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Featured researches published by Hermann Schieffer.


Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 1997

Optimizing the AV Delay in DDD Pacemaker Patients with High Degree AV Block: Mitral Valve Doppler Versus Impedance Cardiography

Michael Kindermann; Gerd Eröhlig; Thomas Doerr; Hermann Schieffer

In DDD‐pacemaker patients with high degree A V block, Doppler echocardiography of transmitral blood flow can be used to find the individually optimal AV delay (AVO) for left heart AV synchronization. This study tried to validate a Doppler method (ECHO) recently proposed to optimize left ventricular filling by comparing it to stroke volume data derived from impedance cardiography (ICG). It should be further elucidated if optimizing the AV delay (AVD) by means of this method is superior to fixed AVD settings and which differential AVD (pace‐sense‐offset) should be programmed for atrially triggered (A TP) and A V sequential (A VP) pacing, respectively. A VO as measured in 53 patients showed a linear correlation between ECHO and ICC for both ATP (r = 0.66, P < 0,00001) and AVP (r = 0.53, P < 0.005). The mean deviation in AVO between ECHO and ICC was ± 26 ms (ATP) and ± 30 ms (AVP), respectively, with a tendency to longer AVDs with the Doppler method. ECHO limitations could mainly be attributed to: (1) restrictions of AVD programming options (which may be compensated for by slight modification of the proposal); and (2) to pathophysiological mechanisms that alter mitral valve dynamics. Optimization of the AVD by Doppler produced a stroke volume that was significantly higher (19%) than with a fixed AVD (150 ms in ATP; 200 ms in AVP). There was a wide scatter in pace‐sense‐offsets between ‐7 and 134 ms, which was reflected by both methods. It is concluded that AVO determinations by ECHO are valid provided that methodological pitfalls and limitations caused by the disease are recognized. Tailoring AVD with respect to diastolic filling improves systolic function and is superior to nominal AVD settings. Fixed differential AVDs as offered by some manufacturers are far from being physiological. Thus modern pulse generators should offer free programmability over a wide range of AV delays.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1999

Influence of right ventricular stimulation site on left ventricular function in atrial synchronous ventricular pacing

Bernhard Schwaab; Gerd Fröhlig; Christof Alexander; Michael Kindermann; Nicola Hellwig; Holger Schwerdt; Carl-Martin Kirsch; Hermann Schieffer

OBJECTIVES The study investigates the correlation between left ventricular function and QRS duration obtained by alternate right ventricular pacing sites. BACKGROUND 1. Right ventricular apical pacing is associated with alterations of left ventricular contraction sequence. 2. A stimulation producing narrow QRS complexes is supposed to provide for better left ventricular contraction patterns. METHODS Fourteen patients with third degree AV block received one ventricular pacing lead in apical position. The alternate lead was attached to that site on the septum that produced the smallest QRS complex as measured from the earliest to the last deflection in any of the orthogonal Frank leads (xyz). During atrial synchronous ventricular pacing, the AV delay was optimized individually and for each stimulation site using mitral valve doppler or impedance cardiography. By radionuclide ventriculography, the phase distribution histogram of left ventricular contraction was evaluated as area under the curve (AuC); systolic function was determined as ejection fraction (EF) and as absolute ejected counts (EC) in random order. The difference (delta) in QRS duration between apical and septal stimulation (deltaxyz) was correlated with the difference in phase distribution (deltaAuC) and ejection parameters (deltaEF, deltaEC). RESULTS QRS duration was shorter with septal than with apical pacing in 9 out of 14 patients (64%); it was longer in 4 (29%), and no difference was seen in 1 patient. There was a significant positive correlation between the change in QRS duration (deltaxvz) and phase distribution (deltaAuC: r = 0.66393, p = 0.010) and a significant negative correlation to systolic function (deltaEF: r = 0.70931, p = 0.004; deltaEC: r = 0.74368, p = 0.002). CONCLUSIONS In atrial synchronous right ventricular pacing, if the AV delay is adapted individually, decreased QRS duration obtained by alternate pacing sites is significantly correlated with homogenization of left ventricular contraction and with increased systolic function in acute tests.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2000

Comparative rest and exercise hemodynamics of 23-mm stentless versus 23-mm stented aortic bioprostheses

