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Dive into the research topics where Thomas Kapapa is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas Kapapa.


Acta Radiologica | 2011

Variations of the aortic arch – a study on the most common branching patterns:

Marguerite Müller; Bernd Schmitz; Sandra Pauls; Melanie Schick; Stefan Röhrer; Thomas Kapapa; Wiebke Schlötzer

Background Anatomical variants of the aortic arch and its branching patterns often appear as an incidental finding during routine computed tomography (CT) scanning. These variations can be of relevance when performing angiography or endovascular interventions and may cause symptoms such as dysphagia. Purpose To analyze common anatomical variations found within the arteries originating from the aortic arch in patients using contrast CT imaging techniques. Material and Methods A total of 2033 contrast CT scans were analyzed. To obtain a truly representative sample, cases were chosen from different hospital departments without previous knowledge of the patient history. Results The total percentage of variations within the analyzed patients was 13.3%. In 8.0% a truncus bicaroticus was found. 4.2% of the patients showed a left vertebral artery originating directly from the aortic arch, mostly proximal, and in 1 case distal to the left subclavian artery. In 1.0% we found an aberrant right subclavian artery. We also found a single case of a right descending aortic arch. Conclusion Variations of the aortic arch and its branching are frequently found, mostly as an incidental finding during routine diagnostic scanning. A contrast-enhanced CT scan is a good method with which to study the aortic arch and its associated branching pattern.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2010

Head Trauma in Children, Part 3: Clinical and Psychosocial Outcome After Head Trauma in Children

Thomas Kapapa; Ulricke Pfister; Kathrin König; Michael Sasse; Dieter Woischneck; Hans E. Heissler; Eckhard Rickels

With the aim of determining long-term outcome, the authors approached 38 families (average 2.1 years after trauma) with a questionnaire, following the acute-clinical treatment of head trauma of their children. Long-term damage was restricted almost exclusively to patients presenting with a Glasgow Coma Score ≤8. Paresis (16%), cranial nerve damage (13%), incontinence (5%), or coordinative disturbances (18%) continued. The older children stated that they influenced their life to a great extent (11%). Furthermore, many had mental and cognitive problems that occur quite frequently even in children with light head trauma and often only manifest after release from hospital. This causes problems and results in inferior performance (26%), especially at school, which is further complicated through lengthy periods of absence. The parents, especially, mentioned behavioral problems such as social withdrawal or aggressive demeanor, which led to tension also inside the family. A persistent vegetative state is rare after head trauma in children.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2010

Head Trauma in Children, Part 2: Course and Discharge With Outcome

Thomas Kapapa; Kathrin König; Ulricke Pfister; Michael Sasse; Dieter Woischneck; Hans E. Heissler; Eckhard Rickels

To minimize the secondary brain damage, we analyzed the effect of cerebral perfusion pressure—orientated management and tried to find factors of clinical management and biochemical findings that influence clinical, cognitive, and psychosocial outcome. Management at intensive care unit was standardized. A standardized (short form 36 health survey) and nonstandardized split questionnaire explored long-term outcome. Glutamic-oxaloacetic-transaminase, creatine kinase MB or glucose are markers for bad outcome (P < .05). Patients with cerebral perfusion pressure values below the recommended standard for just a single occurrence had significantly worse outcome (P = .0132). Mean arterial pressure, central venous pressure, and heart rate alone do not correlate with outcome. At least 1 occurrence of mean arterial pressure and central venous pressure below the lower limits resulted in a poor outcome (P = .035). Cerebral perfusion pressure—guided therapy seems to prevent further brain damage and results in outcome scores that are comparable to those children with head trauma exhibiting symptoms of mild brain edema.


Neurology Research International | 2014

Desmopressin Acetate in Intracranial Haemorrhage

Thomas Kapapa; Stefan Röhrer; Sabine Struve; Matthias Petscher; Ralph König; Christian Rainer Wirtz; Dieter Woischneck

Introduction. The secondary increase in the size of intracranial haematomas as a result of spontaneous haemorrhage or trauma is of particular relevance in the event of prior intake of platelet aggregation inhibitors. We describe the effect of desmopressin acetate as a means of temporarily stabilising the platelet function. Patients and Methods. The platelet function was analysed in 10 patients who had received single (N = 4) or multiple (N = 6) doses of acetylsalicylic acid and 3 patients (control group) who had not taken acetylsalicylic acid. All subjects had suffered intracranial haemorrhage. Analysis was performed before, half an hour and three hours after administration of desmopressin acetate. Statistical analysis was performed by applying a level of significance of P ≤ 0.05. Results. (1) Platelet function returned to normal 30 minutes after administration of desmopressin acetate. (2) The platelet function worsened again after three hours. (3) There were no complications related to electrolytes or fluid balance. Conclusion. Desmopressin acetate can stabilise the platelet function in neurosurgical patients who have received acetylsalicylic acid prior to surgery without causing transfusion-related side effects or a loss of time. The effect is, however, limited and influenced by the frequency of drug intake. Further controls are needed in neurosurgical patients.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2013

Brain metastasis in pancreatic cancer.

