Browsing by Author "Schmidt, Wolfgang A. (7404056149)"
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Publication The 2017 EULAR standardised procedures for ultrasound imaging in rheumatology(2017) ;Möller, Ingrid (7103192512) ;Janta, Iustina (55930777100) ;Backhaus, Marina (55357052600) ;Ohrndorf, Sarah (13205334300) ;Bong, David A. (6603031463) ;Martinoli, Carlo (7005449059) ;Filippucci, Emilio (6603881110) ;Sconfienza, Luca Maria (24448438200) ;Terslev, Lene (55949307900) ;Damjanov, Nemanja (8503557800) ;Hammer, Hilde Berner (7102733905) ;Sudol-Szopinska, Iwona (7003455916) ;Grassi, Walter (7005496865) ;Balint, Peter (7005110127) ;Bruyn, George A.W. (7006486448) ;D'Agostino, Maria Antonietta (26643055600) ;Hollander, Diana (57199077688) ;Siddle, Heidi J. (26650180700) ;Supp, Gabriela (55814504000) ;Schmidt, Wolfgang A. (7404056149) ;Iagnocco, Annamaria (6603972277) ;Koski, Juhani (7005081297) ;Kane, David (35787288500) ;Fodor, Daniela (24168513700) ;Bruns, Alessandra (57207968067) ;Mandl, Peter (56632095700) ;Kaeley, Gurjit S. (6507369276) ;Micu, Mihaela (36176375800) ;Ho, Carmen (7404652632) ;Vlad, Violeta (35724995700) ;Chávez-López, Mario (55930446200) ;Filippou, Georgios (57877288000) ;Cerón, Carmen Elena (56585652100) ;Nestorova, Rodina (24923396300) ;Quintero, Maritza (12757057400) ;Wakefield, Richard (7006151013) ;Carmona, Loreto (35263586300)Naredo, Esperanza (6602827091)Background In 2001, the European League Against Rheumatism developed and disseminated the first guidelines for musculoskeletal (MS) ultrasound (US) in rheumatology. Fifteen years later, the dramatic expansion of new data on MSUS in the literature coupled with technological developments in US imaging has necessitated an update of these guidelines. Objectives To update the existing MSUS guidelines in rheumatology as well as to extend their scope to other anatomic structures relevant for rheumatology. Methods The project consisted of the following steps: (1) a systematic literature review of MSUS evaluable structures; (2) a Delphi survey among rheumatologist and radiologist experts in MSUS to select MS and non-MS anatomic structures evaluable by US that are relevant to rheumatology, to select abnormalities evaluable by US and to prioritise these pathologies for rheumatology and (3) a nominal group technique to achieve consensus on the US scanning procedures and to produce an electronic illustrated manual (ie, App of these procedures). Results Structures from nine MS and non-MS areas (ie, shoulder, elbow, wrist and hand, hip, knee, ankle and foot, peripheral nerves, salivary glands and vessels) were selected for MSUS in rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases (RMD) and their detailed scanning procedures (ie, patient position, probe placement, scanning method and bony/other landmarks) were used to produce the App. In addition, US evaluable abnormalities present in RMD for each anatomic structure and their relevance for rheumatology were agreed on by the MSUS experts. Conclusions This task force has produced a consensus-based comprehensive and practical framework on standardised procedures for MSUS imaging in rheumatology. © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2017. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication The 2017 EULAR standardised procedures for ultrasound imaging in rheumatology(2017) ;Möller, Ingrid (7103192512) ;Janta, Iustina (55930777100) ;Backhaus, Marina (55357052600) ;Ohrndorf, Sarah (13205334300) ;Bong, David A. (6603031463) ;Martinoli, Carlo (7005449059) ;Filippucci, Emilio (6603881110) ;Sconfienza, Luca Maria (24448438200) ;Terslev, Lene (55949307900) ;Damjanov, Nemanja (8503557800) ;Hammer, Hilde Berner (7102733905) ;Sudol-Szopinska, Iwona (7003455916) ;Grassi, Walter (7005496865) ;Balint, Peter (7005110127) ;Bruyn, George A.W. (7006486448) ;D'Agostino, Maria Antonietta (26643055600) ;Hollander, Diana (57199077688) ;Siddle, Heidi J. (26650180700) ;Supp, Gabriela (55814504000) ;Schmidt, Wolfgang A. (7404056149) ;Iagnocco, Annamaria (6603972277) ;Koski, Juhani (7005081297) ;Kane, David (35787288500) ;Fodor, Daniela (24168513700) ;Bruns, Alessandra (57207968067) ;Mandl, Peter (56632095700) ;Kaeley, Gurjit S. (6507369276) ;Micu, Mihaela (36176375800) ;Ho, Carmen (7404652632) ;Vlad, Violeta (35724995700) ;Chávez-López, Mario (55930446200) ;Filippou, Georgios (57877288000) ;Cerón, Carmen Elena (56585652100) ;Nestorova, Rodina (24923396300) ;Quintero, Maritza (12757057400) ;Wakefield, Richard (7006151013) ;Carmona, Loreto (35263586300)Naredo, Esperanza (6602827091)Background In 2001, the European League Against Rheumatism developed and disseminated the first guidelines for musculoskeletal (MS) ultrasound (US) in rheumatology. Fifteen years later, the dramatic expansion of new data on MSUS in the literature coupled with technological developments in US imaging has necessitated an update of these guidelines. Objectives To update the existing MSUS guidelines in rheumatology as well as to extend their scope to other anatomic structures relevant for rheumatology. Methods The project consisted of the following steps: (1) a systematic literature review of MSUS evaluable structures; (2) a Delphi survey among rheumatologist and radiologist experts in MSUS to select MS and non-MS anatomic structures evaluable by US that are relevant to rheumatology, to select abnormalities evaluable by US and to prioritise these pathologies for rheumatology and (3) a nominal group technique to achieve consensus on the US scanning procedures and to produce an electronic illustrated manual (ie, App of these procedures). Results Structures from nine MS and non-MS areas (ie, shoulder, elbow, wrist and hand, hip, knee, ankle and foot, peripheral nerves, salivary glands and vessels) were selected for MSUS in rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases (RMD) and their detailed scanning procedures (ie, patient position, probe placement, scanning method and bony/other landmarks) were used to produce the App. In addition, US evaluable abnormalities present in RMD for each anatomic structure and their relevance for rheumatology were agreed on by the MSUS experts. Conclusions This task force has produced a consensus-based comprehensive and practical framework on standardised procedures for MSUS imaging in rheumatology. © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2017. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication The new frontiers of ultrasound in the complex world of vasculitides and scleroderma(2012) ;Porta, Francesco (56257387000) ;Gargani, Luna (23012323000) ;Kaloudi, Olga (16024485000) ;Schmidt, Wolfgang A. (7404056149) ;Picano, Eugenio (7102408994) ;Damjanov, Nemanja (8503557800)Matucci-Cerinic, Marco (7005642558)Modern US equipment allows rheumatologists to directly visualize vascular, musculoskeletal, dermal and internal organ structure. In multisystemic and challenging diseases such as vasculitides and scleroderma, where new outcome measures are required in both clinical practice and trials, US measures promise reproducible and objective scores of disease activity and extension. US reveals early pathognonomic abnormalities and may help start early treatment. © The Author 2012. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Society for Rheumatology. All rights reserved. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication The OMERACT ultrasound group: A report from the OMERACT 2016 meeting and perspectives(2017) ;Terslev, Lene (55949307900) ;Iagnocco, Annamaria (6603972277) ;Bruyn, George A.W. (7006486448) ;Naredo, Esperanza (6602827091) ;Vojinovic, Jelena (6603423836) ;Collado, Paz (7004139223) ;Damjanov, Nemanja (8503557800) ;Filer, Andrew (6603511236) ;Filippou, Georgios (57877288000) ;Finzel, Stephanie (36703920200) ;Gandjbakhch, Frederique (23567463900) ;Ikeda, Kei (7404891581) ;Keen, Helen I. (15051832900) ;Kortekaas, Marion C. (36944035400) ;Magni-Manzoni, Silvia (6602281787) ;Ohrndorf, Sarah (13205334300) ;Pineda, Carlos (55989786100) ;Ravagnani, Viviana (23100930700) ;Richards, Bethan (19737986700) ;Sahbudin, Ilfita (56731080400) ;Schmidt, Wolfgang A. (7404056149) ;Siddle, Heidi J. (26650180700) ;Stoenoiu, Maria S. (6602649826) ;Szkudlarek, Marcin (6603855651) ;Tzaribachev, Nikolay (16837459300)D'Agostino, Maria-Antonietta (26643055600)Objective: To provide an update from the Outcome Measures in Rheumatology (OMERACT) Ultrasound Working Group on the progress for defining ultrasound (US) minimal disease activity threshold at joint level in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and