T
Tanja Maria Michel
Researcher at University of Southern Denmark
Publications - 60
Citations - 2012
Tanja Maria Michel is an academic researcher from University of Southern Denmark. The author has contributed to research in topics: Autism & Autism spectrum disorder. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 53 publications receiving 1689 citations. Previous affiliations of Tanja Maria Michel include Odense University Hospital & Tabriz University of Medical Sciences.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Brain structure anomalies in autism spectrum disorder--a meta-analysis of VBM studies using anatomic likelihood estimation.
Thomas Nickl-Jockschat,Ute Habel,Tanja Maria Michel,Janessa H. Manning,Angela R. Laird,Peter T. Fox,Frank Schneider,Simon B. Eickhoff +7 more
TL;DR: This unbiased summary provided evidence for consistent structural abnormalities in spite of heterogeneous diagnostic criteria and voxel‐based morphometry (VBM) methodology, but also hinted at a dependency of VBM findings on the age of the patients.
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The Role of Oxidative Stress in Depressive Disorders
TL;DR: A comprehensive overview over the current literature discussing the involvement of oxidative stress and free radicals in depression is given, finding numerous reports elaborating depressive disorder and oxidative stress.
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Evidence for oxidative stress in the frontal cortex in patients with recurrent depressive disorder--a postmortem study.
Tanja Maria Michel,Sophia Frangou,Dorothea Thiemeyer,Sibylle Camara,Julia Jecel,Keinosuke Nara,Andreas Brunklaus,Robert Zoechling,Peter Riederer +8 more
TL;DR: Compared manganese (Mn) and copper/zinc (Cu/Zn) superoxide dismutase (SOD) coenzyme concentrations in postmortem PFC and hippocampal brain tissue from 7 patients with recurrent depressive disorder and 7 neuropsychiatrically healthy controls using sandwich-type enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) technique.
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Regulatory T cells increased while IL-1β decreased during antidepressant therapy
Hubertus Himmerich,Saša Milenović,Stephany Fulda,Birgit Plümäkers,Abigail J. Sheldrick,Tanja Maria Michel,Tilo Kircher,Lothar Rink +7 more
TL;DR: The increase in CD4(+)CD25(hi) Tregs during antidepressant therapy may be the reason for the decrease in cytokine production and the recovery from depression.
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The role of neurotrophic factors in autism
TL;DR: The role of NTFs in ASD is explored and evidence derived from neurochemical investigations, gene association studies and animal models are included to further elucidate the puzzling aetiology of these conditions.