4,619 results on '"Mügge A"'
Search Results
2. Sex-specific cardiovascular remodeling leads to a divergent sex-dependent development of heart failure in aged hypertensive rats
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Kovács, Árpád, Zhazykbayeva, Saltanat, Herwig, Melissa, Fülöp, Gábor Á., Csípő, Tamás, Oláh, Nikolett, Hassoun, Roua, Budde, Heidi, Osman, Hersh, Kaçmaz, Mustafa, Jaquet, Kornelia, Priksz, Dániel, Juhász, Béla, Akin, Ibrahim, Papp, Zoltán, Schmidt, Wolfgang E., Mügge, Andreas, El-Battrawy, Ibrahim, Tóth, Attila, and Hamdani, Nazha
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- 2024
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3. Prognostic Implications of Coronary Artery Sclerosis in Troponin-Positive Patients with Non-Obstructive Coronary Arteries
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Kreimer, Fabienne, Schlettert, Clara, Abumayyaleh, Mohammad, Akin, Ibrahim, Materzok, Daniel, Gotzmann, Michael, Schiedat, Fabian, Bogossian, Harilaos, Hijazi, Mido Max, Hamdani, Nazha, Mügge, Andreas, El-Battrawy, Ibrahim, Hemetsberger, Rayyan, and Aweimer, Assem
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- 2024
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4. Kombinierte Immunsuppression mit Cyclosporin A, Mycophenolatmofetil (MMF) und Dexamethason zur Aktivitätskontrolle einer rezidivierten, sekundären hämophagozytischen Lymphohistiozytose (sHLH) auf dem Boden eines systemischen Lupus erythematodes (SLE)
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Saleh, Modar, Hampel, Katja, Gerth, Jens, Merkelbach, Stefan, Monecke, Astrid, and Mügge, Lars-Olof
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- 2024
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5. Predictors of ventricular tachyarrhythmia in patients with a wearable cardioverter defibrillator: an international multicenter registry
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Kreimer, Fabienne, Koepsel, Katharina, Gotzmann, Michael, Kovacs, Boldizsar, Dreher, Tobias C., Blockhaus, Christian, Klein, Norbert, Kuntz, Thomas, Shin, Dong-In, Lapp, Hendrik, Rosenkaimer, Stephanie, Abumayyaleh, Mohammad, Hamdani, Nazha, Saguner, Ardan Muammer, Erath, Julia W., Duru, Firat, Beiert, Thomas, Schiedat, Fabian, Weth, Christian, Custodis, Florian, Akin, Ibrahim, Mügge, Andreas, Aweimer, Assem, and El-Battrawy, Ibrahim
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- 2024
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6. Regulatory interdependence in AI
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Mügge, Daniel, primary
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- 2024
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7. Rolle deutscher Cardiac Arrest Center in der Vermittlung von Basisreanimationsmaßnahmen
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Voigt, Ingo, Rott, Nadine, Kersken, Meike, Mügge, Andreas, Böttiger, Bernd W., Preusch, Michael, Wengenmayer, Tobias, and Michels, Guido
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- 2024
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8. Prognostic Implications of Coronary Artery Sclerosis in Troponin-Positive Patients with Non-Obstructive Coronary Arteries
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Fabienne Kreimer, Clara Schlettert, Mohammad Abumayyaleh, Ibrahim Akin, Daniel Materzok, Michael Gotzmann, Fabian Schiedat, Harilaos Bogossian, Mido Max Hijazi, Nazha Hamdani, Andreas Mügge, Ibrahim El-Battrawy, Rayyan Hemetsberger, and Assem Aweimer
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Coronary artery disease ,Atherosclerosis ,Myocardial infarction with non-obstructive coronary arteries (MINOCA) ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Abstract Introduction Coronary sclerosis is a risk factor for the progression to obstructive coronary artery disease (CAD). However, understanding its impact on the outcomes of patients with myocardial infarction and non-obstructive coronary arteries is limited. This study aimed to explore the prognostic influence of coronary sclerosis on in- and out-of-hospital events in troponin-positive patients with non-obstructive coronary arteries. Methods This study was a retrospective cohort analysis based on prospectively collected data. A total of 24,775 patients who underwent coronary angiography from 2010 to 2021 in a German university hospital were screened, resulting in a final study cohort of 373 troponin-positive patients with non-obstructive coronary arteries and a follow-up period of 6.2 ± 3.1 years. Coronary sclerosis was defined as coronary plaques without angiographically detectable stenotic lesions of 50% or more in the large epicardial coronary arteries. The primary study endpoint was the occurrence of in-hospital events. Secondary endpoints included events during follow-up. Results Patients with coronary sclerosis were significantly older (70 ± 12 vs. 58 ± 16 years, p
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- 2024
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9. Political Representation and Intersectionality: Perspectives of Ethnically/Racially Minoritized Citizens
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de Jong, Judith C. and Mügge, Liza M.
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- 2024
10. NEOLIBERALISMO, RELAÇÕES SOCIAIS E SOFRIMENTO PSÍQUICO EM O VERÃO TARDIO, DE LUIZ RUFFATO
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Éderson de Oliveira Cabral, Ernani Mügge, and Roberto Joaquim da Silva Filho
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neoliberalismo. sofrimento psíquico. literatura. ,Education ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
Este artigo visa compreender, por meio da análise da obra O Verão Tardio, de Luiz Ruffato, escritor brasileiro contemporâneo, a conexão das práticas econômicas neoliberais com as relações interpessoais e o sofrimento psíquico das personagens. Para alcançar esse objetivo, realizou-se uma revisão bibliográfica, a qual contempla a literatura e seu papel na sociedade; a identidade do sujeito pós-moderno; o mal-estar contemporâneo e o neoliberalismo. Após, à luz da teoria, realizou-se uma análise crítico-interpretativa da narrativa ficcional, atentando não somente para o contexto social em que vivem as personagens, mas também para os seus posicionamentos, diálogos e situações vividas, o que evidência a constituição psíquica. Esse estudo se justifica pela necessidade de compreender, por meio da ficção, as possíveis consequências do modelo econômico neoliberal na vida emocional dos atores sociais.
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- 2024
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11. Livide Verfärbung am Arm nach Phenytoin-Paravasat – Purple-Glove-Syndrom?
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Göbel, Manuel, Pfützner, Wolfgang, and Mügge, Felicitas
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- 2024
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12. Subcutaneous cardioverter defibrillator implanted intermuscularly in patients with end-stage renal disease requiring hemodialysis: 5-year follow-up
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Kloppe, Axel, Winter, Joachim, Prull, Magnus, Aweimer, Assem, El-Battrawy, Ibrahim, Hanefeld, Christoph, O’Connor, Stephen, Mügge, Andreas, and Schiedat, Fabian
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- 2024
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13. Race/Ethnicity in Candidate Experiments: a Meta-Analysis and the Case for Shared Identification
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van Oosten, Sanne, Mügge, Liza, and van der Pas, Daphne
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- 2024
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14. Survived sudden cardiac death in a patient with arrhythmic mitral valve prolapse syndrome: a case report
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Kreimer, Fabienne, Mügge, Andreas, and Gotzmann, Michael
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- 2023
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15. No beneficial use of the wearable cardioverter defibrillator among patients suffering from inherited and congenital heart disease: data from a European multicenter registry
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Katharina Koepsel, Tobias C. Dreher, Christian Blockhaus, Michael Gotzmann, Norbert Klein, Thomas Kuntz, Dong-In Shin, Hendrik Lapp, Fabian Schiedat, Mohammad Abumayyaleh, Thomas Beiert, Christian Weth, Boldizsar Kovacs, Stephanie Rosenkaimer, Jacqueline Kowitz, Ardan Muammer Saguner, Julia W. Erath, Firat Duru, Andreas Mügge, Ibrahim Akin, Assem Aweimer, Nazha Hamdani, and Ibrahim El-Battrawy
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inherited channelopathies ,sudden cardiac death ,wearable-cardioverter defibrillator ,congenital heart diasease ,ventricular arrhythmia ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
BackgroundData on the use of the wearable cardioverter defibrillator in patients suffering from inherited and congenital heart disease are limited. Consequently, evidence for guideline recommendations in this patient population is lacking.MethodsIn total 1,675 patients were included in a multicenter registry of eight European centers. In the present cohort, we included 18 patients suffering from congenital and inherited heart disease.ResultsNine patients (50%) were male with a mean age of 41.3 ± 16.4 years. Four patients suffered from hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), four patients suffered from non-compaction cardiomyopathy (NCCM), two patients were diagnosed with arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC) and one patient suffered from muscular dystrophy of the limb-girdle type with cardiac involvement, secondary cardiomyopathy. Three patients presented with Brugada syndrome (BrS). One patient suffered from long-QT syndrome type 1 (LQTS1). Furthermore, two patients had congenital heart defects and one patient suffered from cardiac sarcoidosis (CS). There were no appropriate/inappropriate shocks with the WCD in this cohort. One patient had recurrent self-limiting sustained ventricular tachycardia during the wear time, but actively inhibited a shock and was hospitalized. The compliance rate in this cohort was 77.8% with a mean wear time of 45.3 ± 26.9 days with a mean follow-up time of 570 ± 734 days. 55.6% (10/18) of the patients received an ICD after WCD wear time.ConclusionsThis retrospective study of patients with inherited and congenital heart disease shows that WCD use is not beneficial in the majority of patients with inherited and congenital heart disease.
