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Henry Völzke

Researcher at Greifswald University Hospital

Publications -  1093
Citations -  79204

Henry Völzke is an academic researcher from Greifswald University Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Study of Health in Pomerania. The author has an hindex of 115, co-authored 991 publications receiving 64260 citations. Previous affiliations of Henry Völzke include Group Health Cooperative & Umeå University.

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Complement Component 5 Mediates Development of Fibrosis, via Activation of Stellate Cells, in 2 Mouse Models of Chronic Pancreatitis

TL;DR: In mice, loss of C5 or injection of a C5a-receptor antagonist significantly reduced the level of fibrosis of chronic pancreatitis, but this was not a consequence of milder disease in early stages of pancreatitis.
Posted ContentDOI

Dissecting the shared genetic architecture of suicide attempt, psychiatric disorders and known risk factors

Niamh Mullins, +327 more
- 04 Dec 2020 - 
TL;DR: The results identify a risk locus that contributes more strongly to SA than other phenotypes and suggest the existence of a shared genetic etiology between SA and known risk factors that is not mediated by psychiatric disorders.
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Missing, unreplaced teeth and risk of all-cause and cardiovascular mortality.

TL;DR: Having 9 or more unreplaced teeth was related to all-cause mortality and cardiovascular mortality and clinicians and dietitians have a responsibility to consider individual chewing ability in nutritional recommendations.
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Psychosocial consequences and severity of disclosed incidental findings from whole-body MRI in a general population study.

TL;DR: Despite the high satisfaction of most participants, there were numerous adverse consequences concerning the communication of incidental findings and false expectations about the likely potential benefits of whole-body-MRI.
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Genome-wide association analysis of diverticular disease points towards neuromuscular, connective tissue and epithelial pathomechanisms

TL;DR: In silico analyses point to diverticulosis primarily as a disorder of intestinal neuromuscular function and of impaired connective fibre support, while an additional diverticula-free controls risk might be conferred by epithelial dysfunction.