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Dive into the research topics where Werner Moshage is active.

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Featured researches published by Werner Moshage.


Circulation | 2001

Detection of Coronary Artery Stenoses by Contrast-Enhanced, Retrospectively Electrocardiographically-Gated, Multislice Spiral Computed Tomography

Stephan Achenbach; Tom Giesler; Dieter Ropers; Stefan Ulzheimer; Hans Derlien; Christoph Schulte; Evelyn Wenkel; Werner Moshage; W. Bautz; Werner G. Daniel; Willi A. Kalender; Ulrich Baum

Background—Multislice spiral computed tomography (MSCT) with retrospectively ECG-gated image reconstruction permits coronary artery visualization. We investigated the method’s ability to identify high-grade coronary artery stenoses and occlusions. Methods and Results—A total of 64 consecutive patients were studied by MSCT (4×1 mm cross-sections, 500-ms rotation, table feed 1.5 mm/rotation, intravenous contrast agent, retrospectively ECG-gated image reconstruction). All coronary arteries and side branches with a luminal diameter ≥2.0 mm were assessed concerning evaluability and the presence of high-grade stenoses (>70% diameter stenosis) or occlusions. Results were compared with quantitative coronary angiography. Of 256 coronary arteries (left main, left anterior descending, left circumflex and right coronary artery, including their respective side branches), 174 could be evaluated (68%). In 19 patients (30%), all arteries were evaluable. Artifacts caused by coronary motion were the most frequent reason for unevaluable arteries. Overall, 32 of 58 high-grade stenoses and occlusions were detected by MSCT (58%). In evaluable arteries, 32 of 35 lesions were detected, and the absence of stenosis was correctly identified in 117 of 139 arteries (sensitivity, 91%; specificity, 84%). If analysis was extended to all stenoses with >50% diameter reduction, sensitivity was 85% (40 of 47) and specificity was 76% (96 of 127). Conclusions—MSCT with retrospective ECG gating permits the detection of coronary artery stenoses with high accuracy if image quality is sufficient, but its clinical use may presently be limited due to degraded image quality in a substantial number of cases, mainly due to rapid coronary motion.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1998

Value of Electron-Beam Computed Tomography for the Noninvasive Detection of High-Grade Coronary-Artery Stenoses and Occlusions

Stephan Achenbach; Werner Moshage; Dieter Ropers; Jörg Nossen; Werner G. Daniel

BACKGROUND Reliable noninvasive assessment of coronary-artery stenoses and occlusions would constitute an advantage in the care of patients with known or suspected coronary artery disease. We investigated the accuracy of contrast-enhanced electron-beam computed tomography (CT) for the detection of high-grade coronary-artery stenoses and occlusions. METHODS Electron-beam CT was performed in 125 patients. After intravenous injection of a contrast agent, 40 cross-sectional images of the heart were acquired during inspiration, triggered by the electrocardiogram in diastole. Three-dimensional reconstructions of the heart and coronary arteries were rendered to facilitate evaluation of the images. The proximal and middle segments of the major coronary arteries were evaluated for the presence or absence of high-grade stenoses and occlusions. The results were compared with those of invasive coronary angiography in a blinded fashion. RESULTS Because of technical problems that impaired the quality of the images, 124 (25 percent) of the 500 coronary arteries studied (left main, left anterior descending, left circumflex, and right coronary) in a total of 125 patients were excluded from evaluation. No vessels could be evaluated in 19 patients (15 percent), and another 28 patients (22 percent) had one, two, or three vessels that could not be evaluated. In the remaining coronary arteries with adequate image quality, electron-beam CT permitted visualization of 69 of 75 high-grade stenoses and occlusions (sensitivity, 92 percent), whereas in 282 of 301 arteries, the absence of high-grade stenoses and occlusions was correctly detected (specificity, 94 percent). CONCLUSIONS When image quality is adequate, electron-beam CT may be useful to detect or rule out high-grade coronary-artery stenoses and occlusions.