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- 2024
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16. A randomized comparison of the treatment sequence of percutaneous coronary intervention and transcatheter aortic valve implantation: Rationale and design of the TAVI PCI trial
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Stähli, Barbara E., Linke, Axel, Westermann, Dirk, Van Mieghem, Nicolas M., Leistner, David M., Massberg, Steffen, Alber, Hannes, Mügge, Andreas, Musumeci, Giuseppe, Kesterke, Rahel, Schneider, Steffen, Kastrati, Adnan, Ford, Ian, Ruschitzka, Frank, Kasel, Markus A., Kasel, Markus, Van Mieghem, Nicolas, Savonitto, Stefano, Witzenbichler, Bernhard, Swaans, Martin, Swedberg, Karl, Pocock, Stuart, and Maggioni, Aldo
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- 2024
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17. Successful treatment of submassive pulmonary embolism with right ventricle strain using ultrasound-assisted thrombolysis with urokinase: a case report
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Al-Terki, Hani, Gotzmann, Michael, Labedi, Adnan, and Mügge, Andreas
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- 2023
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18. Success and safety of deep sedation as a primary anaesthetic approach for transvenous lead extraction: a retrospective analysis
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Fabian Schiedat, Julian Fischer, Assem Aweimer, Dominik Schöne, Ibrahim El-Battrawy, Christoph Hanefeld, Andreas Mügge, and Axel Kloppe
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract There is a rising number in complications associated with more cardiac electrical devices implanted (CIED). Infection and lead dysfunction are reasons to perform transvenous lead extraction. An ideal anaesthetic approach has not been described yet. Most centres use general anaesthesia, but there is a lack in studies looking into deep sedation (DS) as an anaesthetic approach. We report our retrospective experience for a large number of procedures performed with deep sedation as a primary approach. Extraction procedures performed between 2011 and 2018 in our electrophysiology laboratory have been included retrospectively. We began by applying a bolus injection of piritramide followed by midazolam as primary medication and would add etomidate if necessary. For extraction of leads a stepwise approach with careful traction, locking stylets, dilator sheaths, mechanical rotating sheaths and if needed snares and baskets has been used. A total of 780 leads in 463 patients (age 69.9 ± 12.3, 31.3% female) were extracted. Deep sedation was successful in 97.8% of patients. Piritramide was used as the main analgesic medication (98.5%) and midazolam as the main sedative (94.2%). Additional etomidate was administered in 15.1% of cases. In 2.2% of patients a conversion to general anaesthesia was required as adequate level of DS was not achieved before starting the procedure. Sedation related complications occurred in 1.1% (n = 5) of patients without sequalae. Deep sedation with piritramide, midazolam and if needed additional etomidate is a safe and feasible strategy for transvenous lead extraction.
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- 2023
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19. Selective pressure leads to an improved synthetic consortium fit for dye degradation
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Ngo, Anna Christina R., Celebi, Beyzanur, Hermann Hadewig, Simon Niklas, Mügge, Carolin, and Tischler, Dirk
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- 2024
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20. In-hospital Outcomes of Rotational Atherectomy in ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction: Results From the Multicentre ROTA-STEMI Network
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Hemetsberger, Rayyan, Mankerious, Nader, Muntané-Carol, Guillem, Temporal, Justin, Sulimov, Dmitriy, Gaede, Luise, Woitek, Felix, Grau, Edgar Fadeuilhe, Scalamogna, Maria, Olschewski, Maximilian, Mitsis, Andreas, Ruzsa, Zoltán, Toth, Gabor G., Heyer, Hajo, Toelg, Ralph, Gómez-Hospital, Joan A., Mügge, Andreas, Hengstenberg, Christian, Mangner, Norman, Gori, Tommaso, Cassese, Salvatore, Suárez, Xavier Carrillo, Abdel-Wahab, Mohamed, Johnson, Thomas, Richardt, Gert, and Allali, Abdelhakim
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- 2024
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21. Success and safety of deep sedation as a primary anaesthetic approach for transvenous lead extraction: a retrospective analysis
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Schiedat, Fabian, Fischer, Julian, Aweimer, Assem, Schöne, Dominik, El-Battrawy, Ibrahim, Hanefeld, Christoph, Mügge, Andreas, and Kloppe, Axel
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- 2023
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22. Subthalamic 85 Hz deep brain stimulation improves walking pace and stride length in Parkinson’s disease patients
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Mügge, F., Kleinholdermann, U., Heun, A., Ollenschläger, M., Hannink, J., and Pedrosa, D. J.
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- 2023
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23. Publisher Correction: Mortality rates of severe COVID-19-related respiratory failure with and without extracorporeal membrane oxygenation in the Middle Ruhr Region of Germany
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Aweimer, Assem, Petschulat, Lea, Jettkant, Birger, Köditz, Roland, Finkeldei, Johannes, Dietrich, Johannes W., Breuer, Thomas, Draese, Christian, Frey, Ulrich H., Rahmel, Tim, Adamzik, Michael, Buchwald, Dirk, Useini, Dritan, Brechmann, Thorsten, Hosbach, Ingolf, Bünger, Jürgen, Ewers, Aydan, El‑Battrawy, Ibrahim, and Mügge, Andreas
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- 2023
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24. Mortality rates of severe COVID-19-related respiratory failure with and without extracorporeal membrane oxygenation in the Middle Ruhr Region of Germany
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Aweimer, Assem, Petschulat, Lea, Jettkant, Birger, Köditz, Roland, Finkeldei, Johannes, Dietrich, Johannes W., Breuer, Thomas, Draese, Christian, Frey, Ulrich H., Rahmel, Tim, Adamzik, Michael, Buchwald, Dirk, Useini, Dritan, Brechmann, Thorsten, Hosbach, Ingolf, Bünger, Jürgen, Ewers, Aydan, El-Battrawy, Ibrahim, and Mügge, Andreas
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- 2023
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25. Comparison of infection and complication rates associated with transvenous vs. subcutaneous defibrillators in patients with stage 4 chronic kidney disease: a multicenter long-term retrospective follow-up
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Fabian Schiedat, Benjamin Meuterodt, Magnus Prull, Assem Aweimer, Michael Gotzmann, Stephen O’Connor, Christian Perings, Johannes Korth, Thomas Lawo, Ibrahim El-Battrawy, Christoph Hanefeld, Andreas Mügge, and Axel Kloppe
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sudden cardiac death (SCD) ,implantable cardiac defibrillator (ICD) ,S-ICD ,device infection ,device complication ,chronic kidney disease ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
BackgroundPatients with progressive chronic kidney disease (CKD) are at higher risk of infections and complications from cardiac implantable electronic devices (CIED). In patients with a primary or secondary prophylactic indication, implantable cardiac defibrillators (ICD) can prevent sudden cardiac deaths (SCD). We retrospectively compared transvenous-ICD (TV-ICD) and intermuscularly implanted subcutaneous-ICD (S-ICD) associated infections and complication rates together with hospitalizations in recipients with stage 4 kidney disease.MethodsWe retrospectively analyzed 70 patients from six German centers with stage 4 CKD who received either a prophylactic TV-ICD with a single right ventricular lead, 49 patients, or a S-ICD, 21 patients. Follow-Ups (FU) were performed bi-annually.ResultsThe TV-ICD patients were significantly older. This group had more patients with a history of atrial arrhythmias and more were prescribed anti-arrhythmic medication compared with the S-ICD group. There were no significant differences for other baseline characteristics. The median and interquartile range of FU durations were 55.2 (57.6–69.3) months. During FU, patients with a TV-ICD system experienced significantly more device associated infections (n = 8, 16.3% vs. n = 0; p
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- 2024
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26. Takotsubo syndrome outcomes predicted by thyroid hormone signature: insights from cluster analysis of a multicentre registryResearch in context
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Assem Aweimer, Johannes W. Dietrich, Francesco Santoro, Mireia Camins Fàbregas, Andreas Mügge, Iván J. Núñez-Gil, Ravi Vazirani, Oscar Vedia, Toni Pätz, Ilaria Ragnatela, Luca Arcari, Massimo Volpe, Miguel Corbì-Pascual, Manuel Martinez-Selles, Manuel Almendro-Delia, Alessandro Sionis, Aitor Uribarri, Holger Thiele, Natale Daniele Brunetti, Ingo Eitel, Thomas Stiermaier, Nazha Hamdani, Mohammad Abumayyaleh, Ibrahim Akin, and Ibrahim El-Battrawy
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Takotsubo syndrome ,Thyroid ,Stress cardiomyopathy ,Thyrotoxicosis ,Medicine ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Summary: Background: Recently, abnormal thyroid function was shown to be common in patients with Takotsubo syndrome (TTS), being classified into “endocrine-type” and “stress-type” responses. The aim of this study was to investigate the association between thyroid homeostasis and TTS in a larger international registry. Methods: In total 288 patients with TTS were enrolled through the GEIST multicentre registry from Germany, Italy and Spain. Thyrotropin (TSH), free T4 (FT4) and free T3 (FT3) concentrations were analysed at admission. Data were collected both retrospectively and prospectively from 2017 onwards. Primary endpoints included in-hospital and all-cause fatality, determined by cluster analysis using an unsupervised machine learning algorithm (k-medoids). Findings: Three clusters were identified, classifying TTS with low (TSLT), high (TSHT) and normal (TSNT) thyroid output, based on TSH and FT4 levels in relation to the median thyroid’s secretory capacity (SPINA-GT). Although TSH and FT4 concentrations were similar among survivors and non-survivors, these clusters were significantly associated with patient outcomes. In the longitudinal Kaplan–Meier analysis including in- and out-of-hospital survival, the prognosis related to concentrations of TSH, FT4, and FT3 as well as SPINA-GT, deiodinase activity (SPINA-GD) and clusters. Patients in the TSHT cluster and with cardiogenic shock had a lower initial left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF). Interpretation: This study suggests that thyroid hormones may impact the evolution and prognosis of TTS. The findings indicate that thyroid-derived biomarkers may help identify high-risk patients and pave the way for novel personalized and preventive therapeutic options. Funding: This research was not funded by any public, commercial, or not-for-profit agencies.
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- 2024
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27. The uropygial gland of the Great Cormorant (Phalacrocorax carbo): II. Biochemical analysis of the uropygial secretion
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Holste, Jonas, Mügge, Carolin, Distler, Claudia, and Schulz, Stefan
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- 2023
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28. Impacts of gene variants on drug effects-the foundation of genotype-guided pharmacologic therapy for long QT syndrome and short QT syndrome
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Zhao, Zhihan, Zang, Xiaobiao, Niu, Kerun, Song, Weifeng, Wang, Xianqing, Mügge, Andreas, Aweimer, Assem, Hamdani, Nazha, Zhou, Xiaobo, Zhao, Yonghui, Akin, Ibrahim, and El-Battrawy, Ibrahim
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- 2024
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29. Takotsubo syndrome outcomes predicted by thyroid hormone signature: insights from cluster analysis of a multicentre registry
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Aweimer, Assem, Dietrich, Johannes W., Santoro, Francesco, Fàbregas, Mireia Camins, Mügge, Andreas, Núñez-Gil, Iván J., Vazirani, Ravi, Vedia, Oscar, Pätz, Toni, Ragnatela, Ilaria, Arcari, Luca, Volpe, Massimo, Corbì-Pascual, Miguel, Martinez-Selles, Manuel, Almendro-Delia, Manuel, Sionis, Alessandro, Uribarri, Aitor, Thiele, Holger, Brunetti, Natale Daniele, Eitel, Ingo, Stiermaier, Thomas, Hamdani, Nazha, Abumayyaleh, Mohammad, Akin, Ibrahim, and El-Battrawy, Ibrahim
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- 2024
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30. Digital Twins for Sustainability in the Context of Biological Transformation
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Seegrün, Anne, Mügge, Janine, Riedelsheimer, Theresa, Lindow, Kai, Chaari, Fakher, Series Editor, Gherardini, Francesco, Series Editor, Ivanov, Vitalii, Series Editor, Cavas-Martínez, Francisco, Editorial Board Member, di Mare, Francesca, Editorial Board Member, Haddar, Mohamed, Editorial Board Member, Kwon, Young W., Editorial Board Member, Trojanowska, Justyna, Editorial Board Member, Xu, Jinyang, Editorial Board Member, Kohl, Holger, editor, Seliger, Günther, editor, and Dietrich, Franz, editor
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- 2023
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31. The impact of diabetes mellitus on the outcome of troponin-positive patients with non-obstructive coronary arteries
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Kreimer, Fabienne, Schlettert, Clara, Abumayyaleh, Mohammad, Akin, Ibrahim, Max Hijazi, Mido, Hamdani, Nazha, Gotzmann, Michael, Mügge, Andreas, El-Battrawy, Ibrahim, and Aweimer, Assem
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- 2024
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32. Enhancing biocatalytical N[sbnd]N bond formation with the actinobacterial piperazate synthase KtzT
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Schröder, Simon, Maier, Artur, Schmidt, Sandy, Mügge, Carolin, and Tischler, Dirk
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- 2024
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33. Integrated Consideration of Data Flows and Life Cycle Assessment in Vehicle Dismantling processes
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Mügge, Janine, Seegrün, Anne, Faßbender, Lynn, Riedelsheimer, Theresa, Staufenbiel, Philip, and Lindow, Kai
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- 2024
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34. Asymptomatische Ionenkanalerkrankungen: Risikostratifizierung und Primärprophylaxe
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Aweimer, Assem, Mügge, Andreas, Akin, Ibrahim, and El-Battrawy, Ibrahim
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- 2023
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35. Different treatment strategies versus a common standard arm (CSA) in patients with newly diagnosed AML over the age of 60 years: a randomized German inter-group study
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Niederwieser, Dietger, Lang, Thomas, Krahl, Rainer, Heinicke, Thomas, Maschmeyer, Georg, Al-Ali, Haifa Kathrin, Schwind, Sebastian, Jentzsch, Madlen, Cross, Michael, Kahl, Christoph, Wolf, Hans-Heinrich, Sayer, Herbert, Schulze, Antje, Dreger, Peter, Hegenbart, Ute, Krämer, Alwin, Junghanss, Christian, Mügge, Lars-Olof, Hähling, Detlev, Hirt, Carsten, Späth, Christian, Peter, Norma, Opitz, Bernhard, Florschütz, Axel, Reifenrath, Kolja, Zojer, Niklas, Scholl, Sebastian, Pönisch, Wolfram, Heyn, Simone, Vucinic, Vladan, Hochhaus, Andreas, Aul, Carlo, Giagounidis, Aristoteles, Balleisen, Leopold, Oldenkott, Bernd, Staib, Peter, Kiehl, Michael, Schütte, Wolfgang, Naumann, Ralph, Eimermacher, Hartmut, Dörken, Bernd, Sauerland, Cristina, Lengfelder, Eva, Hiddemann, Wolfgang, Wörmann, Bernhard, Müller-Tidow, Carsten, Serve, Hubert, Schliemann, Christoph, Hehlmann, Rüdiger, Berdel, Wolfgang E., Pfirrmann, Markus, Krug, Utz, and Hoffmann, Verena S.
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- 2023
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36. O baú e a chave da memória em Paraízo-Paraguay, de Marcelo Labes
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Rochele Moura Prass, Ernani Mügge, and Marinês Andrea Kunz
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paraízo-paraguay ,literatura contemporânea ,guerra do paraguai ,memória coletiva ,Language and Literature ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
Investiga-se as relações entre baú, chave e memória no romance paraízo-paraguay, de Marcelo Labes, que conta a história de uma família radicada em um vilarejo de Santa Catarina. Olga, a matriarca, em delírios senis, relata a origem da família e os dois objetos se destacam na narrativa. No baú, ela guardara suas riquezas durante a Segunda Guerra. A chave que o abre, por sua vez, é mantida sob sua intensa guarda. O objetivo é analisar de que modo eles se relacionam com a memória e seu apagamento. Justifica-se o estudo pela necessidade social de refletir acerca da preservação de memórias em suas relações com a História e a Literatura, o que passa pelo campo da Psicanálise. As bases teóricas são conceitos de memória, no que tange à sua formação e ativação, os aspectos do apagamento da memória coletiva, bem como o modo pelo qual a literatura de testemunho se relaciona com o ato de rememorar. Analisa-se ambos os símbolos, baú e chave, face aos significados que eles podem assumir no desenvolvimento da narrativa. A abordagem é qualitativa, exploratória e o procedimento é bibliográfico. Interpreta-se que a chave, presente no início da trama, é o objeto que desencadeia o ato de rememorar; o baú perdido, um repositório de memórias coletivas. O baú é localizado anos após o falecimento de Olga, mas, sem a chave, que desaparece da narrativa quando a idosa falece, impede que os descendentes da matriarca, embora tenham acesso ao conteúdo do baú, compreendam as riquezas nele contidas.
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- 2023
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37. Subthalamic 85 Hz deep brain stimulation improves walking pace and stride length in Parkinson’s disease patients
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F. Mügge, U. Kleinholdermann, A. Heun, M. Ollenschläger, J. Hannink, and D. J. Pedrosa
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Deep brain stimulation ,Low frequency ,Nucleus subthalamicus ,Gait ,Mobile sensors ,Inertial measurement unit ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Abstract Background Mobile gait sensors represent a compelling tool to objectify the severity of symptoms in patients with idiopathic Parkinson’s disease (iPD), but also to determine the therapeutic benefit of interventions. In particular, parameters of Deep Brain stimulation (DBS) with its short latency could be accurately assessed using sensor data. This study aimed at gaining insight into gait changes due to different DBS parameters in patients with subthalamic nucleus (STN) DBS. Methods An analysis of various gait examinations was performed on 23 of the initially enrolled 27 iPD patients with chronic STN DBS. Stimulation settings were previously adjusted for either amplitude, frequency, or pulse width in a randomised order. A linear mixed effects model was used to analyse changes in gait speed, stride length, and maximum sensor lift. Results The findings of our study indicate significant improvements in gait speed, stride length, and leg lift measurable with mobile gait sensors under different DBS parameter variations. Notably, we observed positive results at 85 Hz, which proved to be more effective than often applied higher frequencies and that these improvements were traceable across almost all conditions. While pulse widths did produce some improvements in leg lift, they were less well tolerated and had inconsistent effects on some of the gait parameters. Our research suggests that using lower frequencies of DBS may offer a more tolerable and effective approach to enhancing gait in individuals with iPD. Conclusions Our results advocate for lower stimulation frequencies for patients who report gait difficulties, especially those who can adapt their DBS settings remotely. They also show that mobile gait sensors could be incorporated into clinical practice in the near future.