Johannes Lemke; Jan Scheele; Thomas Kapapa; Christian Rainer Wirtz; Doris Henne-Bruns; Marko Kornmann

Pancreatic cancer is a fatal disease with a 5-year survival rate below 5%. Most patients are diagnosed at an advanced tumor stage and existence of distant metastases. However, involvement of the central nervous system is rare in pancreatic cancer. We retrospectively analyzed all cases of brain metastases in pancreatic cancer reported to date focusing on patient characteristics, clinical appearance, therapy and survival. Including our own, 12 cases of brain metastases originating from pancreatic cancer were identified. In three patients brain metastases were the first manifestation of pancreatic cancer. All other patients developed brain metastases during their clinical course. In most cases, the disease progressed rapidly and the patients died within weeks or months. However, two patients showed long-term survival. Of note, both patients received resection of the pancreatic cancer as well as curative resection of the metachronous brain metastases. Brain metastases in pancreatic cancer are a rare condition and usually predict a very poor prognosis. However, there is evidence that resection of brain metastases of pancreatic cancer can be immensely beneficial to patient’s survival, even with the chance for cure. Therefore, a surgical approach in metastatic pancreatic cancer should be considered in selective cases.


World Neurosurgery | 2013

Health-Related Quality of Life After Spontaneous Subarachnoid Hemorrhage Measured in a Recent Patient Population

Martin Tjahjadi; Christian Heinen; Ralph König; Eckhard Rickels; Christian Rainer Wirtz; Dieter Woischneck; Thomas Kapapa

OBJECTIVE This study sought to determine the impact of spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) on health-related quality of life (HRQOL). METHODS Data were taken retrospectively from 601 patients (219 male, 382 female) treated between 1998 and 2008. Questionnaires concerning HRQOL were circulated prospectively, and the responses from 253 patients (81 male, 172 female) were analyzed. The questionnaires comprised the standardized Short-Form 36 (SF-36) and Short-Form 12 (SF-12) Health Surveys, a number of nonstandardized questions, and visual analogue scales. Statistical analysis of the results was exploratory, using unifactorial ANOVA (Scheffe), multivariate analyses of variance. RESULTS The HRQOL is reduced considerably by SAH and remains so for a period of 10 years. Physical and emotional domains are primarily affected, but also cognitive functions, including memory and concentration in particular. Similarly, certain roles are affected that prove difficult to rehabilitate after acute care and cause serious debility in the long term. The Hunt and Hess Scale, Glasgow Outcome Scale, and seizures were found to have the greatest impact on HRQOL. CONCLUSIONS Documentation of HRQOL after 6 to 12 months is useful because patients are often found to have a diminished HRQOL in the absence of a clear physical impairment. Because psychological, emotional, cognitive, and social functioning influence HRQOL in the long term, efforts at rehabilitation should focus in particular on improving such factors. Documentation of HRQOL is a useful, additive tool for consolidating and evaluating the outcome, and a treatment end point after SAH, respectively.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2010

Head trauma in children, part 1: admission, diagnostics, and findings.

Thomas Kapapa; Kathrin König; Ulrike Pfister; Michael Sasse; Dieter Woischneck; Hans E. Heissler; Eckhard Rickels

The objective of this study is to describe and to determine the preclinical situation and early in-clinical situation, diagnostic findings, and factors influencing the outcome of severe head trauma in children. Records of 48 children (0-16 years) were analyzed during a 3-year interval. Correlations with the outcome (Glasgow Outcome Scale) were determined by focusing on different scales, clinical findings, biochemistry, and clinical course features. The initial shock index had a major relevance (P = .0089). Systolic blood pressure (P = .0002) and bradycardia (P = .035) were important factors. Assessing the severity of trauma according to the Glasgow Coma Score, the most accurate parameter for outcome is based on the detailed quality of ‘‘eye opening’’ (P = .0155). Pupillary motoricity at the accident site (P = .002) and emergency room (P = .0004) are strong predictors. Preclinical measurements of stabilization and oxygenation have the same impact as the in-clinical management.


