851 results on '"Hans Fischer"'
Search Results
2. Pathogen specific, IRF3-dependent signaling and innate resistance to human kidney infection.
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Hans Fischer, Nataliya Lutay, Bryndís Ragnarsdóttir, Manisha Yadav, Klas Jönsson, Alexander Urbano, Ahmed Al Hadad, Sebastian Rämisch, Petter Storm, Ulrich Dobrindt, Ellaine Salvador, Diana Karpman, Ulf Jodal, and Catharina Svanborg
- Subjects
Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
The mucosal immune system identifies and fights invading pathogens, while allowing non-pathogenic organisms to persist. Mechanisms of pathogen/non-pathogen discrimination are poorly understood, as is the contribution of human genetic variation in disease susceptibility. We describe here a new, IRF3-dependent signaling pathway that is critical for distinguishing pathogens from normal flora at the mucosal barrier. Following uropathogenic E. coli infection, Irf3(-/-) mice showed a pathogen-specific increase in acute mortality, bacterial burden, abscess formation and renal damage compared to wild type mice. TLR4 signaling was initiated after ceramide release from glycosphingolipid receptors, through TRAM, CREB, Fos and Jun phosphorylation and p38 MAPK-dependent mechanisms, resulting in nuclear translocation of IRF3 and activation of IRF3/IFNβ-dependent antibacterial effector mechanisms. This TLR4/IRF3 pathway of pathogen discrimination was activated by ceramide and by P-fimbriated E. coli, which use ceramide-anchored glycosphingolipid receptors. Relevance of this pathway for human disease was supported by polymorphic IRF3 promoter sequences, differing between children with severe, symptomatic kidney infection and children who were asymptomatic bacterial carriers. IRF3 promoter activity was reduced by the disease-associated genotype, consistent with the pathology in Irf3(-/-) mice. Host susceptibility to common infections like UTI may thus be strongly influenced by single gene modifications affecting the innate immune response.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Inhibition of TIR domain signaling by TcpC: MyD88-dependent and independent effects on Escherichia coli virulence.
- Author
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Manisha Yadav, Jingyao Zhang, Hans Fischer, Wen Huang, Nataliya Lutay, Christine Cirl, Josephine Lum, Thomas Miethke, and Catharina Svanborg
- Subjects
Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Toll-like receptor signaling requires functional Toll/interleukin-1 (IL-1) receptor (TIR) domains to activate innate immunity. By producing TIR homologous proteins, microbes inhibit host response induction and improve their own survival. The TIR homologous protein TcpC was recently identified as a virulence factor in uropathogenic Escherichia coli (E. coli), suppressing innate immunity by binding to MyD88. This study examined how the host MyD88 genotype modifies the in vivo effects of TcpC and whether additional, TIR-domain containing proteins might be targeted by TcpC. In wild type mice (wt), TcpC enhanced bacterial virulence, increased acute mortality, bacterial persistence and tissue damage after infection with E. coli CFT073 (TcpC+), compared to a ΔTcpC deletion mutant. These effects were attenuated in Myd88(-/-) and Tlr4(-/-) mice. Transcriptomic analysis confirmed that TcpC inhibits MYD88 dependent gene expression in CFT073 infected human uroepithelial cells but in addition the inhibitory effect included targets in the TRIF and IL-6/IL-1 signaling pathways, where MYD88 dependent and independent signaling may converge. The effects of TcpC on bacterial persistence were attenuated in Trif (-/-) or Il-1β (-/-) mice and innate immune responses to ΔTcpC were increased, confirming that Trif and Il-1β dependent targets might be involved in vivo, in addition to Myd88. Furthermore, soluble TcpC inhibited Myd88 and Trif dependent TLR signaling in murine macrophages. Our results suggest that TcpC may promote UTI-associated pathology broadly, through inhibition of TIR domain signaling and downstream pathways. Dysregulation of the host response by microbial TcpC thus appears to impair the protective effects of innate immunity, while promoting inflammation and tissue damage.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. In Situ Hydrophobization of Lithium Aluminate Particles for Flotations by Dry Grinding in the Presence of Punicines
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Frédéric Steiner, Ali Zgheib, Maximilian Hans Fischer, Lukas Büttner, Andreas Schmidt, and Sandra Breitung-Faes
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lithium ,recycling ,planetary ball mill ,comminution ,engineered artificial mineral ,EnAM ,Mineralogy ,QE351-399.2 - Abstract
The engineered artificial mineral (EnAM) lithium aluminate (LiAlO2) is a promising candidate for the recycling of lithium from slags, which can originate from the reprocessing of batteries, for example. Derivatives of the natural product Punicine (1-(2′,5′-dihydroxyphenyl)-pyridinium) from Punica granatum have been proven to be effective switchable collectors for the flotation of this mineral as they react to light. In the present study, three Punicines were added to a planetary ball mill before grinding LiAlO2 to particle sizes suitable for flotation. We investigated the influence of Punicine and two derivatives with C10 and C17 side chains on the grinding results at different grinding times and conditions as well as on the yields in flotations. SEM images of the particles, IR and ICP–OES measurements provided insights into the Punicine–particle interactions. They showed that Punicines not only prevent the formation of hydrophilic and thus undesirable lithium aluminate hydroxide hydrate (LiAl2(OH)7 ▪ x H2O) surfaces in this process, as is unavoidable in aqueous flotation without this pretreatment, they also prevent the undesired release of lithium cations into the aqueous phase. Due to considerable hydrophobization of the particle surface of LiAlO2, nearly quantitative recovery rates of this engineered artificial mineral are achieved using the process described here.
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
5. Die Hamburger Südsee-Expedition: Über Ethnographie und Kolonialismus
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Hans Fischer
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- 2022
6. Methoden ethnologischer Feldforschung
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Christoph Antweiler, Hans Fischer, Brigitta Hauser-Schäublin, Laura Coppens, Martha-Cecilia Dietrich, Hansjörg Dilger, Roland Hardenberg, Julia Pauli, Michael Schäuble, Judith Schlehe, Michael Schnegg, Martin Sökefeld, Thomas Widlok
- Published
- 2020
7. Ethnologie: Einführung in die Erforschung kultureller Vielfalt
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Christoph Antweiler, Bettina Beer, Andrea Bender, Michael Bollig, Christiane Brosius, Hansjörg Dilger, Heike Drotbohm, Eveline Dürr, Hans Fischer, Till Förster, Bernhard Hadolt, Hans Peter Hahn, Frank Heidemann, Ute Luig, Julia Pauli, Johannes Quack, Ursula Rao, Martin Rössler, Nikolaus Schareika, Günther Schlee, Micha
- Published
- 2020
8. Clinical Markers Associated With Risk of Suicide or Drug Overdose Among Individuals With Smoking Exposure
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Brigid A. Adviento, Elizabeth A. Regan, Barry J. Make, MeiLan K. Han, Marilyn G. Foreman, Anand S. Iyer, Surya P. Bhatt, Victor Kim, Jessica Bon, Xavier Soler, Gregory L. Kinney, Nicola A. Hanania, Katherine E. Lowe, Kristen E. Holm, Abebaw M. Yohannes, Gen Shinozaki, Karin F. Hoth, Jess G. Fiedorowicz, James D. Crapo, Edwin K. Silverman, Terri H. Beaty, Peter J. Castaldi, Michael H. Cho, Dawn L. DeMeo, Adel El Boueiz, Auyon Ghosh, Lystra P. Hayden, Craig P. Hersh, Jacqueline Hetmanski, Brian D. Hobbs, John E. Hokanson, Wonji Kim, Nan Laird, Christoph Lange, Sharon M. Lutz, Merry-Lynn McDonald, Dmitry Prokopenko, Matthew Moll, Jarrett Morrow, Dandi Qiao, Aabida Saferali, Phuwanat Sakornsakolpat, Emily S. Wan, Jeong Yun, Juan Pablo Centeno, Jean-Paul Charbonnier, Harvey O. Coxson, Craig J. Galban, Eric A. Hoffman, Stephen Humphries, Francine L. Jacobson, Philip F. Judy, Ella A. Kazerooni, Alex Kluiber, David A. Lynch, Pietro Nardelli, John D. Newell, Aleena Notary, Andrea Oh, James C. Ross, Raul San Jose Estepar, Joyce Schroeder, Jered Sieren, Berend C. Stoel, Juerg Tschirren, Edwin Van Beek, Bram van Ginneken, Eva van Rikxoort, Gonzalo Vegas Sanchez-Ferrero, Lucas Veitel, George R. Washko, Carla G. Wilson, Robert Jensen, Matthew Strand, Jim Crooks, Katherine Pratte, Aastha Khatiwada, Erin Austin, Gregory Kinney, Kendra A. Young, Alejandro A. Diaz, Barry Make, Susan Murray, Elizabeth Regan, Russell P. Bowler, Katerina Kechris, Farnoush Banaei-Kashani, Jeffrey L. Curtis, Perry G. Pernicano, Nicola Hanania, Mustafa Atik, Aladin Boriek, Kalpatha Guntupalli, Elizabeth Guy, Amit Parulekar, Craig Hersh, George Washko, R. Graham Barr, John Austin, Belinda D’Souza, Byron Thomashow, Neil MacIntyre, H. Page McAdams, Lacey Washington, Charlene McEvoy, Joseph Tashjian, Robert Wise, Robert Brown, Nadia N. Hansel, Karen Horton, Allison Lambert, Nirupama Putcha, Richard Casaburi, Alessandra Adami, Matthew Budoff, Hans Fischer, Janos Porszasz, Harry Rossiter, William Stringer, Amir Sharafkhaneh, Charlie Lan, Christine Wendt, Brian Bell, Ken M. Kunisaki, Eric L. Flenaugh, Hirut Gebrekristos, Mario Ponce, Silanath Terpenning, Gloria Westney, Russell Bowler, Richard Rosiello, David Pace, Gerard Criner, David Ciccolella, Francis Cordova, Chandra Dass, Gilbert D’Alonzo, Parag Desai, Michael Jacobs, Steven Kelsen, A. James Mamary, Nathaniel Marchetti, Aditi Satti, Kartik Shenoy, Robert M. Steiner, Alex Swift, Irene Swift, Maria Elena Vega-Sanchez, Mark Dransfield, William Bailey, Anand Iyer, Hrudaya Nath, J. Michael Wells, Douglas Conrad, Andrew Yen, Alejandro P. Comellas, John Newell, Brad Thompson, Ella Kazerooni, Wassim Labaki, Craig Galban, Dharshan Vummidi, Joanne Billings, Abbie Begnaud, Tadashi Allen, Frank Sciurba, Divay Chandra, Joel Weissfeld, Antonio Anzueto, Sandra Adams, Diego Maselli-Caceres, Mario E. Ruiz, and Harjinder Singh
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine - Published
- 2023
9. Clinically Significant and Comorbid Anxiety and Depression Symptoms Predict Severe Respiratory Exacerbations in Smokers: A Post Hoc Analysis of the COPDGene and SPIROMICS Cohorts
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Anand S. Iyer, Trisha M. Parekh, Jacqueline O’Toole, Surya P. Bhatt, Michelle N. Eakin, Jerry A. Krishnan, Abebaw M. Yohannes, Prescott G. Woodruff, Christopher B. Cooper, Richard E. Kanner, Nicola A. Hanania, Mark T. Dransfield, Elizabeth A. Regan, Karin F. Hoth, Victor Kim, James D. Crapo, Edwin K. Silverman, Barry J. Make, Terri Beaty, Ferdouse Begum, Peter J. Castaldi, Michael Cho, Dawn L. DeMeo, Adel R. Boueiz, Marilyn G. Foreman, Eitan Halper-Stromberg, Lystra P. Hayden, Craig P. Hersh, Jacqueline Hetmanski, Brian D. Hobbs, John E. Hokanson, Nan Laird, Christoph Lange, Sharon M. Lutz, Merry-Lynn McDonald, Margaret M. Parker, Dmitry Prokopenko, Dandi Qiao, Phuwanat Sakornsakolpat, Emily S. Wan, Sungho Won, Juan Pablo Centeno, Jean-Paul Charbonnier, Harvey O. Coxson, Craig J. Galban, MeiLan K. Han, Eric A. Hoffman, Stephen Huries, Francine L. Jacobson, Philip F. Judy, Ella A. Kazerooni, Alex Kluiber, David A. Lynch, Pietro Nardelli, John D. Newell, Aleena Notary, Andrea Oh, James C. Ross, Raul San José Estépar, Joyce Schroeder, Jered Sieren, Berend C. Stoel, Juerg Tschirren, Edwin Van Beek, Bram van Ginneken, Eva van Rikxoort, Gonzalo Vegas Sanchez-Ferrero, Lucas Veitel, George R. Washko, Carla G. Wilson, Robert Jensen, Douglas Everett, Jim Crooks, Katherine Pratte, Matt Strand, Gregory Kinney, Kendra A. Young, Jessica Bon, Alejandro A. Diaz, Barry Make, Susan Murray, Elizabeth Regan, Xavier Soler, Russell P. Bowler, Katerina Kechris, Farnoush Banaei-Kashani, Jeffrey L. Curtis, Perry G. Pernicano, Nicola Hanania, Mustafa Atik, Aladin Boriek, Kalpatha Guntupalli, Elizabeth Guy, Amit Parulekar, Craig Hersh, George Washko, R. Graham Barr, John Austin, Belinda D’Souza, Byron Thomashow, Neil MacIntyre, H. Page McAdams, Robert Wise, Robert Brown, Nadia N. Hansel, Karen Horton, Allison Lambert, Los Angeles, Richard Casaburi, Alessandra Adami, Matthew Budoff, Hans Fischer, Janos Porszasz, Harry Rossiter, William Stringer, Amir Sharafkhaneh, Charlie Lan, Christine Wendt, Brian Bell, Ken M. Kunisaki, Russell Bowler, Richard Rosiello, David Pace, Gerard Criner, David Ciccolella, Francis Cordova, Chandra Dass, Gilbert D’Alonzo, Parag Desai, Michael Jacobs, Steven Kelsen, A. James Mamary, Nathaniel Marchetti, Aditi Satti, Kartik Shenoy, Robert M. Steiner, Alex Swift, Irene Swift, Maria Elena Vega-Sanchez, Mark Dransfield, William Bailey, Anand Iyer, Hrudaya Nath, J. Michael Wells, Douglas Conrad, Andrew Yen, Alejandro P. Comellas, John Newell, Brad Thompson, Ella Kazerooni, Wassim Labaki, Craig Galban, Dharshan Vummidi, Joanne Billings, Abbie Begnaud, Tadashi Allen, Frank Sciurba, Divay Chandra, Carl Fuhrman, Joel Weissfeld, Antonio Anzueto, Sandra Adams, Diego Maselli-Caceres, Mario E. Ruiz, and Harjinder Singh
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Comorbid anxiety ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Post-hoc analysis ,Medicine ,Respiratory system ,business ,Depressive symptoms - Published
- 2022
10. Quantitative Research Designs and Approaches
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Knut Neumann, Hans Fischer, and William J. Boone
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Computer science ,Physik (inkl. Astronomie) ,Base (topology) ,Data science ,Research question ,Educational systems - Abstract
To perform quantitative studies, one has to start with a research question, including the operational defi nitions of variables and the purpose of the study. The results of investigating each of the levels of the educational system and the research-based conclusions should be of a kind that other researchers can rely on; and such conclusions should also be a base for extending their research.
