114 results on '"Koppara A"'
Search Results
2. Simultaneous 18-FDG PET and MR imaging in lower extremity arterial disease
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Tobias Koppara, Isabel Dregely, Stephan G. Nekolla, Jörg Nährig, Nicolas Langwieser, Christian Bradaric, Carl Ganter, Karl-Ludwig Laugwitz, Markus Schwaiger, and Tareq Ibrahim
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optical coherence tomography ,magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) ,FDG PET = F-18 fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography ,atherectomy ,peripheral arterial disease ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
BackgroundSimultaneous positron emission tomography (PET) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a novel hybrid imaging method integrating the advances of morphological tissue characterization of MRI with the pathophysiological insights of PET applications.AimThis study evaluated the use of simultaneous 18-FDG PET/MR imaging for characterizing atherosclerotic lesions in lower extremity arterial disease (LEAD).MethodsEight patients with symptomatic stenoses of the superficial femoral artery (SFA) under simultaneous acquisition of 18-FDG PET and contrast-enhanced MRI using an integrated whole-body PET/MRI scanner. Invasive plaque characterization of the SFA was performed by intravascular imaging using optical coherence tomography. Histological analysis of plaque specimens was performed after directional atherectomy.ResultsMRI showed contrast enhancement at the site of arterial stenosis, as assessed on T2-w and T1-w images, compared to a control area of the contralateral SFA (0.38 ± 0.15 cm vs. 0.23 ± 0.11 cm; 1.77 ± 0.19 vs. 1.57 ± 0.15; p-value 1) at the level of symptomatic stenosis was observed in all but one patient. Contrast medium-induced MR signal enhancement was detected in all plaques, whereas FDG uptake in PET imaging was increased in lesions with active fibroatheroma and reduced in fibrocalcified lesions.ConclusionIn this multimodal imaging study, we report the feasibility and challenges of simultaneous PET/MR imaging of LEAD, which might offer new perspectives for risk estimation.
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- 2024
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3. Coronary plaque characterization assessed by delayed enhancement dual-layer spectral CT angiography and optical coherence tomography
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Nadjiri, Jonathan, Koppara, Tobias, Kafka, Andre, Weis, Florian, Rasper, Michael, Gassert, Felix G., von Schacky, Claudio E., Pfeiffer, Daniela, Laugwitz, Karl-Ludwig, Makowski, Marcus R., and Ibrahim, Tareq
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- 2022
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4. Stent Optimization Using Optical Coherence Tomography and Its Prognostic Implications After Percutaneous Coronary Intervention
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Himanshu Rai, Fiona Harzer, Tatsuhiko Otsuka, Youssef S. Abdelwahed, Paula Antuña, Florian Blachutzik, Tobias Koppara, Lorenz Räber, David M. Leistner, Fernando Alfonso, Holger Nef, Masaru Seguchi, Alp Aytekin, Erion Xhepa, Sebastian Kufner, Salvatore Cassese, Karl‐Ludwig Laugwitz, Robert A. Byrne, Adnan Kastrati, and Michael Joner
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major adverse cardiac events ,optical coherence tomography ,percutaneous coronary intervention ,stent expansion index ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Background Stent underexpansion has been known to be associated with worse outcomes. We sought to define optical coherence tomography assessed optimal stent expansion index (SEI), which associates with lower incidence of follow‐up major adverse cardiac events (MACEs). Methods and Results A total of 315 patients (involving 370 lesions) who underwent optical coherence tomography–aided coronary stenting were retrospectively included. SEI was calculated separately for equal halves of each stented segment using minimum stent area/mean reference lumen area ([proximal reference area+distal reference area]/2). The smaller of the 2 was considered to be the SEI of that case. Follow‐up MACE was defined as a composite of all‐cause death, myocardial infarction, stent thrombosis, and target lesion revascularization. Average minimum stent area was 6.02 (interquartile range, 4.65–7.92) mm2, while SEI was 0.79 (interquartile range, 0.71–0.86). Forty‐seven (12.7%) incidences of MACE were recorded for 370 included lesions during a median follow‐up duration of 557 (interquartile range, 323–1103) days. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis identified 0.85 as the best SEI cutoff (
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- 2022
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5. Validation and application of OCT tissue attenuation index for the detection of neointimal foam cells
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Nicol, Philipp, Hoppman, Petra, Euller, Kristina, Xhepa, Erion, Lenz, Tobias, Rai, Himanshu, Jinnouchi, Hiroyuki, Bulin, Anna, Castellanos, Maria Isabel, Lahmann, Anna Lena, Koppara, Tobias, Kastrati, Adnan, and Joner, Michael
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- 2021
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6. Endothelial Retargeting of AAV9 In Vivo
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Tarik Bozoglu, Seungmin Lee, Tilman Ziegler, Victoria Jurisch, Sanne Maas, Andrea Baehr, Rabea Hinkel, Amelie Hoenig, Anjana Hariharan, Christina Inyeop Kim, Simon Decker, Haider Sami, Tobias Koppara, Ruppert Oellinger, Oliver J. Müller, Derk Frank, Remco Megens, Peter Nelson, Christian Weber, Angelika Schnieke, Markus Sperandio, Gianluca Santamaria, Roland Rad, Alessandra Moretti, Karl‐Ludwig Laugwitz, Oliver Soehnlein, Manfred Ogris, and Christian Kupatt
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endothelium ,subject terms: gene therapy ,vascular biology ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Adeno‐associated viruses (AAVs) are frequently used for gene transfer and gene editing in vivo, except for endothelial cells, which are remarkably resistant to unmodified AAV‐transduction. AAVs are retargeted here toward endothelial cells by coating with second‐generation polyamidoamine dendrimers (G2) linked to endothelial‐affine peptides (CNN). G2CNN AAV9‐Cre (encoding Cre recombinase) are injected into mTmG‐mice or mTmG‐pigs, cell‐specifically converting red to green fluorescence upon Cre‐activity. Three endothelial‐specific functions are assessed: in vivo quantification of adherent leukocytes after systemic injection of ‐ G2CNN AAV9 encoding 1) an artificial adhesion molecule (S1FG) in wildtype mice (day 10) or 2) anti‐inflammatory Annexin A1 (Anxa1) in ApoE−/− mice (day 28). Moreover, 3) in Cas9‐transgenic mice, blood pressure is monitored till day 56 after systemic application of G2CNN AAV9‐gRNAs, targeting exons 6–10 of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS), a vasodilatory enzyme. G2CNN AAV9‐Cre transduces microvascular endothelial cells in mTmG‐mice or mTmG‐pigs. Functionally, G2CNN AAV9‐S1FG mediates S1FG‐leukocyte adhesion, whereas G2CNN AAV9‐Anxa1‐application reduces long‐term leukocyte recruitment. Moreover, blood pressure increases in Cas9‐expressing mice subjected to G2CNN AAV9‐gRNAeNOS. Therefore, G2CNN AAV9 may enable gene transfer in vascular and atherosclerosis models.
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- 2022
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7. Subregional volume reduction of the cholinergic forebrain in subjective cognitive decline (SCD)
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Scheef, Lukas, Grothe, Michel J., Koppara, Alexander, Daamen, Marcel, Boecker, Henning, Biersack, Hans, Schild, Hans H., Wagner, Michael, Teipel, Stefan, and Jessen, Frank
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- 2019
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8. POS-439 A STUDY OF OXIDATIVE STRESS, INFLAMMATION AND ENDOTHELIAL DYSFUNCTION IN DIABETIC AND NON-DIABETIC CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE PRE-DIALYSIS PATIENTS
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N. KOPPARA, S. v, A. bitla, and R. Rapur
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Diseases of the genitourinary system. Urology ,RC870-923 - Published
- 2021
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9. Neoatherosclerosis in Patients With Coronary Stent Thrombosis: Findings From Optical Coherence Tomography Imaging (A Report of the PRESTIGE Consortium)
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Joner, Michael, Koppara, Tobias, Byrne, Robert A., Castellanos, Maria Isabel, Lewerich, Jonas, Novotny, Julia, Guagliumi, Giulio, Xhepa, Erion, Adriaenssens, Tom, Godschalk, Thea C., Malik, Nikesh, Alfonso, Fernando, Tada, Tomohisa, Neumann, Franz-Josef, Desmet, Walter, ten Berg, Jurrien M., Gershlick, Anthony H., Feldman, Laurent J., Massberg, Steffen, and Kastrati, Adnan
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- 2018
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10. Randomised comparison of vascular response to biodegradable polymer sirolimus eluting and permanent polymer everolimus eluting stents: An optical coherence tomography study
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Koppara, Tobias, Tada, Tomohisa, Xhepa, Erion, Kufner, Sebastian, Byrne, Robert A., Ibrahim, Tareq, Laugwitz, Karl-Ludwig, Kastrati, Adnan, and Joner, Michael
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- 2018
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11. Which types of mental work demands may be associated with reduced risk of dementia?
