Institution
University of Kiel
Education•Kiel, Germany•
About: University of Kiel is a education organization based out in Kiel, Germany. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Transplantation. The organization has 27816 authors who have published 57114 publications receiving 2061802 citations. The organization is also known as: Christian Albrechts University & Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Reduced hBD-1 shields the healthy epithelium against colonisation by commensal bacteria and opportunistic fungi and against anaerobic, Gram-positive commensals of Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus species.
Abstract: Human epithelia are permanently challenged by bacteria and fungi, including commensal and pathogenic microbiota. In the gut, the fraction of strict anaerobes increases from proximal to distal, reac ...
433 citations
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TL;DR: The suicide rate following subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation for Parkinson's disease was determined by conducting an international multicentre retrospective survey of movement disorder and surgical centres and factors associated with suicide attempts through a nested case-control study.
Abstract: Subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation improves motor symptoms and quality of life in advanced Parkinson's disease. As after other life-altering surgeries, suicides have been reported following deep brain stimulation for movement disorders. We sought to determine the suicide rate following subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation for Parkinson's disease by conducting an international multicentre retrospective survey of movement disorder and surgical centres. We further sought to determine factors associated with suicide attempts through a nested case-control study. In the survey of suicide rate, 55/75 centres participated. The completed suicide percentage was 0.45% (24/5311) and attempted suicide percentage was 0.90% (48/5311). Observed suicide rates in the first postoperative year (263/100,000/year) (0.26%) were higher than the lowest and the highest expected age-, gender- and country-adjusted World Health Organization suicide rates (Standardized Mortality Ratio for suicide: SMR 12.63-15.64; P < 0.001) and remained elevated at the fourth postoperative year (38/100,000/year) (0.04%) (SMR 1.81-2.31; P < 0.05). The excess number of deaths was 13 for the first postoperative year and one for the fourth postoperative year. In the case-control study of associated factors, 10 centres participated. Twenty-seven attempted suicides and nine completed suicides were compared with 70 controls. Postoperative depression (P < 0.001), being single (P = 0.007) and a previous history of impulse control disorders or compulsive medication use (P = 0.005) were independent associated factors accounting for 51% of the variance for attempted suicide risk. Attempted suicides were also associated (P < 0.05) with being younger, younger Parkinson's disease onset and a previous suicide attempt. Completed suicides were associated with postoperative depression (P < 0.001). Postoperative depression remained a significant factor associated with attempted and completed suicides after correction for multiple comparisons using the stringent Bonferroni correction. Mortality in the first year following subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation has been reported at 0.4%. Suicide is thus one of the most important potentially preventable risks for mortality following subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation for Parkinson's disease. Postoperative depression should be carefully assessed and treated. A multidisciplinary assessment and follow-up is recommended.
433 citations
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TL;DR: The use of the MDP-containing composite resin Panavia F on air abraded zirconia ceramic can be recommended as promising bonding method.
431 citations
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TL;DR: It is hypothesised that CRPS is a systemic disease involving the CNS and peripheral nervous system and there should be diagnostic reclassification and redefinition of CRPS.
Abstract: Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) is the result of changes to the somatosensory systems that process noxious, tactile, and thermal information; to the sympathetic systems that innervate skin (blood vessels, sweat glands); and to the somatomotor systems. The changes suggest that the CNS representations of the systems have been altered. Patients with CRPS also have peripheral changes (eg, oedema, signs of inflammation, sympathetic-afferent coupling [the basis for sympathetically maintained pain], and trophic changes) that cannot be explained by central changes. On the basis of clinical observation and research in human beings and animals, we hypothesise that CRPS is a systemic disease involving the CNS and peripheral nervous system. The most important question for future research is what causes CRPS? In this article, we suggest a change to the focus of research efforts and treatment. We also suggest there be diagnostic reclassification and redefinition of CRPS.
431 citations
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TL;DR: IL-4 therapy can induce Th2 differentiation in human CD4+ T cells and has promise as a potential treatment for psoriasis, a prototypic Th1-associated autoimmune disease.
Abstract: Selective skewing of autoreactive interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma)-producing T helper cells (Th1) toward an interleukin-4 (IL-4)-producing (Th2) phenotype can in experimental animals alleviate autoimmune disease without inducing general immunosuppression. In a prospective dose escalation study, we assessed treatment with human IL-4 (rhuIL-4) in 20 patients with severe psoriasis. The therapy was well tolerated, and within six weeks all patients showed decreased clinical scores and 15 improved more than 68%. Stable reduction of clinical scores was significantly better at 0.2-0.5 microg rhuIL-4 than at < or =0.1 microg rhuIL-4 (P = 0.009). In psoriatic lesions, treatment with 0.2-0.5 microg/kg rhuIL-4 reduced the concentrations of IL-8 and IL-19, two cytokines directly involved in psoriasis; the number of chemokine receptor CCR5+ Th1 cells; and the IFN-gamma/IL-4 ratio. In the circulation, 0.2-0.5 microg/kg rhuIL-4 increased the number of IL-4+CD4+ T cells two- to three-fold. Thus, IL-4 therapy can induce Th2 differentiation in human CD4+ T cells and has promise as a potential treatment for psoriasis, a prototypic Th1-associated autoimmune disease.
429 citations
Authors
Showing all 28103 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Stefan Schreiber | 178 | 1233 | 138528 |
Jun Wang | 166 | 1093 | 141621 |
William J. Sandborn | 162 | 1317 | 108564 |
Jens Nielsen | 149 | 1752 | 104005 |
Tak W. Mak | 148 | 807 | 94871 |
Annette Peters | 138 | 1114 | 101640 |
Severine Vermeire | 134 | 1086 | 76352 |
Peter M. Rothwell | 134 | 779 | 67382 |
Dusan Bruncko | 132 | 1042 | 84709 |
Gideon Bella | 129 | 1301 | 87905 |
Dirk Schadendorf | 127 | 1017 | 105777 |
Neal L. Benowitz | 126 | 792 | 60658 |
Thomas Schwarz | 123 | 701 | 54560 |
Meletios A. Dimopoulos | 122 | 1371 | 71871 |
Christian Weber | 122 | 776 | 53842 |