695 results on '"Lindgren E"'
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2. Characterization of surface asperities to understand its effect on fatigue life of electron beam powder bed fusion manufactured Ti-6Al-4 V
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Thalavai Pandian, K., Lindgren, E., Roychowdhury, S., Neikter, M., Hansson, T., and Pederson, R.
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- 2024
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3. Systematic interpolatory ansatz for one-dimensional polaron systems
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Lindgren, E. J., Barfknecht, R. E., and Zinner, N. T.
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Condensed Matter - Quantum Gases - Abstract
We explore a new variational principle for studying one-dimensional quantum systems in a trapping potential. We focus on the Fermi polaron problem, where a single distinguishable impurity interacts through a contact potential with a background of identical fermions. We can accurately describe this system at arbitrary finite repulsion by constructing a truncated basis containing states at both the limits of zero and infinite repulsion. We show how to construct this basis and how to obtain energies, density matrices and correlation functions, and provide results both for a harmonic well and a double well for various particle numbers. The results are compared both with matrix product states methods and with the analytical result for two particles in a harmonic well., Comment: 47 pages, 13 figures
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- 2019
4. Magnetism and transport in transparent high-mobility BaSnO3 films doped with La, Pr, Nd, and Gd
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Alaan, US, Wong, FJ, Ditto, JJ, Robertson, AW, Lindgren, E, Prakash, A, Haugstad, G, Shafer, P, N'Diaye, AT, Johnson, D, Arenholz, E, Jalan, B, Browning, ND, and Suzuki, Y
- Abstract
We have explored the effect of magnetic rare-earth dopants substitutionally incorporated on the Ba sites of BaSnO3 in terms of electronic transport, magnetism, and optical properties. We show that for Ba0.92R0.08SnO3 thin films (where R=La,Pr,Nd,Gd), there is a linear increase of mobility with carrier concentration across all doping schemes. La-doped films have the highest mobilities, followed by Pr- and Nd-doped films. Gd-doped samples have the largest ionic size mismatch with the Ba site and correspondingly the lowest carrier concentrations and electron mobilities. However, crystallinity does not appear to be a strong predictor of transport phenomena; our results suggest that point defects more than grain boundaries are key ingredients in tuning the conduction of BaSnO3 films grown by pulsed laser deposition. Pronounced, nonhysteretic x-ray magnetic dichroism signals are observed for Pr-, Nd-, and Gd-doped samples, indicating paramagnetism. Finally, we probe the optical constants for each of the BaSnO3 doping schemes and note that there is little change in the transmittance across all samples. Together these results shed light on conduction mechanisms in BaSnO3 doped with rare-earth cations.
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- 2019
5. An interpolatory ansatz captures the physics of one-dimensional confined Fermi systems
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Andersen, M. E. S., Dehkharghani, A. S., Volosniev, A. G., Lindgren, E. J., and Zinner, N. T.
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Quantum Physics ,Condensed Matter - Quantum Gases ,Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons - Abstract
Interacting one-dimensional quantum systems play a pivotal role in physics. Exact solutions can be obtained for the homogeneous case using the Bethe ansatz and bosonisation techniques. However, these approaches are not applicable when external confinement is present. Recent theoretical advances beyond the Bethe ansatz and bosonisation allow us to predict the behaviour of one-dimensional confined systems with strong short-range interactions, and new experiments with cold atomic Fermi gases have already confirmed these theories. Here we demonstrate that a simple linear combination of the strongly interacting solution with the well-known solution in the limit of vanishing interactions provides a simple and accurate description of the system for all values of the interaction strength. This indicates that one can indeed capture the physics of confined one-dimensional systems by knowledge of the limits using wave functions that are much easier to handle than the output of typical numerical approaches. We demonstrate our scheme for experimentally relevant systems with up to six particles. Moreover, we show that our method works also in the case of mixed systems of particles with different masses. This is an important feature because these systems are known to be non-integrable and thus not solvable by the Bethe ansatz technique., Comment: 22 pages including methods and supplementary materials, 11 figures, title slightly changed
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- 2015
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6. Black hole formation from point-like particles in three-dimensional anti-de Sitter space
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Lindgren, E. J.
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General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology ,High Energy Physics - Theory - Abstract
We study collisions of many point-like particles in three-dimensional anti-de Sitter space, generalizing the known result with two particles. We show how to construct exact solutions corresponding to the formation of either a black hole or a conical singularity from the collision of an arbitrary number of massless particles falling in radially from the boundary. We find that when going away from the case of equal energies and discrete rotational symmetry, this is not a trivial generalization of the two-particle case, but requires that the excised wedges corresponding to the particles must be chosen in a very precise way for a consistent solution. We also explicitly take the limit when the number of particles goes to infinity and obtain thin shell solutions that in general break rotational invariance, corresponding to an instantaneous and inhomogeneous perturbation at the boundary. We also compute the stress-energy tensor of the shell using the junction formalism for null shells and obtain agreement with the point particle picture., Comment: 42 pages, 9 figures; v2: fixed some typos
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- 2015
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7. Immigration and access to dementia diagnostics and treatment : A nationwide study in Sweden
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Hoang, M. T., Kåreholt, Ingemar, Lindgren, E., von Koch, L., Xu, H., Tan, E. C. K., Johnell, K., Nägga, K., Eriksdotter, M., Garcia-Ptacek, S., Hoang, M. T., Kåreholt, Ingemar, Lindgren, E., von Koch, L., Xu, H., Tan, E. C. K., Johnell, K., Nägga, K., Eriksdotter, M., and Garcia-Ptacek, S.
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- 2024
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8. Holographic thermalization in a top-down confining model
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Craps, B., Lindgren, E. J., and Taliotis, A.
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High Energy Physics - Theory ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology - Abstract
It is interesting to ask how a confinement scale affects the thermalization of strongly coupled gauge theories with gravity duals. We study this question for the AdS soliton model, which underlies top-down holographic models for Yang-Mills theory and QCD. Injecting energy via a homogeneous massless scalar source that is briefly turned on, our fully backreacted numerical analysis finds two regimes. Either a black brane forms, possibly after one or more bounces, after which the pressure components relax according to the lowest quasinormal mode. Or the scalar shell keeps scattering, in which case the pressure components oscillate and undergo modulation on time scales independent of the (small) shell amplitude. We show analytically that the scattering shell cannot relax to a homogeneous equilibrium state, and explain the modulation as due to a near-resonance between a normal mode frequency of the metric and the frequency with which the scalar shell oscillates., Comment: 33 pages, 12 figures; v2: Figure and further discussion added in Section 6
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- 2015
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9. Holographic Hall conductivities from dyonic backgrounds
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Lindgren, E. J., Papadimitriou, Ioannis, Taliotis, Anastasios, and Vanhoof, Joris
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High Energy Physics - Theory ,Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons - Abstract
We develop a general framework for computing the holographic 2-point functions and the corresponding conductivities in asymptotically locally AdS backgrounds with an electric charge density, a constant magentic field, and possibly non-trivial scalar profiles, for a broad class of Einstein-Maxwell-Axion-Dilaton theories, including certain Chern-Simons terms. Holographic renormalization is carried out for any theory in this class and the computation of the renormalized AC conductivities at zero spatial momentum is reduced to solving a single decoupled first order Riccati equation. Moreover, we develop a first order fake supergravity formulalism for dyonic renormalization group flows in four dimensions, allowing us to construct analytically infinite families of such backgrounds by specifying a superpotential at will. These RG flows interpolate between AdS$_4$ in the UV and a hyperscaling violating Lifshitz geometry in the IR with exponents $1
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- 2015
10. Quantum magnetism in strongly interacting one-dimensional spinor Bose systems
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Dehkharghani, A. S., Volosniev, A. G., Lindgren, E. J., Rotureau, J., Forssén, C., Fedorov, D. V., Jensen, A. S., and Zinner, N. T.
