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Dive into the research topics where Miguel Goncalves is active.

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Featured researches published by Miguel Goncalves.


Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine | 2017

Value of Sonography in the Diagnosis of Sialolithiasis: Comparison With the Reference Standard of Direct Stone Identification: Sonography in the Diagnosis of Sialolithiasis

Miguel Goncalves; Mirco Schapher; Heinrich Iro; Wolfgang Wuest; Konstantinos Mantsopoulos; Michael O. Koch

The aim of this study was to assess the effectiveness of sonography for diagnosing sialolithiasis in comparison with the existing reference standard of direct identification of a stone.


Laryngoscope | 2018

Multimodal treatment in difficult sialolithiasis: Role of extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy and intraductal pneumatic lithotripsy: ESWL and IPL in Difficult Sialolithiasis

Michael O. Koch; Mirco Schapher; Konstantinos Mantsopoulos; Felix von Scotti; Miguel Goncalves; Heinrich Iro

To assess results after treatment of difficult/complex sialolithiasis with extracorporeal shock‐wave lithotripsy (ESWL) and intraductal pneumatic lithotripsy (IPL).


Laryngoscope Investigative Otolaryngology | 2017

Long-term oncologic and functional outcome in pleomorphic adenomas of the submandibular gland

Konstantinos Mantsopoulos; Miguel Goncalves; Mirco Schapher; Heinrich Iro

The aim of the study was to evaluate the oncologic and functional long‐term outcome after surgical therapy of pleomorphic adenomas of the submandibular gland.


British Journal of Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery | 2017

Extracapsular dissection in the parapharyngeal space: benefits and potential pitfalls

Konstantinos Mantsopoulos; S. Müller; Abbas Agaimy; Miguel Goncalves; Michael Koch; W. Wüst; Christopher Bohr; Heinrich Iro

The aim of this study was to investigate the benefits and potential pitfalls of transcervical extracapsular dissection in the treatment of parotid gland tumours in the parapharyngeal space. We retrospectively evaluated the records of all patients with parapharyngeal parotid gland lesions treated between 2000 and 2015 by transcervical extracapsular dissection. Patients having revision operations and patients whose records were not complete were excluded, leaving 49 patients in the study. We found acceptable oncological and functional outcomes throughout. Special attention should be paid in cases with multilobular growth of the tumour on magnetic resonance imaging, satellite tumours of pleomorphic adenomas, tumours in broad contact with the inner surface of the deep lobe, and lesions suspected of malignancy. Extracapsular dissection in the parapharyngeal region is associated with acceptable oncological and functional outcomes. These outcomes can be expected only after a thorough assessment of patients history and preoperative imaging.


biomedical engineering systems and technologies | 2018

Patch-based Carcinoma Detection on Confocal Laser Endomicroscopy Images - A Cross-site Robustness Assessment

Marc Aubreville; Miguel Goncalves; Christian Knipfer; Nicolai Oetter; Tobias Würfl; Helmut Neumann; Florian Stelzle; Christopher Bohr; Andreas K. Maier

Deep learning technologies such as convolutional neural networks (CNN) provide powerful methods for image recognition and have recently been employed in the field of automated carcinoma detection in confocal laser endomicroscopy (CLE) images. CLE is a (sub-)surface microscopic imaging technique that reaches magnifications of up to 1000x and is thus suitable for in vivo structural tissue analysis. In this work, we aim to evaluate the prospects of a priorly developed deep learning-based algorithm targeted at the identification of oral squamous cell carcinoma with regard to its generalization to further anatomic locations of squamous cell carcinomas in the area of head and neck. We applied the algorithm on images acquired from the vocal fold area of five patients with histologically verified squamous cell carcinoma and presumably healthy control images of the clinically normal contra-lateral vocal cord. We find that the network trained on the oral cavity data reaches an accuracy of 89.45% and an area-under-the-curve (AUC) value of 0.955, when applied on the vocal cords data. Compared to the state of the art, we achieve very similar results, yet with an algorithm that was trained on a completely disjunct data set. Concatenating both data sets yielded further improvements in cross-validation with an accuracy of 90.81% and AUC of 0.970. In this study, for the first time to our knowledge, a deep learning mechanism for the identification of oral carcinomas using CLE Images could be applied to other disciplines in the area of head and neck. This study shows the prospect of the algorithmic approach to generalize well on other malignant entities of the head and neck, regardless of the anatomical location and furthermore in an examiner-independent manner.


Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery | 2018

Ultrasound Supplemented by Sialendoscopy: Diagnostic Value in Sialolithiasis

Miguel Goncalves; Konstantinos Mantsopoulos; Mirco Schapher; Heinrich Iro; Michael Koch

Objective To assess the value of ultrasound, if indicated, supplemented by sialendoscopy, in the diagnosis of sialolithiasis. Study Design Retrospective study. Setting Referring center for salivary gland diseases. Subjects and Methods All patients who presented with a suspected diagnosis of obstructive sialopathy between January 2011 and April 2017 and had not undergone any treatment were retrospectively evaluated. A total of 2052 patients and 2277 glands were included in the study. Ultrasound examinations were carried out initially and followed by sialendoscopy in all cases. Direct demonstration of sialothiasis by sialendoscopy, transoral ductal surgery, and discharge of concrements/observation of fragments during sialendoscopy after extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy were regarded as definitive evidence of sialolithiasis. Results Ultrasound had an accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of 94.77%, 94.91%, 94.57%, 96.14%, and 92.89%, respectively, for the diagnosis of sialolithiasis. All false-positive findings were correctly diagnosed, and in all false-negative findings, stones/fragments were visualized by sialendoscopy. Over 95% of the false-negative findings in major salivary glands (64/67) had visible ductal dilation in sonography, and in 73.1%, the stones not detected on ultrasound were located in the distal part of the duct, which is easily accessible with the sialendoscope. Conclusion This study shows that sialolithiasis can be diagnosed using ultrasonography with a high degree of certainty. If supplemented by sialendoscopy, the correct diagnosis could be established in virtually all cases of sialolithiasis. Ultrasound supplemented by sialendoscopy has the potential to serve as an alternative diagnostic standard in the future.


Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery | 2018

Intraductal Pneumatic Lithotripsy after Extended Transoral Duct Surgery in Submandibular Sialolithiasis

Michael Koch; Mirco Schapher; Konstantinos Mantsopoulos; Miguel Goncalves; Heinrich Iro

Objective Persistent, residual, or recurrent stones after transoral duct surgery are always associated with hilar to intraparenchymal and/or multiple sialolithiasis, causing difficulties in the treatment. This study was performed to assess the value of intraductal lithotripsy in the treatment of persistent, residual, or recurrent sialolithiasis after extended duct surgery in the submandibular gland. Study Design Retrospective study covering February 2015 to June 2018. Study Setting Tertiary referral center for salivary gland diseases. Subjects and Methods After extended ductal surgery, 39 patients presenting with persistent, residual, or recurrent stones were treated. Four patients had persistent stones; 16 had residual stones; and 19 presented with recurrent stones. Among these patients, 50 stones were treated with intraductal pneumatic lithotripsy. Fragmentation rate, stone-free rate, and symptom-free rate after treatment with intraductal lithotripsy were outcome measures. Results Of the 39 patients, 97.4% became stone-free, and all were symptom-free. Ninety-eight percent of the stones were completely fragmented. For 23.1% of the patients, >1 stone was treated with intraductal lithotripsy. All patients with persistent stones, 93.7% of those with residual stones, and all with recurrent stones became stone-free and symptom-free. No severe complications developed. Conclusions This study shows that patients presenting with difficult and/or multiple sialolithiasis after extended transoral submandibular duct surgery can be treated with success rates >97%. For multiple sialolithiasis in particular, a multimodal treatment approach with interventional sialendoscopy and intraductal lithotripsy as a central element is a prerequisite for success, as this enables the most difficult part to be performed with high success rates.


