27 results on '"Hans Reinhardt"'
Search Results
2. Intensified cytarabine dose during consolidation in AML patients under 65 years is not associated with survival benefit: real-world data from the German SAL-AML registry
- Author
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Maher Hanoun, Leo Ruhnke, Michael Kramer, Christine Hanoun, Kerstin Schäfer-Eckart, Björn Steffen, Tim Sauer, Stefan Krause, Christoph Schliemann, Jan-Henrik Mikesch, Martin Kaufmann, Mathias Haenel, Edgar Jost, Tim Bruemmendorf, LArs Fransecky, Sabrina Kraus, Hermann Einsele, Dirk Niemann, Andreas Neubauer, Johannes Kullmer, Ruth Seggewiss-Bernhard, Martin Goerner, Gerhard Held, Ulrich Kaiser, Sebastian Scholl, Andreas Hochhaus, Hans Reinhardt, Uwe Platzbecker, Claudia Baldus, Carsten Müller-Tidow, Martin Bornhäuser, Hubert Serve, and Christoph Röllig
- Abstract
Higher doses of cytarabine appear to improve long-term outcome in acute myeloid leukemia (AML), in particular for younger patients. To this end, the optimal dosage of single agent cytarabine in consolidation therapy remains elusive. Here, we assessed the impact of different dosages of cytarabine consolidation after 7 + 3 induction on outcome in a large real-world data set from the German Study Alliance Leukemia-Acute Myeloid Leukemia (SAL-AML) registry. Patients below 65 years of age, registered between April 2005 and September 2020, who attained complete remission after intensive induction and received at least one consolidation cycle with intermediate (IDAC) or high dose cytarabine (HiDAC) were selected. To account for differences in patient and disease characteristics between both groups, the average treatment effect was estimated by propensity score weighting. Six-hundred-forty-two patients received HiDAC consolidation with median dosage of median 17.6 (IQR, 16.5–18.0) g/m² for a median number of 3 cycles (IQR, 2–3), whereas 178 patients received IDAC consolidation with 5.9 (IQR, 5.7–8.6) g/m² for a median of 2 cycles (IQR, 1–3). Both groups differed significantly in some important characteristics (age, sex, cytogenetic risk group, ECOG performance status, disease status, HCT-CI, number of induction cycles). After propensity score weighting for differences in patient and disease characteristics, relapse-free survival after 2 years was comparable between HiDAC-treated (55.3%) and IDAC-treated (55.6%) patients. Moreover, no significant differences in overall survival were observed after 2 years (84.7 vs. 80.6%). Notably, more patients treated with IDAC received allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation in first remission (37.6 vs. 19.8%, p
- Published
- 2022
3. Targeted and Untargeted Approaches Unravel Novel Candidate Genes and Diagnostic SNPs for Quantitative Resistance of the Potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) to Phytophthora infestans Causing the Late Blight Disease.