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Condensed Matter - Quantum Gases ,Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons ,Mathematical Physics ,Quantum Physics - Abstract
Strongly interacting one-dimensional quantum systems often behave in a manner that is distinctly different from their higher-dimensional counterparts. When a particle attempts to move in a one-dimensional environment it will unavoidably have to interact and 'push' other particles in order to execute a pattern of motion, irrespective of whether the particles are fermions or bosons. A present frontier in both theory and experiment are mixed systems of different species and/or particles with multiple internal degrees of freedom. Here we consider trapped two-component bosons with short-range inter-species interactions much larger than their intra-species interactions and show that they have novel energetic and magnetic properties. In the strongly interacting regime, these systems have energies that are fractions of the basic harmonic oscillator trap quantum and have spatially separated ground states with manifestly ferromagnetic wave functions. Furthermore, we predict excited states that have perfect antiferromagnetic ordering. This holds for both balanced and imbalanced systems, and we show that it is a generic feature as one crosses from few- to many-body systems., Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures
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- 2014
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11. Gravitational infall in the hard wall model
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Craps, B., Lindgren, E. J., Taliotis, A., Vanhoof, J., and Zhang, H.
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High Energy Physics - Theory ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
An infalling shell in the hard wall model provides a simple holographic model for energy injection in a confining gauge theory. Depending on its parameters, a scalar shell either collapses into a large black brane, or scatters between the hard wall and the anti-de Sitter boundary. In the scattering regime, we find numerical solutions that keep oscillating for as long as we have followed their evolution, and we provide an analytic argument that shows that a black brane can never be formed. This provides examples of states in infinite-volume field theory that never thermalize. We find that the field theory expectation value of a scalar operator keeps oscillating, with an amplitude that undergoes modulation., Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures
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- 2014
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12. Fermionization of two-component few-fermion systems in a one-dimensional harmonic trap
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Lindgren, E. J., Rotureau, J., Forssén, C., Volosniev, A. G., and Zinner, N. T.
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Condensed Matter - Quantum Gases ,Nuclear Theory ,Quantum Physics - Abstract
The nature of strongly interacting Fermi gases and magnetism is one of the most important and studied topics in condensed-matter physics. Still, there are many open questions. A central issue is under what circumstances strong short-range repulsive interactions are enough to drive magnetic correlations. Recent progress in the field of cold atomic gases allows to address this question in very clean systems where both particle numbers, interactions and dimensionality can be tuned. Here we study fermionic few-body systems in a one dimensional harmonic trap using a new rapidly converging effective-interaction technique, plus a novel analytical approach. This allows us to calculate the properties of a single spin-down atom interacting with a number of spin-up particles, a case of much recent experimental interest. Our findings indicate that, in the strongly interacting limit, spin-up and spin-down particles want to separate in the trap, which we interpret as a microscopic precursor of one-dimensional ferromagnetism in imbalanced systems. Our predictions are directly addressable in current experiments on ultracold atomic few-body systems., Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, published version including two appendices on our new numerical and analytical approach
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- 2013
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13. The Similarity Renormalization Group for Three-Body Interactions in One Dimension
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Åkerlund, O., Lindgren, E. J., Bergsten, J., Grevholm, B., Lerner, P., Linscott, R., Forssén, C., and Platter, L.
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Nuclear Theory - Abstract
We report on recent progress of the implementation of the similarity renormalization group (SRG) for three-body interactions in a one-dimensional, bosonic model system using the plane wave basis. We discuss our implementation of the flow equations and show results that confirm that results in the three-body sector remain unchanged by the transformation of the Hamiltonian. We also show how the SRG transformation decouples low- from high-momentum nodes in the three-body sector and therefore simplifies the numerical calculation of observables., Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, svjour style
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- 2011
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14. HEALTH CONSEQUENCES AND REMEDIATION OF MOLD EXPOSURE FOLLOWING NATURAL DISASTERS: A SCOPING REVIEW
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Hardeman, A., primary, Hidalgo, A., additional, Lindgren, E., additional, and Carlson, J., additional
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- 2023
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15. Cancer and risk of cerebral venous thrombosis: a case–control study
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Silvis, S.M., Hiltunen, S., Lindgren, E., Jood, K., Zuurbier, S.M., Middeldorp, S., Putaala, J., Cannegieter, S.C., Tatlisumak, T., and Coutinho, J.M.
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- 2018
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16. Association of genetic ancestry with striatal dopamine D2/D3 receptor availability
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Wiers, C E, Towb, P C, Hodgkinson, C A, Shen, P-H, Freeman, C, Miller, G, Lindgren, E, Shokri-Kojori, E, Demiral, Ş B, Kim, S W, Tomasi, D, Sun, H, Wang, G-J, Goldman, D, and Volkow, N D
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- 2018
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17. Decompressive surgery in cerebral venous sinus thrombosis due to vaccine-induced immune thrombotic thrombocytopenia.
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Krzywicka, K., Aguiar de Sousa, D., Cordonnier, C., Bode, F.J., Field, T.S., Michalski, D., Pelz, J., Skjelland, M., Wiedmann, M., Zimmermann, J., Wittstock, M., Zanotti, B., Ciccone, A., Bandettini di Poggio, M., Borhani-Haghighi, A., Chatterton, S., Aujayeb, A., Devroye, A., Dizonno, V., Geeraerts, T., Giammello, F., Günther, A., Ichaporia, N.R., Kleinig, T., Kristoffersen, E.S., Lemmens, R., Maistre, E. De, Mirzaasgari, Z., Payen, J.F., Putaala, J., Petruzzellis, M., Raposo, N., Sadeghi-Hokmabadi, E., Schoenenberger, S., Umaiorubahan, M., Sylaja, P.N., Munckhof, A. van de, Sanchez van Kammen, M., Lindgren, E., Jood, K., Scutelnic, A., Heldner, M.R., Poli, S., Kruip, M.J.H.A., Arauz, A., Conforto, A.B., Aaron, S., Middeldorp, S., Tatlisumak, T., Arnold, M., Coutinho, J.M., Ferro, J.M., Krzywicka, K., Aguiar de Sousa, D., Cordonnier, C., Bode, F.J., Field, T.S., Michalski, D., Pelz, J., Skjelland, M., Wiedmann, M., Zimmermann, J., Wittstock, M., Zanotti, B., Ciccone, A., Bandettini di Poggio, M., Borhani-Haghighi, A., Chatterton, S., Aujayeb, A., Devroye, A., Dizonno, V., Geeraerts, T., Giammello, F., Günther, A., Ichaporia, N.R., Kleinig, T., Kristoffersen, E.S., Lemmens, R., Maistre, E. De, Mirzaasgari, Z., Payen, J.F., Putaala, J., Petruzzellis, M., Raposo, N., Sadeghi-Hokmabadi, E., Schoenenberger, S., Umaiorubahan, M., Sylaja, P.N., Munckhof, A. van de, Sanchez van Kammen, M., Lindgren, E., Jood, K., Scutelnic, A., Heldner, M.R., Poli, S., Kruip, M.J.H.A., Arauz, A., Conforto, A.B., Aaron, S., Middeldorp, S., Tatlisumak, T., Arnold, M., Coutinho, J.M., and Ferro, J.M.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext, BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Cerebral venous sinus thrombosis due to vaccine-induced immune thrombotic thrombocytopenia (CVST-VITT) is an adverse drug reaction occurring after severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) vaccination. CVST-VITT patients often present with large intracerebral haemorrhages and a high proportion undergoes decompressive surgery. Clinical characteristics, therapeutic management and outcomes of CVST-VITT patients who underwent decompressive surgery are described and predictors of in-hospital mortality in these patients are explored. METHODS: Data from an ongoing international registry of patients who developed CVST within 28 days of SARS-CoV-2 vaccination, reported between 29 March 2021 and 10 May 2022, were used. Definite, probable and possible VITT cases, as defined by Pavord et al. (N Engl J Med 2021; 385: 1680-1689), were included. RESULTS: Decompressive surgery was performed in 34/128 (27%) patients with CVST-VITT. In-hospital mortality was 22/34 (65%) in the surgical and 27/94 (29%) in the non-surgical group (p < 0.001). In all surgical cases, the cause of death was brain herniation. The highest mortality rates were found amongst patients with preoperative coma (17/18, 94% vs. 4/14, 29% in the non-comatose; p < 0.001) and bilaterally absent pupillary reflexes (7/7, 100% vs. 6/9, 67% with unilaterally reactive pupil, and 4/11, 36% with bilaterally reactive pupils; p = 0.023). Postoperative imaging revealed worsening of index haemorrhagic lesion in 19 (70%) patients and new haemorrhagic lesions in 16 (59%) patients. At a median follow-up of 6 months, 8/10 of surgical CVST-VITT who survived admission were functionally independent. CONCLUSIONS: Almost two-thirds of surgical CVST-VITT patients died during hospital admission. Preoperative coma and bilateral absence of pupillary responses were associated with higher mortality rates. Survivors often achieved functional independence.
