Edith Motschall
University of Freiburg
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Featured researches published by Edith Motschall.
Gastroenterology | 2010
Nuh N. Rahbari; Maximilian Aigner; Kristian Thorlund; Nathan M. Mollberg; Edith Motschall; Katrin Jensen; Markus K. Diener; Markus W. Büchler; Moritz Koch; Jürgen Weitz
BACKGROUND & AIMS The prognostic significance of circulating (CTCs) and disseminated tumor cells in patients with colorectal cancer (CRC) is controversial. We performed a meta-analysis of available studies to assess whether the detection of tumor cells in the blood and bone marrow (BM) of patients diagnosed with primary CRC can be used as a prognostic factor. METHODS We searched the Medline, Biosis, Science Citation Index, and Embase databases and reference lists of relevant articles (including review articles) for studies that assessed the prognostic relevance of tumor cell detection in the peripheral blood (PB), mesenteric/portal blood (MPB), or BM of patients with CRC. Meta-analyses were performed using a random effects model, with hazard ratio (HR) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs) as effect measures. RESULTS A total of 36 studies, including 3094 patients, were eligible for final analyses. Pooled analyses that combined all sampling sites (PB, MPB, and BM) associated the detection of tumor cells with poor recurrence-free survival (RFS) (HR = 3.24 [95% CI: 2.06-5.10], n = 26, I(2) = 77%) and overall survival (OS) (2.28 [1.55-3.38], n = 21, I(2) = 66%). Stratification by sampling site showed that detection of tumor cells in the PB compartment was a statistically significant prognostic factor (RFS: 3.06 [1.74-5.38], n = 19, I(2) = 78%; OS: 2.70 [1.74-4.20], n = 16, I(2) = 59%) but not in the MPB (RFS: 4.12 [1.01-16.83], n = 8, I(2) = 75%; OS: 4.80 [0.81-28.32], n = 5, I(2) = 82%) or in the BM (RFS: 2.17 [0.94-5.03], n = 4, I(2) = 78%; OS: 1.50 [0.52-4.32], n = 3, I(2) = 84%). CONCLUSION Detection of CTCs in the PB indicates poor prognosis in patients with primary CRC.
British Journal of Surgery | 2008
Nuh N. Rahbari; Moritz N. Wente; Peter Schemmer; Markus K. Diener; K. Hoffmann; Edith Motschall; Jan Schmidt; Jürgen Weitz; Markus W. Büchler
The effect of portal triad clamping (PTC) on outcome after hepatic resection is uncertain.
American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics | 2009
Theodosia Bartzela; Jens C. Türp; Edith Motschall; Jaap C. Maltha
INTRODUCTION Recently, several reviews have been published on the effects of medications on bone physiology and the clinical side effects in orthodontics. However, the effects of medications on the rate of orthodontic tooth movement have not been evaluated. METHODS A systematic literature review on the effects of medications and dietary supplements on the rate of experimental tooth movement was performed by using PubMed (1953-Oct 2007), Web of Science, and Biosis, complemented by a hand search. RESULTS Forty-nine articles were included in the review, but their interpretation was hindered by the variability in experimental design, magnitude of force applied during tooth movement, and medication regimens. Therapeutic administration of eicosanoids resulted in increased tooth movement, whereas their blocking led to a decrease. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) decreased tooth movement, but non-NSAID analgesics, such as paracetamol (acetaminophen), had no effect. Corticosteroid hormones, parathyroid hormone, and thyroxin have all been shown to increase tooth movement. Estrogens probably reduce tooth movement, although no direct evidence is available. Vitamin D3 stimulates tooth movement, and dietary calcium seemed to reduce it. Bisphosphonates had a strong inhibitory effect. CONCLUSIONS Medications might have an important influence on the rate of tooth movement, and information on their consumption is essential to adequately discuss treatment planning with patients.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2012
Nuh N. Rahbari; Ulrich Bork; Edith Motschall; Kristian Thorlund; Markus W. Büchler; Moritz Koch; Jürgen Weitz
