C
Clemens Kirschbaum
Researcher at Dresden University of Technology
Publications - 519
Citations - 67877
Clemens Kirschbaum is an academic researcher from Dresden University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Trier social stress test & Cortisol secretion. The author has an hindex of 117, co-authored 488 publications receiving 61570 citations. Previous affiliations of Clemens Kirschbaum include University of Düsseldorf & University of Trier.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Multimodal MRI and cognitive function in patients with breast cancer prior to adjuvant treatment--the role of fatigue.
Sanne Menning,Michiel B. de Ruiter,Dick J. Veltman,Vincent Koppelmans,Clemens Kirschbaum,Willem Boogerd,Liesbeth Reneman,Sanne B. Schagen +7 more
TL;DR: The cognitive and imaging data converged to show that symptoms of fatigue were associated with the observed abnormalities; the observed differences were no longer significant when fatigue was accounted for.
Journal ArticleDOI
Social hierarchy and adrenocortical stress reactivity in men
TL;DR: The data suggest a close relationship between social status and pituitary-adrenal responsiveness to psychological stress in men and stress induced salivary cortisol levels under experimental psychological stress.
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Serotonin transporter gene variation impacts innate fear processing: acoustic startle response and emotional startle
Burkhard Brocke,Diana Armbruster,Johannes Müller,Tilman Hensch,Christian Jacob,K.P. Lesch,Clemens Kirschbaum,Alexander Strobel +7 more
TL;DR: The results provide first evidence that the startle response is sensitive to genetic variation in the serotonin pathway, and may provide a valuable endophenotype of fear processing and underlying serotonergic influences.
Journal ArticleDOI
Elevated hair cortisol levels in chronically stressed dementia caregivers.
TL;DR: Elevated HCC in dementia caregivers compared to non-caregiver controls concur with the notion that HCC sensitively capture endocrine aberrations in stress-exposed groups.
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Tissue specificity of glucocorticoid sensitivity in healthy adults.
M. Ebrecht,Angelika Buske-Kirschbaum,Dirk H. Hellhammer,S. Kern,Nicolas Rohleder,Brian R. Walker,Clemens Kirschbaum,Clemens Kirschbaum +7 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that variability in glucocorticoid sensitivity is target tissue specific in healthy subjects, and the idea that interindividual variation in GC sensitivity is an intrinsic trait affecting all tissues is suggested.