Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Florian Jungmann is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Florian Jungmann.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2015

Patency of renal and visceral vessels after open thoracoabdominal aortic replacement

Marwan Youssef; Achim Neufang; Florian Jungmann; Cf Vahl; Bernhard Dorweiler

OBJECTIVE In thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysms (TAAAs), a paradigm shift is observed from open surgery toward total endovascular aortic repair using fenestrated and branched endografts. Whereas outcome after open replacement in terms of mortality and paraplegia has been evaluated extensively, no studies exist addressing long-term patency of visceral and renal vessels. To enable comparison of target vessel patency between open and endovascular treatment, we analyzed our series of open TAAA replacements. METHODS Our vascular surgery database was screened for patients who received open TAAA replacement between 1998 and 2012, and patient records were analyzed retrospectively. All available imaging scans (computed tomography and magnetic resonance angiography: preoperative, postoperative, and follow-up) were evaluated for graft and vessel patency. RESULTS We identified 62 patients (mean age, 66 ± 10 years; 40 men) who had been operated on for aneurysms of Crawford types I (8), II (13), III (13), and IV (24) and Safi type V (4). A total of 181 vessels were revascularized by either patch inclusion (n = 147) or selective revascularization (bypass or transposition, n = 34); 48 survived the procedure, resulting in a number of vessels available for follow-up of 154 (patch, 126; selective revascularization, 28). The respective patency rates for overall, patch, and selective revascularization were 95.2%, 94.2%, and 100% at 5 years and 83.7%, 81.3%, and 100% at 10 years, respectively. In addition, a trend for better performance of selective revascularization (bypass or transposition) was evident as all vessel occlusions were observed in cases of patch inclusion, whereas all selectively revascularized vessels were patent. The respective patency rates for the celiac trunk, superior mesenteric artery, and left and right renal artery were 100%, 97.5%, 92.3%, and 90.3% at 5 years. CONCLUSIONS In our series of open thoracoabdominal aortic replacement, excellent patency rates for revascularized renal and visceral vessels were observed during long-term follow-up. We were able to provide a reference value of long-term target vessel patency that can and should be taken into account to judge the efficacy of endovascular repair in TAAA.


Radiologe | 2013

Erfassung und Monitoring der radiologischen Strahlenexposition

Florian Jungmann; D. Pinto dos Santos; Johann-Martin Hempel; Christoph Düber; P. Mildenberger

Strategies for reducing radiation exposure are an important part of optimizing medical imaging and therefore a relevant quality factor in radiology. Regarding the medical radiation exposure, computed tomography has a special relevance. The use of the integrating the healthcare enterprise (IHE) radiation exposure monitoring (REM) profile is the upcoming standard for organizing and collecting exposure data in radiology. Currently most installed base devices do not support this profile generating the required digital imaging and communication in medicine (DICOM) dose structured reporting (SR). For this reason different solutions had been developed to register dose exposure measurements without having the dose SR object.Registration and analysis of dose-related parameters is required for constantly optimizing examination protocols, especially computed tomography (CT) examinations based on the latest research results in order to minimize the individual radiation dose exposure from medical imaging according to the principle as low as reasonably achievable (ALARA).


BMC Surgery | 2018

One visceral artery may be enough; successful pancreatectomy in a patient with total occlusion of the celiac and superior mesenteric arteries

Evangelos Tagkalos; Florian Jungmann; Hauke Lang; Stefan Heinrich

BackgroundThe anatomic variations of the visceral arteries are not uncommon. The liver arterial blood supply shows 50% variability between humans, with the most common anatomy being one hepatic artery arising from the celiac trunk and one pancreatico-duodenal arcade between the celiac trunk and the superior mesenteric artery. Occlusion of one artery are mostly asymptomatic but may become clinically relevant when surgery of the liver, bile duct or the pancreas is required. If these pathologies are not reversible, an oncologic pancreatic head resection cannot be performed.Case presentationWe report the case of a 64-year-old Caucasian female patient with a locally advanced, resectable adenocarcinoma of the pancreas with complete atherosclerotic occlusion of the celiac trunk and the superior mesenteric artery. This vascular anomaly was missed on the preoperative imaging and became known postoperatively. A collateral circulation from a hypertrophic inferior mesenteric artery to the celiac trunk and the superior mesenteric artery compensated the blood supply to the visceral organs. The postoperative course was complicated by an elevation of the transaminases AST/ALT, which normalized under conservative treatment with alprostadil (prostavasin™) and anticoagulation, since angiographic recanalization failed. The patient recovered fully and was discharged at the 14th postoperative day. Two years later, she required endovascular repair of an aortic rupture during which the inferior mesenteric artery was preserved.ConclusionThis case underlines the natural potential of the human body to adapt to chronic arterial malperfusion by creating a collateral circulation and supports the need for adequate preoperative imaging, including a proper arterial phase before upper abdominal surgery.


