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Dive into the research topics where Günter Görge is active.

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Featured researches published by Günter Görge.


Circulation | 1997

Coronary Artery Calcium in Acute Coronary Syndromes A Comparative Study of Electron-Beam Computed Tomography, Coronary Angiography, and Intracoronary Ultrasound in Survivors of Acute Myocardial Infarction and Unstable Angina

Axel Schmermund; Dietrich Baumgart; Günter Görge; Rainer Seibel; Dietrich Grönemeyer; Junbo Ge; Michael Haude; John A. Rumberger; Raimund Erbel

BACKGROUND Quantification of coronary artery calcified plaques by electron-beam CT (EBCT) may predict cardiovascular events. However, whereas advanced coronary atherosclerotic plaques can be identified, mildly stenotic lipid-rich (soft) plaques may be difficult to detect. The value of EBCT in a subgroup of patients has therefore been questioned. To investigate this, we evaluated patients with acute coronary syndromes by EBCT and compared the results with coronary angiography and, in patients with an indeterminate angiogram, intracoronary ultrasound (ICUS). METHODS AND RESULTS EBCT was performed in 118 consecutive patients (57+/-11 years of age) with previous myocardial infarction (n=101) or unstable angina (n=17). A standard protocol requiring a CT density >130 Hounsfield units in an area > or =1.03 mm2 was used for the definition of coronary artery calcium. We found that 110 patients had moderate to severe coronary artery disease by coronary angiography, and 8 had either mildly stenotic plaques at a single site (4 patients, confirmed by ICUS) or nonatherosclerotic causes of the unstable coronary syndrome (4 patients). One hundred and five of the 110 patients (96%) with moderate to severe angiographic disease but only 1 of the 8 other patients (13%) had a positive EBCT. Patients with acute coronary syndromes and negative EBCTs were significantly younger than patients with positive EBCTs (46+/-12 versus 58+/-10 years, P<.001), and a higher percentage was actively smoking (100% of the smokers versus 46%, P<.05). CONCLUSIONS The vast majority of patients with acute coronary syndromes and at least moderate angiographic disease have identifiable coronary calcium by EBCT. Those patients with negative EBCTs have minimal or no atherosclerotic plaque formation. They are younger and tend to be active cigarette smokers.


Heart | 1999

Screening of ruptured plaques in patients with coronary artery disease by intravascular ultrasound

Junbo Ge; F Chirillo; J Schwedtmann; Günter Görge; Michael Haude; Dietrich Baumgart; V Shah; C. von Birgelen; Stefan Sack; H Boudoulas; Raimund Erbel

AIM To visualise the characteristics of ruptured plaques by intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) and to correlate plaque characteristics with clinical symptoms to establish a quantitative index of plaque vulnerability. METHODS 144 consecutive patients with angina were examined using IVUS. Ruptured plaques, characterised by a plaque cavity and a tear on the thin fibrous cap, were identified in 31 patients (group A), of whom 23 (74%) presented with unstable angina. Plaque rupture was confirmed by injecting contrast medium filling the plaque cavity during IVUS examination. Of the patients without plaque rupture (group B, n = 108), only 19 (18%) had unstable angina. RESULTS No significant differences were found between groups A and B in relation to plaque and vessel area (p > 0.05). Mean (SD) per cent stenosis in group A was less than in group B, at 56.2 (16.5)% v67.9 (13.4)%; p < 0.001. Area of the emptied plaque cavity in group A (4.1 (3.2) mm2) was larger than the echolucent zone in group B (1.32 (0.79) mm2) (p < 0.001). The plaque cavity to plaque ratio in group A (38.5 (17.1)%) was larger than the echolucent area to plaque ratio in group B (11.2 (8.9)%) (p < 0.001). The thickness of the fibrous cap in group A was less than in group B, at 0.47 (0.20) mm v 0.96 (0.94) mm; p < 0.001. CONCLUSIONS Plaques seem to be prone to rupture when the echolucent area is larger than 4.1 (3.2) mm2, when the echolucent area to plaque ratio is greater than 38.5 (17.1)%, and when the fibrous cap is thinner than 0.7 mm. IVUS can identify plaque rupture and vulnerable plaques. This may influence patient management and treatment.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1994

