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Dive into the research topics where Florian Maier is active.

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Featured researches published by Florian Maier.


Nature Medicine | 2014

Longitudinal PET-MRI reveals [beta]-amyloid deposition and rCBF dynamics and connects vascular amyloidosis to quantitative loss of perfusion

Florian Maier; Andreas Schmid; Julia G. Mannheim; Stefan Wiehr; Chommanad Lerdkrai; Carsten Calaminus; Anke Stahlschmidt; Lan Ye; Michael Burnet; Detlef Stiller; Osama Sabri; Gerald Reischl; Mathias Staufenbiel; Olga Garaschuk; Mathias Jucker; Bernd J. Pichler

The dynamics of β-amyloid deposition and related second-order physiological effects, such as regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF), are key factors for a deeper understanding of Alzheimers disease (AD). We present longitudinal in vivo data on the dynamics of β-amyloid deposition and the decline of rCBF in two different amyloid precursor protein (APP) transgenic mouse models of AD. Using a multiparametric positron emission tomography and magnetic resonance imaging approach, we demonstrate that in the presence of cerebral β-amyloid angiopathy (CAA), β-amyloid deposition is accompanied by a decline of rCBF. Loss of perfusion correlates with the growth of β-amyloid plaque burden but is not related to the number of CAA-induced microhemorrhages. However, in a mouse model of parenchymal β-amyloidosis and negligible CAA, rCBF is unchanged. Because synaptically driven spontaneous network activity is similar in both transgenic mouse strains, we conclude that the disease-related decline of rCBF is caused by CAA.


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2014

Preclinical and Translational PET/MR Imaging

Stefan Wiehr; Mathew R. Divine; Sergios Gatidis; Grant T. Gullberg; Florian Maier; Anna-Maria Rolle; Johannes Schwenck; Wolfgang M. Thaiss; Bernd J. Pichler

Combined PET and MR imaging (PET/MR imaging) has progressed tremendously in recent years. The focus of current research has shifted from technologic challenges to the application of this new multimodal imaging technology in the areas of oncology, cardiology, neurology, and infectious diseases. This article reviews studies in preclinical and clinical translation. The common theme of these initial results is the complementary nature of combined PET/MR imaging that often provides additional insights into biologic systems that were not clearly feasible with just one modality alone. However, in vivo findings require ex vivo validation. Combined PET/MR imaging also triggers a multitude of new developments in image analysis that are aimed at merging and using multimodal information that ranges from better tumor characterization to analysis of metabolic brain networks. The combination of connectomics information that maps brain networks derived from multiparametric MR data with metabolic information from PET can even lead to the formation of a new research field that we would call cometomics that would map functional and metabolic brain networks. These new methodologic developments also call for more multidisciplinarity in the field of molecular imaging, in which close interaction and training among clinicians and a variety of scientists is needed.


Radiation Oncology | 2011

Significant impact of different oxygen breathing conditions on noninvasive in vivo tumor-hypoxia imaging using [18F]-fluoro-azomycinarabino-furanoside ([18F]FAZA)

Florian Maier; Manfred Kneilling; Gerald Reischl; Funda Cay; Daniel Bukala; Andreas Schmid; Martin S. Judenhofer; Martin Röcken; Hans-Jürgen Machulla; Bernd J. Pichler

