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Dive into the research topics where Dorothee M. Aeppli is active.

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Featured researches published by Dorothee M. Aeppli.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1998

Prevalence of sudden cardiac death during competitive sports activities in Minnesota high school athletes.

Barry J. Maron; Thomas E. Gohman; Dorothee M. Aeppli

OBJECTIVES Reliable prevalence data would be useful in assessing the impact of sudden cardiac death in young competitive athletes on the community and designing effective preparticipation screening strategies. BACKGROUND The frequency with which these catastrophes occur is largely unknown. METHODS We utilized a circumstance unique to Minnesota in which the precise number of participants and deaths due to cardiovascular disease could be ascertained over a substantial period of time based on a long-standing insurance program for catastrophic injury or death, mandatory for all student athletes engaged in interscholastic sports. RESULTS Over the 12-year period, 1985/1986 to 1996/1997, inclusive, three sudden deaths due to cardiovascular disease occurred in competitive high school athletes (grades 10-12) during competition or practice. At autopsy, 1 each proved to be due to anomalous origin of the left main coronary artery from the right sinus of Valsalva, congenital aortic valve stenosis (with bicuspid valve) and myocarditis. All three athletes were white and male, 16 or 17 years of age; two competed in cross-country/track and one in basketball. During the study period there were 1,453,280 overall sports participations and 651,695 student athlete participants among the 27 high school sports. The calculated risk for sudden death was 1:500,000 participations and 1:217,400 participants per academic year (or 0.46/100,000, annually). Over a 3-year high school career for a student athlete the estimated risk was 1:72,500. CONCLUSIONS The risk of sudden cardiac death in a population of high school student athletes was small, in the range of one in 200,000 per year, and was higher in male athletes. The rare occurrence of sudden cardiac death in competitive sports underlines the limitations implicit in structuring productive and cost-effective broad-based preparticipation screening strategies for high school athletes.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1983

Acyclovir Halts Progression of Herpes Zoster in Immunocompromised Patients

Henry H. Balfour; Bonnie Bean; Laskin Ol; Richard F. Ambinder; Joel D. Meyers; James C. Wade; John A. Zaia; Dorothee M. Aeppli; Kirk Le; Anthony C. Segreti; Ronald E. Keeney

We conducted a placebo-controlled, double-blind study of acyclovir therapy for acute herpes zoster in immunocompromised patients. Of the 94 patients enrolled in the study, 52 had localized skin lesions at entry, and 42 had disseminated cutaneous zoster. A one-week course of intravenous acyclovir (1500 mg per square meter of body-surface area per day) halted progression of zoster in both groups, as determined by development or progression of cutaneous dissemination, development of visceral zoster, or proportion of cases deemed treatment failures. Significantly fewer patients treated with acyclovir within the first three days after the onset of exanthem had complications of zoster, as compared with patients treated with placebo (P = 0.02 by Fishers exact test), but acyclovir also stopped progression of zoster in patients treated after three days of rash (P = 0.05 by Fishers exact test). Acyclovir recipients with disseminated cutaneous zoster had a significantly accelerated rate of clearance of virus from vesicles, as compared with placebo recipients (P = 0.05 by the Breslow test).


Circulation | 2003

Comparison of Standard Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Versus the Combination of Active Compression-Decompression Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and an Inspiratory Impedance Threshold Device for Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest

Benno Wolcke; D. Mauer; Mark F. Schoefmann; Heinke Teichmann; Terry A. Provo; Karl H. Lindner; Wolfgang Dick; Dorothee M. Aeppli; Keith G. Lurie