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- 2023
18. Sex differences in cerebral venous sinus thrombosis after adenoviral vaccination against COVID-19.
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Scutelnic, A., Munckhof, A. van de, Krzywicka, K., Kammen, M.S. van, Lindgren, E., Cordonnier, C., Kleinig, T.J., Field, T.S., Poli, S., Lemmens, R., Middeldorp, S., Aaron, S., Borhani-Haghighi, A., Arauz, A., Kremer Hovinga, J.A., Günther, A., Putaala, J., Wasay, M., Conforto, A.B., Sousa, D.A. de, Jood, K., Tatlisumak, T., Ferro, J.M., Coutinho, J.M., Arnold, M., Heldner, M.R., Scutelnic, A., Munckhof, A. van de, Krzywicka, K., Kammen, M.S. van, Lindgren, E., Cordonnier, C., Kleinig, T.J., Field, T.S., Poli, S., Lemmens, R., Middeldorp, S., Aaron, S., Borhani-Haghighi, A., Arauz, A., Kremer Hovinga, J.A., Günther, A., Putaala, J., Wasay, M., Conforto, A.B., Sousa, D.A. de, Jood, K., Tatlisumak, T., Ferro, J.M., Coutinho, J.M., Arnold, M., and Heldner, M.R.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext, INTRODUCTION: Cerebral venous sinus thrombosis associated with vaccine-induced immune thrombotic thrombocytopenia (CVST-VITT) is a severe disease with high mortality. There are few data on sex differences in CVST-VITT. The aim of our study was to investigate the differences in presentation, treatment, clinical course, complications, and outcome of CVST-VITT between women and men. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We used data from an ongoing international registry on CVST-VITT. VITT was diagnosed according to the Pavord criteria. We compared the characteristics of CVST-VITT in women and men. RESULTS: Of 133 patients with possible, probable, or definite CVST-VITT, 102 (77%) were women. Women were slightly younger [median age 42 (IQR 28-54) vs 45 (28-56)], presented more often with coma (26% vs 10%) and had a lower platelet count at presentation [median (IQR) 50x10(9)/L (28-79) vs 68 (30-125)] than men. The nadir platelet count was lower in women [median (IQR) 34 (19-62) vs 53 (20-92)]. More women received endovascular treatment than men (15% vs 6%). Rates of treatment with intravenous immunoglobulins were similar (63% vs 66%), as were new venous thromboembolic events (14% vs 14%) and major bleeding complications (30% vs 20%). Rates of good functional outcome (modified Rankin Scale 0-2, 42% vs 45%) and in-hospital death (39% vs 41%) did not differ. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS: Three quarters of CVST-VITT patients in this study were women. Women were more severely affected at presentation, but clinical course and outcome did not differ between women and men. VITT-specific treatments were overall similar, but more women received endovascular treatment., 01 december 2023
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- 2023
19. CPR-related injuries after manual or mechanical chest compressions with the LUCAS™ device: A multicentre study of victims after unsuccessful resuscitation
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Smekal, D., Lindgren, E., Sandler, H., Johansson, J., and Rubertsson, S.
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- 2014
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20. 380 Engaging Community Stakeholders in Curricular Development: A Patient-Centered Approach to Teaching Harm Reduction to Medical Students
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Ferreira, J., primary, Lindgren, E., additional, Fockele, C., additional, Jauregui, J., additional, and Shandro, J., additional
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- 2022
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21. Equity in dementia care focusing on immigrants in Sweden: a nationwide register-based study: Emma Lindgren
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Lindgren, E, Sörenson, J, Nägga, K, and Wattmo, C
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- 2017
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22. Vocational outcome in cerebral venous thrombosis: Long‐term follow‐up study
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Lindgren, E., Jood, K., and Tatlisumak, T.
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- 2018
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23. Age-Stratified Risk of Cerebral Venous Sinus Thrombosis After SARS-CoV-2 Vaccination
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Krzywicka, K., Munckhof, A. van de, Kammen, Mayte Sanchez van, Heldner, M.R., Jood, K., Lindgren, E., Middeldorp, S., Coutinho, J.M., Sousa, Diana Aguiar de, Krzywicka, K., Munckhof, A. van de, Kammen, Mayte Sanchez van, Heldner, M.R., Jood, K., Lindgren, E., Middeldorp, S., Coutinho, J.M., and Sousa, Diana Aguiar de
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Item does not contain fulltext
- Published
- 2022
24. Declining mortality of cerebral venous sinus thrombosis with thrombocytopenia after SARS-CoV-2 vaccination
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Munckhof, A. van de, Krzywicka, K., Sousa, D. Aguiar de, Kammen, M. Sánchez van, Heldner, M.R., Jood, K., Lindgren, E., Tatlisumak, T., Putaala, J., Hovinga, J.A. Kremer, Middeldorp, S., Levi, M., Arnold, M., Ferro, J.M., Coutinho, J.M., Munckhof, A. van de, Krzywicka, K., Sousa, D. Aguiar de, Kammen, M. Sánchez van, Heldner, M.R., Jood, K., Lindgren, E., Tatlisumak, T., Putaala, J., Hovinga, J.A. Kremer, Middeldorp, S., Levi, M., Arnold, M., Ferro, J.M., and Coutinho, J.M.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext, BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: High mortality rates have been reported in patients with cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST) due to vaccine-induced immune thrombotic thrombocytopenia (VITT) after vaccination with adenoviral vector SARS-CoV-2 vaccines. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether the mortality of patients with CVST-VITT has decreased over time. METHODS: The EudraVigilance database of the European Medicines Agency was used to identify cases of CVST with concomitant thrombocytopenia occurring within 28 days of SARS-CoV-2 vaccination. Vaccines were grouped based on vaccine type (adenoviral or mRNA). Cases with CVST onset until 28 March were compared to cases after 28 March 2021, which was the day when the first scientific paper on VITT was published. RESULTS: In total, 270 cases of CVST with thrombocytopenia were identified, of which 266 (99%) occurred after adenoviral vector SARS-CoV-2 vaccination (ChAdOx1 nCoV-19, n = 243; Ad26.COV2.S, n = 23). The reported mortality amongst adenoviral cases with onset up to 28 March 2021 was 47/99 (47%, 95% confidence interval 37%-58%) compared to 36/167 (22%, 95% confidence interval 16%-29%) in cases with onset after 28 March (p < 0.001). None of the four cases of CVST with thrombocytopenia occurring after mRNA vaccination died. CONCLUSION: The reported mortality of CVST with thrombocytopenia after vaccination with adenoviral vector-based SARS-CoV-2 vaccines has significantly decreased over time, which may indicate a beneficial effect of earlier recognition and/or improved treatment on outcome after VITT.
