T
Thomas Meyer
Researcher at University of Göttingen
Publications - 201
Citations - 4144
Thomas Meyer is an academic researcher from University of Göttingen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Bipolar disorder & Mood. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 187 publications receiving 3315 citations. Previous affiliations of Thomas Meyer include Newcastle University & University of Texas at Austin.
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Cardiac troponin I elevation in acute pulmonary embolism is associated with right ventricular dysfunction.
TL;DR: Tronin I tests helped to identify patients with RV dilatation who had significantly more segmental defects in lung scans, demonstrating that troponin I assays are useful to detect minor myocardial damage in pulmonary embolism.
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Impact of treatment delay on mortality in ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) patients presenting with and without haemodynamic instability: results from the German prospective, multicentre FITT-STEMI trial.
Karl Heinrich Scholz,Sebastian Maier,Lars S. Maier,Björn Lengenfelder,Claudius Jacobshagen,Jens Jung,Claus Fleischmann,Gerald S. Werner,Hans G Olbrich,Rainer Ott,Harald Mudra,Karlheinz Seidl,P. Christian Schulze,Christian Weiss,Josef Haimerl,Tim Friede,Thomas Meyer +16 more
TL;DR: In patients with CS, the time elapsing from the first medical contact to primary PCI is a strong predictor of an adverse outcome, hence special efforts to shorten contact-to-balloon time should be applied in particular to these high-risk STEMI patients.
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Are behavioral interventions effective in increasing physical activity at 12 to 36 months in adults aged 55 to 70 years? a systematic review and meta-analysis
Nicola Hobbs,Alan Godfrey,Jose Lara,Linda Errington,Thomas Meyer,Lynn Rochester,Martin White,John C. Mathers,Falko F. Sniehotta +8 more
TL;DR: Interventions in adults aged 55 to 70 years led to long term improvements in physical activity at 12 months; however, maintenance beyond this is unclear and these findings have important implications for community-based public health interventions in and around the retirement transition.
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Nuclear localization and phosphorylation modulate pathological effects of Alpha-Synuclein
Raquel Pinho,Raquel Pinho,Isabel Paiva,Kristina Gotovac Jerčić,Luis Fonseca-Ornelas,Ellen Gerhardt,Christiane Fahlbusch,Paula Garcia-Esparcia,Cemil Kerimoglu,Maria Angeliki S. Pavlou,Anna Villar-Piqué,Éva M. Szegö,Tomás Lopes da Fonseca,Francesca Odoardi,Szabolcs Soeroes,Ana Cristina Rego,Wolfgang Fischle,Wolfgang Fischle,Jens Christian Schwamborn,Thomas Meyer,Sebastian Kügler,Isidre Ferrer,Johannes Attems,Andre Fischer,Andre Fischer,Stefan Becker,Markus Zweckstetter,Markus Zweckstetter,Markus Zweckstetter,Fran Borovečki,Fran Borovečki,Tiago F. Outeiro +31 more
TL;DR: It is hypothesize that the role of aSyn on gene expression and, ultimately, toxicity, may be modulated by the phosphorylation status and nuclear presence of different aSyn species.
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Neuroprogression and Cognitive Functioning in Bipolar Disorder: A Systematic Review.
TL;DR: There is evidence that cognitive function in BD is negatively associated with features of illness progression such as number of mood episodes, illness duration, and hospitalizations, and no meaningful interaction of age and bipolar disorder has been found in terms of cognitive decline.