95 results on '"Leicht H"'
Search Results
2. Nutritional behavior and food pattern are sex-specific with higher salt intake and consumption of ultra-processed foods in a large cohort of NAFLD patients
- Author
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Jerzynski, J., additional, Heller, B., additional, Reiter, F.P., additional, Leicht, H-B., additional, Bergheim, I., additional, Heuschmann, P.U., additional, Geier, A., additional, and Rau, M., additional
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
3. Morbidity and mortality after surgery for lower urinary tract symptoms: a study of 95 577 cases from a nationwide German health insurance database
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Gilfrich, C, Leicht, H, Fahlenbrach, C, Jeschke, E, Popken, G, Stolzenburg, J U, Weißbach, L, Zastrow, C, and Günster, C
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- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Volume–outcome relationship in pancreatic surgery
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Alsfasser, G., Leicht, H., Günster, C., Rau, B. M., Schillinger, G., and Klar, E.
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- 2016
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- View/download PDF
5. Krankheitskosten bei Demenz aus gesellschaftlicher Perspektive: Eine Übersicht
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Leicht, H. and König, H.-H.
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- 2012
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6. Critical evaluation of self-rated quality of life in mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer’s disease — Further evidence for the impact of anosognosia and global cognitive impairment
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Berwig, Martin, Leicht, H., and Gertz, H. J.
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- 2009
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7. 1st Conference Clinical Trials on Alzheimer’s Disease September 17-18-19, 2008 School of Medecine Montpellier, France
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Gabelle, A., Roche, S., Gény, C., Portet, F., Touchon, J., Lehmann, S., De Meyer, G., Shapiro, F., Vanderstichele, H., Vanmechelen, E., Engelborghs, S., De Deyn, P. P., Shaw, L., Trojanowski, J., Nestor, S. M., Rupsingh, R., Borrie, M., Smith, M., Wells, J. L., Bartha, R., Blennow, K., De Meyer, G., Hansson, O., Minthon, L., Wallin, A., Zetterberg, H., Lewezuk, P., Vandertischele, H., Kornhuber, J., Wiltfang, J., Iqbal, K., Chalbot, S., Grundke-Iqbal, I., Gertz, H. J., Berwig, M., Leicht, H., Zhu, C. W., Leibman, C., Townsend, R., Mclaughlin, T., Scarmeas, N., Albert, M., Brandt, J., Blacker, D., Sano, M., Stern, Y., Bravo, G., Dubois, M. F., Hansel, S., Duguet, A. M., Robert, P. H., Deudon, A., Ake, N., Gervais, X., Leone, E., Lavallart, B., Amato, D., Zavitz, K., Green, R. C., Schneider, L. S., Swabb, E., Van Kan, G. Abellan, Carrie, I., Gillette, S., Soto, M. E., Gardette, J., Przybylski, C., Andrieu, S., Vellas, B., Dangour, A. D., Allen, E., Elbourne, D., Fletcher, A., Richards, M., Uauy, R., Green, R. C., Schneider, L. S., Zavitz, K. H., Wurtman, R. J., Peters, O., Lorenz, D., Möller, H. J., Frölich, L., Heuser, I., Vandenberghe, R., Thurfjell, L., Owenius, R., Brooks, D. J., Nelissen, N., Koole, M., Bormans, G., Van Laere, K., Boada, M., Muñoz, J., Tárraga, L., Ortiz, P., Hernández, I., Becker, J., López, O., Buendia, M., Pla, R., Grifols, J. R., Paez, A., Núñez, L., Ferrer, I., Lachno, D. R., De Groote, G., Kostanjevecki, V., Siemers, E. R., Willey, M. B., Ruiz, A., Ramírez-Lorca, R., Sáez, M. E., Mauleón, A., Rosende-Roca, M., Martínez-Lage, P., Gutiérrez, M., Real, L. Miguel, López-arrieta, J., Gayán, J., Antúnez, C., González-Pérez, A., Hugonot-Diener, L., Bchiri, J. El, Fraisse, M. L., Von Raison, F., Bone, M., Duron, E., Husson, J. M., Meeuwsen, E. J., Melis, R. J. F., Adang, E. M., Krabbe, P. F., Schölzel-Dorenbos, C. J. M., Ruckert, M. G. M. Olde, Truemner, J., Best, S., Lozanski, M., Nsiah, C., Wells, J., Tractenberg, R. E., Tractenberg, R. E., Chu, L. W., Yik, P. Y., Mok, W., Chung, C. P., Gauthier, S., Douillet, P., Doody, R., Fox, N. C., Orgogozo, J. M., Ingenbleek, Y., Bienvenu, J., Molloy, D. W., Standish, T., Cowan, D., Almeida, E., Diloreto, P., Woolmore-Goodwin, S., Clarke, J., Berardi, P., Smith, M., Purcell, T., Woolmore-Goodwin, S., Gutmanis, I., Borrie, M., Robert, P. H., Reynish, E., Cantet, C., Erder, M. H., Fillit, H., Hofbauer, R. K., Setyawan, J., Tourkodimitris, S., Fridman, M., Lyketsos, C., Unzeta, M., Valente, T., Hidalgo, J., Ramirez, B., Anglés, N., Morelló, J. R., Reguant, J., Boada, M., Claassen, J. A., Van Beek, A. H., Olde Rikkert, M. G., Roca, I., Cuberas, G., Castell, J., Buendia, M., Pla, R., Núñez, L., Ferrer, I., Latger, C., Tramoni, E., Elkhoury, C., Aubert-Khalfa, S., Ceccaldi, M., Schneeberger, A., Mandler, M., Otava, O., Mattner, F., Schmidt, W., Gatignol, P., David, C., Guitton, C., Plaza, M., Szaniszlo, P., German, P., Hajas, G., Kruzel, M., Boldogh, I., Wesnes, K., Satek, S., Turk, P., Satek, S., Vinay, M., Wetten, S., Li, H., Galwey, N., Gibson, R. A., Irizarry, M. C., Nourhashémi, F., Gillette-Guyonnet, S., Andrieu, S., Rolland, Y., Ousset, P. J., Verwey, N. A., Blennow, K., Clark, C., Cole, G. M., De Deyn, P. P., Galasko, D., Hampel, H., Hartmann, T., Kapaki, E., Lannfelt, L., Mehta, P. D., Parnetti, L., Petzold, A., Pirttila, T., Saleh, L., Skinningsrud, A., Swieten, J. C. V., Verbeek, M. M., Wiltfang, J., Younkin, S., Blankenstein, M. A., Ishihara-Paul, L., Viswanathan, A., Allen, J. K., Hyman, B. T., Betensky, R., Weil, J., The Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, The MAPT Study Investigators, The Xaliproden Ad Study Team, and the PLASA Group
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- 2008
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8. Age of major depression onset, depressive symptoms, and risk for subsequent dementia: results of the German Study on Ageing, Cognition, and Dementia in Primary Care Patients (AgeCoDe)
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Heser, K., Tebarth, F., Wiese, B., Eisele, M., Bickel, H., Köhler, M., Mösch, E., Weyerer, S., Werle, J., König, H.-H., Leicht, H., Pentzek, M., Fuchs, A., Riedel-Heller, S. G., Luppa, M., Prokein, J., Scherer, M., Maier, W., and Wagner, M.
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- 2013
9. Assessing cognitive changes in the elderly: Reliable Change Indices for the Mini-Mental State Examination
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Stein, J., Luppa, M., Maier, W., Wagner, M., Wolfsgruber, S., Scherer, M., Köhler, M., Eisele, M., Weyerer, S., Werle, J., Bickel, H., Mösch, E., Wiese, B., Prokein, J., Pentzek, M., Fuchs, A., Leicht, H., König, H.-H., and Riedel-Heller, S. G.
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- 2012
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10. Net costs of dementia by disease stage
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Leicht, H., Heinrich, S., Heider, D., Bachmann, C., Bickel, H., van den Bussche, H., Fuchs, A., Luppa, M., Maier, W., Mösch, E., Pentzek, M., Rieder-Heller, S. G., Tebarth, F., Werle, J., Weyerer, S., Wiese, B., Zimmermann, T., and König, H.-H.