- Author
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Teresa Mosquera, Maria Fernanda Alvarez, José M Jiménez-Gómez, Meki Shehabu Muktar, Maria João Paulo, Sebastian Steinemann, Jinquan Li, Astrid Draffehn, Andrea Hofmann, Jens Lübeck, Josef Strahwald, Eckhard Tacke, Hans-Reinhardt Hofferbert, Birgit Walkemeier, and Christiane Gebhardt
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
The oomycete Phytophthora infestans causes late blight of potato, which can completely destroy the crop. Therefore, for the past 160 years, late blight has been the most important potato disease worldwide. The identification of cultivars with high and durable field resistance to P. infestans is an objective of most potato breeding programs. This type of resistance is polygenic and therefore quantitative. Its evaluation requires multi-year and location trials. Furthermore, quantitative resistance to late blight correlates with late plant maturity, a negative agricultural trait. Knowledge of the molecular genetic basis of quantitative resistance to late blight not compromised by late maturity is very limited. It is however essential for developing diagnostic DNA markers that facilitate the efficient combination of superior resistance alleles in improved cultivars. We used association genetics in a population of 184 tetraploid potato cultivars in order to identify single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that are associated with maturity corrected resistance (MCR) to late blight. The population was genotyped for almost 9000 SNPs from three different sources. The first source was candidate genes specifically selected for their function in the jasmonate pathway. The second source was novel candidate genes selected based on comparative transcript profiling (RNA-Seq) of groups of genotypes with contrasting levels of quantitative resistance to P. infestans. The third source was the first generation 8.3k SolCAP SNP genotyping array available in potato for genome wide association studies (GWAS). Twenty seven SNPs from all three sources showed robust association with MCR. Some of those were located in genes that are strong candidates for directly controlling quantitative resistance, based on functional annotation. Most important were: a lipoxygenase (jasmonate pathway), a 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase (mevalonate pathway), a P450 protein (terpene biosynthesis), a transcription factor and a homolog of a major gene for resistance to P. infestans from the wild potato species Solanum venturii. The candidate gene approach and GWAS complemented each other as they identified different genes. The results of this study provide new insight in the molecular genetic basis of quantitative resistance in potato and a toolbox of diagnostic SNP markers for breeding applications.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Validation of candidate gene markers for marker-assisted selection of potato cultivars with improved tuber quality
- Author
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Li, Li, Tacke, Eckhard, Hofferbert, Hans-Reinhardt, Lübeck, Jens, Strahwald, Josef, Draffehn, Astrid M., Walkemeier, Birgit, and Gebhardt, Christiane
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Daptomycin versus Standard Therapy for Bacteremia and Endocarditis Caused by Staphylococcus aureus
- Author
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Fowler, Vance G., Jr., Boucher, Helen W., Corey, G. Ralph, Abrutyn, Elias, Karchmer, Adolf W., Rupp, Mark E., Levine, Donald P., Chambers, Henry F., Tally, Francis P., Vigliani, Gloria A., Cabell, Christopher H., Link, Arthur Stanley, DeMeyer, Ignace, Filler, Scott G., Zervos, Marcus, Cook, Paul, Parsonnet, Jeffrey, Bernstein, Jack M., Price, Connie Savor, Forrest, Graeme N., Fatkenheuer, Gerd, Gareca, Marcelo, Rehm, Susan J., Brodt, Hans Reinhardt, Tice, Alan, and Cosgrove, Sara E.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Validation of candidate gene markers for marker-assisted selection of potato cultivars with improved tuber quality
- Author
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Eckhard Tacke, Christiane Gebhardt, Birgit Walkemeier, Josef Strahwald, Hans-Reinhardt Hofferbert, Jens Lübeck, Astrid M. Draffehn, and Li Li
- Subjects
Genetic Markers ,Genotype ,Starch ,Population ,Cold storage ,Glucose-1-Phosphate Adenylyltransferase ,Breeding ,Biology ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Statistics, Nonparametric ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Germany ,Genetics ,Selection, Genetic ,Allele ,Association mapping ,education ,Crosses, Genetic ,Genetic Association Studies ,Polymorphism, Single-Stranded Conformational ,Solanum tuberosum ,Original Paper ,Analysis of Variance ,education.field_of_study ,fungi ,food and beverages ,General Medicine ,Marker-assisted selection ,Plant Tubers ,Phenotype ,chemistry ,Genetic marker ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Tuber yield, starch content, starch yield and chip color are complex traits that are important for industrial uses and food processing of potato. Chip color depends on the