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Dive into the research topics where Heinrich Strobl is active.

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Featured researches published by Heinrich Strobl.


International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 1999

Conservative treatment of unilateral condylar fractures in children: a long‐term clinical and radiologic follow‐up of 55 patients

Heinrich Strobl; Rüdiger Emshoff; Gabriel Röthler

The purpose of this prospectively designed study was the long-term clinical and radiological evaluation of conservatively treated unilateral condylar fractures in children. Fifty-five children aged between 2 1/2 and 9 3/4 years, presenting with a singular unilateral fracture of the mandibular condyle, were treated in a nonsurgical-functional way using an intraoral myofunctional appliance. In the follow-up period, patients were investigated by standardized clinical examination and by evaluation of panoramic radiographs taken immediately post-traumatically, after 6, 12, 24, 48 and 72 weeks, and then yearly through the period of growth. With a satisfactory clinical course in all patients, there was no instance of functional disturbance or mandibular asymmetry after the respective follow-up periods. The radiographs showed a fairly good shape of the condyle (no or only slight condylar deformity) in the 47 patients of the 2-6 year age group. In the eight patients of the 7-10 year age group presenting with a class II or III condylar fracture, healing was characterized by incomplete condylar regeneration, resulting in a moderate condylar deformity in two cases, a definite reduction in condylar neck height in two cases, and a hypertrophic condylar deformity in four cases. The positive results of this study confirm the concept of a nonsurgical-functional approach in children presenting with various types of unilateral fractures of the mandibular condyle. Condylar remodeling was the mode of fracture healing in instances of displaced and dislocated condylar fractures.


Oral Surgery Oral Medicine Oral Pathology Oral Radiology and Endodontology | 2003

Clinical signs of orbital wall fractures as a function of anatomic location.

Siegfried Jank; Barbara Schuchter; Rüdiger Emshoff; Heinrich Strobl; Julius Koehler; Alessandro Nicasi; Burghard Norer; Ivo Baldissera

OBJECTIVE The objective of this study was to see whether clinical signs of medial orbital wall fractures distinguished these fractures from fractures of the lateral orbital wall and the orbital floor. STUDY DESIGN The orbital fractures of 424 patients were analyzed. The patients were divided into 2 groups: (1) patients with orbital fractures with a medial orbital wall component and (2) patients with orbital fractures without a medial orbital wall component. RESULTS Orbital fractures with involvement of the medial orbital wall showed a significantly higher incidence (P =.001) of diplopia and exophthalmos (P =.039) than fractures without involvement of the medial wall. CONCLUSION Posttraumatic orbital clinical signs are associated with a higher incidence of medial orbital wall component fracture. Apparent lack of involvement of the medial orbital wall should not be an exclusion criterion for a surgical intervention when clinical orbital signs exist.


Oral Surgery Oral Medicine Oral Pathology Oral Radiology and Endodontology | 1999

