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Dive into the research topics where Franz Schmidlin is active.

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Featured researches published by Franz Schmidlin.


BJUI | 2004

Evaluation and management of renal injuries: consensus statement of the renal trauma subcommittee

R A Santucci; Hunter Wessells; Georg Bartsch; J. Descotes; Chris F. Heyns; Jack W. McAninch; P. Nash; Franz Schmidlin

The first in this series of five papers concerns the evaluation and management of renal injuries. The authors of this paper come from four continents and seven countries, and they reviewed all papers on renal injury published between 1966 and April 2002. The results of the authors’ deliberations are present here as a consensus document.


Journal of Biomechanics | 1999

Material characterization of the pig kidney in relation with the biomechanical analysis of renal trauma.

Mehdi Farshad; Michel Barbezat; Peter Flüeler; Franz Schmidlin; Pierre Graber; Peter Niederer

The objective of this study was an investigation of the material properties of the fresh pig kidney and parametric characterization of its elastic and inelastic material behavior. The material investigation included density measurements, uniaxial as well as three-dimensional compression tests, tensile tests. and shear tests on the samples extracted from the fresh pig kidney. For comparison, density measurements on a number of soft synthetic materials were also performed. Compression tests on the radial and the tangential specimens from the cortex tissue were performed at various loading rates. Three-axial compression tests were performed on the cortex tissues placed in a compression chamber. Shear tests were performed by punching a cylinder into a slice of the cortex. Tensile tests were carried out on the outer capsule. For characterization of the material behavior, a non-linear theoretical simulation based on a two parameter Blatz model was used. For characterization of the time-dependent behavior of the pig kidney cortex, a four-parameter linear viscoelastic model was employed. From the present experimental and theoretical studies, a number of conclusions were derived: (1) The general behavior of the pig kidney cortex samples under compression showed the general non-linear features typical of the soft tissues; the stress strain diagram was composed of a very flat part at very low stress level to about 30% relative deformation which was followed by a steeply rising stiffening leading to the radial rupture of samples marked by a maximum nominal rupture strain of about 50%. (2) The uniaxial compression tests on the radial and the tangential samples from the cortex tissue showed an increase of the rupture stress with the increase in the loading rate, but a decrease in the related rupture strain. (3) The long-term uniaxial compression tests on the cortex specimens under sustained constant load showed an instantaneous deformation followed by a creep response which eventually approached an asymptote. (4) Simulation of the non-linear material behavior of the cortex tissue under uniaxial compression by the Blatz model gave two pairs of material parameters for the cortex in the radial and the tangential directions. Furthermore, fitting of the assumed four-parameter linear viscoelastic model with the experimental data resulted in the viscoelastic material parameters.


Lasers in Surgery and Medicine | 1997

Clinical evaluation of a method for detecting superficial transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder by light-induced fluorescence of protoporphyrin IX following topical application of 5-aminolevulinic acid: Preliminary results

Patrice Jichlinski; Martin Forrer; Jerome C. Mizeret; Thomas Glanzmann; Daniel Braichotte; Georges Wagnières; Georges Zimmer; Louis Guillou; Franz Schmidlin; P. Graber; Hubert van den Bergh; H.-J. Leisinger

In bladder cancer, conventional white light endoscopic examination of the bladder does not provide adequate information about the presence of “flat” urothelial lesions such as carcinoma in situ. In the present investigation, we examine a new technique for the photodetection of such lesions by the imaging of protoporphyrin IX (PpIX) fluorescence following topical application of 5‐aminolevulinic acid (ALA).


International Journal of Hyperthermia | 2004

Investigation of the thermal and tissue injury behaviour in microwave thermal therapy using a porcine kidney model

Xiaoming He; Shawn Mcgee; James E. Coad; Franz Schmidlin; Paul A. Iaizzo; David J. Swanlund; Stan Kluge; Eric N. Rudie; John C. Bischof