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- 2022
25. Outcomes of Cerebral Venous Thrombosis due to Vaccine-Induced Immune Thrombotic Thrombocytopenia After the Acute Phase
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Munckhof, A. van de, Lindgren, E., Kleinig, T.J., Field, T.S., Cordonnier, C., Krzywicka, K., Poli, S., Sanchez van Kammen, M., Borhani-Haghighi, A., Lemmens, R., Scutelnic, A., Ciccone, A., Gattringer, T., Wittstock, M., Dizonno, V., Devroye, A., Elkady, A., Günther, A., Cervera, A., Mengel, A., Chew, B.L.A., Buck, B., Zanferrari, C., Garcia-Esperon, C., Jacobi, C., Soriano, C., Michalski, D., Zamani, Z., Blacquiere, D., Johansson, E., Cuadrado-Godia, E., Vuillier, F., Bode, F.J., Caparros, F., Maier, F., Tsivgoulis, G., Katzberg, H.D., Duan, J., Burrow, J., Pelz, J., Mbroh, J., Oen, J., Schouten, J., Zimmermann, J., Ng, K., Garambois, K., Petruzzellis, M., Dias, M., Ghiasian, M., Romoli, M., Miranda, M., Wronski, M., Skjelland, M., Almasi-Dooghaee, M., Cuisenier, P., Murphy, S., Timsit, S., Coutts, S.B., Schönenberger, S., Nagel, S., Hiltunen, S., Chatterton, S., Cox, T., Bartsch, T., Shaygannejad, V., Mirzaasgari, Z., Middeldorp, S., Levi, M.M., Kremer Hovinga, J.A., Jood, K., Tatlisumak, T., Putaala, J., Heldner, M.R., Arnold, M., Aguiar de Sousa, D., Ferro, J.M., Coutinho, J.M., Munckhof, A. van de, Lindgren, E., Kleinig, T.J., Field, T.S., Cordonnier, C., Krzywicka, K., Poli, S., Sanchez van Kammen, M., Borhani-Haghighi, A., Lemmens, R., Scutelnic, A., Ciccone, A., Gattringer, T., Wittstock, M., Dizonno, V., Devroye, A., Elkady, A., Günther, A., Cervera, A., Mengel, A., Chew, B.L.A., Buck, B., Zanferrari, C., Garcia-Esperon, C., Jacobi, C., Soriano, C., Michalski, D., Zamani, Z., Blacquiere, D., Johansson, E., Cuadrado-Godia, E., Vuillier, F., Bode, F.J., Caparros, F., Maier, F., Tsivgoulis, G., Katzberg, H.D., Duan, J., Burrow, J., Pelz, J., Mbroh, J., Oen, J., Schouten, J., Zimmermann, J., Ng, K., Garambois, K., Petruzzellis, M., Dias, M., Ghiasian, M., Romoli, M., Miranda, M., Wronski, M., Skjelland, M., Almasi-Dooghaee, M., Cuisenier, P., Murphy, S., Timsit, S., Coutts, S.B., Schönenberger, S., Nagel, S., Hiltunen, S., Chatterton, S., Cox, T., Bartsch, T., Shaygannejad, V., Mirzaasgari, Z., Middeldorp, S., Levi, M.M., Kremer Hovinga, J.A., Jood, K., Tatlisumak, T., Putaala, J., Heldner, M.R., Arnold, M., Aguiar de Sousa, D., Ferro, J.M., and Coutinho, J.M.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext, BACKGROUND: Cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT) due to vaccine-induced immune thrombotic thrombocytopenia (VITT) is a severe condition, with high in-hospital mortality rates. Here, we report clinical outcomes of patients with CVT-VITT after SARS-CoV-2 (severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2) vaccination who survived initial hospitalization. METHODS: We used data from an international registry of patients who developed CVT within 28 days of SARS-CoV-2 vaccination, collected until February 10, 2022. VITT diagnosis was classified based on the Pavord criteria. Outcomes were mortality, functional independence (modified Rankin Scale score 0-2), VITT relapse, new thrombosis, and bleeding events (all after discharge from initial hospitalization). RESULTS: Of 107 CVT-VITT cases, 43 (40%) died during initial hospitalization. Of the remaining 64 patients, follow-up data were available for 60 (94%) patients (37 definite VITT, 9 probable VITT, and 14 possible VITT). Median age was 40 years and 45/60 (75%) patients were women. Median follow-up time was 150 days (interquartile range, 94-194). Two patients died during follow-up (3% [95% CI, 1%-11%). Functional independence was achieved by 53/60 (88% [95% CI, 78%-94%]) patients. No new venous or arterial thrombotic events were reported. One patient developed a major bleeding during follow-up (fatal intracerebral bleed). CONCLUSIONS: In contrast to the high mortality of CVT-VITT in the acute phase, mortality among patients who survived the initial hospitalization was low, new thrombotic events did not occur, and bleeding events were rare. Approximately 9 out of 10 CVT-VITT patients who survived the acute phase were functionally independent at follow-up.
