Publications by authors named "Bitter F"

The role of sensory awareness in movement control is receiving increasing interest in sports and clinical literature as a feed-forward and feedback mechanism. The aim of the study was to assess the feasibility and effect of training in sensory awareness on dexterity in healthy adults. 29 healthy students were randomly allocated to a single-group, sensory awareness lesson with the dominant hand, the same lesson with the nondominant hand, or to a sham control group.

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The upward creep of the heart during myocardial single photon emission tomography (SPET) acquisition has been reported as a frequent source of false-positive results. The aim of this study was to simplify the detection and correction of this upward creep and to estimate its clinical relevance during routine patient care. To recognize the upward heart motion a straight line was fitted to the upper and lower border of consecutively displayed tomographic projection images.

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Gated SPECT (GASPECT) during radionuclide ventriculography (RNV) is a time-consuming procedure requiring extended hard- and software. Furthermore, the procedure suffers from poor count statistics. Our method tries to overcome these difficulties by exploiting the count summation effect of Fourier analysis.

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Timing of aortic valve replacement (AVR) in chronic aortic regurgitation (AR) remains a difficult problem in clinical practice. Radionuclide ventriculography (RNV) yields information on the extent of valvular regurgitation, the enlargement and the systolic function of the left ventricle. A "well-timed" AVR is defined by 1) postoperative improvement of clinical symptoms, decrease in left ventricular end-diastolic volume (EDV) and normalization of ejection fraction (EF) as well as by 2) greater improvement under surgical therapy as compared to conservative management.

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Electrocardiograms and radionuclide ventriculograms were obtained at rest and on exercise in 23 patients (20 men and 3 women, mean age 53.4 years) with exercise-dependent myocardial ischaemia after infarction, as well as in 22 persons (17 men and 5 women, mean age 43 years) without clinical, electrocardiographic and biochemical evidence of coronary heart disease. Among the ischaemia patients exercise-dependent loss of motility, as measured by regional ejection fraction and Fourier amplitude, occurred in 95% (50% of controls) in one sector, in 78% (4.

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Criteria for the detection of coronary artery disease in nuclear cardiology include visualization of perfusion defects and functional impairment of contraction. The purpose of this study is to combine both methods in one procedure with the new myocardial perfusion tracer, 99mTc-methoxy-isobutyl-isonitril (MIBI), reducing time and radiation burden to the patient. Following an uncomplicated recovery, ten patients with first myocardial infarction participated in this study.

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Myocardial scanning (MS) and radionuclide ventriculography (RNV) are the foundation of nuclear cardiology. These procedures aim in two completely different directions: RNV tries to image heart motion, that is, mechanical (pump) function, and therefore belongs to the group of first-order functional imaging (FI, imaging mechanical function), whereas MS is based on myocardial metabolism, and therefore can be attributed to third-order functional imaging (metabolism). This statement is relevant for the assessment of the clinical position of RNV: Third-order (metabolism) functional imaging is the domain of nuclear medicine (NM), whereas first-order FI has to face the competition of alternative noninvasive procedures such as ultrasound (US), digital subtraction angiography (DSA), computer tomography (CT), and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR).

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In LBBB the diagnosis of the underlying disease, i.e. infarction (MI) or cardiomyopathy (CMP), is still a challenge.

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The diagnosis of tricuspid regurgitation (TR) is difficult to make by simple clinical methods or by invasive techniques. Contrast echocardiography and Doppler echocardiography have improved diagnostic results, but a golden standard is still not available. Radionuclide ventriculography (RNV) is a well-established method for the detection and quantification of a volume load on the left ventricle: the regurgitation fraction can simply be derived from the regurgitant index as the ratio of enddiastolic-endsystolic count-rate differences between the left and right ventricle.

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A series of 42 patients with chest pain but normal coronary angiograms and normal haemodynamics at rest were prospectively classified as typical angina (group 1, N = 9) or atypical angina (group 2, N = 16) or non-anginal chest pain (group 3, N = 17). All patients underwent radionuclide ventriculography and measurement of pulmonary artery pressure at rest and during maximum exercise. Comparison of data during exercise revealed significantly higher (P less than 0.

