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Dive into the research topics where Imke Schatka is active.

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Featured researches published by Imke Schatka.


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2014

Advanced Imaging of Cardiac Sarcoidosis

Imke Schatka; Frank M. Bengel

Sarcoidosis is a systemic granulomatous disease of unknown etiology. Cardiac involvement may occur, leading to an adverse outcome. Although early treatment to improve morbidity and mortality is desirable, sensitive and accurate detection of cardiac sarcoidosis remains a challenge. Accordingly, interest in the use of advanced imaging such as cardiac MR and PET with 18F-FDG is increasing in order to refine the clinical workup. Although the field is still facing challenges and uncertainties, this article presents a summary of clinical background and the current state of diagnostic modalities and treatment of cardiac sarcoidosis.


Circulation-cardiovascular Imaging | 2014

Characterizing the Inflammatory Tissue Response to Acute Myocardial Infarction by Clinical Multimodality Noninvasive Imaging

Tim Wollenweber; Philipp Roentgen; Andreas Schäfer; Imke Schatka; Caroline Zwadlo; Thomas Brunkhorst; Georg Berding; Johann Bauersachs; Frank M. Bengel

Background—Myocardial infarction (MI) triggers a systemic inflammatory response which determines subsequent healing. Experimentally, cardiac positron emission tomography and magnetic resonance imaging have been used successfully to obtain mechanistic insights. We explored the translational potential in patients early after MI. Methods and Results—Positron emission tomography/computed tomography and cardiac magnetic resonance were performed in 15 patients <7 days after first MI. Cardiac magnetic resonance showed regional transmural late gadolinium enhancement and edema exceeding the area of late gadolinium enhancement. Using F-18 deoxyglucose with heparin pretreatment, metabolic rate of glucose (MRGlc) was significantly increased in infarct versus remote myocardium (median, 2.0 versus 0.4 mg/min per 100 mL; P=0.0001). MRGlc in infarct correlated with remote myocardium (&rgr;=0.64; P=0.01), spleen (&rgr;=0.82; P=0.0002), and bone marrow(&rgr;=0.57; P=0.03), but not with muscle or liver. Regionally, F-18 deoxyglucose score was highest in segments with late gadolinium enhancement versus edema only and remote (median, 2.0 versus 1.8 versus 0.4; P<0.0001). Patients requiring repeat intervention during preliminary follow-up of 11±5 months tended to have higher early post-MI MRGlc. Five patients with chronic, stable MI served as controls. Opposite to acute MI, MRGlc was lower in infarct (median infarct/remote ratio, 0.6 versus 3.2 for acute MI; P=0.001), and there was no correlation with bone marrow or spleen MRGlc. Conclusions—Increased glucose utilization after heparin-induced suppression of myocyte uptake appears to mostly reflect inflammatory activity in damaged myocardium early after MI. Consistent with prior preclinical observations, and in contrast to chronic MI, this is associated with activity in spleen and bone marrow as sources of inflammatory cells. Positron emission tomography and cardiac magnetic resonance multimodality characterization of the acutely infarcted, inflamed myocardium may provide multiparametric end points for clinical studies aiming at support of infarct healing.


Oncotarget | 2017

Survival prediction in patients undergoing radionuclide therapy based on intratumoral somatostatin-receptor heterogeneity

Rudolf A. Werner; Constantin Lapa; Harun Ilhan; Takahiro Higuchi; Andreas K. Buck; Sebastian Lehner; Peter Bartenstein; Frank M. Bengel; Imke Schatka; Dirk O. Muegge; Laszlo Papp; Norbert Zsoter; Tobias Große-Ophoff; Markus Essler; Ralph Bundschuh