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- 2023
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38. The impact of diabetes mellitus on the outcome of troponin-positive patients with non-obstructive coronary arteries
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Fabienne Kreimer, Clara Schlettert, Mohammad Abumayyaleh, Ibrahim Akin, Mido Max Hijazi, Nazha Hamdani, Michael Gotzmann, Andreas Mügge, Ibrahim El-Battrawy, and Assem Aweimer
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MINOCA ,Diabetes mellitus ,Major adverse cardiovascular events ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Background: Diabetes mellitus is a major cardiovascular risk factor for the development of coronary artery disease, but knowledge about the impact of diabetes mellitus on the outcome of patients with myocardial infarction with non-obstructive coronary arteries is limited. The aim of this study was to investigate the prognostic impact of diabetes mellitus on in- and out-of-hospital adverse events in troponin-positive patients with non-obstructive coronary arteries. Methods and Results: A total of 373 troponin-positive patients with non-obstructive coronary arteries between 2010 and 2021 at Bergmannsheil University Hospital Bochum were enrolled, including 65 diabetics and 307 nondiabetics. The median follow-up was 6.2 years. The primary study end point was a composite of in-hospital major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE). Secondary endpoints covered MACE during follow-up.Mean age of the study cohort was 62.9 years and 49.3 % were male. Although the overall rate of in-hospital MACE was higher in diabetics (41.5 %) than in non-diabetics (33.9 %), this difference did not reach statistical significance (p = 0.240). The in-hospital mortality rate was low in both groups, 0 % of diabetes group versus 2.9 % of non-diabetic patients. During follow-up, diabetic patients had a significantly higher rate of MACE (51.9 % vs. 31.1 %, p = 0.004) and a significantly higher all-cause mortality rate than non-diabetic patients (42.3 % vs. 20.1 %, p
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- 2024
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39. Autoria em tempos de inteligência artificial generativa: um olhar para a produção ficcional contemporânea no Brasil
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Rochele Moura Prass, Ernani Mügge, and Helen Lentz Ribeiro Bernasiuk
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Autoria ,Literatura ,Direito ,ChatGPT ,Communication. Mass media ,P87-96 ,Literature (General) ,PN1-6790 - Abstract
A eclosão de sistemas de Inteligência Artificial Generativa, notadamente o ChatGPT, suscita tensionamentos sobre práticas culturais desenvolvidas em um contexto no qual dispositivos assumem tarefas de seres humanos. Face à possibilidade de uma ferramenta criar textos ficcionais, instituímos como objetivo problematizar a atribuição de autoria a textos narrativos produzidos por IAGs. A investigação tem caráter exploratório e descritivo, com técnicas de pesquisa bibliográfica e documental, uma vez que conceituamos autoria pelo viés dos estudos literários e os cotejamos com a legislação sobre direito autoral no Brasil. Os resultados apontam que, no arcabouço legislativo brasileiro, inexistem dispositivos que contemplem o tema. O Projeto de Lei n. 2.338/2023, que versa sobre o emprego de sistemas de IAG, dada sua natureza, tampouco adentra este caso específico. A despeito da literariedade das produções textuais de IAGs e da soberania do leitor quanto ao valor que atribui a uma obra, ressaltamos que essas tecnologias instalam novos desafios no que tange à definição de autoria. Esse novo contexto se apresenta complexo e carente de olhares direcionados à relação entre tais sistemas e produção cultural. De um lado, é necessário considerar a autoria de textos literários, canônicos ou não, que serviram para o treinamento de máquina; de outro, não é possível é possível atribuir plena autoria a sujeitos que produzem e publicam textos ficcionais via tais ferramentas. Concluímos que narrativas oriundas por IAGs podem ser consideradas de autoria híbrida e que essa condição deve ser comunicada a leitores e a outros atores da cena literária.
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- 2023
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40. High frequency of diastolic dysfunction in a population-based cohort of elderly women - but poor association with the symptom dyspnea
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Krämer Ursula, Ranft Ulrich, Vierkötter Andrea, Schikowski Tamara, Gotzmann Michael, Germing Alfried, and Mügge Andreas
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Geriatrics ,RC952-954.6 - Abstract
Abstract Background The European Society of Cardiology recently proposed a new algorithm "How to diagnose heart failure with normal ejection fraction". Central element of the diagnostic strategy is the demonstration of diastolic dysfunction, either by tissue Doppler-derived indices in first line, or in second line by a combination of elevated blood levels of natriuretic peptide with abnormal tissue Doppler findings. We thought to use this diagnostic flowchart in a population-based cohort of elderly women, in whom the prevalence of diastolic dysfunction and heart failure is believed to be high. The purpose was to evaluate the association of dyspnea with the presence of diastolic dysfunction. Methods The study cohort recruited from a cross-sectional follow-up examination of the SALIA cohort (study on the influence of air pollution on lung function, inflammation, and aging). Participants with cardiac or pulmonary disease were excluded, 291 participants formed the final study group (all women, age range 69 to 79 years, all in sinus rhythm, LV ejection fraction > 50%, LV enddiastolic volume index < 97 mL/m2). Quality of life was assessed by the Minnesota living with heart failure questionnaire, and actual symptoms by a structural questionnaire; the examination consisted of a physical examination, measurement of B-type natriuretic peptide, ECG and tissue Doppler echocardiography. Diastolic dysfunction was assumed when the E/E' ratio exceeded 15 as derived from tissue Doppler. In case, tissue Doppler yielded an E/E' ratio ranging from 8 to 15, additional non-invasive parameters had to be fulfilled: left atrial volume index > 40 ml/m2 body surface, or left ventricular mass index > 122 g/m2 body surface, or transmitral E/A ratio < 0.5 plus deceleration time > 280 ms, or blood level of brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) > 200 pg/mL. Results The examinations were concordant with the presence of diastolic dysfunction in 122/291 participants (41.9%). The diagnosis based in 94% of cases on two criteria: in 50 cases on the criterion "E/E' ratio > 15", and in 65 cases on the criterion "15 > E/E'>8 and LV mass index > 122 g/m2". The participants with diastolic dysfunction had on average a higher body mass index, more frequent a history of arterial hypertension and of hospitalization for congestive heart failure, poorer quality of life, and higher BNP blood levels as compared to those participants without signs of diastolic dysfunction. The number of participants complaining exertional dyspnea, however, was similar distributed among the subgroups with and without signs of diastolic dysfunction (40.2 vs 40.8%; p = n.s). In a logistic regression model, the symptom dyspnea was best predicted by systolic pulmonary artery pressure, followed by left atrial volume index, BNP, and body mass index. Conclusion The demonstration of diastolic dysfunction showed only a poor association with the symptom dyspnea in a cohort of elderly women with otherwise normal systolic function. Additional structural or hemodynamic changes are necessary to "explain" the symptom dyspnea. It is unclear whether these additional factors are secondary to a more advanced stage of diastolic dysfunction, or are related to cardiovascular co-morbidities, or both.
