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Dive into the research topics where Mario Siebler is active.

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Featured researches published by Mario Siebler.


Stroke | 1998

Consensus on Microembolus Detection by TCD

E. Bernd Ringelstein; Dirk W. Droste; Viken L. Babikian; David H. Evans; Donald G. Grosset; Manfred Kaps; Hugh S. Markus; David Russell; Mario Siebler

Transcranial Doppler ultrasound is capable of detecting microembolic material, both gaseous and solid, within the intracranial cerebral arteries. To avoid discrediting this promising and exciting new technique, experts in this field met in January 1997 in Frankfurt, Germany, to discuss the limitations and problems of embolus detection and to determine guidelines for its proper use in clinical practice, as well as in scientific investigations. In particular, the authors suggest that studies report the following parameters: (1) ultrasound device, (2) transducer type and size, (3) insonated artery, (4) insonation depth, (5) algorithms for signal intensity measurement, (6) scale settings, (7) detection threshold, (8) axial extension of sample volume, (9) fast Fourier transform (FFT) size (number of points used), (10) FFT length (time), (11) FFT overlap, (12) transmitted ultrasound frequency, (13) high-pass filter settings, and (14) recording time. There was agreement that no current system of automatic embolus detection has the required sensitivity and specificity for clinical use.


Circulation | 2005

Dual Antiplatelet Therapy With Clopidogrel and Aspirin in Symptomatic Carotid Stenosis Evaluated Using Doppler Embolic Signal Detection The Clopidogrel and Aspirin for Reduction of Emboli in Symptomatic Carotid Stenosis (CARESS) Trial

Hugh S. Markus; Dirk W. Droste; Manfred Kaps; Vincent Larrue; Kennedy R. Lees; Mario Siebler; E. Bernd Ringelstein

Background—Evidence for efficacy of dual antiplatelet therapy in stroke is limited. Symptomatic carotid stenosis patients are at high risk of early recurrent stroke. In this group, asymptomatic microembolic signals (MES), detected by transcranial Doppler ultrasound (TCD), are markers of future stroke and transient ischemic attack (TIA) risk. They offer a surrogate marker to evaluate antiplatelet therapy, but no multicenter study has evaluated the feasibility of this approach. Methods and Results—Clopidogrel and Aspirin for Reduction of Emboli in Symptomatic Carotid Stenosis (CARESS) is a randomized, double-blind study in subjects with recently symptomatic ≥50% carotid stenosis. Patients were screened with TCD, and if MES were detected, they were randomized to clopidogrel and aspirin or aspirin monotherapy. Repeated TCD recordings were made on days 2 and 7. MES were detected in 110 of 230 patients by online analysis at baseline, of whom 107 were randomized. Intention-to-treat analysis revealed a significant reduction in the primary end point: 43.8% of dual-therapy patients were MES positive on day 7, as compared with 72.7% of monotherapy patients (relative risk reduction 39.8%; 95% CI, 13.8 to 58.0; P=0.0046). The secondary end point of MES frequency per hour was reduced (compared with baseline) by 61.4% (95% CI, 31.6 to 78.2; P=0.0013) in the dual-therapy group at day 7 and by 61.6% (95% CI, 34.9 to 77.4; P=0.0005) on day 2. There were 4 recurrent strokes and 7 TIAs in the monotherapy group versus no stroke and 4 TIAs in the dual-therapy group that were treatment emergent and ipsilateral to the qualifying carotid stenosis; 2 additional ipsilateral TIAs occurred before treatment started. MES frequency was greater in the 17 patients with recurrent ipsilateral events compared with the 90 without (mean±SD: 24.4±27.7 versus 8.9±11.5 per hour; P=0.0003). Conclusions—In patients with recently symptomatic carotid stenosis, combination therapy with clopidogrel and aspirin is more effective than aspirin alone in reducing asymptomatic embolization. Doppler MES detection is a feasible method to evaluate the efficacy of antiplatelet therapy in multicenter studies.