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- 2011
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11. Self-Rated Quality of Life in Mild Cognitive Impairment and Alzheimer’s Disease: The Problem of Affective Distortion
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Berwig, M., Leicht, H., Hartwig, K., and Gertz, H. J.
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- 2011
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12. Hybrid composites based on technical cellulose from rice husk
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Shapovalova, I., Vurasko, A., Petrov, L., Kraus, E., Leicht, H., Heilig, M., Stoyanov, O., Shapovalova, I., Vurasko, A., Petrov, L., Kraus, E., Leicht, H., Heilig, M., and Stoyanov, O.
- Abstract
We introduced the preparation of hybrid composites using technical cellulose as a matrix material from rice husks with a natural SiO2 content from 0% to 19.4%. In this work, the physicochemical characteristics of the resulting hybrid composites have been investigated. The presence of SiOC chemical bonds in the resulting hybrid composites was determined by infrared spectroscopy. Microscopic analysis showed the complete removal of the mineral component and lignin from the cell wall of the rice husk fibers. This allows obtaining of an expanded surface of the fibers (101.7 m2/g) with uniform distribution of the TiO2 aggregates. It could be shown that with content increasing of natural silicon dioxide in the hybrid composite the decomposition rate of H2O2 also increases. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J. Appl. Polym. Sci. 2018, 135, 45796. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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- 2018
13. Active and passive thermography for defect detection in polymer joints
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Leicht, H., primary, Heilig, M., additional, Pommer, C., additional, Kraus, E., additional, and Baudrit, B., additional
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- 2018
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14. Age of major depression onset, depressive symptoms, and risk for subsequent dementia: results of the German Study on Ageing, Cognition, and Dementia in Primary Care Patients (AgeCoDe)
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Heser, K., Tebarth, F., Leicht, H., Bohnau, Harald, Pinsdorf, Ursula, Busch, Thomas, Keller, Gisela, Fuchs-Romer, Susanne, Beisel, Wolfgang, Richter-Polynice, Birgitt, Cupsa, Florinela, Unkelbach, Roland Matthias, Schiller, Gerhard, Pentzek, M., Damanakis, Barbara, Frenkel, Michael, Ebeling, Klaus-Wolfgang, Berger, Pauline, Gillhausen, Kurt, Hellmessen, Uwe, Hummerich, Helga, Heede, Hans-Christian, Kormann, Boguslaw-Marian, Peters, Josef, Fuchs, A., Schott, Ulrich, Matzies, Dirk, Schumacher, Andre, Oliver Flettner, Tim, Thraen, Winfried, Siegmund, Harald, Levacher, Claus, Blankenstein, Tim, Lamborelle, Eliane, Hollstein, Ralf, Riedel-Heller, S. G., Hoffmann, Edna, Ghane, Ingeborg, Claß, Regine, Meier, Stefan-Wolfgang, Moers, Leo W, Wundram, Udo, Schmitt, Klaus, Missghian, Rastin, Spallek, Karin, Schlosser, Christiane, Luppa, M., Groß, Kathrin, Bouche, Winfried, Linn, Ursula, Bormann, Gundula, Schulze, Gerhard, Stelter, Klaus, Gatermann, Heike, Fischer-Radizi, Doris, Witt, Peter, Kavka, Stefanie, Prokein, J., Klotzl, Gunther, Baumho, Michael, Oberlander, Maren, Schiewe, Cornelia, Hufnagel, Jorg, Kressel, Marei, Kebschull, Michael, Wagner, Christine, Burkhardt, Fridolin, Hase, Martina, Scherer, M., Houcken, Karl-Heinz, Zebidi, Christiane, Brohan, Johann, Russ, Christiane, Bethge, Frank, Rughase-Block, Gisela, Lorenzen, Margret, Elsen, Arne, Korte, Daniela, Jedicke, Ursula, Group, Age CoDe Study, Zoras, Constantin, Pfeil-Woltmann, Gabriele, Kaiser, Martin, Bruns, Johannes, Homann, Joachim, Gorgon, Georg, Middendorf, Niklas, Menschke, Kay, Bayer, Hans H, Maier, Wolfgang, Jesse, Nadine, Dahlke, Marcus, Lipp, Thomas, Amm, Martina, Bauer, Horst, Rauchmaul, Gabriele, Ebert, Hans Jochen, Gabriel-Mu, Angelika, Taut, Hans-Christian, Voß, Hella, Scherer, Martin, Schmidt, Holger, Hager, Eva, Tunze, Bettina, Paschke, Thomas, Assmann, Heinz-Michael, Rahnefeld, Uwe, Striegler, Petra, Gierth, Marga, Boehm, Margret, Harnisch, Dagmar, Wiese, B., van den Bussche, Hendrik, Kornisch-Koch, Simone, Hambsch, Frank, Herzig, Cornelia, Georgi, Astrid, Schwarzmann, Erhard, Schinagl, Gerd, Pehnke, Ulrike, Dayab, Mohammed, Brosig, Michael, Sperling, Volkmar, Abholz, Heinz-Harald, Lebuser, Frank, Hagert, Detlef, Arnold, Gerhard, Bauer, Viet-Harold, Becker, Hartwig, Becker, Hermine, Besier, Werner, Grella, Hartmut, Grimm, Hans Heinrich, Heck, Petra, Bachmann, Cadja, Hemler, Werner, Henn, Eric, Mayer, Manfred, Orlovius, Gerhard, Renz, Helmut, Scheer, Georg, Schilp, Michael, Schmid, Angela, Schneider, Matthias, Uhle, Christian, Bickel, Horst, Weinga, Brigitte, Wochele, Eberhard, Wolfram, Bernhard, Hofmann, Andreas, Allwein, Eugen, Ruile, Helmut, Koeppel, Andreas, Dick, Peter, Holtz, Friedrich, Schmidt, Gabriel, Blank, Wolfgang, Fischer, Lutz-Ingo, Thaller, Johann, Bloß, Guntram, Kreuzer, Franz, Holthausen, Gunther, Ludwig Maier, Karl, Krebs, Walter, Mohr, Christoph, Koschine, Heinz, Ellersdorfer, Richard, Speth, Michael, Kleinhans, Maria, Koutsouva-Sack, Panagiota, Staudinger, Gabriele, Eiber, Johann, Thiel, Stephan, Gold, Cornelia, Nalbach, Andrea, Reichert, Kai, Neef, Martin, Eifflaender-Gorfer, Sandra, Fleischmann, Viktor, Mayer, Natalija, Spiegl, Andreas, Renner, Fritz, Weishappel-Ketisch, Eva, Kochems, Thomas, Hunger, Hartmut, Hofbeck, Marianne, Neumeier, Alfred, Goldhofer, Elfriede, Eisele, Marion, Bommer, Thomas, Vollmuth, Reinhold, Lanzinger, Klaus, Pauli, Ramona, Lindner, Jutta, Brandt, Gerlinde, Hohentanner, Otto, Porz, Peter, Zimmerhackl, Bernd, Hallwachs, Alexander, Ernst, Annette, Haseke, Claudia, Ploch, Andreas, Swobodnik, Monika, Jost, Detlev, Narr, Renate, Nehmann, Gabriele, Eder, Christiane, Pillin, Helmut, Loth, Frank, Fritz, Nicola, Fuchs, Angela, Rafferzeder, Michael, Zirpel, Dietmar, Romberg, Heinz-Peter, Liese, Hanna, Burfent, Inge, von Aswege, Johann, Honig, Wolf-Dietrich, Schu, Heribert, Marx, Manfred, Straimer, Annemarie, Eisele, M., Heser, Kathrin, Uhlenbrock, Arndt, Werner, Michael, Gobel-Schlatholt, Maria, Prechtel, Eberhard, Kaschell, Hans-Jurgen, Weckbecker, Klaus, Alfen, Theodor, Eimers-Kleene, Jorg, Fischer, Klaus, Weisbach, Wolf-Rudiger, Jessen, Frank, Tschoke, Martin, Fliedner, Michael, Hodgson, Binjamin, Hamkens, Werner, Ackermann, Angela, Kaduszkiewicz, Hanna, Kirsch, Michael, Miasnikov, Vladimir, Kormann, Marian, Kaufeler, Teresa, Lu, Dieter, Wirtz, Clemens, Kohler, Mirjam, Krug, Bernd-Uwe, Hutter, Petra, Lau, Dietrich, Schroder-Hoch, Ursula, Herzog, Wolfgang, Weidner, Klaus, Witt, Otto-Peter, Konig, Hans-Helmut, Titova, Ljudmila, Moritz, Andrea, Lipp, Ina, Koppara, Alexander, Muhlmann, Ute, Bra, Barbara, Ziehbold, Sabine, Lange, Carolin, Schmalbruch, Ina, Ka, Gunter, Bo, Hanna, Ludwig, Ingrid, Noky, Adolf, Leicht, Hanna, Perleberg, Helmut, Rieder, Carsten, Rosen, Michael, Kunzendorf, Gerhard, Wachter, Jurgen, Weingartner, Brigitte, Luck, Tobias, Willhauck, Hans-Georg, Herbst, Helga, Friedrich, Peter, Kirchner, Hans-Georg, Kirchner, Elke, Knauer, Luitpold, Bickel, H., Luppa, Melanie, Holtz, Karl-Friedrich, Schmid, Elmar, Kahmann, Ulf, nther