561 results on '"Meffert P"'
Search Results
552. The strategic role of tourism trade fairs in the new age of tourism
- Author
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Fayos-Sola, E., Marin, A., and Meffert, C.
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- 1994
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553. UV-induced cross-linking of Tet repressor to DNA containing tet operator sequences and 8-azidoadenines
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Meffert, Rainer, Rathgeber, Gabriele, Schäfer, Hans-Jochen, and Dose, Klaus
- Abstract
The synthesis of 8-azldo-2′-deoxyadenosine-5′-tri-phosphate is described. The photoreactive dATP analog was characterized by thin layer chromatography, proton resonance spectroscopy, infrared spectroscopy and UV spectroscopy. Its photolysis upon UV irradiation was studied. After incorporation of this dATP analog into DNA containing the tet operator sequence the investigation of the interactions between tet operator DNA and Tet repressor protein by UV photocross-linking becomes possible. Photocross-linking of protein to DNA was demonstrated by the reduced migration of the DNA in SDS polyacrylamlde gel electrophoresis. Addition of the inducer tetracycllne prior to UV irradiation significantly reduces the DNA-protein cross-linking rate. The long wave UV light applied here does not significantly alter the DNA or the protein under the photocross-linking conditions.
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- 1990
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554. Author Correction: A global database for metacommunity ecology, integrating species, traits, environment and space.
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Jeliazkov A, Mijatovic D, Chantepie S, Andrew N, Arlettaz R, Barbaro L, Barsoum N, Bartonova A, Belskaya E, Bonada N, Brind'Amour A, Carvalho R, Castro H, Chmura D, Choler P, Chong-Seng K, Cleary D, Cormont A, Cornwell W, de Campos R, de Voogd N, Doledec S, Drew J, Dziock F, Eallonardo A, Edgar MJ, Farneda F, Hernandez DF, Frenette-Dussault C, Fried G, Gallardo B, Gibb H, Gonçalves-Souza T, Higuti J, Humbert JY, Krasnov BR, Saux EL, Lindo Z, Lopez-Baucells A, Lowe E, Marteinsdottir B, Martens K, Meffert P, Mellado-Díaz A, Menz MHM, Meyer CFJ, Miranda JR, Mouillot D, Ossola A, Pakeman R, Pavoine S, Pekin B, Pino J, Pocheville A, Pomati F, Poschlod P, Prentice HC, Purschke O, Raevel V, Reitalu T, Renema W, Ribera I, Robinson N, Robroek B, Rocha R, Shieh SH, Spake R, Staniaszek-Kik M, Stanko M, Tejerina-Garro FL, Braak CT, Urban MC, Klink RV, Villéger S, Wegman R, Westgate MJ, Wolff J, Żarnowiec J, Zolotarev M, and Chase JM
- Abstract
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
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- 2020
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555. A global database for metacommunity ecology, integrating species, traits, environment and space.
- Author
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Jeliazkov A, Mijatovic D, Chantepie S, Andrew N, Arlettaz R, Barbaro L, Barsoum N, Bartonova A, Belskaya E, Bonada N, Brind'Amour A, Carvalho R, Castro H, Chmura D, Choler P, Chong-Seng K, Cleary D, Cormont A, Cornwell W, de Campos R, de Voogd N, Doledec S, Drew J, Dziock F, Eallonardo A, Edgar MJ, Farneda F, Hernandez DF, Frenette-Dussault C, Fried G, Gallardo B, Gibb H, Gonçalves-Souza T, Higuti J, Humbert JY, Krasnov BR, Saux EL, Lindo Z, Lopez-Baucells A, Lowe E, Marteinsdottir B, Martens K, Meffert P, Mellado-Díaz A, Menz MHM, Meyer CFJ, Miranda JR, Mouillot D, Ossola A, Pakeman R, Pavoine S, Pekin B, Pino J, Pocheville A, Pomati F, Poschlod P, Prentice HC, Purschke O, Raevel V, Reitalu T, Renema W, Ribera I, Robinson N, Robroek B, Rocha R, Shieh SH, Spake R, Staniaszek-Kik M, Stanko M, Tejerina-Garro FL, Braak CT, Urban MC, Klink RV, Villéger S, Wegman R, Westgate MJ, Wolff J, Żarnowiec J, Zolotarev M, and Chase JM
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- Animals, Biodiversity, Ecology, Plants, Biota
- Abstract
The use of functional information in the form of species traits plays an important role in explaining biodiversity patterns and responses to environmental changes. Although relationships between species composition, their traits, and the environment have been extensively studied on a case-by-case basis, results are variable, and it remains unclear how generalizable these relationships are across ecosystems, taxa and spatial scales. To address this gap, we collated 80 datasets from trait-based studies into a global database for metaCommunity Ecology: Species, Traits, Environment and Space; "CESTES". Each dataset includes four matrices: species community abundances or presences/absences across multiple sites, species trait information, environmental variables and spatial coordinates of the sampling sites. The CESTES database is a live database: it will be maintained and expanded in the future as new datasets become available. By its harmonized structure, and the diversity of ecosystem types, taxonomic groups, and spatial scales it covers, the CESTES database provides an important opportunity for synthetic trait-based research in community ecology.