Background—Active compression-decompression (ACD) CPR combined with an inspiratory impedance threshold device (ITD) improves vital organ blood flow during cardiac arrest. This study compared survival rates with ACD+ITD CPR versus standard manual CPR (S-CPR). Methods and Results—A prospective, controlled trial was performed in Mainz, Germany, in which a 2-tiered emergency response included early defibrillation. Patients with out-of-hospital arrest of presumed cardiac pathogenesis were sequentially randomized to ACD+ITD CPR or S-CPR by the advanced life support team after intubation. Rescuers learned which method of CPR to use at the start of each work shift. The primary end point was 1-hour survival after a witnessed arrest. With ACD+ITD CPR (n=103), return of spontaneous circulation and 1- and 24-hour survival rates were 55%, 51%, and 37% versus 37%, 32%, and 22% with S-CPR (n=107) (P =0.016, 0.006, and 0.033, respectively). One- and 24-hour survival rates in witnessed arrests were 55% and 41% with ACD+ITD CPR versus 33% and 23% in control subjects (P =0.011 and 0.019), respectively. One- and 24-hour survival rates in patients with a witnessed arrest in ventricular fibrillation were 68% and 58% after ACD+ITD CPR versus 27% and 23% after S-CPR (P =0.002 and 0.009), respectively. Patients randomized ≥10 minutes after the call for help to the ACD+ITD CPR had a 3 times higher 1-hour survival rate than control subjects (P =0.002). Hospital discharge rates were 18% after ACD+ITD CPR versus 13% in control subjects (P =0.41). In witnessed arrests, overall neurological function trended higher with ACD+ITD CPR versus control subjects (P =0.07). Conclusions—Compared with S-CPR, ACD+ITD CPR significantly improved short-term survival rates for patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. Additional studies are needed to evaluate potential long-term benefits of ACD+ITD CPR.


Journal of Periodontology | 1994

Bacteria as Risk Markers for Periodontitis

Larry F. Wolff; Gunnar Dahlén; Dorothee M. Aeppli

Specific microbial species have been closely associated with periodontitis. Through longitudinal studies, some of these microbial species have been implicated in the etiology of progressive periodontal disease. Although putative periodontal pathogens are often isolated from individuals with severe periodontitis, they also frequently inhabit the subgingival environment and are not always associated with advanced disease. In this respect, it is becoming increasingly apparent that there is no single etiology of the various periodontal diseases. Destructive periodontal diseases are the result of environmental, host, and bacterial factors. Microorganisms, however, are essential components of any model for progressive periodontitis. This paper selectively reviews bacteria as risk markers for periodontitis. Attention focuses on bacteria in conjunction with behavioral patterns (oral hygiene habits and smoking) and host response (gingival crevicular fluid substances) as risk markers for periodontitis. Prospective studies implicating specific bacteria in progressive periodontitis are addressed and a bacterial risk assessment model for progressive periodontitis is discussed with respect to the interplay between bacterial, environmental, and host markers. J Periodontol 1994; 64:498-510.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2003

Clinical course of hypertrophiccardiomyopathy with survival to advanced age

Barry J. Maron; Susan A. Casey; Robert G. Hauser; Dorothee M. Aeppli

OBJECTIVES This study was designed to clarify and resolve the clinical profile of older patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). BACKGROUND Adverse consequences of HCM such as sudden death and incapacitating symptoms have been emphasized for the young and middle-aged. METHODS Long-term outcome of HCM was assessed in a community-based cohort not subject to tertiary center referral bias. RESULTS Of 312 patients, 73 (23%) achieved normal life expectancy (> or =75 years; range to 96); 44 (14%) were > or =80 years old. Most patients > or =75 years (47; 64%) experienced no or only mild limiting symptoms and lived virtually their entire lives with few HCM-related clinical consequences; 26 patients (36%) experienced severe progressive symptoms. In elderly patients with HCM, diagnosis and symptom onset were considerably delayed to 74 +/- 8 and 70 +/- 11 years, respectively. For patients > or =50 years at diagnosis, the probability of survival for 5, 10, and 15 years was 85 +/- 3%, 74 +/- 4%, and 57 +/- 6%, respectively, and did not significantly differ from a matched general population (p = 0.20). Patients > or =75 years were predominantly women, and had less marked wall thickness and more frequently showed basal outflow obstruction > or =30 mm Hg (compared with those <75 years; p < 0.01 and 0.001, respectively). CONCLUSIONS Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is frequently well tolerated and compatible with normal life expectancy, and may remain clinically dormant for long periods of time with symptoms and initial diagnosis deferred until late in life. These observations afford a measure of reassurance to many patients with HCM, a disease for which clinical course is often unfavorable and unpredictable.


