scispace - formally typeset
W

Werner Hacke

Researcher at Heidelberg University

Publications -  688
Citations -  93115

Werner Hacke is an academic researcher from Heidelberg University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Stroke & Thrombolysis. The author has an hindex of 123, co-authored 656 publications receiving 84593 citations. Previous affiliations of Werner Hacke include University Hospital Heidelberg & Steklov Mathematical Institute.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Kognitive Leistungsfähigkeit nach Operation und stentgeschützter Angioplastie einer Karotisstenose

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors untersuchten eine prospektiven, kontrollierten, and randomisierten Studie, in which they unterstand den Unterschied zwischen der Endarteriektomie (CEA) and der stentgeschutzten Angioplastie (CAS) zur Behandlung einer hochgradigen symptomatischen Karotisstenose im Hinblick auf kognitive Leistungen.
Journal ArticleDOI

Letter to the Editor: Analysis of stroke patient migration for mechanical thrombectomy and changes in neurointerventional center size in Germany.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyse nationwide changes in neurointerventional center size of all German hospitals performing mechanical thrombectomy (MT) in stroke patients from 2016 to 2019 and assess cross-district patient migration for MT for the first time using hospitals' structured quality reports and German Diagnosis-Related Groups data in 2019.
Journal ArticleDOI

HTLV-1-assoziierte Myelopathie/tropische spastische Paraparese

TL;DR: A current review on the pathophysiology, epidemiology, clinical manifestations, diagnosis and treatment of HAM/TSP, a neurological disease caused by infection with HTLV-1 which is very rare in Europe but endemic in many parts of the world.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transcranial oximetry using fast near infrared spectroscopy can detect failure of collateral blood supply in humans

TL;DR: It is concluded, that transcranial pulse oximetry can detect local hypoxia if collateral blood supply fails and is significantly different from all other groups (P<0.05, one way-ANOVA).