Holthausen, Gu, Mosch, Edelgard, Reich, Paul, Stahl, Eberhard, Lunow, Reinhold, Undritz, Klaus, Voss, Bernd, Spreer, Achim, Brenig, Oliver, Eich, Ralf, Vossel, Angelika, Leggewie, Dieter, Olbrich, Julia, Schmidt, Angelika, Aghdai-Heuser, Nahid, Witten, Lutz, Igel, Michael, Hodgson, Benjamin, Hoff, Bernhard, Pentzek, Michael, Luttringhaus, Dieter, Opitz, Rolf, Bausch, Jurgen, Mecking, Dirk, Ganßauge, Friederike, Peters, Elmar, Wester, Alfons, Petersen, Werner, Prokein, Jana, Daase, Martin, Rusing, Martin, von Sethe, Christoph, Borngra, Wilmhard, Colling-Pook, Brigitte, Weidner, Ullrich, Rieger, Peter, Witte, Lutz, Busch, Hans-Wilhelm, Unger, Jurgen, Schumacher, Anna, Preis, Angela, Mann, Michael, Haeberle, Ernst, Kohler, Horst, Sliwiok, Helmut, Deest, Harald, Ackermann-Korner, Margret, Reinstorff, Dieter, Schluter, Christamaria, Heinrichs, Henrik, Riedel-Heller, Steffi, Dankwarth, Ole, Bose, Michael, Ryll, Ulricke, Bauer, Reinhard, Schnakenbeck, Sven, Beckmann, Karin, Callsen, Annegret, Schiewe, Ewa, Gehm, Holger, Lambert, Volker, Stein, Janine, Hinkel-Reineke, Karin, Stolzenbach, Carl-Otto, Berdin, Peter, Windler, Friedhelm, Weidnitzer, Sabine, Rosenkranz, Erika, Letzien, Norbert, Klossek, Doris, Liebsch, Martin, Steinmann, Susanne, Zwicker, Andrea, Hantel, Ulrike, Pilz, Monika, Kirschner, Volker, Arnold, Rainer, Poser, Ulrich, Barthel, Wolfgang, Blechinger, Fritz, Fritz, Reiner Walter, Junemann, Susanne, Köhler, M., Tebarth, Franziska, Kirsch, Gabriele, Kulinna, Jurgen, Legner-Gorke, Andreas, Lehr, Christa, Meer, Wolfgang, Panzer, Christina, Raabe, Achim, Schmidt-Back, Helga, Wagner, Michael, Gunter Stieglitz, Hans, von der Heide, Marie-Luise, Kirchner, Georg, Kastner, Jorg, Janssen, Ulrike, Standl, Albert, Gottl, Clemens, Franze, Marianne, Moser, Gerhard, Blumm, Almut, Weber, Petra, Poetsch, Wolfgang, Puppe, Heinrich, Weeg, Dagmar, Specht, Gerd, Badmann, Leonard, Leveringhaus, May, Posern, Michael, Potkowski, Ralph, Schwandner, Michael, Weigert, Rudolf, Huber, Christoph, Werle, Jochen, Weyerer, Siegfried, Wiese, Birgitt, Wolfsgruber, Steffen, Zimmermann, Thomas, Adrian, Claudia, Mösch, E., Gulle, Peter, Schutzendorf, Heribert, Benz, Elisabeth, Werner, Klaus-Michael, Weyerer, S., Stahlschmidt, Markus, Dorn, Jurgen, Menke, Helmut, Werle, J., Sievert, Erik, Krockert, Ulrich, Salingre, Gabriele, Morchen, Christian, Raab, Peter, Baszenski, Angela, Loth, Clarli, Knaak, Christian, Hotte, Peter, Pieper, Jorg, König, H-H, Wassermann, Dirk, Leyendecker, Hans Josef, Gohde, Gerhard, Simons, Barbara, Brunger, Achim, Petersen, Uwe, Wahl, Heike, Tewes, Rainer, Junghans-Kullmann, Doris, and Grimm-Kraft, Angela
- Subjects
Male ,Risk ,epidemiology [Cognition Disorders] ,Aging ,medicine.medical_specialty ,epidemiology [Alzheimer Disease] ,etiology [Alzheimer Disease] ,epidemiology [Depressive Disorder, Major] ,epidemiology [Germany] ,epidemiology [Dementia] ,Prodrome ,Alzheimer Disease ,Germany ,medicine ,History of depression ,psychology [Aging] ,Humans ,Dementia ,ddc:610 ,Age of Onset ,Risk factor ,Psychiatry ,Applied Psychology ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,epidemiology [Depression] ,Depressive Disorder, Major ,Primary Health Care ,Depression ,business.industry ,Hazard ratio ,Cognition ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Female ,etiology [Dementia] ,Age of onset ,Cognition Disorders ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
BackgroundWhether late-onset depression is a risk factor for or a prodrome of dementia remains unclear. We investigated the impact of depressive symptoms and early- v. late-onset depression on subsequent dementia in a cohort of elderly general-practitioner patients (n = 2663, mean age = 81.2 years).MethodRisk for subsequent dementia was estimated over three follow-ups (each 18 months apart) depending on history of depression, particularly age of depression onset, and current depressive symptoms using proportional hazard models. We also examined the additive prediction of incident dementia by depression beyond cognitive impairment.ResultsAn increase of dementia risk for higher age cut-offs of late-onset depression was found. In analyses controlling for age, sex, education, and apolipoprotein E4 genotype, we found that very late-onset depression (aged ⩾70 years) and current depressive symptoms separately predicted all-cause dementia. Combined very late-onset depression with current depressive symptoms was specifically predictive for later Alzheimer's disease (AD; adjusted hazard ratio 5.48, 95% confidence interval 2.41–12.46, p ConclusionsDepression might be a prodrome of AD but not of dementia of other aetiology as very late-onset depression in combination with current depressive symptoms, possibly emerging as a consequence of subjectively perceived worrisome cognitive deterioration, was most predictive. As depression parameters and subjective memory impairment predicted AD independently of objective cognition, clinicians should take this into account.
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- 2012
15. Effects of ventrolateral premotor lesions on a sequence manipulation task
- Author
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Schubotz, R.I., Leicht, H., and von Cramon, D.Y.
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- 2024
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16. 165 National trends and differences in morbidity among surgical approaches for radical prostatectomy in Germany
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Stolzenburg, J.U., primary, Kyriazis, I., additional, Gilfrich, C., additional, Popken, G., additional, Weißbach, L., additional, Von Zastrow, C., additional, Fahlenbrach, C., additional, Günster, C., additional, Jeschke, E., additional, and Leicht, H., additional
- Published
- 2016
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17. Insertion Polymerization of Polar Vinyl Monomers
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Wucher, P., Rünzi, T., Neuwald, B., Leicht, H., Schuster, N., Geist, F., Tritscher, U., Roesle, P., Jian, Z., Caporaso, Lucia, Cavallo, Luigi, Göttker Schnetmann, I., and Mecking, S.
