Christoph Preul
University of Jena
33 Papers
205 Citations
Christoph Preul is an academic researcher from University of Jena. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Insula. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 31 publications. Previous affiliations of Christoph Preul include Max Planck Society.
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Papers
•Journal Article
Diffuse Axonal Injury Associated with Chronic Traumatic Brain Injury: Evidence from T2*-weighted Gradient-echo Imaging at 3 T
TL;DR: T2*-weighted gradient-echo imaging at high field strength is a useful tool for the evaluation of diffuse axonal injury during the chronic stage of traumatic brain injury.
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Cognitive Sequelae of Diffuse Axonal Injury
TL;DR: An MRI lesion pattern compatible with isolated DAI is associated with persistent cognitive impairment, and the traumatic microbleed load is no sufficient parameter for the assessment of DAI severity or functional outcome.
277
The first evaluation of brain shift during functional neurosurgery by deformation field analysis
Dirk Winkler,Marc Tittgemeyer,Johannes Schwarz,Christoph Preul,Karl Strecker,Jürgen Meixensberger +5 more
TL;DR: The need to reduce risk factors for intraoperative brain movement is shown and the ability of deformation field analysis to quantify this complication is demonstrated.
136
Functional deactivations: Multiple ipsilateral brain areas engaged in the processing of somatosensory information
Carsten M. Klingner,Ralph Huonker,Sandra Flemming,Caroline Hasler,Stefan Brodoehl,Christoph Preul,Hartmut Peter Burmeister,Andreas Kastrup,Otto W. Witte +8 more
TL;DR: Negative deflections of the BOLD response were found consistently in several ipsilateral brain areas, including the primary somatosensory cortex, the supplementary motor area, the insula, the dorsal part of the posterior cingulate cortex, and the contralateral cerebellum, indicating that the physiological basis of these deactivations differs from that of the positive BOLD responses.
No impairment of recognition and experience of disgust in a patient with a right-hemispheric lesion of the insula and basal ganglia.
Thomas Straube,Anja Weisbrod,Stephanie Schmidt,Claudia Raschdorf,Christoph Preul,Hans-Joachim Mentzel,Wolfgang H. R. Miltner +6 more
TL;DR: Either deficits in disgust processing are not reliably observed in patients with lesion of the insula and basal ganglia regardless of the laterality of the lesion; or right-hemispheric lesions, in contrast to left-hemisphere lesions, do not seem to induce impairments in the processing of disgust.
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