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Dive into the research topics where Florian Doepp is active.

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Featured researches published by Florian Doepp.


Annals of Neurology | 2010

No Cerebrocervical Venous Congestion in Patients with Multiple Sclerosis

Florian Doepp; Friedemann Paul; José M. Valdueza; Klaus Schmierer; Stephan J. Schreiber

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is characterized by demyelination centered around cerebral veins. Recent studies suggested this topographic pattern may be caused by venous congestion, a condition termed chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI). Published sonographic criteria of CCSVI include reflux in the deep cerebral veins and/or the internal jugular and vertebral veins (IJVs and VVs), stenosis of the IJVs, missing flow in IJVs and VVs, and inverse postural response of the cerebral venous drainage.


Movement Disorders | 2008

Brain parenchyma sonography and 123I‐FP‐CIT SPECT in Parkinson's disease and essential tremor

Florian Doepp; Michail Plotkin; Lara Siegel; Anatol Kivi; Doreen Gruber; Elmar Lobsien; Stephan J. Schreiber

We aimed to investigate the accuracy of transcranial brain parenchyma sonography (TCS) for differentiation between idiopathic Parkinsons disease (PD) and essential tremor (ET) in comparison to 123I‐FP‐CIT SPECT (FP‐CIT SPECT). Seventy‐four patients, in whom PD or ET was suspected on the basis of clinical criteria, were analyzed. The echogenicity of the substantia nigra (SN) and the striatal binding of dopamine transporters (DAT) were evaluated by TCS and FP‐CIT SPECT, respectively. Three patients were excluded due to an insufficient transtemporal bone window using TCS. Forty‐six and 25 patients were clinically classified as PD and ET. SPECT revealed a reduced DAT binding in 42 of all 71 included patients. Thirty‐six of the 42 patients with abnormal FP‐CIT SPECT findings had a pathological SN hyperechogenicity, whereas TCS findings in the remaining 6 patients were normal. In 27 of 29 patients with normal SPECT findings the SN echogenicity was regular. Referring to FP‐CIT SPECT, the sensitivity and specificity of TCS for detection of PD were 86 and 93%; the positive and negative predictive values were 95 and 82%, respectively. Sensitivity and specificity in detection of clinically diagnosed PD patients were 78 and 92% for TCS and 91 and 100% for FP‐CIT SPECT, respectively. In patients with pathological FP‐CIT SPECT and pathological TCS, the extent of SN hyperechogenicity did not correlate with the degree of reduction in dopamine transporter binding on the side opposite of the more affected limb. TCS allows a reliable differentiation of PD and ET. The TCS SN hyperechogenicity does not correlate with the extent of dopaminergic neuron degeneration.


Neurology | 2011

Venous drainage in multiple sclerosis A combined MRI and ultrasound study

Florian Doepp; Jens Würfel; Caspar F. Pfueller; José M. Valdueza; D. Petersen; Friedemann Paul; Stephan J. Schreiber

Background: Chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI) was proposed as the causal trigger for developing multiple sclerosis (MS). However, current data are contradictory and a gold standard for venous flow assessment is missing. Objective: To compare structural magnetic resonance venography (MRV) and dynamic extracranial color-coded duplex sonography (ECCS) in a cohort of patients with MS. Methods: We enrolled 40 patients (44 ± 10 years). All underwent contrast-enhanced MRV for assessment of internal jugular vein (IJV) and azygos vein (AV) narrowing, graded into 3 groups: 0%–50%, 51%–80%, and >80%. ECCS analysis of blood flow direction, cross-sectional area (CSA), and blood volume flow (BVF) in both IJV and vertebral veins (VV) occurred in the supine and upright body position. Results: MRV identified 1 AV narrowing. IJV analysis yielded 12 patients for group 1 (30%), 19 patients for group 2 (48%), and 9 patients for group 3 (22%). By ECCS criteria, 4 patients (10%) presented with venous drainage abnormalities. Jugular BVF was different only between groups 1 and 3 (616 ± 133 vs 381 ± 213 mL/min, p = 0.02). No other parameters in supine position and none of the parameters in the upright body position, apart from the IJV-BVF decrease in groups 1 and 3 (479 ± 172 vs 231 ± 144 mL/min, p = 0.01), were different. Conclusions: Our ECCS data contradict the postulated 100% prevalence of CCSVI criteria in MS. MRV seems more sensitive to detect IJV narrowing compared to ECCS. A measurable hemodynamic effect only exists in vessel narrowings >80%. Our combined data argue against a causal relationship of venous narrowing and MS, favoring the rejection of the CCSVI hypothesis.