quantity of reducing sugars glucose and fructose in the tubers, which are generated by starch degradation. Reducing sugars accumulate when tubers are stored at low temperatures. Early and efficient selection of cultivars with superior yield, starch yield and chip color is hampered by the fact that reliable phenotypic selection requires multiple year and location trials. Application of DNA-based markers early in the breeding cycle, which are diagnostic for superior alleles of genes that control natural variation of tuber quality, will reduce the number of clones to be evaluated in field trials. Association mapping using genes functional in carbohydrate metabolism as markers has discovered alleles of invertases and starch phosphorylases that are associated with tuber quality traits. Here, we report on new DNA variants at loci encoding ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase and the invertase Pain-1, which are associated with positive or negative effect with chip color, tuber starch content and starch yield. Marker-assisted selection (MAS) and marker validation were performed in tetraploid breeding populations, using various combinations of 11 allele-specific markers associated with tuber quality traits. To facilitate MAS, user-friendly PCR assays were developed for specific candidate gene alleles. In a multi-parental population of advanced breeding clones, genotypes were selected for having different combinations of five positive and the corresponding negative marker alleles. Genotypes combining five positive marker alleles performed on average better than genotypes with four negative alleles and one positive allele. When tested individually, seven of eight markers showed an effect on at least one quality trait. The direction of effect was as expected. Combinations of two to three marker alleles were identified that significantly improved average chip quality after cold storage and tuber starch content. In F1 progeny of a single-cross combination, MAS with six markers did not give the expected result. Reasons and implications for MAS in potato are discussed. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s00122-012-2035-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
- Published
- 2013
7. Physical mapping of QTL for tuber yield, starch content and starch yield in tetraploid potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) by means of genome wide genotyping by sequencing and the 8.3 K SolCAP SNP array
- Author
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Schönhals, Elske Maria, Ding, Jia, Ritter, Enrique, Caldas Paulo, M.J., Cara, Nicolás, Tacke, Eckhard, Hofferbert, Hans Reinhardt, Lübeck, Jens, Strahwald, Josef, Gebhardt, Christiane, Schönhals, Elske Maria, Ding, Jia, Ritter, Enrique, Caldas Paulo, M.J., Cara, Nicolás, Tacke, Eckhard, Hofferbert, Hans Reinhardt, Lübeck, Jens, Strahwald, Josef, and Gebhardt, Christiane
- Abstract
Background Tuber yield and starch content of the cultivated potato are complex traits of decisive importance for breeding improved varieties. Natural variation of tuber yield and starch content depends on the environment and on multiple, mostly unknown genetic factors. Dissection and molecular identification of the genes and their natural allelic variants controlling these complex traits will lead to the development of diagnostic DNA-based markers, by which precision and efficiency of selection can be increased (precision breeding). Results Three case-control populations were assembled from tetraploid potato cultivars based on maximizing the differences between high and low tuber yield (TY), starch content (TSC) and starch yield (TSY, arithmetic product of TY and TSC). The case-control populations were genotyped by restriction-site associated DNA sequencing (RADseq) and the 8.3 k SolCAP SNP genotyping array. The allele frequencies of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were compared between cases and controls. RADseq identified, depending on data filtering criteria, between 6664 and 450 genes with one or more differential SNPs for one, two or all three traits. Differential SNPs in 275 genes were detected using the SolCAP array. A genome wide association study using the SolCAP array on an independent, unselected population identified SNPs associated with tuber starch content in 117 genes. Physical mapping of the genes containing differential or associated SNPs, and comparisons between the two genome wide genotyping methods and two different populations identified genome segments on all twelve potato chromosomes harboring one or more quantitative trait loci (QTL) for TY, TSC and TSY. Conclusions Several hundred genes control tuber yield and starch content in potato. They are unequally distributed on all potato chromosomes, forming clusters between 0.5–4 Mbp width. The largest fraction of these genes had unknown function, followed by genes with putative signalling a
- Published
- 2017
8. Targeted and Untargeted Approaches Unravel Novel Candidate Genes and Diagnostic SNPs for Quantitative Resistance of the Potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) to Phytophthora infestans Causing the Late Blight Disease
