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Dive into the research topics where Walter Möller-Hartmann is active.

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Featured researches published by Walter Möller-Hartmann.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2001

Metabolic and electrophysiological validation of functional MRI

Timo Krings; Mathias Schreckenberger; Veit Rohde; Henrik Foltys; Uwe Spetzger; Sabri O; M. H. T. Reinges; Stefan Kemeny; P T Meyer; Walter Möller-Hartmann; Marcus C. Korinth; Joachim M. Gilsbach; U Buell; Armin Thron

OBJECTIVES Although functional MRI is widely used for preoperative planning and intraoperative neuronavigation, its accuracy to depict the site of neuronal activity is not exactly known. Experience with methods that may validate fMRI data and the results obtained when coregistering fMRI with different preoperative and intraoperative mapping modalities including metabolically based 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose PET, electrophysiologcally based transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), and direct electrical cortical stimulation (DECS) are described. METHODS Fifty patients were included. PET was performed in 30, TMS in 10, and DECS in 41 patients. After coregistration using a frameless stereotactic system, results were grouped into overlapping (<1 cm distance), neighbouring (<2 cm), or contradictory (>2 cm). RESULTS Comparing fMRI with PET, 18 overlapping, seven neighbouring, and one contradictory result were obtained. In four patients no comparison was possible (because of motion artefacts, low signal to noise ratio, and unusual high tumour metabolism in PET). The comparison of TMS and fMRI showed seven overlapping and three neighbouring results. In three patients no DECS results could be obtained. Of the remaining 38 patients, fMRI hand motor tasks were compared with DECS results of the upper limb muscles in 36 patients, and fMRI foot motor tasks were compared with DECS results of the lower limb on 13 occasions. Of those 49 studies, overlapping results were obtained in 31 patients, and neighbouring in 14. On four occasions fMRI did not show functional information (because of motion artefacts and low signal to noise). CONCLUSIONS All validation techniques have intrinsic limitations that restrict their spatial resolution. However, of 50 investigated patients, there was only one in whom results contradictory to fMRI were obtained. Although it is not thought that fMRI can replace the intraoperatively updated functional information (DECS), it is concluded that fMRI is an important adjunct in the preoperative assessment of patients with tumours in the vicinity of the central region.


Cerebrovascular Diseases | 2007

The cologne stroke experience: safety and outcome in 450 patients treated with intravenous thrombolysis

Jan Sobesky; Monika Frackowiak; Olivier Zaro Weber; Moritz Hahn; Walter Möller-Hartmann; Jobst Rudolf; Michael Neveling; Martin Grond; Susanne Schmulling; Andreas H. Jacobs; Wolf-Dieter Heiss

Background: Predictors of outcome and safety in intravenous thrombolysis within 3 h in clinical routine is a matter of ongoing debate. Available reports contain small patient numbers or summarize heterogeneous multicenter data. Methods: Four hundred and fifty patients received intravenous thrombolysis within 3 h after stroke. Pretreatment NIHSS score and detailed medical history were analyzed. Noncontrast CT was performed before thrombolysis, 24–36 h later and in case of clinical deterioration. Symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (SICH; any bleeding with an NIHSS increase of ≧4 points) and clinical outcome (modified Rankin Scale, mRS) after 3 months were recorded. Logistic regression identified parameters predictive of independence (mRS 0–2) and SICH. Results: Median onset to admission, door to needle and onset to treatment time was 75, 50 and 135 min, respectively. Direct presentation by emergency service (64%) was the fastest way of referral. Median pretreatment NIHSS was 11 points. Independence (mRS 0–2) was reached by 53%. Mortality was 11% (7% intracerebral, 4% extracerebral complications). Logistic regression identified low NIHSS, low age and absent diabetes as predictors of independence. Overall hemorrhagic complications and SICH were found in 18 and 4% of the patients, respectively. Extracerebral bleeding complications and allergic reactions were found in 3 and 1%, respectively. Conclusion: This largest single center report presents a sample in the range of the 3 h rt-PA cohort of all randomized controlled trials. Outcome was comparable to randomized studies with a higher rate of independence and a lower rate of mortality and SICH.


