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Dive into the research topics where Rüdiger Lehmann is active.

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Featured researches published by Rüdiger Lehmann.


Journal of Neurology | 2001

Perfusion and diffusion magnetic resonance imaging in human cerebral venous thrombosis

Claudia A. Doege; R. Tavakolian; Christian Kerskens; B. I. Romero; Rüdiger Lehmann; K. M. Einhaeupl; Arno Villringer

Background Diagnosis of cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT) is usually achieved by digital subtraction angiography or magnetic resonance angiography, while structural brain tissue damage can be assessed by computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Using perfusion and diffusion weighted imaging (PWI, DWI) we aimed in this study to identify pathophysiological patterns corresponding to only functional and hence reversible tissue involvement. Methods PWI, DWI, and conventional MRI were performed in six CVT patients acutely and after 16–26 days when their clinical condition had improved. All patients were treated with partial thromboplastin time-effective intravenous heparin. After intravenous administration of a paramagnetic contrast agent, bolus track PWI allows pixel based determination of mean transit time (MTT) and cerebral blood volume (CBV). DWI was performed with two different b values (0, 1000 s/mm2) for calculation of apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) maps. Results In five of six cases increased MTT values were observed initially, whereas the CBV was normal, indicating a reduction of cerebral blood flow. ADC values were normal. On follow up after clinical recovery MTT prolongations had resolved. Areas with prolonged MTT did not evolve into structural lesions. Conclusion In patients with CVT, prolongations of MTT in the absence of changes in CBV and ADC seem to indicate reversible involvement of brain tissue, a situation corresponding to the ischaemic penumbra.


Neuroradiology | 1999

Spontaneous remission of chiasmatic/ hypothalamic masses in neurofibromatosis type 1: report of two cases

S. Gottschalk; R. Tavakolian; Annegret Buske; Sigrid Tinschert; Rüdiger Lehmann

Abstract We report two children with neurofibromatosis type 1 showing enhancing masses on MRI suggesting neoplasms in the chiasm and hypothalamic region. In both patients no visual or endocrinal dysfunction was present. On serial MRI spontaneous partial remission was found, implying that a cautious approach to therapeutic management of similar cases should be taken.


Neurosurgery | 1995

Transcallosal removal of lesions affecting the third ventricle: an anatomic and clinical study.

Christian Woiciechowsky; Siegfried Vogel; Rüdiger Lehmann; Johannes Staudt

A series of 54 patients with lesions affecting the third ventricle with a wide range of pathology were operated on by the transcallosal approach. Hydrocephalus was present in 68.5% of all patients, and preoperative shunting was performed in 73.0% of them. Before the partial callosotomy, 16 patients were studied by the use of a cognitive, affective, and behavioral battery, which was repeated 10 and 100 days after the operation. No physiological consequences were ever observed after the partial commissurotomy. The postoperative callosal defect was verified by magnetic resonance imaging. Furthermore, 40 formalin-fixed brains were sectioned to study the variations of the anterior cerebral arteries. On the other hand, magnetic resonance imaging measurements of the corpus callosum in 40 normal subjects were performed to establish a classification system for the corpus callosal area. The results showed a wide variability of the cross-sectional area of the corpus callosum. The differences in the thickness of the truncus were responsible for this variability; the length of the corpus callosum was uniform. This may suggest that subjects with a large corpus callosum may have more interhemispheric connections with higher specialization of each hemisphere and that a smaller number of callosal connections may correlate with more ipsilateral pathways and more independent hemispheres. The results and the clinical as well as anatomical material indicate that the anterior transcallosal route is a safe and feasible alternative in the management of a wide spectrum of pathological lesions within the third ventricle and deserves preference over the transcortical technique.