- Author
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Mosquera, Teresa, Alvarez, Maria Fernanda, Jiménez-Gómez, José M., Muktar, Meki Shehabu, Paulo, Maria João, Steinemann, Sebastian, Li, Jinquan, Draffehn, Astrid, Hofmann, Andrea, Lübeck, Jens, Strahwald, Josef, Tacke, Eckhard, Hofferbert, Hans-Reinhardt, Walkemeier, Birgit, Gebhardt, Christiane, Department of Plant Breeding and Genetic, Agricultural University, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Institut Jean-Pierre Bourgin (IJPB), Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-AgroParisTech, Biometris, Wageningen University and Research [Wageningen] (WUR), Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn, SaKa-Pflanzenzucht GmbH & Co, Partenaires INRAE, Bioplant GmbH, Bohm Nordkartoffel, Max Planck Inst Plant Breeding Res, Dept Plant Breeding & Genet, Cologne, Germany, German Federal Ministry of Education and Research [0315065], International Development Research Centre (IDRC), Department of Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development (DFATD) from Canada through the Canadian International Food Security Research Fund, and Max-Planck Society
- Subjects
Heredity ,Molecular biology ,Genetic Linkage ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,lcsh:Medicine ,Molecular biology assays and analysis techniques ,r-gene ,[SDV.IDA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food engineering ,Vegetables ,lcsh:Science ,field-resistance ,liptransfer protein ,Plant Proteins ,trait loci ,Nucleic acid analysis ,Chromosome Biology ,food and beverages ,Chromosome Mapping ,Agriculture ,Gene Pool ,Genomics ,Plants ,RNA analysis ,genome-wide association ,elicitor arachidonic-acid ,broad-spectrum resistance ,foliage maturity type ,a reductase genes ,arabidopsis-thaliana ,Genetic Mapping ,Biometris ,Phenotype ,Oomycetes ,Potato ,Research Article ,Genotype ,Phytophthora infestans ,Quantitative Trait Loci ,Crops ,Variant Genotypes ,Solanum ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Chromosomes ,Genetics ,Genome-Wide Association Studies ,Life Science ,[SDV.BV]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal Biology ,[SPI.GPROC]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Chemical and Process Engineering ,Plant Diseases ,Solanum tuberosum ,Evolutionary Biology ,Population Biology ,lcsh:R ,fungi ,Gene Mapping ,Organisms ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Computational Biology ,Human Genetics ,Cell Biology ,Genome Analysis ,Immunity, Innate ,Research and analysis methods ,Molecular biology techniques ,Genetic Loci ,lcsh:Q ,Population Genetics ,Crop Science - Abstract
International audience; The oomycete Phytophthora infestans causes late blight of potato, which can completely destroy the crop. Therefore, for the past 160 years, late blight has been the most important potato disease worldwide. The identification of cultivars with high and durable field resistance to P. infestans is an objective of most potato breeding programs. This type of resistance is polygenic and therefore quantitative. Its evaluation requires multi-year and location trials. Furthermore, quantitative resistance to late blight correlates with late plant maturity, a negative agricultural trait. Knowledge of the molecular genetic basis of quantitative resistance to late blight not compromised by late maturity is very limited. It is however essential for developing diagnostic DNA markers that facilitate the efficient combination of superior resistance alleles in improved cultivars. We used association genetics in a population of 184 tetraploid potato cultivars in order to identify single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that are associated with maturity corrected resistance (MCR) to late blight. The population was genotyped for almost 9000 SNPs from three different sources. The first source was candidate genes specifically selected for their function in the jasmonate pathway. The second source was novel candidate genes selected based on comparative transcript profiling (RNA-Seq) of groups of genotypes with contrasting levels of quantitative resistance to P. infestans. The third source was the first generation 8.3k SolCAP SNP genotyping array available in potato for genome wide association studies (GWAS). Twenty seven SNPs from all three sources showed robust association with MCR. Some of those were located in genes that are strong candidates for directly controlling quantitative resistance, based on functional annotation. Most important were: a lipoxygenase (jasmonate pathway), a 3-hydroxy- 3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase (mevalonate pathway), a P450 protein (terpene biosynthesis), a transcription factor and a homolog of a major gene for resistance to P. infestans from the wild potato species Solanum venturii. The candidate gene approach and GWAS complemented each other as they identified different genes. The results of this study provide new insight in the molecular genetic basis of quantitative resistance in potato and a toolbox of diagnostic SNP markers for breeding applications.
