scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

Danube University Krems

EducationKrems, Niederösterreich, Austria
About: Danube University Krems is a education organization based out in Krems, Niederösterreich, Austria. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Stroke & Population. The organization has 498 authors who have published 1572 publications receiving 68797 citations.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Though initially assessed as poor, the prognosis of LVHT has meanwhile improved, most likely due to the increased awareness for the abnormality and the timely administration of adequate therapy.
Abstract: Left ventricular non-compaction, also known as left ventricular hypertrabeculation (LVHT), is a morphological abnormality of the left ventricular myocardium, characterised by a meshwork of myocardial strings, interlacing, and orderless in arrangement. LVHT is most frequently located in the apex and the lateral wall and may occur with or without other congenital or acquired cardiac abnormalities. LVHT is believed to be congenital in the majority of the cases but may develop during life in single cases (acquired LVHT). Congenital LVHT is believed to result from defective late-stage embryonic development of the myocardial architecture. The pathogenesis of acquired LVHT remains speculative. LVHT is most frequently found on transthoracic echocardiography and cardiac MRI but may be visualised also with other imaging techniques. In the majority of the cases, LVHT is associated with hereditary cardiac, neuromuscular, non-cardiac/non-muscle disease, or chromosomal aberrations. In the majority of the cases, LVHT is complicated by ventricular arrhythmias, systolic dysfunction, cardiac embolism, or sudden cardiac death. LVHT per se does not require a specific treatment. Only in case of complications, such as ventricular arrhythmias, cardioembolism, or systolic dysfunction, adequate therapy is indicated. Though initially assessed as poor, the prognosis of LVHT has meanwhile improved, most likely due to the increased awareness for the abnormality and the timely administration of adequate therapy.

39 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Decisionmakers need to be aware that outcomes rated as high CoE often have increased risks for false-positive or false-negative findings.

39 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The German government has adopted a law that requires sewage plants to go beyond the recovery of phosphorus from wastewater and to promote recycling, and as discussed by the authors argue that there is no physical global short- or mid-term phosphorus scarcity.
Abstract: The German government has adopted a law that requires sewage plants to go beyond the recovery of phosphorus from wastewater and to promote recycling. We argue that there is no physical global short‐ or mid‐term phosphorus scarcity. However, we also argue that there are legitimate reasons for policies such as those of Germany, including: precaution as a way to ensure future generations’ long‐term supply security, promotion of technologies for closed‐loop economics in a promising stage of technology development, and decrease in the current supply risk with a new resource pool.

38 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A very simple hardware implementation of an IR-UWB radio is exploited for realizing an accurate synchronization system for wireless sensors, designed for providing accurate timestamping of the packet time of arrival to an adder-based tunable clock, which tracks the network time reference.
Abstract: Wireless sensor networks are becoming widely diffused because of the flexibility and scalability they offer. However, distributed measurements are significant only if the readout is coupled to time information. For this reason, network-wide time synchronization is the main concern. The objective of this paper is to exploit a very simple hardware implementation of an IR-UWB radio for realizing an accurate synchronization system for wireless sensors. The proposed solution relies on commercial-off-the-shelf discrete electronic components (rather than on specialized transceivers). It is designed for providing accurate timestamping of the packet time of arrival (TOA) to an adder-based tunable clock, which tracks the network time reference. The comprehensive set of experimental results based on prototypes, shows a TOA detection error with a standard deviation well below 1 ns. On the other hand, in the FPGA-based prototype, the synchronization performance reaches an overall synchronization error of few nanoseconds. Finally, in order to highlight the tradeoff between timestamping accuracy, clock stability, and synchronization performance, some additional simulations have been carried out: a synchronization error in the order of 1 ns is possible, if good local oscillator sources are available in the nodes and if the adjustable clock has a sufficient resolution.

38 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Project was an innovator of methods to involve stakeholders and continues to develop its methods in conducting reviews that are highly relevant to policy-makers.
Abstract: The Drug Effectiveness Review Project was initiated in 2003 in response to dramatic increases in the cost of pharmaceuticals, which lessened the purchasing power of state Medicaid budgets. A collaborative group of state Medicaid agencies and other organizations formed to commission high-quality comparative effectiveness reviews to inform evidence-based decisions about drugs that would be available to Medicaid recipients. The Project is coordinated by the Center for Evidence-based Policy (CEbP) at Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU), and the systematic reviews are undertaken by the Evidence-based Practice Centers (EPCs) at OHSU and at the University of North Carolina. The reviews adhere to high standards for comparative effectiveness reviews. Because the investigators have direct, regular communication with policy-makers, the reports have direct impact on policy and decision-making, unlike many systematic reviews. The Project was an innovator of methods to involve stakeholders and continues to develop its methods in conducting reviews that are highly relevant to policy-makers. The methods used for selecting topics, developing key questions, searching, determining eligibility of studies, assessing study quality, conducting qualitative and quantitative syntheses, rating the strength of evidence, and summarizing findings are described. In addition, our on-going interactions with the policy-makers that use the reports are described.

38 citations


Authors

Showing all 514 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Jaakko Tuomilehto1151285210682
Massimo Zeviani10447839743
J. Tuomilehto6919719801
Manfred Reichert6769519569
Roland W. Scholz6428915387
Michael Brainin5521544194
Gerald Gartlehner5429515320
Thomas Schrefl5040310867
Charity G. Moore5017911040
Josef Finsterer48147913836
Silvia Miksch442647790
J. Tuomilehto4410711425
Heinrich Schima432495973
Reinhard Bauer402285435
Thomas Groth381865191
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
University of Erlangen-Nuremberg
85.6K papers, 2.6M citations

86% related

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
176.5K papers, 6.2M citations

86% related

Radboud University Nijmegen
83K papers, 3.2M citations

85% related

VU University Amsterdam
75.6K papers, 3.4M citations

85% related

University of Hong Kong
99.1K papers, 3.2M citations

85% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20237
202221
2021176
2020165
2019157
2018144