Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Hans-Ekkehart Vitzthum is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Hans-Ekkehart Vitzthum.


European Spine Journal | 2002

Microendoscopic lumbar discectomy versus open surgery: an intraoperative EMG study

Uta Schick; Döhnert J; Richter A; Alexander König; Hans-Ekkehart Vitzthum

Abstract. This study investigated electromyographic (EMG) activity as a marker of nerve root irritation during two different surgical procedures for lumbar disc herniation. Mechanically elicited EMG activity was recorded during the dynamic stages of surgery in muscle groups innervated by lumbar nerve roots. Confirmation of surgical activity was correlated with the activity of the electromyogram. Fifteen patients with lumbar disc herniations were treated via an endoscopic medial approach, and 15 patients via the open microscopic surgical technique. Results indicated that the endoscopic technique was superior to the open surgical technique and produced less irritation of the nerve root. Significantly less mechanically elicited activity was recorded during both the approach and the root mobilization. The study showed that microendoscopic discectomy allows a smaller incision and less tissue trauma with comparable visualization of the nerve structures than does open surgery.


Acta Neurochirurgica | 2004

Laser-induced thermotherapy of neoplastic lesions in the brain – underlying tissue alterations, MRI-monitoring and clinical applicability

P. C. Schulze; Hans-Ekkehart Vitzthum; Axel Goldammer; J.-P. Schneider; Ralf Schober

SummaryLaser-induced thermotherapy (LITT) is a minimally invasive neurosurgical approach to the stereotactic treatment of brain tumors in poorly accessible regions. Its clinical applicability has been shown in several experimental and clinical studies under on-line monitoring by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). This review characterizes LITT as an alternative neurosurgical approach with specific focus on the typical histological alterations and ultrastructural cellular changes following laser irradiation in the central nervous system. The spatial and temporal pattern of these changes is discussed in their relevance to the neurosurgical treatment of neoplastic lesions using LITT.


Computer Aided Surgery | 1999

Spinal markers: A new method for increasing accuracy in spinal navigation

Dirk Winkler; Hans-Ekkehart Vitzthum; Volker Seifert

Spinal navigation opens up a completely new dimension in the planning and realization of neurosurgical and orthopedic procedures, and offers the possibility of simulating the operation preoperatively. There is currently only limited experience with spinal navigation, and despite the development of advanced software, intraoperative difficulties include identification of characteristic and reproducible anatomical landmarks, localization of these points in the surgical field, referencing, and intraoperative control. We report the use of a new kind of implantable fiducial marker in a case of a 58-year-old female patient with spondylolisthesis. Percutaneously applied spinal markers were used as prominent anatomical landmarks and permitted much easier intraoperative handling. In our opinion, in the hands of an experienced neurosurgeon or orthopedist, the additional preoperative time required for placement of such spinal markers is negligible.


Neurocritical Care | 2005

Effects of temporary clips on somatosensory evoked potentials in aneurysm surgery

Uta Schick; Jörg Döhnert; Jan-Jakob Meyer; Hans-Ekkehart Vitzthum

Introduction: Changes in somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) were used to identify cerebral ischemia and to predict neurological outcome during the application of temporary clips in aneurysm surgery.Methods: SEPs were recorded intra-operatively in 76 patients with 79 aneurysms (8 in the posterior fossa). Twenty aneurysms ruptured during surgery, and 37 temporary clips were applied over an average of 8.1 minutes (range: 2–25 minutes).Results: Of 17 cases with complete loss of potential, 14 were associated with temporary clips. Two losses were persistent with postoperative neurological deficit after 10 minutes of clipping. Six showed incomplete recovery after a mean loss of 19.2 minutes following clipping of 9.3 minutes, resulting in a new deficit in four patients. Despite complete recovery of potential in six patients after a πloss over 18.8 minutes following clipping of 10.7 minutes, four patients developed neurological deficits.The sensitivity of SEPs in determining permanent neurological deficits was 57%, and the was specificity 88%. The duration of temporary clipping was significantly shorter in patients without resulting new neurological deficit (Mann-Whitney Test; p<0.01). The risk of a new deficit was 30.7% in cases where less than 8 minutes of clipping was performed, and the risk was 80.9% when clipping exceeded 8 minutes. The extent of recovery of potentials and the duration of SEP changes was strongly associated with the postoperative deficits (Kolmogorov-Smirnov Test, p=0.009; p=0.001, Mann-Whitney Test).Pathological p(ti)O2 measurements were obtained in 6 of 12 patients. In four patients, temporary occlusion was followed by a parallel alteration of SEPs and p(ti)O2 below 10 mm Hg.Conclusion: There is no genuinely safe permissible occlusion time. Despite complete recovery of SEPs after a loss of potential, the patient may develop new deficits.


