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Featured researches published by Thomas Werncke.


European Radiology | 2017

Chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension: Evaluation of 2D-perfusion angiography in patients who undergo balloon pulmonary angioplasty

Sabine K. Maschke; Julius Renne; Thomas Werncke; Karen M. Olsson; Marius M. Hoeper; Frank Wacker; Bernhard C. Meyer; J Hinrichs

ObjectiveTo evaluate the feasibility of 2D-perfusion angiography (2D-PA) in order to quantify perfusion changes of the lung parenchyma pre- and post-balloon pulmonary angioplasty (BPA).MethodsThirty consecutive interventions in 16 patients with 99 treated pulmonary artery segments were included. To quantify changes in pulmonary blood flow using 2D-PA, the acquired digital subtraction angiographies (DSA) pre- and post-BPA were post-processed. A reference ROI in the treated pulmonary artery and a distal target ROI in the lung parenchyma were placed in corresponding areas on DSA pre- and post-BPA. Time to peak (TTP), peak density (PD) and area under the curve (AUC) were assessed. The ratios reference ROI to target ROI (TTPparenchyma/TTPinflow; PDparenchyma/PDinflow; AUCparenchyma/AUCinflow) were calculated. Relative differences of the 2D-PA parameters were correlated to changes in the pulmonary-flow-grade-score.ResultsThe pulmonary-flow-grade-score improved after BPA (p<0.0001). Likewise, the ratio TTPparenchyma/TTPinflow shortened by 10% (p=0.0002), the PDparenchyma/PDinflow increased by 46% (p<0.0001) and the AUCparenchyma/AUCinflow increased by 36% (p<0.0001). A significant correlation between changes in the pulmonary-flow-grade-score and changes in PDparenchyma/PDinflow (ρ=0.48, p<0.0001) and AUCparenchyma/AUCinflow (ρ=0.31, p=0.0018) was observed.ConclusionQuantification of pulmonary perfusion pre- and post-BPA using 2D-PA is feasible and has the potential to improve monitoring of BPA.Key points• Quantification of BPA results by use of 2D-PA is feasible.• 2D-PA allows objective assessment of changes in lung parenchymal perfusion.• 2D-PA has the potential to optimize BPA.


European Radiology | 2018

C-Arm computed tomography (CACT)-guided balloon pulmonary angioplasty (BPA): Evaluation of patient safety and peri- and post-procedural complications

Sabine K. Maschke; J Hinrichs; Julius Renne; Thomas Werncke; Hinrich B. Winther; Kristina Ringe; Karen M. Olsson; Marius M. Hoeper; Frank Wacker; Bernhard C. Meyer

AimTo assess the frequency and severity of complications of balloon pulmonary angioplasty (BPA) using C-arm computed tomography (CACT) guidance.Material and methods266 consecutive interventions in 67 patients (42 females, mean age 66 ± 13 years) were included. Selective CACT was acquired prior to the intervention for three-dimensional (3D) guidance and to select appropriate balloon size based on the measured vessel diameter. Complications during and after the procedure, the need for further interventions and the impact on patient safety and outcome were assessed and categorised according to the SIR Classification System to Complications by Outcome (Grade A–F).ResultsOverall, 237 interventions were conducted without any complications (89.1%). Minor complications not requiring additional treatment occurred during or after 25 procedures (9.4%), including recurring dry cough in four patients during a total of 11 interventions (4.1%) (Grade A), three focal dissections of the targeted pulmonary artery (1.1%), four cases of pulmonary haemorrhage (1.5%), one case of reperfusion oedema (0.4%) and six cases of post-interventional short-term hemoptysis (2.3%) (Grade B). Four cases of major complications requiring additional treatment were observed (1.5%): one case of pulmonary haemorrhage (0.4%) and two cases of post-interventional haemoptysis (0.8%), all resolved after medical therapy without requiring further intervention, and one case of atrial tachycardia induced during catheterisation, subsequently requiring pharmacological cardioversion (0.4%) (Grade C). No fatal or life-threatening peri- or post-interventional complications or mortality were observed (Grade D–F).ConclusionBPA performed under CACT guidance appears to be a safe procedure with a low risk of severe complications.Key Points• CACT guidance of BPA is safe and successful.• CACT-guided BPA procedures have a low complication profile.• CACT guidance is a valuable tool to navigate BPA.


European Journal of Radiology | 2018

Virtual single source CT using dual source acquisition: Clinical applicability in run-off CT-angiography for intra-individual comparison of different scan protocols.

Thomas Werncke; J Hinrichs; Babak Alikhani; Sabine K. Maschke; Frank Wacker; Bernhard C. Meyer

