4,449 results on '"Claus, G."'
Search Results
2. Circulating monocyte populations as biomarker for abdominal aortic aneurysms: a single-center retrospective cohort study
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Johannes Klopf, Branislav Zagrapan, Annika Brandau, Peter Lechenauer, Catharina J. Candussi, Patrick Rossi, Nihan Dide Celem, Michael Ziegler, Lukas Fuchs, Hubert Hayden, Claus G. Krenn, Wolf Eilenberg, Christoph Neumayer, and Christine Brostjan
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abdominal aortic aneurysm ,biomarker ,diagnosis ,intermediate monocytes ,monocyte-platelet aggregates ,prognosis ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
BackgroundAbdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) development is driven by inflammation, in particular myeloid cells, which represent attractive biomarker candidates. Yet to date, the maximum aortic diameter is the only clinically applied predictor of AAA progression and indicator for surgical repair. We postulated that aortic inflammation is reflected in a systemic change of monocyte populations, which we investigated regarding marker potential in AAA diagnosis and prognosis.MethodsWe conducted a single-center retrospective cohort study in a diagnostic setting, measuring monocyte subsets by flow cytometry in peripheral blood samples of 47 AAA patients under surveillance, matched with 25 healthy controls and 25 patients with peripheral artery disease (PAD). In a prognostic setting, we acquired longitudinal data of 60 AAA patients including aneurysm growth assessment by computed tomography at 6-month intervals.ResultsBlood levels of total monocytes, CD16+ monocytes and particularly intermediate monocytes were significantly increased in AAA patients versus healthy individuals and were also elevated compared to PAD patients. The combination of intermediate monocyte and D-dimer blood levels outperformed the individual diagnostic marker values. Additionally, the elevated concentrations of total monocytes, intermediate monocytes, and monocyte-platelet aggregates (MPA) were suited to predict rapid AAA progression over short-term periods of six months. Of note, MPA were identified as independent predictor of AAA disease progression in multivariable analysis.ConclusionCirculating monocyte subsets are elevated in AAA patients and support diagnosis and prediction of aneurysm progression. Monocyte subsets and D-dimer reflect different hallmarks (inflammation and hemostasis) of AAA pathology and when combined, may serve as improved biomarker.
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- 2024
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3. Latest results from the RD42 collaboration on the radiation tolerance of polycrystalline diamond detectors
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Mali, M., Artuso, M., Bäni, L., Bartosik, M., Bellini, V., Bentele, B., Bergonzo, P., Bes, A., Brom, J-M., Chiodini, G., Chren, D., Cindro, V., Claus, G., Collot, J., Cumalat, J., Dabrowski, A., Dauvergne, D., Tchernij, S. Ditalia, Eigen, G., Eremin, V., Everaere, P., Forneris, J., Gallin-Martel, L., Gallin-Martel, M-L., Gan, K.K., Gastal, M., Gentry, A., Goffe, M., Goldstein, J., Golubev, A., Gorišek, A., Grigoriev, E., Grosse-Knetter, J., Hiti, B., Hits, D., Hoarau, C., Hoeferkamp, M., Hosslet, J., Hügging, F., Hutson, C., Jackman, R., Jennings-Moors, R., Kagan, H., Kanxheri, K., Kis, M., Kramberger, G., Kruger, M., Kuleshov, S., Lacoste, A., Lukosi, E., Maazouzi, C., Mandić, I., Marcatili, S., Marino, A., Mathieu, C., Menichelli, M., Mikuž, M., Molle, R., Morozzi, A., Moscatelli, F., Moss, J., Mountain, R., Muraz, J-F., Narazyanan, E.A., Oh, A., Olivero, P., Passeri, D., Pernegger, H., Perrino, R., Picollo, F., Porter, A., Portier, A., Potenza, R., Quadt, A., Rarbi, F., Re, A., Reichmann, M., Roe, S., Rossetto, O., Salter, P., Becerra, D.A. Sanz, Schmidt, C.J., Schnetzer, S., Seidel, S., Servoli, L., Shivaraman, R., Smith, D.S., Sopko, B., Sopko, V., Sorenson, J., Spagnolo, S., Spanier, S., Stenson, K., Stone, R., Stugu, B., Sutera, C., Traeger, M., Trischuk, W., Truccato, M., Tuve, C., Velthuis, J., Verbitskaya, E., Wagner, S., Wallny, R., Welch, J., Wengler, T., Yamouni, M., Zalieckas, J., and Zavrtanik, M.
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- 2024
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4. Response of the MIMOSIS-1 CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensor to particle beams with different dE/dx
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Darwish, H., Altingun, A., Andary, J., Arnoldi-Meadows, B., Baudot, J., Bertolone, G., Besson, A., Bugiel, R., Claus, G., Colledani, C., Deveaux, M., Dorokhov, A., El Bitar, Z., Goffe, M., Himmi, A., Hu-Guo, C., Jaaskelainen, K., Keller, O., Koziel, M., Matejcek, F., Michel, J., Morel, F., Müntz, C., Pham, H., Schmidt, C.J., Specht, M., Stroth, J., Valin, I., and Winter, M.
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- 2024
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5. Novel airflow ring for the reduction of germ load in a surgical field
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Scherrieble Andreas, Haab Elena, Held-Föhn Evi, Linti Carsten, Baumgartner Tobias, Wandres Claus G., Doser Michael, and Gresser Götz T.
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nosocomial infections ,hospital infections ,sterile airflow ,surgical wounds ,Medicine - Abstract
Hospital-acquired infections occur through microbial contamination of the surgical wound and can lead to severe complications. A significant transmission path is the aerogenic transmission, where pathogens stick to floating particles like skin scales or to air moisture. A novel porous airflow ring which is placed around the surgical field aims to overcome this by applying sterile air directly at the operation wound. The ring is provided with an air tight coating at the outer side and allows for fixation on the skin by an adhesive coating at the lower side. To evaluate its performance the airflow ring was placed in an atmosphere with nebulized suspension of Staphylococcus arlettae of a concentration of 5.0 x 10^5 CFU/ml resp. 5.0 x 10^6 CFU/ml within a box. The formation of bacterial colonies (CFU) on contact plates placed within the airflow ring was subsequently determined by visual counting after incubating at 37 °C for one day. CFU counts of the ventilated and the unventilated situation were compared. With the smaller inoculum, the introduction of bacteria into the inner site of the ring was completely prevented, whereas the contact plate of the unventilated ring resulted in 77 to 427 colonies in different trials. With the higher inoculum, the bacteria ingress was very strongly reduced by 99.7% respectively 99.9%. In conclusion the airflow ring shows a strong shielding effect for germs adhered to fog-sized water droplets. To clearly demonstrate the effect, the number of bacteria was greatly increased compared to reality in this setup. It was shown that it can withstand even conditions significantly worse than those encountered in an operating theatre. In order to demonstrate the effect in vivo, clinical trials have to be conducted to confirm the laboratory results.
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- 2023
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6. Defect Spectroscopy and Non-Ionizing Energy Loss Analysis of Proton and Electron Irradiated p-type GaAs Solar Cells
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Pellegrino, Carmine, Gagliardi, Alessio, and Zimmermann, Claus G.