Stroke | 2002

Effect of Intravenous Thrombolysis on MRI Parameters and Functional Outcome in Acute Stroke <6 Hours

J. Roether; Peter D. Schellinger; A. Gass; Mario Siebler; Arno Villringer; Jochen B. Fiebach; Jens Fiehler; Olav Jansen; Thomas Kucinski; V. Schoder; K. Szabo; G. J. Junge-Huelsing; Michael G. Hennerici; H. Zeumer; K. Sartor; C. Weiller; Werner Hacke

Background and Purpose— The goals of this study were to examine MRI baseline characteristics of patients with acute ischemic stroke (AIS) and to study the influence of intravenous tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) on MR parameters and functional outcome using a multicenter approach. Methods— In this open-label, nonrandomized study of AIS patients with suspected anterior circulation stroke, subjects received a multiparametric stroke MRI protocol (diffusion- and perfusion-weighted imaging and MR angiography) within 6 hours after symptom onset and on follow-up. Patients were treated either with tPA (thrombolysis group) or conservatively (no thrombolysis group). Functional outcome was assessed on day 90 (modified Rankin Score; mRS). Results— We enrolled 139 AIS patients (no thrombolysis group, n=63; thrombolysis group, n=76). Patients treated with tPA were more severely affected (National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score, 10 versus 13;P =0.002). Recanalization rates were higher in the thrombolysis group (Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction criteria 1 through 3 on day 1; 66.2% versus 32.7%;P <0.001). Proximal vessel occlusions resulted in larger infarct volumes and worse outcome (P =0.02). Thrombolysis was associated with a better outcome regardless of the time point of tPA treatment (≤3 hours or 3 to 6 hours) (univariate analysis: mRS ≤2, P =0.017; mRS ≤1, P =0.023). Age (P =0.003), thrombolytic therapy at 0 to 6 hours (P =0.01), recanalization (P =0.016), lesion volume on day 7 (P =0.001), and initial National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score (P =0.001) affected functional outcome (mRS on day 90) positively (multivariate analysis). The time point of tPA therapy affected the recanalization rate (P =0.024) but not final infarct volume. Conclusions— In this pilot study, tPA therapy had a beneficial effect on vessel recanalization and functional outcome. Multiparametric MRI delineates tissue at risk of infarction in AIS patients, which may be helpful for the selection of patients for tPA therapy. tPA therapy appeared safe and effective beyond a 3-hour time window. This study delivers the rationale for a randomized, MR-based tPA trial.


Stroke | 2004

Stroke Magnetic Resonance Imaging Is Accurate in Hyperacute Intracerebral Hemorrhage: A Multicenter Study on the Validity of Stroke Imaging

Jochen B. Fiebach; Peter D. Schellinger; A. Gass; Thomas Kucinski; Mario Siebler; Arno Villringer; P. Oelkers; J. G. Hirsch; S. Heiland; P. Wilde; Olav Jansen; J. Roether; Werner Hacke; K. Sartor

Background and Purpose— Although modern multisequence stroke MRI protocols are an emerging imaging routine for the diagnostic assessment of acute ischemic stroke, their sensitivity for intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH), the most important differential diagnosis, is still a matter of debate. We hypothesized that stroke MRI is accurate in the detection of ICH. To evaluate our hypotheses, we conducted a prospective multicenter trial. Methods— Stroke MRI protocols of 6 university hospitals were standardized. Images from 62 ICH patients and 62 nonhemorrhagic stroke patients, all imaged within the first 6 hours after symptom onset (mean, 3 hours 18 minutes), were analyzed. For diagnosis of hemorrhage, CT served as the “gold standard.” Three readers experienced in stroke imaging and 3 final-year medical students, unaware of clinical details, separately evaluated sets of diffusion-, T2-, and T2*-weighted images. The extent and phenomenology of the hemorrhage on MRI were assessed separately. Results— Mean patient age was 65.5 years; median National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score was 10. The experienced readers identified ICH with 100% sensitivity (confidence interval, 97.1 to 100) and 100% overall accuracy. Mean ICH size was 17.3 mL (range, 1 to 101.5 mL). The students reached a mean sensitivity of 95.16% (confidence interval, 90.32 to 98.39). Conclusions— Hyperacute ICH causes a characteristic imaging pattern on stroke MRI and is detectable with excellent accuracy. Even raters with limited film-reading experience reached good accuracy. Stroke MRI alone can rule out ICH and demonstrate the underlying pathology in hyperacute stroke.


Stroke | 1995

Plaque Ulceration and Lumen Thrombus Are the Main Sources of Cerebral Microemboli in High-grade Internal Carotid Artery Stenosis

Matthias Sitzer; Wolfram Müller; Mario Siebler; Waldemar Hort; H.-W. Kniemeyer; Lutz Jäncke; Helmuth Steinmetz