Cephalalgia | 2007

Incompetence of internal jugular valve in patients with primary exertional headache: a risk factor?

Florian Doepp; Jm Valdueza; Stephan J. Schreiber

The pathophysiology of primary exertional headache (EH) is unknown. Physical exertion is associated with Valsalva-like manoeuvres (VM). VM leads to increased intrathoracic pressure and reduces cerebral venous drainage. Internal jugular vein valve incompetence (IJVVI) leads to retrograde venous flow during VM with transient increase of intracranial pressure. We analysed the prevalence of IJVVI in EH patients using duplex ultrasound. Bilateral measurements were performed at rest and during VM in 20 patients and 40 controls. Incompetence was concluded if retrograde venous flow could be seen in the jugular Doppler spectrum during repeated VM. Seventy percent of EH patients and 20% of controls demonstrated IJVVI, yielding a significant difference (P = 0.0004). IJVVI was always observed on the dominant venous drainage side. Our study suggests that intracranial venous congestion caused by retrograde jugular venous flow might play a role in the pathophysiology of EH with IJVVI as a risk factor.


Stroke | 2012

Development and Validation of a Dispatcher Identification Algorithm for Stroke Emergencies

Sebastian Krebes; Martin Ebinger; André M. Baumann; Philipp Kellner; Michal Rozanski; Florian Doepp; Jan Sobesky; Thomas Gensecke; Bernd A. Leidel; Uwe Malzahn; Ian Wellwood; Peter U. Heuschmann; Heinrich J. Audebert

Background and Purpose— Recent innovations such as CT installation in ambulances may lead to earlier start of stroke-specific treatments. However, such technically complex mobile facilities require effective methods of correctly identifying patients before deployment. We aimed to develop and validate a new dispatcher identification algorithm for stroke emergencies. Methods— Dispatcher identification algorithm for stroke emergencies was informed by systematic qualitative analysis of the content of emergency calls to ambulance dispatchers for patients with stroke or transient ischemic attack (N=117) and other neurological (N=39) and nonneurological (N=51) diseases (Part A). After training of dispatchers, sensitivity and predictive values were determined prospectively in patients admitted to Charité hospitals by using the discharge diagnosis as reference standard (Part B). Results— Part A: Dysphasic/dysarthric symptoms (33%), unilateral symptoms (22%) and explicitly stated suspicion of stroke (47%) were typically identified in patients with stroke but infrequently in nonstroke cases (all <10%). Convulsive symptoms (41%) were frequent in other neurological diseases but not strokes (3%). Pain (26%) and breathlessness (31%) were often expressed in nonneurological emergencies (6% and 7% in strokes). Part B: Between October 15 and December 16, 2010, 5774 patients were admitted by ambulance with 246 coded with final stroke diagnoses. Sensitivity of dispatcher identification algorithm for stroke emergencies for detecting stroke was 53.3% and positive predictive value was 47.8% for stroke and 59.1% for stroke and transient ischemic attack. Of all 275 patients with stroke dispatcher codes, 215 (78.5%) were confirmed with neurological diagnosis. Conclusions— Using dispatcher identification algorithm for stroke emergencies, more than half of all patients with stroke admitted by ambulance were correctly identified by dispatchers. Most false-positive stroke codes had other neurological diagnoses.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2013

What Went Wrong? the Flawed Concept of Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency:

José M. Valdueza; Florian Doepp; Stephan J. Schreiber; Bob W. van Oosten; Klaus Schmierer; Friedemann Paul; Mike P. Wattjes