Rofo-fortschritte Auf Dem Gebiet Der Rontgenstrahlen Und Der Bildgebenden Verfahren | 2017

Multidetector Computed Tomography Angiography (MD-CTA) of Coronary Artery Bypass Grafts – Update 2017

Florian Jungmann; Tilman Emrich; P. Mildenberger; Anna Lena Emrich; Christoph Düber; K.-F. Kreitner

BACKGROUND Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) is still an important therapeutic approach in the treatment especially of advanced coronary artery disease. In this study, we elucidate the current role of multidetector computed tomography angiography (MD-CTA) in imaging patients after CABG surgery. METHOD This study is based on recent reports in the literature (2007 - 2016) on imaging of CABG using 64-slice MD-CT scanners and beyond. We included 13 reports that compared ECG-gated MD-CTA with conventional invasive coronary angiography (ICA) as the reference standard for the assessment of graft patency and for the detection of > 50 % stenoses. These studies had to provide absolute values for true-positive, true-negative, false-positive and false-negative results or at least allow calculation of these numbers. In total, 1002 patients with 2521 bypass grafts were the basis for this review. RESULTS AND CONCLUSION The sensitivity and specificity for the assessment of graft patency or the detection of > 50 % graft stenosis were 97.2 % and 97.5 %, respectively. The negative and positive predictive values were 93.6 % and 99 %, respectively. By using prospective ECG-gating and an increasing pitch factor, the radiation dose exposure declined to 2.4 mSv in the latest reports. ECG-gated MD-CTA provides a fast and reliable, noninvasive method for assessing patients after CABG. The most substantial benefit of the newest CT scanner generations is a remarkable reduction of radiation dose exposure while maintaining a still excellent diagnostic accuracy during recent years. KEY POINTS · MD-CTA using 64-slice MDCT scanners and beyond is a reliable, noninvasive method for evaluating CABGs.. · Technical advances such as prospective ECG-gating, iterative reconstruction algorithms and high-pitch scanning lead to a remarkable drop-down in radiation dose exposures as low as 2.4 mSv.. · Despite significant dose reductions, MD-CTA could maintain a high diagnostic accuracy in evaluating CABGs in recent years.. CITATION FORMAT · Jungmann F, Emrich T, Mildenberger P et al. Multidetector Computed Tomography Angiography (MD-CTA) of Coronary Artery Bypass Grafts - Update 2017. Fortschr Röntgenstr 2018; 190: 237 - 249.


European Radiology | 2017

Comparison of medical-grade and calibrated consumer-grade displays for diagnosis of subtle bone fissures

Daniel Pinto dos Santos; Jonas Welter; Tilman Emrich; Florian Jungmann; Evelyn Dappa; P. Mildenberger; Roman Kloeckner

ObjectiveTo compare the diagnostic accuracy of medical-grade and calibrated consumer-grade digital displays for the detection of subtle bone fissures.MethodsThree experienced radiologists assessed 96 digital radiographs, 40 without and 56 with subtle bone fissures, for the presence or absence of fissures in various bones using one consumer-grade and two medical-grade displays calibrated according to the DICOM-Grayscale Standard Display Function. The reference standard was consensus reading. Subjective image quality was also assessed by the three readers. Statistical analysis was performed using receiver operating characteristic analysis and by calculating the sensitivity, specificity, and Youden’s J for each combination of reader and display. Cohen’s unweighted kappa was calculated to assess inter-rater agreement. Subjective image quality was compared using the Wilcoxon signed-rank test.ResultsNo significant differences were found for the assessment of subjective image quality. Diagnostic performance was similar across all readers and displays, with Youden’s J ranging from 0.443 to 0.661. The differences were influenced more by the reader than by the display used for the assessment.ConclusionNo significant differences were found between medical-grade and calibrated consumer-grade displays with regard to their diagnostic performance in assessing subtle bone fissures. Calibrated consumer-grade displays may be sufficient for most radiological examinations.Key points• Diagnostic performance of calibrated consumer-grade displays is comparable to medical-grade displays.• There is no significant difference with regard to subjective image quality.• Use of calibrated consumer-grade displays could cut display costs by 60-80%.


