Institution
University of Münster
Education•Münster, Germany•
About: University of Münster is a education organization based out in Münster, Germany. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Catalysis. The organization has 35609 authors who have published 69059 publications receiving 2278534 citations. The organization is also known as: University of Munster & University of Muenster.
Topics: Population, Catalysis, Transplantation, Gene, Crystal structure
Papers published on a yearly basis
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TL;DR: It is reported that through much of the later Neoproterozoic, anoxia remained widespread beneath the mixed layer of the oceans; deeper water masses were sometimes sulfidic but were mainly Fe2+-enriched, marking a return to ocean chemistry not seen for more than one billion years of Earth history.
Abstract: Earth9s surface chemical environment has evolved from an early anoxic condition to the oxic state we have today. Transitional between an earlier Proterozoic world with widespread deep-water anoxia and a Phanerozoic world with large oxygen-utilizing animals, the Neoproterozoic Era [1000 to 542 million years ago (Ma)] plays a key role in this history. The details of Neoproterozoic Earth surface oxygenation, however, remain unclear. We report that through much of the later Neoproterozoic (
644 citations
Nottingham City Hospital1, University of California, San Francisco2, University of Pittsburgh3, University of Münster4, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre5, Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital6, Brigham and Women's Hospital7, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center8, University of Porto9, Singapore General Hospital10, Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis11
TL;DR: An analysis of the validity of Histological grade as a prognostic factor and a consensus view on the significance of histological grade and its role in breast cancer classification and staging systems in this era of emerging clinical use of molecular classifiers are presented.
Abstract: Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease with varied morphological appearances, molecular features, behavior, and response to therapy. Current routine clinical management of breast cancer relies on the availability of robust clinical and pathological prognostic and predictive factors to support clinical and patient decision making in which potentially suitable treatment options are increasingly available. One of the best-established prognostic factors in breast cancer is histological grade, which represents the morphological assessment of tumor biological characteristics and has been shown to be able to generate important information related to the clinical behavior of breast cancers. Genome-wide microarray-based expression profiling studies have unraveled several characteristics of breast cancer biology and have provided further evidence that the biological features captured by histological grade are important in determining tumor behavior. Also, expression profiling studies have generated clinically useful data that have significantly improved our understanding of the biology of breast cancer, and these studies are undergoing evaluation as improved prognostic and predictive tools in clinical practice. Clinical acceptance of these molecular assays will require them to be more than expensive surrogates of established traditional factors such as histological grade. It is essential that they provide additional prognostic or predictive information above and beyond that offered by current parameters. Here, we present an analysis of the validity of histological grade as a prognostic factor and a consensus view on the significance of histological grade and its role in breast cancer classification and staging systems in this era of emerging clinical use of molecular classifiers.
642 citations
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TL;DR: Recent characterization of homologs of eukaryotic modification guide snoRNAs in Archaea reveals the ancient origin of these non-coding RNA families and offers new perspectives as to their range of function.
641 citations
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St George's Hospital1, University of Manchester2, University of Münster3, University of Auckland4, Wellington Management Company5, Linköping University6, Cardiff University7, The Chinese University of Hong Kong8, University of Arizona9, University of Malta10, Royal Children's Hospital11, Jaslok Hospital12, Queen's University13
TL;DR: Prevalence surveys were conducted among representative samples of school children from locations in Europe, Asia, Africa, Australasia, North and South America to study the prevalence of asthma and allergies in Childhood.
Abstract: Background: As part of the International Study of Asthma and Allergies in Childhood (ISAAC), prevalence surveys were conducted among representative samples of school children from locations in Europe, Asia, Africa, Australasia, North and South America
Subjects: 257,800 children aged 6-7 years from 91 centres in 38 countries, and 463,801 children aged 13-14 years from 155 centres in 56 countries Methods: Written symptom questionnaires were translated from English into the local language for self-completion by the 13-14-year-olds and completion by the parents of the 6-7-year-olds Rhinitis was described as a problem with sneezing, or a runny, or blocked nose when you (your child) DID NOT have a cold or the flu Additional questions were asked about rhinitis associated with itchy-watery eyes, interference with activities and a history of hay fever ever
Results: The prevalence of rhinitis with itchy-watery eyes (“rhinoconjunctivitis”) in the past year varied across centres from 08%(to 149% in the 6-7-year-olds and from 14% to 397% in the 13-14-year-olds Within each age group, the global pattem was broadly consistent across each of the symptom categories In centres of higher prevalence there was great variability in the proportion of rhinoconjunctivitis labelled as hay fever The lowest prevalences of rhinoconjunctivitis were found in parts of eastern Europe south and central Asia High prevalences were reported from centres in several regions
Conclusion: These results suggest substantial worldwide variations in the prevalence and labelling of symptoms of allergic rhinoconjunctivitis which require further study These differences, if real, may offer important clues to environmental influences on allergy
640 citations
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Mayo Clinic1, Technical University of Madrid2, French Institute of Health and Medical Research3, University of Barcelona4, Cardiovascular Institute of the South5, Clinical Data, Inc6, Centre national de la recherche scientifique7, University of Amsterdam8, University of Münster9, Baylor College of Medicine10, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center11, University of Girona12, University of Nantes13
TL;DR: Overall, 21% of BrS probands have mutations in SCN5A compared to the 2% to 5% background rate of rare variants reported in healthy control subjects, which may help further distinguish pathogenic mutations from similarly rare but otherwise innocuous ones found in cases.
640 citations
Authors
Showing all 36075 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Hyun-Chul Kim | 176 | 4076 | 183227 |
Klaus Müllen | 164 | 2125 | 140748 |
Giacomo Bruno | 158 | 1687 | 124368 |
Anders M. Dale | 156 | 823 | 133891 |
Holger J. Schünemann | 141 | 810 | 113169 |
Joachim Heinrich | 136 | 1309 | 76887 |
Markus Merschmeyer | 132 | 1188 | 84975 |
Klaus Ley | 129 | 495 | 57964 |
Robert W. Mahley | 128 | 363 | 60774 |
Robert J. Kurman | 127 | 397 | 60277 |
Bart Barlogie | 126 | 779 | 57803 |
Thomas Schwarz | 123 | 701 | 54560 |
Carlos Caldas | 122 | 547 | 73840 |
Klaus Weber | 121 | 524 | 60346 |
Andrey L. Rogach | 117 | 576 | 46820 |