Roland Fries; Olaf Wendler; Hermann Schieffer; Hans-Joachim Schäfers

BACKGROUND The hemodynamic superiority of stentless valves at rest has been generally accepted, but there is a lack of studies on exercise hemodynamics. METHODS We assessed aortic valve hemodynamics at rest and during exercise in 10 patients with a 23-mm stentless aortic bioprosthesis (Medtronic Freestyle; Medtronic Europe SA/NV, St. Stevens Woluwe, Belgium), in 10 patients with a 23-mm stented aortic bioprosthesis (Carpentier-Edwards, SAV, model 2650; Baxter Edwards AG, Horw, Switzerland), and in 10 healthy volunteers (control group) by means of Doppler echocardiography. RESULTS Gradients at rest and gradients on comparable maximum exercise levels were significantly lower in patients with stentless valves compared to those with stented valves (rest: 6 +/- 2/11 +/- 4 mm Hg [mean/peak] versus 12 +/- 3/21 +/- 10 mm Hg; exercise: 9 +/- 3/18 +/- 6 mm Hg [mean/peak] versus 22 +/- 8/40 +/- 11 mm Hg). Patients with stentless valves revealed, in comparison to healthy young men, significantly higher gradients, but the small gradient difference of 3/7 mm Hg (mean/peak) at rest remained nearly unchanged throughout the exercise protocol (4/8 mm Hg [mean/peak] at 25 W, 4/9 mm Hg at 50 W and 4/9 mm Hg at 75 W). In contrast, the gradient difference between patients with stented and stentless valves increased significantly from one exercise level to the next (6/12 mm Hg [mean/peak] at rest, 8/14 mm Hg at 25 W, 12/17 mm Hg at 50 W, and 15/25 mm Hg at 75 W). CONCLUSIONS A stentless aortic bioprosthesis seems to be an appropriate aortic valve substitute, especially in patients who perform regular physical exercise.


The American Journal of Medicine | 2001

Long-term follow-up of a randomized study of primary stenting versus angioplasty in acute myocardial infarction

Bruno Scheller; Benno Hennen; Sabine Severin-Kneib; Cem Özbek; Hermann Schieffer; Torsten Markwirth

PURPOSE Primary stenting leads to better short-term outcomes than does balloon angioplasty among patients with acute myocardial infarction, but there are no data available on long-term follow-up. SUBJECTS AND METHODS We designed a randomized study with long-term follow-up to compare primary angioplasty with angioplasty accompanied by implantation of a silicon carbide-coated stent in patients within 24 hours after the onset of acute myocardial infarction. All 88 patients had lesions that were suitable for coronary stenting. RESULTS There were 44 patients in each of the randomization groups. During long-term follow-up (mean +/- SD: 710+/-282 days), primary stenting was associated with a reduction in the combined endpoint of death, reinfarction, or target vessel revascularization (10 [23%] versus 19 [43%], P = 0.03); death (4 [9%] versus 8 [18%], P = 0.18); reinfarction (1 [2%] versus 4 [9%], P = 0.18); and target lesion revascularization (7 [16%] versus 15 [34%], P = 0.04). Rehospitalization due to ischemic events (unstable angina or reinfarction) was also less frequent in the stent group (6 [14%] versus 10 [23%], P = 0.20). CONCLUSION Primary stenting in acute myocardial infarction is significantly superior to angioplasty alone in both short-term and long-term follow-up.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1988

Atrial signal variations and pacemaker malsensing during exercise: a study in the time and frequency domain.

Gerd Fröhlig; Holger Schwerdt; Hermann Schieffer; Ludwig Bette

To give some explanation for atrial malsensing in dual chamber pacing that occurs only during exercise, atrial electrograms from 33 patients were telemetrically recorded and analyzed in both the time and frequency domains. During exercise, an overall decrease from 6.4 +/- 1.9 to 5.6 +/- 1.9 mV (-11%) in the atrial signal amplitude was noted. Despite considerable variability among patients, marked changes occurred in 15 patients whose signals diminished by 11 to 49%. Slew rates showed a similar decrease from 1.35 +/- 0.45 to 1.18 +/- 0.45 V/s (-10.8%), with individual changes of as much as -51%. Signal attenuation in the time domain correlated well with frequency data, exhibiting a highly significant reduction of signal energy between 25 and 105 Hz. However, spectral distribution changed from rest to exercise, with a relative increase of signal energy in the range between 5 and 25 Hz and a decrease at higher frequencies. Individual changes differed widely when low (15 to 65 Hz) and high (65 to 115 Hz) frequencies were compared, but in a group of 11 patients signal attenuation in the high frequency band was more pronounced (-45%) than in the low frequency band (-23%). The clinical impact of the change in frequency distribution during ergometry was visualized by computer simulation of two different (low and high bandpass) filters. Although in individual patients, both characteristics may be favorable with respect to atrial sensing, it was observed in 11 patients that high pass filtering attenuates signal amplitudes by 10 to 24% in excess of the variation without filtering.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 1999

Bipolar ventricular far-field signals in the atrium.