- Published
- 2023
11. The Association Between Lung Hyperinflation and Coronary Artery Disease in Smokers
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Divay Chandra, Aman Gupta, Gregory L. Kinney, Carl R. Fuhrman, Joseph K. Leader, Alejandro A. Diaz, Jessica Bon, R. Graham Barr, George Washko, Matthew Budoff, John Hokanson, Frank C. Sciurba, James D. Crapo, Edwin K. Silverman, Barry J. Make, Elizabeth A. Regan, Terri Beaty, Ferdouse Begum, Adel R. Boueiz, Peter J. Castaldi, Michael Cho, Dawn L. DeMeo, Marilyn G. Foreman, Eitan Halper-Stromberg, Lystra P. Hayden, Craig P. Hersh, Jacqueline Hetmanski, Brian D. Hobbs, John E. Hokanson, Nan Laird, Christoph Lange, Sharon M. Lutz, Merry-Lynn McDonald, Margaret M. Parker, Dmitry Prokopenko, Dandi Qiao, Phuwanat Sakornsakolpat, Emily S. Wan, Sungho Won, Mustafa Al Qaisi, Harvey O. Coxson, Teresa Gray, MeiLan K. Han, Eric A. Hoffman, Stephen Humphries, Francine L. Jacobson, Philip F. Judy, Ella A. Kazerooni, Alex Kluiber, David A. Lynch, John D. Newell, James C. Ross, Raul San Jose Estepar, Joyce Schroeder, Jered Sieren, Douglas Stinson, Berend C. Stoel, Juerg Tschirren, Edwin Van Beek, Bram van Ginneken, Eva van Rikxoort, Carla G. Wilson, Robert Jensen, Jim Crooks, Douglas Everett, Camille Moore, null Strand, John Hughes, Gregory Kinney, Katherine Pratte, Kendra A. Young, Surya Bhatt, Carlos Martinez, Susan Murray, Xavier Soler, Farnoush Banaei-Kashani, Russell P. Bowler, Katerina Kechris, Jeffrey L. Curtis, Perry G. Pernicano, Nicola Hanania, Mustafa Atik, Aladin Boriek, Kalpatha Guntupalli, Elizabeth Guy, Amit Parulekar, Craig Hersh, John Austin, Belinda D’Souza, Byron Thomashow, Neil MacIntyre, H. Page McAdams, Lacey Washington, Charlene McEvoy, Joseph Tashjian, Robert Wise, Robert Brown, Nadia N. Hansel, Karen Horton, Allison Lambert, Nirupama Putcha, Richard Casaburi, Alessandra Adami, Hans Fischer, Janos Porszasz, Harry Rossiter, William Stringer, Michael E. DeBakey, Amir Sharafkhaneh, Charlie Lan, Christine Wendt, Brian Bell, Ken M. Kunisaki, Eugene Berkowitz, Gloria Westney, Russell Bowler, Richard Rosiello, David Pace, Gerard Criner, David Ciccolella, Francis Cordova, Chandra Dass, Gilbert D’Alonzo, Parag Desai, Michael Jacobs, Steven Kelsen, Victor Kim, A. James Mamary, Nathaniel Marchetti, Aditi Satti, Kartik Shenoy, Robert M. Steiner, Alex Swift, Irene Swift, Maria Elena Vega-Sanchez, Mark Dransfield, William Bailey, Surya P. Bhatt, Anand Iyer, Hrudaya Nath, J. Michael Wells, Joe Ramsdell, Paul Friedman, Andrew Yen, Alejandro P. Comellas, Karin F. Hoth, John Newell, Brad Thompson, Ella Kazerooni, Carlos H. Martinez, Joanne Billings, Abbie Begnaud, Tadashi Allen, Frank Sciurba, Carl Fuhrman, Joel Weissfeld, Antonio Anzueto, Sandra Adams, Diego Maselli-Caceres, and Mario E. Ruiz
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Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,COPD: Original Research ,Coronary artery disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,FEV1/FVC ratio ,0302 clinical medicine ,Functional residual capacity ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Lung volumes ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Myocardial infarction ,Lung ,Subclinical infection ,COPD ,business.industry ,Smoking ,Organ Size ,Middle Aged ,respiratory system ,medicine.disease ,Coronary Vessels ,United States ,Respiratory Function Tests ,respiratory tract diseases ,Airway Obstruction ,Plethysmography ,Biological Variation, Population ,Pulmonary Emphysema ,030228 respiratory system ,Asymptomatic Diseases ,Cohort ,Cardiology ,Airway Remodeling ,Female ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Smokers manifest varied phenotypes of pulmonary impairment. RESEARCH QUESTION: Which pulmonary phenotypes are associated with coronary artery disease (CAD) in smokers? STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: We analyzed data from the University of Pittsburgh COPD Specialized Center for Clinically Oriented Research (SCCOR) cohort (n = 481) and the Genetic Epidemiology of COPD (COPDGene) cohort (n = 2,580). Participants were current and former smokers with > 10 pack-years of tobacco exposure. Data from the two cohorts were analyzed separately because of methodologic differences. Lung hyperinflation was assessed by plethysmography in the SCCOR cohort and by inspiratory and expiratory CT scan lung volumes in the COPDGene cohort. Subclinical CAD was assessed as the coronary artery calcium score, whereas clinical CAD was defined as a self-reported history of CAD or myocardial infarction (MI). Analyses were performed in all smokers and then repeated in those with airflow obstruction (FEV(1) to FVC ratio, < 0.70). RESULTS: Pulmonary phenotypes, including airflow limitation, emphysema, lung hyperinflation, diffusion capacity, and radiographic measures of airway remodeling, showed weak to moderate correlations (r < 0.7) with each other. In multivariate models adjusted for pulmonary phenotypes and CAD risk factors, lung hyperinflation was the only phenotype associated with calcium score, history of clinical CAD, or history of MI (per 0.2 higher expiratory and inspiratory CT scan lung volume; coronary calcium: OR, 1.2; 95% CI, 1.1-1.5; P = .02; clinical CAD: OR, 1.6; 95% CI, 1.1-2.3; P = .01; and MI in COPDGene: OR, 1.7; 95% CI, 1.0-2.8; P = .05). FEV(1) and emphysema were associated with increased risk of CAD (P < .05) in models adjusted for CAD risk factors; however, these associations were attenuated on adjusting for lung hyperinflation. Results were the same in those with airflow obstruction and were present in both cohorts. INTERPRETATION: Lung hyperinflation is associated strongly with clinical and subclinical CAD in smokers, including those with airflow obstruction. After lung hyperinflation was accounted for, FEV(1) and emphysema no longer were associated with CAD. Subsequent studies should consider measuring lung hyperinflation and examining its mechanistic role in CAD in current and former smokers.
- Published
- 2021
12. Prevalence of abnormal spirometry in individuals with a smoking history and no known obstructive lung disease
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Thuonghien V. Tran, Gregory L. Kinney, Alejandro Comellas, Karin F. Hoth, Arianne K. Baldomero, A. James Mamary, Jeffrey L. Curtis, Nicola Hanania, Richard Casaburi, Kendra A. Young, Victor Kim, Barry Make, Emily S. Wan, Alejandro A. Diaz, John Hokanson, James D. Crapo, Edwin K. Silverman, Surya P. Bhatt, Elizabeth Regan, Spyridon Fortis, Barry J. Make, Elizabeth A. Regan, Terri H. Beaty, Peter J. Castaldi, Michael H. Cho, Dawn L. DeMeo, Adel El Boueiz, Marilyn G. Foreman, Auyon Ghosh, Lystra P. Hayden, Craig P. Hersh, Jacqueline Hetmanski, Brian D. Hobbs, John E. Hokanson, Wonji Kim, Nan Laird, Christoph Lange, Sharon M. Lutz, Merry-Lynn McDonald, Dmitry Prokopenko, Matthew Moll, Jarrett Morrow, Dandi Qiao, Aabida Saferali, Phuwanat Sakornsakolpat, Jeong Yun, Juan Pablo Centeno, Jean-Paul Charbonnier, Harvey O. Coxson, Craig J. Galban, MeiLan K. Han, Eric A. Hoffman, Stephen Humphries, Francine L. Jacobson, Philip F. Judy, Ella A. Kazerooni, Alex Kluiber, David A. Lynch, Pietro Nardelli, John D. Newell, Aleena Notary, Andrea Oh, James C. Ross, Raul San Jose Estepar, Joyce Schroeder, Jered Sieren, Berend C. Stoel, Juerg Tschirren, Edwin Van Beek, Bram van Ginneken, Eva van Rikxoort, Gonzalo Vegas Sanchez Ferrero, Lucas Veitel, George R. Washko, Carla G. Wilson, Robert Jensen, Douglas Everett, Jim Crooks, Katherine Pratte, Matt Strand, Erin Austin, Gregory Kinney, Jessica Bon, Susan Murray, Xavier Soler, Russell P. Bowler, Katerina Kechris, Farnoush BanaeiKashani, Perry G. Pernicano, Mustafa Atik, Aladin Boriek, Kalpatha Guntupalli, Elizabeth Guy, Amit Parulekar, Craig Hersh, George Washko, R. Graham Barr, John Austin, Belinda D'Souza, Byron Thomashow, Neil MacIntyre, H. Page McAdams, Lacey Washington, Charlene McEvoy, Joseph Tashjian, Robert Wise, Robert Brown, Nadia N. Hansel, Karen Horton, Allison Lambert, Nirupama Putcha, Alessandra Adami, Matthew Budoff, Hans Fischer, Janos Porszasz, Harry Rossiter, William Stringer, Amir Sharafkhaneh, Charlie Lan, Christine Wendt, Brian Bell, Ken M. Kunisaki, Eric L. Flenaugh, Hirut Gebrekristos, Mario Ponce, Silanath Terpenning, Gloria Westney, Russell Bowler, Richard Rosiello, David Pace, Gerard Criner, David Ciccolella, Francis Cordova, Chandra Dass, Gilbert D'Alonzo, Parag Desai, Michael Jacobs, Steven Kelsen, Nathaniel Marchetti, Aditi Satti, Kartik Shenoy, Robert M. Steiner, Alex Swift, Irene Swift, Maria Elena Vega-Sanchez, Mark Dransfield, William Bailey, Anand Iyer, Hrudaya Nath, J. Michael Wells, Douglas Conrad, Andrew Yen, Alejandro P. Comellas, John Newell, Brad Thompson, Ella Kazerooni, Wassim Labaki, Craig Galban, Dharshan Vummidi, Joanne Billings, Abbie Begnaud, Tadashi Allen, Frank Sciurba, Divay Chandra, Joel Weissfeld, Antonio Anzueto, Sandra Adams, Diego Maselli-Caceres, Mario E. Ruiz, and Harjinder Singh
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine - Published
- 2023
13. Deep vein thrombosis in ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome
- Author
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Svein Joar Auglænd, Johnsen, Olav, Nordbø, and Sebastian Hans, Fischer
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Venous Thrombosis ,Ovarian Hyperstimulation Syndrome ,Humans ,Female ,Jugular Veins - Published
- 2022
14. Hautläsionen mit letalem Verlauf
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Aisha Kumati, Corinne Chmiel, and Hans Fischer
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Gynecology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Erythema gyratum repens ,business.industry ,medicine ,General Medicine ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Zusammenfassung. Dermatologische Probleme stellen einen häufigen Konsultationsgrund in der Hausarztpraxis dar. Besonders bei älteren Personen muss bei gewissen Effloreszenzen an eine zugrundeliegende Neoplasie gedacht werden. Dieser Fallbericht eines Erythema gyratum repens als Erstmanifestation eines sonst asymptomatischen metastasierten Tubenkarzinoms verlief drei Monate nach Diagnosestellung letal.
