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Dive into the research topics where Rainer Röttgen is active.

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Featured researches published by Rainer Röttgen.


Acta Radiologica | 2005

Magnetic resonance imaging including magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography for tumor localization and therapy planning in malignant hilar obstructions

Enrique Lopez Hänninen; M. Pech; S. Jonas; J Ricke; A. Thelen; Jan M. Langrehr; R. Hintze; Rainer Röttgen; Timm Denecke; L. Winter; Peter Neuhaus; Roland Felix

Purpose: To assess image quality and overall accuracy of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), including two magnetic cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) techniques, for the diagnostics and preoperative work-up of malignant hilar obstructions. Material and Methods: Thirty-one patients with malignant hilar obstructions (hilar cholangiocarcinoma, n = 30; hepatocellular carcinoma, n = 1) received MRCP by two techniques (single-shot thick-slab and multisection thin-slice MRCP) and unenhanced and contrast material-enhanced MRI. MR assessment included the evaluation of image quality and visualization of bile ducts (5-point scale), and the classification of tumor status. MR results were subsequently correlated with the results from surgery and pathology. Results: The maximum intensity projections of multisection thin-slice MRCP had significantly more artifacts compared to MRCP in the single-shot thick-slab technique, and overall image quality of single-shot thick-slab MRCP was rated significantly superior compared to multisection thin-slice MRCP (4.4±0.7 and 4.1±0.9, respectively). Moreover, ductal visualization of different parts of the biliary system was rated superior with single-shot thick-slab MRCP. In contrast, the original data from multisection thin slice MRCP facilitated visualization of periductal lesions and adjacent structures. Overall MR accuracy for the assessment of tumor status, periductal infiltration, and lymph node metastases was 90%, 87%, and 66%, respectively. Conclusion: For evaluation of malignant hilar obstructions, MRCP by the single-shot thick-slab technique had superior image quality and fewer artifacts; in contrast, besides sole biliary visualization, multisection MRCP depicted complementary adjacent parenchymal and periductal structures. We therefore recommend MRI, with a combination of both MRCP techniques, for the diagnostic work-up and therapy planning of malignant hilar obstructions.


European Radiology | 2012

Evaluation of the potential of PET-MRI fusion for detection of liver metastases in patients with neuroendocrine tumours

Nils Schreiter; Munenobu Nogami; Ingo G. Steffen; Ulrich-Frank Pape; Bernd Hamm; Winfried Brenner; Rainer Röttgen

AbstractObjectivesThis study was performed to assess the role of retrospective PET-MRI fusion with Ga-68-DOTA(0)-Phe(1)-Tyr(3)-octreotide (Ga-68-DOTATOC) PET and Gd-EOB-DTPA MRI in the detection of hepatic metastases from neuroendocrine tumours (NET).MethodsTwenty-two consecutive patients with suspected liver metastases from histopathologically proven NET were examined with Gd-EOB-DTPA MRI and multiphase contrast-enhanced Ga-68-DOTATOC PET/CT. PET and MRI images were retrospectively fused using commercially available software. Two physicians experienced in nuclear medicine and radiology analysed the images to assess diagnostic confidence and characterise liver lesions.ResultsA total of 181 lesions were detected. PET-MRI showed a sensitivity of 91.2% (significantly superior to PET/CT; P < 0.05) and a specificity of 95.6% (significantly superior to MRI; P < 0.05). PET/CT had a sensitivity of 73.5% and a specificity of 88.2%. MRI had a sensitivity of 87.6% and a specificity of 86.8%. The area under the curve was 0.98 for PET-MRI, 0.96 for MRI, and 0.89 for PET/CT (P < 0.05).ConclusionsRetrospectively fused PET-MRI was superior to multiphase contrast-enhanced Ga-68-DOTATOC PET/CT and Gd-EOB-DTPA MRI in the detection of NET liver metastases. It was more sensitive than PET/CT and more specific than MRI. Fused PET-MRI therefore seems well suited for surgical and interventional treatment planning of NET liver metastases.Key Points• Ga-68-DOTATOC PET–Gd-EOB-DTPA MRI fusion can improve imaging of liver metastases of neuroendocrine tumours.• This technique appears more sensitive than PET/CT for staging NET hepatic metastases. • Ga-68-DOTATOC PET–Gd-EOB-DTPA MRI fusion is more specific than MRI alone.


