Publications by authors named "Thorsten Wischer"

The purpose of this study was to determine the recovery potential of the posterior tibial muscle after late reconstruction following tendon rupture in stage II of posterior tibial tendon dysfunction. Fourteen patients (18 women, 6 men; mean age 59.8 years) were investigated 47 months (range, 24-76 months) after surgical reconstruction of a completely ruptured posterior tibial tendon (end-to-end anastomosis, side-to-side augmentation with the flexor digitorum longus tendon) in combination with a distal calcaneal osteotomy with a tricortical iliac crest bone graft for lengthening of the lateral column.

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Purpose: To investigate the use of magnetic resonance (MR) imaging enhanced with ultrasmall superparamagnetic particles of iron oxide (USPIO) to identify acute, early chronic, and late chronic abscess formation in an experimental model of soft-tissue abscess.

Materials And Methods: Experimental soft-tissue infection in 15 rats was imaged with an MR imaging unit on days 1 and 2 (acute), days 5 and 6 (early chronic), and days 8 and 9 (late chronic) after inoculation of the infectious agent. All animals were imaged without contrast enhancement and immediately and 24 hours after USPIO administration.

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Purpose: To investigate the feasibility of macrophage magnetic resonance (MR) imaging in rats by using an experimental soft-tissue infection model.

Materials And Methods: Thirteen rats with unilateral calf-muscle infection were imaged with a 4.7-T MR imager at an early chronic stage of infection (day 4 before contrast material injection, days 4-7 after injection).

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Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate the use of MR imaging in the characterization of the Perthes lesion by correlating MR findings with findings at arthroscopy.

Conclusion: The use of a combination of axial and abduction-external rotation position sequences on MR images can be helpful in the diagnosis of a Perthes lesion. A fluid-filled joint with capsular distension, caused by either a large amount of effusion or MR arthrography, was found to be helpful in outlining Perthes lesions.

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