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Abholz, Heinz-Harald, Brettschneider, Christian, Bachmann, Cadja, Bickel, Horst, Blank, Wolfgang, van den Bussche, Hendrik, Eifflaender-Gorfer, Sandra, Eisele, Marion, Ernst, Annette, Fuchs, Angela, Heser, Kathrin, Jessen, Frank, Kaduszkiewicz, Hanna, Kaufeler, Teresa, Köhler, Mirjam, König, Hans-Helmut, Koppara, Alexander, Lange, Carolin, Lubisch, Diana, Luck, Tobias, Luppa, Melanie, Maier, Wolfgang, Mayer, Manfred, Mösch, Edelgard, Pentzek, Michael, Posselt, Tina, Prokein, Jana, Riedel-Heller, Steffi, Röhr, Susanne, Scherer, Martin, Schumacher, Anna, Stein, Janine, Steinmann, Susanne, Tebarth, Franziska, Wagner, Michael, Weckbecker, Klaus, Weeg, Dagmar, Werle, Jochen, Weyerer, Siegfried, Wiese, Birgitt, Wolfsgruber, Steffen, Zimmermann, Thomas, Then, Francisca S., Mamone, Silke, and Riedel-Heller, Steffi G.
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- 2017
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12. Assessment of a pro-healing stent in an animal model of early neoatherosclerosis
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Nicol, Philipp, Lutter, Christoph, Bulin, Anna, Castellanos, Maria Isabel, Lenz, Tobias, Hoppmann, Petra, Lahmann, Anna Lena, Colleran, Roisin, Euller, Kristina, Steigerwald, Kristin, Neubauer, Stefanie, Rechenmacher, Florian, Ludwig, Beatrice Stefanie, Weinmüller, Michael, Kerch, Garry, Guo, Liang, Cheng, Qi, Acampado, Eduardo, Koppara, Tobias, Kessler, Horst, and Joner, Michael
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- 2020
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13. Simultaneous 18-FDG PET and MR imaging in lower extremity arterial disease.
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Koppara, Tobias, Dregely, Isabel, Nekolla, Stephan G., Nährig, Jörg, Langwieser, Nicolas, Bradaric, Christian, Ganter, Carl, Laugwitz, Karl-Ludwig, Schwaiger, Markus, and Ibrahim, Tareq
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- 2024
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14. Subregional volume reduction of the cholinergic forebrain in subjective cognitive decline (SCD)
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Lukas Scheef, Michel J. Grothe, Alexander Koppara, Marcel Daamen, Henning Boecker, Hans Biersack, Hans H. Schild, Michael Wagner, Stefan Teipel, and Frank Jessen
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Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Subjective cognitive decline (SCD) patients are considered as a risk population for preclinical Alzheimer's Disease (AD). Supporting this idea, previous studies in SCD populations report subtle alterations in various cognitive and neuroimaging biomarkers that are typically affected during AD progression. To extend these observations, the present study examined whether SCD patients show atrophy of cholinergic basal forebrain nuclei (chBFN), analogous with recent findings in prodromal and clinical AD patients. We assessed volume reductions of the chBFN in 24 SCD subjects compared to 49 matched controls on 3D-T1-weighted MR images based on a postmortem derived atlas. Furthermore, we assessed whether chBFN atrophy was linked with cognitive, structural and metabolic biomarker alterations we previously reported in this SCD cohort: Using correlation analyses we tested for associations between the volumes of the chBFN with the hippocampal gray matter volume, and posterior medial glucose consumption, and the trajectory of verbal memory performance. The SCD cases showed a significant total volume reduction of the chBFN, with largest effect sizes in the Ch1/2 and Ch4p subdivisions of the chBFN. The latter was associated with a reduced glucose metabolism in the precuneus for the SCD group only. These data show an early involvement of the cholinergic basal forebrain nuclei in SCD predominantly in Ch1/2 and Ch4p which supports the conceptual link between SCD and preclinical AD. Keywords: Basal forebrain, Subjective cognitive decline, Nucleus basalis Meynert, Glucose metabolism, Precuneus, Alzheimer
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- 2019
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15. Preclinical evaluation of a novel polyphosphazene surface modified stent
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Koppara, Tobias, Sakakura, Kenichi, Pacheco, Erica, Cheng, Qi, Zhao, XiaoQing, Acampado, Eduardo, Finn, Aloke V., Barakat, Mark, Maillard, Luc, Ren, Jane, Deshpande, Mahesh, Kolodgie, Frank D., Joner, Michael, and Virmani, Renu
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- 2016
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16. A Study of Oxidative Stress, Inflammation, and Endothelial Dysfunction in Diabetic and Nondiabetic Chronic Kidney Disease Pre-Dialysis Patients.
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Koppara, Naveen Kumar, Medooru, Kusuma Kumari, Yadagiri, Lakshmi Amancharla, Vishnubotla, Siva Kumar, Rapur, Ram, and Bitla, Aparna R.
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ATHEROSCLEROSIS risk factors , *CHRONIC kidney failure , *INTERLEUKINS , *C-reactive protein , *STATISTICS , *ENDOTHELIUM , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *INFLAMMATION , *CROSS-sectional method , *MANN Whitney U Test , *OXIDATIVE stress , *TYPE 2 diabetes , *RISK assessment , *MALONDIALDEHYDE , *COMPARATIVE studies , *T-test (Statistics) , *PEARSON correlation (Statistics) , *RESEARCH funding , *CHI-squared test , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *NITRIC oxide , *DATA analysis , *DATA analysis software - Abstract
Background: Oxidative stress, inflammation, and endothelial dysfunction represent a key triad for the development and progression of atherosclerosis. Due to chronic low-grade inflammation in chronic kidney disease (CKD), concentrations of various inflammatory, endothelial, and oxidative stress markers are elevated, increasing the risk of atherosclerosis. The present study was undertaken to compare oxidative stress, inflammation, and endothelial dysfunction in diabetic and nondiabetic CKD pre-dialysis patients. Materials and Methods: This was an observational study on 120 CKD pre-dialysis patients: 60 with diabetes and 60 without diabetes. Markers of oxidative stress were measured in blood -- malondialdehyde (MDA), ferric reducing ability of plasma (FRAP), paroxonase-1 (PON-1), ischemia-modified albumin (IMA); inflammation -- interleukin-6 (IL-6), high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP); and endothelial dysfunction -- nitric oxide (NO), carotid wall intima--media thickness (CIMT). Comparisons between the two groups for continuous variables were made with the Student's unpaired t-test or Mann--Whitney test and for categorical values with χ²-test, as appropriate. Results: MDA, IMA, IL-6, hsCRP, NO, and CIMT were significantly higher, while FRAP and PON-1 were significantly lower in the diabetic group when compared to nondiabetic group (P < 0.001). The number of atherosclerotic plaques was also significantly higher in the diabetic group compared to nondiabetic group. Conclusion: Our study showed increased oxidative stress, inflammation, endothelial dysfunction, and atherosclerosis in diabetic CKD pre-dialysis patients when compared to nondiabetic CKD pre-dialysis patients and in late stages when compared to early stages of CKD in both groups, indicating increased cardiovascular risk in late stages and diabetic CKD pre-dialysis patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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17. Outcomes of endovascular treatment for popliteal artery disease.