The NETTER-1 trial demonstrated significantly improved progression-free survival (PFS) for peptide receptor radionuclide therapy (PRRT) in neuroendocrine tumors (NET) emphasizing the high demand for response prediction in appropriate candidates. In this multicenter study, we aimed to elucidate the prognostic value of tumor heterogeneity as assessed by somatostatin receptor (SSTR)-PET/CT. 141 patients with SSTR-expressing tumors were analyzed obtaining SSTR-PET/CT before PRRT (1-6 cycles, 177Lu somatostatin analog). Using the Interview Fusion Workstation (Mediso), a total of 872 metastases were manually segmented. Conventional PET parameters as well as textural features representing intratumoral heterogeneity were computed. The prognostic ability for PFS and overall survival (OS) were examined. After performing Cox regression, independent parameters were determined by ROC analysis to obtain cut-off values to be used for Kaplan-Meier analysis. Within follow-up (median, 43.1 months), 75 patients showed disease progression (median, 22.2 m) and 54 patients died (median, 27.6 m). Cox analysis identified 8 statistically independent heterogeneity parameters for time-to-progression and time-to-death. Among them, the textural feature Entropy predicted both PFS and OS. Conventional PET parameters failed in response prediction. Imaging-based heterogeneity assessment provides prognostic information in PRRT candidates and outperformed conventional PET parameters. Its implementation in clinical practice can pave the way for individualized patient management.


European Heart Journal | 2015

Single coronary artery anomaly with interarterial left main: caught inbetween

L. Christian Napp; Imke Schatka; Tibor Kempf; Udo Bavendiek; Frank M. Bengel; Johann Bauersachs

An 82-year-old patient with suspected pulmonary hypertension was referred to our department for cardiac catheterization. Right heart catheterization confirmed precapillary pulmonary hypertension. Coronary angiography revealed that the left main (LMCA, arrowhead) originated from the right sinus of valsalva in a common ostium together with the RCA (circle) ( Panels A and B , Supplementary material online, …


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2013

Peptide receptor-targeted radionuclide therapy alters inflammation in atherosclerotic plaques.

Imke Schatka; Tim Wollenweber; Cathleen Haense; Friederike Brunz; Klaus Gratz; Frank M. Bengel


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2017

Somatostatin-Receptor Based Tumor Heterogeneity Predicts Survival in Pancreatic Neuroendocrine Tumor Patients Envisaged for Endoradiotherapy

Rudolf A. Werner; Harun Ilhan; Sebastian Lehner; Laszlo Papp; Norbert Zsoter; Imke Schatka; Dirk O. Mügge; Takahiro Higuchi; Markus Essier; Andreas K. Buck; Frank M. Bengel; Peter Bartenstein; Constantin Lapa; Ralph Bundschuh


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2016

Heterogeneity in Somatostatin-Receptor(SSTR-)PET/CT can Predict Response to Radiopeptide Therapy and Overall Survival in Patients with SSTR-expressing Tumors - a Multicenter Retrospective Trial

Rudolf A. Werner; Constantin Lapa; Harun Ilhan; Lazslo Papp; Frank M. Bengel; Markus Essler; Imke Schatka; Sebastian Lehner; Peter Bartenstein; Ralph Bundschuh


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2014

Semiconductor myocardial SPECT: Comparison of count statistics, quantitative clinical parameters and subjective patient comfort with the standard Anger camera

Tim Wollenweber; Imke Schatka; Schütze Christian; Juliane Fulsche; Thomas Brunkhorst; Georg Berding; Lilli Geworski; Frank M. Bengel


Society of Nuclear Medicine Annual Meeting Abstracts | 2014

Simultaneous multi-isotope imaging for clinical cell tracking, using dedicated cardiac CZT imaging

Tim Wollenweber; Imke Schatka; Schütze Christian; Juliane Fulsche; Thomas Brunkhorst; Georg Berding; Lilli Geworski; Frank M. Bengel


Society of Nuclear Medicine Annual Meeting Abstracts | 2014

11C-Methionine PET/CT identifies biologically active atherosclerotic vessel wall lesions

Imke Schatka; Diana Kager; Stephanie Reichelt; Tim Wollenweber; Frank M. Bengel

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Klaus Gratz

Hannover Medical School

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