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Inger Nennesmo

Researcher at Karolinska Institutet

Publications -  64
Citations -  2943

Inger Nennesmo is an academic researcher from Karolinska Institutet. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dermatomyositis & Polymyositis. The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 57 publications receiving 2724 citations. Previous affiliations of Inger Nennesmo include Max Planck Society.

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A Pan‐European Study of the C9orf72 Repeat Associated with FTLD: Geographic Prevalence, Genomic Instability, and Intermediate Repeats

Julie van der Zee, +88 more
- 01 Feb 2013 - 
TL;DR: In vitro reporter gene expression studies demonstrated significantly decreased transcriptional activity of C9orf72 with increasing number of normal repeat units, indicating that intermediate repeats might act as predisposing alleles and in favor of the loss‐of‐function disease mechanism.
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Alterations of mitochondrial function and correlations with personality traits in selected major depressive disorder patients

TL;DR: Investigating mitochondrial function in selected depressed patients in search of an aetiological or pathophysiological factor common to both depression and physical symptoms suggested that mitochondrial dysfunction is associated with vulnerability to psychopathology in this selected patient group.
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Resolution of inflammation is altered in Alzheimer's disease

TL;DR: Resolution is the final stage of the inflammatory response, when restoration of tissue occurs and may lead to chronic inflammation, which is known as part of the pathology in the brain of individuals with Alzheimer's disease.
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A high incidence of disease flares in an open pilot study of infliximab in patients with refractory inflammatory myopathies

TL;DR: Infliximab treatment was not effective in refractory inflammatory myopathies, and activation of the type I IFN system in several cases, infliximab is not an alternative treatment in patients with treatment-resistant myositis.
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Neuron to neuron transmission of herpes simplex virus ☆: Transport of virus from skin to brainstem nuclei

TL;DR: The findings indicate that HSV spreads via axons, passes through a series of neurons and in this way can reach vital nuclei in the brainstem including monoaminergic neurons from the primary replication area in the lip.