Clinical Imaging | 2010

Measurement of MRI enhancement kinetics for evaluation of inflammatory activity in Crohn's disease

Rainer Röttgen; Thomas Grandke; Christian Grieser; Lukas Lehmkuhl; Bernd Hamm; Lutz Lüdemann

PURPOSE To investigate the feasibility of determining local inflammatory activity of Crohns disease by measurement of bowel wall perfusion kinetics using contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). MATERIAL AND METHODS Twenty-six patients with histologically proven Crohns disease who underwent magnetic resonance (MR) enteroclysis at 1.5 T were included in this retrospective study. Over 109 s, 150 images were acquired with a fat-saturated coronal T1-weighted 2D gradient echo sequence (TR, 9 ms; TE, 1.5 ms) during intravenous contrast administration by means of a pump (Magnevist, 0.2 ml/kg, flow 3 ml/s). On each image, signal intensity was measured in a region of interest placed in an area of maximum thickening of the inflamed bowel wall. Enhancement kinetics were correlated with the endoscopically determined severity of inflammatory activity (on a scale of 0-3). RESULTS The slope of the contrast enhancement curve significantly correlated with local inflammatory activity determined by endoscopy (R=0.594, P=.007). No significant correlation was found for area under the curve and peak maximum (R=0.411, P=.08 and R=0.334, P=.15, respectively). CONCLUSION Determination of the perfusion kinetics of the bowel wall by MRI enables quantitative evaluation of local inflammatory activity in patients with Crohns disease.


Radiology and Oncology | 2014

Searching for primaries in patients with neuroendocrine tumors (NET) of unknown primary and clinically suspected NET: Evaluation of Ga-68 DOTATOC PET/CT and In-111 DTPA octreotide SPECT/CT

Nils Schreiter; Ann-Mirja Bartels; Vera Froeling; Ingo G. Steffen; Ulrich-Frank Pape; A. Beck; Bernd Hamm; Winfried Brenner; Rainer Röttgen

Abstract Background. To evaluate the clinical efficacy of In-111 DTPA octreotide SPECT/CT and Ga-68 DOTATOC PET/CT for detection of primary tumors in patients with either neuroendocrine tumor of unknown primary (NETUP) or clinically suspected primary NET (SNET). Patients and methods. A total of 123 patients were included from 2006 to 2009, 52 received Ga-68 DOTATOC PET/CT (NETUP, 33; SNET, 19) and 71 underwent In-111 DTPA octreotide SPECT/CT (50; 21). The standard of reference included histopathology or clinical verification based on follow-up examinations. Results. In the NETUP group Ga-68 DOTATOC detected primaries in 15 patients (45.5%) and In-111 DTPA octreotide in 4 patients (8%) (p < 0.001); in the SNET group, only 2 primaries could be detected, all by Ga-68 DOTATOC. In patients with NETUP, primary tumors could be found significantly more often than in patients with SNET (p = 0.01). Out of these 21 patients 14 patients were operated. Conclusion. Ga-68 DOTATOC PET/CT is preferable to In-111 DTPA octreotide SPECT/CT when searching for primary NETs in patients with NETUP but should be used with caution in patients with SNET.


Journal of Crohns & Colitis | 2012

Magnetic resonance enteroclysis in patients with Crohn's disease: fat saturated T2-weighted sequences for evaluation of inflammatory activity.

Christian Grieser; Timm Denecke; Ingo G. Steffen; Scarlett Werner; T. J. Kröncke; Olaf Guckelberger; Ulrich-Frank Pape; Johannes Meier; Regina Thiel; Dietmar Kivelitz; Andreas Sturm; Bernd Hamm; Rainer Röttgen

BACKGROUND AND AIMS To evaluate fat saturated (fs) T2-weighted (w) fast relaxation fast spin echo (FRFSE)-sequences compared to the standard protocol with contrast agent for the evaluation of inflammatory activity in patients with Crohns Disease (CD). METHODS Fourty-eight patients (male, 17; female, 33; mean age, 37 years) with suspicion of inflammatory activity in proven CD who underwent MR enteroclysis (MRE) at 1.5T (GE Healthcare) were retrospectively included. Two blinded radiologists analyzed MRE images for presence and extent of CD lesions and degree of local inflammation for fsT2-w FRFSE and contrast enhanced T1-w images (T2-activity; T1-activity; score, 1-4) in consensus. Furthermore, mural signal intensity (SI) ratios (T2-ratio; T1-ratio) were recorded. Patient based MRE findings were correlated with endoscopic (45 patients), surgical (6 patients), histopathological, and clinical data (CDAI) as a surrogate reference standard. RESULTS In total, 24 of 48 eligible patients presented with acute inflammatory activity with 123 affected bowel segments. ROC analysis of the total inflammatory score presented an AUC of 0.93 (p<0.001) for T2-activity (T1-activity, AUC 0.63; p=0.019). ROC analysis revealed an AUC of 0.76 (p<0.001) for the T2-ratio (T1-ratio, AUC 0.51; p=0.93). General linear regression model revealed T2-activity (p=0.001) and age (p=0.024) as predictive factors of acute bowel inflammation. CONCLUSIONS T2-w FRFSE-sequences can depict CD lesions and help to assess the inflammation activity, even with improved accuracy as compared to contrast-enhanced T1-w sequences.