Radiologe | 2014

IT-Systeme in der Radiologie und IT-Systeme für den Radiologen@@@IT systems in radiology and IT systems for radiologists

Johann-Martin Hempel; Florian Jungmann; R. Klöckner; D. Pinto dos Santos; H. Kurz; Christoph Düber

ZusammenfassungDie Radiologie besitzt bekanntermaßen eine Vorreiterrolle bei der Einführung und Verwendung von klinischen IT-Systemen. Radiologieinformationssystem (RIS) und Picture Archiving and Communication System (PACS) sind dabei die Grundpfeiler der modernen digitalen Radiologie. Dieser Artikel gibt einen Überblick über die wichtigsten Grundlagen und Funktionen dieser Systeme und zeigt Ausblicke auf die aktuellen Entwicklungen.AbstractRadiology plays an important role in introduction and use of information technology (IT) systems in the daily clinical routine. The radiology information system (RIS) and picture archiving and communication system (PACS) are the main systems used in a digital radiology department. In this article the basic principles and functions of these systems and trends in development are described.


Radiologe | 2013

IT-Systeme in der Radiologie und IT-Systeme für den Radiologen

Johann-Martin Hempel; Florian Jungmann; R. Klöckner; D. Pinto dos Santos; H. Kurz; Christoph Düber

ZusammenfassungDie Radiologie besitzt bekanntermaßen eine Vorreiterrolle bei der Einführung und Verwendung von klinischen IT-Systemen. Radiologieinformationssystem (RIS) und Picture Archiving and Communication System (PACS) sind dabei die Grundpfeiler der modernen digitalen Radiologie. Dieser Artikel gibt einen Überblick über die wichtigsten Grundlagen und Funktionen dieser Systeme und zeigt Ausblicke auf die aktuellen Entwicklungen.AbstractRadiology plays an important role in introduction and use of information technology (IT) systems in the daily clinical routine. The radiology information system (RIS) and picture archiving and communication system (PACS) are the main systems used in a digital radiology department. In this article the basic principles and functions of these systems and trends in development are described.


Radiologe | 2013

Erfassung und Monitoring der radiologischen Strahlenexposition@@@Registration and monitoring of radiation exposure from radiological imaging

Florian Jungmann; D. Pinto dos Santos; Johann-Martin Hempel; Christoph Düber; P. Mildenberger

Strategies for reducing radiation exposure are an important part of optimizing medical imaging and therefore a relevant quality factor in radiology. Regarding the medical radiation exposure, computed tomography has a special relevance. The use of the integrating the healthcare enterprise (IHE) radiation exposure monitoring (REM) profile is the upcoming standard for organizing and collecting exposure data in radiology. Currently most installed base devices do not support this profile generating the required digital imaging and communication in medicine (DICOM) dose structured reporting (SR). For this reason different solutions had been developed to register dose exposure measurements without having the dose SR object.Registration and analysis of dose-related parameters is required for constantly optimizing examination protocols, especially computed tomography (CT) examinations based on the latest research results in order to minimize the individual radiation dose exposure from medical imaging according to the principle as low as reasonably achievable (ALARA).


European Radiology | 2015

Visceral artery aneurysms: Incidence, management, and outcome analysis in a tertiary care center over one decade

Michael Bernhard Pitton; Evelyn Dappa; Florian Jungmann; Roman Kloeckner; Sebastian Schotten; Gesine M. Wirth; Jens Mittler; Hauke Lang; P. Mildenberger; Karl-Friedrich Kreitner; Katja Oberholzer; Christoph Dueber


Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery | 2012

Minimally invasive surgery for achalasia in patients >40 years: more favorable than anticipated

Ines Gockel; Alexandra Gith; Daniel Drescher; Florian Jungmann; Lukas Eckhard; Hauke Lang

Collaboration


Dive into the Florian Jungmann's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge