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Featured researches published by Wolfgang Hepp.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1988

Shock-wave lithotripsy of gallbladder stones. The first 175 patients

Michael Sackmann; Michael Delius; Tilman Sauerbruch; Joseph Holl; Werner Weber; Ernst Ippisch; Ulrich Hagelauer; Othmar Wess; Wolfgang Hepp; W. Brendel; Gustav Paumgartner

To substantiate the early results of extracorporeal shock-wave fragmentation of gallstones, we used this nonsurgical procedure to treat 175 patients with radiolucent gallbladder calculi. Chenodeoxycholic acid and ursodeoxycholic acid were administered as adjuvant litholytic therapy. The gallstones disintegrated in all patients except one and completely disappeared in 30 percent of all patients within 2 months after lithotripsy, in 48 percent at 2 to 4 months, in 63 percent at 4 to 8 months, in 78 percent at 8 to 12 months, and in 91 percent at 12 to 18 months. In patients with solitary stones up to 20 mm in diameter, the corresponding values were 45, 69, 78, 86, and 95 percent, respectively. Shock-wave therapy had no adverse effects except cutaneous petechiae (14 percent) and transient gross hematuria (3 percent). One third of the patients had one or more episodes of biliary colic before all the fragments disappeared. Two patients had mild pancreatitis, which necessitated endoscopic sphincterotomy in one. The patient with insufficient stone fragmentation underwent elective cholecystectomy; no additional operations were necessary. Extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy combined with medical therapy for stone dissolution is a safe and effective treatment in selected patients with radiolucent gallbladder calculi.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 1988

Apparatus and method for triggering therapeutic shock waves

Bernd Forssmann; Wolfgang Hepp; Klaus Van Prof Dr Ackern; Christian Chaussy

An instrument for therapeutic shock waves in which the shock waves are triggered in response to the patients heartbeat cycle or to the patients breathing cycle or both.


Archive | 1985

Physikalische Aspekte der extrakorporalen Stoßwellen-Lithotripsie

Wolfgang Hepp

Mit der extrakorporalen Stoswellen-Lithotripsie werden fokussierte tosStoswellen zum ersten Mal in der Medizin eingesetzt.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1986

Fragmentation of Gallstones by Extracorporeal Shock Waves

Tilman Sauerbruch; Michael Delius; Gustav Paumgartner; Joseph Holl; Othmar Wess; Werner Weber; Wolfgang Hepp; W. Brendel


Archive | 1985

Lithotripsy system having locating and orienting apparatus

Wolfgang Hepp; Karl-Heinz Restle; Dick Van Rijn; Othmar Wess


Archive | 1977

Solid accretion three=dimensional location and dissolution system - has ultrasonic emitter and receiver axes intersecting shock wave at accretion for medical application

Bernd Forssmann; Wolfgang Hepp; Christian Chaussy; Ferdinand Dr Med Eisenberger


Archive | 1976

Spark gap destroying concretions in living bodies - has low-inductance twin feed and return wires for gap

Bernd Forssmann; Wolfgang Hepp; Hendrik Zech


Archive | 1982

Injury-free coupling and decoupling of therapeutic shock waves

Bernd Forssmann; Wolfgang Hepp; Guenter Dr Rer Nat Hoff; Christian Chaussy


Archive | 1988

Device for ensuring the proper positioning of electrodes in a lithotripter

Bernd Forssmann; Wolfgang Hepp; Gerold Heine; Gustav Sell; Hendrik Zech


Archive | 1985

Device for detecting and positioning

Wolfgang Hepp; Karl-Heinz Restle; Rijn Dick Van; Othmar Wess

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