Journal of Neurology | 1998

Callosal and corticospinal tract function in patients with hydrocephalus: a morphometric and transcranial magnetic stimulation study

Simone Röricht; Bernd-Ulrich Meyer; Christian Woiciechowsky; Rüdiger Lehmann

Abstract In 15 patients with symptomatic hydrocephalus, pressure-induced morphological changes of the brain and the function of callosal and corticospinal fibres were studied. Morphometry of the corpus callosum (CC) was performed on midsagittal MR images. Focal transcranial magnetic stimulation of the motor cortex was used to assess simultaneously excitatory motor responses in contralateral hand muscle (corticospinally mediated effect) and inhibition of tonic EMG activity in ipsilateral hand muscles (transcallosal inhibition (TI) of the contralateral motor cortex). Before a shunt operation, the midsagittal area of the CC was reduced by 34% on average. The height and, to a lesser degree the length, of the CC were increased before the shunt operation. Thresholds and central motor latencies of corticospinally mediated responses were normal, response amplitudes were smaller than in normal subjects. Motor thresholds increased from 38, SD 5 to 52, SD 8% (P<0.01) within 7 days after ventricular drainage, reflecting the increase in the distance between stimulation coil and brain. The threshold increase paralleled a restoration of normal anatomical conditions within 7 days after shunt operation and the improvement of motor symptoms and might be a predictor of successful decompression. Transcallosal inhibition could be elicited in all patients. The measurements of TI lay within the normal range except the duration, which was prolonged in 73% of 15 patients before shunt operation as a probable indicator of an increased dispersion of callosal conduction. The normalization of the area and shape of the CC after shunt operation and the normal corticospinal and callosal conduction times exclude degeneration, demyelination or functional block of a large proportion of callosal or corticospinal tract fibres or a substantial loss of nerve cells in motor cortex.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2003

Two brothers with findings resembling congenital intrauterine infection-like syndrome (pseudo-TORCH syndrome).

Hans Knoblauch; Cornelia Tennstedt; Wolfgang Brueck; Hannes Hammer; Tom Vulliamy; Inderjeet Dokal; Rüdiger Lehmann; Folker Hanefeld; Sigrid Tinschert

Clinical, pathological, and X‐ray findings of two brothers with features resembling congenital intrauterine infection‐like syndrome are presented. Extensive screening for intrauterine infection was performed. Nevertheless all confirmatory tests were normal. Both brothers showed extensive intra‐ and extra‐cranial calcifications, thrombocytopenia, a septum pellucidum cyst, one‐sided paresis of the diaphragm, and metaphyseal changes on X‐ray scans resembling intrauterine infection. Within the first days of life, they developed seizures and died from severe cerebral hemorrhage. The MRI scan of the brain showed cerebellar hypoplasia in one of the boys, while the cerebellum had normal size in the other. No indication of a metabolic disorder, especially in calcium metabolism, was identified. Due to the clinical overlap with Hoyeraal‐Hreidarsson syndrome, mutations in the DKC1 gene (Xq28) and the hTR gene (RNA component of telomerase on chromosome 3q) have been excluded. The parents are non‐consanguineous and further family history was unremarkable. The findings in these boys overlap with features described in congenital intrauterine infection‐like syndrome (pseudo‐TORCH syndrome).


Acta Radiologica | 2001

Assessment of the arteriovenous cerebrovascular system by multi-slice CT. A single-bolus, monophasic protocol.

Randolf Klingebiel; C. Zimmer; P. Rogalla; Dietmar Kivelitz; G. Bohner; R. Götze; Rüdiger Lehmann

Purpose: We present a protocol for the non-invasive angiographic assessment of the arterial and venous cerebrovascular (CV) system by multi-slice CT. Material and Methods: Data acquisition was performed in a multi-slice CT scanner with a scan range from the carotid bifurcation to the vertex and manual scan start following i.v. administration of 120 ml iodinated contrast medium with a flow rate of 4 ml/s. This protocol was applied in 12 patients with symptoms of acute CV insuffiency. Results: In all patients, comprehensive imaging of the arteriovenous CV system was achieved including the common carotid bifurcation, the third segment of the major cerebral arteries, the dural sinus and the internal cerebral veins. Various CV pathologies, such as a territorial artery occlusion, a thrombotic obstruction of the internal carotid artery, an intracranial arteriovenous malformation and a sinus vein thrombosis, were successfully evaluated. Conclusion: Comprehensive assessment of the arteriovenous CV system is possible by the use of a single-bolus, monophasic multi-slice scan technique.


