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Dive into the research topics where Kai-Uwe Juergens is active.

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Featured researches published by Kai-Uwe Juergens.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2007

Optimal Systolic and Diastolic Reconstruction Windows for Coronary CT Angiography Using Dual-Source CT

Harald Seifarth; Susanne Wienbeck; Michael Püsken; Kai-Uwe Juergens; David Maintz; Christian Vahlhaus; Walter Heindel; Roman Fischbach

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to determine the position of the optimal systolic and diastolic reconstruction intervals for coronary CT angiography using dual-source CT. SUBJECTS AND METHODS In 90 patients, coronary dual-source CT angiography was performed without beta-blocking agents. Data were reconstructed in 5% steps throughout the R-R interval. Two independent readers selected optimal systolic and diastolic reconstruction windows for each major coronary vessel--the right coronary artery (RCA), left anterior descending artery (LAD), and left circumflex artery (LCX)--using a 3D viewer and volume-rendering displays. The motion score for each vessel was graded from 1 (no motion artifacts) to 5 (severe motion artifacts over entire vessel). RESULTS The average heart rate of all patients was 68.7 beats per minute (bpm) (range, 43-119 bpm). The median optimal systolic reconstruction windows were at 35%, 30%, and 35% for the RCA, LAD, and LCX, respectively. The median optimal diastolic reconstruction window was at 75% for all vessels. The mean motion scores (+/- SD) in the systolic reconstructions were 1.9 +/- 0.8 (RCA), 1.7 +/- 0.5 (LAD), and 2.0 +/- 0.6 (LCX). The mean motion scores for the diastolic reconstructions were 1.7 +/- 0.9, 1.5 +/- 0.6, and 1.6 +/- 0.7, respectively. In patients with a heart rate of < 70 bpm, motion scores were significantly lower in diastole versus systole (1.3 +/- 0.4 and 1.9 +/- 0.5, respectively; p < 0.01). In most patients with a heart rate of > 80 bpm, motion scores were lower in systolic than in diastolic reconstructions (2.1 +/- 0.6 and 2.6 +/- 0.8, respectively; p < 0.05). CONCLUSION Using dual-source CT, the overall optimal reconstruction window is at 75% of the R-R interval in patients with low or intermediate heart rates. In patients with heart rates of > 80 bpm, systolic reconstructions often yield superior image quality compared with diastolic reconstructions.


Investigative Radiology | 2001

Multislice CT angiography of the iliac arteries in the presence of various stents: In vitro evaluation of artifacts and lumen visibility

David Maintz; Roman Fischbach; Kai-Uwe Juergens; Thomas Allkemper; Johannes Wessling; Walter Heindel

RATIONALE AND OBJECTIVES To evaluate the imaging characteristics of various iliac artery stents and stent-grafts in a multislice, computed tomography angiography (MSCTA) phantom study. METHODS Twelve types of stents and three stent-grafts made of different materials (steel, nitinol, tantalum, cobalt-based alloy) were implanted in plastic tubes with an 8-mm inner diameter filled with iodinated contrast medium diluted to 200 HU. To evaluate the influence of scan parameters on artifacts, the Palmaz stent (as one example) was scanned with a four-slice scanner (Siemens VolumeZoom) with different detector collimations and pitches. All other stents were examined with a collimation of 4 x 1 mm and a table feed of 4 mm/rotation. Axial images and multiplanar reformations were evaluated regarding artifact size, lumen visibility, and intraluminal attenuation values. RESULTS Higher pitch values caused more pronounced artifacts. Image quality and delineation of the stent struts improved with thinner detector collimation. The size of the stent-related artifacts and the visibility of the stent lumen depended on the underlying stent material and design. Pronounced artifacts, resulting in an insufficient delineation of the stent lumen, were caused by the Strecker tantalum stent and the Zenith stent. Moderate artifacts were caused by the Wallgraft, Passager, Palmaz P 395 and P 424, Bridge, Perflex, and ZA stents. Some artificial lumen narrowing but good lumen delineation was seen with the Strecker nitinol, Symphony, Memotherm, SMART, Corinthian, and Wallstent stents. CONCLUSIONS Scanning parameters, stent material, and stent design influence lumen assessability and image quality in MSCTA. Detailed lumen assessment is impossible in the Strecker tantalum and Zenith stents and limited in the Wallgraft, Passager, Palmaz P 395 and PS 424, Bridge, Perflex, and ZA-stent stent-grafts but feasible in all other examined products.


