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Dive into the research topics where Roland Beisteiner is active.

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Featured researches published by Roland Beisteiner.


Clinical Neurophysiology | 1995

Mental representations of movements. Brain potentials associated with imagination of eye movements

P Höllinger; Roland Beisteiner; Wilfried Lang; Gerald Lindinger; Alain Berthoz

OBJECTIVE Current research in motor imagery is focused on similarities between actual and imagined movements on a central and a peripheral level of the nervous system. The present study measured slow cortical potentials (DC-potentials) during execution and internal simulation of memorized saccadic eye movements. METHODS In 19 healthy righthanded subjects DC-potentials were recorded from 28 electrodes during execution and during imagination of a sequence of memorized eye movements during a visual imagery condition. RESULTS Both oculomotor conditions showed a similar global level and similar topography of performance related DC-potentials, both strongly differed from the visual imagery condition and were lateralized to the left hemisphere. CONCLUSION This study therefore supports the hypothesis that cortical brain structures responsible for execution and imagination of memorized saccadic eye movements are similar. The observed left hemispheric lateralization is in contrast to a previous study using bimanual movements. This discrepancy is discussed in relation to recent observations in apractic patients with parietal lesions.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2005

Evaluation of preoperative high magnetic field motor functional MRI (3 Tesla) in glioma patients by navigated electrocortical stimulation and postoperative outcome

K Roessler; M Donat; Rupert Lanzenberger; Klaus Novak; Alexander Geissler; Andreas Gartus; Amir Reza Tahamtan; D Milakara; Thomas Czech; Markus Barth; Roland Beisteiner

Objectives: The validity of 3 Tesla motor functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in patients with gliomas involving the primary motor cortex was investigated by intraoperative navigated motor cortex stimulation (MCS). Methods: Twenty two patients (10 males, 12 females, mean age 39 years, range 10–65 years) underwent preoperative fMRI studies, performing motor tasks including hand, foot, and mouth movements. A recently developed high field clinical fMRI technique was used to generate pre-surgical maps of functional high risk areas defining a motor focus. Motor foci were tested for validity by intraoperative motor cortex stimulation (MCS) employing image fusion and neuronavigation. Clinical outcome was assessed using the Modified Rankin Scale. Results: FMRI motor foci were successfully detected in all patients preoperatively. In 17 of 22 patients (77.3%), a successful stimulation of the primary motor cortex was possible. All 17 correlated patients showed 100% agreement on MCS and fMRI motor focus within 10 mm. Technical problems during stimulation occurred in three patients (13.6%), no motor response was elicited in two (9.1%), and MCS induced seizures occurred in three (13.6%). Combined fMRI and MCS mapping results allowed large resections in 20 patients (91%) (gross total in nine (41%), subtotal in 11 (50%)) and biopsy in two patients (9%). Pathology revealed seven low grade and 15 high grade gliomas. Mild to moderate transient neurological deterioration occurred in six patients, and a severe hemiparesis in one. All patients recovered within 3 months (31.8% transient, 0% permanent morbidity). Conclusions: The validation of clinically optimised high magnetic field motor fMRI confirms high reliability as a preoperative and intraoperative adjunct in glioma patients selected for surgery within or adjacent to the motor cortex.


NeuroImage | 2001

Finger Somatotopy in Human Motor Cortex

Roland Beisteiner; Christian Windischberger; Rupert Lanzenberger; Vinod Edward; Ross Cunnington; Marcus Erdler; Andreas Gartus; Bernhard Streibl; Ewald Moser; L. Deecke

Although qualitative reports about somatotopic representation of fingers in the human motor cortex exist, up to now no study could provide clear statistical evidence. The goal of the present study was to reinvestigate finger motor somatotopy by means of a thorough investigation of standardized movements of the index and little finger of the right hand. Using high resolution fMRI at 3 Tesla, blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) responses in a group of 26 subjects were repeatedly measured to achieve reliable statistical results. The center of mass of all activated voxels within the primary motor cortex was calculated for each finger and each run. Results of all runs were averaged to yield an individual index and little finger representation for each subject. The mean center of mass localizations for all subjects were then submitted to a paired t test. Results show a highly significant though small scale somatotopy of fingerspecific activation patterns in the order indicated by Penfields motor homunculus. In addition, considerable overlap of finger specific BOLD responses was found. Comparing various methods of analysis, the mean center of mass distance for the two fingers was 2--3 mm with overlapping voxels included and 4--5 mm with overlapping voxels excluded. Our data may be best understood in the context of the work of Schieber (1999) who recently described overlapping somatotopic gradients in lesion studies with humans.