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- 2022
26. Management of Cerebral Venous Thrombosis Due to Adenoviral COVID-19 Vaccination
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Scutelnic, A., Krzywicka, K., Mbroh, J., Munckhof, A. van de, Kammen, M.S.V., Sousa, D.A. de, Lindgren, E., Jood, K., Günther, A., Hiltunen, S., Putaala, J., Tiede, A., Maier, F., Kern, R., Bartsch, T., Althaus, K., Ciccone, A., Wiedmann, M., Skjelland, M., Medina, A., Cuadrado-Godia, E., Cox, T., Aujayeb, A., Raposo, N., Garambois, K., Payen, J.F., Vuillier, F., Franchineau, G., Timsit, S., Bougon, D., Dubois, M.C., Tawa, A., Tracol, C., Maistre, E. De, Bonneville, F., Vayne, C., Mengel, A., Michalski, D., Pelz, J., Wittstock, M., Bode, F., Zimmermann, J., Schouten, J., Buture, A., Murphy, S., Palma, V., Negro, A., Gutschalk, A., Nagel, S., Schoenenberger, S., Frisullo, G., Zanferrari, C., Grillo, F., Giammello, F., Martin, M.M., Cervera, A., Burrow, J., Esperon, C.G., Chew, B.L.A., Kleinig, T.J., Soriano, C., Zimatore, D.S., Petruzzellis, M., Elkady, A., Miranda, M.S., Fernandes, J., Vogel, A., Johansson, E., Philip, A.P., Coutts, S.B., Bal, S., Buck, B., Legault, C., Blacquiere, D., Katzberg, H.D., Field, T.S., Dizonno, V., Gattringer, T., Jacobi, C., Devroye, A., Lemmens, R., Kristoffersen, E.S., Poggio, M.B. di, Ghiasian, M., Karapanayiotides, T., Chatterton, S., Wronski, M., Ng, K., Kahnis, R., Geeraerts, T., Reiner, P., Cordonnier, C., Middeldorp, S., Levi, M., Gorp, E.C. van, Beek, D van, Brodard, J., Kremer Hovinga, J.A., Kruip, M., Tatlisumak, T., Poli, S., Heldner, M.R., Scutelnic, A., Krzywicka, K., Mbroh, J., Munckhof, A. van de, Kammen, M.S.V., Sousa, D.A. de, Lindgren, E., Jood, K., Günther, A., Hiltunen, S., Putaala, J., Tiede, A., Maier, F., Kern, R., Bartsch, T., Althaus, K., Ciccone, A., Wiedmann, M., Skjelland, M., Medina, A., Cuadrado-Godia, E., Cox, T., Aujayeb, A., Raposo, N., Garambois, K., Payen, J.F., Vuillier, F., Franchineau, G., Timsit, S., Bougon, D., Dubois, M.C., Tawa, A., Tracol, C., Maistre, E. De, Bonneville, F., Vayne, C., Mengel, A., Michalski, D., Pelz, J., Wittstock, M., Bode, F., Zimmermann, J., Schouten, J., Buture, A., Murphy, S., Palma, V., Negro, A., Gutschalk, A., Nagel, S., Schoenenberger, S., Frisullo, G., Zanferrari, C., Grillo, F., Giammello, F., Martin, M.M., Cervera, A., Burrow, J., Esperon, C.G., Chew, B.L.A., Kleinig, T.J., Soriano, C., Zimatore, D.S., Petruzzellis, M., Elkady, A., Miranda, M.S., Fernandes, J., Vogel, A., Johansson, E., Philip, A.P., Coutts, S.B., Bal, S., Buck, B., Legault, C., Blacquiere, D., Katzberg, H.D., Field, T.S., Dizonno, V., Gattringer, T., Jacobi, C., Devroye, A., Lemmens, R., Kristoffersen, E.S., Poggio, M.B. di, Ghiasian, M., Karapanayiotides, T., Chatterton, S., Wronski, M., Ng, K., Kahnis, R., Geeraerts, T., Reiner, P., Cordonnier, C., Middeldorp, S., Levi, M., Gorp, E.C. van, Beek, D van, Brodard, J., Kremer Hovinga, J.A., Kruip, M., Tatlisumak, T., Poli, S., and Heldner, M.R.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 282309.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access), OBJECTIVE: Cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT) caused by vaccine-induced immune thrombotic thrombocytopenia (VITT) is a rare adverse effect of adenovirus-based severe acute respiratory syndrome-coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) vaccines. In March 2021, after autoimmune pathogenesis of VITT was discovered, treatment recommendations were developed. These comprised immunomodulation, non-heparin anticoagulants, and avoidance of platelet transfusion. The aim of this study was to evaluate adherence to these recommendations and its association with mortality. METHODS: We used data from an international prospective registry of patients with CVT after the adenovirus-based SARS-CoV-2 vaccination. We analyzed possible, probable, or definite VITT-CVT cases included until January 18, 2022. Immunomodulation entailed administration of intravenous immunoglobulins and/or plasmapheresis. RESULTS: Ninety-nine patients with VITT-CVT from 71 hospitals in 17 countries were analyzed. Five of 38 (13%), 11 of 24 (46%), and 28 of 37 (76%) of the patients diagnosed in March, April, and from May onward, respectively, were treated in-line with VITT recommendations (p < 0.001). Overall, treatment according to recommendations had no statistically significant influence on mortality (14/44 [32%] vs 29/55 [52%], adjusted odds ratio [OR] = 0.43, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.16-1.19). However, patients who received immunomodulation had lower mortality (19/65 [29%] vs 24/34 [70%], adjusted OR = 0.19, 95% CI = 0.06-0.58). Treatment with non-heparin anticoagulants instead of heparins was not associated with lower mortality (17/51 [33%] vs 13/35 [37%], adjusted OR = 0.70, 95% CI = 0.24-2.04). Mortality was also not significantly influenced by platelet transfusion (17/27 [63%] vs 26/72 [36%], adjusted OR = 2.19, 95% CI = 0.74-6.54). CONCLUSIONS: In patients with VITT-CVT, adherence to VITT treatment recommendations improved over time. Immunomodulation seems crucial for reducing mortality of VITT-CVT. ANN NEUROL
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- 2022
27. Sudden Stratospheric Warming Formation in an Idealized General Circulation Model Using Three Types of Tropospheric Forcing
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Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences, Lindgren, E. A., Sheshadri, A., Plumb, R. A., Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences, Lindgren, E. A., Sheshadri, A., and Plumb, R. A.
- Abstract
Tropospheric heating perturbations and topography are used to create Northern Hemisphere winter-like stratospheric variability in an idealized atmospheric general circulation model. Wave 1 and wave 2 heating perturbations as well as wave 2 topography are used. With appropriate choices of amplitudes, the three forcings produce reasonable sudden stratospheric warming (SSW) frequencies. It is found that large numbers of both split and displacement sudden warmings occur when the model is forced by heating perturbations, regardless of the wave number of the forcing. This is different from the wave 2 topographic forcing, which produces almost only splits. We use the results of the three model runs to investigate the extent to which SSWs are caused by anomalous tropospheric wave fluxes. We find that SSWs in this model can form both as a direct result of anomalous tropospheric wave activity and due to internal stratospheric processes which alter the propagation of tropospheric wave flux into the stratosphere and that the fraction of the two mechanisms is similar to that of the observed atmosphere for all three forcings. We further investigate the circulation differences associated with splits and displacements and find that splits and displacements have different zonal mean surface signatures when the model is forced by wave 1 heating.
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- 2022
28. An Improved Technique for Determining the Equation of State of Concrete and Geological Materials
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Lindgren, E. A., Mazzatesta, A. D., Rosen, M., Sidhu, H., Tu, Y., Thompson, Donald O., editor, and Chimenti, Dale E., editor
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- 1997
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29. The Shaman Dress of the Dagurs, Solons and Numinchens in N. W. Manchuria
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Lindgren, E. J.
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- 1935
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30. North-Western Manchuria and the Reindeer-Tungus
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Lindgren, E. J.
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- 1930
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31. 131. Bertram Johannes Otto Schrieke: 1890-1945
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Lindgren, E. J.