- Published
- 2021
15. Venetrombose ved ovarialt hyperstimulerings=syndrom
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Sebastian Hans Fischer, Olav Nordbø, and Svein Joar Auglænd Johnsen
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General Medicine - Published
- 2022
16. English–Wampar Finder List
- Author
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Hans Fischer and Bettina Beer
- Published
- 2021
17. Wampar–English Dictionary
- Author
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Hans Fischer and Bettina Beer
- Published
- 2021
18. Introduction
- Author
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Hans Fischer and Bettina Beer
- Published
- 2021
19. Wampar–English Dictionary with an English–Wampar finder list
- Author
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Hans Fischer and Bettina Beer
- Published
- 2021
20. Alpha-1 Antitrypsin MZ Heterozygosity Is an Endotype of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
- Author
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Auyon J. Ghosh, Brian D. Hobbs, Matthew Moll, Aabida Saferali, Adel Boueiz, Jeong H. Yun, Frank Sciurba, Lucas Barwick, Andrew H. Limper, Kevin Flaherty, Gerard Criner, Kevin K. Brown, Robert Wise, Fernando J. Martinez, David Lomas, Peter J. Castaldi, Vincent J. Carey, Dawn L. DeMeo, Michael H. Cho, Edwin K. Silverman, Craig P. Hersh, James D. Crapo, Barry J. Make, Elizabeth A. Regan, Terri H. Beaty, Adel El-Boueiz, Marilyn G. Foreman, Lystra P. Hayden, Jacqueline Hetmanski, John E. Hokanson, Wonji Kim, Nan Laird, Christoph Lange, Sharon M. Lutz, Merry-Lynn McDonald, Dmitry Prokopenko, Jarrett Morrow, Dandi Qiao, Phuwanat Sakornsakolpat, Emily S. Wan, Juan Pablo Centeno, Jean-Paul Charbonnier, Harvey O. Coxson, Craig J. Galban, MeiLan K. Han, Eric A. Hoffman, Stephen Humphries, Francine L. Jacobson, Philip F. Judy, Ella A. Kazerooni, Alex Kluiber, David A. Lynch, Pietro Nardelli, John D. Newell, Aleena Notary, Andrea Oh, James C. Ross, Raul San Jose Estepar, Joyce Schroeder, Jered Sieren, Berend C. Stoel, Juerg Tschirren, Edwin Van Beek, Bram van Ginneken, Eva van Rikxoort, Gonzalo Vegas Sanchez-Ferrero, Lucas Veitel, George R. Washko, Carla G. Wilson, Robert Jensen, Douglas Everett, Jim Crooks, Katherine Pratte, Matt Strand, Erin Austin, Gregory Kinney, Kendra A. Young, Surya P. Bhatt, Jessica Bon, Alejandro A. Diaz, Barry Make, Susan Murray, Elizabeth Regan, Xavier Soler, Russell P. Bowler, Katerina Kechris, Farnoush Banaei-Kashani, Jeffrey L. Curtis, Perry G. Pernicano, Nicola Hanania, Mustafa Atik, Aladin Boriek, Kalpatha Guntupalli, Elizabeth Guy, Amit Parulekar, Craig Hersh, George Washko, R. Graham Barr, John Austin, Belinda D’Souza, Byron Thomashow, Neil MacIntyre, H. Page McAdams, Lacey Washington, Charlene McEvoy, Joseph Tashjian, Robert Brown, Nadia N. Hansel, Karen Horton, Allison Lambert, Nirupama Putcha, Richard Casaburi, Alessandra Adami, Matthew Budoff, Hans Fischer, Janos Porszasz, Harry Rossiter, William Stringer, Amir Sharafkhaneh, Charlie Lan, Christine Wendt, Brian Bell, Ken M. Kunisaki, Eric L. Flenaugh, Hirut Gebrekristos, Mario Ponce, Silanath Terpenning, Gloria Westney, Richard Rosiello, David Pace, David Ciccolella, Francis Cordova, Chandra Dass, Gilbert D’Alonzo, Parag Desai, Michael Jacobs, Steven Kelsen, Victor Kim, A. James Mamary, Nathaniel Marchetti, Aditi Satti, Kartik Shenoy, Robert M. Steiner, Alex Swift, Irene Swift, Maria Elena Vega-Sanchez, Mark Dransfield, William Bailey, Anand Iyer, Hrudaya Nath, J. Michael Wells, Douglas Conrad, Andrew Yen, Alejandro P. Comellas, Karin F. Hoth, John Newell, Brad Thompson, Ella Kazerooni, Wassim Labaki, Craig Galban, Dharshan Vummidi, Joanne Billings, Abbie Begnaud, Tadashi Allen, Divay Chandra, Joel Weissfeld, Antonio Anzueto, Sandra Adams, Diego Maselli-Caceres, Mario E. Ruiz, and Harjinder Singh
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Male ,Endotype ,Respiratory System ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Gastroenterology ,Loss of heterozygosity ,Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive ,Genotype ,80 and over ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Medicine ,Longitudinal Studies ,Aetiology ,Lung ,Aged, 80 and over ,COPD ,RNA sequencing ,Middle Aged ,Respiratory Function Tests ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Phenotype ,Meta-analysis ,Respiratory ,Female ,alpha-1 antitrypsin ,Genetic Markers ,Adult ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Chronic Obstructive ,Heterozygote ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Pulmonary disease ,Pulmonary Disease ,Clinical Research ,Internal medicine ,alpha 1-Antitrypsin Deficiency ,Humans ,Allele ,Aged ,Emphysema ,COPDGene Investigators ,Whole Genome Sequencing ,business.industry ,Original Articles ,medicine.disease ,Survival Analysis ,respiratory tract diseases ,meta-analysis ,alpha 1-Antitrypsin ,Case-Control Studies ,business - Abstract
RATIONALE: Multiple studies have demonstrated an increased risk of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in heterozygous carriers of the AAT (alpha-1 antitrypsin) Z allele. However, it is not known if MZ subjects with COPD are phenotypically different from noncarriers (MM genotype) with COPD. OBJECTIVES: To assess if MZ subjects with COPD have different clinical features compared with MM subjects with COPD. METHODS: Genotypes of SERPINA1 were ascertained by using whole-genome sequencing data in three independent studies. We compared outcomes between MM subjects with COPD and MZ subjects with COPD in each study and combined the results in a meta-analysis. We performed longitudinal and survival analyses to compare outcomes in MM and MZ subjects with COPD over time. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: We included 290 MZ subjects with COPD and 6,184 MM subjects with COPD across the three studies. MZ subjects had a lower FEV(1)% predicted and greater quantitative emphysema on chest computed tomography scans compared with MM subjects. In a meta-analysis, the FEV(1) was 3.9% lower (95% confidence interval [CI], −6.55% to −1.26%) and emphysema (the percentage of lung attenuation areas
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- 2021
21. Geometry of Classical Fields
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Ernst Binz, Jedrzej Sniatycki, Hans Fischer
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- 2011
22. [Skin Lesions with a Lethal Course]
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Aisha, Kumati, Hans, Fischer, and Corinne, Chmiel
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Erythema ,Humans ,Skin Diseases, Genetic ,Aged - Abstract
Skin Lesions with a Lethal Course
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- 2021
23. Longitudinal Association Between Muscle Loss and Mortality in Ever Smokers
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Stefanie E. Mason, Rafael Moreta-Martinez, Wassim W. Labaki, Matthew J. Strand, Elizabeth A. Regan, Jessica Bon, Ruben San Jose Estepar, Richard Casaburi, Merry-Lynn McDonald, Harry B. Rossiter, Barry Make, Mark T. Dransfield, MeiLan K. Han, Kendra Young, Jeffrey L. Curtis, Kathleen Stringer, Greg Kinney, John E. Hokanson, Raul San Jose Estepar, George R. Washko, James D. Crapo, Edwin K. Silverman, Sara Cummings, Kelley Madden, Barry J. Make, Juliet Nabbosa, Emily Port, Serine Rashdi, Lori Stepp, Shandi Watts, Michael Weaver, Terri Beaty, Russell P. Bowler, David A. Lynch, Gary Anderson, Eugene R. Bleecker, Harvey O. Coxson, Ronald G. Crystal, James C. Hogg, Michael A. Province, Stephen I. Rennard, Thomas Croxton, Weiniu Gan, Lisa A. Postow, Lisa M. Viviano, Corinne Costa-Davis, Elisha Malanga, Delia Prieto, Ruth Tal-Singer, Homayoon Farzadegan, Akila Hadji, Leena Sathe, David Baraghoshi, Grace Chen, James Crooks, Ruthie Knowles, Katherine Pratte, Carla Wilson, Pearlanne T. Zelarney, Katerina J. Kechris, Sonia Leach, Erin E. Austin, Annika Czizik, Gregory Kinney, Yisha Li, Sharon M. Lutz, Margaret F. Ragland, Nicole Richmond, Kendra A. Young, Michael Cho, Peter J. Castaldi, Kimberly Glass, Craig Hersh, Wonji Kim, Yang-Yu Liu, Craig P. Hersh, Jacqueline Bidinger, Michael H. Cho, Douglas Conrad, Dawn L. DeMeo, Adel R. El-Boueiz, Marilyn G. Foreman, Auyon Ghosh, Georg Hahn, Nadia N. Hansel, Lystra P. Hayden, Brian Hobbs, Woori Kim, Christoph Lange, Merry- Lynn McDonald, Michael McGeachie, Matthew Moll, Melody Morris, Nikolaos A. Patsopoulos, Dandi Qiao, Ingo Ruczinski, Emily S. Wan, Jennifer G. Dy, Sean B. Fain, Shoshana Ginsburg, Eric A. Hoffman, Stephen Humphries, Philip F. Judy, Alex Kluiber Stefanie Mason, Andrea Oh, Clare Poynton, Joseph M. Reinhardt, James Ross, Joyce D. Schroeder, Arkadiusz Sitek, Robert M. Steiner, Edwin van Beek, Bram van Ginneken, Eva van Rikxoort, Robert Jensen, Co-Chair: John E. Hokanson, Surya P. Bhatt, Victor Kim, Nirupama Putcha, MeiLan Han, Alejandro A. Diaz, Elizabeth Regan, Antonio Anzueto, William C. Bailey, Gerard J. Criner, Kim Sprenger, Takis Benos, Nicola A. Hanania, Karin F. Hoth, Allison Lambert, Katherine Lowe, Gabriela Oates, Trisha Parekh, Gloria Westney, Aparna Balasubramanian, Aladin Boriek, Ashraf Fawzy, Francine Jacobson, David C. LaFon, Neil MacIntyre, Diego Maselli-Caceres, Meredith C. McCormack, Frank Sciurba, Xavier Soler, Vickram Tejwani, Edwin JR. van Beek, Raymond C. Wade, Mike Wells, Chris H. Wendt, Jeong H. Yun, Jingzhou Zhang, Lucas Gillenwater, Katherine E. Lowe, Katherine A. Pratte, Margaret Ragland, Amy Attaway, Stefanie Mason, Punam Kumar Saha, Ava Wilson, Hannatu Amaza, Adrienne Baldomero, A. James Mamary, James O’Brien, Robert A. Wise, Michelle Eakin, Jess G. Fiedorowicz, Ben Henkle, Kristen Holm, Anand Iyer, Ken M. Kunisaki, Charlene McEvoy, Takudzwa Mkorombindo, Gen Shinozaki, Abebaw Yohannes, Brian D. Hobbs, Bruce E. Miller, Tara Retson, Lisa McCloskey, Perry G. Pernicano, Mustafa Atik, Laura Bertrand, Thomas Monaco, Dharani Narendra, Veronica V. Lenge de Rosen, Kwame Badu-Danso, Francine L. Jacobson, Laura Kaufman, Cherie Maguire, Sophie Struble, Seth Wilson, R. Graham Barr, Casandra Almonte, John H.M. Austin, Maria Lorena Gomez Blum, Belinda M. D’Souza, Emilay Florez, Rodney Martinez, Wendy Curry, H. Page McAdams, Charlotte V. Reikofski, Lacey Washington, Robert Brown, Cheryl Clare, Marie Daniel, Karen Horton, Cheng Ting 'Tony' Lin, Tahira Mirza, Meagan Scott, Becky Shade, Matt Budoff, Robert Calmelat, Deborah Cavanaugh, Chris Dailing, Leticia Diaz, Hans Fischer, Renee Love Indelicato, Janos Porszasz, April Soriano, William Stringer, Miriam Urrutia, Arianne Baldomero, Brian Bell, Miranda Deconcini, Linda Loes, Jonathan Phelan, Camille Robichaux, Cheryl Sasse, Joseph H. Tashjian, Eric L. Flenaugh, Kema Abson, Hirut Gebrekristos, Priscilla Johnson, Jessica Jordan, Mario Ponce, Silanath Terpenning, Derrick Wilson, Grace Broadhurst, Debra Dyer, Elena Engel, Jay Finigan, Andrew Hill, Alex Jones, Ryan Jones, Jordan Owen, Richard Rosiello, Nicole Andries, Mary Charpentier, Diane Kirk, David Pace, David Ciccolella, Francis Cordova, Chandra Dass, Gilbert D’Alonzo, Valena Davis, Parag Desai, Dee Fehrle, Carla Grabianowski, Michael Jacobs, Laurie Jameson, Gayle M. Jones, Steven Kelsen, Nathaniel Marchetti, Francine McGonagle, Aditi Satti, Kartik Shenoy, Regina Sheridan, Maria Vega-Sanchez, Samantha Wallace, Samuel Akinseye-kolapo, Matthew Baker, Arnissa Goggins, Anny McClain, Hrudaya Nath, Satinder P. Singh, Sushil K. Sonavane, Elizabeth Westfall, Marissa Gil, Tarek El Hajjaoui, Albert Hsiao, Amber Martineau, Jenna Mielke, Karl Perez, Gabriel Querido, Tara Reston, Andrew Yen, Alejandro Comellas, Spyridon Fortis, Mauricio Galizia, Eric Garcia, Janet Keating, Archana Laroia, Changhyun Lee, Amber Meyer, Brian Mullan, Prashant Nagpal, Oloigbe Ofori, and Sierra Suiter
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Chronic Obstructive ,Clinical Sciences ,Respiratory System ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,COPD: Original Research ,Body Mass Index ,Pectoralis Muscles ,Pulmonary Disease ,sarcopenia ,Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive ,Interquartile range ,Clinical Research ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Tobacco Smoking ,COPD ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Aetiology ,Pectoralis Muscle ,Lung ,Nutrition ,Smokers ,COPDGene Investigators ,Proportional hazards model ,business.industry ,Prevention ,Smoking ,muscle wasting ,medicine.disease ,mortality ,Confidence interval ,Good Health and Well Being ,Sarcopenia ,Cardiology ,Body Composition ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Body mass index ,Bioelectrical impedance analysis ,Biomarkers - Abstract
BackgroundBody composition measures, specifically low weight or reduced muscle mass, are associated with mortality in COPD, but the effect of longitudinal body composition changes is undefined.Research questionIs the longitudinal loss of fat-free mass (FFM) associated with increased mortality, including in those with initially normal or elevated body composition metrics?Study design and methodsParticipants with complete data for at least one visit in the COPDGene study (n= 9,268) and the ECLIPSE study (n= 1,760) were included and monitored for 12 and 8 years, respectively. Pectoralis muscle area (PMA) was derived from thoracic CT scans and used as a proxy for FFM. A longitudinal mixed submodel for PMA and a Cox proportional hazards submodel for survival were fitted on a joint distribution, using a shared random intercept parameter and Markov chain Monte Carlo parameter estimation.ResultsBoth cohorts demonstrated a left-shifted distribution of baseline FFM, not reflected in BMI, and an increase in all-cause mortality risk associated with longitudinal loss of PMA. For each 1-cm2 PMA loss, mortality increased 3.1%(95%CI, 2.4%-3.7%; P< .001) in COPDGene, and 2.4%(95%CI, 0.9%-4.0%; P< .001) in ECLIPSE. Increased mortality risk was independent of enrollment values for BMI and disease severity [BODE (body mass, airflow obstruction, dyspnea, and exercise capacity) index quartiles] and was significant even in participants with initially greater than average PMA.InterpretationLongitudinal loss of PMA is associated with increased all-cause mortality, regardless of BMI or initial muscle mass. Consideration of novel screening tests and further research into mechanisms contributing to muscle decline may improve risk stratification and identify novel therapeutic targets in ever smokers.
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- 2021
24. Longitudinal Phenotypes and Mortality in Preserved Ratio Impaired Spirometry in the COPDGene Study
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Emily S. Wan, Spyridon Fortis, Elizabeth A. Regan, John Hokanson, MeiLan K. Han, Richard Casaburi, Barry J. Make, James D. Crapo, Dawn L. DeMeo, Edwin K. Silverman, Terri Beaty, Ferdouse Begum, Peter J. Castaldi, Michael Cho, Adel R. Boueiz, Marilyn G. Foreman, Eitan Halper-Stromberg, Lystra P. Hayden, Craig P. Hersh, Jacqueline Hetmanski, Brian D. Hobbs, John E. Hokanson, Nan Laird, Christoph Lange, Sharon M. Lutz, Merry-Lynn McDonald, Margaret M. Parker, Dandi Qiao, Sungho Won, Phuwanat Sakornsakolpat, Dmitry Prokopenko, Mustafa Al Qaisi, Harvey O. Coxson, Teresa Gray, Eric A. Hoffman, Stephen Humphries, Francine L. Jacobson, Philip F. Judy, Ella A. Kazerooni, Alex Kluiber, David A. Lynch, John D. Newell, James C. Ross, Raul San Jose Estepar, Joyce Schroeder, Jered Sieren, Douglas Stinson, Berend C. Stoel, Juerg Tschirren, Edwin Van Beek, Bram van Ginneken, Eva van Rikxoort, George Washko, Carla G. Wilson, Robert Jensen, Douglas Everett, Jim Crooks, Camille Moore, Matt Strand, John Hughes, Gregory Kinney, Katherine Pratte, Kendra A. Young, Surya Bhatt, Jessica Bon, Barry Make, Carlos Martinez, Susan Murray, Elizabeth Regan, Xavier Soler, Russell P. Bowler, Katerina Kechris, Farnoush Banaei-Kashani, Jeffrey L. Curtis, Carlos H. Martinez, Perry G. Pernicano, Nicola Hanania, Philip Alapat, Mustafa Atik, Venkata Bandi, Aladin Boriek, Kalpatha Guntupalli, Elizabeth Guy, Arun Nachiappan, Amit Parulekar, Craig Hersh, R. Graham Barr, John Austin, Belinda D’Souza, Gregory D. N. Pearson, Anna Rozenshtein, Byron Thomashow, Neil MacIntyre, H. Page McAdams, Lacey Washington, Charlene McEvoy, Joseph Tashjian, Robert Wise, Robert Brown, Nadia N. Hansel, Karen Horton, Allison Lambert, Nirupama Putcha, Alessandra Adami, Matthew Budoff, Hans Fischer, Janos Porszasz, Harry Rossiter, William Stringer, Amir Sharafkhaneh, Charlie Lan, Christine Wendt, Brian Bell, Eugene Berkowitz, Gloria Westney, Russell Bowler, Richard Rosiello, David Pace, Gerard Criner, David Ciccolella, Francis Cordova, Chandra Dass, Gilbert D’Alonzo, Parag Desai, Michael Jacobs, Steven Kelsen, Victor Kim, A. James Mamary, Nathaniel Marchetti, Aditi Satti, Kartik Shenoy, Robert M. Steiner, Alex Swift, Irene Swift, Maria Elena Vega-Sanchez, Mark Dransfield, William Bailey, Anand Iyer, Hrudaya Nath, J. Michael Wells, Joe Ramsdell, Paul Friedman, Andrew Yen, Alejandro P. Comellas, Karin F. Hoth, John Newell, Brad Thompson, Ella Kazerooni, Joanne Billings, Abbie Begnaud, Tadashi Allen, Frank Sciurba, Divay Chandra, Carl Fuhrman, Joel Weissfeld, Antonio Anzueto, Sandra Adams, Diego Maselli-Caceres, and Mario E. Ruiz
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Spirometry ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Follow up studies ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030228 respiratory system ,Internal medicine ,Cardiology ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Prism ,business - Abstract
Rationale: Increasing awareness of the prevalence and significance of Preserved Ratio Impaired Spirometry (PRISm), alternatively known as restrictive or Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lu...