Gerd Fröhlig; Zarah Helwani; Oliver Kusch; Monika Berg; Hermann Schieffer

In an attempt to evaluate the prevalence and predisposing factors of bipolar ventricular far‐field oversensing, 57 patients were studied who had a Medtronic dual chamber pacemaker implanted (models 7940: n = 6; 7960i: n = 41; 401: n = 3; 8968i: n = 7) and bipolar atrial leads with a dipole spacing from 8.6 to 60 mm attached to various parts of the atrial wall (lateral/anterior: n = 30; appendage: n = 10; atrial septum: n = 10; floating: n = 7). Median bipolar sensing threshold for P waves was 4.0 mV (2.8–4.0 mV, lower and upper quartile) with standard leads and 0.35 (0.25–1.4) mV with single pass (VDD) devices. At the highest sensitivity available, 43 of 50 DDD pacemakers but only two of seven VDD systems detected intrinsic R waves in the atrium (P < 0.01). Ventricular far‐field oversensing occurred at 0.5 mV in 28 (56%) and at 1.0 mV in 16 of 50 DDD units (32%), respectively, and there was one observation in a septal implant at a sensitivity of even 2.8 mV. With ventricular pacing, VDD systems were as susceptible to far‐field signals as DDD pacemakers. Outside the postventricular blanking period (100 ms), evoked R waves were detected by 27 of 57 systems (47%) at maximum atrial sensitivity, by 10 (18%) at 0.5 mV, and by 2 (4%) at a setting of 1.0 up to 1.4 mV, respectively. There was no definite superiority of any lead position, there was a trend in favor of the atrial free wall for better intrinsic R wave rejection, but just the opposite was the case for paced ventricular beats. Bipolar signal discrimination tended to be higher with short tip‐to‐ring spacing (17.8 mm) but the difference to larger dipole lengths (30–60 mm) was not significant in terms of the R to P wave ratio and the overall far‐field susceptibility. In summary, bipolar ventricular far‐field oversensing in the atrium is common with short postventricular blanking times and high atrial sensitivity settings that may be warranted for tachyarrhythmia detection and mode switching. A potentially more discriminant effect of shorter dipole lengths (≤ 10 mm) remains to be tested.


European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | 1994

Myocardial metabolic imaging by means of fluorine-18 deoxyglucose/technetium-99m sestamibi dual-isotope single-photon emission tomography

Hans-Peter Stoll; Nicola Hellwig; Christof Alexander; Cem Özbek; Hermann Schieffer; Erich Oberhausen

The detection of preserved glucose uptake in hypoperfused dysfunctional myocardium by fluorine-18 deoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography (PET) represents the method of choice in myocardial viability diagnostics. As the technique is not available for the majority of patients due to cost and the limited capacity of the PET centres, it was the aim of the present work to develop and test FDG single-photon emission tomography (SPET) with the means of conventional nuclear medicine. The perfusion marker sestamibi (MIBI) was used together with the metabolic tracer FDG in dual-isotope acquisition. A conventional SPET camera was equipped with a 511-keV collimator and designed to operate with simultaneous four-channel acquisition. In this way, the scatter of 18F into the technetium-99m energy window could be taken into account by a novel method of scatter correction. Thirty patients with regional wall motion abnormalities at rest were investigated. The results of visual wall motion analysis by contrast cine-ventriculography in nine segments/heart were compared with the results of quantitative scintigraphy. The scintigraphic patterns of MIBI and FDG tracer accumulation were defined as normal, matched defects and perfusion-metabolism mismatches. Spatial resolution of the system was satisfactory, with a full width at half maximum (FWHM) of 15.2 mm for 18F and 14.0 mm for 99mTe, as measured by planar imaging in air at 5 cm distance from the collimator. Image quality allowed interpretation in all 30 patients. 88% of segments without relevant wall motion abnormalities presented normal scintigraphic results. Seventy-five akinetic segments showed mismatches in 27%, matched defects in 44% and normal perfusion in 29%. We conclude that FDG-MIBI dual-isotope SPET is technically feasible with the means of conventional nuclear medicine. Thus, the method is potentially available for widespread application in patient care and may represent an alternative to the 201T1 reinjection technique.