European Radiology | 2004

Diagnosis of IPA in HIV: the role of the chest X-ray and radiologist

Uta Zaspel; David W. Denning; A.-J. Lemke; Reginald Greene; Dirk Schürmann; Georg Maschmeyer; Markus Ruhnke; Raoul Herbrecht; Patricia Ribaud; Olivier Lortholary; Harmien Zonderland; Klaus F. Rabe; Rainer Röttgen; Roland Bittner; Klaus Neumann; Joerg W. Oestmann

The role of clinical information and chest film for the discrimination between invasive pulmonary aspergillosis (IPA) and its differential diagnoses in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection was studied. The diagnostic performance of clinical information and chest film alone and in combination was studied for eight internists and eight radiologists with regular exposure to IPA patients. The multicenter case sample consisted of 25 patients with proven IPA and 25 with other pulmonary diseases typical for HIV. The cases were presented on a CD-ROM. Receiver operating characteristics (ROC) methodology was employed. With clinical information alone, internists achieved the highest diagnostic performance (area under curve/AUC=0.84). Viewing the chest films did not contribute to their performance (AUC=0.80, P=0.26). The radiologist’s performance on the basis of viewing the chest film (AUC=0.75) increased significantly (P=0.012) when clinical information (AUC=0.83) was supplied. IPA cases with characteristic radiological appearance were correctly identified in 90% with chest film. For radiologists with regular exposure to HIV patients, chest films hold relevant information and contribute to the determination in cases with characteristic radiological appearance. Overall and especially in cases with less characteristic radiological appearance, they have significant profit from full access to the clinical data. For internists with regular exposure to HIV patients, chest films do not provide information essential for the verification or differentiation of potential IPA.


Acta Radiologica | 2006

Magnetic Resonance Imaging in the Assessment of Cystic Pancreatic Lesions: Differentiation of Benign and Malignant Lesion Status

E. Lopez Hänninen; M. Pech; J Ricke; Timm Denecke; Holger Amthauer; Lukas Lehmkuhl; M. Böhmig; Rainer Röttgen; J. Pinkernelle; Roland Felix; Jan M. Langrehr

Purpose: To characterize cystic pancreatic lesions and tumors with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and to assess the value of morphological criteria in differentiating pseudocysts versus cystic tumors and benign versus malignant cystic tumors. Material and Methods: Twenty-three patients with cystic pancreatic tumors or lesions underwent plain and contrast-material-enhanced MRI, including magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP). The MR findings were characterized and analyzed by two readers, and the role of various imaging criteria and combinations thereof for final lesion assignment were assessed. Final diagnoses were obtained from the results of open surgery (n = 19) and/or biopsy (n = 4). Results: Final diagnoses included cystic tumors (n = 11) and pseudocysts (n = 12). The lesions were located in the head (56%) and body or tail (44%). Lesion diameters ranged from 7 to 50 mm. Various lesion contrast enhancement patterns were observed for both benign and malignant lesions. Serous cystadenomas were located in the head, they were lobulated, and had wall diameters⩽2 mm; with the combination of these characteristics all patients with serous cystadenoma could be identified, whereas in no other patient was this constellation observed. Conclusion: MRI facilitated the diagnosis of serous cystadenomas, although no definite morphologic criterion for the differentiation between pseudocysts and mucinous cystadenomas was identified. In consideration of the substantial therapeutic consequences, either diagnostics in unclear cystic pancreatic lesions should comprise cyst fluid analysis if necessary, or eligible patients should be referred for surgical resection.


Acta Radiologica | 2005

Colon dissection: a new three‐dimensional reconstruction tool for computed tomography colonography

Rainer Röttgen; Frank Fischbach; Michail Plotkin; Harry Herzog; Torsten Freund; Ralf Jürgen Schröder; Roland Felix