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Müller, Arne M., Löhn-Kannengießer, Leoni, Bradaric, Christian, Dirschinger, Ralf, Koppara, Tobias, Bergmann, Katharina, Kehl, Victoria, Cassese, Salvatore, Xhepa, Erion, Kastrati, Adnan, Laugwitz, Karl-Ludwig, and Ibrahim, Tareq
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- 2023
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18. Cognitive performance before and after the onset of subjective cognitive decline in old age
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Koppara, Alexander, Wagner, Michael, Lange, Carolin, Ernst, Annette, Wiese, Birgitt, König, Hans-Helmut, Brettschneider, Christian, Riedel-Heller, Steffi, Luppa, Melanie, Weyerer, Siegfried, Werle, Jochen, Bickel, Horst, Mösch, Edelgard, Pentzek, Michael, Fuchs, Angela, Wolfsgruber, Steffen, Beauducel, André, Scherer, Martin, Maier, Wolfgang, and Jessen, Frank
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- 2015
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19. Cognitive performance before and after the onset of subjective cognitive decline in old age
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Alexander Koppara, Michael Wagner, Carolin Lange, Annette Ernst, Birgitt Wiese, Hans‐Helmut König, Christian Brettschneider, Steffi Riedel‐Heller, Melanie Luppa, Siegfried Weyerer, Jochen Werle, Horst Bickel, Edelgard Mösch, Michael Pentzek, Angela Fuchs, Steffen Wolfsgruber, André Beauducel, Martin Scherer, Wolfgang Maier, and Frank Jessen
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Subjective cognitive decline ,Preclinical Alzheimer's disease ,Early detection ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 ,Geriatrics ,RC952-954.6 - Abstract
Abstract Background Our objectives were (1) to test the association between the report of subjective cognitive decline (SCD) and prospective objective cognitive performance in high age individuals and (2) to study the course of longitudinal cognitive performance before and after the first report of SCD. Methods Cognitively normal elderly participants of the German Study on Ageing, Cognition, and Dementia study (N = 2330) with SCD (subjective decline in memory with and without associated concerns) and without SCD at baseline were assessed over 8 years with regard to immediate and delayed verbal recall, verbal fluency, working memory, and global cognition. Baseline performance and cognitive trajectories were compared between groups. In addition, cognitive trajectories before and after the initial report of SCD (incident SCD) were modelled in those without SCD at baseline. Results Baseline performance in the SCD group was lower and declined more steeply in immediate and delayed verbal recall than in the control group (no SCD at baseline). This effect was more pronounced in the SCD group with concerns. Incident SCD was preceded by decline in immediate and delayed memory and word fluency. Conclusions SCD predicts future memory decline. Incident SCD is related to previous cognitive decline. The latter finding supports the concept of SCD indicating first subtle decline in cognitive performance that characterizes preclinical Alzheimer's disease.
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- 2015
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20. Gray matter atrophy pattern in elderly with subjective memory impairment
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Peter, Jessica, Scheef, Lukas, Abdulkadir, Ahmed, Boecker, Henning, Heneka, Michael, Wagner, Michael, Koppara, Alexander, Klöppel, Stefan, and Jessen, Frank
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- 2014
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21. The everolimus-eluting Xience stent in small vessel disease: bench, clinical, and pathology view
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Sanchez OD, Yahagi K, Koppara T, Virmani R, and Joner M
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Medical technology ,R855-855.5 - Abstract
Oscar D Sanchez, Kazuyuki Yahagi, Tobias Koppara, Renu Virmani, Michael Joner CVPath Institute, Inc., Gaithersburg, MD, USA Abstract: Coronary artery disease (CAD) is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. The pathogenesis of CAD relates to the presence of atherosclerotic plaques in the coronary arteries, which are most frequently treated today by percutaneous coronary intervention. Small vessel disease treatment represents one-third of all percutaneous coronary interventions with higher rates of restenosis and major adverse cardiac events. Initially, drug-eluting stents (DES) were developed to reduce in-stent restenosis, improving clinical outcomes and reducing the need for target vessel revascularization. However, late and very late stent thrombosis emerged as a new problem compromising DES's long-term results. The cobalt–chromium everolimus-eluting stent (CoCr-EES) represents the results of an evolutionary process in DES technology aimed at improving the shortcomings of first-generation DES. Small vessel CAD has historically been an obstacle to long-term patency following implantation of DES. Antirestenotic efficacy has been shown to be of high relevance in small vessels. Therefore, stent selection may play an important role in determining outcomes in this subgroup of patients. This article will review the performance of CoCr-EES in the treatment of small vessel CAD from preclinical, clinical, and pathology perspectives, and it will highlight the most important findings in this regard. Keywords: small vessel, cobalt–chromiun everolimus-eluting stent, Xience V, pathology
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- 2014
22. Incident Subjective Cognitive Decline Does Not Predict Mortality in the Elderly--Results from the Longitudinal German Study on Ageing, Cognition, and Dementia (AgeCoDe).
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Susanne Roehr, Tobias Luck, Kathrin Heser, Angela Fuchs, Annette Ernst, Birgitt Wiese, Jochen Werle, Horst Bickel, Christian Brettschneider, Alexander Koppara, Michael Pentzek, Carolin Lange, Jana Prokein, Siegfried Weyerer, Edelgard Mösch, Hans-Helmut König, Wolfgang Maier, Martin Scherer, Frank Jessen, Steffi G Riedel-Heller, and AgeCoDe Study Group
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
OBJECTIVE:Subjective cognitive decline (SCD) might represent the first symptomatic representation of Alzheimer's disease (AD), which is associated with increased mortality. Only few studies, however, have analyzed the association of SCD and mortality, and if so, based on prevalent cases. Thus, we investigated incident SCD in memory and mortality. METHODS:Data were derived from the German AgeCoDe study, a prospective longitudinal study on the epidemiology of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and dementia in primary care patients over 75 years covering an observation period of 7.5 years. We used univariate and multivariate Cox regression analyses to examine the relationship of SCD and mortality. Further, we estimated survival times by the Kaplan Meier method and case-fatality rates with regard to SCD. RESULTS:Among 971 individuals without objective cognitive impairment, 233 (24.0%) incidentally expressed SCD at follow-up I. Incident SCD was not significantly associated with increased mortality in the univariate (HR = 1.0, 95% confidence interval = 0.8-1.3, p = .90) as well as in the multivariate analysis (HR = 0.9, 95% confidence interval = 0.7-1.2, p = .40). The same applied for SCD in relation to concerns. Mean survival time with SCD was 8.0 years (SD = 0.1) after onset. CONCLUSION:Incident SCD in memory in individuals with unimpaired cognitive performance does not predict mortality. The main reason might be that SCD does not ultimately lead into future cognitive decline in any case. However, as prevalence studies suggest, subjectively perceived decline in non-memory cognitive domains might be associated with increased mortality. Future studies may address mortality in such other cognitive domains of SCD in incident cases.
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- 2016
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23. Histopathological evaluation of thrombus in patients presenting with stent thrombosis. A multicenter European study: a report of the prevention of late stent thrombosis by an interdisciplinary global European effort consortium†
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Riegger, Julia, Byrne, Robert A., Joner, Michael, Chandraratne, Sue, Gershlick, Anthony H., ten Berg, Jurrien M., Adriaenssens, Tom, Guagliumi, Giulio, Godschalk, Thea C., Neumann, Franz-Josef, Trenk, Dietmar, Feldman, Laurent J., Steg, Philippe Gabriel, Desmet, Walter, Alfonso, Fernando, Goodall, Alison H., Wojdyla, Roman, Dudek, Dariusz, Philippi, Vanessa, Opinaldo, Sheryl, Titova, Anna, Malik, Nikesh, Cotton, James, Jhagroe, Darshni A., Heestermans, Antonius A.C.M., Sinnaeve, Peter, Vermeersch, Paul, Valina, Christian, Schulz, Christian, Kastrati, Adnan, Massberg, Steffen, Adriaenssens, Tom, Buysschaert, Ian, Chausson, Mickaël, De Cock, Dries, Dens, Jo, Barbato, Emanuele, Desmet, Walter, Gautier, Sandrine, Vermeersch, Paul, Sinnaeve, Peter, Abergel, Helene, Feldman, Laurent, Jandrot-Perrus, Martine, Letourneur, Didier, Mangin, Pierre, Olivier, Véronique, Roques, Caroline, Byrne, Robert A., Chandraratne, Sue, Gratz, Matthias, Joner, Michael, Kastrati, Adnan, Kennerknecht, Elisabeth, Konrad, Ildiko, Koppara, Tobias, Massberg, Steffen, Neumann, Franz-Josef, Ntziachristos, Vasilis, Opinaldo, Sheryl, Philippi, Vanessa, Riegger, Julia, Rosenthal, Amir, Rzany, Alexander, Schulz, Christian, Steigerwald, Kristin, Tada, Tomohiso, Titova, Anna, Trenk, Dietmar, Valina, Christian, Vogelsang, Andreas, Xhepa, Erion, Bernelli, Chiara, Coccato, Micol, Guagliumi, Giulio, Komukai, Kenichi, Sirbu, Vasile, Kerch, Garry, Amoroso, Giovanni, ten Berg, Jurriën, Dewilde, Willem J.M., Godschalk, Thea C., Heestermans, Antonius A.C.M., Jhagroe, Darshni A., Wykrzykowska, Joanne J., Winkens, Mark H.M., Dudek, Dariusz, Rzeszutko, Łukasz, Wojdyla, Roman, Zasada, Wojciech, Alfonso, Fernando, Cuesta, Javier, Medina, Miguel, Berry, Colin, Cotton, James, Curzen, Nick, McEntegart, Margaret, Gerber, Robert, Gershlick, Anthony, Goodall, Alison H., Hetherington, Simon, Hill, Jonathan, Kelly, Damian, Malik, Nikesh, Oldroyd, Keith, Routledge, Helen, Shannon, Joanne, Suresh, Venkatesan, and Zahman, Azfar
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- 2016
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24. Improving vessel healing with fully bioresorbable drug-eluting stents: more than a pipe dream?