- Published
- 2016
9. Comparative RAD sequencing for detecting SNPs with differential allele frequency between potato genotypes with high and low tuber yield, starch content and starch yield
- Author
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Schönhals, Elske Maria, Ding, Jia, Ritter, Enrique, Caldas Paulo, M.J., Cara, Nicolás, Tacke, Eckhard, Hofferbert, Hans Reinhardt, Lübeck, Jens, Strahwald, Josef, Gebhardt, Christiane, Schönhals, Elske Maria, Ding, Jia, Ritter, Enrique, Caldas Paulo, M.J., Cara, Nicolás, Tacke, Eckhard, Hofferbert, Hans Reinhardt, Lübeck, Jens, Strahwald, Josef, and Gebhardt, Christiane
- Abstract
Potato tuber yield, starch content and starch yield are complex agricultural traits. Their optimization is important in potato breeding programs. The genes and their natural allelic variation, which control these traits, particularly yield and starch yield, are mostly unknown. To discover these genes we grouped 90 potato varieties and breeding clones according to field evaluation of tuber yield and starch content in three pairs of genotype groups (case-control populations) with high and low mean tuber yield (24 genotypes per group), high and low mean tuber starch content (24 genotypes per group) and high and low mean starch yield (21 and 24 genotypes, respectively). RAD libraries were constructed from the 90 genotypes (6 genotypes were replicated) and sequenced. The sequences were mapped against the potato genome sequence. The sequence reads of individual genotypes were assigned to the three case-control populations and pooled for cases (high phenotypic mean value) and controls (low phenotypic mean value). Bi-allelic SNPs were called within case-control populations and their allele frequencies were compared to detect differential SNPs.
- Published
- 2016
10. Antibiotika-Therapie
- Author
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Hans-Reinhardt Brodt, Wolfgang Stille, Claus Simon, Hans-Reinhardt Brodt, Wolfgang Stille, and Claus Simon
- Abstract
Neue Erreger und zunehmende Antibiotika-Resistenzen machen eine ständige Anpassung der Behandlungsstrategie unverzichtbar. Bei der Vielzahl an neuen Substanzen den Überblick zu behalten und das optimale Therapieregime für Ihre Patienten zu wählen, ist keine leichte Aufgabe. Mit der'Antibiotika-Therapie'können Sie diese aber spielend meistern! Das Standardwerk zur Klinik und Praxis der antiinfektiösen Behandlung ist in der komplett überarbeiteten und erweiterten 12. Auflage wieder ein zuverlässiger Ratgeber im medizinischen Alltag. Die 3 großen Bereiche • Wirkstoffe, • organ- bzw. regionen- und erregerspezifische Krankheitsbilder sowie • spezielle Therapieprobleme ermöglichen es, gezielt Antworten auf individuelle Fragestellungen zu finden. Wenn Sie bei der Behandlung auf der sicheren Seite sein und das aktuelle Spektrum der antiinfektiösen Therapie effektiv für Ihre Patienten einSetzen möchten, ist die'Antibiotika-Therapie'Ihr unverzichtbarer Begleiter., AUS DEM INHALT Grundbegriffe der Antibiotika-Therapie Eigenschaften der Antiinfektiva • Antibiotika • Virostatika • Antimykotika • Antiprotozoenmittel und Antihelminthika Therapie wichtiger Infektionen • Allgemeiner Teil • Spezieller Teil: Körperregionen und Organsysteme • Spezieller Teil: Erreger Spezielle Therapieprobleme • Unklares Fieber • Schwangerschaft • Neugeborenenperiode • Gestörte Leberfunktion • Niereninsuffizienz • Infektionen bei Granulozytopenie • Therapie nach hämatopoetischer Stammzelltransplantation • Therapie nach Transplantation solider Organe,'Ein zuverlässiger Ratgeber im medizinischen Alltag, der immer greifbar sein sollte...'OUP, Juni 2013, Hans-Reinhard Brodt Prof. Dr. med._ Zentrum der Inneren Medizin, Medizinische Klinik II, Abteilung Internistische Intensivmedizin/Infektiologie, Klinikum der Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt Wolfgang Stille Prof. Dr. med._ Zentrum der Inneren Medizin/Infektiologie, Klinikum der Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt, - Neu in der 12. Auflage: zahlreiche neue Virostatika, neues Kapitel zu Antiprotozoen-Medikamenten und Antihelminthika, Berücksichtigung pädiatrischer Aspekte, differenzierte Dosierungsangaben für verschiedene Lebensalter und Sondersituationen (z.B. Niereninsuffizienz), besondere Therapieempfehlungen für hoch- oder multiresistente Erreger - Komplettes Spektrum der antiinfektiösen Therapie: Wirkstoffe, Krankheitsbilder und spezielle Therapieprobleme umfassend und prägnant dargestellt - Bewährte praxisnahe Konzeption: streng systematische Textgliederung, Expertentipps, benutzerfreundliches Layout mit Icons und Griffregister