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Physics - Applied Physics - Abstract
This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and AIP Publishing. This article appeared in Journal of Applied Physics (Vol.128, Issue 19) and may be found at https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0028029, Comment: This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and AIP Publishing. This article appeared in Journal of Applied Physics (Vol.128, Issue 19) and may be found at https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0028029
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- 2020
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7. Operation of a double-sided CMOS pixelated detector at a high intensity $e^+e^-$ particle collider
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Cuesta, D., Baudot, J., Claus, G., Goffe, M., Jaaskelainen, K., Santelj, L., Specht, M., Szelezniak, M., and Ripp-Baudot, I.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
This article reports the first operation of a double-sided CMOS pixelated ladder in a collider experiment, namely in the inner tracker volume of the Belle II experiment during the Phase 2 run of the SuperKEKB collider. Design and integration of the detector system in the experiment interaction region is first described. The two modules operated almost continuously during slightly more than four months, recording data for the monitoring of the hit rate close to beams. Details of the off-line data analysis are provided and a method to estimate particle momentum from the 2 hits measured per crossing particle is proposed., Comment: 18 pages, 13 figures. Submitted to Nucl. Instrum. Method A
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- 2020
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8. Hypothyroidism in hibernating brown bears
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Frøbert, Anne Mette, Nielsen, Claus G., Brohus, Malene, Kindberg, Jonas, Fröbert, Ole, and Overgaard, Michael T.
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- 2023
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9. Optimal Prostate Cancer Diagnostic Pathways for Men With Prostatomegaly in the MRI Era
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Gold, Samuel A., Goueli, Ramy, Mostardeiro, Thomaz Rodrigues, Carpinito, Gianpaolo P., El-Eishy, Alfarooq, Mauck, Ryan, Woldu, Solomon L., Strand, Douglas W., Lotan, Yair, Roehrborn, Claus G., Costa, Daniel N., and Gahan, Jeffrey C.
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- 2023
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10. Recent Results from Polycrystalline CVD Diamond Detectors
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RD42 Collaboration, Bäni, L., Alexopoulos, A., Artuso, M., Bachmair, F., Bartosik, M., Beck, H., Bellini, V., Belyaev, V., Bentele, B., Bes, A., Brom, J. -M., Bruzzi, M., Chiodini, G., Chren, D., Cindro, V., Claus, G., Collot, J., Cumalat, J., Dabrowski, A., D'Alessandro, R., Dauvergne, D., de Boer, W., Dorfer, C., Dünser, M., Eigen, G., Eremin, V., Forcolin, G., Forneris, J., Gallin-Martel, L., Gallin-Martel, M. -L., Gan, K. K., Gastal, M., Goffe, M., Goldstein, J., Golubev, A., Gorišek, A., Grigoriev, E., Grosse-Knetter, J., Grummer, A., Guthoff, M., Hiti, B., Hits, D., Hoeferkamp, M., Hofmann, T., Hosselet, J., Hügging, F., Hutton, C., Janssen, J., Kagan, H., Kanxheri, K., Kass, R., Kis, M., Kramberger, G., Kuleshov, S., Lacoste, A., Lagomarsino, S., Giudice, A. Lo, Paz, I. López, Lukosi, E., Maazouzi, C., Mandić, I., Mathieu, C., Menichelli, M., Mikuž, M., Morozzi, A., Moss, J., Mountain, R., Oh, A., Olivero, P., Passeri, D., Pernegger, H., Perrino, R., Picollo, F., Pomorski, M., Potenza, R., Quadt, A., Rarbi, F., Re, A., Reichmann, M., Roe, S., Becerra, D. A. Sanz, Scaringella, M., Schmidt, C. J., Schnetzer, S., Schioppa, E., Sciortino, S., Scorzoni, A., Seidel, S., Servoli, L., Smith, D. S., Sopko, B., Sopko, V., Spagnolo, S., Spanier, S., Stenson, K., Stone, R., Stugu, B., Sutera, C., Traeger, M., Trischuk, W., Truccato, M., Tuvè, C., Velthuis, J., Venturi, N., Wagner, S., Wallny, R., Wang, J. C., Wermes, N., Yamouni, M., Zalieckas, J., and Zavrtanik, M.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
Diamond is a material in use at many nuclear and high energy facilities due to its inherent radiation tolerance and ease of use. We have characterized detectors based on chemical vapor deposition (CVD) diamond before and after proton irradiation. We present preliminary results of the spatial resolution of unirradiated and irradiated CVD diamond strip sensors. In addition, we measured the pulse height versus particle rate of unirradiated and irradiated polycrystalline CVD (pCVD) diamond pad detectors up to a particle flux of $20\,\mathrm{MHz/cm^2}$ and a fluence up to $4 \times 10^{15}\,n/\mathrm{cm^2}$., Comment: Talk presented at the 2019 Meeting of the Division of Particles and Fields of the American Physical Society (DPF2019), July 29 - August 2, 2019, Northeastern University, Boston, C1907293
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- 2019
11. Observations on MIMOSIS-0, the first dedicated CPS prototype for the CBM MVD
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Deveaux, M., Arnoldi-Meadows, B., Bertolone, G., Claus, G., Dorokhov, A., Goffe, M., Himmi, A., Jaaskelainen, K., Klaus, P., Koziel, M., Marx, F., Morel, F., Müntz, C., Pham, H., Specht, M., Valin, I., Stroth, J., and Winter, M.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
The Micro Vertex Detector (MVD) of the future Compressed Baryonic Matter (CBM) experiment at FAIR will have to provide a spatial precision of $\sim 5~\rm \mu m$ in combination with a material budget of 0.3\% - 0.5\% X$_0$ for a full detector station. Simultaneously, it will have to handle the rate and radiation load of operating the fixed target experiment at an average collision rate of 100 kHz (4 - 10 AGeV Au+Au collisions) or 10 MHz (up to 28 GeV p-A collisions). The harsh requirements call for a dedicated detector technology, which is the next generation CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensor MIMOSIS. We report about the requirements for the sensor, introduce the design approach being followed to cope with it and show first test results from a first sensor prototype called MIMOSIS-0 ., Comment: Proceedings of the VCI2019 - The 15th Vienna Conference on Instrumentation, 4 pages, 7 figures
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- 2019
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12. Hypothyroidism in hibernating brown bears
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Anne Mette Frøbert, Claus G. Nielsen, Malene Brohus, Jonas Kindberg, Ole Fröbert, and Michael T. Overgaard
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Thyroid hormone ,Thyroxine ,Triiodothyronine ,Thyroxine-binding globulin (TBG) ,Ursus arctos ,Hibernation ,Diseases of the endocrine glands. Clinical endocrinology ,RC648-665 - Abstract
Abstract Brown bears hibernate throughout half of the year as a survival strategy to reduce energy consumption during prolonged periods with scarcity of food and water. Thyroid hormones are the major endocrine regulators of basal metabolic rate in humans. Therefore, we aimed to determine regulations in serum thyroid hormone levels in hibernation compared to the active state to investigate if these are involved in the adaptions for hibernation. We used electrochemiluminescence immunoassay to quantify total triiodothyronine (T3) and thyroxine (T4) levels in hibernation and active state in paired serum samples from six subadult Scandinavian brown bears. Additionally, we determined regulations in the liver mRNA levels of three major thyroid hormone-binding proteins; thyroxine-binding globulin (TBG), transthyretin (TTR), and albumin, by analysis of previously published grizzly bear RNA sequencing data. We found that bears were hypothyroid when hibernating with T4 levels reduced to less than 44% (P = 0.008) and T3 levels reduced to less than 36% (P = 0.016) of those measured in the active state. In hibernation, mRNA levels of TBG and albumin increased to 449% (P = 0.031) and 121% (P = 0.031), respectively, of those measured in the active state. TTR mRNA levels did not change. Hibernating bears are hypothyroid and share physiologic features with hypothyroid humans, including decreased basal metabolic rate, bradycardia, hypothermia, and fatigue. We speculate that decreased thyroid hormone signaling is a key mediator of hibernation physiology in bears. Our findings shed light on the translational potential of bear hibernation physiology to humans for whom a similar hypometabolic state could be of interest in specific conditions.