NeuroImage | 2000

Supplementary Motor Area Activation Preceding Voluntary Movement Is Detectable with a Whole-Scalp Magnetoencephalography System

Marcus Erdler; Roland Beisteiner; D. Mayer; T. Kaindl; Vinod Edward; Christian Windischberger; Gerald Lindinger; L. Deecke

Despite the fact that the knowledge about the structure and the function of the supplementary motor area (SMA) is steadily increasing, the role of the SMA in the human brain, e.g., the contribution of the SMA to the Bereitschaftspotential, still remains unclear and controversial. The goal of this study was to contribute further to this discussion by taking advantage of the increased spatial information of a whole-scalp magnetoencephalography (MEG) system enabling us to record the magnetic equivalent of the Bereitschaftspotential 1, the Bereitschaftsfeld 1 (BF 1) or readiness field 1. Five subjects performed a complex, and one subject a simple, finger-tapping task. It was possible to record the BF 1 for all subjects. The first appearance of the BF 1 was in the range of -1.9 to -1.7 s prior to movement onset, except for the subject performing the simple task (-1 s). Analysis of the development of the magnetic field distribution and the channel waveforms showed the beginning of the Bereitschaftsfeld 2 (BF 2) or readiness field 2 at about -0.5 s prior to movement onset. In the time range of BF 1, dipole source analysis localized the source in the SMA only, whereas dipole source analysis containing also the time range of BF 2 resulted in dipole models, including dipoles in the primary motor area. In summary, with a whole-head MEG system, it was possible for the first time to detect SMA activity in healthy subjects with MEG.


Experimental Brain Research | 1991

Three-dimensional localization of SMA activity preceding voluntary movement

Wilfried Lang; D. Cheyne; R. Kristeva; Roland Beisteiner; Gerald Lindinger; L. Deecke

SummaryPrevious studies by magnetoencephalography (MEG) failed to consistently localize the activity of the supplementary motor area (SMA) prior to voluntary movements in healthy human subjects. Based on the assumption that the SMA of either hemisphere is active prior to volunatry movements, the negative findings of previous studies could be explained by the hypothesis that magnetic fields of current dipole sources in the two SMAs may cancel each other. The present MEG study was performed in a patient with a complete vascular lesion of the right SMA. In this case it was possible to consistently localize a current dipole source in the intact left SMA starting about 1200 msec prior to the initiation of voluntary movements of the right thumb. Starting at about 600 msec prior to movement onset the assumption of a current dipole source in the left primary motor cortex was needed to account for the observed fields. Measurements of brain potentials were consistent with MEG findings of activity of the left SMA starting about 1200 msec prior to movement onset.


NeuroImage | 2011

Clinical fMRI: Evidence for a 7 T benefit over 3 T

Roland Beisteiner; Simon Robinson; Moritz Wurnig; Markus Hilbert; K. Merksa; Jakob Rath; Ilse Höllinger; Nicolaus Klinger; Ch. Marosi; Siegfried Trattnig; Alexander Geißler

Despite there being an increasing number of installations of ultra high field MR systems (> 3 T) in clinical environments, no functional patient investigations have yet examined possible benefits for functional diagnostics. Here we performed presurgical localization of the primary motor hand area on 3 T and 7 T Siemens scanners with identical investigational procedures and comparable system specific sequence optimizations. Results from 17 patients showed significantly higher functional sensitivity of the 7 T system measured via percent signal change, mean t-values, number of suprathreshold voxels and contrast to noise ratio. On the other hand, 7 T data suffered from a significant increase of artifacts (ghosting, head motion). We conclude that ultra high field systems provide a clinically relevant increase of functional sensitivity for patient investigations.