Neurosurgery | 1995

Transcallosal Removal of Lesions Affecting the Third Ventricle: An Anatomic and Clinical Study Anatomical Report: 117

Christian Woiciechowsky; Siegfried Vogel; Rüdiger Lehmann; Johannes Staudt

ABSTRACT: A SERIES OF 54 patients with lesions affecting the third ventricle with a wide range of pathology were operated on by the transcallosal approach. Hydrocephalus was present in 68.5% of all patients, and preoperative shunting was performed in 73.0% of them. Before the partial callosotomy, 16 patients were studied by the use of a cognitive, affective, and behavioral battery, which was repeated 10 and 100 days after the operation. No physiological consequences were ever observed after the partial commissurotomy. The postoperative callosal defect was verified by magnetic resonance imaging. Furthermore, 40 formalin‐fixed brains were sectioned to study the variations of the anterior cerebral arteries. On the other hand, magnetic resonance imaging measurements of the corpus callosum in 40 normal subjects were performed to establish a classification system for the corpus callosal area. The results showed a wide variability of the crosssectional area of the corpus callosum. The differences in the thickness of the truncus were responsible for this variability; the length of the corpus callosum was uniform. This may suggest that subjects with a larger corpus callosum may have more interhemispheric connections with higher specialization of each hemisphere and that a smaller number of callosal connections may correlate with more ipsilateral pathways and more independent hemispheres. The results and the clinical as well as anatomical material indicate that the anterior transcallosal route is a safe and feasible alternative in the management of a wide spectrum of pathological lesions within the third ventricle and deserves preference over the transcortical technique.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2001

Age-related reduction in visually evoked cerebral blood flow responses

Ludwig Niehaus; Rüdiger Lehmann; Simone Röricht; Bernd-Ulrich Meyer

The influence of aging on photoreactive flow changes in the posterior cerebral artery (PCA) was investigated in 38 healthy volunteers aged 20-81 years. Mean blood flow velocity (MBFV) was measured at rest and during 10-Hz photic stimulation by transcranial Doppler sonography. The amplitude of the evoked flow response significantly decreased with age (r = -0.39; P < 0.001). In a group of elderly subjects (60-81 years), the evoked blood flow velocity increase was 10.8 +/- 2.7%, which is less than in young subjects aged 20-39 years (14.7 +/- 4.3%; P = 0.001). We conclude that normal aging affects photoreactive flow changes in the occipital lobe. This may limit the application of functional imaging studies based on measurements of blood flow changes in the elderly.


Acta Oto-laryngologica | 2001

High-resolution petrous bone imaging using multi-slice computerized tomography

Randolf Klingebiel; H.-C. Bauknecht; P. Rogalla; U. Bockmühl; O. Kaschke; Mechthild Werbs; Rüdiger Lehmann