- Published
- 2013
18. Catalyst Selectivity and Deactivation Routes in Insertion Polymerization of Polar Vinyl Monomers
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Wucher, P., Geist, F., Leicht, H., Neuwald, B., Roesle, P., Rünzi, T., Schuster, N., Tritschler, U., Caporaso, Lucia, Göttker Schnetmann, I., and Mecking, S.
- Published
- 2013
19. Reoperation and Complication Rates after Hip and Knee Replacement Surgery in 1 046 145 Obese Patients.
- Author
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Jeschke, E., Gehrke, T., Günster, C., Heller, K. D., Leicht, H., Malzahn, J., Niethard, F. U., Schräder, P, Zacher, J., and Halder, A. M.
- Abstract
The worldwide prevalence of obesity has nearly tripled since 1975. Between 1999 and 2017 it rose from 30.5 to 42.4% in the USA and from 11.5 to 16.3% in Germany (1). Obesity is a risk factor for osteoarthritis of the hip and even more so of the knee, which is why obese patients often present for joint replacement. However, they have a greater risk of complications in comparison with the non-obese. So far, studies dealing with this issue have only examined smaller cohorts, while data from Germany are lacking altogether. The aim of our study was to examine the association between obesity and complication rates, revision rates, and mortality after primary and revision replacement surgery of the hip and knee (HRS, R-HRS, KRS, R- KRS), respectively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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20. Volume–outcome relationship in pancreatic surgery
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Alsfasser, G, primary, Leicht, H, additional, Günster, C, additional, Rau, B M, additional, Schillinger, G, additional, and Klar, E, additional
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- 2015
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21. Immunohìstochemical hormone determinations in pituitary adenomas in comparison with endocrinological findings in vivo
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Schatz, H., primary, Daun, M., additional, Leicht, H., additional, Stracke, H., additional, Saeger, W., additional, and Zierski, J., additional
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22. Relative Impact Of Multimorbid Chronic Conditions On Health-Related Quality Of Life Measured By The EQ-5D
- Author
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Brettschneider, C., primary, Leicht, H., additional, Bickel, H., additional, Dahlhaus, A., additional, Fuchs, A., additional, Gensichen, J., additional, Maier, W., additional, Riedel-Heller, S., additional, Schäfer, I., additional, Schön, G., additional, Weyerer, S., additional, Wiese, B., additional, van den Bussche, H., additional, Scherer, M., additional, and König, H.H., additional
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- 2013
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23. Predictors of costs in dementia in a longitudinal perspective
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Leicht, H., primary, Brettschneider, C., additional, König, H.H., additional, Stuhldreher, N., additional, Bachmann, C., additional, Bickel, H., additional, Fuchs, A., additional, Heser, K., additional, Jessen, F., additional, Köhler, M., additional, Luppa, M., additional, Mösch, E., additional, Pentzek, M., additional, Riedel-Heller, S., additional, Scherer, M., additional, Werle, J., additional, Weyerer, S., additional, Wiese, B., additional, and Maier, W., additional
- Published
- 2013
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24. Direct costs associated with depressive symptoms in late life – A 4.5-year prospective study
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Luppa, M, primary, König, HH, additional, Heider, D, additional, Sikorski, C, additional, Leicht, H, additional, Schomerus, G, additional, and Riedel-Heller, SG, additional
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- 2012
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25. Morbidity and mortality after surgery for lower urinary tract symptoms: a study of 95?577 cases from a nationwide German health insurance database
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Gilfrich, C, Leicht, H, Fahlenbrach, C, Jeschke, E, Popken, G, Stolzenburg, J U, Weißbach, L, Zastrow, C, and Günster, C
- Abstract
Background:: Little real-world data is available on the comparison of different methods in surgery for lower urinary tract symptoms due to benign prostatic obstruction in terms of complications. The objective was to evaluate the proportions of TURP, open prostatectomy (OP) and laser-based surgical approaches over time and to analyse the effect of approach on complication rates. Methods:: Using data of the German local healthcare funds (Allgemeine Ortskrankenkassen (AOK)), we identified 95?577 cases with a primary diagnosis of hyperplasia of prostate who received TURP, laser vaporisation (LVP), laser enucleation (LEP) of the prostate or OP between 2008 and 2013. Univariable logistic regression was used to analyse proportions of surgical approach over time, and the effect of surgical method on outcomes was analysed by means of multivariable logistic regression. Results:: The proportion of TURP decreased from 83.4% in 2008 to 78.7% in 2013 (P<0.001). Relative to TURP and adjusting for age, co-morbidities, AOK hospital volume, year of surgery and antithrombotic medication, OP had increased mortality (odds ratio (OR) 1.47, P<0.05), transfusions (OR 5.20, P<0.001) and adverse events (OR 2.17, P<0.001), and lower re-interventions for bleeding (OR 0.75, P<0.001) and long-term re-interventions (OR 0.55, P<0.001). LVP carried a lower risk of transfusions (OR 0.57, P<0.001) and re-interventions for bleeding (OR 0.76, P<0.001), but a higher risk of long-term re-interventions (OR 1.43, P<0.001). LEP had increased re-interventions for bleeding (OR 1.35, P<0.01). Complications were also dependent on age and co-morbidity. Limitations include the lack of clinical information and functional results. Conclusions:: OP has the greatest risks of complication despite a low re-intervention rate. LVP demonstrated favourable results for transfusion and bleeding, but increased long-term re-interventions compared with TURP, while LEP showed increased re-interventions for bleeding. Findings support a careful indication and choice of method for surgery for LUTS, taking age and co-morbidities into account.
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- 2016
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26. Net costs of dementia by disease stage: results of the German Study on Ageing, Cognition and Dementia in Primary Care Patients (AgeCoDe)
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Leicht, H, primary, Heider, D, additional, Bickel, H, additional, van den Bussche, H, additional, Maier, W, additional, Riedel-Heller, SG, additional, Weyerer, S, additional, and König, HH, additional
- Published
- 2011
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27. Effects of ventrolateral premotor lesions on a sequence manipulation task
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Schubotz, R.I., primary, Leicht, H., additional, and von Cramon, D.Y., additional
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- 2006
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28. PHP127 - Relative Impact Of Multimorbid Chronic Conditions On Health-Related Quality Of Life Measured By The EQ-5D
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Brettschneider, C., Leicht, H., Bickel, H., Dahlhaus, A., Fuchs, A., Gensichen, J., Maier, W., Riedel-Heller, S., Schäfer, I., Schön, G., Weyerer, S., Wiese, B., van den Bussche, H., Scherer, M., and König, H.H.
- Published
- 2013
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29. PND22 - Predictors of costs in dementia in a longitudinal perspective
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Leicht, H., Brettschneider, C., König, H.H., Stuhldreher, N., Bachmann, C., Bickel, H., Fuchs, A., Heser, K., Jessen, F., Köhler, M., Luppa, M., Mösch, E., Pentzek, M., Riedel-Heller, S., Scherer, M., Werle, J., Weyerer, S., Wiese, B., and Maier, W.
- Published
- 2013
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30. Prediction of incident dementia: impact of impairment in instrumental activities of daily living and mild cognitive impairment-results from the German study on ageing, cognition, and dementia in primary care patients.