Extent of atherosclerosis and remodeling of the left main coronary artery determined by intravascular ultrasound

Thomas C. Gerber; Raimund Erbel; Günter Görge; Junbo Ge; Hans-Jürgen Rupprecht; Jürgen Meyer

This study used intravascular ultrasound (IU) to assess the incidence and extent of left main coronary artery (LMCA) disease and the effects of arterial remodeling. Sixty-nine patients undergoing cardiac catheterization were imaged with a 20 MHz rotational-tip IU device. Nine of the 69 studies (13%) could not be analyzed because of technical (n = 2) or anatomic (n = 7) reasons. Of the remaining 60 patients, 38 (63%) had at least 1 lesion in the left coronary artery perfusion territory by angiography; significant LMCA stenosis was present in 2 patients (3%). Intravascular ultrasonography demonstrated plaques in 27 of 60 LMCAs (45%), 6 of them in patients with normal angiograms. Twenty-four plaques (89%) were eccentric and calcium was present in 4 (15%). The mean minimal lumen diameter was 4.9 +/- 0.8 mm, the maximal lumen diameter was 5.6 +/- 0.8 mm, the planimetered lumen area was 22.6 +/- 6.0 mm2, the plaque area was 3.9 +/- 5.8 mm2, the vessel area was 26.5 +/- 5.9 mm2, and the area stenosis was 13 +/- 19%. In the 27 patients with plaque, plaque area was 8.7 +/- 5.7 mm2 and the area stenosis was 30 +/- 17%. The vessel area was significantly larger in diseased LMCAs (p < 0.001) and correlated with plaque area (r = 0.46). IU examination of the LMCA was feasible in 87% of patients and was more reliable for delineating plaques than angiography.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1998

Measuring the Effect of Risk Factors on Coronary Atherosclerosis: Coronary Calcium Score Versus Angiographic Disease Severity

Axel Schmermund; Dietrich Baumgart; Günter Görge; Dietrich Grönemeyer; Rainer Seibel; Kent R. Bailey; John A. Rumberger; Dietrich Paar; Raimund Erbel

OBJECTIVES This study sought to determine whether noninvasive quantification of coronary calcium is comparable to selective coronary angiography in measuring the effect of cardiovascular risk factors on coronary atherosclerosis. BACKGROUND Electron beam computed tomography (EBCT) allows the delineation of anatomic coronary atherosclerotic disease and may be useful for noninvasively defining the role of established and new cardiovascular risk factors in selected patient groups. METHODS A total of 211 consecutive patients, 26 to 79 years old, referred for evaluation of suspected or recently diagnosed coronary artery disease were examined. Selective coronary angiography was used to define five angiographic disease categories: normal coronary arteries, nonobstructive disease and one-, two- or three-vessel disease. EBCT was used to calculate coronary calcium scores, and cardiovascular risk, including lipid variables and fibrinogen levels, was assessed. RESULTS Coronary calcium score and angiographic disease severity categories were largely predicted by identical risk factors (i.e., age, male gender, total/high density lipoprotein cholesterol ratio, fibrinogen) and, to a lesser degree, hypertension. Only smoking predicted angiographic disease severity but not calcium scores. The risk factors together explained a comparable proportion of the variability in angiographic disease categories and in calcium score quintiles (33% vs. 41%, p=0.16 by bootstrap analysis). An overall risk score composed of these risk factors separated angiographic disease categories and calcium score quintiles with a similar area under the receiver operating characteristic curve ([mean+/-SE] 0.81+/-0.03 vs. 0.83+/-0.03, p=NS). CONCLUSIONS Quantification of coronary calcium is comparable to selective coronary angiography in measuring the effect of established cardiovascular risk factors on coronary atherosclerosis. Thus, EBCT may be useful for the noninvasive evaluation of the relations between conventional or developing cardiovascular risk factors and coronary atherosclerosis.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1995