- Published
- 2012
11. Medical treatment of an Ebola-infected doctor—ethics over costs?
- Author
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Zacharowski, Kai, primary, Brodt, Hans-Reinhardt, additional, and Wolf, Timo, additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Natural DNA variation at candidate loci is associated with potato chip color, tuber starch content, yield and starch yield
- Author
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Maria João Paulo, F.A. van Eeuwijk, Josef Strahwald, Christiane Gebhardt, Eckhard Tacke, Hans-Reinhardt Hofferbert, Jörg Wunder, Jens Lübeck, Li Li, Holger Junghans, and Astrid M. Draffehn
- Subjects
Candidate gene ,Linkage disequilibrium ,DNA, Plant ,Starch ,phytophthora-infestans ,enzymes ,Cold storage ,sucrose metabolism ,Locus (genetics) ,solanum-tuberosum ,Biology ,Quantitative trait locus ,Genes, Plant ,resistance ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,higher-plants ,Laboratorium voor Plantenveredeling ,Genetic variation ,Genetics ,Genetic variability ,genes ,Alleles ,Solanum tuberosum ,Original Paper ,Pigmentation ,fungi ,Chromosome Mapping ,Genetic Variation ,food and beverages ,temperature ,General Medicine ,PE&RC ,PRI Biometris ,inhibitor ,Plant Tubers ,Plant Breeding ,Phenotype ,chemistry ,quantitative trait loci ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Complex characters of plants such as starch and sugar content of seeds, fruits, tubers and roots are controlled by multiple genetic and environmental factors. Understanding their molecular basis will facilitate diagnosis and combination of superior alleles in crop improvement programs (“precision breeding”). Association genetics based on candidate genes is one approach toward this goal. Tetraploid potato varieties and breeding clones related by descent were evaluated for 2 years for chip quality before and after cold storage, tuber starch content, yield and starch yield. Chip quality is inversely correlated with tuber sugar content. A total of 36 loci on 11 potato chromosomes were evaluated for natural DNA variation in 243 individuals. These loci included microsatellites and genes coding for enzymes that function in carbohydrate metabolism or transport (candidate loci). The markers were used to analyze population structure and were tested for association with the tuber quality traits. Highly significant and robust associations of markers with 1–4 traits were identified. Most frequent were associations with chip quality and tuber starch content. Alleles increasing tuber starch content improved chip quality and vice versa. With two exceptions, the most significant and robust associations (q
- Published
- 2008
13. Daptomycin versus standard therapy for bacteremia and endocarditis caused by Staphylococcus aureus
- Author
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Arthur Stanley Link, Marcus J. Zervos, Ignace DeMeyer, Hans Reinhardt Brodt, Marcelo Gareca, Christopher H. Cabell, Jack M. Bernstein, Henry F. Chambers, Donald P. Levine, Gerd Fätkenheuer, Jeffrey Parsonnet, Helen W. Boucher, Alan D. Tice, Adolf W. Karchmer, Gloria Vigliani, Vance G. Fowler, Scott G. Filler, Mark E. Rupp, Graeme N. Forrest, Paul P. Cook, Sara E. Cosgrove, Elias Abrutyn, Connie S. Price, G. Ralph Corey, Francis P. Tally, and Susan J. Rehm
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Bacteremia ,Penicillins ,medicine.disease_cause ,Telavancin ,Daptomycin ,Vancomycin ,medicine ,Endocarditis ,Humans ,Antibacterial agent ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Endocarditis, Bacterial ,Middle Aged ,Staphylococcal Infections ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Treatment Outcome ,Gentamicin ,Female ,Methicillin Resistance ,Gentamicins ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Alternative therapies for Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia and endocarditis are needed.We randomly assigned 124 patients with S. aureus bacteremia with or without endocarditis to receive 6 mg of daptomycin intravenously per kilogram of body weight daily and 122 to receive initial low-dose gentamicin plus either an antistaphylococcal penicillin or vancomycin. The primary efficacy end point was