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- 1948
32. Fluency and its relationship with typology, exposure and lexical retrieval in bilingual Persian-Swedish children’s writing
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Johansson, B., primary and Lindgren, E., additional
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- 2021
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33. Characteristics and Outcomes of Patients With Cerebral Venous Sinus Thrombosis in SARS-CoV-2 Vaccine-Induced Immune Thrombotic Thrombocytopenia
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van Kammen, MS, de Sousa, DA, Poli, S, Cordonnier, C, Heldner, MR, van de Munckhof, A, Krzywicka, K, van Haaps, T, Ciccone, A, Middeldorp, S, Levi, MM, Hovinga, JAK, Silvis, S, Hiltunen, S, Mansour, M, Arauz, A, Barboza, MA, Field, TS, Tsivgoulis, G, Nagel, S, Lindgren, E, Tatlisumak, T, Jood, K, Putaala, J, Ferro, JM, Arnold, M, Coutinho, JM, Guisado-Alonso D., and Cerebral Venous Sinus Thrombosis T
- Abstract
Importance Thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome (TTS) has been reported after vaccination with the SARS-CoV-2 vaccines ChAdOx1 nCov-19 (Oxford-AstraZeneca) and Ad26.COV2.S (Janssen/Johnson & Johnson). Objective To describe the clinical characteristics and outcome of patients with cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST) after SARS-CoV-2 vaccination with and without TTS. Design, Setting, and Participants This cohort study used data from an international registry of consecutive patients with CVST within 28 days of SARS-CoV-2 vaccination included between March 29 and June 18, 2021, from 81 hospitals in 19 countries. For reference, data from patients with CVST between 2015 and 2018 were derived from an existing international registry. Clinical characteristics and mortality rate were described for adults with (1) CVST in the setting of SARS-CoV-2 vaccine-induced immune thrombotic thrombocytopenia, (2) CVST after SARS-CoV-2 vaccination not fulling criteria for TTS, and (3) CVST unrelated to SARS-CoV-2 vaccination. Exposures Patients were classified as having TTS if they had new-onset thrombocytopenia without recent exposure to heparin, in accordance with the Brighton Collaboration interim criteria. Main Outcomes and Measures Clinical characteristics and mortality rate. Results Of 116 patients with postvaccination CVST, 78 (67.2%) had TTS, of whom 76 had been vaccinated with ChAdOx1 nCov-19; 38 (32.8%) had no indication of TTS. The control group included 207 patients with CVST before the COVID-19 pandemic. A total of 63 of 78 (81%), 30 of 38 (79%), and 145 of 207 (70.0%) patients, respectively, were female, and the mean (SD) age was 45 (14), 55 (20), and 42 (16) years, respectively. Concomitant thromboembolism occurred in 25 of 70 patients (36%) in the TTS group, 2 of 35 (6%) in the no TTS group, and 10 of 206 (4.9%) in the control group, and in-hospital mortality rates were 47% (36 of 76; 95% CI, 37-58), 5% (2 of 37; 95% CI, 1-18), and 3.9% (8 of 207; 95% CI, 2.0-7.4), respectively. The mortality rate was 61% (14 of 23) among patients in the TTS group diagnosed before the condition garnered attention in the scientific community and 42% (22 of 53) among patients diagnosed later. Conclusions and Relevance In this cohort study of patients with CVST, a distinct clinical profile and high mortality rate was observed in patients meeting criteria for TTS after SARS-CoV-2 vaccination. Question What are the clinical characteristics and outcomes of patients with cerebral venous sinus thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome after SARS-CoV-2 vaccination? Findings In this cohort study of 116 patients with cerebral venous sinus thrombosis after SARS-CoV-2 vaccination, 78 (67.2%) had thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome. Patients with thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome were frequently comatose at presentation (24%) and often had intracerebral hemorrhage (68%) and concomitant thromboembolism (36%), and 47% died during hospitalization. Meaning Patients with cerebral venous sinus thrombosis after SARS-CoV-2 vaccination who met criteria for thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome had a distinct clinical profile and high mortality rate. This cohort study describes the clinical characteristics and outcome of patients with cerebral venous sinus thrombosis after SARS-CoV-2 vaccination with and without thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome.
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- 2021
34. Frequency of Thrombocytopenia and Platelet Factor 4/Heparin Antibodies in Patients With Cerebral Venous Sinus Thrombosis Prior to the COVID-19 Pandemic
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Sanchez van Kammen, M., Heldner, M.R., Brodard, J., Scutelnic, A., Silvis, S., Schroeder, V., Hovinga, J.A. Kremer, Middeldorp, S., Levi, M., Hiltunen, S., Lindgren, E., Mansour, M., Arauz, A., Barboza, M.A., Zuurbier, S.M., Sousa, D. Aguiar de, Ferro, J.M., Fischer, U., Field, T.S., Jood, K., Tatlisumak, T., Putaala, J., Arnold, M., Coutinho, J.M., Sanchez van Kammen, M., Heldner, M.R., Brodard, J., Scutelnic, A., Silvis, S., Schroeder, V., Hovinga, J.A. Kremer, Middeldorp, S., Levi, M., Hiltunen, S., Lindgren, E., Mansour, M., Arauz, A., Barboza, M.A., Zuurbier, S.M., Sousa, D. Aguiar de, Ferro, J.M., Fischer, U., Field, T.S., Jood, K., Tatlisumak, T., Putaala, J., Arnold, M., and Coutinho, J.M.
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Item does not contain fulltext, IMPORTANCE: Cases of cerebral venous sinus thrombosis in combination with thrombocytopenia have recently been reported within 4 to 28 days of vaccination with the ChAdOx1 nCov-19 (AstraZeneca/Oxford) and Ad.26.COV2.S (Janssen/Johnson & Johnson) COVID-19 vaccines. An immune-mediated response associated with platelet factor 4/heparin antibodies has been proposed as the underlying pathomechanism. OBJECTIVE: To determine the frequencies of admission thrombocytopenia, heparin-induced thrombocytopenia, and presence of platelet factor 4/heparin antibodies in patients diagnosed with cerebral venous sinus thrombosis prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This was a descriptive analysis of a retrospective sample of consecutive patients diagnosed with cerebral venous sinus thrombosis between January 1987 and March 2018 from 7 hospitals participating in the International Cerebral Venous Sinus Thrombosis Consortium from Finland, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Sweden, Mexico, Iran, and Costa Rica. Of 952 patients, 865 with available baseline platelet count were included. In a subset of 93 patients, frozen plasma samples collected during a previous study between September 2009 and February 2016 were analyzed for the presence of platelet factor 4/heparin antibodies. EXPOSURES: Diagnosis of cerebral venous sinus thrombosis. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Frequencies of admission thrombocytopenia (platelet count <150 ×103/μL), heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (as diagnosed by the treating physician), and platelet factor 4/heparin IgG antibodies (optical density >0.4, in a subset of patients with previously collected plasma samples). RESULTS: Of 865 patients (median age, 40 years [interquartile range, 29-53 years], 70% women), 73 (8.4%; 95% CI, 6.8%-10.5%) had thrombocytopenia, which was mild (100-149 ×103/μL) in 52 (6.0%), moderate (50-99 ×103/μL) in 17 (2.0%), and severe (<50 ×103/μL) in 4 (0.5%). Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia with platelet factor 4/hepari
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- 2021
35. Characteristics and Outcomes of Patients With Cerebral Venous Sinus Thrombosis in SARS-CoV-2 Vaccine-Induced Immune Thrombotic Thrombocytopenia