Circulation | 2009

Abciximab in Patients With Acute ST-Segment–Elevation Myocardial Infarction Undergoing Primary Percutaneous Coronary Intervention After Clopidogrel Loading A Randomized Double-Blind Trial

Julinda Mehilli; Adnan Kastrati; Stefanie Schulz; Stefan Früngel; Stephan G. Nekolla; Werner Moshage; Franz Dotzer; Kurt Huber; Jürgen Pache; Josef Dirschinger; Melchior Seyfarth; Stefan Martinoff; Markus Schwaiger; Albert Schömig

Background— The glycoprotein IIb/IIIa receptor inhibitor abciximab has improved the efficacy of primary percutaneous coronary interventions in patients with acute myocardial infarction. However, it is not known whether abciximab remains beneficial after adequate clopidogrel loading in patients with acute ST-segment–elevation myocardial infarction. Methods and Results— A total of 800 patients with acute ST-segment–elevation myocardial infarction within 24 hours from symptom onset, all treated with 600 mg clopidogrel, were randomly assigned in a double-blind fashion to receive either abciximab (n=401) or placebo (n=399) in the intensive care unit before being sent to the catheterization laboratory. The primary end point, infarct size measured by single-photon emission computed tomography with technetium-99m sestamibi before hospital discharge, was 15.7±17.2% (mean±SD) of the left ventricle in the abciximab group and 16.6±18.6% of the left ventricle in the placebo group (P=0.47). At 30 days, the composite of death, recurrent myocardial infarction, stroke, or urgent revascularization of the infarct-related artery was observed in 20 patients in the abciximab group (5.0%) and 15 patients in the placebo group (3.8%) (relative risk, 1.3; 95% CI, 0.7 to 2.6; P=0.40). Major bleeding complications were observed in 7 patients in each group (1.8%). Conclusion— Upstream administration of abciximab is not associated with a reduction in infarct size in patients presenting with acute myocardial infarction within 24 hours of symptom onset and receiving 600 mg clopidogrel.


American Heart Journal | 1997

Effects of magnetic resonance imaging on cardiac pacemakers and electrodes

Stephan Achenbach; Werner Moshage; Björn Diem; Tobias Bieberlea; Volker Schibgilla; K. Bachmann

In phantom studies we investigated the effects of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) on pacemakers and electrodes. Twenty-five electrodes were exposed to MRI in a 1.5T scanner with continuous registration of the temperature at the electrode tip. Eleven pacemakers (five single chamber and six dual chamber) were exposed to MRI. Pacemaker output was monitored to detect malfunction in VOO/DOO and VVI/DDD modes. A temperature increase at the electrode tip of up to 63.1 degrees C was observed during 90 seconds of scanning. In seven electrodes the temperature increase exceeded 15 degrees C. Although no pacemaker malfunctions were observed in asynchronous pacing mode (VOO/DOO), inhibition and rapid pacing were observed during spin-echo imaging if the pacemakers were set to VVI or DDD mode. Pacemaker function was not impaired during scanning with gradient-echo sequences. Next to pacemaker dysfunction, electrode heating has to be considered a possible adverse effect when exposing patients with pacemakers to MRI.


Circulation | 2006

Effect of Intensive Versus Standard Lipid-Lowering Treatment With Atorvastatin on the Progression of Calcified Coronary Atherosclerosis Over 12 Months: A Multicenter, Randomized, Double-Blind Trial

Axel Schmermund; Stephan Achenbach; Thomas Budde; Yuri Buziashvili; Andreas Förster; Guy Friedrich; Michael Y. Henein; Gert Kerkhoff; Friedrich Knollmann; V. Kukharchuk; Avijit Lahiri; Roman Leischik; Werner Moshage; Michael Schartl; Winfried Siffert; Elisabeth Steinhagen-Thiessen; Valentin Sinitsyn; Anja Vogt; Burkhard Wiedeking; Raimund Erbel

