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Dive into the research topics where Siegbert Faiss is active.

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Featured researches published by Siegbert Faiss.


International Journal of Colorectal Disease | 2008

Through the endoscope balloon dilation of ileocolonic strictures: prognostic factors, complications, and effectiveness

Jörg C. Hoffmann; Frank Heller; Siegbert Faiss; Bernd von Lampe; Anton J. Kroesen; Ulrich Wahnschaffe; Jörg-Dieter Schulzke; Martin Zeitz; Christian Bojarski

Background/aimsAbout half of all Crohn’s disease (CD) patients undergo surgery at some point, many because of strictures. An alternative possibility is to dilate strictures endoscopically. However, little is known about prognostic factors.Patients and methodsThirty-two patients with primary CD (n = 2), radiogenic strictures (n = 1), or postoperative strictures (27 because of CD; 2 after resection because of cancer), were planned to undergo colonoscopic dilatation of which 25 patients were dilated (10 men; 15 women; median age 48). Length of stenosis, diameter of stricture, balloon size, smoking status, ulcer in the stricture, passage postdilatation, hemoglobin level, complications, redilatation, and subsequent surgery were recorded. Only patients with at least 6 months follow up were included.ResultsFive out of 32 patients had no stenosis, marked inflammation, or fistulas adjacent to the stricture. One patient each had a long stricture (8cm) or a filiform stenosis ruling out dilatation [technical success, 25/27 (92.6%)]. Among these 25 patients, 39 colonoscopies with 51 dilatations were performed. After a single dilatation, 52% were asymptomatic while 48% needed another intervention, half of them surgery. Bleeding without need for transfusion occurred in 3 out of 39 colonoscopies and one perforation required surgery. Significant prognostic factors were smoking and ulcers in the stricture (P < 0.05 each). Some ulcers led to intussusception requiring surgery in spite of good dilatation results.ConclusionThrough the endoscope balloon stricture dilatation is a relatively safe and often effective treatment modality in ileocolonic strictures. The presence of ulcers in the stricture have a worse outcome as do smokers.


British Journal of Cancer | 2002

Screening for oesophageal neoplasia in patients with head and neck cancer

Hans Scherübl; B von Lampe; Siegbert Faiss; P. Däubler; P. Bohlmann; T. Plath; H.-D. Foss; H. Scherer; A. Strunz; B. Hoffmeister; H. Stein; Martin Zeitz; Ernst-Otto Riecken

Due to advanced disease at the time of diagnosis the prognosis of oesophageal cancer is generally poor. As mass screening for oesophageal cancer is neither feasible nor reasonable, high-risk groups should be identified and surveilled. The aim of this study was to define the risk of oesophageal cancer in patients with (previous) head and neck cancer. A total of 148 patients with (previous) head and neck cancer were prospectively screened for oesophageal cancer by video-oesophagoscopy and random oesophageal biopsies. Even in a macroscopically normal looking oesophagus, four biopsy specimens were taken every 3 cm throughout the entire length of the squamous oesophagus. Low- or high-grade squamous cell dysplasia was detected histologically in 10 of the 148 patients (6.8%). All but one dysplasias were diagnosed synchronously with the head and neck cancers. In addition, oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma was diagnosed in 11 of the 148 patients (7.4%). Most invasive cancers (63.6%) occurred metachronously. The risk of squamous cell neoplasia of the oesophagus is high in patients with (previous) head and neck cancer. Surveillance is recommended in this high-risk group.


Digestion | 2002

Pancreatic Panniculitis in an 88-Year-Old Man with Neuroendocrine Carcinoma

Jan C. Preiss; Siegbert Faiss; Christoph Loddenkemper; Martin Zeitz; Rainer Duchmann

Pancreatic panniculitis is a rare complication that occurs in 0.3–3% of patients with pancreatic diseases. Most of the cases reported to date were associated with adenocarcinoma and acute or chronic pancreatitis. We here present an 88-year-old man who was admitted to our institution with a nonfunctional neuroendocrine carcinoma of the pancreas. He subsequently developed pancreatic panniculitis and arthritis. Treatment with octreotide did not have an effect neither on progression of the carcinoma nor on development of new skin lesions. Two months after the diagnosis of pancreatic panniculitis had been made, the patient died from progressing carcinoma. A review of the literature shows that there is no congruent hypothesis for the pathogenesis of pancreatic panniculitis. Vascular damage seems to induce lipolysis by pancreatic enzymes. This eventually leads to fat necrosis. The diversity of disorders that can go along with pancreatic panniculitis suggests an unspecific damage of pancreatic tissue as a first step in the chain of events.


World Journal of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy | 2014

Management of early asymptomatic gastrointestinal stromal tumors of the stomach.

