M
Michael Müller-Steinhardt
Researcher at Heidelberg University
Publications - 51
Citations - 1314
Michael Müller-Steinhardt is an academic researcher from Heidelberg University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cytokine & Whole blood. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 50 publications receiving 1242 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael Müller-Steinhardt include University of Lübeck & German Red Cross.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Cytokine responses correlate differentially with age in infancy and early childhood
Christoph Härtel,N. Adam,Tobias Strunk,P. Temming,Michael Müller-Steinhardt,Christian Schultz +5 more
TL;DR: These findings are valuable for further assessment of normal variations and maturation processes in immune cell responses and for the clinical–therapeutic monitoring of immunological status in various childhood diseases.
Journal ArticleDOI
Ex vivo induction of cytokine mRNA expression in human blood samples
TL;DR: The data demonstrate the need for data on the impact of ex vivo variation in order to extract reliable and consistent information, particularly when cytokine mRNA expression data from healthy blood donors are included in clinical studies.
Journal Article
Evaluation of the decellularized pulmonary valve homograft (SynerGraft).
Bechtel Jf,Michael Müller-Steinhardt,Claudia Schmidtke,Brunswik A,Ulrich Stierle,Hans-H. Sievers +5 more
TL;DR: Though evidence was found of a reduced immunologic response after SynerGraft implantation this (unexpectedly) did not translate into any hemodynamic advantage, and factors other than rejection appear as the main contributions to the observed functional changes.
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A 5-year follow-up on antibody response after diphtheria and tetanus vaccination in hemodialysis patients.
TL;DR: Evidence is provided that during a 5-year period, antibody persistence against tetanus toxoid is better than that against diphtheria toxoid, therefore, detection of individual antibody concentrations may be indicated to decide on revaccination.
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Delayed Cytokine mRNA Expression Kinetics after T-Lymphocyte Costimulation: A Quantitative Measure of the Efficacy of Cyclosporin A-based Immunosuppression
TL;DR: A delayed increase in cytokine mRNA expression during T-cell costimulation may represent a sensitive effect of immunosuppression and the parameter "area of cytokineRNA expression over time", which should include absolute cytokine RNA values at two different time points of mRNA kinetics is suggested.