PURPOSE Virtual single source computed tomography (VSS-CT) acquisition on a dual source CT (DSCT) has been demonstrated to allow for dose-neutral intra-individual comparison of three acquisition protocols at different radiation dose levels (RDL) within one acquisition in a phantom. The purpose of this study was twofold: first to evaluate the applicability of VSS-CT in patients and second to optimize the task-dependent trade-off between radiation dose and image quality of lower extremity CT angiography (run-off CTA). MATERIAL AND METHODS In this IRB-approved prospective study 52 patients underwent run-off CTA between 06/2012 and 06/2013. VSS-CT acquisition was conducted using a first generation DSCT applying equal X-ray tube settings (120 kVp), collimation (2 × 32 × 0.6 mm), and slice thickness (1.0 mm) but different effective tube current-time products (tube A: 80 mAs, tube B: 40 mAs). Three different image datasets representing three different radiation dose levels (RDL40, RDL80, RDL120) were reconstructed using a soft kernel from the raw data of tube B, tube A or both tubes combined. Dose length products (DLP) of each raw data set were documented. Quantitative image quality (IQ) was assessed for five anatomical levels using image noise and contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR). To investigate dose efficiency of each acquisition, the dose-weighted CNR (CNRD) was determined. Qualitative IQ was evaluated by two blinded readers in consensus using a 5-point Likert scale and compared with a Friedman- and posthoc Wilcoxon test. RESULTS Mean DLP was 200 ± 40, 400 ± 90 and 600 ± 130 mGy·cm for the RDL40, RDL80 and RDL120, respectively. Image noise and CNR were best for RDL120 and decreased significantly for RDL80 and RDL40, independent of the anatomic level (p < 0.001). CNRD showed no significant differences at the abdominal and pelvic level between the investigated radiation dose levels. However, for thigh to foot level a significant increase of CNRD was noted between RDL120, RDL80 and RDL40. Significant differences of qualitative IQ were observed between RDL120 and RDL40 from the abdominal to the foot level, whereas no difference was seen for the other dose levels. CONCLUSION Radiation dose splitting with VSS-CT can be applied to run-off CTA facilitating intra-individual comparison of different acquisition protocols without additional radiation exposure. Furthermore, a radiation dose reduction potential for run-off CTA of approximately 1/3 as compared to the acquisition protocol recommended by the manufacturer could be identified in this study.


European Journal of Radiology | 2017

Ultra-high resolution C-Arm CT arthrography of the wrist: Radiation dose and image quality compared to conventional multidetector computed tomography

Thomas Werncke; Lena Sonnow; Bernhard C. Meyer; Matthias Lüpke; J Hinrichs; Frank Wacker; Christian von Falck

OBJECTIVE Objective of this phantom and cadaveric study was to compare the effective radiation dose (ED) and image quality (IQ) between C-arm computed tomography (CACT) using an ultra-high resolution 1×1 binning with a standard 16-slice CT (MDCT) arthrography of the wrist. METHODS ED was determined with thermoluminescence dosimetry using an anthropomorphic phantom and different patient positions. Imaging was conducted in 10 human cadaveric wrists after tri-compartmental injection of diluted iodinated contrast material and a wire phantom. IQ of MDCT was compared with CACT reconstructed with a soft (CACT1) and sharp (CACT2) kernel. High and low contrast resolution was determined. Three radiologists assessed IQ of wrist structures and occurrence of image artifacts using a 5-point Likert scale. RESULTS ED of MDCT was comparable to standard CACT (4.3μSv/3.7μSv). High contrast resolution was best for CACT2, decreased to CACT1 and MDCT. Low contrast resolution increased between CACT2 and MDCT (P<0.001). IQ was best for CACT2 (1.3±0.5), decreased to CACT1 (1.9±0.6) and MDCT (3.5±0.6). Non-compromising artifacts were only reported for CACT. CONCLUSIONS The results of this phantom and cadaveric study indicate that ultra-high resolution C-Arm CT arthrography of the wrist bears the potential to outperform MDCT arthrography in terms of image quality and workflow at the cost of mildly increasing image artifacts while radiation dose to the patient is comparably low for both, MDCT and C-Arm CT.


Rofo-fortschritte Auf Dem Gebiet Der Rontgenstrahlen Und Der Bildgebenden Verfahren | 2016

C-Arm Computed Tomography Adds Diagnostic Information in Patients with Chronic Thromboembolic Pulmonary Hypertension and a Positive V/Q SPECT

J Hinrichs; Thomas Werncke; T Kaireit; Marius M. Hoeper; Karen M. Olsson; Jan Christopher Kamp; Frank Wacker; Frank M. Bengel; Christian von Falck; Imke Schatka; Bernhard C. Meyer


Radiography | 2017

Impact of CT parameters on the physical quantities related to image quality for two MDCT scanners using the ACR accreditation phantom: A phantom study

Babak Alikhani; Leila Jamali; Hans-Jürgen Raatschen; Frank Wacker; Thomas Werncke


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2018

3:36 PM Abstract No. 286 Transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt dysfunction: quantitative assessment of perfusion changes using 2D-perfusion angiography following shunt revision

S. Maschke; Thomas Werncke; Julius Renne; S. Marquardt; Frank Wacker; B Meyer; J Hinrichs


European Journal of Radiology | 2018

Correlation of size-dependent conversion factor and body-mass-index using size-specific dose estimates formalism in CT examinations

Babak Alikhani; Tobias Getzin; T Kaireit; Kristina Ringe; Leila Jamali; Frank Wacker; Thomas Werncke; Hans-Jürgen Raatschen


CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology | 2018

CT-Guided Microwave Ablation of Liver Tumors in Anatomically Challenging Locations

Van Dai Vo Chieu; Thomas Werncke; Bennet Hensen; Frank Wacker; Kristina Ringe


Abdominal Radiology | 2018

Comparison of health-related quality of life after transarterial chemoembolization and transarterial radioembolization in patients with unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma

T. Kirchner; Steffen Marquardt; Thomas Werncke; Martha M. Kirstein; T. Brunkhorst; Frank Wacker; Arndt Vogel; Thomas Rodt

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Frank Wacker

Hannover Medical School

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J Hinrichs

Hannover Medical School

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Julius Renne

Hannover Medical School

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