treatment success 42 days after the end of therapy.Forty-two days after the end of therapy in the modified intention-to-treat analysis, a successful outcome was documented for 53 of 120 patients who received daptomycin as compared with 48 of 115 patients who received standard therapy (44.2 percent vs. 41.7 percent; absolute difference, 2.4 percent; 95 percent confidence interval, -10.2 to 15.1 percent). Our results met prespecified criteria for the noninferiority of daptomycin. The success rates were similar in subgroups of patients with complicated bacteremia, right-sided endocarditis, and methicillin-resistant S. aureus. Daptomycin therapy was associated with a higher rate of microbiologic failure than was standard therapy (19 vs. 11 patients, P=0.17). In 6 of the 19 patients with microbiologic failure in the daptomycin group, isolates with reduced susceptibility to daptomycin emerged; similarly, a reduced susceptibility to vancomycin was noted in isolates from patients treated with vancomycin. As compared with daptomycin therapy, standard therapy was associated with a nonsignificantly higher rate of adverse events that led to treatment failure due to the discontinuation of therapy (17 vs. 8, P=0.06). Clinically significant renal dysfunction occurred in 11.0 percent of patients who received daptomycin and in 26.3 percent of patients who received standard therapy (P=0.004).Daptomycin (6 mg per kilogram daily) is not inferior to standard therapy for S. aureus bacteremia and right-sided endocarditis. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00093067 [ClinicalTrials.gov].).
- Published
- 2006
14. The Use of Solvent Extraction in the Recovery of Waste
- Author
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Hans Reinhardt and Michael Cox
- Subjects
Materials science ,Chromatography ,Solvent extraction - Published
- 2004
15. Daptomycin versus Standard Therapy for Bacteremia and Endocarditis Caused byStaphylococcus aureus
- Author
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Fowler, Vance G., primary, Boucher, Helen W., additional, Corey, G. Ralph, additional, Abrutyn, Elias, additional, Karchmer, Adolf W., additional, Rupp, Mark E., additional, Levine, Donald P., additional, Chambers, Henry F., additional, Tally, Francis P., additional, Vigliani, Gloria A., additional, Cabell, Christopher H., additional, Link, Arthur Stanley, additional, DeMeyer, Ignace, additional, Filler, Scott G., additional, Zervos, Marcus, additional, Cook, Paul, additional, Parsonnet, Jeffrey, additional, Bernstein, Jack M., additional, Price, Connie Savor, additional, Forrest, Graeme N., additional, Fätkenheuer, Gerd, additional, Gareca, Marcelo, additional, Rehm, Susan J., additional, Brodt, Hans Reinhardt, additional, Tice, Alan, additional, and Cosgrove, Sara E., additional
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Liquid-liquid extraction equipment
- Author
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Hans Reinhardt
- Subjects
Chromatography ,Chemistry ,Liquid–liquid extraction ,Materials Chemistry ,Metals and Alloys ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering - Published
- 1996
17. Theoretical Model for Behavior of Drops in a Centrifuge
- Author
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Jan-Olov Liljenzin and Hans Reinhardt
- Subjects
Centrifuge ,Chemistry ,General Engineering ,Mechanics - Published
- 1970
18. Solvent Extraction Studies by the AKUFVE Method. II. A New Centrifuge for Absolute Phase Separation
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Hans Reinhardt, Jan Rydberg, J. O. Liljenzin, H. Reinhardt, J. Rydberg, and J. Cymerman Craig
- Subjects
Centrifuge ,Chromatography ,Absolute phase ,Chemistry ,General Chemical Engineering ,Extraction (chemistry) ,Analytical chemistry ,Centrifugation ,Solvent extraction - Published
- 1969
19. Les églises romanes de la Champagne après l'an mil
- Author
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Hans Reinhardt
- Subjects
History ,Literature and Literary Theory ,Visual Arts and Performing Arts - Abstract
Reinhardt Hans. Les églises romanes de la Champagne après l'an mil. In: Cahiers de civilisation médiévale, 4e année (n°14), Avril-juin 1961. pp. 149-158.