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- 2023
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13. Understanding Treatment Response in Individual Profiles of Men with Prostatic Enlargement at Risk of Progression
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Gravas, Stavros, Palacios-Moreno, Juan Manuel, Thompson, Douglas, Concas, Federico, Kamola, Piotr J., Roehrborn, Claus G., Oelke, Matthias, Kattan, Michael W., Averbeck, Marcio Augusto, Manyak, Michael, Cortés, Vanessa, and Lulic, Zrinka
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- 2023
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14. Measurements of beam backgrounds in SuperKEKB Phase 2
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Liptak, Z., Paladino, A., Santelj, L., Schueler, J., Stefkova, S., Tanigawa, H., Tsuzuki, N., Aloisio, A., Ahlburg, P., Bambade, P., Bassi, G., Barrett, M., Baudot, J., Browder, T.E., Casarosa, G., Cautero, G., Cinabro, D., Claus, G., Cuesta, D., Di Capua, F., Di Carlo, S., Flanagan, J., Frey, A., Fulsom, B.G., Funakoshi, Y., Gabriel, M., Giordano, R., Giuressi, D., Goffe, M., Hara, K., Hartbrich, O., Hedges, M.T., Heuchel, D., Iida, N., Ishibashi, T., Jaaskelainen, K., Jehanno, D., de Jong, S., Kraetzschmar, T., La Licata, C., Lanceri, L., Leitl, P., Lewis, P.M., Marinas, C., Miller, C., Moser, H., Nakamura, K.R., Nakayama, H., Niebuhr, C., Onuki, Y., Pang, C., Paschen, B., Ripp-Baudot, I., Rizzo, G., Roney, J.M., Schreeck, H., Schwenker, B., Simon, F., Specht, M., Spruck, B., Soloviev, Y., Szelezniak, M., Tanaka, S., Terui, S., Tortone, G., Tsuboyama, T., Uematsu, Y., Vahsen, S.E., Vitale, L., and Windel, H.
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- 2022
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15. Choosing the Most Efficacious and Safe Oral Treatment for Idiopathic Overactive Bladder: A Systematic Review and Network Meta-analysis
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Mostafaei, Hadi, Salehi-Pourmehr, Hanieh, Jilch, Sandra, Carlin, Greta Lisa, Mori, Keiichiro, Quhal, Fahad, Pradere, Benjamin, Grossmann, Nico C., Laukhtina, Ekaterina, Schuettfort, Victor M., Aydh, Abdulmajeed, Sari Motlagh, Reza, König, Frederik, Roehrborn, Claus G., Katayama, Satoshi, Rajwa, Pawel, Hajebrahimi, Sakineh, and Shariat, Shahrokh F.
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- 2022
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16. Field Deployment of Robotic Systems for Agriculture in Light of Key Safety, Labor, Ethics and Legislation Issues
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Benos, Lefteris, Sørensen, Claus G., and Bochtis, Dionysis
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- 2022
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17. SABR for High-Risk Prostate Cancer: A Prospective Multilevel MRI-Based Dose Escalation Trial
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Hannan, Raquibul, Salamekh, Samer, Desai, Neil B., Garant, Aurelie, Folkert, Michael R., Costa, Daniel N., Mannala, Samantha, Ahn, Chul, Mohamad, Osama, Laine, Aaron, Kim, Dong W. Nathan, Dickinson, Tamara, Raj, Ganesh V., Shah, Rajal B., Wang, Jing, Jia, Xun, Choy, Hak, Roehrborn, Claus G., Lotan, Yair, and Timmerman, Robert D.
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- 2022
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18. Placebo Response in Patients with Oral Therapy for Overactive Bladder: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis
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Mostafaei, Hadi, Janisch, Florian, Mori, Keiichiro, Quhal, Fahad, Pradere, Benjamin, Hajebrahimi, Sakineh, Roehrborn, Claus G., and Shariat, Shahrokh F.
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- 2022
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19. Prostatic Urethral Lift Versus Medical Therapy: Examining the Impact on Sexual Function in Men with Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia
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Roehrborn, Claus G. and Rukstalis, Daniel B.
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- 2022
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20. The UroLift implant: mechanism behind rapid and durable relief from prostatic obstruction
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Roehrborn, Claus G., Chin, Peter T., and Woo, Henry H.
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- 2022
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21. The placebo and nocebo effects in functional urology
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Mostafaei, Hadi, Jilch, Sandra, Carlin, Greta Lisa, Mori, Keiichiro, Quhal, Fahad, Pradere, Benjamin, Laukhtina, Ekaterina, Schuettfort, Victor M., Aydh, Abdulmajeed, Sari Motlagh, Reza, Roehrborn, Claus G., Shariat, Shahrokh F., and Hajebrahimi, Sakineh
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- 2022
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22. PICMIC-0: a 5 μm pitch hexagonal pixel sensor with an original tri-axis readout
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Abreu, H., primary, Bechetoille, E., additional, Bertolone, G., additional, Claus, G., additional, Colledani, C., additional, Combaret, C., additional, Doziere, G., additional, Hu-Guo, C., additional, Laktineh, I., additional, Mathez, H., additional, Pham, H., additional, Specht, M., additional, Valin, I., additional, Zhang, L., additional, and Zhao, Y., additional
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- 2024
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23. MP09-11 CAN WE PREDICT IPSS SCORES WITH VOIDING PERFORMANCE ON HOME-BASED UROFLOWMETRY DATA USING A SMARTPHONE APPLICATION?