PURPOSE Up to 25% of patients with node-negative colorectal cancer (CRC) on conventional histopathologic analysis ultimately die of recurrent disease. We performed a systematic review with meta-analyses to clarify whether molecular detection of isolated tumor cells or micrometastases in regional lymph nodes indicates high risk of disease recurrence and poor survival in node-negative CRC. METHODS The following databases were searched in August 2011 to identify studies on the prognostic significance of molecular tumor-cell detection in regional lymph nodes of node-negative CRC: MEDLINE, BIOSIS, Science Citation Index, EMBASE, CCMed, and publisher databases. We extracted hazard ratios (HRs) and associated 95% CIs from the identified studies and performed random-effects model meta-analyses on overall survival, disease-specific survival, and disease-free survival. RESULTS A total of 39 studies with a cumulative sample size of 4,087 patients were included. Immunohistochemistry, reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction, and both techniques were applied in 30, seven, and two studies, respectively. Thirteen studies were graded with low risk of bias. Meta-analyses revealed that molecular tumor-cell detection in regional lymph nodes was associated with poor overall survival (HR, 2.20; 95% CI, 1.43 to 3.40), disease-specific survival (HR, 3.37; 95% CI, 2.31 to 4.93), and disease-free survival (HR, 2.24; 95% CI, 1.57-3.20). Subgroup analyses showed the prognostic significance of molecular tumor-cell detection of being independent of the applied detection method, molecular target, and number of retrieved lymph nodes. CONCLUSION Molecular detection of occult disease in regional lymph nodes is associated with an increased risk of disease recurrence and poor survival in patients with node-negative CRC.
Journal of Orofacial Orthopedics-fortschritte Der Kieferorthopadie | 2007
Birgit Amelie Hanke; Edith Motschall; Jens C. Türp
Objective:The aim of this systematic review was to provide comprehensive access to and an analysis of the specialist literature published through December 2005 describing a correlation between orthopedic (leg-length inequality, pelvis obliquity, column diseases and head posture) and dental findings (occlusion, mandibular position, temporomandibular joints, masticatory muscles).Method:Four medical and dental internet sources (PubMed; Medpilot.de; databases of the Deutsche Ärzte-Verlag and Quintessenz-Verlag) were screened for relevant articles using carefully selected retrieval strategies and keywords. Bibliographies of relevant articles were examined for further pertinent publications. All relevant articles were tabulated according to their year of publication, the subject area discussed, and the levels of scientific evidence.Results:Our electronic inquiry yielded 359 relevant articles (electronic search: 195, search in bibliographies: 164), 355 of which could be analyzed. A correlation between dental findings and spinal column diseases was described in 266 articles, head posture in 216, pelvis obliquity in 53, and leg-length inequality in 35 papers. In 131 publications, conclusions were drawn from dental to orthopedic findings, whereas they were drawn from orthopedic to dental findings in 171 articles. The number of relevant articles rose significantly, particularly since the 1980’s. Classification in levels of evidence reveals three publications (0.8%) with level II (randomized controlled trials), 63 (17.7%) with level III (experimental studies with no randomization, cohort studies, or case-control studies), 178 (50.1%) with level IV (non-experimental studies, such as cross-sectional trials, case series, case reports), and 111 (31.3%) with level V (narrative review or expert opinion without explicit critical appraisal).Conclusions:1) While there is great interest in possible correlations between orthopedic and dental findings in the specialist literature, most publications fail to provide the hard facts and solid evidence characteristic of high-quality research. 2) This literature analysis attests to the importance of searching electronic databases while making the inherent weaknesses of such searches obvious. Manual literature searches remain essential.ZusammenfassungZielsetzung:Ziel dieses Beitrags war die Erstellung einer Übersicht und einer Analyse der bis Dezember 2005 publizierten Literatur zum Zusammenhang zwischen Beinlängendifferenz, Beckenschiefstand, Wirbelsäulenbefunden und/oder Kopfhaltung einerseits und zahnmedizinischen Befunden (Okklusion, Kieferfehlstellungen, Kiefergelenke, Kaumuskulatur) andererseits.Methodik:Mit Hilfe von ausgewählten Suchstrategien erfolgten Recherchen in den elektronischen Informationsportalen PubMed und Medpilot.de und