Background— Recent clinical trials have suggested that intensive versus standard lipid-lowering therapy provides for additional benefit. Electron-beam computed tomography provides the opportunity to quantify the progression of coronary artery calcification (CAC) in serial measurements. Methods and Results— In a multicenter, randomized, double-blind trial, 471 patients (age 61±8 years) who had no history of coronary artery disease and no evidence of high-grade coronary stenoses (>50% diameter reduction) were randomized if they had ≥2 cardiovascular risk factors and moderate calcified coronary atherosclerosis as evidenced by a CAC score ≥30. Patients were assigned to receive 80 mg or 10 mg of atorvastatin per day over 12 months. Progression of CAC volume scores could be analyzed in 366 patients. After pretreatment with 10 mg of atorvastatin for 4 weeks, 12 months of study medication reduced LDL cholesterol from 106±22 to 87±33 mg/dL in the group randomized to receive 80 mg of atorvastatin (P<0.001), whereas levels remained stable in the group randomized to receive 10 mg (108±23 at baseline, 109±28 mg/dL at the end of the study, P=NS). The mean progression of CAC volume scores, corrected for the baseline CAC volume score, was 27% (95% CI 20.8% to 33.1%) in the 80-mg atorvastatin group and 25% (95% CI 19.1% to 30.8%) in the 10-mg atorvastatin group (P=0.65). CAC progression showed no relationship with on-treatment LDL cholesterol levels. Conclusions— We did not observe a relationship between on-treatment LDL cholesterol levels and the progression of calcified coronary atherosclerosis. Over a period of 12 months, intensive atorvastatin therapy was unable to attenuate CAC progression compared with standard atorvastatin therapy. The possibility remains that the time window was too short to demonstrate an effect.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2001

Visualization of coronary artery anomalies and their anatomic course by contrast-enhanced electron beam tomography and three-dimensional reconstruction☆

Dieter Ropers; Werner Moshage; Werner G. Daniel; Jürgen Jessl; Martin Gottwik; Stephan Achenbach

Anomalous coronary arteries are rare conditions. However, they may cause myocardial ischemia and sudden death and their reliable identification is crucial for any imaging method that attempts coronary artery visualization. We studied the ability of contrast-enhanced electron beam tomography (EBT) to identify anomalous coronary arteries and their course. Thirty patients with previously identified coronary anomalies and 30 subjects with normal coronary anatomy were studied. By EBT, 40 to 50 axial images of the heart (3-mm slice thickness, 1 mm overlap, electrocardiographic trigger) were acquired in a single breathhold during continuous injection of contrast agent (160 ml, 4 ml/s). Based on the original images and 3-dimensional reconstructions, the EBT data were analyzed by 2 blinded observers as to the presence of coronary anomalies and their course. Results were compared with invasive angiography. EBT correctly identified all normal controls and all patients with coronary anomalies. The anatomic course of the coronary anomalies was correctly classified in 29 of 30 patients (97%), including right-sided origin of the left main coronary artery (n = 4) or of the left circumflex coronary artery (n = 15), left-sided origin of the right coronary artery (n = 9), and 1 coronary fistula from the left circumflex coronary artery to the right atrium. Only the distal anastomosis of a second fistula from the left circumflex coronary artery to a bronchial artery was not correctly identified. This study demonstrates that contrast-enhanced EBT is a reliable noninvasive technique to identify anomalous coronary arteries and their course.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2001

Investigation of Aortocoronary Artery Bypass Grafts by Multislice Spiral Computed Tomography With Electrocardiographic-Gated Image Reconstruction

Dieter Ropers; Stefan Ulzheimer; Evelyn Wenkel; Ulrich Baum; Tom Giesler; Hans Derlien; Werner Moshage; W. Bautz; Werner G. Daniel; Willi A. Kalender; Stephan Achenbach

MK, Popma JJ, Leon MB. Increased restenosis in diabetes mellitus after coronary interventions is due to exaggerated intimal hyperplasia: a serial intravascular ultrasound study. Circulation 1997;95:1366–1369. 17. Kastrati A, Shoming A, Elezi S, Shuhlen H, Dirschinger J, Hadamitzky M, Wehinger A, Hausleiter J, Walter H, Neumann FJ. Predictive factors of restenosis after coronary stent placement. J Am Coll Cardiol 1997;30:1428–1436. 18. Akiyama T, Moussa I, Reimers B, Ferraro M, Kobayashi Y, Blengino S, Di Francesco L, Finci L, Di Mario C, Colombo A. Angiographic and clinical outcome following coronary stenting of small vessels. A comparison with coronary stenting of large vessels. J Am Coll Cardiol 1998;32:1610–1618. 19. Lau KW, Ding ZP, Sim LL, Sigwart U. Clinical and angiographic outcome after angiographically-guided stent placement in small coronary vessels. Am Heart J 2000;139:830–839.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2001

Variability of Repeated Coronary Artery Calcium Measurements by Electron Beam Tomography

