C
Caroline Haberl
Researcher at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
Publications - 5
Citations - 129
Caroline Haberl is an academic researcher from Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. The author has contributed to research in topics: Intra-rater reliability & Bell's palsy. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications receiving 120 citations.
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Induced brain hypothermia in asphyxiated human newborn infants: a retrospective chart analysis of physiological and adverse effects.
TL;DR: Adverse effects of mild Hypothermia induced for 3 days in asphyxiated newborns were significantly less than expected from previous reports on neonates with accidental hypothermia.
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Effect of lung water content, manipulated by intratracheal furosemide, surfactant, or a mixture of both, on compliance and viscoelastic tissue forces in lung-lavaged newborn piglets.
Andreas W. Flemmer,Georg Simbruner,Stefan Muenzer,Hans Proquitté,Caroline Haberl,Thomas Nicolai,Rosemarie Leiderer +6 more
TL;DR: Although the combination of surfactant with a diuretic failed to increase respiratory compliance to a significantly larger extent than surfactan alone, furosemide at the end of the study increased respiratory Compliance to a level similar to surfactants-containing treatments.
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Inter- and intra-rater reliability of blood and cerebrospinal fluid flow quantification by phase-contrast MRI.
Inga K. Koerte,Caroline Haberl,Michael Schmidt,Andreas Pomschar,Sang H. Lee,Petra Rapp,Denise Steffinger,Rong Wen Tain,Noam Alperin,Birgit Ertl-Wagner +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the intra-class correlation coefficients (ICC) were calculated for the primary measurements of areas and flow rates through the main cervical arteries, veins and the CSF space, and for secondary parameters derived from the individual flow rates.
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Methodological investigation of measuring nasopharyngeal temperature as noninvasive brain temperature analogue in the neonate
TL;DR: Tnasoph measured at a position anatomically closest to the brain reflects epidural brain temperature more closely than Trectum when measured at nose-ear distance, and is unaffected by breathing or head turning.
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Canalicular magnetic stimulation lacks specificity to differentiate idiopathic facial palsy from borreliosis in children.
Andreas Hufschmidt,Wolfgang Müller-Felber,Maria Tzitiridou,Urban M. Fietzek,Caroline Haberl,Florian Heinen +5 more
TL;DR: D diagnostic assessment by TMS failed to provide a reliable diagnostic criterion for distinguishing between idiopathic facial nerve palsy and bFNP in children and adolescents.