- Published
- 1961
20. Comment interpréter le plan carolingien de Saint-Gall
- Author
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Hans Reinhardt
- Subjects
Archeology ,Visual Arts and Performing Arts ,Architecture - Abstract
Reinhardt Hans. Comment interpréter le plan carolingien de Saint-Gall. In: Bulletin Monumental, tome 96, n°3, année 1937. pp. 265-279.
- Published
- 1937
21. Étude sur les églises-porches carolingiennes et leur survivance dans l'art roman
- Author
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Étienne Fels and Hans Reinhardt
- Subjects
Archeology ,Visual Arts and Performing Arts ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Architecture ,Art ,media_common - Abstract
Reinhardt Hans, Fels Étienne. Étude sur les églises-porches carolingiennes et leur survivance dans l'art roman. In: Bulletin Monumental, tome 92, n°3, année 1933. pp. 331-365.
- Published
- 1933
22. Le retable d'or de Bâle
- Author
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Hans Reinhardt
- Subjects
General Medicine - Abstract
Reinhardt Hans. Le retable d'or de Bâle. In: Bulletin de la Société Nationale des Antiquaires de France, 1945-1947, 1950. pp. 163-164.
- Published
- 1950
23. Hypothèse sur l'origine des premiers déambulatoires en Picardie
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Hans Reinhardt
- Subjects
Archeology ,Visual Arts and Performing Arts ,Architecture - Abstract
Reinhardt Hans. Hypothèse sur l'origine des premiers déambulatoires en Picardie. In: Bulletin Monumental, tome 88, année 1929. pp. 269-288.
- Published
- 1929
24. Les sculptures du croisillon sud de la cathédrale de Strasbourg : le pilier des Anges et le décor du portail méridional
- Author
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Hans Reinhardt
- Subjects
General Medicine - Abstract
Reinhardt Hans. Les sculptures du croisillon sud de la cathédrale de Strasbourg : le pilier des Anges et le décor du portail méridional. In: Bulletin de la Société Nationale des Antiquaires de France, 1968, 1970. pp. 62-65.
- Published
- 1970
25. Noise barrier pad and the method for the production of same
- Author
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Armin Tritsch, Hans Reinhardt, and Manfred Schmahl
- Subjects
Materials science ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,medicine.disease_cause ,Blank ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,chemistry ,Mold ,medicine ,Tread ,Composite material ,Curing (chemistry) ,Noise barrier ,Polyurethane - Abstract
A noise barrier pad and a method for the production of same comprises the steps of forming a tread layer by reacting a mixture for polyurethane foam in a hollow mold having separable upper and lower parts and which is shaped so as to form the tread layer, curing the foam, removing the upper part of the mold, placing a blank of noise barrier material on the surface of the foam which corresponds to the bottom side of the tread layer, and forming a bottom foam layer on the tread layer and barrier material by placing another upper mold constructed in accordance with the bottom layer of the noise barrier pad and defining a cavity over the tread layer and barrier material and filling the cavity with the reaction mixture for the polyurethane foam.
- Published
- 1983
26. La Cathedrale de Reims
- Author
-
Hans Reinhardt and Robert Branner
- Subjects
History ,Visual Arts and Performing Arts ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Art ,media_common - Published
- 1963
27. Der Basler Munsterschatz
- Author
-
Rainer Ruckert and Hans Reinhardt
- Subjects
Visual Arts and Performing Arts - Published
- 1957
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