians who received an invitation, a total of 6351 (15.8%) participated. The data of 5897 participants were suitable for analysis. Results Of the participants, 10.3% were affected by major depression. Our study results suggest that potentially 50.7% of the participants were affected by symptoms of burnout. Compared to physicians unaffected by burnout, the odds ratio of suffering from major depression was 2.99 (95% CI 2.21–4.06) for physicians with mild, 10.14 (95% CI 7.58–13.59) for physicians with moderate, 46.84 (95% CI 35.25–62.24) for physicians with severe burnout and 92.78 (95% CI 62.96–136.74) for the 3% of participants with the highest HBI_sum (sum score of all ten HBI components). The HBI components Emotional Exhaustion, Personal Accomplishment and Detachment (representing depersonalization) tend to correlate more highly with the main symptoms of major depression (sadness, lack of interest and lack of energy) than with each other. A combination of the HBI components Emotional Exhaustion, Helplessness, Inner Void and Tedium (adj.R2 = 0.92) explained more HBI_sum variance than the three “core” components (adj.R2 = 0.85) of burnout combined. Cronbach’s alpha for Emotional Exhaustion, Helplessness, Inner Void and Tedium combined was 0.90 compared to α = 0.54 for the combination of the three “core” components. Conclusions This study demonstrates the overlap of burnout and major depression in terms of symptoms and the deficiency of the three-dimensional concept of burnout. In our opinion, it might be preferable to use multidimensional burnout inventories in combination with valid depression scales than to rely exclusively on MBI when clinically assessing burnout.


Psychopraxis | 2010

Moderne Antidepressivatherapie: Standards und Neuentwicklungen

Peter Hofmann; Christoph Ebner

OBJECTIVE Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is an effective mode of treatment--especially for severe depression and for depression refractory to pharmacotherapy, nevertheless the mode of action of ECT is far from being fully understood. This study assessed the effects of a series of ECT in depressive subjects on cerebral glucose metabolism measured by FDG-PET scans pre- and post-therapy in thus far the largest group of 12 patients. METHODS Our analysis included careful repeated evaluation of clinical changes in mood and behaviour by standardised questionnaires, which allowed testing for a potential correlation between clinical and cerebral metabolic changes. PET scanning was done within a predefined time window and we used predefined ROIs with counts normalized to the pons activity. RESULTS We observed few changes in cerebral glucose metabolism over time. There was a marginal increase in the left temporal and a trend for a decrease in left frontobasal areas subsequent to treatment in our sample. FDG uptake patterns remained remarkably stable in all the other predefined ROIs pre- and post-treatment. There were no significant correlations between changes in relative metabolic rates and changes in depression scores and parameters derived from neurocognitive testing. CONCLUSIONS Our study thus cannot support the view that FDG-PET can assess the functional brain changes that are likely to occur subsequent to ECT in such a scenario, but this may be related to limited sensitivity given the sample size. Future studies thus might wish to challenge this notion in larger patient samples to clarify this issue.


Elektrotechnik Und Informationstechnik | 2006

Mobile teledermatology coming of age

Christoph Ebner; Gerald Gabler; Cesare Massone; Rainer Hofmann-Wellenhof; Gian Piero Lozzi; Elisabeth Wurm; Hans-peter Soyer

In den letzten drei Jahrzehnten ist es, mit der Entwicklung der so genannten selektiven Serotonin-Wiederaufnahmehemmer (SSRI), zu einer Revolution in der Behandlung der Depression gekommen. Mit dieser Produktgruppe war es erstmals möglich, depressive Erkrankungen mittels einfacher Strategien (1 × 1 Dosierung) bei hoher Effektivität durchzuführen. So haben die Antidepressiva einen Siegeszug um die Welt angetreten und gehören heute zu den am häufigsten verschriebenen Medikamenten überhaupt. Gerade dadurch wurde eine neue Ära moderner, antidepressiver Pharmakotherapie eingeleitet. Einer der wesentlichen Effekte dürfte darin liegen, dass in den industrialisierten Staaten seit der Einführung der SSRI die Suizidraten rückläufig sind - was eine sensationelle Entwicklung moderner Behandlungsstrategien in der Psychiatrie reflektiert.


Open Journal of Depression | 2013

Mood-Related Negative Bias in Response to Affective Stimuli in Patients with Major Depression

Rottraut Ille; Peter Hofmann; Christoph Ebner; Hans-Peter Kapfhammer


Neuropsychiatrie | 2018

Remission eines komplexen periodischen katatonen Syndroms unter Elektrokonvulsionstherapie

Robert Queissner; Walter Wurm; Christoph Ebner; Eva Z. Reininghaus; Hans-Peter Kapfhammer


psychopraxis. neuropraxis | 2010

Moderne Antidepressivatherapie : Standards und Neuentwicklungen (Psychiatrie)

Peter Hofmann; Christoph Ebner


Acta Neuropsychiatrica | 2009

49 The influence of bipolar disorder on sexuality and partnership

Martina Leodolter; Bernadette Stebbegg; Eva Z. Schmidt; Bernd Reininghaus; Rosa-Maria Lassnig; Christoph Ebner; Hans-Peter Kapfhammer

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Cesare Massone

Medical University of Graz

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Bernd Reininghaus

Medical University of Graz

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Elisabeth Wurm

Medical University of Graz

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