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Kazarian, Austin G., primary, Murphy, Andrew, additional, Kim, Min G., additional, Doo, Karen, additional, Goldberg, Kenneth, additional, Roehrborn, Claus G., additional, and Goueli, Ramy, additional
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- 2024
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24. Challenges in QCD matter physics - The Compressed Baryonic Matter experiment at FAIR
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CBM Collaboration, Ablyazimov, T., Abuhoza, A., Adak, R. P., Adamczyk, M., Agarwal, K., Aggarwal, M. M., Ahammed, Z., Ahmad, F., Ahmad, N., Ahmad, S., Akindinov, A., Akishin, P., Akishina, E., Akishina, T., Akishina, V., Akram, A., Al-Turany, M., Alekseev, I., Alexandrov, E., Alexandrov, I., Amar-Youcef, S., Anđelić, M., Andreeva, O., Andrei, C., Andronic, A., Anisimov, Yu., Appelshäuser, H., Argintaru, D., Atkin, E., Avdeev, S., Averbeck, R., Azmi, M. D., Baban, V., Bach, M., Badura, E., Bähr, S., Balog, T., Balzer, M., Bao, E., Baranova, N., Barczyk, T., Bartoş, D., Bashir, S., Baszczyk, M., Batenkov, O., Baublis, V., Baznat, M., Becker, J., Becker, K. -H., Belogurov, S., Belyakov, D., Bendarouach, J., Berceanu, I., Bercuci, A., Berdnikov, A., Berdnikov, Y., Berendes, R., Berezin, G., Bergmann, C., Bertini, D., Bertini, O., Beşliu, C., Bezshyyko, O., Bhaduri, P. P., Bhasin, A., Bhati, A. K., Bhattacharjee, B., Bhattacharyya, A., Bhattacharyya, T. K., Biswas, S., Blank, T., Blau, D., Blinov, V., Blume, C., Bocharov, Yu., Book, J., Breitner, T., Brüning, U., Brzychczyk, J., Bubak, A., Büsching, H., Bus, T., Butuzov, V., Bychkov, A., Byszuk, A., Cai, Xu, Cálin, M., Cao, Ping, Caragheorgheopol, G., Carević, I., Cătănescu, V., Chakrabarti, A., Chattopadhyay, S., Chaus, A., Chen, Hongfang, Chen, LuYao, Cheng, Jianping, Chepurnov, V., Cherif, H., Chernogorov, A., Ciobanu, M. I., Claus, G., Constantin, F., Csanád, M., D'Ascenzo, N., Das, Supriya, Das, Susovan, de Cuveland, J., Debnath, B., Dementiev, D., Deng, Wendi, Deng, Zhi, Deppe, H., Deppner, I., Derenovskaya, O., Deveaux, C. A., Deveaux, M., Dey, K., Dey, M., Dillenseger, P., Dobyrn, V., Doering, D., Dong, Sheng, Dorokhov, A., Dreschmann, M., Drozd, A., Dubey, A. K., Dubnichka, S., Dubnichkova, Z., Dürr, M., Dutka, L., Dželalija, M., Elsha, V. V., Emschermann, D., Engel, H., Eremin, V., Eşanu, T., Eschke, J., Eschweiler, D., Fan, Huanhuan, Fan, Xingming, Farooq, M., Fateev, O., Feng, Shengqin, Figuli, S. P. D., Filozova, I., Finogeev, D., Fischer, P., Flemming, H., Förtsch, J., Frankenfeld, U., Friese, V., Friske, E., Fröhlich, I., Frühauf, J., Gajda, J., Galatyuk, T., Gangopadhyay, G., Chávez, C. García, Gebelein, J., Ghosh, P., Ghosh, S. K., Gläßel, S., Goffe, M., Golinka-Bezshyyko, L., Golovatyuk, V., Golovnya, S., Golovtsov, V., Golubeva, M., Golubkov, D., Ramírez, A. Gómez, Gorbunov, S., Gorokhov, S., Gottschalk, D., Gryboś, P., Grzeszczuk, A., Guber, F., Gudima, K., Gumiński, M., Gupta, A., Gusakov, Yu., Han, Dong, Hartmann, H., He, Shue, Hehner, J., Heine, N., Herghelegiu, A., Herrmann, N., Heß, B., Heuser, J. M., Himmi, A., Höhne, C., Holzmann, R., Hu, Dongdong, Huang, Guangming, Huang, Xinjie, Hutter, D., Ierusalimov, A., Ilgenfritz, E. -M., Irfan, M., Ivanischev, D., Ivanov, M., Ivanov, P., Ivanov, Valery, Ivanov, Victor, Ivanov, Vladimir, Ivashkin, A., Jaaskelainen, K., Jahan, H., Jain, V., Jakovlev, V., Janson, T., Jiang, Di, Jipa, A., Kadenko, I., Kähler, P., Kämpfer, B., Kalinin, V., Kallunkathariyil, J., Kampert, K. -H., Kaptur, E., Karabowicz, R., Karavichev, O., Karavicheva, T., Karmanov, D., Karnaukhov, V., Karpechev, E., Kasiński, K., Kasprowicz, G., Kaur, M., Kazantsev, A., Kebschull, U., Kekelidze, G., Khan, M. M., Khan, S. A., Khanzadeev, A., Khasanov, F., Khvorostukhin, A., Kirakosyan, V., Kirejczyk, M., Kiryakov, A., Kiš, M., Kisel, I., Kisel, P., Kiselev, S., Kiss, T., Klaus, P., Kłeczek, R., Klein-Bösing, Ch., Kleipa, V., Klochkov, V., Kmon, P., Koch, K., Kochenda, L., Koczoń, P., Koenig, W., Kohn, M., Kolb, B. W., Kolosova, A., Komkov, B., Korolev, M., Korolko, I., Kotte, R., Kovalchuk, A., Kowalski, S., Koziel, M., Kozlov, G., Kozlov, V., Kramarenko, V., Kravtsov, P., Krebs, E., Kreidl, C., Kres, I., Kresan, D., Kretschmar, G., Krieger, M., Kryanev, A. V., Kryshen, E., Kuc, M., Kucewicz, W., Kucher, V., Kudin, L., Kugler, A., Kumar, Ajit, Kumar, Ashwini, Kumar, L., Kunkel, J., Kurepin, A., Kurepin, N., Kurilkin, A., Kurilkin, P., Kushpil, V., Kuznetsov, S., Kyva, V., Ladygin, V., Lara, C., Larionov, P., García, A. Laso, Lavrik, E., Lazanu, I., Lebedev, A., Lebedev, S., Lebedeva, E., Lehnert, J., Lehrbach, J., Leifels, Y., Lemke, F., Li, Cheng, Li, Qiyan, Li, Xin, Li, Yuanjing, Lindenstruth, V., Linnik, B., Liu, Feng, Lobanov, I., Lobanova, E., Löchner, S., Loizeau, P. -A., Lone, S. A., Martínez, J. A. Lucio, Luo, Xiaofeng, Lymanets, A., Lyu, Pengfei, Maevskaya, A., Mahajan, S., Mahapatra, D. P., Mahmoud, T., Maj, P., Majka, Z., Malakhov, A., Malankin, E., Malkevich, D., Malyatina, O., Malygina, H., Mandal, M. M., Mandal, S., Manko, V., Manz, S., Garcia, A. M. Marin, Markert, J., Masciocchi, S., Matulewicz, T., Meder, L., Merkin, M., Mialkovski, V., Michel, J., Miftakhov, N., Mik, L., Mikhailov, K., Mikhaylov, V., Milanović, B., Militsija, V., Miskowiec, D., Momot, I., Morhardt, T., Morozov, S., Müller, W. F. J., Müntz, C., Mukherjee, S., Castillo, C. E. Muńoz, Murin, Yu., Najman, R., Nandi, C., Nandy, E., Naumann, L., Nayak, T., Nedosekin, A., Negi, V. S., Niebur, W., Nikulin, V., Normanov, D., Oancea, A., Oh, Kunsu, Onishchuk, Yu., Ososkov, G., Otfinowski, P., Ovcharenko, E., Pal, S., Panasenko, I., Panda, N. R., Parzhitskiy, S., Patel, V., Pauly, C., Penschuck, M., Peshekhonov, D., Peshekhonov, V., Petráček, V., Petri, M., Petriş, M., Petrovici, A., Petrovici, M., Petrovskiy, A., Petukhov, O., Pfeifer, D., Piasecki, K., Pieper, J., Pietraszko, J., Płaneta, R., Plotnikov, V., Plujko, V., Pluta, J., Pop, A., Pospisil, V., Poźniak, K., Prakash, A., Prasad, S. K., Prokudin, M., Pshenichnov, I., Pugach, M., Pugatch, V., Querchfeld, S., Rabtsun, S., Radulescu, L., Raha, S., Rami, F., Raniwala, R., Raniwala, S., Raportirenko, A., Rautenberg, J., Rauza, J., Ray, R., Razin, S., Reichelt, P., Reinecke, S., Reinefeld, A., Reshetin, A., Ristea, C., Ristea, O., Rodriguez, A. Rodriguez, Roether, F., Romaniuk, R., Rost, A., Rostchin, E., Rostovtseva, I., Roy, Amitava, Roy, Ankhi, Rożynek, J., Ryabov, Yu., Sadovsky, A., Sahoo, R., Sahu, P. K., Sahu, S. K., Saini, J., Samanta, S., Sambyal, S. S., Samsonov, V., Rosado, J. Sánchez, Sander, O., Sarangi, S., Satława, T., Sau, S., Saveliev, V., Schatral, S., Schiaua, C., Schintke, F., Schmidt, C. J., Schmidt, H. R., Schmidt, K., Scholten, J., Schweda, K., Seck, F., Seddiki, S., Selyuzhenkov, I., Semennikov, A., Senger, A., Senger, P., Shabanov, A., Shabunov, A., Shao, Ming, Sheremetiev, A. D., Shi, Shusu, Shumeiko, N., Shumikhin, V., Sibiryak, I., Sikora, B., Simakov, A., Simon, C., Simons, C., Singaraju, R. N., Singh, A. K., Singh, B. K., Singh, C. P., Singhal, V., Singla, M., Sitzmann, P., Siwek-Wilczyńska, K., Škoda, L., Skwira-Chalot, I., Som, I., Song, Guofeng, Song, Jihye, Sosin, Z., Soyk, D., Staszel, P., Strikhanov, M., Strohauer, S., Stroth, J., Sturm, C., Sultanov, R., Sun, Yongjie, Svirida, D., Svoboda, O., Szabó, A., Szczygieł, R., Talukdar, R., Tang, Zebo, Tanha, M., Tarasiuk, J., Tarassenkova, O., Târzilă, M. -G., Teklishyn, M., Tischler, T., Tlustý, P., Tölyhi, T., Toia, A., Topil'skaya, N., Träger, M., Tripathy, S., Tsakov, I., Tsyupa, Yu., Turowiecki, A., Tuturas, N. G., Uhlig, F., Usenko, E., Valin, I., Varga, D., Vassiliev, I., Vasylyev, O., Verbitskaya, E., Verhoeven, W., Veshikov, A., Visinka, R., Viyogi, Y. P., Volkov, S., Volochniuk, A., Vorobiev, A., Voronin, Aleksey, Voronin, Alexander, Vovchenko, V., Vznuzdaev, M., Wang, Dong, Wang, Xi-Wei, Wang, Yaping, Wang, Yi, Weber, M., Wendisch, C., Wessels, J. P., Wiebusch, M., Wiechula, J., Wielanek, D., Wieloch, A., Wilms, A., Winckler, N., Winter, M., Wiśniewski, K., Wolf, Gy., Won, Sanguk, Wu, Ke-Jun, Wüstenfeld, J., Xiang, Changzhou, Xu, Nu, Yang, Junfeng, Yang, Rongxing, Yin, Zhongbao, Yoo, In-Kwon, Yuldashev, B., Yushmanov, I., Zabołotny, W., Zaitsev, Yu., Zamiatin, N. I., Zanevsky, Yu., Zhalov, M., Zhang, Yifei, Zhang, Yu, Zhao, Lei, Zheng, Jiajun, Zheng, Sheng, Zhou, Daicui, Zhou, Jing, Zhu, Xianglei, Zinchenko, A., Zipper, W., Żoładź, M., Zrelov, P., Zryuev, V., Zumbruch, P., and Zyzak, M.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Substantial experimental and theoretical efforts worldwide are devoted to explore the phase diagram of strongly interacting matter. At LHC and top RHIC energies, QCD matter is studied at very high temperatures and nearly vanishing net-baryon densities. There is evidence that a Quark-Gluon-Plasma (QGP) was created at experiments at RHIC and LHC. The transition from the QGP back to the hadron gas is found to be a smooth cross over. For larger net-baryon densities and lower temperatures, it is expected that the QCD phase diagram exhibits a rich structure, such as a first-order phase transition between hadronic and partonic matter which terminates in a critical point, or exotic phases like quarkyonic matter. The discovery of these landmarks would be a breakthrough in our understanding of the strong interaction and is therefore in the focus of various high-energy heavy-ion research programs. The Compressed Baryonic Matter (CBM) experiment at FAIR will play a unique role in the exploration of the QCD phase diagram in the region of high net-baryon densities, because it is designed to run at unprecedented interaction rates. High-rate operation is the key prerequisite for high-precision measurements of multi-differential observables and of rare diagnostic probes which are sensitive to the dense phase of the nuclear fireball. The goal of the CBM experiment at SIS100 (sqrt(s_NN) = 2.7 - 4.9 GeV) is to discover fundamental properties of QCD matter: the phase structure at large baryon-chemical potentials (mu_B > 500 MeV), effects of chiral symmetry, and the equation-of-state at high density as it is expected to occur in the core of neutron stars. In this article, we review the motivation for and the physics programme of CBM, including activities before the start of data taking in 2022, in the context of the worldwide efforts to explore high-density QCD matter., Comment: 15 pages, 11 figures. Published in European Physical Journal A
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- 2016
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25. From vertex detectors to inner trackers with CMOS pixel sensors
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Besson, A., Pérez, A. Pérez, Spiriti, E., Baudot, J., Claus, G., Goffe, M., and Winter, M.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
The use of CMOS Pixel Sensors (CPS) for high resolution and low material vertex detectors has been validated with the 2014 and 2015 physics runs of the STAR-PXL detector at RHIC/BNL. This opens the door to the use of CPS for inner tracking devices, with 10-100 times larger sensitive area, which require therefore a sensor design privileging power saving, response uniformity and robustness. The 350 nm CMOS technology used for the STAR-PXL sensors was considered as too poorly suited to upcoming applications like the upgraded ALICE Inner Tracking System (ITS), which requires sensors with one order of magnitude improvement on readout speed and improved radiation tolerance. This triggered the exploration of a deeper sub-micron CMOS technology, Tower-Jazz 180 nm, for the design of a CPS well adapted for the new ALICE-ITS running conditions. This paper reports the R&D results for the conception of a CPS well adapted for the ALICE-ITS., Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, VCI 2016 conference proceedings
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- 2016
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26. Performance of the EUDET-type beam telescopes
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Jansen, H., Spannagel, S., Behr, J., Bulgheroni, A., Claus, G., Corrin, E., Cussans, D. G., Dreyling-Eschweiler, J., Eckstein, D., Eichhorn, T., Goffe, M., Gregor, I. M., Haas, D., Muhl, C., Perrey, H., Peschke, R., Roloff, P., Rubinskiy, I., and Winter, M.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