Stephan Achenbach; Dieter Ropers; Stefan Möhlenkamp; Axel Schmermund; Gerd Muschiol; Jutta Groth; Magda Kusus; Matthias Regenfus; Werner G. Daniel; Raimund Erbel; Werner Moshage

In 120 patients, the mean interscan variability of coronary calcium quantification by electron beam tomography was 19.9% (median 7.8%) for the traditional calcium score, and 16.2% (median 5.7%) for volumetric scoring. Although this difference was not significant, there was a significant influence of the total amount of calcium, number of acquired images, and image noise on interscan reproducibility.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1997

Noninvasive, Three-Dimensional Visualization of Coronary Artery Bypass Grafts by Electron Beam Tomography

Stephan Achenbach; Werner Moshage; Dieter Ropers; Jörg Nossen; K. Bachmann

Electron beam tomography (EBT, ultrafast computed tomography [CT], cine CT) combines unique temporal and high spatial resolution and is especially well suited for cardiac imaging. We established and evaluated a protocol for the noninvasive visualization and assessment of aortocoronary artery bypass grafts. Twenty-five patients with 56 bypass grafts were studied by EBT. Forty contiguous cross-sectional images were acquired triggered to the electrocardiogram during breathhold and intravenous injection of contrast agent. Three-dimensional reconstructions of the heart and bypass grafts were performed and compared with selective angiography of the bypass grafts. In 1 patient with 2 bypass grafts, a technically inadequate EBT examination was obtained. In the remaining patients (54 grafts), all 13 bypass occlusions were diagnosed with a sensitivity and specificity of 100%. Evaluation for hemodynamically relevant stenosis was possible in 84% of cases (36 of 43 patent grafts) and yielded a sensitivity of 100% (5 of 5 high-grade stenoses correctly detected) and specificity of 97% (1 false-positive diagnosis of high-grade graft stenosis). The main reasons for impaired ability to evaluate the scans were breathing artifacts and misplacement of the imaging volume, causing parts of the bypass grafts to be cut off. EBT permits noninvasive determination of bypass graft occlusion and relevant stenosis with high accuracy.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2000

Noninvasive detection of coronary artery stenosis using contrast-enhanced three-dimensional breath-hold magnetic resonance coronary angiography

Matthias Regenfus; Dieter Ropers; Stephan Achenbach; Winfried Kessler; Gerhard Laub; Werner G. Daniel; Werner Moshage

OBJECTIVES The purpose of this study was to evaluate a contrast-enhanced three-dimensional (3D) breath-hold magnetic resonance (MR) technique for detection of coronary artery stenoses. BACKGROUND The accuracy of previously published MR coronary angiography protocols varies widely. Recently, coronary artery imaging using T1-shortening contrast agent has become possible, but so far there are no data concerning its clinical application. METHODS Magnetic resonance coronary angiography was performed in 50 patients with suspected coronary artery disease. Magnetic resonance data acquisition using an ultrafast 3D gradient-echo sequence lasted over 32 heartbeats within one single breath-hold. Twenty milliliters of gadopentetate dimeglumine was injected at a flow rate of 1 ml/s for two successive studies covering the main coronary arteries in single-oblique planes. Stenosis assessment by MR was compared with significant (diameter stenosis > 50%) stenoses on X-ray angiography. Evaluation was limited to the proximal and mid-coronary artery segments. RESULTS Two hundred sixty-eight of 350 artery segments (76.6%) could be evaluated. Left circumflex coronary artery was only evaluable in 50% of cases by MR. In the evaluable segments, 48 of 56 stenoses and 193 of 212 nonstenotic segments were correctly classified by MR. On a patient basis, MR correctly identified 34 of 36 patients with and 8 of 14 patients without significant coronary stenoses as demonstrated by X-ray angiography (sensitivity 94.4%, specificity 57.1%). CONCLUSIONS Oblique projection contrast-enhanced MR coronary angiograms obtained within one single breath-hold permit identification of patients with coronary stenoses in the proximal and mid segments of the major coronary arteries with satisfactory accuracy.

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Stephan Achenbach

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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K. Bachmann

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Werner G. Daniel

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Dieter Ropers

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Matthias Regenfus

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Karsten Pohle

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Winfried Kessler

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Gerhard Laub

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Axel Schmermund

University of Duisburg-Essen

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Theresa Menéndez

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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