Minimally invasive microwave thermal therapies are being developed for the treatment of small renal cell carcinomas (RCC, d<3 cm). This study assessed the thermal history and corresponding tissue injury patterns resulting from microwave treatment of the porcine renal cortex. Three groups of kidneys were evaluated: (1) in vitro treated, (2) in vivo with 2-h post-treatment perfusion (acute) and (3) in vivo with 7-day post-treatment perfusion (chronic). The kidneys were treated with an interstitial water-cooled microwave probe (Urologix, Plymouth, MN) that created a lesion centered in the renal cortex (50 W for 10 min). The thermal histories were recorded at 0.5 cm radial intervals from the probe axis for correlation with the histologic cellular and vascular injury. The kidneys showed a reproducible 2 cm chronic lesion with distinct histologic injury zones identified. The thermal histories at the edge of these zones were found using Lagrangian interpolation. The threshold thermal histories for microvascular injury and stasis appeared to be lower than that for renal epithelial cell injury. The Arrhenius kinetic injury models were fit to the thermal histories and injury data to determine the kinetic parameters (i.e. activation energy and frequency factor) for the thermal injury processes. The resultant activation energies are consistent in magnitude with those for thermally induced protein denaturation. A 3-D finite element thermal model based on the Pennes bioheat equation was developed and solved using ANSYS (V7.0). The real geometry of the kidneys studied and temperature dependent thermal properties were used in this model. The specific absorption rate (SAR) of the microwave probe required for the thermal modelling was experimentally determined. The results from the thermal modelling suggest that the complicated change of local renal blood perfusion with temperature and time during microwave thermal therapy can be predicted, although a first order kinetic model may be insufficient to capture blood flow changes. The local blood perfusion was found to be a complicated function of temperature and time. A non-linear model based on the degree of vascular stasis was introduced to predict the blood perfusion. In conclusion, interstitial microwave thermal therapy in the normal porcine kidney results in predictable thermal and tissue injury behaviour. Future work in human kidney tissue will be necessary to confirm the clinical significance of these results.


European Radiology | 1998

Blunt abdominal trauma in adults: role of CT in the diagnosis and management of visceral injuries. Part 2: Gastrointestinal tract and retroperitoneal organs

Christoph Becker; Gilles Mentha; Franz Schmidlin; François Terrier

Abstract. Computed tomography plays an important role in the detection and management of blunt visceral injuries in adults. Current standard examination techniques enable detection of the majority of perforating or devascularizing bowel injuries, although diagnostic findings are often subtle and meticulous inspection is required. Computed tomography may demonstrate pancreatic contusions and lacerations and help in distinguishing minor traumatic lesions without involvement of the pancreatic duct (organ injury scale, grades I and II) from deep lacerations with ductal involvement (grades III and V). Computed tomography enables distinguishing renal contusions and minor cortical lacerations that can usually be managed conservatively (injuries of grades I–III) from corticomedullary lacerations and injuries of the major renal vessels (grades IV and V) that have a less favorable prognosis and more commonly require surgical repair. In addition, CT is well suited for the detection of active renal hemorrhage and guidance of transcatheter embolization treatment and delineation of preexisting benign or malignant pathologies that may predispose to posttraumatic hemorrhage. The radiologists awareness of the diagnostic CT findings of abdominal visceral injuries as well as their clinical and surgical implications are important prerequisites for optimal patient management.


Cryobiology | 2002

Cryosurgical changes in the porcine kidney: histologic analysis with thermal history correlation

Christopher C. Rupp; Nathan E. Hoffmann; Franz Schmidlin; David J. Swanlund; John C. Bischof; James E. Coad

Advances in minimally invasive renal cryosurgery have renewed interest in the relative contributions of direct cryothermic and secondary vascular injury-associated ischemic cell injury. Prior studies have evaluated renal cryolesions seven or more days post-ablation and postulated that vascular injury is the primary cell injury mechanism; however, the contributions of direct versus secondary cell injury are not morphologically distinguishable during the healing/repair stage of a cryolesion. While more optimal to evaluate this issue, minimal acute (< or = 3 days) post-ablation histologic data with thermal history correlation exists. This study evaluates three groups of porcine renal cryolesions: Group (1) in vitro non-perfused (n = 5); Group (2) in vivo 2-h post-ablation perfused (n = 5); and Group (3) in vivo 3-day post-ablation perfused (n = 6). The 3.4 mm argon-cooled cryoprobes thermal history included a 75 degrees C/min cooling rate, -130 degrees C end temperature, 60 degrees C/min thawing rate, and 15-min freeze time. An enthalpy-based mathematical model with a 2-D transient axisymmetric numerical solution with blood flow consideration was used to determine the thermal history within the ice ball. All three groups of cryolesions showed histologically similar central regions of complete cell death (CD) and transition zones of incomplete cell death (TZ). The CD had radii of 1.4, 1.1, and 1.0 cm in the non-perfused, 2-h and 3-day lesions, respectively. Capillary thrombosis was present in the 2-h perfused cryolesions with the addition of TZ arteriolar/venous thrombosis in the 3-day perfused lesions. Thermal modeling revealed the outer CD boundary in all three groups experienced similar thermal histories with an approximately -20 degrees C end temperature and 2 degrees C/min cooling and thawing rates. The presence of similar CD histology and in vitro/in vivo thermal histories in each group suggests that direct cryothermic cell injury, prior to or synchronous with vascular thrombosis, is a primary mediator of cell death in renal cryolesions.


Cancer | 2009

Impact of socioeconomic status on prostate cancer diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis†

Elisabetta Rapiti; Gérald Fioretta; Robin Schaffar; Isabel Neyroud‐Caspar; Helena M. Verkooijen; Franz Schmidlin; Raymond Miralbell; Roberto Zanetti; Christine Bouchardy

The objective of the current study was to evaluate the impact of socioeconomic disparities on prostate cancer presentation, treatment, and prognosis in Geneva, Switzerland, in which healthcare costs, medical coverage, and life expectancy are considered to be among the highest in the world.