Circulation | 2004

Usefulness of B-Type Natriuretic Peptide Assay in the Assessment of Symptomatic State in Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy

Barry J. Maron; Venkatakrishna N. Tholakanahalli; Andrey G. Zenovich; Susan A. Casey; Daniel Duprez; Dorothee M. Aeppli; Jay N. Cohn

Background—Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) has a diverse clinical spectrum that often includes progressive heart failure symptoms and disability. Assessment of symptom severity may be highly subjective, encumbered by the heterogeneous clinical presentation. Plasma B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP) has been used widely as an objective marker for heart failure severity and outcome, predominantly in coronary heart disease with ventricular dilatation and systolic dysfunction. Methods and Results—We prospectively assessed plasma BNP as a quantitative clinical marker of heart failure severity in 107 consecutive HCM patients. BNP showed a statistically significant relationship to magnitude of functional limitation, assessed by New York Heart Association (NYHA) functional class: I, 136±159 pg/mL; II, 338±439 pg/mL; and III/IV, 481±334 pg/mL (P <0.001). Multivariable analysis showed that BNP was independently related to NYHA class as well as age and left ventricular wall thickness (each with a value of P =0.0001). BNP ≥200 pg/mL was the most reliable predictor of heart failure symptoms, with positive and negative predictive values of 63% and 79%, respectively. BNP power in distinguishing patients with or without heart failure symptoms was less than that for differentiating between no (or only mild) and severe symptoms (area under receiver operating characteristic curve=0.75 and 0.83, respectively). Conclusions—Plasma BNP is independently related to the presence and magnitude of heart failure symptoms in patients with HCM. As a clinical marker for heart failure, BNP is limited by considerable overlap in values between categories of heart failure severity as well as confounding variables of left ventricular wall thickness and age.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2000

The need for long-term surveillance for patients treated with curative radiotherapy for Hodgkin's disease: University of Minnesota experience.

Chung K.K. Lee; Dorothee M. Aeppli; Mary E. Nierengarten

PURPOSE To examine the long-term outcome of Stage I, II, and III patients treated with curative radiotherapy for Hodgkins disease at the University of Minnesota Hospital, with particular focus on long-term treatment-related complications and the need for long-term surveillance after treatment. METHODS AND MATERIALS A total of 210 Stage I, II, and III patients (98 female, 112 male) treated at the University of Minnesota since 1970 were included in this study. All patients were laparotomy staged. Between 1970 and 1974, 35 high-risk patients (i.e., patients with large mediastinal mass, and/or hilar disease, and/or splenic involvement) and 40 low-risk patients were treated with standard field radiotherapy. From 1975 on, 67 high-risk patients received radical radiotherapy because of poor outcomes with standard radiotherapy, and 68 low-risk patients received standard radiotherapy. Salvage chemotherapy was given to 62 patients who recurred. Median follow-up for all patients was 15.6 years (range 0. 35-26.5 years). Long-term complications after treatment were assessed using standardized incidence ratios (SIR) and mortality ratios (SMR), with particular focus on cardiac complications and secondary malignancies. RESULTS By study end, 70% of the patients are alive and 70% had never recurred. Complications included 33 second malignancies and 75 cardiovascular events. Patients treated for Hodgkins disease had about 7 times the risk of dying from cardiac problems (SMR = 7.2) and 10 times the risk of dying from a second malignancy (SMR = 10.3) compared to the general population. In terms of absolute risk, Hodgkins disease would cause seven additional deaths from secondary malignancies per year among 1000 patients and four additional deaths from cardiac problems. CONCLUSION Hodgkins disease patients treated successfully with radiotherapy are at an increased risk for developing long-term treatment-related cardiac disease and/or second malignancies. Careful monitoring of these patients is essential to manage morbidity and minimize mortality from these complications. Suggestions for the establishment of worldwide surveillance programs for these patients are proposed.