- Author
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Luck T, Luppa M, Wiese B, Maier W, van den Bussche H, Eisele M, Jessen F, Weeg D, Weyerer S, Pentzek M, Leicht H, Koehler M, Tebarth F, Olbrich J, Eifflaender-Gorfer S, Fuchs A, Koenig HH, Riedel-Heller SG, AgeCoDe Study Group, and Luck, Tobias
- Abstract
Objectives: There is an increasing call for a stronger consideration of impairment in instrumental activities of daily living (IADL) in the diagnostic criteria of Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) to improve the prediction of dementia. Thus, the aim of the study was to determine the predictive capability of MCI and IADL impairment for incident dementia.Design: Longitudinal cohort study with four assessments at 1.5-year intervals over a period of 4.5 years.Setting: : Primary care medical record registry sample.Participants: As part of the German Study on Ageing, Cognition, and Dementia in Primary Care Patients, a sample of 3,327 patients from general practitioners, aged 75 years and older, was assessed.Measurements: The predictive capability of MCI and IADL impairment for incident dementia was analysed using receiver operating characteristics, Kaplan-Meier survival analyses, and Cox proportional hazards models.Results: MCI and IADL impairment were found to be significantly associated with higher conversion to, shorter time to, and better predictive power for future dementia. Regarding IADL, a significant impact was particularly found for impairment in responsibility for one's own medication, shopping, and housekeeping, and in the ability to use public transport.Conclusions: Combining MCI with IADL impairment significantly improves the prediction of future dementia. Even though information on a set of risk factors is required to achieve a predictive accuracy for dementia in subjects with MCI being clinically useful, IADL impairment should be a very important element of such a risk factor set. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2012
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31. The external surface area of carbon additives - A key to enhance the dynamic charge acceptance of lead-carbon electrodes
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Jochen Settelein, Oehm, J., Bozkaya, B., Leicht, H., Wiener, M., Reichenauer, G., Sextl, G., and Publica
- Subjects
Kohlenstoff ,Elektrode ,Bleiakku ,Elektrochemie ,Batterie - Abstract
The dynamic charge acceptance (DCA) of modern lead-carbon batteries is one of the key parameters for their future application in micro- and mild-hybrid cars. This work elucidates the impact of the external surface area of carbon additives on the electrochemical performance of lead-carbon electrodes with respect to the DCA. Five specially synthesized amorphous hard carbon powders with different specific external surface area ranging from 13 m2 g−1 to 192 m2 g−1 were added to the negative active material of laboratory lead-carbon test cells. Results from cyclic voltammetry reveal that the specific external surface area of amorphous carbons exhibits a clear correlation to the electrochemical activity of lead-carbon electrodes. Firstly, an almost linear increase of the activity of the hydrogen evolution reaction with increasing specific external surface area of the carbon additive can be found. Secondly, the specific double-layer capacity of the negative active material is directly linked to the specific external surface area of the additive, as well. Thirdly, a clear correlation to the DCA can be established. In conclusion, a high specific external carbon surface in the negative active material seems to be a key to improve the dynamic charge acceptance of modern lead-carbon batteries.
32. Immunohistochemical examination of hormones (including β-endorphin and calcitonin) in pituitary adenomas: qualitative and quantitative findings in comparison to preoperative hormone levels in serum
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SCHATZ, H., primary, DAUN, M., additional, LEICHT, H., additional, STRACKE, H., additional, ZIERSKI, J., additional, and SAEGER, W., additional
- Published
- 1985
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33. PHP127 Relative Impact Of Multimorbid Chronic Conditions On Health-Related Quality Of Life Measured By The EQ-5D
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Brettschneider, C., Leicht, H., Bickel, H., Dahlhaus, A., Fuchs, A., Gensichen, J., Maier, W., Riedel-Heller, S., Schäfer, I., Schön, G., Weyerer, S., Wiese, B., van den Bussche, H., Scherer, M., and König, H.H.
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34. PND22 Predictors of costs in dementia in a longitudinal perspective
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Leicht, H., Brettschneider, C., König, H.H., Stuhldreher, N., Bachmann, C., Bickel, H., Fuchs, A., Heser, K., Jessen, F., Köhler, M., Luppa, M., Mösch, E., Pentzek, M., Riedel-Heller, S., Scherer, M., Werle, J., Weyerer, S., Wiese, B., and Maier, W.
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35. Influence of social support on cognitive change and mortality in old age: results from the prospective multicentre cohort study AgeCoDe
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Eisele Marion, Zimmermann Thomas, Köhler Mirjam, Wiese Birgitt, Heser Kathrin, Tebarth Franziska, Weeg Dagmar, Olbrich Julia, Pentzek Michael, Fuchs Angela, Weyerer Siegfried, Werle Jochen, Leicht Hanna, König Hans-Helmut, Luppa Melanie, Riedel-Heller Steffi, Maier Wolfgang, and Scherer Martin
- Subjects
Geriatrics ,RC952-954.6 - Abstract
Abstract Background Social support has been suggested to positively influence cognition and mortality in old age. However, this suggestion has been questioned due to inconsistent operationalisations of social support among studies and the small number of longitudinal studies available. This study aims to investigate the influence of perceived social support, understood as the emotional component of social support, on cognition and mortality in old age as part of a prospective longitudinal multicentre study in Germany. Methods A national subsample of 2,367 primary care patients was assessed twice over an observation period of 18 months regarding the influence of social support on cognitive function and mortality. Perceived social support was assessed using the 14-item version of the FSozU, which is a standardised and validated questionnaire of social support. Cognition was tested by the neuropsychological test battery of the Structured Interview for the Diagnosis of Dementia (SIDAM). The influence of perceived support on cognitive change was analysed by multivariate ANCOVA; mortality was analysed by multivariate logistic and cox regression. Results Sample cognitive change (N = 1,869): Mean age was 82.4 years (SD 3.3) at the beginning of the observation period, 65.9% were female, mean cognition was 49 (SD 4.4) in the SIDAM. Over the observation period cognitive function declined in 47.2% by a mean of 3.4 points. Sample mortality (N = 2,367): Mean age was 82.5 years (SD 3.4), 65.7% were female and 185 patients died during the observation period. Perceived social support showed no longitudinal association with cognitive change (F = 2.235; p = 0.135) and mortality (p = 0.332; CI 0.829-1.743). Conclusions Perceived social support did not influence cognition and mortality over an 18 months observation period. However, previous studies using different operationalisations of social support and longer observation periods indicate that such an influence may exist. This influence is rather small and the result of complex interaction mechanisms between different components of social support; the emotional component seems to have no or only a limited effect. Further research is needed to describe the complex interactions between components of social support. Longer observation periods are necessary and standardised operationalisations of social support should be applied.
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- 2012
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36. Blood transfusion and venous thromboembolism trends and risk factors in primary and aseptic revision total hip and knee arthroplasties: A nationwide investigation of 736,061 cases.
- Author
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Jeschke E, Citak M, Halder AM, Heller KD, Niethard FU, Schräder P, Zacher J, Leicht H, Malzahn J, Günster C, and Gehrke T
- Subjects
- Blood Transfusion, Female, Humans, Pharmaceutical Preparations, Reoperation, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip adverse effects, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip methods, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee adverse effects, Stroke, Tranexamic Acid therapeutic use, Venous Thromboembolism epidemiology, Venous Thromboembolism etiology
- Abstract
Background: Over the last years, new transfusion guidelines and pharmaceuticals have been introduced in primary and revision total hip and knee arthroplasty (P-THA, P-TKA, R-THA, R-TKA). In the US, a substantial decrease in transfusions has been observed in recent years. Little data exists on the subject in Europe. In this context we aimed to analyze: (1) Is there also a significant decrease in blood transfusion for these procedures in Germany? (2) Which patient and hospital related factors are associated with the risk of blood transfusion? (3) Is there a trend in complications, especially venous thromboembolism and stroke events that can be linked to tranexamic acid use?, Hypothesis: There is a significant trend in decreasing blood transfusions in hip and knee arthroplasty., Methods: Using nationwide healthcare insurance data for inpatient hospital treatment, 736,061 cases treated between January 2011 and December 2017 were included (318,997 P-THAs, 43,780 R-THAs, 338,641 P-TKAs, 34,643 R-TKAs). Multivariable logistic regression was used to model the odds of transfusion as a function of the year of surgery. Adjusted odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) were calculated., Results: In each cohort the odds of transfusion decreased over time (2017 vs. 2011 (reference): P-THA: OR 0.42 (95%CI: 0.39-0.45), P-TKA: OR 0.41 (95%CI: 0.37-0.46), R-THA: OR 0.52 (95%CI: 0.47-0.58), R-TKA: OR 0.53 (95%CI: 0.46-0.61). Patient-related risk factors for blood transfusion included older age, female gender, lower Body Mass Index, comorbidities such as renal failure, cardiac arrhythmia, congestive heart failure, valvular disease, coagulopathy, depression, and antithrombotic medication prior to surgery. Venous thromboembolism or stroke events did not increase over the study period., Discussion: The incidence of blood transfusions in primary and revision TKA and THA decreased over the study period. This may be due to new transfusion guidelines and the introduction of novel pharmaceuticals such as tranexamic acid. A further improved patient blood management and a focus on vulnerable patient groups might lead to a further future reduction of transfusions, especially in R-THA., Level of Evidence: III; comparative observational study., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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37. Time to Surgery and Outcome in the Treatment of Proximal Femoral Fractures.