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- 2011
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41. Tailored antiplatelet therapy can overcome clopidogrel and aspirin resistance - The BOchum CLopidogrel and Aspirin Plan (BOCLA-Plan) to improve antiplatelet therapy
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Pepinghege Fenena, Lask Sebastian, Engelhardt Andreas, Krüger Jan C, Endres Heinz G, Kaiser Andreas FC, Neubauer Horst, Kusber Andreas, and Mügge Andreas
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Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background Dual antiplatelet therapy using acetylsalicylic acid (ASA, aspirin) and clopidogrel is of great importance following coronary stenting. However, the variable platelet inhibitory effectiveness compromises the antithrombotic advantages provided by dual antiplatelet therapy. The aim of this single-center prospective study was to reduce the low response incidence of dual antiplatelet therapy with ASA and clopidogrel according to a prespecified therapy algorithm. Methods Platelet function testing using whole blood aggregometry (Chronolog 590) was performed 48 hours following coronary stenting (for either acute coronary syndromes or stable coronary artery disease) on 504 patients. The antiplatelet therapy included a loading dose of 600 mg clopidogrel and 500 mg ASA, followed by 75 mg clopidogrel and 100 mg ASA once daily. Clopidogrel low responders (CLR: >5 ohm; adenosine diphosphate (ADP) 5 μM) and/or ASA low responders (ALR: >0 ohm; arachidonic acid 10 μM) were treated according to a structured therapy plan: in the case of CLR, the maintenance + dose was doubled (repeated loading dose followed by 150 mg daily), and when still ineffective ticlopidine or prasugrel, if available and not contraindicated, were used. ALR was treated by increasing the dose to 300 mg in a first step or to 500 mg ASA when the first modification did not take effect sufficiently. In addition, ADP receptor antagonist 2-methylthioadenosine 5'-monophosphate triethylammonium salt (MeSAMP) testing and ASA incubation were performed to rule out either a platelet ADP-receptor defect or an ASA pharmacokinetic resistance. Results Of the total cohort of 504 patients, we detected 30.8% clopidogrel low-responders and 19.4% aspirin low-responders. For ALR, with a dose adjustment of 300 mg ASA daily, 94.6% of ALR were effectively treated and the residual 5.4% by administration of daily dosages of 500 mg ASA. This means that after modification of the ASA maintenance dose, all initial ALRs had an adequate antiplatelet response. The results for clopidogrel revealed that 69% of the CLR were treated effectively by increasing the clopidogrel dose to 150 mg daily. When prasugrel was not available or contraindicated, 12.7% of the remaining low responders showed an adequate result after being switched to ticlopidine. Consequently, by applying the therapy algorithm, we were able to reduce the CLR prevalence by 86.6%. On including prasugrel in the therapy plan, we were finally able to eliminate thienopyridine low response. In addition, no ADP receptor defect was found in this study as a potential reason for CLR. We identified the following factors associated with both CLR and ALR status: acute coronary syndromes, positive troponin values as well as diabetes mellitus and elevated HbA1C values and a higher platelet count. Furthermore, our data revealed for CLR elevated C-reactive protein values and a high PREDICT-score (including an age >65 years, acute coronary syndrome, diabetes mellitus, renal failure, and reduced left ventricular function) as risk factors. The following factors correlated with the risk of ASA low response: patients with elevated hemoglobin, serum creatinine and C-reactive protein values. In addition, medication with nitrates reduced the risk of being CLR. As also holds true for CLR, we found the PREDICT-score to be correlated to the risk of being ALR. However, by far the strongest risk factor for CLR or ALR was the fact of dual resistance. Conclusion Following a structured therapy plan based on a "test and treat" strategy, the prevalence of clopidogrel or aspirin low response can be significantly reduced and the risk of inadequate dual antiplatelet therapy minimized. Trial Registration NCT01212302 (Clinicaltrials.gov)
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- 2011
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42. The impact of sacubitril/valsartan on outcome in patients suffering from heart failure with a concomitant diabetes mellitus
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Ibrahim El‐Battrawy, Jonathan Demmer, Mohammad Abumayyaleh, Carina Crack, Christina Pilsinger, Xiaobo Zhou, Andreas Mügge, Ibrahim Akin, and Assem Aweimer
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Life‐threatening arrhythmia ,Sacubitril/valsartan ,Sudden cardiac death ,Diabetes mellitus ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Abstract Background Guidelines classify sacubitril/valsartan as a significant part of medical treatment of heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF). Data have shown that the HbA1c levels in patients with diabetes mellitus could be impacted by sacubitril/valsartan. A possible positive effect in diabetes patients treated with sacubitril/valsartan on outcome and echocardiography parameters is not well studied yet. Aims The aim of the present study was to compare the impact of sacubitril/valsartan on life‐threatening arrhythmias, atrial fibrillation, different echocardiography parameters and congestion rate in patients suffering from HFrEF according to the diagnosis diabetes mellitus or no diabetes mellitus. Methods and results Consecutive 240 patients with HFrEF from 2016 to 2020 were treated with sacubitril/valsartan and separated to concomitant diabetes mellitus (n = 87, median age 68 years interquartile range (IQR) [32–87]) or no diabetes mellitus (n = 153, median age 66 year IQR [34–89]). Different comorbidities and outcome data were evaluated over a follow‐up period of 24 months. Arterial hypertension (87% vs. 64%; P
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- 2023
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43. Mortality rates of severe COVID-19-related respiratory failure with and without extracorporeal membrane oxygenation in the Middle Ruhr Region of Germany
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Assem Aweimer, Lea Petschulat, Birger Jettkant, Roland Köditz, Johannes Finkeldei, Johannes W. Dietrich, Thomas Breuer, Christian Draese, Ulrich H. Frey, Tim Rahmel, Michael Adamzik, Dirk Buchwald, Dritan Useini, Thorsten Brechmann, Ingolf Hosbach, Jürgen Bünger, Aydan Ewers, Ibrahim El-Battrawy, and Andreas Mügge
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract The use of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) is discussed to improve patients’ outcome in severe COVID-19 with respiratory failure, but data on ECMO remains controversial. The aim of the study was to determine the characteristics of patients under invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV) with or without veno-venous ECMO support and to evaluate outcome parameters. Ventilated patients with COVID-19 with and without additional ECMO support were analyzed in a retrospective multicenter study regarding clinical characteristics, respiratory and laboratory parameters in day-to-day follow-up. Recruitment of patients was conducted during the first three COVID-19 waves at four German university hospitals of the Ruhr University Bochum, located in the Middle Ruhr Region. From March 1, 2020 to August 31, 2021, the charts of 149 patients who were ventilated for COVID-19 infection, were included (63.8% male, median age 67 years). Fifty patients (33.6%) received additional ECMO support. On average, ECMO therapy was initiated 15.6 ± 9.4 days after symptom onset, 10.6 ± 7.1 days after hospital admission, and 4.8 ± 6.4 days after the start of IMV. Male sex and higher SOFA and RESP scores were observed significantly more often in the high-volume ECMO center. Pre-medication with antidepressants was more often detected in survivors (22.0% vs. 6.5%; p = 0.006). ECMO patients were 14 years younger and presented a lower rate of concomitant cardiovascular diseases (18.0% vs. 47.5%; p = 0.0004). Additionally, cytokine-adsorption (46.0% vs. 13.1%; p
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- 2023