Background[18F]FAZA is a PET biomarker with great potential for imaging tumor hypoxia. Aim of our study was to compare [18F]FAZA uptake in mice with subcutaneous exogenous CT26 colon carcinomas and endogenous polyoma middle-T (PyV-mT) mammary carcinomas and to analyze the influence of different breathing protocols in CT26 colon carcinomas as well as the reversibility or irreversibility of [18F]FAZA uptake.MethodsWe injected subcutaneous CT26 colon carcinoma or polyomavirus middle-T (PyV-mT) mammary carcinoma-bearing mice intravenously with18F-FAZA and performed PET scans 1-3 h post injection (p.i.). To analyze the impact of oxygen supply in CT26 carcinomas we used three different breathing protocols: (P0) air; (P1) 100% oxygen 1 h prior injection until 3 h p.i.; (P2) 100% oxygen breathing starting 2 min prior tracer injection until 1 h p.i. and during the PET scans; mice were breathing air between the 2 h and 3 h 10 min static scans. Normalized PET images were analyzed by using defined regions of interest. Finally, some mice were dissected for pimonidazole immunohistochemistry.ResultsThere was no difference in18F-FAZA uptake 1-3 h p.i. between the two carcinoma types (CT26: 1.58 ± 0.45%ID/cc; PyV-mT: 1.47 ± 0.89%ID/cc, 1 h p.i., tumor size < 0.5 cm3). We measured a significant tracer clearance, which was more pronounced in muscle tissue (P0). The [18F]FAZA tumor-to-muscle-ratios in CT26 colon carcinoma-bearing mice 2 h and 3 h, but not 1 h p.i. were significantly higher when the mice breathed air (P0: 3.56 ± 0.55, 3 h) compared to the oxygen breathing protocols (P1: 2.45 ± 0.58; P2: 2.77 ± 0.42, 3 h). Surprisingly, the breathing protocols P1 and P2 showed no significant differences in T/M ratios, thus indicating that the crucial [18F]FAZA uptake phase is during the first hour after [18F]FAZA injection. Importantly, the muscle clearance was not affected by the different oxygen breathing conditions while the tumor clearance was lower when mice were breathing air.ConclusionExogenous CT26 colon carcinomas and endogenous polyoma middle-T (PyV-mT) mammary carcinomas showed no differences in [18F]FAZA uptake 1-3 h p.i. Our analysis using various breathing protocols with air (P0) and with pure oxygen (P1, P2) clearly indicate that [18F]FAZA is an appropriate PET biomarker for in vivo analysis of hypoxia revealing an enhanced tracer uptake in tumors with reduced oxygen supply. [18F]FAZA uptake was independent of tumor-type.


Experimental Dermatology | 2010

Para‐phenylenediamine‐specific lymphocyte activation test: a sensitive in vitro assay to detect para‐phenylenediamine sensitization in patients with severe allergic reactions

Manfred Kneilling; Ulrich M. Caroli; Cornelia Grimmel; Martin Eichner; Thomas Wieder; Florian Maier; Martin Röcken; Tilo Biedermann

Please cite this paper as: Para‐phenylenediamine‐specific lymphocyte activation test: a sensitive in vitro assay to detect para‐phenylenediamine sensitization in patients with severe allergic reactions. Experimental Dermatology 2010; 19: 435–441.


international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 2007

Fast self-collision detection and simulation of bifurcated stents to treat abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAA)

Jan Egger; Mostarkić Z; Florian Maier; Jens N. Kaftan; Stefan Grosskopf; Bernd Freisleben

In this paper, we present a fast and robust collision detection algorithm for bifurcated stent graft simulation. The algorithm is designed for simulating bifurcations of Y-stents in blood vessels in CT-data. For stent simulation, we use the active contours method (ACM) which realizes internal and external forces acting on the stent. The internal forces are for the elastic and smoothing behavior of the stent surface. The external forces (balloon force and resistance of the vessel wall) pull and push the stent towards the artery wall. In addition to these two forces, another force interacts in the bifurcated part of the stent. For this purpose, the algorithm uses axis aligned bounding boxes (AABB) that are placed along these bifurcated parts. Our simulation and collision detection algorithm is evaluated on computed tomography angiography (CTA) data with variations in anatomy and location of pathology.


PLOS ONE | 2015

A Comparative pO2 Probe and [18F]-Fluoro-Azomycinarabino-Furanoside ([18F]FAZA) PET Study Reveals Anesthesia-Induced Impairment of Oxygenation and Perfusion in Tumor and Muscle.

Moritz Mahling; Kerstin Fuchs; Wolfgang M. Thaiss; Florian Maier; Martina Feger; Daniel Bukala; Maren Harant; Martin Eichner; Jörg Reutershan; Florian Lang; Gerald Reischl; Bernd J. Pichler; Manfred Kneilling