Hans Scherübl; Siegbert Faiss; Wolfram-Trudo Knoefel; Eva Wardelmann

Gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST) are the most common mesenchymal tumors of the digestive tract. Approximately two thirds of clinically manifest tumors occur in the stomach, nearly one third in the small bowel, and the rest in the colorectal region with a few cases in the esophagus. GIST originate within the smooth muscle layer in the wall of the tubular gastrointestinal tract and grow mostly toward the serosa, far less often toward the mucosa. In the latter case, ulceration may develop and can cause gastrointestinal bleeding as the cardinal symptom. However, most GIST of the stomach are asymptomatic. They are increasingly detected incidentally as small intramural or submucosal tumors during endoscopy and particularly during endoscopic ultrasound. Epidemiological and molecular genetic findings suggest that early asymptomatic GIST of the stomach (< 1 cm) show self-limiting tumorigenesis. Thus, early (< 1 cm) asymptomatic gastric GIST (synonym: micro-GIST) are found in 20%-30% of the elderly. The mostly elderly people with early gastric GIST have an excellent GIST-specific prognosis. Patients with early GIST of the stomach can therefore be managed by endoscopic surveillance.


World Journal of Gastroenterology | 2017

New flexible endoscopic controlled stapler technique for the treatment of Zenker's diverticulum: A case series

Johanna Wilmsen; Robert Baumbach; Dietmar Stüker; Vincens Weingart; Frank Neser; Stefan Karl Gölder; Christof Pfundstein; Ellen Claudia Nötzel; Thomas Rösch; Siegbert Faiss

AIM To report about the combination and advantages of a stapler-assisted diverticulotomy performed by flexible endoscopy. METHODS From November 2014 till December 2015 17 patients (8 female, 9 male, average age 69.8 years) with a symptomatic Zenker diverticulum (mean size 3.5 cm) were treated by inserting a new 5 mm fully rotatable surgical stapler (MicroCutter30 Xchange, Cardica Inc.) next to an ultrathin flexible endoscope through an overtube. The Patients were under conscious sedation with the head reclined in left position, the stapler placed centrally and pushed forward to the bottom of the diverticulum. The septum was divided by the staple rows under flexible endoscopic control. RESULTS In eleven patients (64.7%) the stapler successfully divided the septum completely. Mean procedure time was 21 min, medium size of the septum was 2.8 cm (range 1.5 cm to 4 cm). In four patients the septum was shorter than 3 cm, in seven longer than 3 cm. To divide the septum, averagely 1.3 stapler cartridges were used. Two minor bleedings occurred. Major adverse events like perforation or secondary haemorrhage did not occur. After an average time of two days patients were discharged from the hospital. In 6 patients (35.3%) the stapler failed due to a thick septum or insufficient reclination of the head. Follow up endoscopy was performed after an average of two months in 9 patients; 4 patients (44.4%) were free of symptoms, 5 patients (55.6%) stated an improvement. A relapse of symptoms did not occur. CONCLUSION Flexible endoscopic Zenker diverticulotomy by using a surgical stapler is a new, safe and efficient treatment modality. A simultaneously tissue opening and occlusion prevents major complications.


Surgical Endoscopy and Other Interventional Techniques | 2014

Interventional endoscopic ultrasonography: an overview of safety and complications

María Victoria Alvarez-Sánchez; Christian Jenssen; Siegbert Faiss; Bertrand Napoleon


Surgical Endoscopy and Other Interventional Techniques | 2009

EUS-guided Trucut needle biopsies as first-line diagnostic method for patients with intestinal or extraintestinal mass lesions

Ulrich Wahnschaffe; Reiner Ullrich; Julia Mayerle; Markus M. Lerch; Martin Zeitz; Siegbert Faiss


Gastrointestinal Endoscopy | 2005

Double-balloon enteroscopy for the detection of midgut carcinoids

Hans Scherübl; Siegbert Faiss; Rebecca Tschöpe; Martin Zeitz


Zeitschrift Fur Gastroenterologie | 2004

Current diagnosis and therapy of esophageal carcinoma

Mühr-Wilkenshoff F; Stahl M; Siegbert Faiss; Martin Zeitz; Hans Scherübl


Gastrointestinal Endoscopy | 2017

1151 Multicenter Feasibility Study of Combined Injection and Argon Plasma Coagulation (Hybrid-APC) in the Ablation Therapy of Neoplastic Barrett Esophagus

Thomas Rösch; Hendrik Manner; Andrea May; Mate Knabe; Guido Schachschal; Hanno Ehlken; Horst Neuhaus; Torsten Beyna; Jacques J. Bergman; Bas L. Weusten; Oliver Pech; Siegbert Faiss; Mario Anders; Christian Ell

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Andrea May

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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