for standardization of US application in juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA). Methods: For minimal disease activity, healthy controls (HC) and patients with early arthritis (EA) who were naive to disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs were recruited from 2 centers. US was performed of the hands and feet, and scored semiquantitatively (0-3) for synovial hypertrophy (SH) and power Doppler (PD). Synovial effusion (SE) was scored a binary variable. For JIA, a Delphi approach and subsequent validation in static images and patient-based exercises were used to developed preliminary definitions for synovitis and a scoring system. Results: For minimal disease activity, 7% HC had at least 1 joint abnormality versus 30% in the EA group. In HC, the findings of SH and PD were predominantly grade 1 whereas all grades were seen in the EA cohort, but SE was rare. In JIA, synovitis can be diagnosed based on B-mode findings alone because of the presence of physiological vascularization. A semiquantitative scoring system (0-3) for synovitis for both B-mode and Doppler were developed in which the cutoff between Doppler grade 2 and grade 3 was 30%. Conclusion: The first step has been taken to define the threshold for minimal disease activity in RA by US and to define and develop a scoring system for synovitis in JIA. Further steps are planned for the continuous validation of US in these areas. The Journal of Rheumatology Copyright © 2017. All rights reserved. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication The OMERACT ultrasound group: A report from the OMERACT 2016 meeting and perspectives(2017) ;Terslev, Lene (55949307900) ;Iagnocco, Annamaria (6603972277) ;Bruyn, George A.W. (7006486448) ;Naredo, Esperanza (6602827091) ;Vojinovic, Jelena (6603423836) ;Collado, Paz (7004139223) ;Damjanov, Nemanja (8503557800) ;Filer, Andrew (6603511236) ;Filippou, Georgios (57877288000) ;Finzel, Stephanie (36703920200) ;Gandjbakhch, Frederique (23567463900) ;Ikeda, Kei (7404891581) ;Keen, Helen I. (15051832900) ;Kortekaas, Marion C. (36944035400) ;Magni-Manzoni, Silvia (6602281787) ;Ohrndorf, Sarah (13205334300) ;Pineda, Carlos (55989786100) ;Ravagnani, Viviana (23100930700) ;Richards, Bethan (19737986700) ;Sahbudin, Ilfita (56731080400) ;Schmidt, Wolfgang A. (7404056149) ;Siddle, Heidi J. (26650180700) ;Stoenoiu, Maria S. (6602649826) ;Szkudlarek, Marcin (6603855651) ;Tzaribachev, Nikolay (16837459300)D'Agostino, Maria-Antonietta (26643055600)Objective: To provide an update from the Outcome Measures in Rheumatology (OMERACT) Ultrasound Working Group on the progress for defining ultrasound (US) minimal disease activity threshold at joint level in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and for standardization of US application in juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA). Methods: For minimal disease activity, healthy controls (HC) and patients with early arthritis (EA) who were naive to disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs were recruited from 2 centers. US was performed of the hands and feet, and scored semiquantitatively (0-3) for synovial hypertrophy (SH) and power Doppler (PD). Synovial effusion (SE) was scored a binary variable. For JIA, a Delphi approach and subsequent validation in static images and patient-based exercises were used to developed preliminary definitions for synovitis and a scoring system. Results: For minimal disease activity, 7% HC had at least 1 joint abnormality versus 30% in the EA group. In HC, the findings of SH and PD were predominantly grade 1 whereas all grades were seen in the EA cohort, but SE was rare. In JIA, synovitis can be diagnosed based on B-mode findings alone because of the presence of physiological vascularization. A semiquantitative scoring system (0-3) for synovitis for both B-mode and Doppler were developed in which the cutoff between Doppler grade 2 and grade 3 was 30%. Conclusion: The first step has been taken to define the threshold for minimal disease activity in RA by US and to define and develop a scoring system for synovitis in JIA. Further steps are planned for the continuous validation of US in these areas. The Journal of Rheumatology Copyright © 2017. All rights reserved.