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- 2018
25. Heparin fragments induce cervical inflammation by recruiting immune cells through Toll-like receptor 4 in nonpregnant mice
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Hans Fischer, Anders Malmström, Manisha Yadav, Gunvor Ekman-Ordeberg, Jakob B Axelsson, Anna Åkerud, and Jonas S. Erjefält
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0301 basic medicine ,Embryology ,Neutrophils ,Inflammation ,Cervix Uteri ,Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immune system ,Cell Movement ,Pregnancy ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Cervix ,Mice, Knockout ,Toll-like receptor ,Innate immune system ,Heparin ,Macrophages ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Interleukin ,Cell Biology ,Immunity, Innate ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Toll-Like Receptor 4 ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neutrophil Infiltration ,Reproductive Medicine ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Myeloid Differentiation Factor 88 ,TLR4 ,Cancer research ,Female ,Interferon Regulatory Factor-3 ,medicine.symptom ,Cervical Ripening ,Signal Transduction ,Developmental Biology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Inflammation is a hallmark in the human cervix remodelling. A possible candidate inducing the inflammatory driven ripening of the cervix is the matrix component heparan sulphate, which has been shown to be elevated in late pregnancy in the cervix and uterus. Heparin and a glycol-split low molecular weight heparin (gsHep) with low anticoagulant potency has been shown to enhance myometrial contraction and interleukin (IL)-8 production by cervical fibroblasts. The aim of this study was to investigate the mechanism by which heparin promotes cervical inflammation. Wild-type, Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4), Myeloid differentiation primary response gene 88 (MyD88) and Interferon regulatory factor 3 (IRF3)-deficient mice were treated by deposition of gsHep into the vaginas of nonpregnant mice. To identify which cells that responded to the heparin fragments, a rhodamine fluorescent construct of gsHep was used, which initially did bind to the epithelial cells and were at later time points located in the sub-mucosa. The heparin fragments induced a strong local inflammatory response in wild-type mice shown by a rapid infiltration of neutrophils and to a lesser extent macrophages into the epithelium and the underlying extracellular matrix of the cervix. Further, a marked migration into the cervical and vaginal lumen was seen by both neutrophils and macrophages. The induced mucosal inflammation was strongly reduced in TLR4- and IRF3-deficient mice. In conclusion, our findings suggest that a TLR4/IRF3-mediated innate immune response in the cervical mucosa is induced by gsHep. This low anticoagulant heparin version, a novel TLR4 agonist, could contribute to human cervical ripening during the initiation of labour.
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- 2021
26. Emphysema Progression and Lung Function Decline Among Angiotensin Converting Enzyme Inhibitors and Angiotensin-Receptor Blockade Users in the COPDGene Cohort
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Vickram Tejwani, Ashraf Fawzy, Nirupama Putcha, Peter J. Castaldi, Michael H. Cho, Katherine A. Pratte, Surya P. Bhatt, David A. Lynch, Stephen M. Humphries, Gregory L. Kinney, Franco R. D’Alessio, Nadia N. Hansel, James D. Crapo, Edwin K. Silverman, Barry J. Make, Elizabeth A. Regan, Terri Beaty, Ferdouse Begum, Michael Cho, Dawn L. DeMeo, Adel R. Boueiz, Marilyn G. Foreman, Eitan Halper-Stromberg, Lystra P. Hayden, Craig P. Hersh, Jacqueline Hetmanski, Brian D. Hobbs, John E. Hokanson, Nan Laird, Christoph Lange, Sharon M. Lutz, Merry-Lynn McDonald, Margaret M. Parker, Dmitry Prokopenko, Dandi Qiao, Phuwanat Sakornsakolpat, Emily S. Wan, Sungho Won, Juan Pablo Centeno, Jean-Paul Charbonnier, Harvey O. Coxson, Craig J. Galban, MeiLan K. Han, Eric A. Hoffman, Stephen Humphries, Francine L. Jacobson, Philip F. Judy, Ella A. Kazerooni, Alex Kluiber, Pietro Nardelli, John D. Newell, Aleena Notary, Andrea Oh, James C. Ross, Raul San Jose Estepar, Joyce Schroeder, Jered Sieren, Berend C. Stoel, Juerg Tschirren, Edwin Van Beek, Bramvan Ginneken, Eva van Rikxoort, Gonzalo Vegas Sanchez-Ferrero, Lucas Veitel, George R. Washko, Carla G. Wilson, Robert Jensen, Douglas Everett, Jim Crooks, Katherine Pratte, Matt Strand, Gregory Kinney, Kendra A. Young, Jessica Bon, Alejandro A. Diaz, Barry Make, Susan Murray, Elizabeth Regan, Xavier Soler, Russell P. Bowler, Katerina Kechris, Farnoush Banaei-Kashani, Jeffrey L. Curtis, Perry G. Pernicano, Nicola Hanania, Mustafa Atik, Aladin Boriek, Kalpatha Guntupalli, Elizabeth Guy, Amit Parulekar, Craig Hersh, George Washko, R. Graham Barr, John Austin, Belinda D’Souza, Byron Thomashow, Neil MacIntyre, H. Page McAdams, Lacey Washington, Eric Flenaugh, Silanth Terpenning, Charlene McEvoy, Joseph Tashjian, Robert Wise, Robert Brown, Karen Horton, Allison Lambert, Richard Casaburi, Alessandra Adami, Matthew Budoff, Hans Fischer, Janos Porszasz, Harry Rossiter, William Stringer, Amir Sharafkhaneh, Charlie Lan, Christine Wendt, Brian Bell, KenM. Kunisaki, Russell Bowler, Richard Rosiello, David Pace, Gerard Criner, David Ciccolella, Francis Cordova, Chandra Dass, Gilbert D’Alonzo, Parag Desai, Michael Jacobs, Steven Kelsen, Victor Kim, A. James Mamary, Nathaniel Marchetti, Aditi Satti, Kartik Shenoy, Robert M. Steiner, Alex Swift, Irene Swift, Maria Elena Vega-Sanchez, Mark Dransfield, William Bailey, Anand Iyer, Hrudaya Nath, J. Michael Wells, Douglas Conrad, Andrew Yen, Alejandro P. Comellas, Karin F. Hoth, John Newell, Brad Thompson, Ella Kazerooni, Wassim Labaki, Craig Galban, Dharshan Vummidi, Joanne Billings, Abbie Begnaud, Tadashi Allen, Frank Sciurba, Divay Chandra, Carl Fuhrman, and Joel Weissfeld
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Male ,Angiotensin receptor ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,Vital Capacity ,Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors ,Walk Test ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Angiotensin Receptor Antagonists ,Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Forced Expiratory Volume ,Medicine ,Humans ,cardiovascular diseases ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Prospective Studies ,education ,Aged ,COPD ,education.field_of_study ,Lung ,biology ,business.industry ,Angiotensin-converting enzyme ,respiratory system ,Middle Aged ,Protective Factors ,medicine.disease ,Angiotensin II ,respiratory tract diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030228 respiratory system ,Genetic epidemiology ,Pulmonary Emphysema ,Spirometry ,Cohort ,biology.protein ,Cardiology ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Lung Volume Measurements ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed - Abstract
Background Attenuation of transforming growth factor β by blocking angiotensin II has been shown to reduce emphysema in a murine model. General population studies have demonstrated that the use of angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEis) and angiotensin-receptor blockers (ARBs) is associated with reduction of emphysema progression in former smokers and that the use of ACEis is associated with reduction of FEV1 progression in current smokers. Research Question Is use of ACEi and ARB associated with less progression of emphysema and FEV1 decline among individuals with COPD or baseline emphysema? Methods Former and current smokers from the Genetic Epidemiology of COPD Study who attended baseline and 5-year follow-up visits, did not change smoking status, and underwent chest CT imaging were included. Adjusted linear mixed models were used to evaluate progression of adjusted lung density (ALD), percent emphysema (%total lung volume Results Over 5 years of follow-up, compared with nonusers, ACEi and ARB users with COPD showed slower ALD progression (adjusted mean difference [aMD], 1.6; 95% CI, 0.34-2.9). Slowed lung function decline was not observed based on phase 1 medication (aMD of FEV1 % predicted, 0.83; 95% CI, –0.62 to 2.3), but was when analysis was limited to consistent ACEi and ARB users (aMD of FEV1 % predicted, 1.9; 95% CI, 0.14-3.6). No effect modification by smoking status was found for radiographic outcomes, and the lung function effect was more pronounced in former smokers. Results were similar among participants with baseline emphysema. Interpretation Among participants with spirometry-confirmed COPD or baseline emphysema, ACEi and ARB use was associated with slower progression of emphysema and lung function decline. Trial Registry ClinicalTrials.gov ; No.: NCT00608764; URL: www.clinicaltrials.gov
- Published
- 2020
27. Disease Progression Modeling in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
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Barry J. Make, Venkata Bandi, Douglas Stinson, Ella A. Kazerooni, Harry B. Rossiter, Farnoush Banaei-Kashani, Xavier Soler, Arun C. Nachiappan, Paul J. Friedman, Karen M. Horton, Terri H. Beaty, Christine H. Wendt, Andrew Yen, Philip F. Judy, Ferdouse Begum, Jeffrey L. Curtis, Lystra P. Hayden, Joe W. Ramsdell, Peter J. Castaldi, Alejandro P. Comellas, Emily S. Wan, Susan Murray, Aladin M. Boriek, David Pace, Jessica Bon, Nadia N. Hansel, Chandra Dass, Marilyn G. Foreman, Neil R. MacIntyre, Kartik Shenoy, David A. Lynch, Brian D. Hobbs, Raúl San José Estépar, John D. Newell, Philip Alapat, Karin F. Hoth, Stephen M. Humphries, Robert M. Steiner, Alessandra Adami, R.P. Bowler, Parag Desai, Mustafa Al Qaisi, Anna Rozenshtein, Joel L. Weissfeld, Robert A. Wise, Nan M. Laird, Margaret M. Parker, Felix J. S. Bragman, Camille M. Moore, Abbie Begnaud, Allison A. Lambert, Elizabeth Guy, Michael R. Jacobs, Mario E. Ruiz, Dawn L. DeMeo, Sungho Won, Alex Kluiber, Amit D. Parulekar, John H. M. Austin, Nathaniel Marchetti, Dandi Qiao, Douglas Everett, Joseph H. Tashjian, Juerg Tschirren, Kendra A. Young, Adel Boueiz, James D. Crapo, Gregory L. Kinney, Richard Casaburi, Russell P. Bowler, Daniel C. Alexander, Francis Cordova, Craig P. Hersh, George R. Washko, H. Page McAdams, Amir Sharafkhaneh, A. James Mamary, J. Michael Wells, Lacey Washington, MeiLan K. Han, Mark T. Dransfield, Nirupama Putcha, Craig J. Galbán, Dmitry Prokopenko, Eric A. Hoffman, Gloria Westney, Katerina Kechris, Bojidar Rangelov, Carla Wilson, Charlene McEvoy, Divay Chandra, Edwin J R van Beek, Carlos H. Martinez, Kalpatha Guntupalli, Gregory D.N. Pearson, Diego Maselli-Caceres, James C. Ross, Katherine A. Pratte, Christoph Lange, David Ciccolella, Charlie Lan, R. Graham Barr, Phuwanat Sakornsakolpat, Aditi Satti, Irene Swift, Robert H. Brown, Hans Fischer, Victor Kim, Maria Elena Vega-Sanchez, Sandra G. Adams, Belinda D’Souza, Perry G. Pernicano, Bram van Ginneken, Hrudaya Nath, Byron Thomashow, Jim Crooks, Joanne Billings, Jered Sieren, Eitan Halper-Stromberg, Matthew J. Budoff, William C. Bailey, Eva M. van Rikxoort, Merry-Lynn McDonald, Francine L. Jacobson, Edwin K. Silverman, John E. Hokanson, Robert L. Jensen, John Hughes, Michael H. Cho, Alexandra L. Young, Steven G. Kelsen, Janos Porszasz, Jacqueline B. Hetmanski, Alex Swift, John R. Hurst, Elizabeth A. Regan, Anand S Iyer, Frank C. Sciurba, Mustafa A. Atik, Gerard J. Criner, Antonio Anzueto, Sharon M. Lutz, David J. Hawkes, Carl R. Fuhrman, William W. Stringer, Harvey O. Coxson, Berend C. Stoel, Eugene Berkowitz, Joyce D. Schroeder, Tadashi Allen, Surya P. Bhatt, Matthew Strand, Brad H. Thompson, Nicola A. Hanania, Brian Bell, Teresa Gray, Gilbert E. D'Alonzo, and Richard Rosiello
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pulmonary disease ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Machine Learning ,03 medical and health sciences ,Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Aged ,COPD ,business.industry ,Disease progression ,Editorials ,Original Articles ,Middle Aged ,Models, Theoretical ,respiratory system ,medicine.disease ,respiratory tract diseases ,030228 respiratory system ,Disease Progression ,Bronchitis ,Female ,Ct imaging ,business ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Rare cancers Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 9] - Abstract
Contains fulltext : 220761.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access) Rationale: The decades-long progression of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) renders identifying different trajectories of disease progression challenging.Objectives: To identify subtypes of patients with COPD with distinct longitudinal progression patterns using a novel machine-learning tool called "Subtype and Stage Inference" (SuStaIn) and to evaluate the utility of SuStaIn for patient stratification in COPD.Methods: We applied SuStaIn to cross-sectional computed tomography imaging markers in 3,698 Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) 1-4 patients and 3,479 controls from the COPDGene (COPD Genetic Epidemiology) study to identify subtypes of patients with COPD. We confirmed the identified subtypes and progression patterns using ECLIPSE (Evaluation of COPD Longitudinally to Identify Predictive Surrogate Endpoints) data. We assessed the utility of SuStaIn for patient stratification by comparing SuStaIn subtypes and stages at baseline with longitudinal follow-up data.Measurements and Main Results: We identified two trajectories of disease progression in COPD: a "Tissue-->Airway" subtype (n = 2,354, 70.4%), in which small airway dysfunction and emphysema precede large airway wall abnormalities, and an "Airway-->Tissue" subtype (n = 988, 29.6%), in which large airway wall abnormalities precede emphysema and small airway dysfunction. Subtypes were reproducible in ECLIPSE. Baseline stage in both subtypes correlated with future FEV1/FVC decline (r = -0.16 [P < 0.001] in the Tissue-->Airway group; r = -0.14 [P = 0.011] in the Airway-->Tissue group). SuStaIn placed 30% of smokers with normal lung function at elevated stages, suggesting imaging changes consistent with early COPD. Individuals with early changes were 2.5 times more likely to meet COPD diagnostic criteria at follow-up.Conclusions: We demonstrate two distinct patterns of disease progression in COPD using SuStaIn, likely representing different endotypes. One third of healthy smokers have detectable imaging changes, suggesting a new biomarker of "early COPD."
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- 2020
28. 13 Dokumentation von Feldforschungsdaten
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Hans Fischer and Bettina Beer
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- 2020
29. Aufgaben im Physikunterricht
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Hans Fischer and Alexander Kauertz
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Aufgaben nehmen eine zentrale Rolle im Physikunterricht ein. Sie stellen eine Kommunikationssituation dar, in der Lehrende und Lernende in Interaktion treten.
