@article{JendeKenderRotheretal.2020, author = {Jende, Johann M. E. and Kender, Zoltan and Rother, Christian and Alvarez-Ramos, Lucia and Groener, Jan B. and Pham, Mirko and Morgenstern, Jakob and Oikonomou, Dimitrios and Hahn, Artur and Juerchott, Alexander and Kollmer, Jennifer and Heiland, Sabine and Kopf, Stefan and Nawroth, Peter P. and Bendszus, Martin and Kurz, Felix T.}, title = {Diabetic Polyneuropathy Is Associated With Pathomorphological Changes in Human Dorsal Root Ganglia: A Study Using 3T MR Neurography}, series = {Frontiers in Neuroscience}, volume = {14}, journal = {Frontiers in Neuroscience}, doi = {10.3389/fnins.2020.570744}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-212459}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Diabetic neuropathy (DPN) is one of the most severe and yet most poorly understood complications of diabetes mellitus. In vivo imaging of dorsal root ganglia (DRG), a key structure for the understanding of DPN, has been restricted to animal studies. These have shown a correlation of decreased DRG volume with neuropathic symptom severity. Our objective was to investigate correlations of DRG morphology and signal characteristics at 3 Tesla (3T) magnetic resonance neurography (MRN) with clinical and serological data in diabetic patients with and without DPN. In this cross-sectional study, participants underwent 3T MRN of both L5 DRG using an isotropic 3D T2-weighted, fat-suppressed sequence with subsequent segmentation of DRG volume and analysis of normalized signal properties. Overall, 55 diabetes patients (66 ± 9 years; 32 men; 30 with DPN) took part in this study. DRG volume was smaller in patients with severe DPN when compared to patients with mild or moderate DPN (134.7 ± 21.86 vs 170.1 ± 49.22; p = 0.040). In DPN patients, DRG volume was negatively correlated with the neuropathy disability score (r = -0.43; 95\%CI = -0.66 to -0.14; p = 0.02), a measure of neuropathy severity. DRG volume showed negative correlations with triglycerides (r = -0.40; 95\%CI = -0.57 to -0.19; p = 0.006), and LDL cholesterol (r = -0.33; 95\%CI = -0.51 to -0.11; p = 0.04). There was a strong positive correlation of normalized MR signal intensity (SI) with the neuropathy symptom score in the subgroup of patients with painful DPN (r = 0.80; 95\%CI = 0.46 to 0.93; p = 0.005). DRG SI was positively correlated with HbA1c levels (r = 0.30; 95\%CI = 0.09 to 0.50; p = 0.03) and the triglyceride/HDL ratio (r = 0.40; 95\%CI = 0.19 to 0.57; p = 0.007). In this first in vivo study, we found DRG morphological degeneration and signal increase in correlation with neuropathy severity. This elucidates the potential importance of MR-based DRG assessments in studying structural and functional changes in DPN.}, language = {en} } @article{BaurBuentemeyerMegerleetal.2017, author = {Baur, Johannes and B{\"u}ntemeyer, Tjark-Ole and Megerle, Felix and Deutschbein, Timo and Spitzweg, Christine and Quinkler, Marcus and Nawroth, Peter and Kroiss, Matthias and Germer, Christoph-Thomas and Fassnacht, Martin and Steger, Ulrich}, title = {Outcome after resection of Adrenocortical Carcinoma liver metastases: a retrospective study}, series = {BMC Cancer}, volume = {17}, journal = {BMC Cancer}, number = {522}, doi = {10.1186/s12885-017-3506-z}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-159409}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Background: Metastatic Adrenocortical Carcinoma (ACC) is a rare malignancy with a poor 5-year-survival rate (<15\%). A surgical approach is recommended in selected patients if complete resection of distant metastasis can be achieved. To date there are only limited data on the outcome after surgical resection of hepatic metastases of ACC. Methods: A retrospective analysis of the German Adrenocortical Carcinoma Registry was conducted. Patients with liver metastases of ACC but without extrahepatic metastases or incomplete tumour resection were included. Results: Seventy-seven patients fulfilled these criteria. Forty-three patients underwent resection of liver metastases of ACC. Complete tumour resection (R0) could be achieved in 30 (69.8\%). Median overall survival after liver resection was 76.1 months in comparison to 10.1 months in the 34 remaining patients with unresected liver metastases (p < 0.001). However, disease free survival after liver resection was only 9.1 months. Neither resection status (R0/R1) nor extent of liver resection were significant predictive factors for overall survival. Patients with a time interval to the first metastasis/recurrence (TTFR) of greater than 12 months or solitary liver metastases showed significantly prolonged survival. Conclusions: Liver resection in the case of ACC liver metastases can achieve long term survival with a median overall survival of more than 5 years, but disease free survival is short despite metastasectomy. Time to recurrence and single versus multiple metastases are predictive factors for the outcome.}, language = {en} }