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Joner, Michael, Koppara, Tobias, Virmani, Renu, and Byrne, Robert A.
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- 2016
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25. Prognostic value of plasma myeloperoxidase concentration in patients with stable coronary artery disease
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Stefanescu, Ada, Braun, Siegmund, Ndrepepa, Gjin, Koppara, Tobias, Pavaci, Herribert, Mehilli, Julinda, Schömig, Albert, and Kastrati, Adnan
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- 2008
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26. Vertebral artery pseudoaneurysm complicating transaxillar aortic valve implantation
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Koppara, Tobias, Fusaro, Massimiliano, Will, Albrecht, and Ibrahim, Tareq
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- 2013
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27. Stent Optimization Using Optical Coherence Tomography and Its Prognostic Implications After Percutaneous Coronary Intervention.
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Rai, Himanshu, Harzer, Fiona, Tatsuhiko Otsuka, Abdelwahed, Youssef S., Antuña, Paula, Blachutzik, Florian, Koppara, Tobias, Räber, Lorenz, Leistner, David M., Alfonso, Fernando, Nef, Holger, Masaru Seguchi, Aytekin, Alp, Xhepa, Erion, Kufner, Sebastian, Cassese, Salvatore, Laugwitz, Karl-Ludwig, Byrne, Robert A., Kastrati, Adnan, and Joner, Michael
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- 2022
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28. Ten-Year Clinical Outcomes in Patients With Acute Coronary Syndrome Treated With Biodegradable, Permanent-Polymer or Polymer-Free Drug-Eluting Stents.
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Coughlan, J. J., Aytekin, Alp, Lenz, Tobias, Koch, Tobias, Wiebe, Jens, Cassese, Salvatore, Joner, Michael, Koppara, Tobias, Xhepa, Erion, Kessler, Thorsten, Ibrahim, Tareq, Laugwitz, Karl-Ludwig, Schunkert, Heribert, Kastrati, Adnan, and Kufner, Sebastian
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- 2022
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29. Driving to a Better Understanding of Acyl Glucuronide Transformations Using NMR and Molecular Modeling.
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Buevich, Alexei V., Cyndi Qixin He, Pio, Barbara, Samuel, Koppara, Mitra, Kaushik, Sherer, Edward C., Cancilla, Mark T., and Chobanian, Harry R.
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- 2022
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30. Endothelial Retargeting of AAV9 In Vivo.
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Bozoglu, Tarik, Lee, Seungmin, Ziegler, Tilman, Jurisch, Victoria, Maas, Sanne, Baehr, Andrea, Hinkel, Rabea, Hoenig, Amelie, Hariharan, Anjana, Kim, Christina Inyeop, Decker, Simon, Sami, Haider, Koppara, Tobias, Oellinger, Ruppert, Müller, Oliver J., Frank, Derk, Megens, Remco, Nelson, Peter, Weber, Christian, and Schnieke, Angelika
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NITRIC-oxide synthases ,GENETIC transformation ,ENDOTHELIAL cells ,POLYAMIDOAMINE dendrimers ,GENOME editing ,BLOOD pressure - Abstract
Adeno‐associated viruses (AAVs) are frequently used for gene transfer and gene editing in vivo, except for endothelial cells, which are remarkably resistant to unmodified AAV‐transduction. AAVs are retargeted here toward endothelial cells by coating with second‐generation polyamidoamine dendrimers (G2) linked to endothelial‐affine peptides (CNN). G2CNN AAV9‐Cre (encoding Cre recombinase) are injected into mTmG‐mice or mTmG‐pigs, cell‐specifically converting red to green fluorescence upon Cre‐activity. Three endothelial‐specific functions are assessed: in vivo quantification of adherent leukocytes after systemic injection of ‐ G2CNN AAV9 encoding 1) an artificial adhesion molecule (S1FG) in wildtype mice (day 10) or 2) anti‐inflammatory Annexin A1 (Anxa1) in ApoE−/− mice (day 28). Moreover, 3) in Cas9‐transgenic mice, blood pressure is monitored till day 56 after systemic application of G2CNN AAV9‐gRNAs, targeting exons 6–10 of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS), a vasodilatory enzyme. G2CNN AAV9‐Cre transduces microvascular endothelial cells in mTmG‐mice or mTmG‐pigs. Functionally, G2CNN AAV9‐S1FG mediates S1FG‐leukocyte adhesion, whereas G2CNN AAV9‐Anxa1‐application reduces long‐term leukocyte recruitment. Moreover, blood pressure increases in Cas9‐expressing mice subjected to G2CNN AAV9‐gRNAeNOS. Therefore, G2CNN AAV9 may enable gene transfer in vascular and atherosclerosis models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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31. Long‐term clinical outcomes after drug eluting stent implantation with and without stent overlap.
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Coughlan, J. J., Aytekin, Alp, Koch, Tobias, Wiebe, Jens, Lenz, Tobias, Cassese, Salvatore, Joner, Michael, Koppara, Tobias, Xhepa, Erion, Ibrahim, Tareq, Fusaro, Massimiliano, Laugwitz, Karl‐Ludwig, Schunkert, Heribert, Kastrati, Adnan, and Kufner, Sebastian
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- 2022
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32. Ten-year clinical outcomes of polymer-free versus durable polymer new-generation drug-eluting stent in patients with coronary artery disease with and without diabetes mellitus: Results of the Intracoronary Stenting and Angiographic Results: Test Efficacy of Sirolimus- and Probucol- and Zotarolimus-Eluting Stents (ISAR-TEST 5) trial
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Koch, Tobias, Lenz, Tobias, Joner, Michael, Xhepa, Erion, Koppara, Tobias, Wiebe, Jens, Coughlan, J. J., Aytekin, Alp, Ibrahim, Tareq, Kessler, Thorsten, Cassese, Salvatore, Laugwitz, Karl-Ludwig, Schunkert, Heribert, Kastrati, Adnan, Kufner, Sebastian, for the Intracoronary Stenting and Angiographic Results: Test Efficacy of Sirolimus- and Probucol-Eluting Versus Zotarolimus- Eluting Stents (ISAR-TEST 5) Investigators, Mehilli, Julinda, Hausleiter, Jörg, and Byrne, Robert A.