Tumor hypoxia can be identified by [18F]FAZA positron emission tomography, or invasively using oxygen probes. The impact of anesthetics on tumor hypoxia remains controversial. The aim of this comprehensive study was to investigate the impact of isoflurane and ketamine/xylazine anesthesia on [18F]FAZA uptake and partial oxygen pressure (pO2) in carcinoma and muscle tissue of air- and oxygen-breathing mice. Methods CT26 colon carcinoma-bearing mice were anesthetized with isoflurane (IF) or ketamine/xylazine (KX) while breathing air or oxygen (O2). We performed 10 min static PET scans 1 h, 2 h and 3 h after [18F]FAZA injection and calculated the [18F]FAZA-uptake and tumor-to-muscle ratios (T/M). In another experimental group, we placed a pO2 probe in the tumor as well as in the gastrocnemius muscle to measure the pO2 and perfusion. Results Ketamine/xylazine-anesthetized mice yielded up to 3.5-fold higher T/M-ratios compared to their isoflurane-anesthetized littermates 1 h, 2 h and 3 h after [18F]FAZA injection regardless of whether the mice breathed air or oxygen (3 h, KX-air: 7.1 vs. IF-air: 1.8, p = 0.0001, KX-O2: 4.4 vs. IF-O2: 1.4, p < 0.0001). The enhanced T/M-ratios in ketamine/xylazine-anesthetized mice were mainly caused by an increased [18F]FAZA uptake in the carcinomas. Invasive pO2 probe measurements yielded enhanced intra-tumoral pO2 values in air- and oxygen-breathing ketamine/xylazine-anesthetized mice compared to isoflurane-anesthetized mice (KX-air: 1.01 mmHg, IF-air: 0.45 mmHg; KX-O2 9.73 mmHg, IF-O2: 6.25 mmHg). Muscle oxygenation was significantly higher in air-breathing isoflurane-anesthetized (56.9 mmHg) than in ketamine/xylazine-anesthetized mice (33.8 mmHg, p = 0.0003). Conclusion [18F]FAZA tumor uptake was highest in ketamine/xylazine-anesthetized mice regardless of whether the mice breathed air or oxygen. The generally lower [18F]FAZA whole-body uptake in isoflurane-anesthetized mice could be due to the higher muscle pO2-values in these mice compared to ketamine/xylazine-anesthetized mice. When performing preclinical in vivo hypoxia PET studies, oxygen should be avoided, and ketamine/xylazine-anesthesia might alleviate the identification of tumor hypoxia areals.


Bildverarbeitung f&uuml;r die Medizin | 2008

Automatic Liver Segmentation Using the Random Walker Algorithm

Florian Maier; Andreas Wimmer; Grzegorz Soza; Jens N. Kaftan; Dominik Fritz; Rüdiger Dillmann

In this paper we present a new method for fully automatic liver segmentation in computed tomography images. First, an initial set of seed points for the random walker algorithm is created. In this context, voxels belonging to air, fat tissue and ribcage are labeled as background. Furthermore, depending on the shape of the ribcage and voxel intensities, several seed points inside the liver are automatically selected as foreground. This seed mask is then used to initialize the segmentation algorithm. Our method was successfully tested on data of 22 patients.


Oncotarget | 2016

Correlation between positron emission tomography and Cerenkov luminescence imaging in vivo and ex vivo using 64 Cu-labeled antibodies in a neuroblastoma mouse model

Florian Maier; Julia Schmitt; Andreas Maurer; Walter Ehrlichmann; Gerald Reischl; Konstantin Nikolaou; Rupert Handgretinger; Bernd J. Pichler; Wolfgang M. Thaiss

Antibody-based therapies gain momentum in clinical therapy, thus the need for accurate imaging modalities with respect to target identification and therapy monitoring are of increasing relevance. Cerenkov luminescence imaging (CLI) are a novel method detecting charged particles emitted during radioactive decay with optical imaging. Here, we compare Position Emission Tomography (PET) with CLI in a multimodal imaging study aiming at the fast and efficient screening of monoclonal antibodies (mAb) designated for targeting of the neuroblastoma-characteristic epitope disialoganglioside GD2. Neuroblastoma-bearing SHO mice were injected with a 64Cu-labeled GD2-specific mAb. The tumor uptake was imaged 3 h, 24 h and 48 h after tracer injection with both, PET and CLI, and was compared to the accumulation in GD2-negative control tumors (human embryonic kidney, HEK-293). In addition to an in vivo PET/CLI-correlation over time, we also demonstrate linear correlations of CLI- and γ-counter-based biodistribution analysis. CLI with its comparably short acquisition time can thus be used as an attractive one-stop-shop modality for the longitudinal monitoring of antibody-based tumor targeting and ex vivo biodistribution. These findings suggest CLI as a reliable alternative for PET and biodistribution studies with respect to fast and high-throughput screenings in subcutaneous tumors traced with radiolabeled antibodies. However, in contrast to PET, CLI is not limited to positron-emitting isotopes and can therefore also be used for the visualization of mAb labeled with therapeutic isotopes like electron emitters.