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44. Patterns of oral anticoagulant use and outcomes in Asian patients with atrial fibrillation: a post-hoc analysis from the GLORIA-AF Registry
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Abban, Dzifa Wosornu, Abdul, Nasser, Abud, Atilio Marcelo, Adams, Fran, Addala, Srinivas, Adragão, Pedro, Ageno, Walter, Aggarwal, Rajesh, Agosti, Sergio, Agostoni, Piergiuseppe, Aguilar, Francisco, Linares, Julio Aguilar, Aguinaga, Luis, Ahmed, Jameel, Aiello, Allessandro, Ainsworth, Paul, Aiub, Jorge Roberto, Al-Dallow, Raed, Alderson, Lisa, Aldrete Velasco, Jorge Antonio, Alexopoulos, Dimitrios, Manterola, Fernando Alfonso, Aliyar, Pareed, Alonso, David, Alves da Costa, Fernando Augusto, Amado, José, Amara, Walid, Amelot, Mathieu, Amjadi, Nima, Ammirati, Fabrizio, Andrade, Marianna, Andrawis, Nabil, Annoni, Giorgio, Ansalone, Gerardo, Ariani, M.Kevin, Arias, Juan Carlos, Armero, Sébastien, Arora, Chander, Aslam, Muhammad Shakil, Asselman, M., Audouin, Philippe, Augenbraun, Charles, Aydin, S., Ayryanova, Ivaneta, Aziz, Emad, Backes, Luciano Marcelo, Badings, E., Bagni, Ermentina, Baker, Seth H., Bala, Richard, Baldi, Antonio, Bando, Shigenobu, Banerjee, Subhash, Bank, Alan, Esquivias, Gonzalo Barón, Barr, Craig, Bartlett, Maria, Kes, Vanja Basic, Baula, Giovanni, Behrens, Steffen, Bell, Alan, Benedetti, Raffaella, Mazuecos, Juan Benezet, Benhalima, Bouziane, Bergler-Klein, Jutta, Berneau, Jean-Baptiste, Bernstein, Richard A., Berrospi, Percy, Berti, Sergio, Berz, Andrea, Best, Elizabeth, Bettencourt, Paulo, Betzu, Robert, Bhagwat, Ravi, Bhatta, Luna, Biscione, Francesco, Bisignani, Giovanni, Black, Toby, Bloch, Michael J., Bloom, Stephen, Blumberg, Edwin, Bo, Mario, Bøhmer, Ellen, Bollmann, Andreas, Bongiorni, Maria Grazia, Boriani, Giuseppe, Boswijk, D.J., Bott, Jochen, Bottacchi, Edo, Kalan, Marica Bracic, Bradman, Drew, Brautigam, Donald, Breton, Nicolas, Brouwers, P.J.A.M., Browne, Kevin, Cortada, Jordi Bruguera, Bruni, A., Brunschwig, Claude, Buathier, Hervé, Buhl, Aurélie, Bullinga, John, Cabrera, Jose Walter, Caccavo, Alberto, Cai, Shanglang, Caine, Sarah, Calò, Leonardo, Calvi, Valeria, Sánchez, Mauricio Camarillo, Candeias, Rui, Capuano, Vincenzo, Capucci, Alessandro, Caputo, Ronald, Rizo, Tatiana Cárdenas, Cardona, Francisco, Carlos da Costa Darrieux, Francisco, Duarte Vera, Yan Carlos, Carolei, Antonio, Carreño, Susana, Carvalho, Paula, Cary, Susanna, Casu, Gavino, Cavallini, Claudio, Cayla, Guillaume, Celentano, Aldo, Cha, Tae-Joon, Cha, Kwang Soo, Chae, Jei Keon, Chalamidas, Kathrine, Challappa, Krishnan, Chand, Sunil Prakash, Chandrashekar, Harinath, Chartier, Ludovic, Chatterjee, Kausik, Chavez Ayala, Carlos Antero, Cheema, Aamir, Cheema, Amjad, Chen, Lin, Chen, Shih-Ann, Chen, Jyh Hong, Chiang, Fu-Tien, Chiarella, Francesco, Chih-Chan, Lin, Cho, Yong Keun, Choi, Jong-Il, Choi, Dong Ju, Chouinard, Guy, Hoi-Fan Chow, Danny, Chrysos, Dimitrios, Chumakova, Galina, José Roberto, Eduardo Julián, Valenzuela, Chuquiure, Nica, Nicoleta Cindea, Cislowski, David J., Clay, Anthony, Clifford, Piers, Cohen, Andrew, Cohen, Michael, Cohen, Serge, Colivicchi, Furio, Collins, Ronan, Colonna, Paolo, Compton, Steve, Connolly, Derek, Conti, Alberto, Buenostro, Gabriel Contreras, Coodley, Gregg, Cooper, Martin, Coronel, Julian, Corso, Giovanni, Sales, Juan Cosín, Cottin, Yves, Covalesky, John, Cracan, Aurel, Crea, Filippo, Crean, Peter, Crenshaw, James, Cullen, Tina, Darius, Harald, Dary, Patrick, Dascotte, Olivier, Dauber, Ira, Davalos, Vicente, Davies, Ruth, Davis, Gershan, Davy, Jean-Marc, Dayer, Mark, De Biasio, Marzia, De Bonis, Silvana, De Caterina, Raffaele, De Franceschi, Teresiano, de Groot, J.R., De Horta, José, De La Briolle, Axel, Topete, Gilberto de la Pena, Vicenzo de Paola, Angelo Amato, de Souza, Weimar, de Veer, A., De Wolf, Luc, Decoulx, Eric, Deepak, Sasalu, Defaye, Pascal, Del-Carpio Munoz, Freddy, Brkljacic, Diana Delic, Deumite, N. Joseph, Di Legge, Silvia, Diemberger, Igor, Dietz, Denise, Dionísio, Pedro, Dong, Qiang, Rossi dos Santos, Fabio, Dotcheva, Elena, Doukky, Rami, D'Souza, Anthony, Dubrey, Simon, Ducrocq, Xavier, Dupljakov, Dmitry, Duque, Mauricio, Dutta, Dipankar, Duvilla, Nathalie, Duygun, A., Dziewas, Rainer, Eaton, Charles B., Eaves, William, Ebels-Tuinbeek; Clifford Ehrlich, L.A., Eichinger-Hasenauer, Sabine, Eisenberg, Steven J., El Jabali, Adnan, El Shahawy, Mahfouz, Hernandes, Mauro Esteves, Izal, Ana Etxeberria, Evonich, Rudolph, III, Evseeva, Oksana, Ezhov, Andrey, Fahmy, Raed, Fang, Quan, Farsad, Ramin, Fauchier, Laurent, Favale, Stefano, Fayard, Maxime, Fedele, Jose Luis, Fedele, Francesco, Fedorishina, Olga, Fera, Steven R., Gomes Ferreira, Luis Gustavo, Ferreira, Jorge, Ferri, Claudio, Ferrier, Anna, Ferro, Hugo, Finsen, Alexandra, First, Brian, Fischer, Stuart, Fonseca, Catarina, Almeida, Luísa Fonseca, Forman, Steven, Frandsen, Brad, French, William, Friedman, Keith, Friese, Athena, Fruntelata, Ana Gabriela, Fujii, Shigeru, Fumagalli, Stefano, Fundamenski, Marta, Furukawa, Yutaka, Gabelmann, Matthias, Gabra, Nashwa, Gadsbøll, Niels, Galinier, Michel, Gammelgaard, Anders, Ganeshkumar, Priya, Gans, Christopher, Quintana, Antonio Garcia, Gartenlaub, Olivier, Gaspardone, Achille, Genz, Conrad, Georger, Frédéric, Georges, Jean-Louis, Georgeson, Steven, Giedrimas, Evaldas, Gierba, Mariusz, Ortega, Ignacio Gil, Gillespie, Eve, Giniger, Alberto, Giudici, Michael C., Gkotsis, Alexandros, Glotzer, Taya V., Gmehling, Joachim, Gniot, Jacek, Goethals, Peter, Goldbarg, Seth, Goldberg, Ronald, Goldmann, Britta, Golitsyn, Sergey, Gómez, Silvia, Mesa, Juan Gomez, Gonzalez, Vicente Bertomeu, Gonzalez Hermosillo, Jesus Antonio, González López, Víctor Manuel, Gorka, Hervé, Gornick, Charles, Gorog, Diana, Gottipaty, Venkat, Goube, Pascal, Goudevenos, Ioannis, Graham, Brett, Greer, G. Stephen, Gremmler, Uwe, Grena, Paul G., Grond, Martin, Gronda, Edoardo, Grönefeld, Gerian, Gu, Xiang, Torres Torres, Ivett Guadalupe, Guardigli, Gabriele, Guevara, Carolina, Guignier, Alexandre, Gulizia, Michele, Gumbley, Michael, Günther, Albrecht, Ha, Andrew, Hahalis, Georgios, Hakas, Joseph, Hall, Christian, Han, Bing, Han, Seongwook, Hargrove, Joe, Hargroves, David, Harris, Kenneth B., Haruna, Tetsuya, Hayek, Emil, Healey, Jeff, Hearne, Steven, Heffernan, Michael, Heggelund, Geir, Heijmeriks, J.A., Hemels, Maarten, Hendriks, I., Henein, Sam, Her, Sung-Ho, Hermany, Paul, Hernández Del Río, Jorge Eduardo, Higashino, Yorihiko, Hill, Michael, Hisadome, Tetsuo, Hishida, Eiji, Hoffer, Etienne, Hoghton, Matthew, Hong, Kui, Hong, Suk keun, Horbach, Stevie, Horiuchi, Masataka, Hou, Yinglong, Hsing, Jeff, Huang, Chi-Hung, Huckins, David, Hughes, kathy, Huizinga, A., Hulsman, E.L., Hung, Kuo-Chun, Hwang, Gyo-Seung, Ikpoh, Margaret, Imberti, Davide, Ince, Hüseyin, Indolfi, Ciro, Inoue, Shujiro, Irles, Didier, Iseki, Harukazu, Israel, C. Noah, Iteld, Bruce, Iyer, Venkat, Jackson-Voyzey, Ewart, Jaffrani, Naseem, Jäger, Frank, James, Martin, Jang, Sung-Won, Jaramillo, Nicolas, Jarmukli, Nabil, Jeanfreau, Robert J., Jenkins, Ronald D., Sánchez, Carlos Jerjes, Jimenez, Javier, Jobe, Robert, Joen-Jakobsen, Tomas, Jones, Nicholas, Moura Jorge, Jose Carlos, Jouve, Bernard, Jung, Byung Chun, Jung, Kyung Tae, Jung, Werner, Kachkovskiy, Mikhail, Kafkala, Krystallenia, Kalinina, Larisa, Kallmünzer, Bernd, Kamali, Farzan, Kamo, Takehiro, Kampus, Priit, Kashou, Hisham, Kastrup, Andreas, Katsivas, Apostolos, Kaufman, Elizabeth, Kawai, Kazuya, Kawajiri, Kenji, Kazmierski, John F., Keeling, P., Kerr Saraiva, José Francisco, Ketova, Galina, Khaira, Ajit Singh, Khripun, Aleksey, Kim, Doo-Il, Kim, Young Hoon, Kim, Nam Ho, Kim, Dae Kyeong, Kim, Jeong Su, Kim, June Soo, Kim, Ki Seok, Kim, Jin bae, Kinova, Elena, Klein, Alexander, Kmetzo, James J., Kneller, G. Larsen, Knezevic, Aleksandar, Angela Koh, Su Mei, Koide, Shunichi, Kollias, Anastasios, Kooistra, J.A., Koons, Jay, Koschutnik, Martin, Kostis, William J., Kovacic, Dragan, Kowalczyk, Jacek, Koziolova, Natalya, Kraft, Peter, Kragten, Johannes A., Krantz, Mori, Krause, Lars, Krenning, B.J., Krikke, F., Kromhout, Z., Krysiak, Waldemar, Kumar, Priya, Kümler, Thomas, Kuniss, Malte, Kuo, Jen-Yuan, Küppers, Achim, Karla Kurrelmeyer, Kwak, Choong Hwan, Laboulle, Bénédicte, Labovitz, Arthur, Lai, Wen Ter, Lam, Andy, Lam, Yat Yin, Zanetti, Fernando Lanas, Landau, Charles, Landini, Giancarlo, Figueiredo, Estêvão Lanna, Larsen, Torben, Lavandier, Karine, LeBlanc, Jessica, Lee, Moon