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Sanchez van Kammen, M., Aguiar de Sousa, D., Poli, S., Cordonnier, C., Heldner, M.R., Munckhof, A. van de, Krzywicka, K., Haaps, T. van, Ciccone, A., Middeldorp, S., Levi, M.M., Hovinga, J.A. Kremer, Silvis, S., Hiltunen, S., Mansour, M., Arauz, A., Barboza, M.A., Field, T.S., Tsivgoulis, G., Nagel, S., Lindgren, E., Tatlisumak, T., Jood, K., Putaala, J., Ferro, J.M., Arnold, M., Coutinho, J.M., Sharma, A.R., Elkady, A., Negro, A., Günther, A., Gutschalk, A., Schönenberger, S., Buture, A., Murphy, S., Nunes, A., Tiede, A., Philip, A. Puthuppallil, Mengel, A., Medina, A., Vogel, Å. Hellström, Tawa, A., Aujayeb, A., Casolla, B., Buck, B., Zanferrari, C., Garcia-Esperon, C., Vayne, C., Legault, C., Pfrepper, C., Tracol, C., Soriano, C., Guisado-Alonso, D., Bougon, D., Zimatore, D.S., Michalski, D., Blacquiere, D., Johansson, E., Cuadrado-Godia, E., Maistre, E. De, Carrera, E., Vuillier, F., Bonneville, F., Giammello, F., Bode, F.J., Zimmerman, J., d'Onofrio, F., Grillo, F., Cotton, F., Caparros, F., Puy, L., Maier, F., Gulli, G., Frisullo, G., Polkinghorne, G., Franchineau, G., Cangür, H., Katzberg, H., Sibon, I., Baharoglu, I., Brar, J., Payen, J.F., Burrow, J., Fernandes, J., Schouten, J., Althaus, K., Garambois, K., Derex, L., Humbertjean, L., Hernandez, L. Herrera, Kellermair, L., Martin, M, Petruzzellis, M., Cotelli, M., Dubois, M.C., Carvalho, M., Wittstock, M., Miranda, M., Skjelland, M., Poggio, M., et al. Bandettini di, Sanchez van Kammen, M., Aguiar de Sousa, D., Poli, S., Cordonnier, C., Heldner, M.R., Munckhof, A. van de, Krzywicka, K., Haaps, T. van, Ciccone, A., Middeldorp, S., Levi, M.M., Hovinga, J.A. Kremer, Silvis, S., Hiltunen, S., Mansour, M., Arauz, A., Barboza, M.A., Field, T.S., Tsivgoulis, G., Nagel, S., Lindgren, E., Tatlisumak, T., Jood, K., Putaala, J., Ferro, J.M., Arnold, M., Coutinho, J.M., Sharma, A.R., Elkady, A., Negro, A., Günther, A., Gutschalk, A., Schönenberger, S., Buture, A., Murphy, S., Nunes, A., Tiede, A., Philip, A. Puthuppallil, Mengel, A., Medina, A., Vogel, Å. Hellström, Tawa, A., Aujayeb, A., Casolla, B., Buck, B., Zanferrari, C., Garcia-Esperon, C., Vayne, C., Legault, C., Pfrepper, C., Tracol, C., Soriano, C., Guisado-Alonso, D., Bougon, D., Zimatore, D.S., Michalski, D., Blacquiere, D., Johansson, E., Cuadrado-Godia, E., Maistre, E. De, Carrera, E., Vuillier, F., Bonneville, F., Giammello, F., Bode, F.J., Zimmerman, J., d'Onofrio, F., Grillo, F., Cotton, F., Caparros, F., Puy, L., Maier, F., Gulli, G., Frisullo, G., Polkinghorne, G., Franchineau, G., Cangür, H., Katzberg, H., Sibon, I., Baharoglu, I., Brar, J., Payen, J.F., Burrow, J., Fernandes, J., Schouten, J., Althaus, K., Garambois, K., Derex, L., Humbertjean, L., Hernandez, L. Herrera, Kellermair, L., Martin, M, Petruzzellis, M., Cotelli, M., Dubois, M.C., Carvalho, M., Wittstock, M., Miranda, M., Skjelland, M., and Poggio, M., et al. Bandettini di
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext, IMPORTANCE: Thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome (TTS) has been reported after vaccination with the SARS-CoV-2 vaccines ChAdOx1 nCov-19 (Oxford-AstraZeneca) and Ad26.COV2.S (Janssen/Johnson & Johnson). OBJECTIVE: To describe the clinical characteristics and outcome of patients with cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST) after SARS-CoV-2 vaccination with and without TTS. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cohort study used data from an international registry of consecutive patients with CVST within 28 days of SARS-CoV-2 vaccination included between March 29 and June 18, 2021, from 81 hospitals in 19 countries. For reference, data from patients with CVST between 2015 and 2018 were derived from an existing international registry. Clinical characteristics and mortality rate were described for adults with (1) CVST in the setting of SARS-CoV-2 vaccine-induced immune thrombotic thrombocytopenia, (2) CVST after SARS-CoV-2 vaccination not fulling criteria for TTS, and (3) CVST unrelated to SARS-CoV-2 vaccination. EXPOSURES: Patients were classified as having TTS if they had new-onset thrombocytopenia without recent exposure to heparin, in accordance with the Brighton Collaboration interim criteria. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Clinical characteristics and mortality rate. RESULTS: Of 116 patients with postvaccination CVST, 78 (67.2%) had TTS, of whom 76 had been vaccinated with ChAdOx1 nCov-19; 38 (32.8%) had no indication of TTS. The control group included 207 patients with CVST before the COVID-19 pandemic. A total of 63 of 78 (81%), 30 of 38 (79%), and 145 of 207 (70.0%) patients, respectively, were female, and the mean (SD) age was 45 (14), 55 (20), and 42 (16) years, respectively. Concomitant thromboembolism occurred in 25 of 70 patients (36%) in the TTS group, 2 of 35 (6%) in the no TTS group, and 10 of 206 (4.9%) in the control group, and in-hospital mortality rates were 47% (36 of 76; 95% CI, 37-58), 5% (2 of 37; 95% CI, 1-18), and 3.9% (8 of 207; 95% CI, 2.
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- 2021
36. Post-SARS-CoV-2-vaccination cerebral venous sinus thrombosis: an analysis of cases notified to the European Medicines Agency
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Krzywicka, K., Heldner, M.R., Kammen, M. Sánchez van, Haaps, T. van, Hiltunen, S., Silvis, S.M., Levi, M., Hovinga, J.A. Kremer, Jood, K., Lindgren, E., Tatlisumak, T., Putaala, J., Sousa, D. Aguiar de, Middeldorp, S., Arnold, M., Coutinho, J.M., Ferro, J.M., Krzywicka, K., Heldner, M.R., Kammen, M. Sánchez van, Haaps, T. van, Hiltunen, S., Silvis, S.M., Levi, M., Hovinga, J.A. Kremer, Jood, K., Lindgren, E., Tatlisumak, T., Putaala, J., Sousa, D. Aguiar de, Middeldorp, S., Arnold, M., Coutinho, J.M., and Ferro, J.M.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext, BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST) has been described after vaccination against SARS-CoV-2. The clinical characteristics of 213 post-vaccination CVST cases notified to the European Medicines Agency are reported. METHODS: Data on adverse drug reactions after SARS-CoV-2 vaccination notified until 8 April 2021 under the Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities Term 'Central nervous system vascular disorders' were obtained from the EudraVigilance database. Post-vaccination CVST was compared with 100 European patients with CVST from before the COVID-19 pandemic derived from the International CVST Consortium. RESULTS: In all, 213 CVST cases were identified: 187 after AstraZeneca/Oxford (ChAdOx1 nCov-19) vaccination and 26 after a messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccination (25 with Pfizer/BioNTech, BNT162b2, and one with Moderna, mRNA-1273). Thrombocytopenia was reported in 107/187 CVST cases (57%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 50%-64%) in the ChAdOx1 nCov-19 group, in none in the mRNA vaccine group (0%, 95% CI 0%-13%) and in 7/100 (7%, 95% CI 3%-14%) in the pre-COVID-19 group. In the ChAdOx1 nCov-19 group, 39 (21%) reported COVID-19 polymerase chain reaction tests were performed within 30 days of CVST symptom onset, and all were negative. Of the 117 patients with a reported outcome in the ChAdOx1 nCov-19 group, 44 (38%, 95% CI 29%-47%) had died, compared to 2/10 (20%, 95% CI 6%-51%) in the mRNA vaccine group and 3/100 (3%, 95% CI 1%-8%) in the pre-COVID-19 group. Mortality amongst patients with thrombocytopenia in the ChAdOx1 nCov-19 group was 49% (95% CI 39%-60%). CONCLUSIONS: Cerebral venous sinus thrombosis occurring after ChAdOx1 nCov-19 vaccination has a clinical profile distinct from CVST unrelated to vaccination. Only CVST after ChAdOx1 nCov-19 vaccination was associated with thrombocytopenia.
