Andrik Aschoff

Universität Ulm, Ulm, Baden-Wuerttemberg, Germany

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Publications (4)8.48 Total impact

  • Article: Aortic wall thickness assessed by multidetector computed tomography as a predictor of coronary atherosclerosis.
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    ABSTRACT: Purpose of this study was the evaluation of the thoracic aortic wall thickness as a potential identifier of patients at increased risk for future cardiac events. Thoracic aortic wall thickness was measured with MDCT in 160 patients. The CT-scans were implemented as non-invasive coronary angiography studies. Relationships between aortic wall thickness, sex, age, major risk factors and atherosclerotic plaque burden of the coronary arteries were explored. Higher values of maximum aortic wall thickness of the descending aorta (women P = 0.02, men P = 0.01) were found in patients with coronary atherosclerosis, compared to patients with same gender but excluded atherosclerosis. Aortic wall thickness of the mid-portion of the descending aorta of 3.0 mm is associated with coronary artery disease (CAD) with a specificity of 96.6% (sensitivity 27.5%) and a positive predictive value (PPV) of 93.3%. For patients with two or more major risk factors and a maximum wall thickness of equal or more than 2.6 mm we found a PPV of 100%. We conclude that measurements of maximum wall thickness of the descending aorta are a potential tool for detecting patients with coronary atherosclerosis. The potential effect of combining measurements of aortic wall thickness at routine chest CT studies with a possible cardiovascular screening is substantial and merits further study.
    The international journal of cardiovascular imaging 01/2009; 25(2):209-17. · 2.15 Impact Factor
  • Article: The cisterna chyli: prevalence, characteristics and predisposing factors.
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    ABSTRACT: The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence and characteristics of the cisterna chyli (CC) in a large 3,000-patient cohort and to identify potential predisposing factors for the development of a CC. Three thousand consecutive contrast-enhanced CT examinations (1,261 women, 1,739 men, mean age 61.0 years) of the chest and/or abdomen were included in this retrospective study. Imaging characteristics of the CC (size, attenuation, location) were documented as well as clinical information (malignant disease, pattern of metastasis). A CC was found in 16.1% of the patients with an average volume of 302 microl. The mean attenuation was 4.8 Hounsfield units (HU). Twenty percent of the CC showed CT densities of 15 HU and higher. Patients with malignancies showed a significantly (p < 0.001) higher prevalence of CC (340/1,757, 19.4%) than patients with benign conditions (144/1,243, 11.6%). Especially the finding of a large CC (>1,000 microl) represents an elevated relative risk for malignancy of 1.7 (p = 0.0017). We found a significant association between malignant disease and the presence and size of a cisterna chyli. Identifying the continuity between the CC and the thoracic duct is a safer method to distinguish a CC from retrocrural lymph nodes than near-water CT attenuation alone.
    European Radiology 09/2008; 19(1):73-8. · 3.22 Impact Factor
  • Article: Electronic colon-cleansing for CT colonography: diagnostic performance.
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    ABSTRACT: The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether an electronic-colonic-cleansing (ECC) algorithm is beneficial for the diagnostic performance compared to a CT colonography (CTC) evaluation without electronic cleansing in tagged datasets. Two blinded readers evaluated CTC datasets from 79 patients with 153 colorectal polyps confirmed by optical colonoscopy. Cases were read in a randomized order with and without the use of electronic colon-cleansing software. Per-polyp sensitivity, per-polyp/per-patient specificity and reading times (with and without ECC) have been calculated and reported. Per-polyp sensitivity for polyps >6 mm without using ECC was 60.4% (Reader 1: 59.7%, Reader 2: 61.1%), while polyps >10 mm were detected with a sensitivity of 58.3% (Reader 1: 66.7%, Reader 2: 50%). On electronically cleansed datasets, the sensitivity was 73.6% (Reader 1: 76.4%; Reader 2: 70.8%) for polyps >6 mm and 83.3% (Reader 1: 83.3%; Reader 2: 83.3%), respectively. Per-patient specificity was 75% without using cleansing (Reader 1: 68%, Reader 2: 82%) and 81.5% using ECC (Reader 1: 86%, Reader 2: 77%). Reading CTC cases using ECC software improves sensitivity in detecting clinically relevant colorectal polyps.
    Abdominal Imaging 03/2008; 34(3):359-64. · 1.73 Impact Factor
  • Article: Objective evaluation of vessel attenuation in multidetector-row computed tomographic pulmonary angiography using high-density contrast material for the detection of pulmonary embolism.
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    ABSTRACT: The purpose of this study was to analyze the pulmonary vessel enhancement obtainable using high-density contrast material and saline flushing with automated bolus tracking for multidetector-row computed tomographic (MDCT) pulmonary angiography in a routine clinical setting. Attenuation values of pulmonary vessels were retrospectively measured in 51 CT scans performed on a 40-channel MDCT for unselected emergency patients with clinically suspected pulmonary embolism. Mean vascular attenuation measured 326.7 +/- 104 Hounsfield units (HU) in the pulmonary trunk and 299.1 +/- 102 HU in the left distal lower lobe artery. Mean vascular attenuation values in the distal lower lobe artery were equal or higher than 150 HU for 94.1% (48/51) of patients. In conclusion, the combination of high-density contrast media and saline flushing with automated bolus tracking on a fast CT scanner reliably results in a homogenously high attenuation of pulmonary vessels, allowing precise delineation of clots down to the subsegmental level in MDCT pulmonary angiography.
    Journal of computer assisted tomography 32(6):893-8. · 1.38 Impact Factor