Publications by authors named "Marius C Wick"

Cartilage degeneration is one of the most common chronic age-related joint disorders leading to pain and reduced joint motion. The increasing prevalence of osteoarthritis requires accurate cartilage imaging, both clinically and in research. Detailed cartilage imaging is also necessary for traumatic cartilage lesions and for pre- and postoperative assessment of cartilage repair procedures.

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Background and purpose - The number of revision total knee arthroplasties (TKA) is continuously increasing, leading to a growing need for reliable management of metaphyseal bone loss. We evaluated patients operated with a TKA using metal metaphyseal sleeves for bone defects with a minimum 5-year follow-up. Patients and methods - 37 patients had been operated on.

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Article Synopsis
  • Large metal-on-metal (MoM) articulations show increased metal ion concentrations and revision rates compared to conventional metal-on-polyethylene (MoP) couplings, prompting a study on their long-term performance.
  • In a randomized controlled trial with 85 patients (average age 65), after 16 years, results revealed similar 15-year implant survival rates for both MoM (96%) and MoP (97%), but MoM patients had significantly higher serum cobalt and chromium levels.
  • Despite comparable implant survival, the elevated metal ion concentrations in the MoM group raise concerns about their long-term safety and potential health impacts.
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Purpose: Computed tomography (CT) examinations, often using high-radiation dosages, are increasingly used in the acute management of polytrauma patients. This study compares a low-dose polytrauma multi-phase whole-body CT (WBCT) protocol on a latest generation of 16-cm detector 258-slice multi-detector CT (MDCT) scanner with advanced dose reduction techniques to a single-phase polytrauma WBCT protocol on a 64-slice MDCT scanner.

Methods: Between March and September 2015, 109 polytrauma patients (group A) underwent acute WBCT with a low-dose multi-phase WBCT protocol on a 258-slice MDCT whereas 110 polytrauma patients (group B) underwent single-phase trauma CT on a 64-slice MDCT.

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This article presents the recommendations of the European Society of Musculoskeletal Radiology Arthritis Subcommittee on the use of ultrasonography (US) in rheumatic disease, focused on the examination of joints in the adult population. The recommended examination technique and protocols used in a radiologic work-up are discussed. The main US features that can lead to a final diagnosis in the most common rheumatic diseases are addressed.

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Objectives: Predicted versus observed radiographic progression in early rheumatoid arthritis (POPeRA) was applied to demonstrate how various treatment modalities affect and potentially minimise radiographic progression over time.

Methods: The POPeRA method utilises the baseline radiographic score and patient-reported symptom duration to predict radiographic outcomes. It was applied at baseline, 2, and 5 years to patients with eRA from the randomised Finnish RA Combination trial (FIN-RACo) (n=144) and New Finnish RA Combination Therapy (NEO-RACo) (n=90) trials.

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This article presents the recommendations of the European Society of Musculoskeletal Radiology Arthritis Subcommittee regarding the standards of the use of MRI in the diagnosis of musculoskeletal rheumatic diseases. The recommendations discuss (1) the role of MRI in current classification criteria of musculoskeletal rheumatic diseases (including early diagnosis of inflammation, disease follow-up, and identification of disease complications); (2) the impact of MRI on the diagnosis of axial and peripheral spondyloarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, and juvenile spondyloarthritis; (3) MRI protocols for the axial and peripheral joints; (4) MRI interpretation and reporting for axial and peripheral joints; and finally, (5) methods for assessing MR images including quantitative, semiquantitative, and dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI studies.

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Introduction: Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients with autoantibodies against collagen type II (CII) are characterized by acute RA onset with elevated inflammatory measures and early joint erosions as well as increased production of tumor necrosis factor-α (ΤΝF-α) by peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) stimulated by anti-CII immune complexes (IC) in vitro. Polymorphonuclear granulocytes (PMN) are abundant in RA synovial fluids, where they might interact directly with anti-CII IC in the articular cartilage, but no studies have investigated PMN responses towards anti-CII IC. The aim was to investigate whether PMN react towards anti-CII IC, and to what extent such reactivity might relate to the clinical acute onset RA phenotype associated with elevated levels of anti-CII.

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All participants for image samplings provided written informed consent. Conventional B-mode ultrasonography (US) has been widely utilized for musculoskeletal problems as a first-line approach because of the advantages of real-time access and the relatively low cost. The biomechanical properties of soft tissues reflect to some degree the pathophysiology of the musculoskeletal disorder.

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Atherosclerosis is a chronic, multifactorial disease that starts in youth, manifests clinically later in life, and can lead to myocardial infarction, stroke, claudication, and death. Although inflammatory processes have long been known to be involved in atherogenesis, interest in this subject has grown in the past 30-40 years. Animal experiments and human analyses of early atherosclerotic lesions have shown that the first pathogenic event in atherogenesis is the intimal infiltration of T cells at arterial branching points.

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Knee osteoarthritis (OA) in the elderly is one of the most common degenerative age-related joint diseases leading to typical degradation of articular cartilage with severe pain and limitation of joint motion. Its increasing prevalence due to the demographic development of the society has major implications for individual and public healthcare with the increasing necessity for clinical imaging assessment in a high number of individuals. Although conventional X-ray radiographs are widely considered as gold standard for the assessment of knee OA, in clinical and scientific settings they increasingly bare significant limitations in situations when high resolution and detailed assessment of cartilage is demanded.

