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Roald Omdal

Researcher at University of Bergen

Publications -  174
Citations -  5999

Roald Omdal is an academic researcher from University of Bergen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Lupus erythematosus & Peripheral neuropathy. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 163 publications receiving 5103 citations. Previous affiliations of Roald Omdal include Stavanger University Hospital & University Hospital of North Norway.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Variants at multiple loci implicated in both innate and adaptive immune responses are associated with Sjogren's syndrome.

Christopher J. Lessard, +67 more
- 01 Nov 2013 - 
TL;DR: The results highlight the importance of genes that are involved in both innate and adaptive immunity in Sjögren's syndrome, including TNFAIP3, PTTG1, PRDM1, DGKQ, FCGR2A, IRAK1BP1, ITSN2 and PHIP, among others.
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Neuropsychiatric disturbances in SLE are associated with antibodies against NMDA receptors.

TL;DR: Findings in several domains indicate an association between anti‐NR2 antibodies and depressed mood in addition to decreased short‐time memory and learning in patients with SLE.
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Improved detection of advanced oxidation protein products in plasma

TL;DR: This improved method detects plasma AOPP with significantly better reproducibility and accuracy compared to previously reported methods, and prevents both loss of lipoproteins due to precipitation and overestimation as a result of light scattering.
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The effect of age and gender on epidermal nerve fiber density

TL;DR: The small (intra)epidermal nerve fibers (ENFs) now can be visualized with immunohistochemical techniques using the panaxonal marker anti-protein gene product PGP 9.5 (PGP 9.4), establishing a reference range for ENF in a healthy white population and evaluating the reliability of the method.
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Biological mechanisms of chronic fatigue

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide an overview of fatigue in chronic autoimmune and inflammatory disease. But, they do not consider the role of specific genes in chronic fatigue in the development of these diseases.