Laryngoscope | 2018

Extracapsular dissection for warthin tumors despite the risk of ipsilateral metachronous occurrence: Extracapsular Dissection and Warthin Tumors

Konstantinos Mantsopoulos; Miguel Goncalves; Michael O. Koch; Heinrich Iro

The ideal extent of surgical intervention for cystadenolymphomas of the parotid gland remains a matter of controversy. The aim of our study was to assess the surgical outcome after extracapsular dissection for cystadenolymphomas of the parotid gland. A further purpose of this study was to examine how the number of primary cystadenolymphomas or the size of the primary lesion influences the possibility of an ipsilateral metachronous tumor occurrence.


International Journal of Computer Assisted Radiology and Surgery | 2018

Deep learning-based detection of motion artifacts in probe-based confocal laser endomicroscopy images

Marc Aubreville; Maike Stoeve; Nicolai Oetter; Miguel Goncalves; Christian Knipfer; Helmut Neumann; Christopher Bohr; Florian Stelzle; Andreas K. Maier

Purpose:Probe-based confocal laser endomicroscopy (pCLE) is a subcellular in vivo imaging technique capable of producing images that enable diagnosis of malign structural modifications in epithelial tissue. Images acquired with pCLE are, however, often tainted by significant artifacts that impair diagnosis. This is especially detrimental for automated image analysis, which is why said images are often excluded from recognition pipelines.MethodsWe present an approach for the automatic detection of motion artifacts in pCLE images and apply this methodology to a data set of 15 thousand images of epithelial tissue acquired in the oral cavity and the vocal folds. The approach is based on transfer learning from intermediate endpoints within a pre-trained Inception v3 network with tailored preprocessing. For detection within the non-rectangular pCLE images, we perform pooling within the activation maps of the network and evaluate this at different network depths.ResultsWe achieved area under the ROC curve values of 0.92 with the proposed method, compared to 0.80 for the best feature-based machine learning approach. Our overall accuracy with the presented approach is 94.8%.ConclusionOver traditional machine learning approaches with state-of-the-art features, we achieved significantly improved overall performance.


Annals of Diagnostic Pathology | 2018

Submandibular gland pleomorphic adenoma: Histopathological capsular characteristics and correlation with the surgical outcome

Konstantinos Mantsopoulos; Miguel Goncalves; Michael Koch; Heinrich Iro; Abbas Agaimy

Pleomorphic adenoma (PA) of the submandibular gland is known to have a very low recurrence rate. The aim of this study was to investigate the histopathological and capsular characteristics of submandibular gland PA, looking for any differences between submandibular PA and the reported data for PA of the parotid gland as possible explanation for its low recurrence rate. We reviewed 72 submandibular gland PAs resected at our center between 2000 and 2016. Patient age ranged from 14 to 77 years (mean, 47.2). At least follow (range, 12 to 170 months; mean, 82), none of the 72 patients developed a local recurrence. Histologically, all of the tumors were encased by a complete and intact anatomical capsule (100%). Pseudopodia were detected in 11 (15.3%) and satellite nodules in 3 (4.2%) cases. The histological subtype (according to Seifert et al.) was classic (mixed) in 39 (54.2%), stroma-rich/myxoid in 18/72 (25%) and cellular in 15 (20.8%) cases. A complete rim of healthy pericapsular tissue encasing the tumor and its capsule was observed in only 23/72 (31.9%) cases. In conclusion, submandibular PAs are characterized by consistent presence of an intact anatomical capsule, infrequent occurrence of pseudopodia, a remarkably infrequent occurrence lower frequency of secondary satellite tumor nodules and a comparatively lower proportion of the fragile risky myxoid subtype. Despite the fact that surgery of the submandibular gland can frequently lead to focal capsular exposure, the aforementioned capsular characteristics of submandibular gland PA are probably responsible for the excellent oncologic results.

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Dive into the Miguel Goncalves's collaboration.

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Heinrich Iro

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Konstantinos Mantsopoulos

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Mirco Schapher

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Michael Koch

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Christopher Bohr

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Abbas Agaimy

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Andreas K. Maier

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Florian Stelzle

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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