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Leicht H, Gaertner T, Günster C, Halder AM, Hoffmann R, Jeschke E, Malzahn J, Tempka A, and Zacher J
- Subjects
- Fracture Fixation, Internal, Humans, Length of Stay, Prostheses and Implants, Treatment Outcome, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip, Femoral Fractures surgery, Femoral Neck Fractures surgery
- Abstract
Background: It has not been conclusively established whether, or to what extent, the time to surgery affects mortality and the risk of complications after the surgical treatment of proximal femoral fractures., Methods: Data on 106 187 hospitalizations over the period 2015-2017 involving insurees of the German AOK health insurance company aged 20 and above were drawn from pseudonymized billing data and stratified in three subgroups: osteosynthesis for pertrochanteric fracture (PTF-OS: N = 52 358), osteosynthesis for femoral neck fracture (FNF-OS: N = 7970), and endoprosthesis for femoral neck fracture (FNF-EP: N = 45 859). Multivariate regression models were used to analyze the relation between preoperative in-hospital stay (time to surgery, TTS: 0 days [reference category], 1, 2, 3, 4-7 days) and mortality and general complications within 90 days, with risk adjustment for fracture site, operative method, age, sex, accompanying illnesses, and antithrombotic medication in the preceding year., Results: Mortality was significantly elevated only with PTF-OS, and only with a TTS of 2 days (odds ratio: 1.12 [95% confidence interval: (1.02; 1.23)]). General complications in relation to TTS were significantly elevated in the following situations: PTF-OS: 2 days: OR 1.24 [1.13; 1.37], 3 days: OR 1.33 [1.11; 1.60], 4-7 days: OR 1.47 [1.21; 1.78]; FNF-EP: 3 days: OR 1.21 [1.06; 1.37], 4-7 days: OR 1.42 [1.25; 1.62]; FNF-OS: 4-7 days: OR 1.86 [1.26; 2.73]., Conclusion: A prolonged time to surgery is associated with an elevated general complication risk depending on the site of the fracture and the type of surgical procedure used.
- Published
- 2021
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38. Surgical Reintervention Rates after Invasive Treatment for Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms due to Benign Prostatic Syndrome: A Comparative Study of More than 43,000 Patients with Long-Term Followup.
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Gilfrich C, May M, Fahlenbrach C, Günster C, Jeschke E, Popken G, Stolzenburg JU, Weissbach L, von Zastrow C, and Leicht H
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Laser Therapy methods, Male, Middle Aged, Organ Sparing Treatments methods, Prostatectomy methods, Reoperation, Transurethral Resection of Prostate methods, Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms etiology, Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms surgery, Prostatic Hyperplasia complications
- Abstract
Purpose: No large-scale comparison of the 4 most established surgical approaches for lower urinary tract symptoms due to benign prostate obstruction in terms of long-term efficacy is available. We compared photoselective vaporization, laser enucleation and open simple prostatectomy to transurethral resection with regard to 5-year surgical reintervention rates., Materials and Methods: A total of 43,041 male patients with lower urinary tract symptoms who underwent transurethral resection (34,526), photoselective vaporization (3,050), laser enucleation (1,814) or open simple prostatectomy (3,651) between 2011 and 2013 were identified in pseudonymized claims and core data of the German local health care funds and followed for 5 years. Surgical reinterventions for lower urinary tract symptoms, urethral stricture or bladder neck contracture were evaluated. Surgical approach was related to reintervention risk using the Kaplan-Meier method and Cox proportional hazards models., Results: A total of 5,050 first reinterventions were performed within 5 years of primary surgery (Kaplan-Meier survival without reintervention: 87.5%, 95% CI 87.2%-87.8%). Photoselective vaporization carried an increased hazard of reintervention (HR 1.31, 95% CI 1.17-1.46, p <0.001) relative to transurethral resection, open simple prostatectomy carried a lower hazard (HR 0.43, 95% CI 0.37-0.50, p <0.001) and laser enucleation of the prostate did not differ significantly (HR 0.84, 95% CI 0.66-1.08, p=0.2). This pattern was more pronounced regarding reintervention for lower urinary tract symptom recurrence (photoselective vaporization: HR 1.52, 95% CI 1.35-1.72, p <0.001; laser enucleation of the prostate: HR 0.84, 95% CI 0.63-1.14, p=0.3; open simply prostatectomy: HR 0.38, 95% CI 0.31-0.46, p <0.001 relative to transurethral resection)., Conclusions: Five-year reintervention rates of transurethral resection and laser enucleation did not differ significantly, while photoselective vaporization had a substantially higher rate. Open simple prostatectomy remains superior to transurethral resection with respect to long-term efficacy.
- Published
- 2021
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39. Low Hospital Volume Increases Re-Revision Rate Following Aseptic Revision Total Knee Arthroplasty: An Analysis of 23,644 Cases.
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Halder AM, Gehrke T, Günster C, Heller KD, Leicht H, Malzahn J, Niethard FU, Schräder P, Zacher J, and Jeschke E
- Subjects
- Elective Surgical Procedures, Hospitals, Humans, Reoperation, Treatment Outcome, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: Along with rising numbers of primary total knee arthroplasty (TKA), the number of revision total knee arthroplasties (R-TKAs) has been increasing. R-TKA is a complex procedure requiring special instruments, implants, and surgical skills. Therefore it is likely that hospitals with more R-TKAs have more experience with this type of surgery and therefore fewer complications. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the relationship between hospital volume and re-revision rate following R-TKA., Methods: Using nationwide healthcare insurance data for inpatient hospital treatment, 23,644 aseptic R-TKAs in 21,573 patients treated between January 2013 and December 2017 were analyzed. Outcomes were 90-day mortality, 1-year re-revision rate, and in-house adverse events. The effect of hospital volumes on outcomes were analyzed by means of multivariate logistic regression. Adjusted odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) were calculated., Results: Hospital volume had a significant effect on 1-year re-revision rate (≤12 R-TKA/a: OR 1.44, CI 1.20-1.72; 13-24 R-TKA/a: OR 1.43, CI 1.20-1.71; 25-52 R-TKA/a: OR 1.13, CI 0.94-1.35; ≥53 R-TKA/a: reference). Ninety-day mortality and major in-house adverse events decreased with increasing volume per year, but after risk adjustment this was not statistically significant., Conclusion: We found evidence of higher risk for re-revision surgery in hospitals with fewer than 25 R-TKA per year. It might contribute to improved patient care if complex elective procedures like R-TKA which require experience and a specific logistic background were performed in specialized centers., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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40. Low Hospital Volume Increases Revision Rate and Mortality Following Revision Total Hip Arthroplasty: An Analysis of 17,773 Cases.