Ultrasonographic cross-sectional characteristics of muscles of the head and neck

Rüdiger Emshoff; Stefan Bertram; Heinrich Strobl

OBJECTIVE Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging are the common techniques for evaluating cross-sectional areas and volumes of human jaw muscles. Because computed tomography has the disadvantage of showing cumulative biological effects and because MRI poses a problem in terms of clinical availability and cost, the purpose of this study was to determine whether ultrasonography could be used to measure local linear cross-sectional dimensions of muscles of the head and neck. STUDY DESIGN In 46 patients with signs and symptoms of temporomandibular disorders, the anterior temporalis, anterior masseter, deep masseter, anterior digastric, posterior digastric, and sternocleidomastoid muscles were measured bilaterally by ultrasonography to assess linear local cross-sectional dimensions. Measurements were made in 2 sessions with a time interval of at least 5 minutes. Data were analyzed for reliability and variability through use of the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) and the repeatability coefficient (RC). To assess local muscle asymmetry patterns, the absolute asymmetry index was used, with the mean maximum muscle diameters of the respective right and left sides calculated from 3 consecutive measurements. RESULTS Satisfactory visualization of muscles was obtained in 93.8% of 1104 imaging procedures. For the ultrasound measurements there was a significant difference in local cross-sectional dimensions between the first and second sessions for the anterior temporalis muscle only (P < .01). Acceptable intrarater reliabilities were obtained for the deep masseter (ICC = 0.92), anterior digastric (ICC = 0.91), and sternocleidomastoid (ICC = 0.86) muscles, whereas evaluation of the posterior digastric (ICC = 0.74), anterior masseter (ICC = 0.72), and anterior temporalis (ICC = 0.70) muscles was associated with moderate reliability. Variability of repeated measurements was found to be acceptable for the anterior temporalis (RC = 0.32 mm) and posterior digastric (RC = 0.48 mm) muscles. Analysis of muscle site-related local cross-sectional dimensions showed a significant difference between the right and left sides for the deep masseter muscle only (P < .05). The study population investigated revealed mean asymmetry indices ranging from 5.3% for the anterior digastric muscle to 8.7% for the deep masseter muscle. CONCLUSIONS Ultrasonography may prove to be a reliable diagnostic technique for the evaluation of cross-sectional dimensions and areas of muscles of the head and neck.


Oral Surgery Oral Medicine Oral Pathology Oral Radiology and Endodontology | 2003

Prognostic indicators of the outcome of arthrocentesis: A short-term follow-up study

Rüdiger Emshoff; Ansgar Rudisch; Renato Bösch; Heinrich Strobl

OBJECTIVES Arthrocentesis of the temporomandibular joint (TMJ) is purported to be an effective modality in the treatment of patients with closed-lock symptoms. The purpose of this study was to determine whether the clinical findings of disk displacement without reduction associated with pain in the TMJ are related to the discovery of TMJ osteoarthrosis (OA) through the use of magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and whether the presence of OA affects the treatment outcome of patients who undergo arthrocentesis of the TMJ. STUDY DESIGN The study population consisted of 38 patients with TMJ pain who were assigned a clinical diagnosis of unilateral internal derangement (ID) of the TMJ, type III (disk displacement without reduction), in combination with capsulitis/synovitis (C/S) and an MR imaging diagnosis of disk displacement without reduction in the painful TMJ only. Before the patients underwent arthrocentesis, bilateral sagittal and coronal MR images were obtained to confirm the presence or absence of ID and OA. The preoperative and postoperative levels of TMJ function with respect to pain and mandibular range of motion were evaluated and compared. Multiple logistic regression analysis was used to compute the odds ratios for successful outcomes for OA (n = 24) versus unsuccessful outcomes for TMJs (n = 14). RESULTS The preoperative data revealed a significant relationship between the clinical diagnosis of TMJ ID type III with C/S and the discovery of OA on MR images (P =.048). At the 2-month follow-up, a clinical evaluation revealed a significant reduction in TMJ pain during function (P =.000); a significant reduction in the clinical diagnoses of ID type III (P =.000), and C/S (P =.000); and a significant increase in the mandibular range of motion (P =.000). The patients with successful outcomes were more likely to be associated with an MR imaging finding of OA than were the patients with unsuccessful outcomes. (10.4 odds ratio; P =.016). CONCLUSIONS Our preliminary findings suggest that the presence of OA revealed on MR images is related to clinical pain; furthermore, OA proved to be an important prognostic determinant of successful arthrocentesis.


Dental Traumatology | 2008

Outcomes of dental fracture injury as related to laser Doppler flow measurements of pulpal blood-flow level