The Cardiology | 1998

LACK OF EVIDENCE FOR A PATHOGENIC ROLE OF CHLAMYDIA PNEUMONIAE AND CYTOMEGALOVIRUS INFECTION IN CORONARY ATHEROMA FORMATION

Heiner Daus; Cem Özbek; Dagmar Saage; Bruno Scheller; Hermann Schieffer; Michael Pfreundschuh; Angela Gause

Atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease is generally accepted to be the result of metabolic disturbances. However, recent studies have suggested an infectious agent, especially Chlamydia pneumoniae or cytomegalovirus, to be involved in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. Atherosclerotic plaque specimens obtained from patients with coronary disease either by balloon dilatation catheter (13 cases) or atherectomy (16 patients) were examined for the presence of C. pneumoniae and cytomegalovirus. Using two primer pairs for C. pneumoniae, two primer pairs for the identification of unknown bacteria and primer pairs for the detection of immediate early gene E2 and the late genomic region of cytomegalovirus, we were unable to detect the suspected agents. The absence of C. pneumoniae, other bacteria and CMV in coronary atheromas is against the hypothesis of a pathogenetic role of these agents in coronary atheroma formation in the patients studied.


Journal of Cardiovascular Electrophysiology | 1998

Discrimination of Sinus Rhythm, Atrial Flutter, and Atrial Fibrillation Using Bipolar Endocardial Signals

Jens Jung; Gregor Hohenberg; Armin Heisel; Daniel J. Strauss; Hermann Schieffer; Roland Eries

Discrimination of NSR, AFL, and AF. Introduction: Analysis of endocardial signals obtained from an electrode located in the right atrium as realized in newly designed dual chamber, implantable cardioverter defibrillators might be used to provide additional therapeutic options, such as overdrive pacing or low‐energy atrial cardioversion for the treatment of concomitant atrial flutter (AFL) or atrial fibrillation (AF). Therefore, we developed a computer algorithm for discrimination of normal sinus rhythm (NSR), AFL, and AF that may lead to adequate differential therapy of atrial tachyarrhythmias in an automated mode.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1991

Progression and regression of minor coronary arterial narrowings by quantitative angiography after fenofibrate therapy

Harry W. Hahmann; Thomas Bunte; Nicola Hellwig; Udo Hau; Dieter Becker; Jan Dyckmans; Hans E. Keller; Hermann Schieffer

To study the effects of fenofibrate, a lipid-lowering medication, on patients with coronary artery disease, 191 minor coronary narrowings in 42 patients with coronary artery disease were analyzed by quantitative coronary angiography using computer-assisted contour detection. Computed parameters were percent diameter reduction and percent plaque area. A prospectively formed intervention group of 21 patients treated with special diet and fenofibrate (200 to 400 mg/day) was checked every 6 weeks with regard to risk factors. After a mean interval of 21 months, coronary angiography was repeated, using the same x-ray system and nearly identical projections. The intervention group was angiographically compared at follow-up with an untreated comparison group, also comprising 21 patients. Both groups had high initial serum cholesterol (mean 311 mg/dl) and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol levels (mean 235 mg/dl). Only among the treated patients did lipid levels change significantly: cholesterol, -19%; LDL cholesterol, -20%; high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, +19%; and triglycerides, -30%. At angiographic follow-up, the changes in percent diameter reduction and percent plaque area correlated positively with the mean serum and LDL cholesterol levels of the intervention group. Significant differences were found in the change in percent plaque area between both groups. The intervention subgroup with angiographic regressions (11 patients) had significantly lower serum and LDL cholesterol levels than the intervention subgroup with angiographic progressions (10 patients). These results indicate the beneficial effect of fenofibrate on minor coronary narrowings. Because of its high reproducibility in measuring minor narrowings, quantitative coronary angiography proved to be a suitable method for angiographic follow-up.

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Jens Jung

University of Mannheim

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Semi Sen

University of Washington

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