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Institution

Stockholm County Council

GovernmentStockholm, Sweden
About: Stockholm County Council is a government organization based out in Stockholm, Sweden. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 1410 authors who have published 2429 publications receiving 78936 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Improvements in a range of molecular, histopathological, electrophysiological and functional endpoints are demonstrated and support the continued development of an allele-selective ZFP-TF for the treatment of Huntington’s disease.
Abstract: Huntington’s disease (HD) is a dominantly inherited neurodegenerative disorder caused by a CAG trinucleotide expansion in the huntingtin gene (HTT), which codes for the pathologic mutant HTT (mHTT) protein. Since normal HTT is thought to be important for brain function, we engineered zinc finger protein transcription factors (ZFP-TFs) to target the pathogenic CAG repeat and selectively lower mHTT as a therapeutic strategy. Using patient-derived fibroblasts and neurons, we demonstrate that ZFP-TFs selectively repress >99% of HD-causing alleles over a wide dose range while preserving expression of >86% of normal alleles. Other CAG-containing genes are minimally affected, and virally delivered ZFP-TFs are active and well tolerated in HD neurons beyond 100 days in culture and for at least nine months in the mouse brain. Using three HD mouse models, we demonstrate improvements in a range of molecular, histopathological, electrophysiological and functional endpoints. Our findings support the continued development of an allele-selective ZFP-TF for the treatment of HD. Zinc finger protein transcription factors are developed for the selective silencing of the mutant huntingtin gene in human neurons in vitro and multiple animal models of Huntington’s disease in vivo while preserving expression of the wild-type allele.

115 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: LUR and dispersion model estimates correlated on average well for NO2 but only moderately for PM10 and PM2.5, with large variability across areas.

115 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Excess risks for asthma and rhinitis were seen primarily in early childhood, whereas those for eczema occurred at later ages, while a dose-dependent pattern with SHS was observed.
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: To examine the role of prenatal and postnatal second-hand tobacco smoke (SHS) exposure on asthma, rhinitis, and eczema development up to 16 years of age. METHODS: A birth cohort of 4089 ...

114 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Sickness certification should be recognized as an important task also for physicians other than general practitioners and these varied considerably between types of clinics.
Abstract: Objective. To study the frequency and nature of problems associated with physicians’ sickness certification practices. Design. Cross-sectional questionnaire study. Setting. Stockholm and Ostergotland Counties in Sweden. Subjects. Physicians aged ≤64 years, n =7665, response rate 71% (n =5455). Main outcome measures. The frequency of consultations involving sickness certification, the frequency and nature of problems related to sickness certification. Results. A total of 74% (n =4019) of the respondents had consultations including sickness certification at least a few times a year. About half of these physicians had sickness certification cases at least six times a week, and 1 out of 10 (9.4%) had this more than 20 times a week. The items that the highest percentage of physicians rated as very or fairly problematic included: handling conflicts with patients over certification, assessing work ability, estimating optimal length and degree of absence, and managing prolongation of sick leave initially certifie...

114 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The prevalence of common diseases in the population can be estimated by combining data gathered during consecutive years from primary care, specialist outpatient care and inpatient care, however, accuracy of disease prevalence is highly dependent on the quality of the data.
Abstract: Background: There is limited knowledge on the prevalence of disease in total populations. Such studies have historically been difficult to conduct but the development of health data registers has facilitated large-scale studies on recorded diagnoses in entire regions. The aim of this study was to analyze the prevalence of diagnosis of six common diseases in the Swedish capital region. Methods: The study population included all living persons who resided in Stockholm County, Sweden, on December 31 st 2011 (N = 2 093 717). Information on all consultations between 2007 and 2011 was obtained from primary health care, specialist outpatient care and inpatient care. Prevalence was defined as the proportion of individuals with a recorded diagnosis of diabetes, depression, anxiety disorders, hypertension, asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease during the five year period, respectively. Analyses were done by age and gender. Results: Hypertension had the highest five-year prevalence (12.2%), followed by depression (6.6%), diabetes mellitus (6.2%), asthma (5.9%), anxiety disorders/phobia (4.8%), and COPD (1.8%). Diabetes was more common in men (5.3% of women and 7.1% of men) while depression (8.7% in women and 4.4% in men) and anxiety (6.3% in women and 3.4% in men) were considerably more common in women. Smaller gender differences were also found for hypertension (13.0% in women and 11.4% in men), asthma (6.4% in women and 5.4% in men) and COPD (2.1% in women and 1.6% in men). Diabetes, hypertension and COPD increased markedly with age, whereas anxiety, depression and asthma were fairly constant in individuals above 18 years. During one year of observation, more than half of all patients had only been diagnosed in primary health care, with hypertension being the diagnosis with the largest proportion of patients only identified in primary health care (70.6%). Conclusion: The prevalence of common diseases in the population can be estimated by combining data gathered during consecutive years from primary care, specialist outpatient care and inpatient care. However, accuracy of disease prevalence is highly dependent on the quality of the data. The high prevalence of the six diagnoses analysed in this study calls for preventive action to minimize suffering and costs to society.

113 citations


Authors

Showing all 1415 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Lars Klareskog13169763281
Christopher A. Walsh12345555874
Jan K. Buitelaar123100461880
Gerhard Andersson11890249159
Lars Alfredsson11260751151
Sarah E. Medland10646246888
Tomas Olsson10567739905
René E. M. Toes10145439812
Göran Pershagen9843233214
Juha Kere9764238403
Agneta Nordberg9351339763
Lars Farde9044628122
G. David Batty8845123826
Christer Halldin8771332079
Anders Ahlbom8735927369
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20231
20227
2021153
2020189
2019281
2018248