Neurosurgery | 2005

TREATMENT OF EXPERIMENTALLY INDUCED ANEURYSMS WITH STENTS

Timo Krings; Franz J. Hans; Walter Möller-Hartmann; A. Brunn; Ruth Thiex; Thomas Schmitz-Rode; Peter Verken; Kira Scherer; Heiko Dreeskamp; Klaus P. Stein; Joachim M. Gilsbach; Armin Thron

OBJECTIVE: Although Guglielmi detachable coil systems have been widely accepted for treatment of intracranial aneurysms, primary stenting of aneurysms using porous stents, stent grafts, or implantation of coils after stent placement constitute emerging techniques in endovascular treatment. The aim of the present study was to use an animal model to investigate these different approaches to treat cerebral aneurysms with regard to the rate of closure and the histopathological changes within the aneurysm cavity and the parent vessel after stent placement. METHODS: We created aneurysms in 30 rabbits by distal ligation and intraluminal incubation of the right common carotid artery with elastase. Ten animals were treated with porous stents alone, 10 animals with stent grafts (covered stents), and 10 animals with stents and additional coiling via the interstices of the stent, which enabled dense packing of the coils. Five animals in each group were observed for 1 month and the other animals for 3 months. Histological analyses were performed, including immunohistochemical investigations for estimating the proliferation of the intima and possible inflammatory infiltration. RESULTS: Covered stents led to a complete and stable aneurysm occlusion with only minimal proliferative carrier vessel wall changes. One covered stent was completely occluded with old thrombus, and the other 9 remained patent. Porous stents occluded two of five aneurysms in the 1-month follow-up group and four of five after 3 months. However, progressive sprouting of neointima inside the carrier vessel that resulted in a stenosis of up to 40% was present. In the Stent + Coil group, one aneurysm showed recanalization after 1 month, and three of five aneurysms were recanalized after 3 months after coil compaction. Moreover, in-stent stenosis of up to 30% was present. CONCLUSION: This study demonstrates the possible shortcomings and problems of emerging stent techniques to treat intracerebral aneurysms, shows where technical advances have to be made, and describes in which cases of aneurysm morphology caution has to be exercised when considering an endovascular approach using stents.


Neuroradiology | 2002

Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy of neurocytoma outside the ventricular region – case report and review of the literature

Walter Möller-Hartmann; Timo Krings; A. Brunn; Marcus C. Korinth; Armin Thron

Abstract. Central neurocytoma is classically considered as an intraventricular benign tumour, largely based on data from small retrospective series and single case reports. We report on a 16-year-old girl who suffered from a large parietooccipital tumour that was diagnosed histologically as central neurocytoma. The features of CT, MRI and proton MR spectroscopy studies are discussed. This is the first report on spectroscopic findings in a case of extraventricular neurocytoma. As well as elevated choline (Cho), the tumour spectrum showed strongly decreased N-acetylaspartate (NAA). NAA is assumed to be produced in mature neurons, and we therefore expected to find high amounts of NAA in this well-differentiated tumour, which was histologically composed of mature neuronal tissue. This observation leads to the conclusion that even the highly differentiated cells of neurocytomas are too immature to produce NAA.


Acta Neurochirurgica | 2002

Functional MRI and 18F FDG-Positron Emission Tomography for Presurgical Planning: Comparison with Electrical Cortical Stimulation

Timo Krings; Mathias Schreckenberger; Veit Rohde; Uwe Spetzger; Osama Sabri; M. H. T. Reinges; F. J. Hans; Philipp T. Meyer; Walter Möller-Hartmann; Joachim M. Gilsbach; Udalrich Buell; Armin Thron

Summary. Background: In patients with mass lesions near “eloquent” cortical areas different preoperative mapping techniques can be used. Two of the most widely used approaches include positron emission tomography (PET) and functional MRI (fMRI). We employed both methods in the same patients undergoing presurgical evaluation and compared the results to those obtained by direct electrical cortical stimulation (DECS). Method: 22 patients with tumours of different aetiology near the central region were investigated. FMRI was performed using a T2*-weighted gradient-echo BOLD sequence at 1.5 T, PET was performed after injection of 122–301 MBq 18F-Fluorodeoxyglucose (18-FDG) under rest and activation conditions. DECS was performed in all patients with recordings of muscles primarily involved in the investigated tasks. Findings: In 19 patients all three modalities could be compared, 1 patient demonstrated discordance between fMRI and PET with DECS speaking in favour of fMRI, 6 patients had neighbouring results of PET and fMRI (between 1–2 cm distance), 12 patients had overlapping results. Interpretation: The high incidence of neighbouring results is presumably related to fMRI specific artefacts. Advantages of fMRI are: Higher spatial and temporal resolution, more and different functional runs, shorter examination time, wider availability, longitudinal examinations, non-invasiveness and cost-effectiveness, easy registration to anatomical images. Advantages of PET are: higher signal-to-noise ratio, lesser susceptibility to artefacts (motion, draining veins), evaluation of tumour metabolism. It is our opinion that the neurosurgeon has to decide on a case-by-case basis which study suits his specific needs in the presurgical evaluation of his patient.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2010