den Verlagsdatenbanken des Deutschen Ärzte-Verlags und des Quintessenz-Verlags. Die Literaturverzeichnisse aller relevanten Artikel wurden auf weitere Publikationen überprüft. Alle themenrelevanten Beiträge wurden hinsichtlich ihres Erscheinungsjahrs, thematischen Schwerpunkts und ihrer wissenschaftlichen Qualität ausgewertet.Ergebnisse:Die Recherche ergab 359 relevante Artikel (elektronische Suche: 195, Suche in den Literaturverzeichnissen: 164), von denen 355 analysiert werden konnten. Ein Zusammenhang zahnmedizinischer Befunde mit Wirbelsäulenbefunden wurde in 266, mit Kopfhaltung in 216, mit Beckenschiefstand in 53 und mit Beinlängendifferenz in 35 Artikeln dargestellt. Rückschlüsse von einem zahnärztlichen auf einen orthopädischen Befund wurden in 131 Publikationen gezogen, in umgekehrter Richtung in 171 Artikeln. Vor allem seit den 1980er Jahren nimmt die Zahl relevanter Publikationen deutlich zu. Die Einstufung in Evidenzgrade ergab drei Artikel (0,8%) mit Evidenzstufe II (randomisierte kontrollierte Studie), 63 (17,7%) mit Evidenzgrad III (experimentelle Studie ohne Randomisierung, Kohortenstudie oder Fall-Kontroll-Studie), 178 (50,1%) mit Grad IV (nicht-experimentelle Studie, z. B. Querschnittstudie, Fallserie, Falldarstellung) und 111 (31,3%) mit Grad V (traditioneller Übersichtsartikel oder Meinung angesehener Autoritäten ohne transparente Belege).Schlussfolgerungen:(1) Die mangelnde Qualität der vorhandenen Publikationen über mögliche Zusammenhänge zwischen orpublithopädischen und zahnmedizinischen Befunden wird dem in der Fachliteratur zunehmend hohen Interesse an dieser Thematik nicht gerecht. (2) Bei einer alleinigen Suche in elektronischen Informationsportalen und Datenbanken müssen große inhaltliche Lücken in Kauf genommen werden; eine zusätzliche Handsuche ist daher unverzichtbar.
BMC Medical Research Methodology | 2013
Martin Boeker; Werner Vach; Edith Motschall
BackgroundRecent research indicates a high recall in Google Scholar searches for systematic reviews. These reports raised high expectations of Google Scholar as a unified and easy to use search interface. However, studies on the coverage of Google Scholar rarely used the search interface in a realistic approach but instead merely checked for the existence of gold standard references. In addition, the severe limitations of the Google Search interface must be taken into consideration when comparing with professional literature retrieval tools.The objectives of this work are to measure the relative recall and precision of searches with Google Scholar under conditions which are derived from structured search procedures conventional in scientific literature retrieval; and to provide an overview of current advantages and disadvantages of the Google Scholar search interface in scientific literature retrieval.MethodsGeneral and MEDLINE-specific search strategies were retrieved from 14 Cochrane systematic reviews. Cochrane systematic review search strategies were translated to Google Scholar search expression as good as possible under consideration of the original search semantics. The references of the included studies from the Cochrane reviews were checked for their inclusion in the result sets of the Google Scholar searches. Relative recall and precision were calculated.ResultsWe investigated Cochrane reviews with a number of included references between 11 and 70 with a total of 396 references. The Google Scholar searches resulted in sets between 4,320 and 67,800 and a total of 291,190 hits. The relative recall of the Google Scholar searches had a minimum of 76.2% and a maximum of 100% (7 searches). The precision of the Google Scholar searches had a minimum of 0.05% and a maximum of 0.92%. The overall relative recall for all searches was 92.9%, the overall precision was 0.13%.ConclusionThe reported relative recall must be interpreted with care. It is a quality indicator of Google Scholar confined to an experimental setting which is unavailable in systematic retrieval due to the severe limitations of the Google Scholar search interface. Currently, Google Scholar does not provide necessary elements for systematic scientific literature retrieval such as tools for incremental query optimization, export of a large number of references, a visual search builder or a history function. Google Scholar is not ready as a professional searching tool for tasks where structured retrieval methodology is necessary.
Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 2004
Dettenkofer M; Seegers S; Gerd Antes; Edith Motschall; Martin Schumacher; F. Daschner
OBJECTIVE To review the evidence regarding the effects of interventions to improve hospital design and construction on the occurrence of nosocomial infections. METHODS Systematic review of experimental and non-experimental, architectural intervention studies in intensive care units (ICUs), surgical departments, isolation units, and hospitals in general. The studies dated from 1975, and were in English, French, German, Italian, and Spanish. Regardless of format, the studies were identified through seven medical databases, reference lists, and expert consultation. RESULTS One hundred seventy-eight scientific articles were identified; however, none of these described a meta-analysis, systematic review, or randomized, controlled trial. Most of the articles were categorized at the lowest level of evidence (expert judgment or consensus statements). Only 17 described completed concurrent or historical cohort studies matching the inclusion criteria (ICUs, 9; surgical departments, 4; isolation units, 2; hospitals in general, 2). The interventions generally included a move to other premises or renovation. However, in many studies, the staff-to-patient ratio was also improved. Some studies showed lower infection rates after intervention, but this finding cannot be generalized because of confounding and frequently small study populations. CONCLUSIONS The lack of stringent evidence linking hospital design and construction with the prevention of nosocomial infection is partly attributable to the multifactorial nature of these infections, and some improvement will be seen if basic conditions such as the availability of sufficient space, isolation capacity, and facilities for handwashing are met. However, to our knowledge, other factors, especially the improper hand hygiene of medical staff, have greater impact.
Neurology | 2014
Matthias Reinhard; Guido Schwarzer; Matthias Briel; Claudia Altamura; Paola Palazzo; Alice King; Natan M. Bornstein; Nils Petersen; Edith Motschall; Andreas Hetzel; Randolph S. Marshall; Catharina J.M. Klijn; Mauro Silvestrini; Hugh S. Markus; Fabrizio Vernieri
Objective: To assess the usefulness of transcranial Doppler CO2 reactivity (CO2R) for prediction of ipsilateral ischemic stroke in carotid artery stenosis and occlusion with a meta-analysis of prospective studies based on individual patient data. Methods: We searched Medline, Biosis Previews, Science Citation Index, The Cochrane Library, and EMBASE for studies in which patients with severe carotid artery stenosis or occlusion underwent Doppler CO2R testing (inhalation of CO2 or breath-holding) and were prospectively followed for ipsilateral ischemic stroke. Individual data from 754 patients from 9 studies were included. We used percentage cerebral blood flow velocity increase (pCi) during hypercapnia as the primary CO2R measure, and defined impaired reactivity as pCi <20% increase. Results: In a multiple regression model, impaired CO2R was independently associated with an increased risk of ipsilateral ischemic stroke (hazard ratio [HR] 3.69; confidence interval [CI] 2.01, 6.77; p < 0.0001). Risk prediction was similar for recently symptomatic vs asymptomatic patients. Using continuous values of pCi, a significant association between decreasing pCi and increasing risk of ipsilateral stroke was found: HR of 1.64 (95% CI 1.33, 2.02; p < 0.0001) per 10% decrease in pCi. For patients with asymptomatic internal carotid artery stenosis only (n = 330), a comparable stroke risk prediction was found: increasing HR 1.95 (95% CI 1.26, 3.04; p = 0.003) per 10% decrease in pCi. Conclusions: This analysis supports the usefulness of CO2R in risk prediction for patients with severe carotid artery stenosis or occlusion, both in recently symptomatic and asymptomatic patients. Further studies should evaluate whether treatment strategies in asymptomatic patients based on CO2R could improve patient outcomes.