European Radiology | 2006

Correlation between respiration-induced thoracic expansion and a shift of central structures

Matthias Weckesser; Lars Stegger; Kai-Uwe Juergens; Dag Wormanns; Walter Heindel; Otmar Schober

The fusion of computed tomography (CT) and positron emission tomography (PET) may improve diagnostic accuracy, but is limited by different breathing protocols. This study aimed at quantifying respiration-induced alignment errors. PET-CT was acquired in 24 patients. Contrast-enhanced whole-body CT was obtained in a single breath hold in the expiratory state of a normal breathing cycle. An inspiratory low-dose CT of the thorax was acquired in the same session, and comparison of the two CT scans was used to assess the potential mismatch of PET and CT fusion. The largest craniocaudal expansion was found in the area of the diaphragm. A considerable sagittal expansion was found in the anterior parts of the lungs. Central tracheo-bronchial structures were displaced during inspiration mainly in the anterior and caudal directions. The craniocaudal shift of central structures showed a linear correlation with the diaphragmatic expansion, whereas the sagittal shift correlated with the sagittal pleural expansion. There was, however, no correlation between craniocaudal and sagittal respiratory motion. Alignment errors are most severe in the base of the lung, but central structures are affected, too. Understanding of the main vectors of respiratory motion may help in image interpretation when PET and CT are acquired separately.


European Radiology | 2001

Desmoplastic fibroma in the thoracic spine: an unusual localization of a rare primary bone tumor

Kai-Uwe Juergens; V. Bullmann; Thomas M. Link; Christian Brinkschmidt; Walter Heindel

Abstract A case of an intraspinal growing desmoplastic fibroma of the thoracic spine (T9–T11) is reported. Desmoplastic fibroma is a rare tumor of connective tissue that shows a locally infiltrative and destructive growth. An affection of the thoracic spine is an extremely rare manifestation. Preoperative CT documents the extent of osseous destruction and tumor associated cortical erosion. In central tumor areas an inhomogeneous, intermediate to low signal is demonstrated by MRI using T1- and T2-weighted spin-echo and turbo-spin-echo sequences. Contrast-enhanced MRI shows marked enhancement in peripheral areas depicting the extraosseous and intramedullary extension.


Circulation | 2006

Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Computed Tomography Findings in Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Cardiomyopathy

David Maintz; Kai-Uwe Juergens; Matthias Grude; Murat Ozgun; Roman Fischbach; Thomas Wichter

A 56-year-old male patient presented with a 4-year history of recurrent palpitations. The initial ECG disclosed ventricular tachycardia with left bundle-branch block. Echocardiography showed a hypokinetic, enlarged right ventricle (RV) and right atrium. The left ventricle (LV) and atrium were normal in size, but LV function was moderately reduced at the apex in terms of hypokinesia. Steady-state, free-precession cine sequences in the transverse and short-axis planes showed enlargement of the right atrium and RV …


European Radiology | 2003

Imaging of coronary artery stents using multislice computed tomography: in vitro evaluation

David Maintz; Kai-Uwe Juergens; Thomas Wichter; Matthias Grude; Walter Heindel; Roman Fischbach


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2002

Revealing in-stent stenoses of the iliac arteries: Comparison of multidetector CT with MR angiography and digital radiographic angiography in a phantom model

David Maintz; Bernd Tombach; Kai-Uwe Juergens; Stefanie Weigel; Walter Heindel; Roman Fischbach


European Radiology | 2006

Tumor staging using whole-body high-resolution 16-channel PET-CT: does additional low-dose chest CT in inspiration improve the detection of solitary pulmonary nodules?

Kai-Uwe Juergens; Matthias Weckesser; Lars Stegger; Christiane Franzius; M. Beetz; Otmar Schober; Walter Heindel; Dag Wormanns


European Radiology | 2009

Introduction of an individually optimized protocol for the injection of contrast medium for coronary CT angiography.

Harald Seifarth; Michael Puesken; John F. Kalafut; Susanne Wienbeck; Johannes Wessling; David Maintz; Walter Heindel; Kai-Uwe Juergens


European Radiology | 2009

Automatic selection of optimal systolic and diastolic reconstruction windows for dual-source CT coronary angiography

Harald Seifarth; Michael Puesken; Susanne Wienbeck; David Maintz; Roman Fischbach; Walter Heindel; Kai-Uwe Juergens

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