- Published
- 2021
37. Genome-Wide Association Study Identifies First Locus Associated with Susceptibility to Cerebral Venous Thrombosis
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Ken-Dror, G, Cotlarciuc, I, Martinelli, I, Grandone, E, Hiltunen, S, Lindgren, E, Margaglione, M, Duchez, VLC, Triquenot, AB, Zedde, M, Mancuso, M, Ruigrok, YM, Marjot, T, Worrall, B, Majersik, JJ, Metso, TM, Putaala, J, Haapaniemi, E, Zuurbier, SM, Brouwer, MC, Passamonti, SM, Abbattista, M, Bucciarelli, P, Mitchell, BD, Kittner, SJ, Lemmens, R, Jern, C, Pappalardo, E, Costa, P, Colombi, M, de Sousa, DA, Rodrigues, S, Canhao, P, Tkach, A, Santacroce, R, Favuzzi, G, Arauz, A, Colaizzo, D, Spengos, K, Hodge, A, Ditta, R, Pezzini, A, Debette, S, Coutinho, JM, Thijs, V, Jood, K, Pare, G, Tatlisumak, T, Ferro, JM, Sharma, P, Ken-Dror, G, Cotlarciuc, I, Martinelli, I, Grandone, E, Hiltunen, S, Lindgren, E, Margaglione, M, Duchez, VLC, Triquenot, AB, Zedde, M, Mancuso, M, Ruigrok, YM, Marjot, T, Worrall, B, Majersik, JJ, Metso, TM, Putaala, J, Haapaniemi, E, Zuurbier, SM, Brouwer, MC, Passamonti, SM, Abbattista, M, Bucciarelli, P, Mitchell, BD, Kittner, SJ, Lemmens, R, Jern, C, Pappalardo, E, Costa, P, Colombi, M, de Sousa, DA, Rodrigues, S, Canhao, P, Tkach, A, Santacroce, R, Favuzzi, G, Arauz, A, Colaizzo, D, Spengos, K, Hodge, A, Ditta, R, Pezzini, A, Debette, S, Coutinho, JM, Thijs, V, Jood, K, Pare, G, Tatlisumak, T, Ferro, JM, and Sharma, P
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT) is an uncommon form of stroke affecting mostly young individuals. Although genetic factors are thought to play a role in this cerebrovascular condition, its genetic etiology is not well understood. METHODS: A genome-wide association study was performed to identify genetic variants influencing susceptibility to CVT. A 2-stage genome-wide study was undertaken in 882 Europeans diagnosed with CVT and 1,205 ethnicity-matched control subjects divided into discovery and independent replication datasets. RESULTS: In the overall case-control cohort, we identified highly significant associations with 37 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within the 9q34.2 region. The strongest association was with rs8176645 (combined p = 9.15 × 10-24 ; odds ratio [OR] = 2.01, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.76-2.31). The discovery set findings were validated across an independent European cohort. Genetic risk score for this 9q34.2 region increases CVT risk by a pooled estimate OR = 2.65 (95% CI = 2.21-3.20, p = 2.00 × 10-16 ). SNPs within this region were in strong linkage disequilibrium (LD) with coding regions of the ABO gene. The ABO blood group was determined using allele combination of SNPs rs8176746 and rs8176645. Blood groups A, B, or AB, were at 2.85 times (95% CI = 2.32-3.52, p = 2.00 × 10-16 ) increased risk of CVT compared with individuals with blood group O. INTERPRETATION: We present the first chromosomal region to robustly associate with a genetic susceptibility to CVT. This region more than doubles the likelihood of CVT, a risk greater than any previously identified thrombophilia genetic risk marker. That the identified variant is in strong LD with the coding region of the ABO gene with differences in blood group prevalence provides important new insights into the pathophysiology of CVT. ANN NEUROL 2021;90:777-788.
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- 2021
38. Causes and consequences of mainstream media dissemination of fake news : literature review and synthesis
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Tsfati, Yariv, Boomgaarden, H.G., Strömbäck, J., Vliegenthart, R., Damstra, A., Lindgren, E., and Corporate Communication (ASCoR, FMG)
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disinformation ,fact checking ,Fake news ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS - Abstract
Research indicates that the reach of fake news websites is limited to small parts of the population. On the other hand, data demonstrate that large proportions of the public know about notable fake news stories and believe them. These findings imply the possibility that most people hear about fake news stories not from fake news websites but through their coverage in mainstream news outlets. Thus far, only limited attention has been directed to the role of mainstream media in the dissemination of disinformation. To remedy this, this article synthesizes the literature pertaining to understand the role mainstream media play in the dissemination of fake news, the reasons for such coverage and its influences on the audience.
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- 2020
39. Caring as sustainable coaching in elite athletics : Benefits and challenges
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Dohlsten, J., Barker-Ruchti, Natalie, Lindgren, E-C., Dohlsten, J., Barker-Ruchti, Natalie, and Lindgren, E-C.
- Abstract
Coaches in elite sport must ensure a balance between performance, high pressure and well-being. A caring approach, based on a coach’s commitment to caring for athletes, has the potential to create such a balance and sustainability. The aim of this study was to identify coaches’ caring and problematise their ethics of care in relation to sustainability. We draw on and integrate the theoretical concept of caring into a conception of (un-) sustainable sport. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with seven Swedish elite athletics coaches. Results show that coaches’ ethics of care is important for creating sustainable elite athletics practices, but that caring also conflicts with sustainability thinking if coaches do not base their actions on practical wisdom and moral and ethical dilemmas.
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- 2020
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40. Emerging Technologies in Hazardous Waste Management IV
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D. WILLIAM TEDDER, FREDERICK G. POHLAND, D. William Tedder, Frederick G. Pohland, Dwayne A. Chesnut, E. R. Lindgren, E. D. Mattson, M. W. Kozak, Henry H. Tabak, Chao Gao, Lei Lai, Xuesheng Yan, Steven Pfanstiel, In S. Kim, Rakesh Govind, K. W. Tsang, P. R. Dugan, R. M. Pfister, T. F. Edgar, Y. L. Hu
- Published
- 1994
41. A Visit to Queen Victoria Spring, January 1955
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Slater, P, Lindgren, E, and BioStor
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- 1955
42. Climate change: present and future risks to health, and necessary responses
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McMichael, A. J. and Lindgren, E.
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- 2011
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43. Causes and consequences of mainstream media dissemination of fake news: literature review and synthesis
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Tsfati, Yariv, primary, Boomgaarden, H. G., additional, Strömbäck, J., additional, Vliegenthart, R., additional, Damstra, A., additional, and Lindgren, E., additional
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- 2020
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- View/download PDF
44. Coronary angiographic findings after cardiac arrest in relation to ECG and comorbidity
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Lagedal, R., primary, Elfwén, L., additional, Jonsson, M., additional, Lindgren, E., additional, Smekal, D., additional, Svensson, L., additional, James, S., additional, Nordberg, P., additional, and Rubertsson, S., additional
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- 2020
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- View/download PDF
45. Risk indicators for the tick Ixodes ricinus and Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato in Sweden
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Jaenson, T. G. T., Eisen, L., Comstedt, P., Mejlon, H. A., Lindgren, E., Bergström, S., and Olsen, B.
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- 2009
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46. On the concept of orthorexia nervosa: a rebuttal
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Eriksson, L., Marklund, B., Baigi, A., and Lindgren, E.-C.
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- 2008
47. Social physique anxiety and sociocultural attitudes toward appearance impact on orthorexia test in fitness participants
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Eriksson, L., Baigi, A., Marklund, B., and Lindgren, E. C.
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- 2008
48. Eliminating the antilipolytic adenosine A1 receptor does not lead to compensatory changes in the antilipolytic actions of PGE2 and nicotinic acid
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Johansson, S. M., Yang, J.-N., Lindgren, E., and Fredholm, B. B.
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- 2007
49. Behaviour of sulphur and nitrogen compounds measured at marine stations Lista and Säby in Scandinavia
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Isakson, J., Selin Lindgren, E. A., Foltescu, V. L., Pacyna, J. M., and Tørseth, K.
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- 1995
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50. A survey of mineral status of soil, feeds and cattle in the Selale Ethiopian highlands. II. Trace elements
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Khalili, M., Lindgren, E., and Varvikko, T.
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- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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