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Jeschke E, Gehrke T, Günster C, Heller KD, Leicht H, Malzahn J, Niethard FU, Schräder P, Zacher J, and Halder AM
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip mortality, Databases, Factual, Elective Surgical Procedures adverse effects, Female, Germany epidemiology, Hospitalization, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Odds Ratio, Postoperative Complications etiology, Reoperation mortality, Risk Factors, Treatment Outcome, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip adverse effects, Hospitals, Low-Volume, Reoperation adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: With the number of primary total hip arthroplasty (THA), the amount of revision THA (R-THA) increases. R-THA is a complex procedure requiring special instruments, implants, and surgical skills. Therefore it is likely that hospitals performing a higher number of R-THAs have more experience with this type of surgery and therefore fewer complications. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the relationship between hospital volume and risk of postoperative complications following R-THA., Methods: Using nationwide healthcare insurance data for inpatient hospital treatment, 17,773 aseptic R-THAs in 16,376 patients treated between January 2014 and December 2016 were included. Outcomes were 90-day mortality, 1-year revision procedures, and in-house adverse events. The effect of hospital volume on outcome was analyzed by means of multivariate logistic regression. Adjusted odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were calculated., Results: Hospital volume had a significant effect on 90-day mortality (≤12 cases per year: OR 2.13, CI 1.53-2.96; 13-24: OR 1.79, CI 1.29-2.50; 25-52: OR 1.53, CI 1.11-2.10; ≥53: reference) and 1-year revision procedures (≤12: OR 1.26, CI 1.09-1.47; 13-24: OR 1.18, CI 1.02-1.37; 25-52: OR 1.03, CI 0.90-1.19; ≥53: reference). There was no significant effect on risk-adjusted major in-house adverse events., Conclusion: We found evidence of higher risk for revision surgery and mortality in hospitals with fewer than 25 and 53 R-THA per year, respectively. To improve patient care, complex elective procedures like R-THA which require experience and a specific logistic background should be performed in specialized centers., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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41. Synergetic Effect of Monomer Functional Group Coordination in Catalytic Insertion Polymerization.
- Author
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Leicht H, Göttker-Schnetmann I, and Mecking S
- Abstract
PhS- and PhNH-functionalized dienes are copolymerized efficiently with butadiene to stereoregular copolymers by [(mesitylene)Ni(allyl)][BAr
F 4 ] (Ni-1). Overall polymerization rates and comonomer incorporations depend strongly on the linker length between the diene moiety and functional group, in, e.g., PhS-(CH2 )x C(═CH2 )-CH═CH2 (PhS-x-BD, x = 3-7), in particular for certain linker lengths high comonomer reactivity ratios stand out. This effect is related to a favorable binding of the comonomer to the active site comprising coordination of its functional group, which significantly enhances comonomer incorporation in the growing polymer chain.- Published
- 2017
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42. National trends and differences in morbidity among surgical approaches for radical prostatectomy in Germany.
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Stolzenburg JU, Kyriazis I, Fahlenbrach C, Gilfrich C, Günster C, Jeschke E, Popken G, Weißbach L, von Zastrow C, and Leicht H
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Follow-Up Studies, Germany epidemiology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Morbidity trends, Prostatic Neoplasms mortality, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Survival Rate trends, Laparoscopy methods, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Prostatectomy methods, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery, Robotics methods
- Abstract
Objective: In this study, we document trends in radical prostatectomy (RP) employment in Germany during the period 2005-2012 and compare the morbidity of open (ORP), laparoscopic and robotic-assisted RP based on nationwide administrative data of Allgemeine Ortskrankenkassen (AOK) German local healthcare funds., Materials and Methods: Administrative claims data of all AOK patients subjected to RP during 2005-2012 (57,156 cases) were used to evaluate the employment of minimally invasive RP (MIRP) procedures, pelvic lymph node dissection (PLND) and nerve-sparing approaches during this period. In addition, data from the most recent three-year period of our dataset (2010-2012) were used to compare the morbidity among the different surgical approaches. Study end points comprised 30-day mortality, 30-day transfusion, 1-year reintervention and 30-day adverse events, as well as 1-year overall complications., Results: A 20 % reduction in RP utilization from 2007 to 2012 was documented. ORP remained the predominant RP approach in Germany. MIRP approaches carried a lower risk of 30-day transfusions, 1-year reinterventions and 1-year overall complications than ORP when adjusting for confounding factors. PLND was associated with an increased risk of complications, while age in the highest quintile and the presence of comorbidities were independent risk factors for morbidity and mortality. Lack of pathological data was the main limitation of the study., Conclusions: RP utilization in Germany is dropping, but the use of MIRP has risen steadily during the years 2005-2012, which is expected to have a positive impact on the morbidity of the operation.
- Published
- 2016
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43. Stereoselective Copolymerization of Butadiene and Functionalized 1,3-Dienes.
- Author
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Leicht H, Göttker-Schnetmann I, and Mecking S
- Abstract
[(Mesitylene)nickel(allyl)
+ ][BArF 4 - ] ( Ni-1 ) catalyzes the 1,4- cis selective copolymerization of isoprene and 1,3-butadiene with 15 (RO)3 Si-, R2 N-, RSO2 -, RSO2 NH-, and (RO)2 B-functionalized 1,3-dienes. Incorporation of the functionalized 1,3-diene occurs very efficiently with high comonomer conversions, as observed, for example, for copolymerizations of 1,3-butadiene with (EtO)3 Si(CH2 )3 C(═CH2 )CH═CH2 ( 1 ), PhS(O)2 (CH2 )3 C(═CH2 )-CH═CH2 ( 7 ), or (pinB)C(═CH2 )C(CH3 )═CH2 ( 15 ), while copolymerization rates vary from strongly to slightly decreased when compared to butadiene homopolymerizations.- Published
- 2016
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44. Direct Synthesis of Imidazolium-Functional Polyethylene by Insertion Copolymerization.
- Author
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Jian Z, Leicht H, and Mecking S
- Subjects
- Catalysis, Molecular Structure, Imidazoles chemistry, Palladium, Polyethylenes chemical synthesis, Polyethylenes chemistry
- Abstract
Cationic imidazolium-functionalized polyethylene is accessible by insertion copolymerization of ethylene and allyl imidazolium tetrafluoroborate (AIm-BF4 ) with phosphinesulfonato palladium(II) catalyst precursors. Imidazolium-substituted repeat units are incorporated into the main chain and the initiating saturated chain end of the linear polymers, rather than the terminating unsaturated chain end. The counterion of the allyl imidazolium monomer is decisive, with the chloride analogue (AIm-Cl) no polymerization is observed. Stoichiometric studies reveal the formation of an inactive chloride complex from the catalyst precursor. An effect of moderate densities (0.5 mol%) of ionic groups on the copolymers' physical properties is exemplified by an enhanced wetting by water., (© 2016 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)
- Published
- 2016
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45. The costs of dementia from the societal perspective: is care provided in the community really cheaper than nursing home care?
- Author
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König HH, Leicht H, Brettschneider C, Bachmann C, Bickel H, Fuchs A, Jessen F, Köhler M, Luppa M, Mösch E, Pentzek M, Werle J, Weyerer S, Wiese B, Scherer M, Maier W, and Riedel-Heller SG
- Subjects
- Activities of Daily Living, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Ambulatory Care economics, Ambulatory Care statistics & numerical data, Cross-Sectional Studies, Dementia epidemiology, Disability Evaluation, Female, Germany epidemiology, Home Care Services statistics & numerical data, Hospitalization economics, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Humans, Male, Regression Analysis, Severity of Illness Index, Caregivers economics, Dementia economics, Home Care Services economics, Nursing Homes economics
- Abstract
Objective: To compare the costs of care for community-dwelling dementia patients with the costs of care for dementia patients living in nursing homes from the societal perspective., Design: Cross-sectional bottom-up cost of illness study nested within the multicenter German AgeCoDe-cohort., Setting: Community and nursing homes., Participants: One hundred twenty-eight community-dwelling dementia patients and 48 dementia patients living in nursing homes., Intervention: None., Measurements: Utilization and costs of medical care and long term care, including formal and informal social and nursing care based on proxy interviews. Informal care was valued using the replacement cost method., Results: Unadjusted mean annual total costs including informal care were €29,930 ($43,997) for community-dwelling patients and €33,482 ($49,218) for patients living in nursing homes. However, multiple regression analysis controlling for age, sex, deficits in basic and instrumental activities of daily living and comorbidity showed that living in the community significantly increased total costs by €11,344 ($16,676; P < .01) compared with living in a nursing home, mainly due to higher costs of informal care (+€20,585; +$30,260; P < .001)., Conclusion: From the societal perspective care for dementia patients living in the community tends to cost more than care in nursing homes when functional impairment is controlled for., (Copyright © 2014 American Medical Directors Association, Inc. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2014
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46. Predictors of costs in dementia in a longitudinal perspective.