Test beam measurements at the test beam facilities of DESY have been conducted to characterise the performance of the EUDET-type beam telescopes originally developed within the EUDET project. The beam telescopes are equipped with six sensor planes using MIMOSA26 monolithic active pixel devices. A programmable Trigger Logic Unit provides trigger logic and time stamp information on particle passage. Both data acquisition framework and offline reconstruction software packages are available. User devices are easily integrable into the data acquisition framework via predefined interfaces. The biased residual distribution is studied as a function of the beam energy, plane spacing and sensor threshold. Its standard deviation at the two centre pixel planes using all six planes for tracking in a 6\,GeV electron/positron-beam is measured to be $(2.88\,\pm\,0.08)\,\upmu\meter$.Iterative track fits using the formalism of General Broken Lines are performed to estimate the intrinsic resolution of the individual pixel planes. The mean intrinsic resolution over the six sensors used is found to be $(3.24\,\pm\,0.09)\,\upmu\meter$.With a 5\,GeV electron/positron beam, the track resolution halfway between the two inner pixel planes using an equidistant plane spacing of 20\,mm is estimated to $(1.83\,\pm\,0.03)\,\upmu\meter$ assuming the measured intrinsic resolution. Towards lower beam energies the track resolution deteriorates due to increasing multiple scattering. Threshold studies show an optimal working point of the MIMOSA26 sensors at a sensor threshold of between five and six times their RMS noise. Measurements at different plane spacings are used to calibrate the amount of multiple scattering in the material traversed and allow for corrections to the predicted angular scattering for electron beams.
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- 2016
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27. Preoperative Multiparametric Prostate Magnetic Resonance Imaging Structured Report Informs Risk for Positive Apical Surgical Margins During Radical Prostatectomy
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Costa, Daniel N., Meng, Xiaosong, Tverye, Aaron, Bagrodia, Aditya, Recchimuzzi, Debora Z., Xi, Yin, Arraj, Patrick, Shah, Rajal B., Subramanian, Naveen, de Leon, Alberto Diaz, Roehrborn, Claus G., Rofsky, Neil M., Chen, Heng, and Pedrosa, Ivan
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- 2023
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28. Impact of early vs. delayed initiation of dutasteride/tamsulosin combination therapy on the risk of acute urinary retention or BPH-related surgery in LUTS/BPH patients with moderate-to-severe symptoms at risk of disease progression
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D’Agate, Salvatore, Chavan, Chandrashekhar, Manyak, Michael, Palacios-Moreno, Juan Manuel, Oelke, Matthias, Michel, Martin C., Roehrborn, Claus G., and Della Pasqua, Oscar
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- 2021
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29. Reasons to overthrow TURP: bring on Aquablation
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Sadri, Iman, Arezki, Adel, Couture, Félix, Nguyen, David-Dan, Schwartz, Russell, Zakaria, Ahmed S., Elterman, Dean, Rijo, Enrique, Misrai, Vincent, Bach, Thorsten, Roehrborn, Claus G., and Zorn, Kevin C.
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- 2021
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30. Data publication - Danielle Maass and BioKollekt article 2024: Identification of yttrium oxide-specific peptides for future recycling of rare earth elements from electronic scrap
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(0000-0002-0866-2530) Maass, D., (0000-0002-9426-647X) Boelens, P., (0009-0000-0807-7684) Bloß, C., Claus, G., Harter, S. D., Günther, D., (0000-0002-3696-8369) Pollmann, K., (0000-0002-0452-3242) Lederer, F., (0000-0002-0866-2530) Maass, D., (0000-0002-9426-647X) Boelens, P., (0009-0000-0807-7684) Bloß, C., Claus, G., Harter, S. D., Günther, D., (0000-0002-3696-8369) Pollmann, K., and (0000-0002-0452-3242) Lederer, F.
- Abstract
Dieser Datensatz enthält die experimentell erworbenen und ausgewerteten Daten der Phagendisplayexperimente auf Y2O3.
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- 2024
31. Identification of yttrium oxide-specific peptides for future recycling of rare earth elements from electronic scrap
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(0000-0002-0866-2530) Maass, D., (0000-0002-9426-647X) Boelens, P., (0009-0000-0807-7684) Bloß, C., Claus, G., Harter, S. D., Günther, D., (0000-0002-3696-8369) Pollmann, K., (0000-0002-0452-3242) Lederer, F., (0000-0002-0866-2530) Maass, D., (0000-0002-9426-647X) Boelens, P., (0009-0000-0807-7684) Bloß, C., Claus, G., Harter, S. D., Günther, D., (0000-0002-3696-8369) Pollmann, K., and (0000-0002-0452-3242) Lederer, F.
- Abstract
Yttrium is a heavy rare earth element that acquires remarkable characteristics when it is in oxide form and doped with other rare earth elements. Owing to these characteristics Y2O3 can be used in the manufacture of several products. However, a supply deficit of this mineral is expected in the coming years, contributing to its price fluctuation. Thus, developing an efficient, cost-effective, and eco-friendly process to recover Y2O3 from secondary sources has become necessary. In this study, we used phage surface display to screen peptides with high specificity for Y2O3 particles. After three rounds of enrichment, a phage expressing the peptide TRTGCHVPRCNTLS (DM39) from the random pVIII phage peptide library Cys4 was found to bind specifically to Y2O3, being 531.6-fold more efficient than the wild-type phage. The phage DM39 contains two arginines in the polar side chains, which may have contributed to the interaction between the mineral targets. Immunofluorescence assays identified that the peptide’s affinity was strong for Y2O3 and negligible to LaPO4:Ce3+,Tb3+. The identification of a peptide with high specificity and affinity for Y2O3 provides a potentially new strategic approach to recycle this type of material from secondary sources, especially from electronic scrap.