- Abstract
Background: Very long-term outcomes according to diabetic status of patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with new-generation drug-eluting stents (DES) are scant. Both, the durable polymer zotarolimus-eluting stent (DP-ZES), the first DES to gain FDA-approval for specific use in patients with diabetes mellitus, and the polymer-free sirolimus- and probucol-eluting stent (PF-SES), with a unique design that enables effective drug release without the need of a polymer offer the potential to enhance clinical long-term outcomes especially in patients with diabetes mellitus. Methods: We investigate 10-year clinical outcomes of the prespecified subgroups of patients with and without diabetes mellitus, randomly assigned to treatment with PF-SES versus DP-ZES in the ISAR-TEST 5 trial. The primary endpoint of interest was major adverse cardiac events (MACE), defined as the composite of all-cause death, any myocardial infarction or any revascularization. Further endpoints of interest were cardiac death, myocardial infarction related to the target vessel and target lesion revascularization as well as the individual components of the primary composite endpoint and the incidence of definite or probable stent thrombosis at 10 years. Results: This analysis includes a total of 3002 patients randomly assigned to PF-SES (n = 2002) or DP-ZES (n = 1000). Prevalence of diabetes mellitus was high and comparable, 575 Patients (28.7%) in PF-SES group and 295 patients (29.5%) in DP-ZES group (P = 0.66). At 10 years 53.5% of patients with diabetes mellitus and 68.5% of patients without diabetes mellitus were alive. Regarding major adverse cardiac events, PF-SES as compared to DP-ZES showed comparable event rates in patients with diabetes mellitus (74.8% vs. 79.6%; hazard ratio 0.86; 95% CI 0.73–1.02; P = 0.08) and in patients without diabetes (PF-SES 62.5% vs. DP-ZES 62.2%; hazard ratio 0.99; 95% CI 0.88–1.11; P = 0.88). Conclusion: At 10 years, both new-generation DES show comparable clinical outcome irrespective of diabetic status or polymer strategy. Event rates after PCI in patients with diabetes mellitus are considerable higher than in patients without diabetes mellitus and continue to accrue over time. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT00598533, Registered 10 January 2008, https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00598533?term=NCT00598533 Kaplan-Meier estimates of endpoints of interest for patients with vs. without diabetes mellitus treated with PF-SES vs. DP-ZES. Bar graphs: Kaplan-Meier estimates as percentages. PF-SES: polymer-free sirolimus-eluting stent; DP-ZES: durable polymer zotarolimus-eluting stent; DM: diabetes mellitus. Comparison of event rates of individual endpoints in patients with and without diabetes mellitus treated with PF-SES vs. DP-ZES all without statistically significant differences. Comparison of event rates of individual endpoints in overall patients with vs. without diabetes mellitus significantly different (P ≤ 0.01 for all comparisons). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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33. Cerebral abscess and calvarial osteomyelitis caused by Burkholderia pseudomallei in a renal transplant recipient.
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Muthina, Raja Amarendra, Koppara, Naveen Kumar, Bethasaida Manuel, Maria, Bommu, Alekhya Naga, Anapalli, Sunnesh Reddy, Boju, Sangeetha Lakshmi, Rapur, Ram, and Vishnubotla, Siva Kumar
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BURKHOLDERIA pseudomallei , *KIDNEY transplantation , *BRAIN abscess , *ABSCESSES , *OSTEOMYELITIS - Abstract
Melioidosis is an infection of humans caused by the saprophytic bacterium Burkholderia (previously Pseudomonas) pseudomallei. We present a patient of cerebral abscess and calvarial osteomyelitis caused by B. pseudomallei in a renal transplant recipient. We treated the patient with ceftazidime for 3 weeks, followed by trimethoprim‐sulfamethoxazole (TMP‐SMX) for 6 months. The superficial abscess reduced in size at the end of first month and subsided gradually. A repeat MRI showed reduction in intracranial abscess. The patient had no neurological deficit. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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34. Outcomes of endovascular treatment for infrapopliteal peripheral artery disease based on the updated TASC II classification.
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Müller, Arne M, Räpple, Veronika, Bradaric, Christian, Koppara, Tobias, Kehl, Victoria, Fusaro, Massimiliano, Cassese, Salvatore, Ott, Ilka, Kastrati, Adnan, Laugwitz, Karl-Ludwig, and Ibrahim, Tareq
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PERIPHERAL vascular diseases ,ENDOVASCULAR surgery ,ARTERIAL diseases ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,MULTIVARIATE analysis - Abstract
We retrospectively analyzed all endovascular procedures of infrapopliteal arterial lesions (n = 383) performed in 270 patients at our institution between December 2008 and January 2018. The overall technical success rate was 97% and yielded 98% for stenoses (n = 214) and 95% for occlusions (n = 169). Trans-Atlantic Inter-Society Consensus (TASC II) classification had no impact on success rates (TASC A + B vs C + D; 96.5% vs 96.9%, p = 0.837). Freedom from clinically driven target lesion revascularization (TLR) after 6 and 12 months was 88.3% and 77.2%. TLR was comparable for TASC A to C lesions and no difference was observed comparing groups of moderately complex TASC A/B lesions and more complex TASC C/D lesions (TASC A + B vs C + D; 78.5% vs 74.2%, p = 0.457). Freedom from TLR was significantly lower in very complex TASC D lesions (TASC A + B + C vs D; 79.7% vs 42.5%, p < 0.001). Multivariate analysis identified TASC D lesions (hazard ratio D/A: 1.5; overall p = 0.002), Fontaine class III and IV (hazard ratio III or IV/IIa or IIb: 2.4; p = 0.041), and occlusive lesions (hazard ratio occlusion/stenosis: 2.4; p = 0.026) as predictors for TLR. In conclusion, endovascular therapy for infrapopliteal artery disease was safe and accompanied with a promising long-term outcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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35. Drug-coated balloons: Technical and clinical progress.
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Ang, Huiying, Koppara, Tobias R, Cassese, Salvatore, Ng, Jaryl, Joner, Michael, and Foin, Nicolas
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TECHNOLOGICAL progress , *POPLITEAL artery , *PERIPHERAL vascular diseases , *ANKLE brachial index , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *BALLOONING - Abstract
The advancement of drug-coated balloons (DCB) presents an alternative nonstent method in the percutaneous treatment of atherosclerotic lesions. While the current generation of drug-eluting stents (DES) are the device of choice, especially in coronary artery disease (CAD), DCB has potential applications in the treatment of de novo lesions, in-stent restenosis (ISR), bifurcations, and in peripheral artery disease (PAD). In terms of coronary clinical experience, DCB is used most in ISR scenarios and more data are collected to support the use of DCB in de novo lesions compared to best-in-class DES. The use of DCB in bifurcation side branch treatment has demonstrated safety, and with good angiographic and clinical outcomes, but more data from randomized trials will be required to assess its clinical value. For PAD, the clinical outcomes of DCB with and without debulking devices in diseased femoropopliteal arteries and treatment of below-the-knee (BTK) vessels with DCB are discussed. Current data demonstrated conflicting long-term safety outcomes in the use of paclitaxel devices in the femoral and/or popliteal arteries, while the role of DCB in BTK disease remains uncertain due to a lack of randomized controlled trial data. In summary, this review provides an overall view of current DCB technologies and progress, followed by an update on DCB clinical data in the treatment of CAD and PAD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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36. Endovascular therapy of subclavian artery occlusive disease involving the vertebral artery origin.
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Schneider, Vera, Dirschinger, Ralf, Wustrow, Isabel, Müller, Arne, Cassese, Salvatore, Fusaro, Massimiliano, Kastrati, Adnan, Koppara, Tobias, Bergmann, Katharina, Laugwitz, Karl-Ludwig, Ibrahim, Tareq, and Bradaric, Christian
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- 2020
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37. The value of the GP's clinical judgement in predicting dementia: a multicentre prospective cohort study among patients in general practice.
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Pentzek, Michael, Wagner, Michael, Abholz, Heinz-Harald, Bickel, Horst, Kaduszkiewicz, Hanna, Wiese, Birgitt, Weyerer, Siegfried, König, Hans-Helmut, Scherer, Martin, Riedel-Heller, Steffi G, Maier, Wolfgang, Koppara, Alexander, AgeCoDe Study Group, van den Bussche, Hendrik, Brettschneider, Christian, Bachmann, Cadja, Blank, Wolfgang, Eifflaender-Gorfer, Sandra, Eisele, Marion, and Ernst, Annette
- Abstract
Background: Clinical judgement is intrinsic to diagnostic strategies in general practice; however, empirical evidence for its validity is sparse.Aim: To ascertain whether a GP's global clinical judgement of future cognitive status has an added value for predicting a patient's likelihood of experiencing dementia.Design and Setting: Multicentre prospective cohort study among patients in German general practice that took place from January 2003 to October 2016.Method: Patients without baseline dementia were assessed with neuropsychological interviews over 12 years; 138 GPs rated the future cognitive decline of their participating patients. Associations of baseline predictors with follow-up incident dementia were analysed with mixed-effects logistic and Cox regression.Results: A total of 3201 patients were analysed over the study period (mean age = 79.6 years, 65.3% females, 6.7% incident dementia in 3 years, 22.1% incident dementia in 12 years). Descriptive analyses and comparison with other cohorts identified the participants as having frequent and long-lasting doctor-patient relationships and being well known to their GPs. The GP baseline rating of future cognitive decline had significant value for 3-year dementia prediction, independent of cognitive test scores and patient's memory complaints (GP ratings of very mild (odds ratio [OR] 1.97, 95% confidence intervals [95% CI] = 1.28 to 3.04); mild (OR 3.00, 95% CI = 1.90 to 4.76); and moderate/severe decline (OR 5.66, 95% CI = 3.29 to 9.73)). GPs' baseline judgements were significantly associated with patients' 12-year dementia-free survival rates (Mantel-Cox log rank test P<0.001).Conclusion: In this sample of patients in familiar doctor-patient relationships, the GP's clinical judgement holds additional value for predicting dementia, complementing test performance and patients' self-reports. Existing and emerging primary care-based dementia risk models should consider the GP's judgement as one predictor. Results underline the importance of the GP-patient relationship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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38. Vascular response to percutaneous coronary intervention with biodegradable-polymer vs. new-generation durable-polymer drug-eluting stents: a meta-analysis of optical coherence tomography imaging trials.