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- 2020
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556. Characterization of serum matrix metalloproteinase 2/9 levels in patients with ascending aortic aneurysms.
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Meffert P, Tscheuschler A, Beyersdorf F, Heilmann C, Kocher N, Uffelmann X, Discher P, Rylski B, Siepe M, and Kari FA
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- Adult, Aged, Aortic Aneurysm complications, Biomarkers blood, Female, Humans, Hyperlipidemias blood, Hyperlipidemias complications, Hypertension blood, Hypertension complications, Male, Middle Aged, Aortic Aneurysm blood, Matrix Metalloproteinase 2 blood, Matrix Metalloproteinase 9 blood
- Abstract
Objectives: The objectives of this study were to identify interrelations between matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP2)/MMP9 levels and clinical variables in patients with aortic root/ascending aortic aneurysms and to describe comorbidities as possible biasing factors in the widely discussed correlation of serum MMP levels and aortic diameter., Methods: Serum MMP9 and MMP2 levels were quantified in 32 consecutive patients with ascending aortic and/or aortic root aneurysms (>45 mm) at the Heart Center University of Freiburg from May 2013 to January 2014. The influence of comorbidities and medication on serum MMP2 and MMP9 levels was studied. We took into account ascending aortic diameter (aAD), aortic valve configuration, hypertension, age and hyperlipidaemia as factors possibly altering serum MMP levels. The relation between serum MMP levels and aAD was examined by a correlation test based on ranks., Results: Serum MMP2 levels and aAD correlated positively. Correlation was increased in patients without hyperlipidaemia (Spearman's ρ = 0.62, P = 0.008 in patients without hyperlipidaemia; ρ = 0.409, P = 0.020 in all patients). Serum MMP9 levels did not correlate with aAD and showed greater variation. Serum MMP9 levels were significantly associated with hyperlipidaemia (P = 0.037)., Conclusions: The distinct correlation patterns in patients with and without hyperlipidaemia have to be considered when defining the potential of MMP2 as a biomarker in future studies. The relation between MMP9 and hyperlipidaemia has to be further investigated., (© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Association for Cardio-Thoracic Surgery. All rights reserved.)
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- 2017
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557. MMP-2 Isoforms in Aortic Tissue and Serum of Patients with Ascending Aortic Aneurysms and Aortic Root Aneurysms.
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Tscheuschler A, Meffert P, Beyersdorf F, Heilmann C, Kocher N, Uffelmann X, Discher P, Siepe M, and Kari FA
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- Aortic Valve metabolism, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Tricuspid Valve metabolism, Aorta metabolism, Aortic Aneurysm metabolism, Matrix Metalloproteinase 2 metabolism, Protein Isoforms metabolism
- Abstract
Objective: The need for biological markers of aortic wall stress and risk of rupture or dissection of ascending aortic aneurysms is obvious. To date, wall stress cannot be related to a certain biological marker. We analyzed aortic tissue and serum for the presence of different MMP-2 isoforms to find a connection between serum and tissue MMP-2 and to evaluate the potential of different MMP-2 isoforms as markers of high wall stress., Methods: Serum and aortic tissue from n = 24 patients and serum from n = 19 healthy controls was analyzed by ELISA and gelatin zymography. 24 patients had ascending aortic aneurysms, 10 of them also had aortic root aneurysms. Three patients had normally functioning valves, 12 had regurgitation alone, eight had regurgitation and stenosis and one had only stenosis. Patients had bicuspid and tricuspid aortic valves (9/15). Serum samples were taken preoperatively, and the aortic wall specimen collected during surgical aortic repair., Results: Pro-MMP-2 was identified in all serum and tissue samples. Pro-MMP-2 was detected in all tissue and serum samples from patients with ascending aortic/aortic root aneurysms, irrespective of valve morphology or other clinical parameters and in serum from healthy controls. We also identified active MMP-2 in all tissue samples from patients with ascending aortic/aortic root aneurysms. None of the analyzed serum samples revealed signals relatable to active MMP-2. No correlation between aortic tissue total MMP-2 or tissue pro-MMP-2 or tissue active MMP-2 and serum MMP-2 was found and tissue MMP-2/pro-MMP-2/active MMP-2 did not correlate with aortic diameter. This evidence shows that pro-MMP-2 is the predominant MMP-2 species in serum of patients and healthy individuals and in aneurysmatic aortic tissue, irrespective of aortic valve configuration. Active MMP-2 species are either not released into systemic circulation or not detectable in serum. There is no reliable connection between aortic tissue-and serum MMP-2 isoforms, nor any indication that pro-MMP-2 functions as a common marker of high aortic wall stress., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
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- 2016
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558. Four-dimensional magnetic resonance imaging-derived ascending aortic flow eccentricity and flow compression are linked to aneurysm morphology†.