European Spine Journal | 2001

Functional MRI of the spine: different patterns of positions of the forward flexed lumbar spine in healthy subjects

Alexander König; Hans-Ekkehart Vitzthum

Since the introduction of the technique of vertical open-configuration systems, efforts have been made to obtain functional lumbar spinal magnetic resonance (MR) images. The purpose of this study was to determine the relation between facet joint orientation and flexion patterns in the lower lumbar spine. Thirty-four normal subjects (18 women, 16 men) were examined in a vertical open 0.5-T MR scanner with T1-weighted gradient echo (GE) sequences. Flexion angles were digitally measured in the sagittal plane and facet joint orientation in the axial plane. The population showed three different functional flexion patterns: 17.6% (n=6) had kyphotic angles in all three lower lumbar levels during forward flexion (type 1), 50% (n=17) had a lordotic angle at L5/S1 but kyphotic angles at L4/L5 and L3/L4 (type 2), and 32.4% (n=11) showed lordotic angles at L5/S1 and L4/L5 but a kyphotic angle at L3/L4 (type 3). There were statistically significant differences between flexion patterns and mean facet joint orientation: at L4/L5 33.3° for type 1, 33.5° for type 2 and 46.2° for type 3; at L5/S1 27.2° for type 1, 46.4° for type 2 and 48.1° for type 3. There were no significant differences between the three groups at L3/L4. The three different flexion patterns in normal subjects and their relation to facet joint orientation have not been described previously. Knowledge of these patterns may lead to a better understanding of physiological spinal movement as a base for future investigations in low back pain patients.


The Spine Journal | 2008

Evaluation of five scoring systems for cervical spondylogenic myelopathy

Kristina Dalitz; Hans-Ekkehart Vitzthum

BACKGROUND CONTEXT Comparison of measured clinical deficits and outcomes is vital for international discussion about the identification and treatment of cervical spondylotic myelopathy (CSM). There is currently little information comparing outcomes as assessed by different CSM scoring systems. PURPOSE To qualitatively and quantitatively analyze five specific CSM outcome scores that are frequently used to assess the grade of severity and outcome after operative decompression. STUDY DESIGN This retrospective study evaluated the Nurick score, the Japanese Orthopedic Association score (JOA score), the Cooper myelopathy scale (CMS), the Prolo score, and the European myelopathy score (EMS). PATIENT SAMPLE The study included 43 patients with clinical and morphological signs of CSM, who underwent ventral decompression. Data were evaluated in sufficient detail to objectively assess the scores. OUTCOME MEASURES Clinical findings (funicular and radicular symptoms), recovery rate, symptom duration, age, economic situation, time away from employment, somatic-evoked potentials, and radiological findings were assessed. METHODS Scores were assessed using both pre- and postoperative clinical data. Correlations between scores, score improvement, and how well the scores reflected the clinical, diagnostic, and anamnestic data were analyzed using nonparametric, descriptive statistical tests. The recovery rate, as a measure of cumulative outcome, was also assessed and compared for each scoring system. RESULTS All five scores were suitable for qualitatively assessing the clinical characteristics and progression of cervical myelopathy. All showed a statistically significant correlation (p<.05), and measured postoperative improvement (p<.001). All scores also reflected clinical deficits except for the Prolo score, which rates the severity of CSM with an emphasis on data related to the economic impact on the patients situation rather than on clinical symptoms per se. Quantitative assessment of clinical symptom improvement varied greatly among the scores, for example, Nurick score (33%) versus JOA score (81%). The recovery rates, as a measure of cumulative improvement, showed less variation among most of the scores. The Nurick score and the EMS measured clinical deficit improvements in significantly fewer patients than did the JOA score (p<.05). CONCLUSIONS Evaluating the recovery rate is essential for comparing the results of the five CSM scores evaluated in this study. There was a large quantitative difference among the scores as the result of the different criteria used to produce each score. Qualitatively, all five scores allowed evaluation of cervical myelopathy, but only the recovery rate allowed for statistical comparison. Advancements in the treatment of CSM depend on the ability of clinicians to evaluate the therapeutic results of CSM studies. This study suggests that using the recovery rate to assess outcome is best for comparing studies that use different scores.


Zeitschrift Fur Medizinische Physik | 2003

Kryotherapie am Hirn – ein neuer methodischer Ansatz

Wilfried Gründer; Axel Goldammer; Ralf Schober; Hans-Ekkehart Vitzthum

Cryodestruction of tissue is influenced by cooling and thawing rates, absolute tissue temperature, number of freeze-thaw cycles, and type of tissue. However, under clinical conditions a MRT visualization of the temperature distribution during cryo-procedures is not possible. Thus, the extent of necrotic areas within the cryo-influenced regions are not precisely predictable. This limitation is particularly relevant for the application of cryoablation in the brain. The present paper proposes the concept of a local, cryo-induced ischemic necrosis. The basic concept is that the MRT-observable and surgically well-manageable frozen region is ischemic. This cryo-induced ischemia causes a necrosis. The extent of the necrotic region is exclusively determined by the ischemia tolerance of the tissue. The effectiveness of this method is demonstrated on sheep brain in vivo. Compared to the freeze-thaw method, histological examinations show a sharper demarcation between regions of necrosis and healthy tissue. In conclusion, the method of MR-controlled local, cryo-induced ischemia enables an exact definition of the region of necrosis in the brain.


European Spine Journal | 2007

Analysis of five specific scores for cervical spondylogenic myelopathy

Hans-Ekkehart Vitzthum; Kristina Dalitz


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2000

Dynamic examination of the lumbar spine by using vertical, open magnetic resonance imaging

Hans-Ekkehart Vitzthum; and Alexander König; Volker Seifert


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2005

Anatomical data on the craniocervical junction and their correlation with degenerative changes in 30 cadaveric specimens

Stefan Alexander König; Axel Goldammer; Hans-Ekkehart Vitzthum

Collaboration


Dive into the Hans-Ekkehart Vitzthum's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Volker Seifert

Goethe University Frankfurt

View shared research outputs
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