Institution
University of Gothenburg
Education•Gothenburg, Sweden•
About: University of Gothenburg is a education organization based out in Gothenburg, Sweden. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Health care. The organization has 23855 authors who have published 65241 publications receiving 2606327 citations. The organization is also known as: Göteborg University & Gothenburg University.
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TL;DR: A clinical trial was undertaken to test the hypothesis that periodontitis can be cured and that bone regeneration occurs in infrabony pockets in patients maintained on an optimal standard of oral hygiene, and showed that all osseous defects of the patients of the test group were refilled with bone.
Abstract: A clinical trial was undertaken to test the hypothesis that periodontitis can be cured and that bone regeneration occurs in infrabony pockets in patients maintained on an optimal standard of oral hygiene. The material comprised 24 patients with advanced periodontal disease. After an initial examination, the patients were randomly distributed into one test group and one control group. All the patients were given instruction and practice in a proper oral hygiene technique, and then subjected to periodontal surgery using the modified Widman flap procedure. Following treatment, during a 2-year period the patients of the test group were recalled once every second week for professional tooth cleaning. The control patients were recalled once every 12 months for prophylaxis. The results showed that all osseous defects of the patients of the test group were refilled with bone. The control patients, on the other hand, could not maintain a high standard of oral hygiene, and exhibited a progressive deterioration of the periodontal tissues during the postsurgical observation time.
369 citations
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TL;DR: Results demonstrated that subjects with a long-narrow form of the upper central incisors had experienced more recession of the gingival margin at buccal surfaces than subjects who had a short-wide tooth form.
Abstract: It has been suggested that the variation in the morphology of the human periodontium may be related to the shape and form of the teeth. Furthermore, the severity of symptoms of periodontal disease have been proposed to differ among these various morphologic entities or "biotypes". The aim of the present study was (i) to identify individuals with markedly different crown forms and (ii) to determine probing pocket depth, probing attachment level and amount of gingival recession that had occurred at different teeth and tooth surfaces in such individuals. Clinical photographs of the maxillary incisor tooth region of 113 subjects who had been recruited for a long-term study on periodontal disease were available. The length (CL) and width (CW) of the crowns were determined and the CW/CL ratio was calculated for each tooth. 10% in each tail, 11 subjects in each group, were arbitrarily chosen as having either a long-narrow (N) or a short-wide (W) form of the central incisors. The probing pocket depth, probing attachment level and gingival recession data available from all subjects and subjects in groups W and N were compared and analyzed using the Student t-test and multiple regression analysis. The result from the analyses demonstrated that: (1) subjects with a long-narrow form of the upper central incisors had experienced more recession of the gingival margin at buccal surfaces than subjects who had a short-wide tooth form; (2) there was a significant influence of the CW/CL-ratio on the probing attachment level (p less than 0.05) and the amount of gingival recession (p less than 0.01) on buccal tooth surfaces.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
369 citations
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369 citations
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University of Southern California1, Oslo University Hospital2, University of Oslo3, University of California, Irvine4, University of California, San Diego5, University of Göttingen6, University Hospital Heidelberg7, Karolinska Institutet8, Karolinska University Hospital9, University of Gothenburg10, University of California, Los Angeles11, Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior12, Yale University13, National University of Ireland, Galway14, Brown University15, University of Pittsburgh16, Cardiff University17, University of Exeter18, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai19, King's College London20, University of Pennsylvania21, IBM22, French Institute of Health and Medical Research23, University of Paris24, Newcastle University25, University of Oxford26, University of Birmingham27, University Medical Center Utrecht28, Dresden University of Technology29, Dalhousie University30, National Institutes of Health31, University of Edinburgh32
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors quantified case-control differences in intracranial volume (ICV) and each of eight subcortical brain measures: nucleus accumbens, amygdala, caudate, hippocampus, globus pallidus, putamen, thalamus, lateral ventricles.
Abstract: Considerable uncertainty exists about the defining brain changes associated with bipolar disorder (BD). Understanding and quantifying the sources of uncertainty can help generate novel clinical hypotheses about etiology and assist in the development of biomarkers for indexing disease progression and prognosis. Here we were interested in quantifying case–control differences in intracranial volume (ICV) and each of eight subcortical brain measures: nucleus accumbens, amygdala, caudate, hippocampus, globus pallidus, putamen, thalamus, lateral ventricles. In a large study of 1710 BD patients and 2594 healthy controls, we found consistent volumetric reductions in BD patients for mean hippocampus (Cohen’s d=−0.232; P=3.50 × 10−7) and thalamus (d=−0.148; P=4.27 × 10−3) and enlarged lateral ventricles (d=−0.260; P=3.93 × 10−5) in patients. No significant effect of age at illness onset was detected. Stratifying patients based on clinical subtype (BD type I or type II) revealed that BDI patients had significantly larger lateral ventricles and smaller hippocampus and amygdala than controls. However, when comparing BDI and BDII patients directly, we did not detect any significant differences in brain volume. This likely represents similar etiology between BD subtype classifications. Exploratory analyses revealed significantly larger thalamic volumes in patients taking lithium compared with patients not taking lithium. We detected no significant differences between BDII patients and controls in the largest such comparison to date. Findings in this study should be interpreted with caution and with careful consideration of the limitations inherent to meta-analyzed neuroimaging comparisons.
369 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on approaches for assessing the risks of changes in land use, which include combining biological effect studies with catchment and hydrodynamic modeling, using statistical models that forecast the distribution and abundance of species relative to changes in habitat type, and using sensitive species that play important ecological roles as indicators of change.
Abstract: Changes in land use and the development of coastal regions around the world have markedly increased rates of sediment input into estuarine and coastal habitats. Field studies looking at the consequences of terrestrial sediment deposition, water-borne sediment, and long-term changes in habitats indicate that increasing rates of sediment loading adversely affect the biodiversity and ecological value of estuarine and coastal ecosystems. Managing this threat requires means with which to convey the magnitude of the problem, forecast long-term trends, and assess the risks associated with changes in land use. Here we focus on approaches for assessing the risks of changes in land use, which include combining biological effect studies with catchment and hydrodynamic modeling, using statistical models that forecast the distribution and abundance of species relative to changes in habitat type, and using sensitive species that play important ecological roles as indicators of change.
368 citations
Authors
Showing all 24120 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Peter J. Barnes | 194 | 1530 | 166618 |
Luigi Ferrucci | 193 | 1601 | 181199 |
Richard H. Friend | 169 | 1182 | 140032 |
Napoleone Ferrara | 167 | 494 | 140647 |
Timothy A. Springer | 167 | 669 | 122421 |
Anders Björklund | 165 | 769 | 84268 |
Hua Zhang | 163 | 1503 | 116769 |
Kaj Blennow | 160 | 1845 | 116237 |
Leif Groop | 158 | 919 | 136056 |
Tomas Hökfelt | 158 | 1033 | 95979 |
Johan G. Eriksson | 156 | 1257 | 123325 |
Naveed Sattar | 155 | 1326 | 116368 |
Paul Elliott | 153 | 773 | 103839 |
Claude Bouchard | 153 | 1076 | 115307 |
Hakon Hakonarson | 152 | 968 | 101604 |