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Previous work has shown that rates of cerebral microemboli downstream of high-grade internal carotid artery stenosis are higher in recently symptomatic compared with asymptomatic patients. In addition, microembolic rates decline after carotid endarterectomy. We conducted a prospective investigation of 40 consecutive asymptomatic or recently symptomatic patients undergoing carotid endarterectomy for 70% to 95% internal carotid artery stenosis to determine the relationship between microembolic rate and pathoanatomic features of the carotid plaque. METHODS Transcranial Doppler monitoring including automated emboli detection was performed preoperatively to assess the rate of cerebral microemboli of the ipsilateral middle cerebral artery. The corresponding endarterectomy specimens were evaluated histologically with respect to the occurrence of plaque fissuring, intraplaque hemorrhage, plaque ulceration, or intraluminal thrombosis. RESULTS There were strong associations between plaque ulceration, intraluminal thrombosis, and downstream cerebral microemboli (P < or = .005, respectively). There were no correlations of microembolism with plaque fissuring or intraplaque hemorrhage (P = .82 and P = .28, respectively). CONCLUSIONS We conclude that ulceration and luminal thrombosis of the atheromatous plaque are the main sources of downstream cerebral microemboli in patients with high-grade internal carotid artery stenosis. Our data support the view that these pathoanatomic features may also play a key role in symptom development.


Stroke | 2000

Diffusion- and Perfusion-Weighted MRI Influence of Severe Carotid Artery Stenosis on the DWI/PWI Mismatch in Acute Stroke

Tobias Neumann-Haefelin; Hans-Jörg Wittsack; Gereon R. Fink; Frank Wenserski; Tie-Qiang Li; Rüdiger J. Seitz; Mario Siebler; U. Mödder; Hans-Joachim Freund

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) and perfusion-weighted imaging (PWI) have been used increasingly in recent years to evaluate acute stroke in the emergency setting. In the present study, we compared DWI and PWI findings in acute stroke patients with and without severe extracranial internal carotid artery (ICA) disease. METHODS Twenty-seven patients with nonlacunar ischemic stroke were selected for this analysis. DWI, PWI, and conventional MRI were performed in all patients within 24 hours of symptom onset and after 1 week. To exclude patients with partial or complete reperfusion, we included only patients with a PWI deficit larger than the DWI lesion. Severe ICA disease (>70% stenosis) was present unilaterally in 9 and bilaterally in 2 patients. Acute DWI lesion volume, the size of the acute PWI/DWI mismatch, and final infarct size (on T2-weighted images) were determined. RESULTS The PWI/DWI mismatch was significantly larger in patients with severe ICA disease than in patients without extracranial carotid stenosis, both when time-to-peak and mean transit time maps (P<0.01) were used to calculate the mismatch. Quantitative analysis of the time-to-peak delay in the mismatch indicated that a relatively smaller fraction of the total mismatch was critically ischemic in patients with carotid stenosis than in those without. Average lesion volume increased less in the stenosis group (P=0.14), despite the larger PWI/DWI mismatch, and final infarct size was smaller in the stenosis group (P<0.05). In the 2 patients with bilateral ICA disease, variable hemodynamic involvement of the contralateral hemisphere was found in addition to the ipsilateral PWI deficit. CONCLUSIONS In most acute stroke patients with severe ICA stenosis, a considerably smaller fraction of the total PWI/DWI mismatch is at risk than in patients without carotid disease.


Stroke | 2004

Transient Ischemic Attacks Before Ischemic Stroke: Preconditioning the Human Brain? A Multicenter Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study

Susanne Wegener; Barbara Gottschalk; Verica Jovanovic; René Knab; Jochen B. Fiebach; Peter D. Schellinger; Thomas Kucinski; Gerhard Jan Jungehülsing; Peter Brunecker; Bianca Müller; Anna Banasik; Nicola Amberger; Klaus D. Wernecke; Mario Siebler; Joachim Röther; Arno Villringer; Markus Weih

Background and Purpose— We investigated whether transient ischemic attacks (TIAs) before stroke can induce tolerance by raising the threshold of tissue vulnerability in the human brain. Methods— Sixty-five patients with first-ever ischemic territorial stroke received diffusion- and perfusion-weighted MRI within 12 hours of symptom onset. Epidemiological and clinical data, lesion volumes in T2, apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) maps and perfusion maps, and cerebral blood flow and cerebral blood volume values were compared between patients with and without a prodromal TIA. Results— Despite similar size and severity of the perfusion deficit, initial diffusion lesions tended to be smaller and final infarct volumes were significantly reduced (final T2: 9.1 [interquartile range, 19.7] versus 36.5 [91.2] mL; P =0.014) in patients with a history of TIA (n=16). This was associated with milder clinical deficits. Conclusions— The beneficial effect of TIAs on lesion size in ADC and T2 suggests the existence of endogenous neuroprotection in the human brain.