Hyoung, Lee, Chang-Hoon, Lehman, John, Leitão, Ana, Lellouche, Nicolas, Lelonek, Malgorzata, Lenarczyk, Radoslaw, Lenderink, T., González, Salvador León, Leong-Sit, Peter, Leschke, Matthias, Ley, Nicolas, Li, Zhanquan, Li, Xiaodong, Li, Weihua, Li, Xiaoming, Lichy, Christhoh, Lieber, Ira, Limon Rodriguez, Ramon Horacio, Lin, Hailong, Lip, Gregory Y.H., Liu, Feng, Liu, Hengliang, Esperon, Guillermo Llamas, Navarro, Nassip Llerena, Lo, Eric, Lokshyn, Sergiy, López, Amador, López-Sendón, José Luís, Lorga Filho, Adalberto Menezes, Lorraine, Richard S., Luengas, Carlos Alberto, Luke, Robert, Luo, Ming, Lupovitch, Steven, Lyrer, Philippe, Ma, Changsheng, Ma, Genshan, Madariaga, Irene, Maeno, Koji, Magnin, Dominique, Maid, Gustavo, Mainigi, Sumeet K., Makaritsis, Konstantinos, Malhotra, Rohit, Manning, Rickey, Manolis, Athanasios, Manrique Hurtado, Helard Andres, Mantas, Ioannis, Jattin, Fernando Manzur, Maqueda, Vicky, Marchionni, Niccolo, Ortuno, Francisco Marin, Santana, Antonio Martín, Martinez, Jorge, Maskova, Petra, Hernandez, Norberto Matadamas, Matsuda, Katsuhiro, Maurer, Tillmann, Mauro, Ciro, May, Erik, Mayer, Nolan, McClure, John, McCormack, Terry, McGarity, William, McIntyre, Hugh, McLaurin, Brent, Medina Palomino, Feliz Alvaro, Melandri, Francesco, Meno, Hiroshi, Menzies, Dhananjai, Mercader, Marco, Meyer, Christian, Meyer, Beat J., Miarka, Jacek, Mibach, Frank, Michalski, Dominik, Michel, Patrik, Chreih, Rami Mihail, Mikdadi, Ghiath, Mikus, Milan, Milicic, Davor, Militaru, Constantin, Minaie, Sedi, Minescu, Bogdan, Mintale, Iveta, Mirault, Tristan, Mirro, Michael J., Mistry, Dinesh, Miu, Nicoleta Violeta, Miyamoto, Naomasa, Moccetti, Tiziano, Mohammed, Akber, Nor, Azlisham Mohd, Mollerus, Michael, Molon, Giulio, Mondillo, Sergio, Moniz, Patrícia, Mont, Lluis, Montagud, Vicente, Montaña, Oscar, Monti, Cristina, Moretti, Luciano, Mori, Kiyoo, Moriarty, Andrew, Morka, Jacek, Moschini, Luigi, Moschos, Nikitas, Mügge, Andreas, Mulhearn, Thomas J., Muresan, Carmen, Muriago, Michela, Musial, Wlodzimierz, Musser, Carl W., Musumeci, Francesco, Nageh, Thuraia, Nakagawa, Hidemitsu, Nakamura, Yuichiro, Nakayama, Toru, Nam, Gi-Byoung, Nanna, Michele, Natarajan, Indira, Nayak, Hemal M., Naydenov, Stefan, Nazlić, Jurica, Cristian Nechita, Alexandru, Nechvatal, Libor, Negron, Sandra Adela, Neiman, James, Neuenschwander, Fernando Carvalho, Neves, David, Neykova, Anna, Miguel, Ricardo Nicolás, Nijmeh, George, Nizov, Alexey, Campos, Rodrigo Noronha, Nossan, Janko, Novikova, Tatiana, Nowalany-Kozielska, Ewa, Nsah, Emmanuel, Nunez Fragoso, Juan Carlos, Nurgalieva, Svetlana, Nuyens, Dieter, Nyvad, Ole, Odin de Los Rios Ibarra, Manuel, O'Donnell, Philip, O'Donnell, Martin, Oh, Seil, Oh, Yong Seog, Oh, Dongjin, O'Hara, Gilles, Oikonomou, Kostas, Olivares, Claudia, Oliver, Richard, Ruiz, Rafael Olvera, Olympios, Christoforos, omaszuk-Kazberuk, Anna, Asensi, Joaquín Osca, Jose, eena Padayattil, Padilla Padilla, Francisco Gerardo, Rios, Victoria Padilla, Pajes, Giuseppe, Pandey, Shekhar, Paparella, Gaetano, Paris, F., Park, Hyung Wook, Park, Jong Sung, Parthenakis, Fragkiskos, Passamonti, Enrico, Patel, Rajesh J., Patel, Jaydutt, Patel, Mehool, Patrick, Janice, Jimenez, Ricardo Pavón, Paz, Analía, Pengo, Vittorio, Pentz, William, Pérez, Beatriz, Pérez Ríos, Alma Minerva, Pérez-Cabezas, Alejandro, Perlman, Richard, Persic, Viktor, Perticone, Francesco, Peters, Terri K., Petkar, Sanjiv, Pezo, Luis Felipe, Pflücke, Christian, Pham, David N., Phillips, Roland T., Phlaum, Stephen, Pieters, Denis, Pineau, Julien, Pinter, Arnold, Pinto, Fausto, Pisters, R., Pivac, Nediljko, Pocanic, Darko, Podoleanu, Cristian, Politano, Alessandro, Poljakovic, Zdravka, Pollock, Stewart, Garcéa, Jose Polo, Poppert, Holger, Porcu, Maurizio, Reino, Antonio Pose, Prasad, Neeraj, Précoma, Dalton Bertolim, Prelle, Alessandro, Prodafikas, John, Protasov, Konstantin, Pye, Maurice, Qiu, Zhaohui, Quedillac, Jean-Michel, Raev, Dimitar, Raffo Grado, Carlos Antonio, Rahimi, Sidiqullah, Raisaro, Arturo, Rama, Bhola, Ramos, Ricardo, Ranieri, Maria, Raposo, Nuno, Rashba, Eric, Rauch-Kroehnert, Ursula, Reddy, Ramakota, Renda, Giulia, Reza, Shabbir, Ria, Luigi, Richter, Dimitrios, Rickli, Hans, Rieker, Werner, Vera, Tomas Ripolil, Ritt, Luiz Eduardo, Roberts, Douglas, Briones, Ignacio Rodriguez, Rodriguez Escudero, Aldo Edwin, Pascual, Carlos Rodríguez, Roman, Mark, Romeo, Francesco, Ronner, E., Roux, Jean-Francois, Rozkova, Nadezda, Rubacek, Miroslav, Rubalcava, Frank, Russo, Andrea M., Rutgers, Matthieu Pierre, Rybak, Karin, Said, Samir, Sakamoto, Tamotsu, Salacata, Abraham, Salem, Adrien, Bodes, Rafael Salguero, Saltzman, Marco A., Salvioni, Alessandro, Vallejo, Gregorio Sanchez, Fernández, Marcelo Sanmartín, Saporito, Wladmir Faustino, Sarikonda, Kesari, Sasaoka, Taishi, Sati, Hamdi, Savelieva, Irina, Scala, Pierre-Jean, Schellinger, Peter, Scherr, Carlos, Schmitz, Lisa, Schmitz, Karl-Heinz, Schmitz, Bettina, Schnabel, Teresa, Schnupp, Steffen, Schoeniger, Peter, Schön, Norbert, Schwimmbeck, Peter, Seamark, Clare, Searles, Greg, Seidl, Karl-Heinz, Seidman, Barry, Sek, Jaroslaw, Sekaran, Lakshmanan, Serrati, Carlo, Shah, Neerav, Shah, Vinay, Shah, Anil, Shah, Shujahat, Sharma, Vijay Kumar, Shaw, Louise, Sheikh, Khalid H., Shimizu, Naruhito, Shimomura, Hideki, Shin, Dong-Gu, Shin, Eun-Seok, Shite, Junya, Sibilio, Gerolamo, Silver, Frank, Sime, Iveta, Simmers, Tim A., Singh, Narendra, Siostrzonek, Peter, Smadja, Didier, Smith, David W., Snitman, Marcelo, Filho, Dario Sobral, Soda, Hassan, Sofley, Carl, Sokal, Adam, Oi Yan, Yannie Soo, Sotolongo, Rodolfo, Ferreira de Souza, Olga, Sparby, Jon Arne, Spinar, Jindrich, Sprigings, David, Spyropoulos, Alex C., Stakos, Dimitrios, Steinwender, Clemens, Stergiou, Georgios, Stiell, Ian, Stoddard, Marcus, Stoikov, Anastas, Streb, Witold, Styliadis, Ioannis, Su, Guohai, Su, Xi, Sudnik, Wanda, Sukles, Kai, Sun, Xiaofei, Swart, H., Szavits-Nossan, Janko, Taggeselle, Jens, Takagi, Yuichiro, Singh Takhar, Amrit Pal, Tamm, Angelika, Tanaka, Katsumi, Tanawuttiwat, Tanyanan, Tang, Sherman, Tang, Aylmer, Tarsi, Giovanni, Tassinari, Tiziana, Tayal, Ashis, Tayebjee, Muzahir, Berg, J.M. ten, Tesloianu, Dan, The, Salem H.K., Thomas, Dierk, Timsit, Serge, Tobaru, Tetsuya, Tomasik, Andrzej R., Torosoff, Mikhail, Touze, Emmanuel, Trendafilova, Elina, Tsai, W. Kevin, Tse, Hung Fat, Tsutsui, Hiroshi, Tu, Tian Ming, Tuininga, Ype, Turakhia, Minang, Turk, Samir, Turner, Wayne, Tveit, Arnljot, Tytus, Richard, Valadão, C., van Bergen, P.F.M.M., van de Borne, Philippe, van den Berg, B.J., van der Zwaan, C., Van Eck, M., Vanacker, Peter, Vasilev, Dimo, Vasilikos, Vasileios, Vasilyev, Maxim, Veerareddy, Srikar, Miño; Asok Venkataraman, Mario Vega, Verdecchia, Paolo, Versaci, Francesco, Vester, Ernst Günter, Vial, Hubert, Victory, Jason, Villamil, Alejandro, Vincent, Marc, Vlastaris, Anthony, Dahl, Jürgen vom, Vora, Kishor, Vranian, Robert B., Wakefield, Paul, Wang, Ningfu, Wang, Mingsheng, Wang, Xinhua, Wang, Feng, Wang, Tian, Warner, Alberta L., Watanabe, Kouki, Wei, Jeanne, Weimar, Christian, Weiner, Stanislav, Weinrich, Renate, Wen, Ming-Shien, Wiemer, Marcus, Wiggers, Preben, Wilke, Andreas, Williams, David, Williams, Marcus L., Witzenbichler, Bernhard, Wong, Brian, Lawrence Wong, Ka Sing, Wozakowska-Kaplon, Beata, Wu, Shulin, Wu, Richard C., Wunderlich, Silke, Wyatt, Nell, Wylie, John (Jack), Xu, Yong, Xu, Xiangdong, Yamanoue, Hiroki, Yamashita, Takeshi, Bryan Yan, Ping Yen, Yang, Tianlun, Yao, Jing, Yeh, Kuo-Ho, Yin, Wei Hsian, Yotov, Yoto, Zahn, Ralf, Zarich, Stuart, Zenin, Sergei, Zeuthen, Elisabeth Louise, Zhang, Huanyi, Zhang, Donghui, Zhang, Xingwei, Zhang, Ping, Zhang, Jun, Zhao, Shui Ping, Zhao, Yujie, Zhao, Zhichen, Zheng, Yang, Zhou, Jing, Zimmermann, Sergio, Zini, Andrea, Zizzo, Steven, Zong, Wenxia, Zukerman, L. Steven, Romiti, Giulio Francesco, Corica, Bernadette, Proietti, Marco, Mei, Davide Antonio, Frydenlund, Juliane, Bisson, Arnaud, Olshansky, Brian, Chan, Yi-Hsin, Huisman, Menno V., and Chao, Tze-Fan
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- 2023
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45. The CYP2J2 G-50T polymorphism and myocardial infarction in patients with cardiovascular risk profile
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Epplen Jörg T, Mügge Andreas, Neubauer Horst, Hanefeld Christoph, Bulut Daniel, Börgel Jan, Holland-Letz Tim, and Spiecker Martin