Multi-slice computerized tomography (MSCT) is considered to provide superior image quality. We defined a data acquisition protocol for high-resolution (HR) temporal bone imaging using MSCT and assessed its impact on data acquisition and post-processing (PP). The data acquisition protocol was defined in cadaveric phantom studies performed by MSCT and subsequently applied to 38 patients referred for temporal bone assessment. The parameters image quality and diagnostic value of MSCT data were assessed for the cross-sectional source images as well as for 2-dimensional (2D) reformations and 3-dimensional (3D) reconstructions by 3 radiologists by comparison with incremental HR scans of 17 patients with suspected middle ear disorders. The data acquisition protocol yielded HR images with an excellent detail resolution and a comparable image quality of cross-sectional scans and related orthogonal reformations. MSCT achieved higher scores for image quality and diagnostic value (p < 0.001, t-test) than incremental HR CT with regard to both 2D and 3D reconstructions. MSCT improves the image quality of HR cross-sectional scans as well as that of 2D and 3D PP techniques in petrous bone imaging. The radiation exposure of the eye lenses is increased by MSCT as gantry angulation is not yet possible in the helical scan mode.Multi-slice computerized tomography (MSCT) is considered to provide superior image quality. We defined a data acquisition protocol for high-resolution (HR) temporal bone imaging using MSCT and assessed its impact on data acquisition and post-processing (PP). The data acquisition protocol was defined in cadaveric phantom studies performed by MSCT and subsequently applied to 38 patients referred for temporal bone assessment. The parameters image quality and diagnostic value of MSCT data were assessed for the cross-sectional source images as well as for 2-dimensional (2D) reformations and 3-dimensional (3D) reconstructions by 3 radiologists by comparison with incremental HR scans of 17 patients with suspected middle ear disorders. The data acquisition protocol yielded HR images with an excellent detail resolution and a comparable image quality of cross-sectional scans and related orthogonal reformations. MSCT achieved higher scores for image quality and diagnostic value (p < 0.001, t-test) than incremental HR CT with regard to both 2D and 3D reconstructions. MSCT improves the image quality of HR cross-sectional scans as well as that of 2D and 3D PP techniques in petrous bone imaging. The radiation exposure of the eye lenses is increased by MSCT as gantry angulation is not yet possible in the helical scan mode.


Otology & Neurotology | 2001

Virtual endoscopy of the tympanic cavity based on high-resolution multislice computed tomographic data.

Randolf Klingebiel; Hans-Christian Bauknecht; O. Kaschke; Mechthild Werbs; B. Freigang; H. Behrbohm; Patrik Rogalla; Rüdiger Lehmann

Objective This study was designed to assess the value of high-resolution multislice computed tomography (MSCT) data of the petrous bone for the virtual endoscopic visualization of the tympanic cavity. Background The recently introduced MSCT technology has improved spatial resolution in the z axis as well as scan speed in computed tomography. Three-dimensional rendering of high-resolution MSCT data of the petrous bone may be expected to provide endoluminal views of superior image quality, thus competing with transtympanic endoscopy (otoendoscopy). Setting This study was conducted at a university teaching hospital. Materials and Methods Cadaveric phantom studies in a MSCT scanner were performed to define a data acquisition protocol, combining adequate detail resolution with low tube current. Subsequently, the cadaveric phantom underwent otoendoscopy. The postprocessing parameters of the three-dimensional rendering protocol were chosen to produce views closely resembling the corresponding otoendoscopic images. High-resolution data from 18 patients with pathologic conditions of the middle ear, as suggested by clinical findings and assessment of cross-sectional data, were postprocessed using the volume rendering technique to generate standardized virtual endoscopic views. A total of 36 virtual endoscopic scans of the tympanic cavity were generated. Results With regard to intermediate and high-density structures, virtual endoscopic images, based on MSCT data, yielded endoluminal views closely resembling corresponding otoendoscopic views. Virtual endoscopy seems useful for imaging ossicular pathologic conditions such as dysplasia and chain disruption as well as for assessing patient status before and after otosurgery. Conclusion MSCT data sets allow for generating virtual endoscopic views closely resembling otoendoscopic images. The technique is especially useful when ossicular pathologic changes are present as well as for preoperative and postoperative imaging of otologic procedures.

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Dietmar Kivelitz

Humboldt University of Berlin

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P. Rogalla

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Siegfried Vogel

Humboldt University of Berlin

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C. Zimmer

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Johannes Staudt

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Sigrid Tinschert

Humboldt University of Berlin

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