Human Brain Mapping | 2000

Quantification of fMRI artifact reduction by a novel plaster cast head holder

Vinod Edward; Christian Windischberger; Ross Cunnington; Marcus Erdler; Rupert Lanzenberger; D. Mayer; W. Endl; Roland Beisteiner

In light of artifact‐induced high variability of activation in fMRI repeat studies, we developed and tested a clinically useful plaster cast head holder (PCH) with improved immobilization, repositioning, and comfort. With PCH, there were considerably lower levels of translational and rotational head motion components compared to head fixation with conventional restraining straps (CRS). Rotational components cannot be fully compensated by realignment and lead to “false activations.” In addition, task‐correlated head motion, which highly increases the risk of artifacts, was considerably reduced with PCH, especially in a motion prone subject. Compared with PCH, head motion was 133% larger with CRS in a highly cooperative subject. With a motion prone subject, head motion range was increased by 769% (PCH: 0.9 mm, CRS: 7.8 mm), which may indicate the usefulness of PCH for restless patients. In functional activation maps, PCH alone yielded fewer residual motion artifacts than CRS + image registration. Subject tolerance of the head holder during the long measurement times of up to 2.5 hr was good, and slice orientation on different days confirmed the quality of repositioning. Hum. Brain Mapping 11:207–213, 2000.


NeuroImage | 2005

Influence of fMRI smoothing procedures on replicability of fine scale motor localization

Alexander Geissler; Rupert Lanzenberger; Markus Barth; Amir Reza Tahamtan; Denny Milakara; Andreas Gartus; Roland Beisteiner

Recent publications analyzing the influence of spatial smoothing on fMRI brain activation results demonstrated that smoothing may artificially combine activations from adjacent though functionally and anatomically distinct brain regions and that activation from large draining vessels may be smoothed into neighboring neuronal tissue. To investigate whether functional localizations may be artificially shifted by the smoothing procedure we performed replicability measurements. Localization centers of motor hand activations achieved during different conditions (isolated hand movements and simultaneous hand and chin movements) were compared with respect to smoothing effects. The voxel with the highest probability to represent a true positive activation was localized with a non-smoothed and a standard 4 x 4 x 6 mm smoothed correlational data analysis technique. Results show an increase of motor center aberrations between measurements by about 100% due to data smoothing indicating a statistically significant decrease in localization replicability.


Neuroscience Letters | 2000

Improvement of presurgical patient evaluation by generation of functional magnetic resonance risk maps.

Roland Beisteiner; Rupert Lanzenberger; Klaus Novak; Vinod Edward; Christian Windischberger; Marcus Erdler; Ross Cunnington; Andreas Gartus; Bernhard Streibl; Ewald Moser; Th. Czech; L. Deecke

Recent functional magnetic resonance imaging (FMRI) replication studies show a high variability of active voxels within subjects and across runs - a potentially harmful situation for clinical applications. We tried to reduce these uncertainties inherent in current presurgical FMRI. For this, a new high quality head fixation device was used to detect reliably activated voxels over repeated measurements. In addition high correlation thresholds were applied to define the areas with highest probability of activation. The results show a focussing of such functional high risk areas to only a few voxels which localized close to intraoperative cortical stimulation. The generation of such FMRI risk maps may improve validity of clinical localization and facilitate the development of currently missing standards for maximized but still safe tumor resection.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 1997

Magnetoencephalography May Help to Improve Functional MRI Brain Mapping

Roland Beisteiner; Marcus Erdler; C. Teichtmeister; Markus Diemling; Ewald Moser; Vinod Edward; L. Deecke

The validity of functional magnetic resonance imaging (FMRI) brain maps with respect to the sites of neuronal activation is still unknown. One source of localization error may be pixels with large signal amplitudes, since such pixels may be expected to overlie large vessels, running remote from the centre of neuronal activation. In this study, magnetoencephalography was used to determine the centre of neuronal activation in a simple finger tapping task. The localization accuracy of conventional FMRI depending on FMRI signal enhancement was investigated relative to the magnetoencephalography reference. The results show a deterioration of FMRI localization with increasing signal amplitude related to increased contributions from large vessels. We conclude that FMRI data analysis should exclude large signal amplitudes and that magnetoencephalography may help to improve FMRI brain mapping results in a multimethod approach.

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Alexander Geissler

Medical University of Vienna

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Rupert Lanzenberger

Medical University of Vienna

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Thomas Foki

Medical University of Vienna

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Ewald Moser

Medical University of Vienna

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Jakob Rath

Medical University of Vienna

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