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- 2020
30. Gestaltung von Unterricht
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Hans Fischer and Heiko Krabbe
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Die Gestaltung von Physikunterricht orientiert sich in Kapitel 4 an einer groben Einteilung von Sicht- und Tiefenstruktur. Sie fokussiert sowohl die Beurteilung als auch die Planung von Unterricht auf die zu erreichenden Lernziele, die nicht nur fachwissenschaftlich, sondern auch physikalisch-methodisch, wissenschaftstheoretisch und vor allem lerntheoretisch verstanden werden. Die Betrachtung von Lernprozessen zum Erreichen lerntheoretischer Ziele, wie z. B. dem Lernen durch eigene Erfahrung, von Konzepten oder von Problemlosen zur Gestaltung der Tiefenstruktur des Unterrichts wird durch die aktuell relevanten und empirisch gesicherten Qualitatskriterien fur Unterricht erganzt.Die Sichtstruktur des Unterrichts, also u. a. der Einsatz von Medien und die Sozialformen, sind frei von der Lehrkraft planbar. Sie sollten der Tiefenstruktur nach der Ausstattung der jeweiligen Schule bestmoglich entsprechen. Die Gestaltung von Unterricht sollte an Lernprozessen orientiert sein (lerntheoretisch und fachlich) und an kognitiver Aktivierung, sie sollte schulerorientiert sein, sich durch klare Unterrichtsfuhrung auszeichnen (Regelklarheit,Storungspravention) und insgesamt ein forderliches Lernklima anstreben. Diese Merkmale gehoren zur Tiefenstruktur des Unterrichts, und sie lassen sich nicht ohne theoriegeleitete Analyse und Bezug zur Unterrichtsqualitat beschreiben. An beispielhaften Unterrichtsentwurfen zum Thema optische Linsen werden unterschiedliche Strukturierungsmodelle verdeutlicht.
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- 2020
31. Themen der Physikdidaktik
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Hans Fischer, Raimund Girwidz, and Ernst Kircher
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Die Physikdidaktik umfasst ein breites Themenfeld. Nur eine Auswahl von zentralen Fragestellungen, Aussagen und Aufgaben konnen in diesem Buch abgedeckt werden.
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- 2020
32. Empirische Forschung in der Physikdidaktik
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Heiko Krabbe and Hans Fischer
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Das wichtigste Ziel fachdidaktischer Forschung in allen Fachern ist die Verbesserung von Unterricht. Dies ist naturlich auch fur den Unterricht in Physik anzustreben. Lehrerinnen und Lehrer mussen erfahren konnen, wie sie Physikunterricht so gestalten konnen und wie sie sich in Lernsituationen verhalten sollten damit ihre Schulerinnen und Schuler erfolgreich die angestrebten Ziele des Physikunterrichts mit groser Wahrscheinlichkeit erreichen konnen.
- Published
- 2020
33. Kompetenzen und Anforderungen an Lehrkräfte
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Hans Fischer and Alexander Kauertz
- Abstract
Der Kompetenzdefinition von Weinert folgend entsteht Professionskompetenz von Lehrkraften aus der Fahigkeit, die grundlegenden Konzepte und Wissensbestande der beteiligten Fachwissenschaften so anwenden zu wollen, dass die Lernprozesse der Schulerinnen und Schuler eine optimale Basis haben. Professionskompetenz kann also in Kompetenzbereichen strukturiert werden. Neben Fachwissen, das wiederum aus fachdidaktischem, fachlichem (physikalischem) und bildungswissenschaftlichem Wissen zusammengesetzt ist, zahlen aktuell die motivationale Orientierung, Uberzeugungen und Werthaltungen und selbstregulative Fahigkeiten zu den Bereichen, in denen Lehrkrafte kompetent sein mussten, um gut zu unterrichten. Das Fachwissen und darin besonders das fachliche Wissen, ist damit eine notwendige, aber nicht hinreichende Bedingung fur gutes Unterrichten. Die anderen Kompetenzbereiche formulieren weitere Rahmenbedingungen, wie den Umgang mit den vielfaltigen Belastungen der Profession, die Erhaltung der Belastbarkeit, Stressbewaltigung, die Reflexion der eigenen Einstellungen und Werthaltungen gegenuber Schulerinnen und Schulern, Eltern, Schulsystem und Lernen. Speziell in der Physik als empirischem Fach zahlt dazu ebenfalls die epistemologische Reflexion der individuellen Wissensgenerierung und der philosophisch-historischen Entwicklung des fachlichen Wissens.
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- 2020
34. Lobar Emphysema Distribution Is Associated With 5-Year Radiological Disease Progression
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Adel Boueiz, Yale Chang, Michael H. Cho, George R. Washko, Raul San José Estépar, Russell P. Bowler, James D. Crapo, Dawn L. DeMeo, Jennifer G. Dy, Edwin K. Silverman, Peter J. Castaldi, James Crapo, Edwin Silverman, Barry Make, Elizabeth Regan, Terri Beaty, Nan Laird, Christoph Lange, Stephanie Santorico, John Hokanson, Dawn DeMeo, Nadia Hansel, Craig Hersh, Peter Castaldi, Merry-Lynn McDonald, Emily Wan, Megan Hardin, Jacqueline Hetmanski, Margaret Parker, Marilyn Foreman, Brian Hobbs, Robert Busch, Dandi Qiao, Eitan Halper-Stromberg, Ferdouse Begum, Sungho Won, Sharon Lutz, David A. Lynch, Harvey O. Coxson, MeiLan K. Han, Eric A. Hoffman, Stephen Humphries, Francine L. Jacobson, Philip F. Judy, Ella A. Kazerooni, John D. Newell, James C. Ross, Raul José Estépar, Berend C. Stoel, Juerg Tschirren, Eva van Rikxoort, Bram van Ginneken, Carla G. Wilson, Mustafa Al Qaisi, Teresa Gray, Alex Kluiber, Tanya Mann, Jered Sieren, Douglas Stinson, Joyce Schroeder, Edwin Van Beek, Robert Jensen, Douglas Everett, Anna Faino, Matt Strand, Carla Wilson, John E. Hokanson, Gregory Kinney, Kendra Young, Katherine Pratte, Lindsey Duca, Jeffrey L. Curtis, Carlos H. Martinez, Perry G. Pernicano, Nicola Hanania, Philip Alapat, Venkata Bandi, Mustafa Atik, Aladin Boriek, Kalpatha Guntupalli, Elizabeth Guy, Amit Parulekar, Arun Nachiappan, Francine Jacobson, R. Graham Barr, Byron Thomashow, John Austin, Belinda D’Souza, Gregory D.N. Pearson, Anna Rozenshtein, Neil MacIntyre, Lacey Washington, H. Page McAdams, Charlene McEvoy, Joseph Tashjian, Robert Wise, Robert Brown, Karen Horton, Nirupama Putcha, Richard Casaburi, Alessandra Adami, Janos Porszasz, Hans Fischer, Matthew Budoff, Harry Rossiter, Amir Sharafkhaneh, Charlie Lan, Christine Wendt, Brian Bell, Gloria Westney, Eugene Berkowitz, Russell Bowler, David Lynch, Richard Rosiello, David Pace, Gerard Criner, David Ciccolella, Francis Cordova, Chandra Dass, Gilbert D’Alonzo, Parag Desai, Michael Jacobs, Steven Kelsen, Victor Kim, A. James Mamary, Nathaniel Marchetti, Aditi Satti, Kartik Shenoy, Robert M. Steiner, Alex Swift, Irene Swift, Maria Elena Vega-Sanchez, Mark Dransfield, William Bailey, J. Michael Wells, Surya Bhatt, Hrudaya Nath, Joe Ramsdell, Paul Friedman, Xavier Soler, Andrew Yen, Alejandro Cornellas, John Newell, Brad Thompson, MeiLan Han, Ella Kazerooni, Carlos Martinez, Joanne Billings, Tadashi Allen, Frank Sciurba, Divay Chandra, Joel Weissfeld, Carl Fuhrman, Jessica Bon, Antonio Anzueto, Sandra Adams, Diego Maselli-Caceres, and Mario E. Ruiz
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Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Genome-wide association study ,Comorbidity ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Severity of Illness Index ,Gastroenterology ,03 medical and health sciences ,FEV1/FVC ratio ,0302 clinical medicine ,Forced Expiratory Volume ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,COPD ,Distribution (pharmacology) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Aged ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,respiratory system ,medicine.disease ,respiratory tract diseases ,Pulmonary Emphysema ,030228 respiratory system ,Genetic epidemiology ,Radiological weapon ,Cohort ,Disease Progression ,Inflammatory diseases Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 5] ,Female ,Metabolic syndrome ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Rare cancers Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 9] - Abstract
Contains fulltext : 194255.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access) BACKGROUND: Emphysema has considerable variability in its regional distribution. Craniocaudal emphysema distribution is an important predictor of the response to lung volume reduction. However, there is little consensus regarding how to define upper lobe-predominant and lower lobe-predominant emphysema subtypes. Consequently, the clinical and genetic associations with these subtypes are poorly characterized. METHODS: We sought to identify subgroups characterized by upper-lobe or lower-lobe emphysema predominance and comparable amounts of total emphysema by analyzing data from 9,210 smokers without alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency in the Genetic Epidemiology of COPD (COPDGene) cohort. CT densitometric emphysema was measured in each lung lobe. Random forest clustering was applied to lobar emphysema variables after regressing out the effects of total emphysema. Clusters were tested for association with clinical and imaging outcomes at baseline and at 5-year follow-up. Their associations with genetic variants were also compared. RESULTS: Three clusters were identified: minimal emphysema (n = 1,312), upper lobe-predominant emphysema (n = 905), and lower lobe-predominant emphysema (n = 796). Despite a similar amount of total emphysema, the lower-lobe group had more severe airflow obstruction at baseline and higher rates of metabolic syndrome compared with subjects with upper-lobe predominance. The group with upper-lobe predominance had greater 5-year progression of emphysema, gas trapping, and dyspnea. Differential associations with known COPD genetic risk variants were noted. CONCLUSIONS: Subgroups of smokers defined by upper-lobe or lower-lobe emphysema predominance exhibit different functional and radiological disease progression rates, and the upper-lobe predominant subtype shows evidence of association with known COPD genetic risk variants. These subgroups may be useful in the development of personalized treatments for COPD.
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- 2018
35. Wampar–English Dictionary with an English–Wampar finder list
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Bettina Beer, Hans Fischer, Bettina Beer, and Hans Fischer
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- English language--Dictionaries--Wampar, Wampar language--Dictionaries--English
- Abstract
This ethnographic dictionary is the result of Hans Fischer's long-term fieldwork among the Wampar, who occupy the middle Markham Valley in Morobe Province, Papua New Guinea (PNG). Their language, Dzob Wampar, belongs to the Markham family of the Austronesian languages. Today most Wampar speak not only Wampar but also PNG's lingua franca, Tok Pisin. Six decades of Wampar research has documented the extent and speed of change in the region. Today, mining, migration and the commodification of land are accelerating the pace of change in Wampar communities, resulting in great individual differences in knowledge of the vernacular. This dictionary covers largely forgotten Wampar expressions as well as loanwords from German and Jabêm that have become part of everyday language. Most entries contain example sentences from original Wampar texts. The dictionary is complemented by an overview of ethnographic research among Wampar, a sketch of Wampar grammar, a bibliography and an English-to-Wampar finder list.
- Published
- 2021
36. Evaluation of a Teaching Unit Based on a Problem-Solving Model for Seventh-Grade Students
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Mohamed A. Shahat, Hans Fischer, and Annika Ohle
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Class (computer programming) ,020205 medical informatics ,Teaching method ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Sample (statistics) ,02 engineering and technology ,Science education ,Learning sciences ,Unit (housing) ,Intervention (counseling) ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Mathematics education ,Quality (business) ,Psychology ,0503 education ,media_common - Abstract
In this study using a quasi-experimental design, a student-centered science teaching unit, which provided additional support to students for handling experimental material, was developed and evaluated on an ad-hoc sample of Egyptian lower secondary school students in a classroom setting. Particularly challenging for using student-centered (with the students as the focus of the activity) and student-oriented teaching (with the activity guided by the students’ ideas) are average class sizes of 40 students in Egypt. The goal of this teaching unit was to foster students’ content knowledge on density and buoyancy, problem-solving abilities, experimental strategy knowledge, motivation for learning science, and perceptions of the instruction quality in a course of five double lessons. To examine the effect of the intervention, the intervention group was taught in accordance with the model of problem solving with a student-centered and student-oriented approach, the control group learned the same content in traditional, transmissive teacher-centered (with the teacher as the focus of the activity) and teacher-oriented approach (with the activity guided by the teacher). The students in the intervention group performed significantly better – with small and medium effect sizes in all five dependent variables – than did the control group. Despite the small sample size (N = 147), this study provides evidence that the teaching unit can be effective and warrants further research to confirm these findings on larger random samples. This study contributes to research on instructional quality in large learning groups with no experience on scientific inquiry or problem solving and provides practical implications for developing countries.
- Published
- 2017
37. Science Teachers’ Use of a Concept Map Marking Guide as a Formative Assessment Tool for the Concept of Energy
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Hans Fischer, Heiko Krabbe, David F. Treagust, Siv Ling Ley, and Mihye Won
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Science instruction ,Computer science ,Concept map ,Energy (esotericism) ,05 social sciences ,050401 social sciences methods ,050301 education ,Diagnostic test ,Science teachers ,Physik (inkl. Astronomie) ,Education ,Formative assessment ,0504 sociology ,Evaluation methods ,Pedagogy ,Mathematics education ,Statistical analysis ,0503 education - Abstract
In this study, we investigated the value of a concept map marking guide as an alternative formative assessment tool for science teachers to adopt for the topic of energy. Eight high school science ...