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- 2024
32. Novel Route Planning Method to Improve the Operational Efficiency of Capacitated Operations. Case: Application of Organic Fertilizer
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Mahdi Vahdanjoo and Claus G. Sorensen
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route planning ,operational planning ,operational efficiency ,optimization ,simulation ,precision agriculture ,Agriculture (General) ,S1-972 ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 - Abstract
A field area coverage-planning algorithm has been developed for the optimization and simulation of capacitated field operations such as the organic fertilizer application process. The proposed model provides an optimal coverage plan, which includes the optimal sequence of the visited tracks with a designated application rate. The objective of this paper is to present a novel approach for route planning involving two simultaneous optimization criteria, non-working distance minimization and the optimization of application rates, for the capacitated field operations such as organic fertilizer application to improve the overall operational efficiency. The study and the developed algorithm have shown that it is possible to generate the optimized coverage plan based on the required defined capacity of the distributer. In this case, the capacity of the distributer is not considered a limiting factor for the farmers. To validate this new method, a shallow injection application process was considered, and the results of applying the optimization algorithm were compared with the conventional methods. The results show that the proposed method increase operational efficiency by 19.7%. Furthermore, the applicability of the proposed model in robotic application were demonstrated by way of two defined scenarios.
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- 2021
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33. Circulating monocyte populations as biomarker for abdominal aortic aneurysms: a single-center retrospective cohort study.
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Klopf, Johannes, Zagrapan, Branislav, Brandau, Annika, Lechenauer, Peter, Candussi, Catharina J., Rossi, Patrick, Celem, Nihan Dide, Ziegler, Michael, Fuchs, Lukas, Hayden, Hubert, Krenn, Claus G., Eilenberg, Wolf, Neumayer, Christoph, and Brostjan, Christine
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ABDOMINAL aortic aneurysms ,PERIPHERAL vascular diseases ,MYELOID cells ,DISEASE progression ,COMPUTED tomography - Abstract
Background: Abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) development is driven by inflammation, in particular myeloid cells, which represent attractive biomarker candidates. Yet to date, the maximum aortic diameter is the only clinically applied predictor of AAA progression and indicator for surgical repair. We postulated that aortic inflammation is reflected in a systemic change of monocyte populations, which we investigated regarding marker potential in AAA diagnosis and prognosis. Methods: We conducted a single-center retrospective cohort study in a diagnostic setting, measuring monocyte subsets by flow cytometry in peripheral blood samples of 47 AAA patients under surveillance, matched with 25 healthy controls and 25 patients with peripheral artery disease (PAD). In a prognostic setting, we acquired longitudinal data of 60 AAA patients including aneurysm growth assessment by computed tomography at 6-month intervals. Results: Blood levels of total monocytes, CD16+ monocytes and particularly intermediate monocytes were significantly increased in AAA patients versus healthy individuals and were also elevated compared to PAD patients. The combination of intermediate monocyte and D-dimer blood levels outperformed the individual diagnostic marker values. Additionally, the elevated concentrations of total monocytes, intermediate monocytes, and monocyte-platelet aggregates (MPA) were suited to predict rapid AAA progression over short-term periods of six months. Of note, MPA were identified as independent predictor of AAA disease progression in multivariable analysis. Conclusion: Circulating monocyte subsets are elevated in AAA patients and support diagnosis and prediction of aneurysm progression. Monocyte subsets and D-dimer reflect different hallmarks (inflammation and hemostasis) of AAA pathology and when combined, may serve as improved biomarker. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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34. Pharyngeal electrical stimulation for neurogenic dysphagia following stroke, traumatic brain injury or other causes: Main results from the PHADER cohort study
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Bath, Philip M., Woodhouse, Lisa J., Suntrup-Krueger, Sonja, Likar, Rudolf, Koestenberger, Markus, Warusevitane, Anushka, Herzog, Juergen, Schuttler, Michael, Ragab, Suzanne, Everton, Lisa, Ledl, Christian, Walther, Ernst, Saltuari, Leopold, Pucks-Faes, Elke, Bocksrucker, Christof, Vosko, Milan, de Broux, Johanna, Haase, Claus G., Raginis-Zborowska, Alicja, Mistry, Satish, Hamdy, Shaheen, and Dziewas, Rainer
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- 2020
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35. New test beam results of 3D and pad detectors constructed with poly-crystalline CVD diamond
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Reichmann, M., Alexopoulos, A., Artuso, M., Bachmair, F., Bäni, L., Bartosik, M., Beacham, J., Beck, H., Bellini, V., Belyaev, V., Bentele, B., Bes, A., Brom, J-M., Bruzzi, M., Chiodini, G., Chren, D., Cindro, V., Claus, G., Collot, J., Cumalat, J., Dabrowski, A., D’Alessandro, R., Dauvergne, D., Boer, W. de, Dick, S., Dorfer, C., Dünser, M., Eigen, G., Eremin, V., Forcolin, G.T., Forneris, J., Gallin-Martel, L., Gallin-Martel, M.L., Gan, K.K., Gastal, M., Giroletti, C., Goffe, M., Goldstein, J., Golubev, A., Gorišek, A., Grigoriev, E., Grosse-Knetter, J., Grummer, A., Gui, B., Guthoff, M., Hiti, B., Hits, D., Hoeferkamp, M., Hofmann, T., Hosselet, J., Hostachy, J-Y., Hügging, F., Hutton, C., Janssen, J., Kagan, H., Kanxheri, K., Kasieczka, G., Kass, R., Kis, M., Kramberger, G., Kuleshov, S., Lacoste, A., Lagomarsino, S., Giudice, A. Lo, Paz, I. López, Lukosi, E., Maazouzi, C., Mandic, I., Marino, A., Mathieu, C., Menichelli, M., Mikuž, M., Morozzi, A., Moss, J., Mountain, R., Oh, A., Olivero, P., Passeri, D., Pernegger, H., Perrino, R., Piccini, M., Picollo, F., Pomorski, M., Potenza, R., Quadt, A., Rarbi, F., Re, A., Roe, S., Becerra, D.A. Sanz, Scaringella, M., Schmidt, C.J., Schioppa, E., Schnetzer, S., Sciortino, S., Scorzoni, A., Seidel, S., Servoli, L., Smith, D.S., Sopko, B., Sopko, V., Spagnolo, S., Spanier, S., Stenson, K., Stone, R., Stugo, B., Sutera, C., Tannenwald, B., Traeger, M., Trischuk, W., Tromson, D., Truccato, M., Tuve, C., Velthuis, J., Venturi, N., Wagner, S., Wallny, R., Wang, J.C., Weingarten, J., Weiss, C., Wermes, N., Yamouni, M., Zalieckas, M., Zavrtanik, M., Salter, P.S., Chmeissani, M., Grinstein, S., and Furelos, D. Vazquez
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- 2020
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36. Observations on MIMOSIS-0, the first dedicated CPS prototype for the CBM MVD
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Deveaux, M., Arnoldi-Meadows, B., Bertolone, G., Claus, G., Dorokhov, A., Goffe, M., Himmi, A., Jaaskelainen, K., Klaus, P., Koziel, M., Marx, F., Morel, F., Müntz, C., Pham, H., Specht, M., Valin, I., Stroth, J., and Winter, M.
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- 2020
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37. Arterial oxygen tensions in mechanically ventilated ICU patients and mortality: a retrospective, multicentre, observational cohort study
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Schjørring, Olav L., Jensen, Aksel K.G., Nielsen, Claus G., Ciubotariu, Andrei, Perner, Anders, Wetterslev, Jørn, Lange, Theis, and Rasmussen, Bodil S.