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Cassese, Salvatore, Xhepa, Erion, Ndrepepa, Gjin, Kufner, Sebastian, Colleran, Roisin, Giacoppo, Daniele, Koppara, Tobias, Mankerious, Nader, Byrne, Robert A, and Laugwitz, Karl-Ludwig
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HYPERPLASIA ,BLOOD circulation ,META-analysis ,POLYMERS ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,OPTICAL coherence tomography ,DRUG-eluting stents ,PERCUTANEOUS coronary intervention - Abstract
Aims Whether biodegradable-polymer drug-eluting stents (BP-DES) induce a vascular response at follow-up more favourable than that of new-generation durable-polymer drug-eluting stents (DP-DES) remains controversial. We sought to evaluate the vascular response to percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with BP-DES vs. new-generation DP-DES as assessed by optical coherence tomography (OCT) imaging at follow-up. Methods and results We undertook a meta-analysis of aggregate data by searching electronic scientific databases for investigations of PCI-patients receiving BP-DES vs. new-generation DP-DES and OCT imaging at follow-up. The primary outcome was neointima hyperplasia (NIH) thickness. The co-primary outcome was the incidence of lesions with uncovered struts. The main secondary outcome was the incidence of lesions with malapposed struts. Among 10 trials, a total of 544 PCI-patients were assigned to BP-DES (n = 282) or new-generation DP-DES (n = 262). Of these, 447 participants with 480 treated lesions had analysable OCT imaging at a weighted median follow-up of 7 months. Lesions treated with BP-DES vs. new-generation DP-DES showed comparable NIH thickness [weighted mean difference 95% confidence intervals (CI) = −11.37 (−29.25, 6.52); P = 0.21]. However, thick-struts (>100 μm) BP-DES showed less NIH thickness as compared to new-generation DP-DES [−20.39 (−33.83, −6.95); P = 0.003]. BP-DES vs. new-generation DP-DES showed a higher risk for uncovered struts [odds ratio 95% CI = 3.50 (1.69–7.26); P = 0.0008] and a trend towards higher risk for malapposed struts [2.01 (0.98–4.12); P = 0.06]. Conclusion In PCI-patients with available OCT imaging at follow-up, BP-DES with thicker backbones delay vascular response as compared with new-generation DP-DES. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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39. Absorption, metabolism and excretion of [14C]omarigliptin, a once-weekly DPP-4 inhibitor, in humans.
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Xu, Shiyao, Tatosian, Dan, Mcintosh, Ian, Caceres, Maria, Matthews, Catherine, Samuel, Koppara, Selverian, Diana, Kumar, Sanjeev, and Kauh, Eunkyung
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TYPE 2 diabetes ,METABOLISM ,EXCRETION ,ABSORPTION ,RADIOACTIVITY - Abstract
1. Omarigliptin (MARIZEV®) is a once-weekly DPP-4 inhibitor approved in Japan for the treatment of type 2 diabetes. The objective of this study was to investigate the absorption, metabolism and excretion of omarigliptin in humans. 2. Six healthy subjects received a single oral dose of 25
14 C]omarigliptin. Blood, plasma, urine and fecal samples were collected at various intervals for up to 2014 C]Omarigliptin was rapidly absorbed, with peak plasma concentrations observed at 0.5-2- Published
- 2018
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40. Cerebrospinal Fluid Biomarkers and Clinical Progression in Patients with Subjective Cognitive Decline and Mild Cognitive Impairment.
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Wolfsgruber, Steffen, Polcher, Alexandra, Koppara, Alexander, Kleineidam, Luca, Frölich, Lutz, Peters, Oliver, Hóll, Michael, Róther, Eckart, Wiltfang, Jens, Maier, Wolfgang, Kornhuber, Johannes, Lewczuk, Piotr, Jessen, Frank, Wagner, Michael, Hüll, Michael, and Rüther, Eckart
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CEREBROSPINAL fluid ,MILD cognitive impairment ,COGNITION ,DEMENTIA ,COMPARATIVE studies ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,NERVE tissue proteins ,PEPTIDES ,PHOSPHORYLATION ,RESEARCH ,EVALUATION research ,DISEASE incidence ,DISEASE prevalence ,PROPORTIONAL hazards models ,DISEASE progression ,KAPLAN-Meier estimator ,SELF diagnosis - Abstract
Background: There is very limited data on the prevalence of abnormal cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarkers of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and their predictive value for clinical progression in memory clinic patients with subjective cognitive decline (SCD).Objective: To assess the frequency of abnormal CSF biomarkers of AD and their predictive value for clinical progression in memory clinic patients with SCD in comparison to patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) from the same cohort.Methods: We analyzed prospective data from memory clinic patients of the German Competence Network Dementia cohort with a baseline diagnosis of SCD (n = 82) or MCI (n = 134), distinguished by actuarial neuropsychological MCI criteria ("Jak-Bondi criteria"). Risk of clinical progression during 3-year follow-up was evaluated with Cox-Proportional-Hazard models.Results: Prevalence of abnormal values in CSF markers of tau-mediated neurodegeneration (67.8% versus 46.3%) but not of amyloid deposition (40.3% versus 35.4%) was significantly higher in MCI compared to SCD. The rate of incident AD dementia (26.1% versus 12.2%) was also significantly higher in MCI. In SCD, additional 22% progressed to MCI during follow-up. Combined amyloid/tau abnormality was the strongest predictor of clinical progression in both groups.Conclusion: High prevalence of biomarker abnormality and clinical progression, together with the predictive value of CSF biomarkers, in memory clinic patients with SCD support the validity and usefulness of this condition as a "pre-MCI" at risk stage of AD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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41. Face-Name Associative Recognition Deficits in Subjective Cognitive Decline and Mild Cognitive Impairment.
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Polcher, Alexandra, Frommann, Ingo, Koppara, Alexander, Wolfsgruber, Steffen, Wagner, Michael, and Jessen, Frank
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ALZHEIMER'S disease research ,EARLY diagnosis ,ASSOCIATIVE memory (Psychology) ,MILD cognitive impairment ,COGNITION ,HIPPOCAMPUS (Brain) - Abstract
Background: There is a need for more sensitive neuropsychological tests to detect subtle cognitive deficits emerging in the preclinical stage of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Associative memory is a cognitive function supported by the hippocampus and affected early in the process of AD.Objective: We developed a short computerized face-name associative recognition test (FNART) and tested whether it would detect memory impairment in memory clinic patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and subjective cognitive decline (SCD).Methods: We recruited 61 elderly patients with either SCD (n = 32) or MCI (n = 29) and 28 healthy controls (HC) and compared performance on FNART, self-reported cognitive deterioration in different domains (ECog-39), and, in a reduced sample (n = 46), performance on the visual Paired Associates Learning of the CANTAB battery.Results: A significant effect of group on FNART test performance in the total sample was found (p < 0.001). Planned contrasts indicated a significantly lower associative memory performance in the SCD (p = 0.001, d = 0.82) and MCI group (p < 0.001, d = 1.54), as compared to HCs, respectively. The CANTAB-PAL discriminated only between HC and MCI, possibly because of reduced statistical power. Adjusted for depression, performance on FNART was significantly related to ECog-39 Memory in SCD patients (p = 0.024) but not in MCI patients.Conclusions: Associative memory is substantially impaired in memory clinic patients with SCD and correlates specifically with memory complaints at this putative preclinical stage of AD. Further studies will need to examine the predictive validity of the FNART in SCD patients with regard to longitudinal (i.e., conversion to MCI/AD) and biomarker outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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42. Effect of Visual Impairment on Physical and Cognitive Function in Old Age: Findings of a Population-Based Prospective Cohort Study in Germany.