British Journal of Neurosurgery | 2014

Cognitive performance following spontaneous subarachnoid haemorrhage versus other forms of intracranial haemorrhage.

Christine Brand; Burkhard Alber; Anne-Katharina Fladung; Katharina Knauer; Ralph König; Annette Oechsner; Inga L. Schneider; Hayrettin Tumani; Bernhard Widder; Christian Rainer Wirtz; Dieter Woischneck; Thomas Kapapa

Abstract Objective. The exact cause of cognitive deficits following intracranial haemorrhage is unclear. This prospective study examines the abilities after spontaneous subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH), intracerebral haemorrhage (ICH) and chronic subdural haematoma (SDH) to elucidate the cognitive outcome. Patients and methods. Ninety-nine patients with SAH (N = 60), ICH (N = 25), and SDH (N = 14) were followed up for an average of 6 and 12 months post-haemorrhage. Cognitive tests were used to examine attention, memory, concentration, and executive function. Following were used for analysis: 1. the percentage of patients falling below the 25th percentile per test, 2. the general development from the first to second test point and 3. the incidence of significant changes between the test points. Significance was established as p ≤ 0.05. Results. All three types of haemorrhage resulted in deficits as concerns abstract language (53%–75%). The processing speed was below the normal levels in more than 70% of the patients tested. The cognitive performance of SAH patients was similar to that of patients with SDH and ICH patients after 6 months. The number of patients with outcomes falling below the 25th percentile (to some extent more than 75% in patients post-SAH) is high in all patient groups and mostly decreases over the course. Nevertheless, patients with SAH reveal improvements in many more areas than with ICH and SDH (p ≤ 0.006). Conclusions. The cognitive impairments following SAH, ICH and SDH deficits appear to develop in a similar way regardless of the type of haemorrhage. Cognitive improvement is most pronounced in patients with SAH.


Surgical Neurology | 2009

The use of recombinant activated factor VII in neurosurgery

Thomas Kapapa; Kathrin König; Hans E. Heissler; Christiane Schatzmann; Christoph A. Tschan; Michael Perl; Mario von Depka; Matthias Zumkeller; Eckhard Rickels

BACKGROUND Bleeding complications in neurosurgery often take alarming proportions without major hemodynamic effect or impairment of coagulation physiology because severe neurologic deficits are to be expected. Any measures used to stabilize or normalize coagulation are therefore of great interest. Administration of packed red cells, fresh frozen plasma, and platelet concentrates is associated with volume loading, which is suspected to multiply the secondary brain damage, for example, by the development of an edema. In this respect, the administration of rFVIIa may develop into a new option associated with low-volume administration. CASE DESCRIPTIONS We report on 5 neurosurgical patients to whom rFVIIa was given at doses of 51 to 202 microg/kg of body weight for the treatment of severe intraoperative bleeding (n = 3) or as prophylaxis of bleeding (n = 2). The operation was completed successfully in all patients after administration of rFVIIa, with stabilization of the coagulation status. CONCLUSION Therefore, reported cases constitute an approach in treatment and prophylaxis of bleeding complications in neurosurgery. There are reports of thromboembolic events in use of rFVIIa, particularly in unlabeled use. But according to our findings and current literature, there is no evidence of higher risk of thromboembolic adverse events in treatment with rFVIIa. However, the number of patients presented does not allow any final assessment to be made as to whether the properties of rFVIIa are of particular benefit for neurosurgical patients. Further studies with appropriate study design are required to verify effects observed in this investigation.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2015

Head injury in children: has a change in circumstances caused an increase in treatment numbers?

Andrej Pala; Melanie Kapapa; Carsten Posovszky; Götz Röderer; Ralph König; Dieter Woischneck; Christian Rainer Wirtz; Thomas Kapapa

The number of hospitalizations for head injuries in children is rising. The exact causes remain unclear. We analyzed data of children aged between 0 and 18 years who sustained a head injury between 2010 and 2011. The analysis focused on data related to demographics, trauma mechanism, clinical course, results of imaging scans, concomitant injuries, and outcome. A total of 794 inpatient cases of head injury were treated. The leading mechanism of injury was a fall (at home) primarily at the age of 1 to 4 years (46.5%), with the majority of the children sustaining a mild brain injury (764, 96.2%). Neurosurgery was performed in 21 (2.64%) cases; average hospital stay was 2.9 days (range: 0-68 days). This study is not able to confirm that children are increasingly being brought to the hospital by their parents because of new trauma mechanisms or parents’ uncertainty, nor can we confirm that the number of nonaccidental injuries is rising.

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Dieter Woischneck

Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg

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Raimund Firsching

Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg

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