Stroke | 1998

Inflammation in High-Grade Carotid Stenosis A Possible Role for Macrophages and T Cells in Plaque Destabilization

Sebastian Jander; Matthias Sitzer; René Schumann; Michael Schroeter; Mario Siebler; Helmuth Steinmetz; Guido Stoll

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Inflammatory mechanisms have been implicated in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. In this study, we investigated whether the extent of inflammatory infiltration in high-grade stenoses of the internal carotid artery (ICA) correlates to clinical features of plaque destabilization. METHODS Endarterectomy specimens from 37 consecutive patients undergoing surgery for high-grade ICA stenosis were stained immunocytochemically for macrophages (CD68) and T cells (CD3). The staining was quantified by planimetry of immunostained areas (CD68) or counting individual cells (CD3). Clinical evidence of plaque instability was provided by the preoperative assessment of recent ischemic symptoms attributable to the stenosis and of the occurrence of cerebral microembolism in transcranial Doppler ultrasound monitoring of the ipsilateral middle cerebral artery. RESULTS The percentage of macrophage-rich areas and number of T cells per mm2 section area were larger in recently symptomatic patients than in asymptomatic patients (macrophages: 18+/-10% versus 11+/-4%, P=0.005; T cells: 71.2+/-34.4 versus 40.5+/-31.4 mm2, P=0.005). The presence of microembolism was associated with an increase in macrophage-rich areas (P=0.011). Macrophage (19+/-10% versus 9+/-3%, P=0.0009) and T cell (71.5+/-39.0 versus 46.4+/-22 mm2, P=0.045) infiltration were more pronounced in predominantly atheromatous than in fibrous plaques, but did not correlate significantly to the presence of surface ulceration or luminal thrombosis. CONCLUSIONS Our data suggest a role of plaque-infiltrating macrophages and T cells in the clinical destabilization of high-grade ICA stenoses. Inflammatory mechanisms may be a therapeutic target in patients with symptomatic ICA disease.


Neurology | 1994

Cerebral microembolism in symptomatic and asymptomatic high‐grade internal carotid artery stenosis

Mario Siebler; A. Kleinschmidt; Helmuth Steinmetz; Hans-Joachim Freund

Using transcranial Doppler (TCD) ultrasonography in patients with high-grade (>=70%) internal carotid artery (ICA) stenosis, we examined the relation between the rate of TCD-detected silent microembolism of the ipsilateral middle cerebral artery and a history of recent (<121 days) ischemic symptoms attributable to the diseased ICA. In the so-defined neurologically symptomatic group (n = 33 patients), silent microembolic events occurred in 27 subjects (overall mean rate, 14/h ± 29). Among 56 neurologically asymptomatic patients matched for the degree of ICA stenosis, only nine showed such events (overall mean rate, 0.35/h ± 1.4). Across all 89 patients studied, an individual microembolic event rate ≥2/h had a positive predictive value of 0.88 for a history of recent symptoms. Our data suggest that TCD monitoring can provide reliable paraclinical evidence of “unstable ICA disease.”


Stroke | 1995

Cerebral Microembolism and the Risk of Ischemia in Asymptomatic High-Grade Internal Carotid Artery Stenosis

Mario Siebler; Andreas Nachtmann; Matthias Sitzer; Georg Rose; Andreas Kleinschmidt; Jörg Rademacher; Helmuth Steinmetz

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Previous work has shown that cerebral microembolism detected with transcranial Doppler sonography distal to internal carotid artery stenosis occurs more frequently in recently symptomatic compared with asymptomatic patients. It has remained unclear whether cerebral microembolism also indicates a higher risk of future cerebral or retinal ischemia. SUMMARY OF REPORT Sixty-four asymptomatic patients with unilateral 70% to 90% internal carotid artery stenosis were investigated prospectively (mean follow-up, 72 weeks). Five patients developed ischemic symptoms attributable to the stenosis (transient ischemic attack, 2 patients; stroke, 3 patients). A microembolic rate of > or = 2 per hour in the ipsilateral middle cerebral artery was associated with a substantially increased risk of developing ischemia of the corresponding carotid territory (odds ratio, 31; 95% confidence interval, 3 to 302; P = .005). CONCLUSIONS This prospective pilot study suggests that cerebral microembolism detected with transcranial Doppler sonography may define a high-risk subgroup among patients with asymptomatic high-grade internal carotid artery stenosis.

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Helmuth Steinmetz

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Matthias Sitzer

University of Düsseldorf

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Ulrich Junghans

University of Düsseldorf

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W. Sandmann

University of Düsseldorf

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U. Mödder

University of Düsseldorf

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