Intravascular ultrasound after low and high inflation pressure coronary artery stent implantation

Günter Görge; Michael Haude; Ge Junbo; Elisabeth Voegele; Thomas C. Gerber; Hans-Jürgen Rupprecht; Jürgen Meyer; Raimund Erbel

OBJECTIVES We sought to characterize the differences seen after low or high pressure coronary artery stent deployment as assessed by intravascular ultrasound. BACKGROUND Until 1992, the success of stent deployment was assessed by angiographic criteria only, but in 1993 the procedure was expanded to include postprocedural single-use intravascular ultrasound imaging. Ultrasound criteria for successful stent deployment were 1) symmetry, 2) minimal lumen diameter > 3.0 mm, 3) no echo-free spaces between the stent and the vessel, and 4) no uncovered dissections. METHODS We used mechanical 4.8F or 3.5F 20- or 30-MHz monorail single-use intravascular ultrasound catheters. RESULTS Fifty-two patients were included, 28 treated in 1991 and 1992 (group A) and 24 treated in 1993 or 1994 (group B); 87% of patients underwent elective stent implantation. The number of echocardiographic studies per patient increased from 1 +/- 0.1 (mean +/- SD) in group A to 2.0 +/- 0.85 in group B. Mean maximal balloon size increased from 3.3 +/- 0.33 to 3.73 +/- 0.24 mm and maximal inflation pressure from 6.9 +/- 1.1 to 15.8 +/- 2.4 bar (p < 0.001). The eccentricity index was 0.915 +/- 0.04 in group B versus 0.87 +/- 0.05 in group A. Minimal lumen diameter measured by echocardiography increased from 2.55 +/- 0.41 mm in group A to 3.14 +/- 0.37 mm in group B. The final mean values per cross-sectional area as a percent of calculated balloon area were similar in group A (67.5 +/- 23%) and group B (66.5 +/- 22.9%). No major acute complications occurred in either group; subacute thrombosis developed in two patients, both in group A. CONCLUSIONS Intravascular ultrasound data confirm that high pressure stent deployment leads to increased minimal lumen area. Despite high pressure stent deployment, homogeneous stent geometry and optimal stent expansion were not observed in all patients.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1998

Comparison of electron-beam computed tomography and intracoronary ultrasound in detecting calcified and noncalcified plaques in patients with acute coronary syndromes and no or minimal to moderate angiographic coronary artery disease

Axel Schmermund; Dietrich Baumgart; Michael Adamzik; Junbo Ge; Dietrich Grönemeyer; Rainer Seibel; Cornelia Sehnert; Günter Görge; Michael Haude; Raimund Erbel

We compared intracoronary ultrasound (ICUS) and electron-beam computed tomography (EBCT) on a coronary segmental basis in 40 consecutive patients with acute coronary syndromes and no or minimal to moderate angiographic disease (53+/-10 years; 34 men, 6 women). ICUS was used to define plaques, and EBCT was used to quantify coronary calcium (using a threshold of a CT density > 130 Hounsfield units in an area > 1.03 mm2). In a site-by-site analysis, coronary segments were defined as normal if both methods were negative, as containing noncalcified plaques if only ICUS was positive, and as containing calcified plaques if both methods were positive. A total of 222 coronary segments were analyzed (5.6+/-1.9 segments per patient). In 36 patients (90%), a total of 95 segments with plaques were identified, whereas in 4 patients (10%), only normal segments were seen. Of the 95 segments with plaques, 61 (64%) were calcified, and 34 (36%) were noncalcified. There was a linear relationship between the number of segments with calcified and with noncalcified plaques (r = 0.86, p <0.0001), but the mean relative frequency of segments with calcified plaques (55+/-38%) was highly variable. Calcium was found in 15 of 16 patients (93%) with 3 or more segments with plaques, while it was found in only 12 of 20 patients (60%) with one or 2 segments with plaques (p = 0.026). Younger age, higher low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol levels, diabetes, and active smoking predicted a higher relative frequency of segments with noncalcified plaques. Thus, in patients with acute coronary syndromes but no angiographically critical stenoses, there is a linear relationship between segments with calcified plaques versus segments with noncalcified plaques. However, while the mean ratio of these segments is close to 1:1, it is highly variable among individual patients.


