Stephan Czerner
Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
22 Papers
53 Citations
Stephan Czerner is an academic researcher from Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. The author has contributed to research in topics: Lung transplantation & Transplantation. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 22 publications.
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Papers
The impact of continuous non-invasive arterial blood pressure monitoring on blood pressure stability during general anaesthesia in orthopaedic patients: A randomised trial.
Agnes S. Meidert,Johanna S. Nold,Roman Hornung,Alexander C. Paulus,Bernhard Zwißler,Stephan Czerner +5 more
TL;DR: Investigating the presence of continuous BP monitoring in patients undergoing general anaesthesia with a history of chronic hypertension found that it contributes to BP stability in the studied population.
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Potential functional and survival benefit of double over single lung transplantation for selected patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.
Claus Neurohr,P Huppmann,Dolores Thum,Werner Leuschner,Werner von Wulffen,Tobias Meis,Hanno Leuchte,R. Baumgartner,G. Zimmermann,Rudolf Hatz,Stephan Czerner,Lorenz Frey,Peter Ueberfuhr,Iris Bittmann,Juergen Behr +14 more
TL;DR: The data warrant further trials of SLTX versus DLTX stratifying for potential confounders including PH and Cox regression analysis confirmed SLTX to be a significant predictor for death and BOS.
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Effect of inpatient rehabilitation on quality of life and exercise capacity in long-term lung transplant survivors: A prospective, randomized study
F. Ihle,Claus Neurohr,P Huppmann,G. Zimmermann,Hanno Leuchte,Rainier Baumgartner,Klaus Kenn,Bernd Sczepanski,Rudolf Hatz,Stephan Czerner,Lorenz Frey,Peter Ueberfuhr,Iris Bittmann,Jürgen Behr +13 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that structured physical training may improve exercise tolerance in LTS and the study results did not demonstrate a significant benefit of an inpatient over an outpatient exercise program.
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Extracorporeal Circulation During Lung Transplantation Procedures: a Meta-Analysis
Dominik J. Hoechter,Yu-Ming Shen,Tobias Kammerer,S. Günther,Thomas Weig,René Schramm,Christian Hagl,Frank Born,Bruno Meiser,Gerhard Preissler,Hauke Winter,Stephan Czerner,Bernhard Zwissler,Ulrich U. Mansmann,Vera von Dossow +14 more
TL;DR: Data indicate a benefit of the intraoperative use of ECMO as compared with CPB during lung transplant procedures regarding short-term outcome (ICU stay) and the superiority of EC MO in lutx patients remains to be determined in larger multi-center randomized trials.
The munich lung transplant group: intraoperative extracorporeal circulation in lung transplantation
Dominik J. Hoechter,V. von Dossow-Hanfstingl,Stephan Czerner,Hauke Winter,RA Hatz,Christian Schneider,Hans-Helge Müller,Thomas Weig,Bernhard Zwißler,Bruno Meiser,Claus Neurohr,Tobias Meis,Juergen Behr,Frank Born,Christian Hagl,René Schramm +15 more
Abstract: Abstract Background This retrospective single-center study aimed to analyze transfusion requirements, coagulation parameters, and outcome parameters in patients undergoing lung transplantation (LuTx) with intraoperative extracorporeal circulatory support, comparing cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB), and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). Methods Over a 3-year period, 49 of a total of 188 LuTx recipients were identified being set intraoperatively on either conventional CPB (n = 22) or ECMO (n = 27). Intra- and postoperative transfusion and coagulation factor requirements as well as early outcome parameters were analyzed. Results LuTx patients on CPB had significantly higher intraoperative transfusion requirements when compared with ECMO patients, that is, packed red cells (9 units [5–18] vs. 6 units [4–8], p = 0.011), platelets (3.5 units [2–4] vs. 2 units [0–3], p = 0.034), fibrinogen (5 g [4–6] vs. 0 g [0–4], p = 0.013), prothrombin complex concentrate (3 iU [2–5] vs. 0 iU [0–2], p = 0.001), and tranexamic acid (2.5 mg [2–5] vs. 2.0 mg [1–3], p = 0.002). Also, ventilator support requirements (21days [7–31] vs. 5 days [3–21], p = 0.013) and lengths of ICU stays (36 days [14–62] vs. 15 days [6–44], p = 0.030) were markedly longer in CPB patients. There were no differences in 30-day and 1-year mortality rates. Conclusion These data indicate a perioperative advantage of ECMO usage with low-dose heparinization over conventional CPB for extracorporeal circulatory support during LuTx. Long-term outcome is not affected.
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