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Hajek, André, Brettschneider, Christian, Lühmann, Dagmar, Eisele, Marion, Mamone, Silke, Wiese, Birgitt, Weyerer, Siegfried, Werle, Jochen, Pentzek, Michael, Fuchs, Angela, Riedel‐Heller, Steffi G., Luck, Tobias, Bickel, Horst, Weeg, Dagmar, Koppara, Alexander, Wagner, Michael, Scherer, Martin, Maier, Wolfgang, König, Hans‐Helmut, and Abholz, Heinz‐Harald
- Subjects
VISION disorders in old age ,FUNCTIONAL loss in older people ,COGNITIVE ability ,GERIATRIC assessment ,MEDICAL offices ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,PHYSICIAN-patient relations ,COHORT analysis ,COGNITION ,DEMOGRAPHY ,LIFE skills ,PROBABILITY theory ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,VISION disorders ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
Objectives To examine how visual impairment affects physical and cognitive function in old age. Design A longitudinal population-based prospective cohort study. Setting General practitioner offices at six study centers in Germany. They were observed every 1.5 years over four waves. Participants Individuals aged 77-101 at follow-up Wave 2 (N = 2,394). Measurements Physical and cognitive function were assessed using an adapted scale that had been previously developed, and visual impairment was rated on a Likert scale (none, mild, severe or profound). Results Adjusting for sociodemographic factors and comorbidity, linear fixed-effects regression showed that the onset of severe visual impairment was associated with a decline in physical function score in the total sample ( β = −0.15, P = .01) and in women ( β = −.15, P = .03). Moreover, the onset of severe visual impairment was associated with decline in cognitive function score in the total sample ( β = −0.38, P < .001) and in women ( β = −0.38, P < .001) and men ( β = −0.37, P = .001). Conclusion Visual impairment affects physical and cognitive function in old age. Interventional strategies to postpone visual impairment may contribute to maintaining physical and cognitive function. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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43. The Latent Dementia Phenotype δ is Associated with Cerebrospinal Fluid Biomarkers of Alzheimer's Disease and Predicts Conversion to Dementia in Subjects with Mild Cognitive Impairment.
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Koppara, Alexander, Wolfsgruber, Steffen, Kleineidam, Luca, Schmidtke, Klaus, Frölich, Lutz, Kurz, Alexander, Schulz, Stefanie, Hampel, Harald, Heuser, Isabella, Peters, Oliver, Reischies, Friedel M., Jahn, Holger, Luckhaus, Christian, Hüll, Michael, Gertz, Hermann-Josef, Schröder, Johannes, Pantel, Johannes, Rienhoff, Otto, Rütherg, Eckart, and Henn, Fritz
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DEMENTIA , *CEREBROSPINAL fluid , *BIOMARKERS , *ALZHEIMER'S disease , *MILD cognitive impairment , *PHENOTYPES , *GENETICS , *DIAGNOSIS of dementia , *COGNITION disorders , *LONGITUDINAL method , *NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *NERVE tissue proteins , *PEPTIDES , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *ACTIVITIES of daily living , *PREDICTIVE tests , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *DISEASE progression , *PSYCHOLOGICAL factors , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background: The recently proposed latent variable δ is a new tool for dementia case finding. It is built in a structural equation modeling framework of cognitive and functional data and constitutes a novel endophenotype for Alzheimer's disease (AD) research and clinical trials.Objective: To investigate the association of δ with AD biomarkers and to compare the prediction of δ with established scales for conversion to dementia in patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI).Methods: Using data from a multicenter memory clinic study, we examined the external associations of the latent variable δ and compared δ with well-established cognitive and functional scales and cognitive-functional composite scores. For that purpose, logistic regressions with cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarkers and conversion to dementia as dependent variables were performed with the investigated scores. The models were tested for significant differences.Results: In patients with MCI, δ based on a broad range of cognitive scales (including the ADAS-cog, the MMSE, and the CERAD neuropsychological battery) predicted an abnormal CSF Aβ42/tau ratio indicative of AD (n = 340, AUC = 0.78, p < 0.001), and predicted incident dementia within 1-3 years of follow-up (n = 525, AUC = 0.84, p < 0.001). These associations were generally stronger than for any other scale or cognitive-functional composite examined. Homologs of δ based on reduced test batteries yielded somewhat lower effects.Conclusion: These findings support the interpretation of δ as a construct capturing the disease-related "essence" of cognitive and functional impairments in patients with MCI and dementia, and suggest that δ might become an analytical tool for dementia research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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44. Incident Subjective Cognitive Decline Does Not Predict Mortality in the Elderly – Results from the Longitudinal German Study on Ageing, Cognition, and Dementia (AgeCoDe).
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Roehr, Susanne, Luck, Tobias, Heser, Kathrin, Fuchs, Angela, Ernst, Annette, Wiese, Birgitt, Werle, Jochen, Bickel, Horst, Brettschneider, Christian, Koppara, Alexander, Pentzek, Michael, Lange, Carolin, Prokein, Jana, Weyerer, Siegfried, Mösch, Edelgard, König, Hans-Helmut, Maier, Wolfgang, Scherer, Martin, Jessen, Frank, and Riedel-Heller, Steffi G.
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DEMENTIA patients ,MILD cognitive impairment ,AGE factors in disease ,ALZHEIMER'S disease diagnosis ,DISEASE prevalence ,LONGITUDINAL method ,PATIENTS - Abstract
Objective: Subjective cognitive decline (SCD) might represent the first symptomatic representation of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), which is associated with increased mortality. Only few studies, however, have analyzed the association of SCD and mortality, and if so, based on prevalent cases. Thus, we investigated incident SCD in memory and mortality. Methods: Data were derived from the German AgeCoDe study, a prospective longitudinal study on the epidemiology of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and dementia in primary care patients over 75 years covering an observation period of 7.5 years. We used univariate and multivariate Cox regression analyses to examine the relationship of SCD and mortality. Further, we estimated survival times by the Kaplan Meier method and case-fatality rates with regard to SCD. Results: Among 971 individuals without objective cognitive impairment, 233 (24.0%) incidentally expressed SCD at follow-up I. Incident SCD was not significantly associated with increased mortality in the univariate (HR = 1.0, 95% confidence interval = 0.8–1.3, p = .90) as well as in the multivariate analysis (HR = 0.9, 95% confidence interval = 0.7–1.2, p = .40). The same applied for SCD in relation to concerns. Mean survival time with SCD was 8.0 years (SD = 0.1) after onset. Conclusion: Incident SCD in memory in individuals with unimpaired cognitive performance does not predict mortality. The main reason might be that SCD does not ultimately lead into future cognitive decline in any case. However, as prevalence studies suggest, subjectively perceived decline in non-memory cognitive domains might be associated with increased mortality. Future studies may address mortality in such other cognitive domains of SCD in incident cases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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45. Feature Binding Deficits in Subjective Cognitive Decline and in Mild Cognitive Impairment.
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Koppara, Alexander, Frommann, Ingo, Polcher, Alexandra, Parra, Mario A., Maier, Wolfgang, Jessen, Frank, Klockgether, Thomas, and Wagner, Michael
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MILD cognitive impairment , *ALZHEIMER'S disease , *CONTROL groups , *NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *BIOMARKERS , *LONGITUDINAL method , *COGNITION disorders diagnosis , *ANALYSIS of variance , *COGNITION disorders , *MEMORY disorders , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *RESEARCH funding , *PSYCHOLOGICAL factors , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background: Feature binding is a sensitive and specific cognitive marker for Alzheimer's disease (AD). Subjective cognitive decline (SCD) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) are clinical categories associated with an increased risk for AD.Objective: To investigate whether the SCD and MCI group are impaired with regard to feature binding.Methods: The feature binding test was administered to memory clinic patients with either SCD (n = 19, mean MMSE: 29.2) or with MCI (n = 23, mean MMSE: 26.5), and to a group of healthy controls (HC, n = 23, mean MMSE: 29.0). Participants were assessed with the CERAD Plus neuropsychological test battery. Cognitive performance of the three groups was compared by ANCOVA with age, gender and education as covariates and planned contrasts.Results: Groups differed in the binding condition. Planned contrasts showed significant differences in adjusted means between HC and SCD (p = 0.003), as well as between HC and MCI (p < 0.0001).Discussion: The feature binding task detects subtle cognitive impairments in participants with SCD, who are unimpaired in traditional neuropsychological testing. This corroborates the use of feature binding tests in preclinical AD studies and suggests that specific cognitive deficits can be found in SCD. Future studies incorporating AD biomarkers and longitudinal follow-up are needed to further establish the clinical utility of feature binding. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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46. Determinants of health-related quality of life in older primary care patients: results of the longitudinal observational AgeCoDe Study.