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Fourier transform of gated radionuclide ventriculograms (RNV) permits the quantitative evaluation of regional wall motion abnormalities (RWMA) regarding both regional magnitude (amplitude display) and regional time sequence of contraction (phase display). In this study, an attempt was made to further specify coronary artery disease (CAD) and non-CAD RWMA detected on consecutive exercise RNV in 17 patients (pts) with proven severe CAD; or on resting RNV in 24 pts with transmural myocardial infarction (MI) compared with 27 pts after treatment with daunorubicin (DAU). RWMA were defined objectively from parametric images by a decrease of the sectorial amplitude by more than 2 s.

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In order to test the diagnostic potential of phase analysis of radionuclide ventriculography (RNV) for localizing accessory bundles in Wolff-Parkinson-White (WPW) syndrome, 24 experimental runs were performed in three open chest instrumented dogs. After a baseline study, WPW syndrome was simulated by stimulation at seven different sites around the base of the ventricles, and RNV's were obtained. Subsequent data processing including Fourier transformation allowed the localization of the site of the first inward motion of the ventricles by an isophasic wave display.

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A consecutive series of 56 patients with chest pain but no evidence of previous myocardial infarction was prospectively studied by radionuclide ventriculography to determine the value of global and regional radionuclide indices in detecting coronary artery disease. The results were correlated with the clinical judgment of chest pain, the results of the exercise electrocardiogram, and the right heart haemodynamic measurements during exercise. As a result of the criteria for entry, the study group was representative of the population seen in such a clinical setting.

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It has been suggested that phase analysis of radionuclide ventriculograms may be of value for detecting and localising the abnormal sequence of ventricular contraction secondary to Wolff-Parkinson-White (WPW) syndrome. The present study was undertaken to test this hypothesis. The space--time sequences of right- and left-ventricular action obtained from radionuclide ventriculograms obtained during rest studies were evaluated in 8 patients with WPW syndrome (confirmed by 12-lead surface electrocardiography) and compared to those of 14 normal subjects.

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In order to define as effective a procedure as possible for the intra- and post-partum clearance of the upper airways of meconium contaminated infants, three methods of suction clearance, nasal, oral and combined nasal and oral, were carried out on each of five kittens aged between 17 to 19 weeks. There was an interval of at least one week between each investigation. The animals were anaesthetized with ketamine intramuscularly.

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The present investigation was undertaken to assess a new scintigraphic method for the diagnosis of left-to-right shunts due to atrial septal defect based on the differing stroke volumes of left and right ventricles and to compare it with oxymetric data. Radionuclide ventriculography was carried out after injection of 20 mCi 99mtechnetium-labeled red blood cells. Time-activity curves were obtained from the left and right ventricular regions, and the ratio (A) of end-diastolic-end-systolic count rate differences for the left and right ventricles was calculated.

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ECG gated radionuclide ventriculography was performed in 85 patients with heart disease. From the analysis of time activity curves of each pixel, sets of parametric scans were displayed. Of 496 parametric scans, 192 were normal and 304 showed wall motion abnormalities.

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Extensive analysis of heart function by scintigraphy yields global parameters of ventricular volumes and their changes during the heart cycle (ejection fraction, enddiastolic and endsystolic volumes, velocity of contraction and relaxation). Additionally, information regarding localized disorders of wall motion may be obtained in a qualitative and quantitative manner by the parameters "phase" and "amplitude". These parameters can be computed from regional time-activity curves by Fourier analysis.

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In 17 patients with no demonstrable cardiac disease, analysis of the ventriculogram with respect to regional wall motion was performed. These normal patients formed the basis for establishing the normal ranges for 6 different methods of regional wall motion analysis (3 chord, 2 radial, 1 area). In each method, analysis of regional shortening showed a Gaussian distribution.

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The present investigation was undertaken to introduce a quantitative scintigraphic method for evaluation of regurgitation and to compare it with the generally accepted quantitative method of Sandler and Dodge (Sandler et al., 1963). Radionuclide ventriculography was carried out after injection of 20 mCi 99mtechnetium-labeled red blood cells.

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