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Purpose: To report a retrospective review of all patients who were admitted to the interventional radiology unit at our hospital for transcatheter arterial embolization (TAE) of an acute active hemorrhage of the inferior epigastric artery.

Methods: From 1996 to 2012, 52 consecutive patients (26 men; mean age 63±15 years) with hemodynamically relevant active abdominal wall hematoma were admitted for TAE of the inferior epigastric artery. Of these, 19 patients had spontaneous hemorrhage due to use of anticoagulants, 18 due to abdominal trauma, and 15 due to an iatrogenic complication.

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Objectives: During the last decade, many educational efforts and technological improvements have been made to protect skiing athletes from injuries. Whether these efforts have changed the pattern of acute injuries from skiing casualties has not yet been shown on a medical basis, which this longitudinal study examines.

Methods: All patients transferred to the Department of Radiology of our level I trauma center for acute emergency computed tomography (CT) after alpine skiing accidents from 2000 to 2011 were included.

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Introduction: We have previously reported that high levels of antibodies specific for native human type II collagen (anti-CII) at the time of RA diagnosis were associated with concurrent but not later signs of inflammation. This was associated with CII/anti-CII immune complex (IC)-induced production of pro-inflammatory cytokines in vitro. In contrast, anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide antibodies (anti-CCP) were associated both with late inflammation and late radiological destruction in the same RA cohort.

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A method to estimate the individual ankylosing spondylitis (AS) patient radiological progression of semi-quantitative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) changes in the sacroiliac joints has not been described yet, which this study examines. Inflammatory disease activity and MRIs of the sacroiliac joints of 38 patients with recent onset established AS were analyzed at baseline and during follow-up. Sacroiliac MRIs were semi-quantitatively assessed using a modification of the "Spondylarthritis Research Consortium of Canada" (SPARCC) method.

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Purpose: To present an initial peripheral application of the self-expanding, detachable, fully-retrievable Solitaire FR Recanalization Device for endovascular thrombectomy in the lower leg of a patient with acute peripheral limb ischemia.

Case Report: A 79-year-old woman with a long history of peripheral arterial occlusive disease and a femoropopliteal bypass graft presented with sudden grade IIb ischemia of the left lower leg. Conventional antegrade angiography identified total thrombotic occlusion of the tibioperoneal trunk below the distal femoropopliteal bypass anastomosis; the bypass itself was not occluded.

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Objective: Production of anti-citrullinated protein antibodies (ACPAs) is an important biomarker for rheumatoid arthritis (RA). We undertook this study to determine whether genetic factors (HLA-DRB1 alleles) are associated with extreme ACPA levels in individuals with ACPA-positive RA, and to ascertain whether there are any phenotypic characteristics associated with these subgroups of RA.

Methods: HLA-DRB1 allelic groups were genotyped in 1,073 ACPA-positive RA patients from the Swedish Epidemiological Investigation of Rheumatoid Arthritis study.

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Objective: To assess the value of sonographic criteria, based on measurements of joint capsule distension and synovial hyperemia, during the course of repeated ultrasound (US)-guided intra-articular injections of hyaluronic acid (HA) in hand osteoarthritis (OA).

Materials And Methods: Thirty-three patients (28 females/5 males), with hand OA in 78 joints, were included in this study. Patients underwent sonographic evaluation at baseline and consecutively for 4 weeks at weekly US-guided intra-articular injections of HA (Hyalgan(®)).

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Hallmarks of inflammation in various cardiovascular diseases, notably atherosclerosis, have been observed for a long time. However, evidence for an (auto)antigen-driven process at these sites of inflammation has come forward only recently. Heat shock proteins (HSPs) have been identified as playing either immunologically mediated disease promoting or protective roles.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the relationship between the GSTM1 gene copy number variation (CNV), smoking, and the risk of developing rheumatoid arthritis (RA), which is influenced by genetic and environmental factors.
  • Using qPCR, researchers analyzed data from over 3,600 individuals and found no overall link between GSTM1 CNV and RA, but identified a significant risk for autoantibody positive RA in non-smoking females over 60 with at least one GSTM1 copy.
  • The results suggest that while GSTM1 variation may impact RA risk in specific populations, it doesn't broadly modify how smoking affects RA risk.
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Diagnostic tests in patients complaining of carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) are based on physical examination, electrodiagnostic tests (EDTs), and diagnostic imaging. Timely diagnosis helps prevent permanent nerve damage and its sequelae in terms of functional impairment. Imaging provides additional information to that obtained from clinical tests and EDTs.

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Objective: To identify the risk of hip and vertebral fractures in patients with rheumatic disorders (RD) and inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD).

Methods: This population-based case-control study assessed the fracture risk of patients with rheumatoid arthritis, juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA), ankylosing spondylitis (AS), systemic lupus erythematosus, polymyositis/dermatomyositis (PM/DM), systemic sclerosis (SSc), Crohn's disease, and ulcerative colitis (UC). The study cohort comprised 53,108 patients with fracture (66% women) and 370,602 age-matched and sex-matched controls.

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We report a novel application to demonstrate and visualize the selective binding of lipids in cells of the reticuloendothelial system to super paramagnetic iron oxide (SPIO) nanoparticles. Ten New Zealand White rabbits that were experimentally injected intravenously with SPIO and five controls were investigated with vibrational microspectroscopy based on surface-enhanced coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (SECARS) microscopy. Marked cellular intensity enhancements in hepatic Kupffer cells and melanomacrophages of spleen have been observed in the range of 2850-2875 cm in SPIO-injected animals but not in controls.

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