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Leicht H, König HH, Stuhldreher N, Bachmann C, Bickel H, Fuchs A, Heser K, Jessen F, Köhler M, Luppa M, Mösch E, Pentzek M, Riedel-Heller S, Scherer M, Werle J, Weyerer S, Wiese B, and Maier W
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- Activities of Daily Living, Cognition Disorders pathology, Comorbidity, Dementia pathology, Germany, Humans, Regression Analysis, Retrospective Studies, Surveys and Questionnaires, Dementia economics, Health Resources economics
- Abstract
Objective: To analyse predictors of costs in dementia from a societal perspective in a longitudinal setting., Method: Healthcare resource use and costs were assessed retrospectively using a questionnaire in four waves at 6-month intervals in a sample of dementia patients (N = 175). Sociodemographic data, dementia severity and comorbidity at baseline, cognitive impairment and impairment in basic and instrumental activities of daily living were also recorded. Linear mixed regression models with random intercepts for individuals were used to analyse predictors of total and sector-specific costs., Results: Impairment in activities of daily living significantly predicted total costs in dementia patients, with associations between basic activities of daily living and formal care costs on the one and instrumental activities of daily living and informal care costs on the other hand. Nursing home residence was associated with lower total costs than residence in the community. There was no effect of cognition on total or sector-specific costs., Conclusion: Cognitive deficits in dementia are associated with costs only via their effect on the patients' capacity for activities of daily living. Transition into a nursing home may reduce total costs from a societal perspective, owing to the fact that a high amount of informal care required by severely demented patients prior to transition into a nursing home may cause higher costs than inpatient nursing care.
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- 2013
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47. Relative impact of multimorbid chronic conditions on health-related quality of life--results from the MultiCare Cohort Study.
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Brettschneider C, Leicht H, Bickel H, Dahlhaus A, Fuchs A, Gensichen J, Maier W, Riedel-Heller S, Schäfer I, Schön G, Weyerer S, Wiese B, van den Bussche H, Scherer M, and König HH
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cohort Studies, Depression physiopathology, Female, Humans, Male, Obesity physiopathology, Parkinson Disease physiopathology, Prospective Studies, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Background: Multimorbidity has a negative impact on health-related quality of life (HRQL). Previous studies included only a limited number of conditions. In this study, we analyse the impact of a large number of conditions on HRQL in multimorbid patients without preselecting particular diseases. We also explore the effects of these conditions on the specific dimensions of HRQL., Materials and Methods: This analysis is based on a multicenter, prospective cohort study of 3189 multimorbid primary care patients aged 65 to 85. The impact of 45 conditions on HRQL was analysed. The severity of the conditions was rated. The EQ-5D, consisting of 5 dimensions and a visual-analogue-scale (EQ VAS), was employed. Data were analysed using multiple ordinary least squares and multiple logistic regressions. Multimorbidity measured by a weighted count score was significantly associated with lower overall HRQL (EQ VAS), b = -1.02 (SE: 0.06). Parkinson's disease had the most pronounced negative effect on overall HRQL (EQ VAS), b = -12.29 (SE: 2.18), followed by rheumatism, depression, and obesity. With regard to the individual EQ-5D dimensions, depression (OR = 1.39 to 3.3) and obesity (OR = 1.44 to 1.95) affected all five dimensions of the EQ-5D negatively except for the dimension anxiety/depression. Obesity had a positive effect on this dimension, OR = 0.78 (SE: 0.07). The dimensions "self-care", OR = 4.52 (SE: 1.37) and "usual activities", OR = 3.59 (SE: 1.0), were most strongly affected by Parkinson's disease. As a limitation our sample may only represent patients with at most moderate disease severity., Conclusions: The overall HRQL of multimorbid patients decreases with an increasing count and severity of conditions. Parkinson's disease, depression and obesity have the strongest impact on HRQL. Further studies should address the impact of disease combinations which require very large sample sizes as well as advanced statistical methods.
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- 2013
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48. Effects of multiple chronic conditions on health care costs: an analysis based on an advanced tree-based regression model.
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König HH, Leicht H, Bickel H, Fuchs A, Gensichen J, Maier W, Mergenthal K, Riedel-Heller S, Schäfer I, Schön G, Weyerer S, Wiese B, Bussche Hv, Scherer M, and Eckardt M
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Algorithms, Ambulatory Care economics, Chronic Disease epidemiology, Comorbidity, Drug Costs, Female, Germany epidemiology, Home Care Services economics, Hospitalization economics, Humans, Male, Prospective Studies, Regression Analysis, Chronic Disease economics, Health Care Costs statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: To analyze the impact of multimorbidity (MM) on health care costs taking into account data heterogeneity., Methods: Data come from a multicenter prospective cohort study of 1,050 randomly selected primary care patients aged 65 to 85 years suffering from MM in Germany. MM was defined as co-occurrence of ≥3 conditions from a list of 29 chronic diseases. A conditional inference tree (CTREE) algorithm was used to detect the underlying structure and most influential variables on costs of inpatient care, outpatient care, medications as well as formal and informal nursing care., Results: Irrespective of the number and combination of co-morbidities, a limited number of factors influential on costs were detected. Parkinson's disease (PD) and cardiac insufficiency (CI) were the most influential variables for total costs. Compared to patients not suffering from any of the two conditions, PD increases predicted mean total costs 3.5-fold to approximately € 11,000 per 6 months, and CI two-fold to approximately € 6,100. The high total costs of PD are largely due to costs of nursing care. Costs of inpatient care were significantly influenced by cerebral ischemia/chronic stroke, whereas medication costs were associated with COPD, insomnia, PD and Diabetes. Except for costs of nursing care, socio-demographic variables did not significantly influence costs., Conclusions: Irrespective of any combination and number of co-occurring diseases, PD and CI appear to be most influential on total health care costs in elderly patients with MM, and only a limited number of factors significantly influenced cost., Trial Registration: Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN89818205.
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- 2013
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49. Incorporation of vinyl chloride in insertion polymerization.
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Leicht H, Göttker-Schnetmann I, and Mecking S
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- 2013
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50. Direct costs associated with depressive symptoms in late life: a 4.5-year prospective study.
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Luppa M, König HH, Heider D, Leicht H, Motzek T, Schomerus G, and Riedel-Heller SG
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Antidepressive Agents therapeutic use, Demography, Depression diagnosis, Depression epidemiology, Depression therapy, Female, Germany epidemiology, Home Care Services statistics & numerical data, Humans, Linear Models, Male, Mental Health Services statistics & numerical data, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Socioeconomic Factors, Antidepressive Agents economics, Depression economics, Direct Service Costs statistics & numerical data, Drug Costs statistics & numerical data, Home Care Services economics, Hospital Costs statistics & numerical data, Mental Health Services economics
- Abstract
Background: Depression in old age is common. Only few studies examined the association of depressive symptoms and direct costs in the elderly in a cross-sectional way. This study aims to investigate prospectively health service use and direct costs over a course of 4.5 years considering also different courses of depressive symptomatology., Methods: 305 primary care patients aged 75+ were assessed face-to-face regarding depressive symptoms (Geriatric Depression Scale), and service use and costs at baseline and 4.5 years later. Resource utilization was monetarily valued using 2004/2005 prices. The association of baseline factors and direct costs after 4.5 years was analyzed by multivariate linear regression., Results: Mean annual direct costs of depressed individuals at baseline and follow-up were almost one-third higher than of non-depressed, and highest for individuals with chronic depressive symptoms. Most relevant cost drivers were costs for inpatient care, pharmaceuticals, and home care. Costs for home care increased at most in individuals with chronic depressive symptoms. Baseline variables that were associated with direct costs after 4.5 years were number of medications as a measure of comorbidity, age, gender, and depressive symptoms., Conclusions: Presence and persistence of depressive symptoms in old age seems to be associated with future direct costs even after adjustment for comorbidity. The findings deign a look to the potential economic consequences of depressive symptoms in the elderly for the healthcare system in the future.
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- 2013
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