Jürgen Frielingsdorf
Winterthur Museum, Garden and Library
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Featured researches published by Jürgen Frielingsdorf.
Journal of The American Society of Echocardiography | 1997
Harald P. Kühl; Andreas Franke; Jürgen Frielingsdorf; Christian Flaskamp; Winfried Krebs; Frank A. Flachskampf; Peter Hanrath
Elevated left ventricular mass and increased wall thickness have important prognostic implications in clinical medicine. However, these parameters have been incompletely characterized by one- and two-dimensional echocardiography. Therefore this study was performed to validate in vitro measurement of left ventricular mass and circumferential wall thickness with a multiplane transesophageal transducer and three-dimensional reconstruction. Results for mass measurements were also compared with a standard method for the determination of left ventricular mass, the Penn convention. Fourteen necropsied left ventricles were scanned in a water bath by a volume-rendering, three-dimensional reconstruction system. There was an excellent correlation and high agreement for determination of three-dimensional left ventricular mass (r = 0.98; standard error of the estimate [SEE] = 9.6 gm; y = 1.02x + 0.46) and wall thickness (r = 0.93; SEE = 1.4 mm; y = 0.95x + 1.64) compared with anatomic measurements. Left ventricular mass by a simulated Penn convention revealed a lower correlation and larger error compared with three-dimensional measurements (r = 0.72; SEE = 42.8 gm; y = 1.01x + 9.61). Therefore determination of left ventricular mass by three-dimensional reconstruction was validated in vitro and was superior to one-dimensional echocardiographic methods.
Journal of The American Society of Echocardiography | 1998
Jürgen Frielingsdorf; Andreas Franke; Harald P. Kühl; Emile Rijcken; Winfried Krebs; Otto M. Hess; Frank A. Flachskampf; Peter Hanrath
Assessment of regional left ventricular (LV) function in patients with asymmetric LV hypertrophy is difficult with two-dimensional echocardiography mainly because of factors such as LV geometry, structure, regional wall stress, and ischemia. Multiplane transesophageal echocardiography with three-dimensional reconstruction of cross-sectional images was used for quantitative evaluation of regional wall thickness and fractional thickening. Fifteen patients (56 +/- 13 years old) with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (LV ejection fraction 71% +/- 4%), 15 (62 +/- 13 years) with hypertensive heart disease (ejection fraction 66% +/- 8%) and 15 (53 +/- 11 years) healthy control subjects (ejection fraction 61% +/- 5%) were included in the analysis. Regional function was studied in four parallel equidistant short-axis cross sections from base to apex of the reconstructed left ventricle. In 15 degree intervals, 24 wall thickness measurements in each cross section were made at end-diastole and end-systole after endocardial and epicardial border tracing. A total of 192 measurements were obtained in each patient, and absolute wall thickening and fractional thickening were calculated. Absolute and fractional wall thickening showed a significant inverse relation to end-diastolic wall thickness in all heart conditions (r = 0.71, p < 0.0001). Regions of normal wall thickness in diseased patients were not hyperdynamic when compared with normal control subjects. Significant impairment in fractional thickening at identical end-diastolic thickness was observed in the septum compared with the lateral free wall in both hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and hypertensive heart disease. Thus regional systolic function is inversely related to end-diastolic wall thickness. The decrease in regional systolic function with increasing LV hypertrophy was similar in idiopathic and hypertensive cardiomyopathy. In both types of hypertrophy, significant differences in systolic function were observed in septal and lateral wall segments of similar wall thickness. This indicates that factors other than end-diastolic wall thickness influence myocardial thickening in patients with hypertrophy and preserved global function.
Coronary Artery Disease | 2000
Philipp A. Kaufmann; Christian M. Matter; Lazar Mandinov; Jürgen Frielingsdorf; Christian Seiler; Otto M. Hess
BackgroundCoronary vasomotor tone plays an important role in the regulation of myocardial perfusion and influences ischemic threshold significantly. Endothelial dysfunction occurs in the presence of coronary risk factors and is closely linked to the development of atherosclerosis affecting myocardial perfusion and decreasing ischemic threshold. ObjectiveTo study the effect of hypercholesterolemia on coronary vasomotor tone in normal and stenotic coronary arteries at rest and during exercise. Patients and methodsIn total 48 patients were included in the present analysis. Patients were divided into two groups according to the actual levels of serum cholesterol: 18 patients had normal (mean 181 ± 28 mg%; group 1) and 30 had elevated (mean 263 ± 46 mg%; group 2) levels of serum cholesterol according to the 4S criteria with a cutoff level of 213 mg% (5.5 mmol/l). Coronary vasomotor tone at rest and during supine bicycle exercise was calculated by dividing mean aortic pressure by radius of coronary vessel obtained using biplanar quantitative coronary angiography. A normal as well as a stenotic vessel segment in each patient were studied. ResultsNormal vessel segments in patients with normal levels of cholesterol (group 1) exhibited no exercise-induced change in coronary vascular tone (+3%, NS), whereas a significant increase in tone (+24%, P < 0.01 versus rest) occurred in those with high levels of cholesterol (group 2). In contrast, stenotic segments in members of both groups exhibited an increase in vascular tone irrespective of the actual level of serum cholesterol. ConclusionsHypercholesterolemia causes a pathologic increase in coronary vasomotor tone of angiographically normal vessel segments during exercise. A similar pathologic response occurs in stenotic arteries, but this is independent of the actual level of serum cholesterol. These findings suggest that hypercholesterolemia influences vasomotor tone of the nonstenosed coronary arteries in patients with coronary artery disease probably through the occurrence of endothelial dysfunction.
European Heart Journal | 2012
Jürgen Frielingsdorf; Thomas A. Fischer; André Linka
A 52-year-old female patient in cardiogenic shock was sent to our hospital. Three years ago, she had suffered from rheumatic aortic endocarditis, which resulted in a sinus valsalva aneurysm and dissection of the anterior mitral leaflet due to a fistula arising from …
Journal of The American Society of Echocardiography | 2001
Jürgen Frielingsdorf; Andreas Franke; Harald P. Kühl; Otto M. Hess; Frank A. Flachskampf
Journal of Nuclear Cardiology | 2013
Tiziano Schepis; Karin Benz; Andreas Haldemann; Philipp A. Kaufmann; Christian Schmidhauser; Jürgen Frielingsdorf
European Journal of Echocardiography | 2007
Jürgen Frielingsdorf; Michele Genoni; Otto M. Hess; Frank A. Flachskampf
Journal of The American Society of Echocardiography | 2004
Jürgen Frielingsdorf; Andreas Franke; Otto M. Hess; Frank A. Flachskampf
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1996
Jürgen Frielingsdorf; Andreas Franke; Harald P. Kühl; Emil Rijken; Winfried Krebs; Heinrich G. Klues; Frank A. Flachskampf; Peter Hanrath
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1996
Jürgen Frielingsdorf; Philipp A. Kaufmann; Christian Seiler; Giuseppe Vassalli; Thomas Suter; Otto M. Hess