In 2006, Zamboni reintroduced the concept that chronic impaired venous outflow of the central nervous system is associated with multiple sclerosis (MS), coining the term of chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (‘CCSVI’). The diagnosis of ‘CCSVI’ is based on sonographic criteria, which he found exclusively fulfilled in MS. The concept proposes that chronic venous outflow failure is associated with venous reflux and congestion and leads to iron deposition, thereby inducing neuroinflammation and degeneration. The revival of this concept has generated major interest in media and patient groups, mainly driven by the hope that endovascular treatment of ‘CCSVI’ could alleviate MS. Many investigators tried to replicate Zambonis results with duplex sonography, magnetic resonance imaging, and catheter angiography. The data obtained here do generally not support the ‘CCSVI’ concept. Moreover, there are no methodologically adequate studies to prove or disprove beneficial effects of endovascular treatment in MS. This review not only gives a comprehensive overview of the methodological flaws and pathophysiologic implausibility of the ‘CCSVI’ concept, but also summarizes the multimodality diagnostic validation studies and open-label trials of endovascular treatment. In our view, there is currently no basis to diagnose or treat ‘CCSVI’ in the care of MS patients, outside of the setting of scientific research.


Headache | 2003

Migraine aggravation caused by cephalic venous congestion

Florian Doepp; Stephan J. Schreiber; Jens P. Dreier; Karl M. Einhäupl; José M. Valdueza

Background.—Cerebral venous distension is thought by some to serve as a source of migraine pain. Previous investigators have tried to modify pain intensity by induction of additional venous congestion via compression of both internal jugular veins (Queckenstedts maneuver). The magnitude of blood flow within the internal jugular veins depends markedly on body position, and inconsistencies in positioning may have influenced their results.


Journal of Clinical Ultrasound | 2008

Internal jugular vein valve incompetence in COPD and primary pulmonary hypertension.

Florian Doepp; Dieter Bähr; Matthias John; Sören Hoernig; José M. Valdueza; Stephan J. Schreiber

Under physiologic conditions, intact internal jugular vein valves (IJVVs) efficiently prevent retrograde venous flow during intrathoracic pressure increase. Chronically elevated central venous pressure found in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and primary pulmonary hypertension (PPH) might lead to IJVV incompetence (IJVVI). The aim of this study was to analyze the prevalence of IJVVI in patients with COPD and PPH using duplex sonography (DUS).


Annals of Otology, Rhinology, and Laryngology | 2001

Venous Collateral Blood Flow Assessed by Doppler Ultrasound after Unilateral Radical Neck Dissection

Florian Doepp; Ingeborg Lammert; Olaf Hoffmann; Karl M. Einhäupl; Stephan J. Schreiber; José M. Valdueza

Removal of the internal jugular vein (IJV) in unilateral radical neck dissection (rND) necessitates redirection of cerebrovenous blood to collateral pathways. If adaptation is insufficient, neurologic sequelae develop that are due to impaired venous drainage and increased intracranial pressure. The authors studied venous hemodynamic effects of unilateral rND using Doppler and duplex ultrasound in 17 patients. Blood flow velocities (BFVs) were recorded from the distal IJV (dIJV) and the vertebral vein (VV) before and 9 to 88 days after surgery. A preoperative compression test of the dIJV was performed to identify the side of dominant drainage. The BFV increased in the contralateral dIJV after right-sided rND (n = 10) by 111% (range, 50% to 320%), and after left-sided rND (n = 7) by 34% (range, 5% to 105%). In the contralateral VV, a rise of BFV by 75% was found. Our results confirm the role of the contralateral dIJV as the predominant collateral pathway. The VVs serve as an important additional major outflow. Doppler ultrasound may help to identify patients at risk of insufficient cerebrovenous drainage after rND.


Movement Disorders | 2012

No correlation of substantia nigra echogenicity and nigrostriatal degradation in Parkinson's disease.

Elmar Lobsien; Simon Schreiner; Michail Plotkin; Stephan J. Schreiber; Florian Doepp

Substantia nigra hyperechogenicity assessed by transcranial sonography is a typical finding in up to 90% of patients with idiopathic Parkinsons disease, although its value as a surrogate marker for disease progression in Parkinsons disease is controversial. 123I‐FP‐CIT–single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) represents an established paraclinical surrogate marker to quantify the nigrostriatal dopaminergic deficit in Parkinsons disease. Whereas most studies found no correlation between extent of substantia nigra echogenicity and the putaminal FP‐CIT binding ratio, a more recent analysis reported opposite results.

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José M. Valdueza

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Friedemann Paul

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Karl M. Einhäupl

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Klaus Schmierer

Queen Mary University of London

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