Corpus callosum size in adults with high-functioning autism and the relevance of gender

Ralf Tepest; Esther Jacobi; Astrid Gawronski; Barbara Krug; Walter Möller-Hartmann; Fritz Georg Lehnhardt; Kai Vogeley

The goal of the study was to investigate the size of the corpus callosum (CC) and its subsegments in relation to total brain volume (TBV) as an empirical indicator of impaired connectivity in autism with special respect to gender. In MRI data sets of 29 adults with high-functioning autism (HFA) and 29 age-, gender- and IQ-matched control subjects, the TBV was measured and the CC was analyzed as a whole and in subsegments employing two different manual segmentation procedures. With respect to diagnosis, there were no significant differences in the dependent variables (CC, CC subsegments, and TBV). With respect to gender, only TBV was significantly increased in males compared with females, resulting in a significantly decreased CC/TBV ratio in males. This finding, however, was independent from gender and can be fully attributed to brain size. Our findings do not support the following hypotheses: (1) a hypothesis of impaired CC in HFA adults as a subgroup of patients with autism spectrum disorders, and (2) the sexual dimorphism hypothesis of the CC.


Brain | 2008

Correlation of passivity symptoms and dysfunctional visuomotor action monitoring in psychosis.

Knut Schnell; Karsten Heekeren; Jörg Daumann; Thomas Schnell; Ralph Schnitker; Walter Möller-Hartmann; Euphrosyne Gouzoulis-Mayfrank

Passivity experiences are hallmark symptoms of schizophrenia that can be characterized by the belief that ones thoughts or actions are controlled by an external agent. It has recently been suggested that these psychotic experiences result from defective monitoring of ones own actions, i.e. disturbed comparison of actions and perceived outcomes. In this study, we examined the function of the previously characterized action monitoring network of the inferior parietal lobule (IPL), medial (mPFC) and lateral prefrontal cortices in patients with different levels of passivity symptoms with an fMRI task. The visuomotor fMRI task demanded control of visually perceived object movements by alternating button presses with the left and the right index finger. In the monitoring condition of this task subjects stopped their actions whenever they detected visuomotor incongruence. fMRI and behavioural data from 15 patients were tested for correlation with passivity symptoms using standardized Scale for Assessment of Positive Symptoms (SAPS)- and AMDP- passivity symptom ratings. Both types of data were tested for differences between the patients group and 15 healthy controls. In the patient group we found the expected correlation of passivity symptoms and visuomotor monitoring performance. There was a significant positive correlation of passivity symptoms with increased latency of incongruence detection and a negative correlation of SAPS-passivity with the number of detected events. fMRI data revealed correlations of passivity symptoms with activation in bilateral IPL, primary motor and sensory cortices in the action monitoring condition. A correlation of passivity symptoms with the main experimental effect (actions with – actions without monitoring) was found in the posterior cingulate cortex (PCC) and in the left IPL. No group differences or group by task interactions were found within the visuomotor-action-monitoring network. Our results demonstrate the association between passivity symptoms and the dysfunction of visuomotor action monitoring and support the idea that psychotic passivity experiences result from dysfunctions of central action monitoring mechanisms: According to pre-existing concepts of parietal cortex function, IPL-hyperactivation may represent an increase in false detections of visuomotor incongruence while the correlation between passivity and the differential effect of monitoring on PCC-activation assumedly represents greater self-monitoring effort in passivity experiences.