- Published
- 2017
38. Combined Forced Expiratory Volume in 1 Second and Forced Vital Capacity Bronchodilator Response, Exacerbations, and Mortality in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
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Spyridon Fortis, Alejandro Comellas, Barry J. Make, Craig P. Hersh, Sandeep Bodduluri, Dimitris Georgopoulos, Victor Kim, Gerard J. Criner, Mark T. Dransfield, Surya P. Bhatt, James D. Crapo, Edwin K. Silverman, Elizabeth A. Regan, Terri Beaty, Ferdouse Begum, Robert Busch, Peter J. Castaldi, Michael Cho, Dawn L. DeMeo, Adel R. Boueiz, Marilyn G. Foreman, Eitan Halper-Stromberg, Nadia N. Hansel, Megan E. Hardin, Lystra P. Hayden, Jacqueline Hetmanski, Brian D. Hobbs, John E. Hokanson, Nan Laird, Christoph Lange, Sharon M. Lutz, Merry-Lynn McDonald, Margaret M. Parker, Dandi Qiao, Stephanie Santorico, Emily S. Wan, Sungho Won, Mustafa Al Qaisi, Harvey O. Coxson, Teresa Gray, MeiLan K. Han, Eric A. Hoffman, Stephen Humphries, Francine L. Jacobson, Philip F. Judy, Ella A. Kazerooni, Alex Kluiber, David A. Lynch, John D. Newell, James C. Ross, Raul San Jose Estepar, Joyce Schroeder, Jered Sieren, Douglas Stinson, Berend C. Stoel, Juerg Tschirren, Edwin Van Beek, Bram van Ginneken, Eva van Rikxoort, George Washko, Carla G. Wilson, Robert Jensen, Douglas Everett, Jim Crooks, Camille Moore, Matt Strand, John Hughes, Gregory Kinney, Katherine Pratte, Kendra A. Young, Jeffrey L. Curtis, Carlos H. Martinez, Perry G. Pernicano, Nicola Hanania, Philip Alapat, Mustafa Atik, Venkata Bandi, Aladin Boriek, Kalpatha Guntupalli, Elizabeth Guy, Arun Nachiappan, Amit Parulekar, Craig Hersh, R. Graham Barr, John Austin, Belinda D’Souza, Gregory D.N. Pearson, Anna Rozenshtein, Byron Thomashow, Neil MacIntyre, H. Page McAdams, Lacey Washington, Charlene McEvoy, Joseph Tashjian, Robert Wise, Robert Brown, Karen Horton, Allison Lambert, Nirupama Putcha, Richard Casaburi, Alessandra Adami, Matthew Budoff, Hans Fischer, Janos Porszasz, Harry Rossiter, William Stringer, Amir Sharafkhaneh, Charlie Lan, Christine Wendt, Brian Bell, Eugene Berkowitz, Gloria Westney, Russell Bowler, Richard Rosiello, David Pace, Gerard Criner, David Ciccolella, Francis Cordova, Chandra Dass, Gilbert D’Alonzo, Parag Desai, Michael Jacobs, Steven Kelsen, A. James Mamary, Nathaniel Marchetti, Aditi Satti, Kartik Shenoy, Robert M. Steiner, Alex Swift, Irene Swift, Maria Elena Vega-Sanchez, Mark Dransfield, William Bailey, Surya Bhatt, Anand Iyer, Hrudaya Nath, J. Michael Wells, Joe Ramsdell, Paul Friedman, Xavier Soler, Andrew Yen, Alejandro P. Comellas, John Newell, Brad Thompson, Ella Kazerooni, Joanne Billings, Abbie Begnaud, Tadashi Allen, Frank Sciurba, Jessica Bon, Divay Chandra, Carl Fuhrman, Joel Weissfeld, Antonio Anzueto, Sandra Adams, Diego Maselli-Caceres, and Mario E. Ruiz
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Spirometry ,Male ,Vital capacity ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Vital Capacity ,Pulmonary disease ,Risk Assessment ,Severity of Illness Index ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Bronchodilator ,Forced Expiratory Volume ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Respiratory system ,Asthma ,Aged ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Retrospective Studies ,Original Research ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Survival Analysis ,respiratory tract diseases ,Bronchodilator Agents ,Respiratory Function Tests ,Logistic Models ,Treatment Outcome ,030228 respiratory system ,Volume (thermodynamics) ,Multivariate Analysis ,Cardiology ,Disease Progression ,Female ,business ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed - Abstract
Rationale: The American Thoracic Society (ATS)/European Respiratory Society defines a positive bronchodilator response (BDR) by a composite of BDR in either forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV(1)) and/or forced vital capacity (FVC) greater than or equal to 12% and 200 ml (ATS-BDR). We hypothesized that ATS-BDR components would be differentially associated with important chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) outcomes. Objectives: To examine whether ATS-BDR components are differentially associated with clinical, functional, and radiographic features in COPD. Methods: We included subjects with COPD enrolled in the COPDGene study. In the main analysis, we excluded subjects with self-reported asthma. We categorized BDR into the following: 1) No-BDR, no BDR in either FEV(1) or FVC; 2) FEV(1)-BDR, BDR in FEV(1) but no BDR in FVC; 3) FVC-BDR, BDR in FVC but no BDR in FEV(1); and 4) Combined-BDR, BDR in both FEV(1) and FVC. We constructed multivariable logistic, linear, zero-inflated negative binomial, and Cox hazards models to examine the association of BDR categories with symptoms, computed tomography findings, change in FEV(1) over time, respiratory exacerbations, and mortality. We also created models using the ATS BDR definition (ATS-BDR) as the main independent variable. Results: Of 3,340 COPD subjects included in the analysis, 1,083 (32.43%) had ATS-BDR, 182 (5.45%) had FEV(1)-BDR, 522 (15.63%) had FVC-BDR, and 379 (11.34%) had Combined-BDR. All BDR categories were associated with FEV(1) decline compared with No-BDR. Compared with No-BDR, both ATS-BDR and Combined-BDR were associated with higher functional residual capacity %predicted, greater internal perimeter of 10 mm, and greater 6-minute-walk distance. In contrast to ATS-BDR, Combined-BDR was independently associated with less emphysema (adjusted beta regression coefficient, −1.67; 95% confidence interval [CI], −2.68 to −0.65; P = 0.001), more frequent respiratory exacerbations (incidence rate ratio, 1.25; 95% CI, 1.03–1.50; P = 0.02) and severe exacerbations (incidence rate ratio, 1.34; 95% CI, 1.05–1.71; P = 0.02), and lower mortality (adjusted hazards ratio, 0.76; 95% CI, 0.58–0.99; P = 0.046). Sensitivity analysis that included subjects with self-reported history of asthma showed similar findings. Conclusions: BDR in both FEV(1) and FVC indicates a COPD phenotype with asthma-like characteristics, and provides clinically more meaningful information than current definitions of BDR.
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- 2019
39. Vorhersage des Studienabbruchs in naturwissenschaftlich-technischen Studiengängen
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Detlev Leutner, Philipp Schmiemann, Elke Sumfleth, Martin Lang, Jens Fleischer, Hans Fischer, and Matthias Brand
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Gynecology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Psychologie ,Political science ,05 social sciences ,medicine ,050301 education ,050109 social psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,0503 education ,Education - Abstract
Vor dem Hintergrund vergleichsweise hoher Abbruchquoten in den naturwissenschaftlich-technischen Studiengangen kommt der Untersuchung des Studienerfolgs insbesondere in diesen Studiengangen eine besondere Relevanz zu. Im vorliegenden Beitrag werden Pradiktoren des Studienabbruchs in der Eingangsphase naturwissenschaftlich-technischer Studiengange untersucht. Hierbei zeigen sich das fachliche Vorwissen, das mathematische Wissen, das fachbezogene Studieninteresse, die Erwartungskomponente der Studienmotivation, das Engagement im Studium sowie die Zufriedenheit mit den Studieninhalten als relevante Pradiktoren sowohl fur die Studienabbruchsintention als auch fur das Risiko eines tatsachlichen Studienabbruchs. Die Zufriedenheit mit den Studieninhalten erweist sich dabei als Mediator, uber den ein Teil der Effekte der anderen Pradiktoren auf die Abbruchsintention vermittelt wird. Die Abbruchsintention stellt wiederum einen fruhen Indikator fur das Risiko eines spateren Studienabbruchs dar. Die Ergebnisse zeigen sowohl Gemeinsamkeiten als auch Unterschiede zwischen den betrachteten Studiengangen hinsichtlich der Bedeutung der einzelnen Pradiktoren.
- Published
- 2019
40. The St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire Definition of Chronic Bronchitis May Be a Better Predictor of COPD Exacerbations Compared With the Classic Definition
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Victor Kim, Huaqing Zhao, Elizabeth Regan, MeiLan K. Han, Barry J. Make, James D. Crapo, Paul W. Jones, Jeffrey L. Curtis, Edwin K. Silverman, Gerard J. Criner, Elizabeth A. Regan, Terri Beaty, Ferdouse Begum, Robert Busch, Peter J. Castaldi, Michael Cho, Dawn L. DeMeo, Adel R. Boueiz, Marilyn G. Foreman, Eitan Halper-Stromberg, Nadia N. Hansel, Megan E. Hardin, Lystra P. Hayden, Craig P. Hersh, Jacqueline Hetmanski, Brian D. Hobbs, John E. Hokanson, Nan Laird, Christoph Lange, Sharon M. Lutz, Merry-Lynn McDonald, Margaret M. Parker, Dandi Qiao, Stephanie Santorico, Emily S. Wan, Sungho Won, Jean-Paul Charbonnier, Harvey O. Coxson, Eric A. Hoffman, Stephen Humphries, Francine L. Jacobson, Philip F. Judy, Ella A. Kazerooni, Alex Kluiber, David A. Lynch, John D. Newell, James C. Ross, Raul San Jose Estepar, Jered Sieren, Berend C. Stoel, Juerg Tschirren, Edwin Van Beek, Bram van Ginneken, Eva van Rikxoort, George Washko, Carla G. Wilson, Robert Jensen, Douglas Everett, Jim Crooks, Camille Moore, Matt Strand, John Hughes, Gregory Kinney, Katherine Pratte, Kendra A. Young, Carlos H. Martinez, Perry G. Pernicano, Nicola Hanania, Philip Alapat, Mustafa Atik, Venkata Bandi, Aladin Boriek, Kalpatha Guntupalli, Elizabeth Guy, Arun Nachiappan, Amit Parulekar, Craig Hersh, R. Graham Barr, John Austin, Belinda D’Souza, Gregory D.N. Pearson, Anna Rozenshtein, Byron Thomashow, Neil MacIntyre, H. Page McAdams, Lacey Washington, Charlene McEvoy, Joseph Tashjian, Robert Wise, Robert Brown, Karen Horton, Allison Lambert, Nirupama Putcha, Richard Casaburi, Alessandra Adami, Matthew Budoff, Hans Fischer, Janos Porszasz, Harry Rossiter, William Stringer, Amir Sharafkhaneh, Charlie Lan, Christine Wendt, Brian Bell, Eugene Berkowitz, Eric L. Flenaugh, Gloria Westney, Russell Bowler, Richard Rosiello, David Pace, Gerard Criner, David Ciccolella, Francis Cordova, Chandra Dass, Gilbert D’Alonzo, Parag Desai, Michael Jacobs, Steven Kelsen, A. James Mamary, Nathaniel Marchetti, Aditi Satti, Kartik Shenoy, Robert M. Steiner, Maria Elena Vega-Sanchez, Mark Dransfield, William Bailey, Surya Bhatt, Anand Iyer, Hrudaya Nath, Gabriela Oates, Sushil Sonavane, J. Michael Wells, Joe Ramsdell, Paul Friedman, Xavier Soler, Andrew Yen, Alejandro P. Comellas, John Newell, Brad Thompson, Ella Kazerooni, Joanne Billings, Abbie Begnaud, Tadashi Allen, Frank Sciurba, Jessica Bon, Divay Chandra, Carl Fuhrman, Joel Weissfeld, Antonio Anzueto, Sandra Adams, Diego Maselli-Caceres, and Mario E. Ruiz
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Chronic bronchitis ,Exacerbation ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Severity of Illness Index ,03 medical and health sciences ,Diagnostic Self Evaluation ,Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Per patient per year ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Respiratory system ,Aged ,COPD ,Normal spirometry ,business.industry ,Severe exacerbation ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Prognosis ,humanities ,Obstructive lung disease ,respiratory tract diseases ,Bronchitis, Chronic ,030228 respiratory system ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,human activities - Abstract
Background Chronic bronchitis (CB) increases risk of COPD exacerbations. We have shown that the St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ) CB definition identifies patients with a similar clinical phenotype as classically defined CB. Whether the SGRQ CB definition is a predictor of future COPD exacerbations is unknown. Methods We analyzed 7,557 smokers with normal spirometry and Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease stage 1-4 COPD in the Genetic Epidemiology of COPD study with longitudinal follow-up data on exacerbations. Subjects were divided into classic CB+ or classic CB–, using the classic definition. In addition, subjects were divided into SGRQ CB+ or SGRQ CB–. Exacerbation frequency and severe exacerbation frequency were determined in each group. Multivariable linear regressions were performed for exacerbation frequency with either classic CB or SGRQ CB and relevant covariates. Results There were 1,434 classic CB+ subjects and 2,290 SGRQ CB+ subjects. The classic CB+ group had a greater exacerbation frequency compared with the classic CB– group (0.69 ± 1.26 vs 0.36 ± 0.90 exacerbations per patient per year; P Conclusions The SGRQ CB definition identified more subjects at risk for future exacerbations than the classic CB definition. SGRQ CB was at least a similar if not better predictor of future exacerbations than classic CB.
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- 2018
41. Methoden ethnologischer Feldforschung
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Christoph Antweiler, Hans Fischer, Brigitta Hauser-Schäublin, Laura Coppens, Martha-Cecilia Dietrich, Hansjörg Dilger, Roland Hardenberg, Julia Pauli, Michael Schäuble, Judith Schlehe, Michael Schnegg, Martin Sökefeld, Thomas Widlok, Bettina Beer, Anika König, Christoph Antweiler, Hans Fischer, Brigitta Hauser-Schäublin, Laura Coppens, Martha-Cecilia Dietrich, Hansjörg Dilger, Roland Hardenberg, Julia Pauli, Michael Schäuble, Judith Schlehe, Michael Schnegg, Martin Sökefeld, Thomas Widlok, Bettina Beer, and Anika König
- Abstract
Ethnolog•innen erheben ihre Daten »im Feld«, also in der Lebenswelt der Untersuchten. Die Feldforschung ist zentrale Methode der Ethnologie und umfasst unterschiedliche Verfahren der Datenerhebung. Der Band vermittelt Grundkenntnisse der empirischen Datenerhebung und dient damit als praktischer Leitfaden – sowohl für Studierende als auch für Lehrende. Die Texte bieten wertvolle Hilfe bei der Vorbereitung einer Feldforschung, geben eine Übersicht über einzelne Verfahren und regen zur näheren Auseinandersetzung an. »Im Feld« dient der Band als Nachschlagewerk, wenn z.B. unvorhergesehene Probleme auftreten, und ermuntert dazu, verschiedene Methoden auszuprobieren. Inhalt Teilnehmende Beobachtung (Brigitta Hauser-Schäublin, Göttingen) Systematische Beobachtung (Bettina Beer, Luzern) Zur Bedeutung der Sprache für die ethnologische Feldforschung (Thomas Widlok, Köln) Qualitative ethnographische Interviews (Judith Schlehe, Freiburg) Strukturierte Interviews und Fragebögen (Martin Sökefeld, München) Ethnographischer Zensus (Julia Pauli, Hamburg) Die Genealogische Methode (Roland Hardenberg, Frankfurt a. M.) Die ethnologische Netzwerkanalyse (Michael Schnegg, Hamburg) Kognitive Methoden (Christoph Antweiler, Bonn) Digitale Ethnographie (Anika König, Luzern) Audiovisuelle Forschungsmethoden (Laura Coppens, Martha-Cecilia Dietrich, Michaela Schäuble, Bern) Dokumentation von Feldforschungsdaten (Hans Fischer, Hamburg und Bettina Beer, Luzern) Ethik und Reflexivität in der Feldforschung (Hansjörg Dilger, Berlin)