- Author
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Eisele, Marion, Kaduszkiewicz, Hanna., König, Hans-Helmut, Lange, Carolin, Wiese, Birgitt, Prokein, Jana, Weyerer, Siegfried, Werle, Jochen, Riedel-Heller, Steffi G., Luppa, Melanie, Heser, Kathrin, Koppara, Alexander, Mösch, Edelgard, Weeg, Dagmar, Fuchs, Angela, Pentzek, Michael, Maier, Wolfgang, Scherer, Martin, Hajek, André, and AgeCoDe Study Group
- Subjects
CHRONIC diseases & psychology ,QUALITY of life ,MENTAL health ,MEDICAL care for older people ,CHRONIC diseases ,COMPARATIVE studies ,MENTAL depression ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PRIMARY health care ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH ,COMORBIDITY ,EVALUATION research ,EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
Background: In older patients with chronic diseases, focusing on subjective, patient-relevant outcomes, such as health-related quality of life (HRQoL), is more pertinent than pursuing clinical or laboratory target values.Aim: To investigate factors influencing the course of HRQoL in older (aged ≥78 years) primary care patients and to derive non-pharmacological recommendations for improving their quality of life.Design and Setting: A population-based prospective longitudinal observational study featuring data analysis from waves 2 to 5 of the AgeCoDe study, which was conducted in six cities in Germany.Method: The HRQoL of 1968 patients over the course of 4.5 years was observed. Patients were, on average, aged 82.6 (±3.4) years and their HRQoL was measured using the EQ-5D visual analogue scale in a face-to-face assessment. Fixed-effects regression models were calculated to examine impact of change in potential influencing factors. This method allows unobserved heterogeneity to be controlled.Results: The course of the participants' HRQoL declined with increasing age, walking and incident hearing impairment. Increasing the number of physical activities improved the HRQoL. These findings were modified by sex, education level, and depression. Especially in females and patients with rather low education levels, increased physical activity improved the subjects' HRQoL, while hearing impairment decreased it. Moving to an institution only improved the HRQoL in patients without depression or those with a low level of education (primary education).Conclusion: Motivating patients to increase their weekly physical activity and to focus on preserving their ability to walk are promising approaches to improving HRQoL in older age. Less-educated patients and those without depression can also benefit from moving into an institution (for example, a care or retirement home). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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47. Thrombogenicity and Early Vascular Healing Response in Metallic Biodegradable Polymer-Based and Fully Bioabsorbable Drug-Eluting Stents.
- Author
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Koppara, Tobias, Qi Cheng, Kazuyuki Yahagi, Hiroyoshi Mori, Sanchez, Oscar David, Feygin, Julia, Wittchow, Eric, Kolodgie, Frank D., Virmani, Renu, and Joner, Michael
- Abstract
Background--Acute thrombogenicity and re-endothelialization represent clinically relevant end points pertaining to the safety of coronary stents, which have not been compared among biodegradable polymer-based drug-eluting metallic stents and fully bioabsorbable scaffolds to date. Methods and Results--We investigated comparative outcomes with respect to acute thrombogenicity and re-endothelialization among thin-strut biodegradable polymer metallic everolimus eluting stents (EES), thick-strut fully bioabsorbable EES, thick-strut biodegradable polymer metallic biolimus-eluting stents and control bare metal stents. An ex-vivo porcine arterio-venous shunt model was used to assess platelet aggregation, whereas a healthy rabbit model of iliofemoral stent implantation was used to assess re-endothelialization and inflammation. Confocal microscopy was used to detect fluorescently labeled antibody staining directed against CD61/CD42b for the identification of aggregated thrombocytes, CD14/PM-1, and RAM-11 for identification of neutrophils and monocytes/macrophages. Endothelial recovery was assessed by scanning electron microscopy, whereas CD31/PECAM-1 was used to confirm endothelial maturity. EES demonstrated significantly less acute thrombogenicity compared with bioabsorbable EES and biolimus-eluting stents. EES showed greater re-endothelialization at 28 days and reduced inflammatory cell adhesion of monocytes/macrophages at 14 days compared with bioabsorbable EES. Only bare metal stents showed complete re-endothelialization at 28 days. Conclusions--These outcomes indicate differential trends in thrombogenicity and vascular healing among contemporary stents used in clinical practice and suggest a need for long-term adjunct antithrombotic pharmacotherapy for bioabsorbable EES. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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48. Subjective cognitive decline is related to CSF biomarkers of AD in patients with MCI.
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Wolfsgruber, Steffen, Jessen, Frank, Koppara, Alexander, Kleineidam, Luca, Schmidtke, Klaus, Frölich, Lutz, Kurz, Alexander, Schulz, Stefanie, Hampel, Harald, Heuser, Isabella, Peters, Oliver, Reischies, Friedel M, Jahn, Holger, Luckhaus, Christian, Hüll, Michael, Gertz, Hermann-Josef, Schröder, Johannes, Pantel, Johannes, Rienhoff, Otto, and Rüther, Eckart
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- 2015
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49. Observations With Simultaneous 18F-FDG PET and MR Imaging in Peripheral Artery Disease.
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Dregely, Isabel, Koppara, Tobias, Nekolla, Stephan G., Nährig, Jörg, Kuhs, Kristin, Langwieser, Nicolas, Dzijan-Horn, Marijana, Ganter, Carl, Joner, Michael, Laugwitz, Karl-Ludwig, Schwaiger, Markus, and Ibrahim, Tareq
- Published
- 2017
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50. Safety and Efficacy of a Potential Treatment Algorithm by Using Manual Compression Repair and Ultrasound-Guided Thrombin Injection for the Management of Iatrogenic Femoral Artery Pseudoaneurysm in a Large Patient Cohort.
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Dzijan-Horn, Marijana, Langwieser, Nicolas, Groha, Philipp, Bradaric, Christian, Linhardt, Maryam, Böttiger, Corinna, Byrne, Robert A., Steppich, Birgit, Koppara, Tobias, Gödel, Julia, Hadamitzky, Martin, Ott, Ilka, von Beckerath, Nicolas, Kastrati, Adnan, Laugwitz, Karl-Ludwig, and Ibrahim, Tareq
- Abstract
Because of the risk of associated complications, femoral pseudoaneurysm (PSA) formation implies further treatment. Ultrasound-guided thrombin injection (UGTI) is becoming the accepted gold standard, but manual compression (MC) represents an established treatment option including PSAs not feasible for UGTI. This study aims to assess our experience in PSA treatment using MC or UGTI according to a potential algorithm based on morphological properties in a large patient cohort.Between January 2007 and January 2011, a total of 432 PSAs were diagnosed in 29091 consecutive patients (1.49%) undergoing femoral artery catheterization. When compressible, small PSAs (<20 mm), PSAs without clearly definable neck, PSAs directly adjacent to vessels, and PSAs with concomitant arteriovenous fistula were referred to MC (n=145, 34%). All other PSAs were treated by UGTI (n=287, 66%). Follow-up duplex scans were performed within 12 to 14 hours after manual compression therapy and within 4 to 6 hours after UGTI or by the next morning and were available for 428 patients (99.1%). The overall success rate of our institutional therapeutic approach was 97.2%, which was achieved by 178 MC- and 357 UGTI-procedures, respectively. Procedural complications occurred in 5 cases (1.4%) after UGTI and in 3 cases (1.7%) after MC, respectively. The treatment algorithm was not successful in 12 patients, whereas 2 PSAs (0.5%) were successfully excluded by implantation of a covered stent-graft, and 10 patients necessitated surgical intervention (2.3%), which was associated with a high complication rate (30%).The presented treatment algorithm facilitates effective and safe PSA elimination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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