American Heart Journal | 1987

Survival of patients with acute renal failure requiring dialysis after open heart surgery: Early prognostic indicators

Helmut W. Lange; Dorothee M. Aeppli; David C. Brown

We analyzed pre- and postoperative data from 36 consecutive patients, who developed acute renal failure requiring hemodialysis after open heart surgery, to determine which factors predicted survival. Seventeen patients (47%) survived. Age, sex, preoperative renal dysfunction, severity of underlying heart disease, perioperative myocardial infarction, cardiopulmonary bypass time, and oliguria did not influence outcome (by univariate analysis). However, the number and type of postoperative complications, before the first hemodialysis and 48 hours thereafter, were found to be significant predictors of outcome. Univariate as well as multivariate analysis showed that the highest mortality rate was associated with the presence of respiratory failure, central nervous system dysfunction, hypotension, and infection (48 hours after first hemodialysis). Thirty-three (92%) of the 36 patients were correctly classified as survivors or nonsurvivors based on the presence or absence of any one of three prognostic indicators (three or more complications before the first hemodialysis and persisting 48 hours later; hypotension before the first dialysis and persisting 48 hours later; or central nervous system dysfunction 48 hours after hemodialysis was initiated). We conclude that an assessment of prognosis can be made in such patients as early as 48 hours after the first hemodialysis based on the number and type of complications.


Muscle & Nerve | 1996

Neuropathy and mortality in diabetes: influence of pancreas transplantation.

Xavier Navarro; William R. Kennedy; Dorothee M. Aeppli; David E. R. Sutherland

We collected information on patient status and cause of death for 545 insulin‐dependent diabetic subjects who had cardiorespiratory reflex and nerve conduction tests performed to determine if presence and severity of autonomic and somatic neuropathy is associated with mortality and if a functioning pancreas transplantation (PTx) influences mortality. Follow‐up was 12–138 months. Abnormal cardiorespiratory reflexes were present in 417 patients and there was abnormal nerve conduction in 392 patients. Mortality rates for patients with abnormal tests were higher (P < 0.0001) than for patients with normal tests. A total neuropathy score that included cardiorespiratory and nerve conduction test scores predicted survival better than separate scores. Patients with moderate neuropathy, but not those with severe neuropathy, who retained a functioning PTx, had longer survival times than patients whose PTx failed in the first 3 months. Considering only patients transplanted after 1985, those with moderate neuropathy who retained a functioning PTx had even longer survival times than nontransplanted patients.


Urology | 2005

Prevalence and effect of varicoceles in an elderly population

Benjamin K. Canales; Daniel M. Zapzalka; Cesar Ercole; Patrick Carey; Erhard Haus; Dorothee M. Aeppli; Jon L. Pryor

OBJECTIVES The prevalence of a varicocele in the adolescent and young adult populations is approximately 15%. Because other varicose veins increase in prevalence with advanced age, we hypothesized that the incidence of varicoceles in the elderly population would be greater and might affect testicular size, consistency, and function. METHODS As part of a prostate cancer screening program, we prospectively evaluated 354 men (mean age 60.7 years) by physical examination for the presence of a varicocele, testicular size, and consistency, and measured the serum testosterone level. RESULTS A varicocele was present bilaterally in 19.8% (70 of 354), left sided only in 22.0% (78 of 354), and right sided only in 1.1% (4 of 354) of patients. Decreased testosterone levels correlated with older age (P = 0.001) and the presence of bilaterally soft testes (P = 0.02) but not the presence of a varicocele. Testes in men with bilateral varicoceles were significantly smaller (P = 0.001) and softer (P = 0.001) than in men without varicoceles. Higher grade varicoceles were more likely to be associated with soft testes (P = 0.001) than were lower grade varicoceles. CONCLUSIONS The 42% prevalence of varicoceles in our elderly population was greater than that for historic control younger populations, suggesting either an increase with age or examiner sensitivity bias. Varicoceles in the elderly, especially when bilateral, significantly affect testicular consistency (softer) and testicular size (smaller), but do not directly decrease serum testosterone levels. The presence of bilaterally soft testes in elderly men indicates bilateral gonadal dysfunction and may be a physical examination finding associated with decreased serum testosterone.

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Bonnie Bean

University of Minnesota

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Clara D. Bloomfield

Roswell Park Cancer Institute

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