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- 2020
42. EuReCa ONE27 Nations, ONE Europe, ONE Registry
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Jan-Thorsten Gräsner, Rolf Lefering, Rudolph W. Koster, Siobhán Masterson, Bernd W. Böttiger, Johan Herlitz, Jan Wnent, Ingvild B.M. Tjelmeland, Fernando Rosell Ortiz, Holger Maurer, Michael Baubin, Pierre Mols, Irzal HadžibegoviĿ, Marios Ioannides, Roman Škulec, Mads Wissenberg, Ari Salo, Hervé Hubert, Nikolaos I. Nikolaou, Gerda Lóczi, Hildigunnur Svavarsdóttir, Federico Semeraro, Peter J. Wright, Carlo Clarens, Ruud Pijls, Grzegorz Cebula, Vitor Gouveia Correia, Diana Cimpoesu, Violetta Raffay, Stefan Trenkler, Andrej Markota, Anneli Strömsöe, Roman Burkart, Gavin D. Perkins, Leo L. Bossaert, Marc Kaufmann, Markus Thaler, Martin Maier, Gerhard Prause, Helmut Trimmel, Diane de Longueville, Thierry Preseau, Dominique Biarent, Christian Melot, Nicolas Mpotos, Koen Monsieurs, Patrick Van de Voorde, Marie Vanhove, Pascale Lievens, Mathias Faniel, Slobodanka Keleuva, Milan Lazarevic, Radmila Majhen Ujevic, Mato Devcic, Branka Bardak, Fabijan Barisic, Silvija Hunyadi Anticevic, Marios Georgiou, Anatolij Truhláſ, Jiſí Knor, Eva Smržová, Roman Sviták, Robin Šín, Petr Mokrejš, Freddy K. Lippert, Juhana Hallikainen, Marko Hoikka, Timo Iirola, Timo Jama, Helena Jäntti, Raimo Jokisalo, Milla Jousi, Hetti Kirves, Markku Kuisma, Jukka Laine, Sami Länkimäki, Petri Loikas, Vesa Lund, Teuvo Määttä, Heini Nal, Heimo Niemelä, Petra Portaankorva, Marko Pylkkänen, Marko Sainio, Piritta Setälä, Jerry Tervo, Taneli Väyrynen, Davy Murgue, Anne Champenois, Marc Fournier, Daniel Meyran, Romain Tabary, Aurélie Avondo, Gelin Gelin, Bruno Simonnet, Marc Joly, Isabelle Megy-Michoux, Xavier Paringaux, Yves Duffait, Michael Vial, Julien Segard, Sophie Narcisse, David Hamban, Jonathan Hennache, Sylvain Thiriez, Mathieu Doukhan, Carine Vanderstraeten, Jean-Charles Morel, Gilles Majour, Corinne Michenet, Laurent Tritsch, Marc Dubesset, Olivier Peguet, David Pinero, Fréderic Guillaumee, Patrick Fuster, Jean-François Ciacala, Benoît Jardel, Jean-Yves Letarnec, Frank Goes, Pierre Gosset, Muriel Vergne, Christian Bar, Fabienne Branche, Stevens Prineau, Steven Lagadec, Carole Cornaglia, Cécile Ursat, Philippe Bertrand, Jean-Marc Agostinucci, Pierre Nadiras, Géraldine Gonzales de Linares, Line Jacob, François Revaux, Thomas Pernot, Nathalie Roudiak, Agnès Ricard-Hibon, Laurent Villain-Coquet, Stefan Beckers, Thomas Hanff, Bernd Strickmann, Nicolai Wiegand, Petra Wilke, Harald Sues, Stefan Bogatzki, Wolfgang Baumeier, Kai Pohl, Bert Werner, Hans Fischer, Torsten Zeng, Erik Popp, Andreas Günther, Andreas Hochberg, Alex Lechleuthner, Jens-Christian Schewe, Hans Lemke, Erich Wranze-Bielefeld, Andreas Bohn, Markus Roessler, Frank Naujoks, Frank Sensen, Torben Esser, Matthias Fischer, Martin Messelken, Christopher Rose, Gabriele Schlüter, Wolfgang Lotz, Michael Corzilius, Claus-Martin Muth, Christian Diepenseifen, Björn Tauchmann, Torsten Birkholz, Andreas Flemming, Stefanie Herrmann, Uwe Kreimeier, Clemens Kill, Frank Marx, Ralph Schröder, Wolfgang Lenz, Glykeria Botini, Barakos Grigorios, Nikolaos Giannakoudakis, Michail Zervopoulos, Dimitrios Papangelis, Sofia Petropoulou-Papanastasiou, Themistoklis Liaskos, Spyridon Papanikolaou, Andreas Karabinis, Attila Zentay, Hólmgeir ÿorsteinsson, Anna Gilsdóttir, Svavar A. Birgisson, Fjölnir Freyr Guðmundsson, Hallgrímur Hreiðarsson, Björgvin ÿrnason, Hermann Hermannsson, Gísli Björnsson, Brynjar ÿór Friðriksson, Gunnar Baldursson, ÿrmann Höskuldsson, Jórunn Valgarðsdottir, Matthildur ÿsmundardóttir, Guðmundur Guðmundsson, Hjörtur Kristjánsson, Eyþór Rúnar ÿórarinsson, Jón Guðlaugsson, Sigurður Skarphéðinsson, Alberto Peratoner, Andrea Santarelli, Cesare Sabetta, Giovanni Gordini, Giovanni Sesana, Riccardo Giudici, Simone Savastano, Tommaso Pellis, Jean Beissel, Jean Uhrig, Tom Manderscheid, Marco Klop, Pascal Stammet, Marc Koch, Philippe Welter, Robert Schuman, Wendy Bruins, Hesam Amin, Nina Braa, Staale Bratland, Eirik Alnes Buanes, Tomas Draegni, Knut Roar Johnsen, Wenche Torunn Mathisen, Terje Oedegaarden, Marie Oppedal, Alf Stolt-Nielsen Reksten, Mats Eirik Roedsand, Jon Erik Steen-Hansen, Marta Dyrda, Anna Frejlich, Sſawomir MaciĿg, Sonia Osadnik, Ireneusz Weryk, Eugénio Mendonça, Carlos Freitas, Pinto Cruz, Carmo Caldeira, José Barros, Luis Vale, António Brazão, Nuno Jardim, Fernanda Rocha, Ricardo Duarte, Nicodemos Fernandes, Pedro Ramos, Margarida Jardim, Miguel Reis, Romulo Ribeiro, Sérgio Zenha, Jorge Fernandes, Juan Francisco, David Assis, Fernanda Abreu, Dinarte Freitas, Leonardo Ribeiro, Paulo Azevedo, Débora Calafatinho, Rui Jardim, Aleixo Pestana, Rui Faria, Bogdan Oprita, Alis Grasu, Paul Nedelea, Sorina Sovar, Florin Agapi, Aleksandar KliĿkoviĿ, Aleksandra LaziĿ, Bogdan NikoliĿ, Bogdan Zivanovic, Branislav MartinoviĿ, Dušan MilenkoviĿ, HuseinoviĿ Damir, Jovanka Koprivica, Kornelija Horvat JakšiĿ, Margit Pajor, Saša MiliĿ, Mirko VidoviĿ, Radojka Petrovic Glamoclija, Sladjana Andjelic, Vlajovic Sladjana, Zlatko BabiĿ, Zlatko Fišer, Peter Androvic, Lubica Bajerovska, Miroslav Chabron, Viliam Dobias, Eva Havlikova, Bozena Horanova, Renata Kratochvilova, Dana Kubova, Jan Murgas, Juraj Patras, Ladislav Simak, Vladimir Snarskij, Zuzana Zaviaticova, Marcela Zuffova, Francesc Escalada Roig, Luis Sánchez Santos, Alfredo Echarri Sucunza, Juan A. Cordero Torres, Guadalupe Inza Muñoz, Marta Martínez del Valle, Isabel Ceniceros Rozalen, Enrique Martín Sánchez, María Victoria Raúl Canabal Berlanga, Karlos Ibarguren Olalde, José I. Ruiz Azpiazu, María José García-Ochoa, Rafael Zoyo López-Navarro, José M. Adsuar Quesada, José A. Cortés Ramas, Francisco J. Mellado Vergel, Juan B. López Messa, Patricia Fernández del Valle, Luciano Anselmi, Breganzona Claudio Benvenuti, Nigel Batey, Yorkshire Ambulance, Scott Booth, Patricia Bucher, Charles D. Deakin, Jay Duckett, Chen Ji, Nancy Loughlin, Jenny Lumley-Holmes, Jessica Lynde, Frank Mersom, Carly Ramsey, Clare Robinson, Robert Spaight, Sukhdeep Dosanjh, Gurkamal Virdi, and Andrew Whittington
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medicine.medical_specialty ,resuscitation outcomes ,resuscitation ,united-states ,education ,cardiac arrest ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Emergency Nursing ,survival ,Out of hospital cardiac arrest ,resuscitation registry ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,cpr ,success ,business.industry ,sweden ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,association ,emergency medicine, europe ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,defibrillation ,3. Good health ,quality ,Emergency ,Emergency medicine ,Emergency Medicine ,epidemiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,management - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The aim of the EuReCa ONE study was to determine the incidence, process, and outcome for out of hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) throughout Europe.METHODS: This was an international, pr ...
- Published
- 2016
43. Developing and evaluating a paper-and-pencil test to assess components of physics teachers’ pedagogical content knowledge
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Sophie Kirschner, Claudia von Aufschnaiter, Julie Gess-Newsome, Hans Fischer, and Andreas Borowski
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Higher education ,Item analysis ,business.industry ,Teaching method ,05 social sciences ,Physics education ,050401 social sciences methods ,050301 education ,Physik (inkl. Astronomie) ,Science education ,Pencil test ,Teacher education ,Education ,Test (assessment) ,0504 sociology ,Pedagogy ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,Mathematics education ,Psychology ,business ,0503 education - Abstract
Teachers’ professional knowledge is assumed to be a key variable for effective teaching. As teacher education has the goal to enhance professional knowledge of current and future teachers, this knowledge should be described and assessed. Nevertheless, only a limited number of studies quantitatively measures physics teachers’ professional knowledge. The study reported in this paper was part of a bigger project with the broader goal of understanding teacher professional knowledge. We designed a test instrument to assess the professional knowledge of physics teachers (N = 186) in the dimensions of content knowledge (CK), pedagogical content knowledge (PCK), and pedagogical knowledge (PK). A model describing the relationships between these three dimensions of professional knowledge was created to inform the design of the tests used to measure CK, PCK, and PK. In this paper, we describe the model with particular emphasis on the PCK part, and the subsequent PCK test development and its implementation in...
- Published
- 2016
44. Routine Coronary Calcium Scan Can Precisely Measure Vertebral Bone Density Without a Quantitative Calibration Phantom
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Matthew J. Buodff, Yanting Luo, Dong Li, Song Shou Mao, and Hans Fischer
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Male ,musculoskeletal diseases ,Accuracy and precision ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Bone density ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Coronary Angiography ,Thoracic Vertebrae ,Imaging phantom ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Bone Density ,Calcinosis ,Hounsfield scale ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Quantitative computed tomography ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Phantoms, Imaging ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Coronary Vessels ,body regions ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Thoracic vertebrae ,Female ,Radiology ,Tomography ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business - Abstract
OBJECTIVE We aimed to assess accuracy and precision of quantitative computed tomography (QCT) and phantomless in thoracic bone mineral density (BMD) assessment using coronary artery calcium scan (CACS). METHODS A total of 513 subjects underwent CACS with a calibration phantom. The thoracic spine BMD and concentration of calcium hydroxyapatite in phantom rods, as well CT Hounsfield unit of both, were measured. The thoracic BMD and phantom-rods calcium concentration were obtained using phantomless. The accuracy and precision error of QCT and phantomless were compared. RESULTS The mean biases from true calcium concentration of phantom rods were 2.9% and 3.8% for the QCT and phantomless, respectively (P < 0.001). The biases of thoracic BMD from QCT by phantomless were 3.8% with a similar precision error in both methods. CONCLUSIONS The thoracic BMD can be assessed accurately and precisely using QCT and phantomless with a routine CACS.
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- 2016
45. Spirometric Volumes and Breathlessness across Levels of Airflow Limitation: The COPDGene Study
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Magnus Ekström, Anna Bornefalk-Hermansson, Nicholas Wysham, David C. Currow, Neil MacIntyre, James D. Crapo, Edwin K. Silverman, Barry J. Make, Elizabeth A. Regan, Terri Beaty, Ferdouse Begum, Robert Busch, Peter J. Castaldi, Michael Cho, Dawn L. DeMeo, Adel R. Boueiz, Marilyn G. Foreman, Eitan Halper-Stromberg, Nadia N. Hansel, Megan E. Hardin, Lystra P. Hayden, Craig P. Hersh, Jacqueline Hetmanski, Brian D. Hobbs, John E. Hokanson, Nan Laird, Christoph Lange, Sharon M. Lutz, Merry-Lynn McDonald, Margaret M. Parker, Dandi Qiao, Stephanie Santorico, Emily S. Wan, Sungho Won, Mustafa Al Qaisi, Harvey O. Coxson, Teresa Gray, MeiLan K. Han, Eric A. Hoffman, Stephen Humphries, Francine L. Jacobson, Philip F. Judy, Ella A. Kazerooni, Alex Kluiber, David A. Lynch, John D. Newell, James C. Ross, Raul San Jose Estepar, Joyce Schroeder, Jered Sieren, Douglas Stinson, Berend C. Stoel, Juerg Tschirren, Edwin Van Beek, Bram van Ginneken, Eva van Rikxoort, George Washko, Carla G. Wilson, Robert Jensen, Douglas Everett, Jim Crooks, Camille Moore, Matt Strand, John Hughes, Gregory Kinney, Katherine Pratte, Kendra A. Young, Jeffrey L. Curtis, Carlos H. Martinez, Perry G. Pernicano, Nicola Hanania, Philip Alapat, Mustafa Atik, Venkata Bandi, Aladin Boriek, Kalpatha Guntupalli, Elizabeth Guy, Arun Nachiappan, Amit Parulekar, Craig Hersh, R. Graham Barr, John Austin, Belinda D’Souza, Gregory D. N. Pearson, Anna Rozenshtein, Byron Thomashow, H. Page McAdams, Lacey Washington, Charlene McEvoy, Joseph Tashjian, Robert Wise, Robert Brown, Karen Horton, Allison Lambert, Nirupama Putcha, Richard Casaburi, Alessandra Adami, Matthew Budoff, Hans Fischer, Janos Porszasz, Harry Rossiter, William Stringer, Amir Sharafkhaneh, Charlie Lan, Christine Wendt, Brian Bell, Eugene Berkowitz, Gloria Westney, Russell Bowler, Richard Rosiello, David Pace, Gerard Criner, David Ciccolella, Francis Cordova, Chandra Dass, Gilbert D’Alonzo, Parag Desai, Michael Jacobs Pharm.D, Steven Kelsen, Victor Kim, A. James Mamary, Nathaniel Marchetti, Aditi Satti, Kartik Shenoy, Robert M. Steiner, Alex Swift, Irene Swift, Maria Elena Vega-Sanchez, Mark Dransfield, William Bailey, Surya Bhatt, Anand Iyer, Hrudaya Nath, J. Michael Wells, Joe Ramsdell, Paul Friedman, Xavier Soler, Andrew Yen, Alejandro P. Comellas, John Newell, Brad Thompson, Ella Kazerooni, Joanne Billings, Abbie Begnaud, Tadashi Allen, Frank Sciurba, Jessica Bon, Divay Chandra, Carl Fuhrman, Joel Weissfeld, Antonio Anzueto, Sandra Adams, Diego Maselli-Caceres, and Mario E. Ruiz
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,COPD ,business.industry ,Airflow ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,medicine.disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030228 respiratory system ,Internal medicine ,Correspondence ,Cardiology ,Medicine ,business ,Lung function - Abstract
Spirometric Volumes and Breathlessness Across Levels of Airflow Limitation : The COPDGene Study.