Coronary Artery Disease | 1993

Coronary artery remodeling in atherosclerotic disease: An intravascular ultrasonic study in vivo

Junbo Ge; Raimund Erbel; Jose Luis Zamorano; Lothar Koch; Peter Kearney; Günter Görge; Thomas C. Gerber; Jürgen Meyer

BackgroundPathologic studies have revealed that coronary arteries undergo compensatory enlargement in the presence of atherosclerosis. MethodsIn order to assess coronary artery remodeling in vivo, we used intravascular ultrasound to examine 46 patients (36 men and 10 women; aged 58.2 ± 6.8 years) with non-calcified plaques. The vessel, lumen, and plaque areas of the atherosclerotic and of normal proximal and distal segments were determined. ResultsA total of 92 atherosclerotic segments were analyzed. The degree of stenosis ranged from 9.2 to 92.8% (mean 34.1 ±16.9%) and the plaque area from 2 to 19.6 mm2 (mean 6.3 ± 3.6 mm2). The vessel area of the atherosclerotic segment (mean 20.4 ± 7.3 mm2) was larger than that of the proximal segment (mean 18.7 ± 7.3 mm2, P = 0.018). The vessel area increased in proportion to plaque area. This relationship can be described using the equation y = 23.5(1 -e -0.35x). The difference between the vessel area in the atherosclerotic segment and that in the proximal normal segment correlated with the percentage of stenosis (r = 0.53, P <; 0.005) until the degree of stenosis exceeded 45%. ConclusionThis study indicates that coronary artery remodeling, previously observed in pathologic studies, can be evaluated using intravascular ultrasound in vivo. As a result of the compensatory enlargement of the vessel, coronary angiography cannot be used to detect or exclude the early signs of coronary atherosclerosis.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1992

Classification of morphologic effects of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty assessed by intravascular ultrasound

Thomas C. Gerber; Raimund Erbel; Günter Görge; Junbo Ge; Hans-Jürgen Rupprecht; Jürgen Meyer

The aim of this study was the assessment and classification of the morphologic effects of percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTCA) by intravascular ultrasound (IU). Fifty-eight patients were examined immediately after PTCA with a 4.8Fr, 20 MHz rotational tip IU system. In 10 patients (17%), IU images could not be analyzed due to failure of the imaging system or poor image quality. In 48 patients (83%; 40 men and 8 women, aged 55 +/- 9 years), IU images of 48 PTCA segments, as well as 41 distal and 44 proximal sites, were analyzed. The left anterior descending artery was studied in 30 patients, the right coronary artery in 17 and the left main coronary artery in 1. Calcium was present in 32 of 48 PTCA segments (67%). Plaque morphology was concentric in 18 patients (38%) and eccentric in 30 (62%). Seven distinct morphologic patterns were observed. In concentric plaques, plaque compression without significant wall alterations (type 1) was found in 2 patients (4%), superficial tears within the plaque (type 2) in 1 (2%) and deep tears (type 3) in 8 (17%). Deep tearing associated with submedial or subintimal dissection (type 4) was found in 2 patients (4%). Dissection between plaque and vessel wall without noticeable intimal tearing (type 5) was the most common morphology (n = 15; 31%) and occurred in concentric and eccentric plaques. In eccentric plaques, no significant tearing of the plaque (type 6) was found in 6 patients (13%), and tearing of the plaque close to its base with dissection (type 7) in 14 (29%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1994

