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Nadine Wachsmuth
Researcher at University of Bayreuth
Publications - 52
Citations - 1009
Nadine Wachsmuth is an academic researcher from University of Bayreuth. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 38 publications receiving 781 citations. Previous affiliations of Nadine Wachsmuth include Medical University of Graz.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Altitude training and haemoglobin mass from the optimised carbon monoxide rebreathing method determined by a meta-analysis
Christopher J. Gore,Ken Sharpe,Laura A. Garvican-Lewis,Laura A. Garvican-Lewis,Philo U. Saunders,Philo U. Saunders,Clare E. Humberstone,Eileen Y. Robertson,Nadine Wachsmuth,Sally A. Clark,Blake D. McLean,Birgit Friedmann-Bette,Mitsuo Neya,Torben Pottgiesser,Yorck Olaf Schumacher,Walter Schmidt +15 more
TL;DR: This meta-analysis uses raw data from 17 studies that used carbon monoxide rebreathing to determine Hbmass prealtitude, during altitude and postaltitude to characterise the time course of changes in haemoglobin mass in response to altitude exposure.
Journal ArticleDOI
AltitudeOmics: The Integrative Physiology of Human Acclimatization to Hypobaric Hypoxia and Its Retention upon Reascent
Andrew W. Subudhi,Andrew W. Subudhi,Nicolas Bourdillon,Jenna Bucher,Christopher Davis,Jonathan E. Elliott,Morgan Eutermoster,Oghenero Evero,Jui-Lin Fan,Sonja Jameson-Van Houten,Colleen G. Julian,Jonathan Kark,Sherri Kark,Bengt Kayser,Julia P. Kern,See Eun Kim,Corinna E. Lathan,Steven S. Laurie,Andrew T. Lovering,Ryan Paterson,David M. Polaner,Benjamin J. Ryan,James Spira,Jack W. Tsao,Nadine Wachsmuth,Robert C. Roach +25 more
TL;DR: Findings from the AltitudeOmics project reveal new information about retention of acclimatization, and can be used as a physiological foundation for companion mechanistic studies to explore the molecular mechanisms of acc Climatization and its retention.
Journal ArticleDOI
The effects of classic altitude training on hemoglobin mass in swimmers
Nadine Wachsmuth,Christian Völzke,Nicole Prommer,Arno Schmidt-Trucksäss,F. Frese,O. Spahl,Annette Eastwood,J. Stray-Gundersen,Walter Schmidt +8 more
TL;DR: The altitude (2,320 m) effect on Hb-mass is still present 3 weeks after return, it decisively depends on the health status, but is not influenced by sex, and in healthy subjects it exceeds by far the oscillation occurring at sea level.
Journal ArticleDOI
AltitudeOmics: rapid hemoglobin mass alterations with early acclimatization to and de-acclimatization from 5260 m in healthy humans.
Benjamin J. Ryan,Nadine Wachsmuth,Walter Schmidt,William C. Byrnes,Colleen G. Julian,Andrew T. Lovering,Andrew W. Subudhi,Robert C. Roach +7 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that Hbmass increases within 7 days of ascent to 5260 m but that the altitude-induced HBMass adaptation is lost within 7 Days of descent to 1525 m, suggesting the rapid time course of these adaptations contrasts with the classical dogma.
Journal ArticleDOI
Total hemoglobin mass and blood volume of elite Kenyan runners.
Nicole Prommer,Stefanie Thoma,Lennart Quecke,Thomas Gutekunst,Christian Völzke,Nadine Wachsmuth,Andreas M. Niess,Walter Schmidt +7 more
TL;DR: The oxygen transport of the blood cannot explain the superior endurance performance of Kenyan runners, and tHb-mass even deteriorates after an adaptation to near sea level.