Purpose: To improve the sensitivity of computed tomography (CT) colonography in the detection of polyps by comparing the 3D reconstruction tool “colon dissection” and endoluminal view (virtual colonoscopy) with axial 2D reconstructions. Material and Methods: Forty‐eight patients (22 M, 26 F, mean age 57±21) were studied after intra‐anal air insufflation in the supine and prone positions using a 16‐slice helical CT (16×0.625 mm, pitch 1.7; detector rotation time 0.5 s; 160 mAs und 120 kV) and conventional colonoscopy. Two radiologists blinded to the results of the conventional colonoscopy analyzed the 3D reconstruction in virtual‐endoscopy mode, in colon‐dissection mode, and axial 2D slices. Results: Conventional colonoscopy revealed a total of 35 polyps in 15 patients; 33 polyps were disclosed by CT methods. Sensitivity and specificity for detecting colon polyps were 94% and 94%, respectively, when using the “colon dissection”, 89% and 94% when using “virtual endoscopy”, and 62% and 100% when using axial 2D reconstruction. Sensitivity in relation to the diameter of colon polyps with “colon dissection”, “virtual colonoscopy”, and axial 2D‐slices was: polyps with a diameter >5.0 mm, 100%, 100%, and 71%, respectively; polyps with a diameter of between 3 and 4.9 mm, 92%, 85%, and 46%; and polyps with a diameter <3 mm, 89%, 78%, and 56%. The difference between “virtual endoscopy” and “colon dissection” in diagnosing polyps up to 4.9 mm in diameter was statistically significant. Conclusion: 3D reconstruction software “colon dissection” improves sensitivity of CT colonography compared with the endoluminal view.


Journal of Clinical Densitometry | 2012

Comparison Between Amputation-Induced Demineralization and Age-Related Bone Loss Using Digital X-Ray Radiogrammetry

Max-Ludwig Schäfer; Joachim Böttcher; Alexander Pfeil; Andreas Hansch; Ansgar Malich; Martin H. Maurer; Florian Streitparth; Rainer Röttgen; Diane M. Renz

Digital X-ray radiogrammetry (DXR) is a computer-assisted automatic osteodensitometric tool. This study was performed to compare DXR measurements between bone changes following amputation trauma and age-related bone loss. Thirty-five men, who had undergone finger amputations, received a baseline examination and 2--3 serial measurements. As a second group, 215 males older than 70yr were enrolled. All patients obtained standardized hand radiographs. The following DXR parameters evaluating metacarpals were considered: cortical bone mineral density (DXR-BMD), cortical thickness (DXR-CT), metacarpal index (DXR-MCI), outer bone diameter (width; DXR-W), and inner medullary diameter (DXR-MD). In the amputation group, the DXR parameters showed an accentuated initial decrease between first and second measurements (DRX-BMD--12.7%, DXR-CT--14.2%, DXR-W--8.6%, DXR-MCI--6.1%; p<0.001) followed by a less pronounced reduction between second and third radiographs (DRX-BMD--0.5%, DXR-CT--1.5%, DXR-W--0.1%, DXR-MCI--1.3%). DXR-MD revealed a reduction of--3.6% (p<0.05) between first and second estimates and a non-significant increase (+1.1%) between second and third measurements. When compared with the second and third estimates in the amputation group, men older than 70yr presented lower DXR-BMD, DXR-CT, and DXR-MCI values (p<0.001), but larger metacarpal outer and inner bone diameters (DXR-W and DXR-MD; p<0.001). DXR-MD of the elderly men group was also more extended when compared with the baseline measurements of the amputation cohort (p<0.001). The early accentuated cortical bone loss and particularly the pronounced decrease of the outer bone width seem to be characteristic for amputation-induced osteoporosis, suggesting that this might be a distinct secondary osteoporosis entity. When compared with amputation-associated osteoporosis, where the bone loss occurs to a higher extent in the outer bone diameter than in the medullary cavity, the age-related bone changes lead more to an increase of the medullary diameter than of the outer bone width.


Journal of Endovascular Therapy | 2010

Traumatic transection of the aorta and thoracic spinal cord injury without radiographic abnormality in an adult patient.

Burkhart Zipfel; Semih Buz; Dietrich Hullmeine; Rainer Röttgen; Roland Hetzer

Purpose: To describe a rare case of spinal cord injury without radiographic abnormalities (SCIWORA) associated with a traumatic aortic transection. Case Report: A 48-year-old man was transferred for endovascular treatment of a traumatic aortic transection. Primary traumatic paraplegia had been documented at the scene of the accident. No osseous or ligamentous injuries were found in the conventional radiographic images. The transection was treated successfully with an endovascular stent-graft, but the patient remained paraplegic. On the magnetic resonance images 8 days later, discrete trauma of the intraspinal ligament at T1/T2 was seen, without signs of injury to the myelum. The patient made a slow but incomplete recovery after that. Conclusion: SCIWORA very rarely affects the thoracic spinal cord in adults; therefore, a vascular injury in relation to the trauma of the aorta is assumed. When spinal cord damage is noted after stent-grafting or open aortic surgery for traumatic transection, SCIWORA should be ruled out by history and neurological examination.

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R. Felix

Free University of Berlin

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Schröder Rj

Humboldt University of Berlin

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