- Author
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Kari FA, Kocher N, Beyersdorf F, Tscheuschler A, Meffert P, Rylski B, Siepe M, Russe MF, and Hope MD
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- Adult, Aged, Aorta surgery, Aortic Aneurysm surgery, Blood Flow Velocity physiology, Cohort Studies, Compressive Strength, Confidence Intervals, Contrast Media, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Imaging, Three-Dimensional methods, Male, Middle Aged, Preoperative Care methods, Regional Blood Flow physiology, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Severity of Illness Index, Statistics, Nonparametric, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Aorta pathology, Aortic Aneurysm diagnosis, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine methods, Radiographic Image Enhancement
- Abstract
Objectives: The impact of specific blood flow patterns within ascending aortic and/or aortic root aneurysms on aortic morphology is unknown. We investigated the interrelation of ascending aortic flow compression/peripheralization and aneurysm morphology with respect to sinotubuar junction (STJ) definition., Methods: Thirty-one patients (aortic root/ascending aortic aneurysm >45 mm) underwent flow-sensitive 4D magnetic resonance thoracic aortic flow measurement at 3 Tesla (Siemens, Germany) at two different institutions (Freiburg, Germany, and San Francisco, CA, USA). Time-resolved image data post-processing and visualization of mid-systolic, mid-ascending aortic flow were performed using local vector fields. The Flow Compression Index (FCI) was calculated individually as a fraction of the area of high-velocity mid-systolic flow over the complete cross-sectional ascending aortic area. According to aortic aneurysm morphology, patients were grouped as (i) small root, eccentric ascending aortic aneurysm (STJ definition) and (ii) enlarged aortic root, non-eccentric ascending aortic aneurysm with diffuse root and tubular enlargement., Results: The mean FCI over all patients was 0.47 ± 0.5 (0.37-0.99). High levels of flow compression/peripheralization (FCI <0.6) were linked to eccentric aneurysm morphology (Group A, n = 11), while low levels or absence of aortic flow compression/peripheralization (FCI >0.8) occurred more often in Group B (n = 20). The FCI was 0.48 ± 0.05 in Group A and 0.78 ± 0.14 in Group B (P < 0.001). Distribution of bicuspid aortic valve (P = 0.6) and type of valve dysfunction (P = 0.22 for aortic stenosis) was not found to be different between groups., Conclusions: Irrespective of aortic valve morphology and function, ascending aortic blood flow patterns are linked to distinct patterns of ascending aortic aneurysm morphology. Implementation of quantitative local blood flow analyses might help to improve aneurysm risk stratification in the future., (© The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Association for Cardio-Thoracic Surgery. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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559. Effects of water-filtered infrared-A and of heat on cell death, inflammation, antioxidative potential and of free radical formation in viable skin--first results.
- Author
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Piazena H, Pittermann W, Müller W, Jung K, Kelleher DK, Herrling T, Meffert P, Uebelhack R, and Kietzmann M
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- Animals, Antioxidants chemistry, Cattle, Dinoprostone metabolism, Formazans metabolism, Free Radicals chemistry, Inflammation pathology, Skin metabolism, Skin pathology, Temperature, Water chemistry, Antioxidants metabolism, Apoptosis radiation effects, Free Radicals metabolism, Infrared Rays, Skin radiation effects
- Abstract
The effects of water-filtered infrared-A (wIRA) and of convective heat on viability, inflammation, inducible free radicals and antioxidative power were investigated in natural and viable skin using the ex vivo Bovine Udder System (BUS) model. Therefore, skin samples from differently treated parts of the udder of a healthy cow were analyzed using the 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) test, by prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) measurement and by electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy. Neither cell viability, the inflammation status, the radical status or the antioxidative defence systems of the skin were significantly affected by wIRA applied within 30 min by using an irradiance of 1900 W m(-2) which is of relevance for clinical use, but which exceeded the maximum solar IR-A irradiance at the Earth's surface more than 5 times and which resulted in a skin surface temperature of about 45 °C without cooling and of about 37 °C with convective cooling by air ventilation. No significant effects on viability and on inflammation were detected when convective heat was applied alone under equivalent conditions in terms of the resulting skin surface temperatures and exposure time. As compared with untreated skin, free radical formation was almost doubled, whereas the antioxidative power was reduced to about 50% after convective heating to about 45 °C., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2014
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560. Significance and function of different spinal collateral compartments following thoracic aortic surgery: immediate versus long-term flow compensation.
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Meffert P, Bischoff MS, Brenner R, Siepe M, Beyersdorf F, and Kari FA
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- Humans, Iatrogenic Disease prevention & control, Monitoring, Intraoperative, Spinal Cord Ischemia prevention & control, Aorta, Thoracic surgery, Collateral Circulation physiology, Spinal Cord blood supply
- Abstract
Iatrogenic paraplegia has been accompanying cardiovascular surgery since its beginning. As a result, surgeons have been developing many theories about the exact mechanisms of this devastating complication. Thus, the impact of single arteries that contribute to the spinal perfusion is one of the most discussed subjects in modern surgery. The subsequent decision of reattachment or the permanent disconnection of these intercostal arteries divides the surgical community. On the one hand, the anatomical or vascular approach pleads for the immediate reimplantation to reconstruct the anatomical situation. On the other hand, the decision of the permanent disconnection aims at avoiding stealing phenomenon away from the spinal vascular network. This spinal collateral network can be described as consisting of three components-the intraspinal and two paraspinal compartments-that feed the nutrient arteries of the spinal cord. The exact functional impact of the different compartments of the collateral network remains poorly understood. In this review, the function of the intraspinal compartment in the context of collateral network principle as an immediate emergency backup system is described. The exact structure and architectural principles of the intraspinal compartment are described. The critical parameters with regard to the risk of postoperative spinal cord ischaemia are the number of anterior radiculomedullary arteries (ARMAs) and the distance between them in relation to the longitudinal extent of aortic disease. The paraspinal network as a sleeping reserve is proposed as the long-term backup system. This sleeping reserve has to be activated by arteriogenic stimuli. These are presented briefly, and prior findings regarding arteriogenesis are discussed in the light of the collateral network concept. Finally, the role of preoperative visualization of the ARMAs in order to evaluate the risk of postoperative paraplegia is emphasized.
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- 2014
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561. Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging for staging liver fibrosis is less reliable in the presence of fat and iron.
- Author
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Bülow R, Mensel B, Meffert P, Hernando D, Evert M, and Kühn JP
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- Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Adipose Tissue pathology, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Fatty Liver metabolism, Fatty Liver pathology, Iron analysis, Liver Cirrhosis metabolism, Liver Cirrhosis pathology
- Abstract
Objectives: To investigate the reliability of diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DW-MRI) for staging liver fibrosis in the presence of fat and iron., Methods: Ninety-five patients, including 48 men and 47 women, aged 57.0 ± 14.2 years, underwent liver biopsy. Ninety-six samples were histologically staged for liver fibrosis (0-Ishak score 0; 1-Ishak score 1-4; 2-Ishak score 5-6) and semiquantitatively graded for hepatic iron (0, no; 1, low; 2, moderate; 3, high iron) and for hepatic steatosis. Within 72 h after biopsy, navigator-triggered DW-MRI using b-values of 50/400/800 s/mm(2) was performed in a 1.5-T system, and apparent diffusion coefficients (ADC) were analysed. ADCs were correlated with fibrosis stage, steatosis grade, and iron grade using linear regression., Results: ADC did not correlate with fibrosis stages in either the overall group (n = 96; R (2) = 0.38; P = 0.17) or in the subgroup without liver iron and steatosis (n = 40; R (2) = 0.01; P = 0.75). ADC decreased significantly with steatosis grade in cases without iron and fibrosis (n = 42; R (2) = 0.28; ß = -5.3; P < 0.001). Liver iron was modestly correlated with ADC in patients without fibrosis and steatosis (n = 33; R (2) = 0.29; P = 0.04), whereas high iron concentrations were associated with low ADC values (group 3: β = -489; P = 0.005; reference:group 0) but intermediate levels were not (group 1/group 2: P = 0.93/P = 0.54; reference group: 0)., Conclusions: ADC values are confounded by fat and iron. However, even in patients without fat or iron, DW-MRI does not adequately discriminate the stage of fibrosis., Key Points: • Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DW-MRI) is increasingly used to evaluate liver disease. • DWI using b-values of 50/400/800 s/mm (2) does not adequately quantify fibrosis. • Assessment of the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) is confounded by fat and iron. • Fat may influence ADCs by altering water diffusion. • Iron may influence ADCs by signal decay and noise floor effects.
- Published
- 2013
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