Scandinavian Journal of Urology and Nephrology | 1998

The Higher Injury Risk of Abnormal Kidneys in Blunt Renal Trauma

Franz Schmidlin; Christophe Iselin; Alain Naimi; S. Rohner; François Borst; Mehdi Farshad; Peter Niederer; Pierre Graber

Objective: To investigate the vulnerability of abnormal kidneys in blunt trauma, and to determine clinical features which enable identification of patients at risk of renal abnormality, hence modifying their management. Material and Methods: The medical records of 120 patients with blunt renal trauma were reviewed. Presence of pre-existing renal abnormalities, clinical symptoms, contrast study findings, associated injuries and the estimated impact velocity were recorded. Results: Pre-existing renal abnormalities were found in 23 patients (19%). Patients with renal abnormalities had a lower rate of associated trauma to other abdominal organs, a lower Injury Severity Score (ISS) and their kidneys were more frequently injured by low velocity impacts. Of the patients with normal kidneys requiring surgery, hemodynamics and/or severity of the renal lesions triggered the operative indications in all cases, whereas most (57%) of the abnormal kidneys were operated because of their underlying renal pathology. Concl...


International Journal of Cancer | 2008

Increased risk of colon cancer after external radiation therapy for prostate cancer

Elisabetta Rapiti; Gérald Fioretta; Helena M. Verkooijen; Roberto Zanetti; Franz Schmidlin; Hyma Shubert; Arnaud Merglen; Raymond Miralbell; Christine Bouchardy

Radiotherapy can induce second cancers. Controversies still exist regarding the risk of second malignancies after irradiation for prostate cancer. We evaluated the risk of developing colon and rectum cancers after prostate cancer in irradiated and nonirradiated patients. Using data from the population‐based Geneva cancer registry, we included in the study all men with prostate cancer diagnosed between 1980 and 1998 who survived at least 5 years after diagnosis. Of the 1,134 patients, 264 were treated with external radiotherapy. Patients were followed for occurrence of colorectal cancer up to 31 December, 2003. We calculated standardized incidence ratios (SIR) using incidence rates for the general population to obtain the expected cancer incidence. The cohort yielded to 3,798 person‐years. At the end of follow‐up 19 patients had developed a colorectal cancer. Among irradiated patients the SIR for colorectal cancer was 3.4 (95% confidence intervals [CI] 1.7–6.0). Compared to the general population, the risk was significantly higher for colon cancer (SIR = 4.0, 95% CI: 1.8–7.6), but not for rectal cancer (SIR = 2.0, 95% CI: 0.2–7.2). The risk of colon cancer was increased in the period of 5–9 years after diagnosis (SIR = 4.7, 95% CI: 2.0–9.2). The overall SIR of secondary cancer in patients treated with radiotherapy was 1.35 (p = 0.056). Nonirradiated patients did not have any increased risk of rectal or colon cancer. This study shows a significant increase of colon but not rectum cancer after radiotherapy for prostate cancer. The risk of second cancer after irradiation, although probably small, needs nevertheless to be carefully monitored.


Journal of Biomechanical Engineering-transactions of The Asme | 2009

ADJUVANT APPROACHES TO ENHANCE CRYOSURGERY

Raghav Goel; Kyle Anderson; Joel W. Slaton; Franz Schmidlin; Greg Vercellotti; John D. Belcher; John C. Bischof

Molecular adjuvants can be used to enhance the natural destructive mechanisms of freezing within tissue. This review discusses their use in the growing field of combinatorial or adjuvant enhanced cryosurgery for a variety of disease conditions. Two important motivations for adjuvant use are: (1) increased control of the local disease in the area of freezing (i.e., reduced local recurrence of disease) and (2) reduced complications due to over-freezing into adjacent tissues (i.e., reduced normal functional tissue destruction near the treatment site). This review starts with a brief overview of cryosurgical technology including probes and cryogens and major mechanisms of cellular, vascular injury and possible immunological effects due to freeze-thaw treatment in vivo. The review then focuses on adjuvants to each of these mechanisms that make the tissue more sensitive to freeze-thaw injury. Four broad classes of adjuvants are discussed including: thermophysical agents (eutectic forming salts and amino acids), chemotherapuetics, vascular agents and immunomodulators. The key issues of selection, timing, dose and delivery of these adjuvants are then elaborated. Finally, work with a particularly promising vascular adjuvant, TNF-alpha, that shows the ability to destroy all cancer within a cryosurgical iceball is highlighted.

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H.-J. Leisinger

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Martin Forrer

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Georges Wagnières

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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