Rüdiger Emshoff; I. Moschen; Andreas Oberrauch; Stefan Gerhard; Heinrich Strobl

Laser Doppler flowmetry (LDF) is a non-invasive method to assess pulpal blood flow (PBF). Dental fracture injuries have been associated with significant PBF reduction The purpose of this study was: (i) to evaluate whether the severity of outcomes of dental fracture injuries may be related to LDF measurements of PBF, and (ii) to investigate whether outcomes of dental fracture injuries may predict PBF levels. The relationship between outcomes and PBF measurements was analyzed in 72 permanent maxillary incisors of 52 consecutive dental trauma patients. The diagnostic outcome group comprised 72 incisors with a type I (absence of sensitivity, periapical radiolucency, and grey discoloration of crown) (n = 42), type II (loss of sensitivity) (n = 16), or type III (loss of sensitivity, periapical radiolucency, and/or grey discoloration of crown) diagnosis. At each session, when an injured permanent maxillary incisor was recorded, a contralateral homologous tooth was used as a control. An ordinal stepwise regression was completed to assess the degree of association between PBF measurements and diagnostic outcomes. A logistic regression analysis was used to compute the odds ratios for the outcome features for incisor non-injury controls vs two outcome groups: type II (n = 16) and type III (n = 14). PBF measurements that were significantly associated with more severe outcome were PBF levels of <or=6 perfusion units (PU) (106.70 odds ratio) (P = 0.000). Significant increase in the risk of a PBF level of <or=6 PU occurred with a type III outcome (32.49 odds ratio) (P = 0.004). PBF measurements were related to the severity of adverse outcomes. Diagnoses of treatment outcomes predicted the presence of specific PBF levels.


International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2005

Interrater reliability in the ultrasound-diagnosis of medial and lateral orbital wall fractures with a curved-array transducer

Siegfried Jank; M. Deibl; Heinrich Strobl; Alessandro Nicasi; A. Oberrauch; Martin Missmann; Gerd Bodner

PURPOSE The aims of the study were to document the effectiveness of ultrasound (US) in diagnosing orbital wall fractures when compared with computed tomography (CT) and to measure the intraobserver reliability of US using a curved array transducer. MATERIALS AND METHODS From December 2003 to March 2004, 13 patients with the clinical diagnosis of an orbital trauma were investigated prospectively by CT (reference) and 2 US investigators. Both orbits were investigated. Sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, and positive and negative predictive value were calculated. The statistical difference between the 2 US investigators was calculated by a chi-square test. The interrater reliability was calculated using the lambda coefficient. Values below 0.4 represent poor reliability, between 0.4 and 0.75 represent fair to good reliability, and a score > 0.75 is graded as excellent reliability. RESULTS The comparison of the results of the 2 US investigators by the chi-square test showed P values of .385 for the medial orbital wall and .638 for the lateral orbital wall, which shows no significant difference. The lambda-value for the investigation of the medial orbital wall reached 0.429, 0.714, and 0.750. The lambda-value for the investigation of the lateral orbital wall yielded 0.647, 0.750, and 0.882. These values show a good and excellent inter-rater reliability. CONCLUSION The US investigation does not yet reach the diagnostic quality of CT. US could be a helpful diagnostic imaging tool in cases with clear clinical symptoms. The results of the current study and the previously published results imply that US has the potential to reach the same diagnostic quality as CT in the future, but further studies must be performed to improve the diagnostic quality of the method.


Oral Surgery Oral Medicine Oral Pathology Oral Radiology and Endodontology | 2003

Orbital floor reconstruction with flexible Ethisorb patches: a retrospective long-term follow-up study.

Siegfried Jank; Rüdiger Emshoff; Barbara Schuchter; Heinrich Strobl; Iris Brandlmaier; Burghard Norer


Journal of the American Dental Association | 2003

Magnetic resonance imaging predictors of temporomandibular joint pain

Rüdiger Emshoff; Iris Brandlmaier; Stefan Gerhard; Heinrich Strobl; Stefan Bertram; Ansgar Rudisch


International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2005

Diagnostic quality of dynamic high-resolution ultrasonography of the TMJ—a pilot study

Siegfried Jank; Rüdiger Emshoff; Burghard Norer; M. Missmann; Alessandro Nicasi; Heinrich Strobl; Robert Gassner; Ansgar Rudisch; Gerd Bodner


International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2003

The diagnostic value of ultrasonography to detect occult lymph node involvement at different levels in patients with squamous cell carcinoma in the maxillofacial region

Siegfried Jank; P Robatscher; Rüdiger Emshoff; Heinrich Strobl; G Gojer; Burghard Norer

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Siegfried Jank

Innsbruck Medical University

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I. Moschen

University of Innsbruck

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R. Emshoff

Innsbruck Medical University

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