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2015

Quantification of β-Amyloidosis and rCBF with Dedicated PET, 7 T MR Imaging, and High-Resolution Microscopic MR Imaging at 16.4 T in APP23 Mice

Florian Maier; Marianne D. Keller; Daniel Bukala; Benjamin Bender; Julia G. Mannheim; Ian M. Brereton; Graham J. Galloway; Bernd J. Pichler

We present a combined PET/7 T MR imaging and 16.4 T microscopic MR imaging dual-modality imaging approach enabling quantification of the amyloid load at high sensitivity and high resolution, and of regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) in the brain of transgenic APP23 mice. Moreover, we demonstrate a novel, voxel-based correlative data analysis method for in-depth evaluation of amyloid PET and rCBF data. Methods: We injected 11C-Pittsburgh compound B (PIB) intravenously in transgenic and control APP23 mice and performed dynamic PET measurements. rCBF data were recorded with a flow-sensitive alternating inversion recovery approach at 7 T. Subsequently, the animals were sacrificed and their brains harvested for ex vivo microscopic MR imaging at 16.4 T with a T2*-weighted gradient-echo sequence at 30-μm spatial resolution. Additionally, correlative amyloid histology was performed. The 11C-PIB PET data were quantified to nondisplaceable binding potentials (BPND) using the Logan graphical analysis; flow-sensitive alternating inversion recovery data were quantified with a simplified version of the Bloch equation. Results: Amyloid load assessed by both 11C-PIB PET and amyloid histology was highest in the frontal cortex of transgenic mice (11C-PIB BPND: 0.93 ± 0.08; amyloid histology: 15.1% ± 1.5%), followed by the temporoparietal cortex (11C-PIB BPND: 0.75 ± 0.08; amyloid histology: 13.9% ± 0.7%) and the hippocampus (11C-PIB BPND: 0.71 ± 0.09; amyloid histology: 9.2% ± 0.9%), and was lowest in the thalamus (11C-PIB BPND: 0.40 ± 0.07; amyloid histology: 6.6% ± 0.6%). However, 11C-PIB BPND and amyloid histology linearly correlated (R2 = 0.82, P < 0.05) and were significantly higher in transgenic animals (P < 0.01). Similarly, microscopic MR imaging allowed quantifying the amyloid load, in addition to the detection of substructures within single amyloid plaques correlating with amyloid deposition density and the measurement of hippocampal atrophy. Finally, we found an inverse relationship between 11C-PIB BPND and rCBF MR imaging in the voxel-based analysis that was absent in control mice (slopetg: −0.11 ± 0.03; slopeco: 0.004 ± 0.005; P = 0.014). Conclusion: Our dual-modality imaging approach using 11C-PIB PET/7 T MR imaging and 16.4 T microscopic MR imaging allowed amyloid-load quantification with high sensitivity and high resolution, the identification of substructures within single amyloid plaques, and the quantification of rCBF.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Temperature and concentration calibration of aqueous polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) solutions for isotropic diffusion MRI phantoms

Friedrich Wagner; Frederik B. Laun; Tristan Anselm Kuder; Anna Mlynarska; Florian Maier; Jonas Faust; Kerstin Demberg; Linus Lindemann; Boris Rivkin; Armin M. Nagel; Mark E. Ladd; Klaus H. Maier-Hein; Sebastian Bickelhaupt; Michael Bach

To use the “apparent diffusion coefficient” (Dapp) as a quantitative imaging parameter, well-suited test fluids are essential. In this study, the previously proposed aqueous solutions of polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) were examined and temperature calibrations were obtained. For example, at a temperature of 20°C, Dapp ranged from 1.594 (95% CI: 1.593, 1.595) μm2/ms to 0.3326 (95% CI: 0. 3304, 0.3348) μm2/ms for PVP-concentrations ranging from 10% (w/w) to 50% (w/w) using K30 polymer lengths. The temperature dependence of Dapp was found to be so strong that a negligence seems not advisable. The temperature dependence is descriptively modelled by an exponential function exp(c2 (T − 20°C)) and the determined c2 values are reported, which can be used for temperature calibration. For example, we find the value 0.02952 K-1 for 30% (w/w) PVP-concentration and K30 polymer length. In general, aqueous PVP solutions were found to be suitable to produce easily applicable and reliable Dapp-phantoms.

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Stefan Wiehr

University of Tübingen

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