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- 2018
46. Blood eosinophil count thresholds and exacerbations in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
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Jeong H. Yun, Andrew Lamb, Robert Chase, Dave Singh, Margaret M. Parker, Aabida Saferali, Jørgen Vestbo, Ruth Tal-Singer, Peter J. Castaldi, Edwin K. Silverman, Craig P. Hersh, James D. Crapo, Barry J. Make, Elizabeth A. Regan, Terri Beaty, Ferdouse Begum, Robert Busch, Michael Cho, Dawn L. DeMeo, Adel R. Boueiz, Marilyn G. Foreman, Eitan Halper-Stromberg, Nadia N. Hansel, Megan E. Hardin, Lystra P. Hayden, Jacqueline Hetmanski, Brian D. Hobbs, John E. Hokanson, Nan Laird, Christoph Lange, Sharon M. Lutz, Merry-Lynn McDonald, Dandi Qiao, Stephanie Santorico, Emily S. Wan, Sungho Won, Mustafa Al Qaisi, Harvey O. Coxson, Teresa Gray, MeiLan K. Han, Eric A. Hoffman, Stephen Humphries, Francine L. Jacobson, Philip F. Judy, Ella A. Kazerooni, Alex Kluiber, David A. Lynch, John D. Newell, James C. Ross, Raul San Jose Estepar, Joyce Schroeder, Jered Sieren, Douglas Stinson, Berend C. Stoel, Juerg Tschirren, Edwin Van Beek, Bram van Ginneken, Eva van Rikxoort, George Washko, Carla G. Wilson, Robert Jensen, Douglas Everett, Jim Crooks, Camille Moore, Matt Strand, John Hughes, Gregory Kinney, Katherine Pratte, Kendra A. Young, Jeffrey L. Curtis, Carlos H. Martinez, Perry G. Pernicano, Nicola Hanania, Philip Alapat, Mustafa Atik, Venkata Bandi, Aladin Boriek, Kalpatha Guntupalli, Elizabeth Guy, Arun Nachiappan, Amit Parulekar, Craig Hersh, R. Graham Barr, John Austin, Belinda D'Souza, Gregory D.N. Pearson, Anna Rozenshtein, Byron Thomashow, Neil MacIntyre, H. Page McAdams, Lacey Washington, Charlene McEvoy, Joseph Tashjian, Robert Wise, Robert Brown, Karen Horton, Allison Lambert, Nirupama Putcha, Richard Casaburi, Alessandra Adami, Matthew Budoff, Hans Fischer, Janos Porszasz, Harry Rossiter, William Stringer, Amir Sharafkhaneh, Charlie Lan, Christine Wendt, Brian Bell, Eugene Berkowitz, Gloria Westney, Russell Bowler, Richard Rosiello, David Pace, Gerard Criner, David Ciccolella, Francis Cordova, Chandra Dass, Gilbert D'Alonzo, Parag Desai, Michael Jacobs, Steven Kelsen, Victor Kim, A. James Mamary, Nathaniel Marchetti, Aditi Satti, Kartik Shenoy, Robert M. Steiner, Alex Swift, Irene Swift, Maria Elena Vega-Sanchez, Mark Dransfield, William Bailey, Surya Bhatt, Anand Iyer, Hrudaya Nath, J. Michael Wells, Joe Ramsdell, Paul Friedman, Xavier Soler, Andrew Yen, Alejandro P. Comellas, John Newell, Brad Thompson, Ella Kazerooni, Joanne Billings, Abbie Begnaud, Tadashi Allen, Frank Sciurba, Jessica Bon, Divay Chandra, Carl Fuhrman, Joel Weissfeld, Antonio Anzueto, Sandra Adams, Diego Maselli-Caceres, Mario E. Ruiz, Y. Ivanov, K. Kostov, J. Bourbeau, M. Fitzgerald, P. Hernandez, K. Killian, R. Levy, F. Maltais, D. O'Donnell, J. Krepelka, J. Vestbo, E. Wouters, D. Quinn, P. Bakke, M. Kosnik, A. Agusti, J. Sauleda, P. de Mallorca, Y. Feschenko, V. Gavrisyuk, L. Yashina Kiev, N. Monogarova, P. Calverley, D. Lomas, W. MacNee, D. Singh, J. Wedzicha, A. Anzueto, S. Braman, R. Casaburi, B. Celli, G. Giessel, M. Gotfried, G. Greenwald, N. Hanania, D. Mahler, B. Make, S. Rennard, C. Rochester, P. Scanlon, D. Schuller, F. Sciurba, A. Sharafkhaneh, T. Siler, E. Silverman, A. Wanner, R. Wise, R. ZuWallack, H. Coxson, C. Crim, L. Edwards, R. Tal Singer, J. Yates, B. Miller, R. Tal-Singer, RS: NUTRIM - R3 - Respiratory & Age-related Health, Pulmonologie, and MUMC+: MA Longziekten (3)
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Male ,Exacerbation ,Allergy ,AIRWAY INFLAMMATION ,INHALED CORTICOSTEROIDS ,Rate ratio ,Leukocyte Count ,0302 clinical medicine ,exacerbation ,CLINICAL CHARACTERISTICS ,Immunology and Allergy ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Longitudinal Studies ,Lung ,COPD ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ,Complete blood count ,Middle Aged ,RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL ,Observational Studies as Topic ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Disease Progression ,Respiratory ,Female ,SHORT-TERM RESPONSE ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Chronic Obstructive ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Immunology ,Pulmonary Disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,FEV1/FVC ratio ,Clinical Research ,Internal medicine ,White blood cell ,medicine ,Humans ,eosinophil ,Asthma ,Aged ,business.industry ,COPDGene and ECLIPSE Investigators ,Eosinophil ,asthma ,medicine.disease ,Eosinophils ,030228 respiratory system ,SPUTUM-EOSINOPHILIA ,OVERLAP SYNDROME ,business ,COPENHAGEN GENERAL-POPULATION - Abstract
BACKGROUND:Eosinophilic airway inflammation in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is associated with exacerbations and responsivity to steroids, suggesting potential shared mechanisms with eosinophilic asthma. However, there is no consistent blood eosinophil count that has been used to define the increased exacerbation risk. OBJECTIVE:We sought to investigate blood eosinophil counts associated with exacerbation risk in patients with COPD. METHODS:Blood eosinophil counts and exacerbation risk were analyzed in patients with moderate-to-severe COPD by using 2 independent studies of former and current smokers with longitudinal data. The Genetic Epidemiology of COPD (COPDGene) study was analyzed for discovery (n=1,553), and the Evaluation of COPD Longitudinally to Identify Predictive Surrogate Endpoints (ECLIPSE) study was analyzed for validation (n=1,895). Asubset of the ECLIPSE study subjects were used to assess the stability of blood eosinophil counts over time. RESULTS:COPD exacerbation risk increased with higher eosinophil counts. An eosinophil count threshold of 300cells/μL or greater showed adjusted incidence rate ratios for exacerbations of 1.32 in the COPDGene study (95% CI, 1.10-1.63). The cutoff of 300cells/μL or greater was validated for prospective risk of exacerbation in the ECLIPSE study, with adjusted incidence rate ratios of 1.22 (95% CI, 1.06-1.41) using 3-year follow-up data. Stratified analysis confirmed that the increased exacerbation risk associated with an eosinophil count of 300cells/μL or greater was driven by subjects with a history of frequent exacerbations in both the COPDGene and ECLIPSE studies. CONCLUSIONS:Patients with moderate-to-severe COPD and blood eosinophil counts of 300cells/μL or greater had an increased risk exacerbations in the COPDGene study, which was prospectively validated in the ECLIPSE study.
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- 2018
47. Mathematisches Wissen von Studienanfängern und Studienerfolg
- Author
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Hans Fischer, Jens Fleischer, Joachim Müller, Elmar Dammann, Andreas Borowski, Martin Lang, and Anita Stender
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Philosophy ,05 social sciences ,Chemie ,050301 education ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Physik (inkl. Astronomie) ,0503 education ,Humanities ,Biologie ,050105 experimental psychology - Abstract
Bei Studierenden der Facher Bauingenieurwesen, Biologie, Chemie und Physik wird untersucht, ob mit einem facherubergreifenden Test zur Erfassung mathematischen Wissens der Studienerfolg zum Ende des ersten Semesters besser vorhergesagt werden kann, als nur mit der Abitur- und Mathematiknote; Studienerfolg ist als gemittelte Klausurleistung am Ende des ersten Semesters operationalisiert. Der Test wurde zu Beginn des Wintersemesters 2016/17 an einer Kohorte (N = 751) von Studienanfangern eingesetzt. Fur alle Facher wird gezeigt, dass das mathematische Wissen auch unter Kontrolle der Schulleistungen pradiktiv fur Studienerfolg ist und dass es inkrementelle Varianz gegenuber der Abiturnote und der Mathematiknote aufklart. Die so durchgefuhrte Prognose von Studienerfolg eroffnet die Moglichkeit, Studienberatung zu verbessern und Hinweise fur die Inhalte vorbereitender und semesterbegleitender Veranstaltungen zu generieren. Anhand des mathematischen Wissens der Studierenden lasst sich eine Bezugsnorm ableiten, die als Grundlage fur zukunftige Gruppendiagnostik dienen kann.
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- 2018
48. Wir und die anderen. Wie die Wampar sich und Fremde sehen und benennen
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Hans Fischer
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Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Anthropology - Published
- 2015
49. Genetic Association and Risk Scores in a Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Meta-analysis of 16,707 Subjects
- Author
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Robert Busch, Brian D. Hobbs, Jin Zhou, Peter J. Castaldi, Michael J. McGeachie, Megan E. Hardin, Iwona Hawrylkiewicz, Pawel Sliwinski, Jae-Joon Yim, Woo Jin Kim, Deog K. Kim, Alvar Agusti, Barry J. Make, James D. Crapo, Peter M. Calverley, Claudio F. Donner, David A. Lomas, Emiel F. Wouters, Jørgen Vestbo, Ruth Tal-Singer, Per Bakke, Amund Gulsvik, Augusto A. Litonjua, David Sparrow, Peter D. Paré, Robert D. Levy, Stephen I. Rennard, Terri H. Beaty, John Hokanson, Edwin K. Silverman, Michael H. Cho, James Crapo, Edwin Silverman, Barry Make, Elizabeth Regan, Terri Beaty, Nan Laird, Christoph Lange, Michael Cho, Stephanie Santorico, Dawn DeMeo, Nadia Hansel, Craig Hersh, Peter Castaldi, Merry-Lynn McDonald, Emily Wan, Megan Hardin, Jacqueline Hetmanski, Margaret Parker, Marilyn Foreman, Brian Hobbs, Adel El-Bouiez, Dandi Qiao, Eitan Halper-Stromberg, Ferdouse Begum, Sungho Won, Sharon Lutz, David A. Lynch, Harvey O. Coxson, MeiLan K. Han, Eric A. Hoffman, Stephen Humphries, Francine L. Jacobson, Philip F. Judy, Ella A. Kazerooni, John D. Newell, James C. Ross, Raul San Jose Estepar, Berend C. Stoel, Juerg Tschirren, Eva van Rikxoort, Bram van Ginneken, George Washko, Carla G. Wilson, Mustafa Al Qaisi, Teresa Gray, Alex Kluiber, Tanya Mann, Jered Sieren, Douglas Stinson, Joyce Schroeder, Edwin Van Beek, Robert Jensen, Douglas Everett, Anna Faino, Matt Strand, Carla Wilson, John E. Hokanson, Gregory Kinney, Kendra Young, Katherine Pratte, Lindsey Duca, Jeffrey L. Curtis, Carlos H. Martinez, Perry G. Pernicano, Nicola Hanania, Philip Alapat, Venkata Bandi, Mustafa Atik, Aladin Boriek, Kalpatha Guntupalli, Elizabeth Guy, Amit Parulekar, Arun Nachiappan, Francine Jacobson, R. Graham Barr, Byron Thomashow, John Austin, Belinda D'Souza, Gregory D. N. Pearson, Anna Rozenshtein, Neil MacIntyre, Lacey Washington, H. Page McAdams, Charlene McEvoy, Joseph Tashjian, Robert Wise, Robert Brown, Karen Horton, Nirupama Putcha, Richard Casaburi, Alessandra Adami, Janos Porszasz, Hans Fischer, Matthew Budoff, Harry Rossiter, Amir Sharafkhaneh, Charlie Lan, Christine Wendt, Brian Bell, Gloria Westney, Eugene Berkowitz, Russell Bowler, David Lynch, Richard Rosiello, David Pace, Gerard Criner, David Ciccolella, Francis Cordova, Chandra Dass, Gilbert D'Alonzo, Parag Desai, Michael Jacobs, Steven Kelsen, Victor Kim, A. James Mamary, Nathaniel Marchetti, Aditi Satti, Kartik Shenoy, Robert M. Steiner, Alex Swift, Irene Swift, Maria Elena Vega-Sanchez, Mark Dransfield, William Bailey, J. Michael Wells, Surya Bhatt, Hrudaya Nath, Joe Ramsdell, Paul Friedman, Xavier Soler, Andrew Yen, Alejandro Comellas, John Newell, Brad Thompson, MeiLan Han, Ella Kazerooni, Carlos Martinez, Joanne Billings, Tadashi Allen, Frank Sciurba, Divay Chandra, Joel Weissfeld, Carl Fuhrman, Jessica Bon, Antonio Anzueto, Sandra Adams, Diego Maselli-Caceres, Mario E. Ruiz, Jaume Sauleda, Peter M. A. Calverley, Stephen Rennard, Y. Ivanov, K. Kostov, J. Bourbeau, M. Fitzgerald, P. Hernandez, K. Killian, R. Levy, F. Maltais, D. O'Donnell, J. Krepelka, J. Vestbo, E. Wouters, D. Quinn, P. Bakke, M. Kosnik, A. Agusti, J. Sauleda, Y. Feschenko, V. Gavrisyuk, L. Yashina, N. Monogarova, P. Calverley, D. Lomas, W. MacNee, D. Singh, J. Wedzicha, A. Anzueto, S. Braman, R. Casaburi, B. Celli, G. Giessel, M. Gotfried, G. Greenwald, N. Hanania, D. Mahler, B. Make, S. Rennard, C. Rochester, P. Scanlon, D. Schuller, F. Sciurba, A. Sharafkhaneh, T. Siler, E. Silverman, A. Wanner, R. Wise, R. ZuWallack, H. Coxson, C. Crim, L. Edwards, R. Tal Singer, J. Yates, B. Miller, R. Tal-Singer, J. Benditt, G. Criner, M. DeCamp, P. Diaz, M. Ginsburg, L. Kaiser, M. Katz, M. Krasna, N. MacIntyre, R. McKenna, F. Martinez, Z. Mosenifar, J. Reilly, A. Ries, J. Utz, RS: NUTRIM - R3 - Respiratory & Age-related Health, Pulmonologie, MUMC+: MA Longziekten (3), and RS: NUTRIM - R3 - Chronic inflammatory disease and wasting
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Clinical Biochemistry ,EMPHYSEMA ,SUSCEPTIBILITY ,AIR-FLOW OBSTRUCTION ,Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive ,Risk Factors ,Medicine ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,Genetic epidemiology ,Original Research ,COPD ,COMPLEX DISEASE ,RECLASSIFICATION ,Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ,Middle Aged ,Genetic risk score ,Respiratory Function Tests ,LUNG-FUNCTION ,Genetic risk factors ,alpha-1 antitrypsin ,Meta-analysis ,Female ,SMOKING ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic epidemiology ,Pulmonary disease ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,genetic risk score ,chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,Genetic variation ,genetic risk factors ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,GENOME-WIDE ASSOCIATION ,Molecular Biology ,Genotyping ,Genetic association ,Aged ,business.industry ,Cell Biology ,Heritability ,medicine.disease ,respiratory tract diseases ,030104 developmental biology ,Physical therapy ,business ,Genome-Wide Association Study - Abstract
The heritability of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) cannot be fully explained by recognized genetic risk factors identified as achieving genome-wide significance. In addition, the combined contribution of genetic variation to COPD risk has not been fully explored. We sought to determine: (1) whether studies of variants from previous studies of COPD or lung function in a larger sample could identify additional associated variants, particularly for severe COPD; and (2) the impact of genetic risk scores on COPD. We genotyped 3,346 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 2,588 cases (1,803 severe COPD) and 1,782 control subjects from four cohorts, and performed association testing with COPD, combining these results with existing genotyping data from 6,633 cases (3,497 severe COPD) and 5,704 control subjects. In addition, we developed genetic risk scores from SNPs associated with lung function and COPD and tested their discriminatory power for COPD-related measures. We identified significant associations between SNPs near PPIC (P = 1.28 X 10(-8)) and PPP4R4/SERPINA1 (P = 1.01 X 10(-8)) and severe COPD; the latter association may be driven by recognized variants in SERPINA1. Genetic risk scores based on SNPs previously associated with COPD and lung function had a modest ability to discriminate COPD (area under the curve, similar to 0.6), and accounted for a mean 0.9-1.9% lower forced expiratory volume in 1 second percent predicted for each additional risk allele. In a large genetic association analysis, we identified associations with severe COPD near PPIC and SERPINA1. A risk score based on combining genetic variants had modest, but significant, effects on risk of COPD and lung function.
- Published
- 2017
50. A Brief History of Probability Theory from 1810 to 1940
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Hans Fischer
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History ,Development (topology) ,Laplace transform ,Probability theory ,Applied mathematics ,Statistical theory ,Measure (mathematics) ,Mathematical economics ,Karl pearson ,Mathematical probability - Abstract
This chapter charts the origins and consolidation of the English statistical school from the 1860s to the 1930s, with a focus on the school’s chief figures: Francis Galton (1822–1911), Karl Pearson (1857–1936), and Ronald Aylmer Fisher (1890–1962). It begins with a historical overview of the rise of statistics as a study, taking into account the founding of the Statistical Society of London, which became the Royal Statistical Society. It then examines the contributions of Galton, Pearson, and Fisher to the development of modern statistics. It also considers the role played by other figures in the conception of statistics as a branch of applied mathematics in Britain, including Harold Jeffreys. The chapter concludes by discussing the English statistical school’s demise, along with the advance of statistical theory in the United States.
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- 2017
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