Surgical Neurology | 2002

Preoperative assessment of motor cortex and pyramidal tracts in central cavernoma employing functional and diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging

Walter Möller-Hartmann; Timo Krings; Volker A. Coenen; Lothar Mayfrank; Jürgen Weidemann; Heidi Kränzlein; Armin Thron

BACKGROUND Functional MRI (fMRI) combines anatomic with functional information and has therefore been widely used for preoperative planning of patients with mass lesions affecting functionally important brain regions. However, the courses of functionally important fiber tracts are not visualized. We therefore propose to combine fMRI with diffusion-weighted MRI (DWI) that allows visualization of large fiber tracts and to implement this data in a neuronavigation system. METHODS DWI was successfully performed at a field strength of 1.5 Tesla, employing a spin-echo sequence with gradient sensitivity in six noncollinear directions to visualize the course of the pyramidal tracts, and was combined with echo-planar T2* fMRI during a hand motor task in a patient with central cavernoma. RESULTS Fusion of both data sets allowed visualization of the displacement of both the primary sensorimotor area (M1) and its large descending fiber tracts. Intraoperatively, these data were used to aid in neuronavigation. Confirmation was obtained by intraoperative electrical stimulation. Postoperative MRI revealed an undisrupted pyramidal tract in the neurologically intact patient. CONCLUSION The combination of fMRI with DWI allows for assessment of functionally important cortical areas and additional visualization of large fiber tracts. Information about the orientation of fiber tracts in normal appearing white matter in patients with tumors within the cortical motor system cannot be obtained by other functional or conventional imaging methods and is vital for reducing operative morbidity as the information about functional cortex. This technique might, therefore, have the prospect of guiding neurosurgical interventions, especially when linked to a neuronavigation system.


Neuroscience Letters | 2002

Time-of-flight-, phase contrast and contrast enhanced magnetic resonance angiography for pre-interventional determination of aneurysm size, configuration, and neck morphology in an aneurysm model in rabbits.

Timo Krings; F. J. Hans; Walter Möller-Hartmann; Ruth Thiex; A. Brunn; Kira Scherer; Klaus-Peter Stein; Alexander Meetz; Heiko Dreeskamp; Edward Allery; Armin Thron

We describe three different magnetic resonance (MR)-angiography techniques to evaluate aneurysm size, configuration, and neck morphology of experimentally created aneurysms in a rabbit model. In five New Zealand White rabbits an aneurysm was created by endovascular occlusion of the right common carotid artery (CCA) using a pliable balloon and subsequent endoluminal incubation of elastase within the proximal CCA above the balloon and distal ligation of the vessel. In all animals, time-of-flight (TOF), phase contrast and contrast enhanced (CE) MR angiographies (MRA) were performed and compared to conventional digital subtraction angiography results. We found, that aneurysms are best visualized employing CE MRA, however, neck morphology was also found to demonstrate interpretable results when evaluating the axial source data of the TOF MRA. The animal model we used can be employed for testing endovascular devices such as new coil material, or covered stents. The described MRA techniques might then be helpful for pre-interventional planning and maybe even for the follow-up of the thus treated aneurysms.


Neuroradiology | 2003

Endovascular treatment of experimentally induced aneurysms in rabbits using stents: a feasibility study

F. J. Hans; Timo Krings; Walter Möller-Hartmann; Ruth Thiex; J. Pfeffer; Kira Scherer; A. Brunn; Heiko Dreeskamp; Klaus-Peter Stein; Alexander Meetz; Joachim M. Gilsbach; Armin Thron

Although Guglielmi detachable coil (GDC) systems have been generally accepted for treatment of intracranial aneurysms, primary stenting of aneurysms using porous stents or implantation of coils after stent placement remains experimental. Testing of these new methods requires an animal model which imitates human aneurysms in size, configuration and neck morphology. We assessed in detail the technical requirements of and steps for transfemoral stent treatment of experimentally induced aneurysms at the top of the brachiocephalic trunk in rabbits. We created aneurysms in ten rabbits by distal ligation and intraluminal digestion of the right common carotid artery with elastase. We treated five animals with porous stents alone, and five with stents plus coiling via the meshes of the stent, which permitted dense packing of coils. No complications related to the procedures occurred. In all animals, even in those treated solely with porous stents, total occlusion of the aneurysm was achieved. Our animal model can be suitable for testing the biocompatibility and occlusion rate of new methods and devices for the treatment of experimental aneurysms.

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Timo Krings

University Health Network

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Armin Thron

RWTH Aachen University

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F. J. Hans

RWTH Aachen University

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Ruth Thiex

RWTH Aachen University

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A. Brunn

RWTH Aachen University

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