Intravascular ultrasound imaging in acute aortic dissection

Andrew Weintraub; Raimund Erbel; Günter Görge; Steven L. Schwartz; Junbo Ge; Thomas C. Gerber; Jürgen Meyer; Tsui-Lieh Hsu; Robert M. Bojar; Sabino Iliceto; Luigi Carella; Paolo Rizzon; Isidre Vilacosta; Javier Goicolea; José Zamorano; Fernando Alfonso; Natesa G. Pandian

OBJECTIVES This study was performed to determine the potential of intravascular ultrasound in the detection and delineation of aortic dissection. BACKGROUND Intravascular ultrasound is a new technique capable of displaying real-time cross-sectional images of arterial vasculature. Its clinical use has been explored mostly in coronary and peripheral arterial circulation. METHODS Intravascular ultrasound imaging of the aorta was performed using a 20-MHz ultrasound catheter in 28 patients with suspected aortic dissection. All patients underwent contrast angiography; 7 had computed tomography; and 22 had transesophageal echocardiography. RESULTS Imaging of the aorta from the root level to its bifurcation was performed in all patients in an average of 10 min. No complications occurred. Dissection was present in 23 patients and absent in 5. In the patients without dissection, intravascular ultrasound revealed normal aortic anatomy. In all 23 patients with dissection, intravascular ultrasound demonstrated the intimal flap and true and false lumena. The longitudinal and circumferential extent of aortic dissection, contents of the false lumen, involvement of branch vessels and the presence of intramural hematoma in the aortic wall could also be identified. In cases where aortography could not define the distal extent of the dissection, intravascular ultrasound did. CONCLUSIONS Our experience in this series of patients with aortic dissection indicates that intravascular ultrasound could be valuable in the identification and categorization of aortic dissection and in the description of associated pathologic changes that may be clinically important. It can be performed rapidly and safely and could serve as an alternative or adjunct diagnostic procedure in patients with aortic dissection.


American Heart Journal | 1995

Intravascular ultrasound approach to the diagnosis of coronary artery aneurysms

Junbo Ge; Fengqi Liu; Peter P. Kearney; Günter Görge; Michael Haude; Dietrich Baumgart; Mahmoud Ashry; Raimund Erbel

Coronary artery aneurysms are usually diagnosed by contrast coronary angiography, which portrays the silhouette of the lumen but cannot distinguish true and false aneurysms. To differentiate true and false aneurysms and to study the morphologic changes of the vessel wall, intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) was performed in patients with angiographic signs of coronary artery aneurysms. We used a 4.8F or 3.5F, 20 MHz IVUS catheter for ultrasound examination. Fourteen patients (12 men and two women ranging in age from 43 to 73 years) with angiographic signs of coronary aneurysm were enrolled. IVUS imaging was optimally obtained in all patients. The vessel area, lumen area, and plaque area of the aneurysm segment and of the proximal and distal segments were determined. IVUS showed that both the proximal and distal reference segments were severely affected by atherosclerotic lesions in all the patients and by calcium deposits in six patients. The percent stenoses were 63.0% +/- 13.7% and 60.9% +/- 17.8% in the proximal and distal reference segments, respectively. In nine patients the walls of the aneurysms showed signs of atherosclerosis. Three angiographically indicated aneurysms were found to be plaque ruptures. Although the lumen and the vessel areas of the aneurysm segments were larger than those of the proximal and distal segments (p < 0.01 and (p < 0.001), no significant differences in plaque area and plaque composition were found between the aneurysm segment and adjacent vessel segments (p > 0.05). In conclusion, IVUS allows detailed characterization of coronary aneurysms. Atherosclerosis seems to play an important role in the formation of acquired coronary aneurysms.

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Raimund Erbel

University of Duisburg-Essen

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Dietrich Baumgart

University of Duisburg-Essen

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Michael Haude

University of Duisburg-Essen

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Dirk Welge

Ruhr University Bochum

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