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Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Abstract Background Cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzyme 2J2, an epoxygenase predominantly expressed in the heart, metabolises arachidonic acid to biologically active eicosanoids. One of the CYP2J2 products, 11, 12-epoxyeicosatrienoic acid, has several vasoprotective effects. The CYP2J2-G-50T-promotor polymorphism decreases gene expression and is associated with coronary artery disease. This association supports the vascular protective role of CYP-derived eicosanoids in cardiovascular disease. In the present study, we investigated the influence of this polymorphism on survived myocardial infarction in two study groups of patients with on average high cardiovascular risk profile. Methods The CYP2J2 polymorphism was genotyped in two groups of patients that were collected with the same method of clinical data collection. Data from 512 patients with sleep apnoea (group: OSA) and on average high cardiovascular risk profile and from another 488 patients who were admitted for coronary angiography (CAR-group) were evaluated for a potential correlation of the CYP2J2 polymorphism G-50T and a history of myocardial infarction. The G-50T polymorphism of the CYP2J2 gene was genotyped by allele specific restriction and light cycler analysis. Results The T-allele of the polymorphism was found in 111 (11.1%; CAR-group: N = 65, 13.3%; OSA: N = 46, 9.0%). 146 patients had a history of myocardial infarction (CAR: N = 120, 24.6%; OSA: N = 26, 5.1%). Cardiovascular risk factors were equally distributed between the different genotypes of the CYP2J2 G-50T polymorphism. In the total group of 1000 individuals, carriers of the T-allele had significantly more myocardial infarctions compared to carriers of the wild type (T/T or G/T: 21.6%; G/G: 13.7%; p = 0.026, odds ratio 1.73, 95%-CI [1.06–2.83]). In the multivariate logistic regression analysis the odds ratio for a history of myocardial infarction in carriers of the T-allele was 1.611, 95%-CI [0.957–2.731] but this trend was not significant (p = 0.073). Conclusion In presence of other risk factors, the CYP2J2 G-50T failed to show a significant role in the development of myocardial infarction. However, since our result is close to the border of significance, this question should be clarified in larger, prospective studies in the future.
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- 2008
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46. Risk factors and myocardial infarction in patients with obstructive sleep apnea: impact of β2-adrenergic receptor polymorphisms
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Mügge Andreas, Bulut Daniel, Hanefeld Christoph, Büchner Nikolaus, Wieczorek Stefan, Börgel Jan, Bartels Nina K, Rump Lars C, Sanner Bernd M, and Epplen Jörg T
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Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background The increased sympathetic nervous activity in patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is largely responsible for the high prevalence of arterial hypertension, and it is suggested to adversely affect triglyceride and high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol levels in these patients. The functionally relevant polymorphisms of the β2-adrenergic receptor (Arg-47Cys/Arg16Gly and Gln27Glu) have been shown to exert modifying effects on these risk factors in previous studies, but results are inconsistent. Methods We investigated a group of 429 patients (55 ± 10.7 years; 361 men, 68 women) with moderate to severe obstructive sleep apnea (apnea/hypopnea index (AHI) 29.1 ± 23.1/h) and, on average, a high cardiovascular risk profile (body mass index 31.1 ± 5.6, with hypertension in 60.1%, dyslipidemia in 49.2%, and diabetes in 17.2% of patients). We typed the β2-adrenergic receptor polymorphisms and investigated the five most frequent haplotypes for their modifying effects on OSA-induced changes in blood pressure, heart rate, and lipid levels. The prevalence of cardiovascular risk factors and coronary heart disease (n = 55, 12.8%) and survived myocardial infarction (n = 27, 6.3%) were compared between the genotypes and haplotypes. Results Multivariate linear/logistic regressions revealed a significant and independent (from BMI, age, sex, presence of diabetes, use of antidiabetic, lipid-lowering, and antihypertensive medication) influence of AHI on daytime systolic and diastolic blood pressure, heart rate, prevalence of hypertension, and triglyceride and HDL levels. The β2-adrenergic receptor genotypes and haplotypes showed no modifying effects on these relationships or on the prevalence of dyslipidemia, diabetes, and coronary heart disease, yet, for all three polymorphisms, heterozygous carriers had a significantly lower relative risk for myocardial infarction (Arg-47Cys: n = 195, odds ratio (OR) = 0.32, P = 0.012; Arg16Gly: n = 197, OR = 0.39, P = 0.031; Gln27Glu: OR = 0.37, P = 0.023). Carriers of the most frequent haplotype (n = 113) (haplotype 1; heterozygous for all three polymorphisms) showed a five-fold lower prevalence of survived myocardial infarction (OR = 0.21, P = 0.023). Conclusion Our study showed no significant modifying effect of the functionally relevant β2-adrenergic receptor polymorphisms on OSA-induced blood pressure, heart rate, or lipid changes. Nevertheless, heterozygosity of these polymorphisms is associated with a lower prevalence of survived myocardial infarction in this group with, on average, a high cardiovascular risk profile.
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- 2007
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47. Use of the Wearable Cardioverter‐Defibrillator Among Patients With Myocarditis and Reduced Ejection Fraction or Ventricular Tachyarrhythmia: Data From a Multicenter Registry
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Ibrahim El‐Battrawy, Katharina Koepsel, David Tenbrink, Boldizsar Kovacs, Tobias C. Dreher, Christian Blockhaus, Michael Gotzmann, Norbert Klein, Thomas Kuntz, Dong‐In Shin, Hendrik Lapp, Stephanie Rosenkaimer, Mohammad Abumayyaleh, Nazha Hamdani, Ardan Muammer Saguner, Jacqueline Kowitz, Julia W. Erath, Firat Duru, Andreas Mügge, Ibrahim Akin, Assem Aweimer, and Thomas Beiert
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myocarditis ,sudden cardiac death ,ventricular tachycardia ,wearable cardioverter‐defibrillator ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Background Data on the use of the wearable cardioverter‐defibrillator (WCD) among patients with myocarditis remain sparse. Consequently, evidence for guideline recommendations in this patient population is lacking. Methods and Results In total, 1596 consecutive patients were included in a multicenter registry from 8 European centers, with 124 patients (8%) having received the WCD due to myocarditis and reduced left ventricular ejection fraction or prior ventricular tachyarrhythmia. The mean age was 51.6±16.3 years, with 74% being male. Patients were discharged after index hospitalization on heart failure medication: Angiotensin‐converting enzyme inhibitors (62.5%), angiotensin‐receptor‐neprilysin inhibitor (22.9%), aldosterone‐antagonists (51%), or beta blockers (91.4%). The initial median left ventricular ejection fraction was 30% (22%–45%) and increased to 48% (39%–55%) over long‐term follow‐up (P
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- 2023
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48. Loss of p53 enhances the tumor-initiating potential and drug resistance of clonogenic multiple myeloma cells
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Chang, Yu-Tai, Chiu, Ian, Wang, Qiuju, Bustamante, Jorge, Jiang, Wenxuan, Rycaj, Kiera, Yi, Song, Li, Joey, Kowalski-Muegge, Jeanne, and Matsui, William
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- 2023
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49. Primary alcohols as substrates or products in whole-cell biocatalysis: Toxicity for Escherichia coli expression strains
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Schultes, Fabian Peter Josef, Haarmann, Melody, Tischler, Dirk, and Mügge, Carolin
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- 2023
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50. The delusive economy: how information and affect colour perceptions of national economic performance
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Linsi, Lukas, Mügge, Daniel, and Carillo-López, Ana
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- 2022
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