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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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Association of blood pressure and antihypertensive drugs with diurnal alpha-amylase activity.

TL;DR: A higher total output of sAA was found in individuals not using AD or being hypertensive, and especially pronounced in hypertensive individuals not use AD, which indicates a difference between normotensive and hypertensives and an association of AD with characteristics of diurnal amylase.
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Hair glucocorticoid levels in Parkinson's disease.

TL;DR: Parkinson's disease patients were found to have chronically increased cortisone, but not cortisol, levels in PD patients compared to controls and hair cortis one levels were significantly positively associated with PD symptoms related to mood, anhedonia, and anxiety.
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Do dehydroepiandrosterone, progesterone, and testosterone influence women's depression and anxiety levels? Evidence from hair-based hormonal measures of 2105 rural Indian women.

TL;DR: In this cohort of women from rural India, higher depressive symptomatology is associated with lower levels of dehydroepiandrosterone and higher depressive and anxiety symptoms are associated with higher levels of testosterone.
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Biological stress indicators as risk markers for increased alcohol use following traumatic experiences

TL;DR: It is found that with decreasing HCC, the number of new‐onset traumatic events was more strongly associated with subsequent alcohol use independent from changes in posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms, and first evidence suggesting that individual differences in long‐term cortisol regulation are involved in the association between traumatic experiences and subsequent alcoholuse.