Annals of Surgical Oncology | 2009
Nuh N. Rahbari; Moritz Koch; Thomas Schmidt; Edith Motschall; Thomas Bruckner; Kathrin Weidmann; Arianeb Mehrabi; Markus W. Büchler; Jürgen Weitz
BackgroundAfter introduction of the clamp-crushing technique in the 1970s, various devices have been developed for transection of the liver with the aim of further reducing blood loss and improving the outcome of patients who undergo hepatic resection. We performed a meta-analysis to quantitatively compare the clamp-crushing technique to any subsequently introduced transection technique with respect to patients’ perioperative outcome.MethodsA systematic literature search was conducted to identify randomized controlled trials comparing the clamp-crushing technique to any alternative method of hepatic transection. Relative risks (RR) were calculated for each outcome and reported along with their 95% confidence intervals (95% CI). Meta-analyses were stratified for the various types of transection techniques compared with the clamp-crushing technique and were carried out by a random effects model.ResultsSeven randomized controlled trials with a total of 554 patients were included in final analyses. Analyses of overall morbidity (RR .89; 95% CI, .63–1.25), biliary leakage (RR 1.03; 95% CI, .50–2.13), transfusion rates (RR .69; 95% CI, .31–1.51), and mortality RR (.20; 95% CI, .02–1.65) revealed no difference between the clamp-crushing and alternative transection techniques. None of the identified studies demonstrated a clinically important benefit of an alternative transection method in terms of blood loss, parenchymal injury, transection time, and hospital stay.ConclusionsThis meta-analysis does not indicate a benefit of any alternative transection technique on patients’ perioperative outcome compared with the clamp-crushing technique. The clamp-crushing technique remains the reference technique for transection of the parenchyma in elective hepatic resection.
Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery | 2009
Nuh N. Rahbari; Moritz Koch; Arianeb Mehrabi; Kathrin Weidmann; Edith Motschall; Christoph Kahlert; Markus W. Büchler; Jürgen Weitz
ObjectiveTo compare the clinical outcome of patients undergoing liver resection under portal triad clamping (PTC) versus hepatic vascular exclusion (HVE).MethodsA systematic literature search was performed following the guidelines of the Cochrane collaboration. Randomized controlled trials (RCT) comparing PTC to any technique of HVE were eligible for inclusion. Two authors independently assessed methodological quality of included trials and extracted data on overall morbidity, mortality, cardiopulmonary and hepatic morbidity, intraoperative blood loss, transfusion rates, postoperative transaminase and bilirubin levels, prothrombin time, and hospital stay. Meta-analyses were performed using a random-effects model.ResultsOf the 1,383 identified references, four RCTs were finally included. These trials compared PTC to selective hepatic vascular exclusion (SHVE), total hepatic vascular exclusion (THVE), and a modified technique of HVE (MTHVE), respectively. Meta-analyses revealed no significant difference in morbidity and mortality between PTC and techniques of HVE. Further analyses showed significantly reduced overall morbidity for the PTC compared to the THVE group. There was a significantly lower transfusion rate for HVE compared to PTC.ConclusionHepatic vascular exclusion does not offer any benefit regarding outcome of patients undergoing hepatic resection compared to PTC alone. Further, well-designed RCTs evaluating adequate vascular control in major hepatectomy and in patients with underlying liver disease appear justified.