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- 2020
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38. Direct MRI-guided In-Bore Targeted Biopsy of the Prostate: A Step-by-Step How To and Lessons Learned
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Recchimuzzi, Debora Z., primary, Diaz de Leon, Alberto, additional, Pedrosa, Ivan, additional, Travalini, Debbie, additional, Latin, Heather, additional, Goldberg, Kenneth, additional, Meng, Xiaosong, additional, Begovic, Jovan, additional, Rayan, Jesse, additional, Roehrborn, Claus G., additional, Rofsky, Neil M., additional, and Costa, Daniel N., additional
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- 2024
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39. Development of a Routine Screening Method for the Microplastic Mass Content in a Wastewater Treatment Plant Effluent
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Caroline Goedecke, Paul Eisentraut, Korinna Altmann, Anna Maria Elert, Claus G. Bannick, Mathias Ricking, Nathan Obermaier, Anne-Katrin Barthel, Thomas Schmitt, Martin Jekel, and Ulrike Braun
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microplastics ,thermo-analytical methods ,TED-GC/MS ,mass content ,wastewater ,sewage ,Environmental technology. Sanitary engineering ,TD1-1066 - Abstract
An investigation of microplastic (MP) occurrence in a municipal wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) effluent with tertiary treatment was carried out. Representative sample volumes of 1 m3 were taken by applying a fractionated filtration method (500, 100, and 50 µm mesh sizes). The detection of MP mass fractions by thermal extraction desorption–gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (TED-GC/MS) was achieved without the previously required additional sample pretreatment for the first time. Different types of quantification methods for the evaluation of TED-GC/MS data were tested, and their accuracy and feasibility have been proven for real samples. Polyethylene, polystyrene, and polypropylene were identified in effluent samples. The polymer mass content varied significantly between 5 and 50 mg m−3. A correlation between the MP load and the quantity of suspended matter in the WWTP effluents, particle size distribution, particle type, and operation day (i.e., weekday, season, and capacity) was not found. It can be concluded that a meaningful assessment of WWTPs requires a comprehensive sampling campaign with varying operation conditions.
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- 2022
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40. Intraoperative Monitoring
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Krenn, Claus G., Nicolic, Marko, and Wagener, Gebhard, editor
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- 2018
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41. Soil water contents for tillage: A comparison of approaches and consequences for the number of workable days
- Author
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Obour, Peter Bilson, Keller, Thomas, Jensen, Johannes L., Edwards, Gareth, Lamandé, Mathieu, Watts, Christopher W., Sørensen, Claus G., and Munkholm, Lars J.
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- 2019
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42. Robotics and labour in agriculture. A context consideration
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Marinoudi, Vasso, Sørensen, Claus G., Pearson, Simon, and Bochtis, Dionysis
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- 2019
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43. Contributors
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Achillas, Charisios, primary, Adamides, George, additional, Alexiou, George, additional, Arvanitis, Konstantinos G., additional, Banias, Georgios F., additional, Bauerdick, Josef, additional, Bernhardt, Heinz, additional, Bochtis, Dionysis, additional, Canavari, Maurizio, additional, Carli, Giacomo, additional, Dietrich, Reinhard, additional, Eom, Gil-Un, additional, Fragkos, Athanasios, additional, Frech, Lorenz, additional, Gaál, Márta, additional, Giannakopoulou, Marianthi, additional, Gräff, Anja, additional, Hijazi, Omar, additional, Höhendinger, Martin, additional, Höld, Manfred, additional, Illés, Ivett, additional, Kateris, Dimitrios, additional, Kemény, Gábor, additional, Kfir, Shlomi, additional, Kiss, Andrea, additional, Kleisiari, Christina, additional, Kontogiannopoulos, Konstantinos N., additional, Kovács, Tamás, additional, Krieg, Hans Jürgen, additional, Kyrgiakos, Leonidas-Sotirios, additional, Lámfalusi, Ibolya, additional, Lampridi, Maria, additional, Lee, Doheon, additional, Loukatos, Dimitrios, additional, Magda, Róbert, additional, Marinoudi, Vasso, additional, Medici, Marco, additional, Mettenleiter, Sonja, additional, Molnár, András, additional, Moon, Junghoon, additional, Moysiadis, Theocharis, additional, Naor, Amos, additional, Niavis, Spyros, additional, Park, Yeowoon, additional, Patsios, Sotiris I., additional, Pearson, Simon, additional, Roy, Latsch, additional, Ruedi, Stark, additional, Salzer, Yael, additional, Sørensen, Claus G., additional, Stumpenhausen, Jörn, additional, Stylianou, Andreas, additional, Szilágyi, Róbert, additional, Szlovák, Sándor, additional, Tagliaventi, Maria Rita, additional, Tóth, Judit, additional, Treiber, Maximilian, additional, Várallyai, László, additional, Vlontzos, George, additional, Yechezkely, Yehoshua, additional, Yonai, Eyal, additional, Yuk, Aesol, additional, Zait, Shimon, additional, and Zotos, Nikolaos, additional
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- 2021
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44. The agricultural occupations landscape in view of work automation
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Marinoudi, Vasso, primary, Lampridi, Maria, additional, Sørensen, Claus G., additional, Pearson, Simon, additional, and Bochtis, Dionysis, additional
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- 2021
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45. Magnetic Resonance Imaging–guided In-bore and Magnetic Resonance Imaging-transrectal Ultrasound Fusion Targeted Prostate Biopsies: An Adjusted Comparison of Clinically Significant Prostate Cancer Detection Rate
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Costa, Daniel N., Goldberg, Kenneth, Leon, Alberto Diaz de, Lotan, Yair, Xi, Yin, Aziz, Muhammad, Freifeld, Yuval, Margulis, Vitaly, Raj, Ganesh, Roehrborn, Claus G., Hornberger, Brad, Desai, Neil, Bagrodia, Aditya, Francis, Franto, Pedrosa, Ivan, and Cadeddu, Jeffrey A.
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- 2019
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46. Development of ultra-light pixelated ladders for an ILC vertex detector
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Chon-Sen, N., Baudot, J., Claus, G., De Masi, R., Deveaux, M., Dulinski, W., Goffe, M., Goldstein, J., Gregor, I. -M., Imhoff, Ch. Hu-Guo M., Müntz, C., Nomerotski, A., Santos, C., Schrader, C., Specht, M., Stroth, J., and Winter, M.
- Subjects
Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
The development of ultra-light pixelated ladders is motivated by the requirements of the ILD vertex detector at ILC. This paper summarizes three projects related to system integration. The PLUME project tackles the issue of assembling double-sided ladders. The SERWIETE project deals with a more innovative concept and consists in making single-sided unsupported ladders embedded in an extra thin plastic enveloppe. AIDA, the last project, aims at building a framework reproducing the experimental running conditions where sets of ladders could be tested.
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- 2010
47. Radiation Tolerance of CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors with Self-Biased Pixels
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Deveaux, M., Amar-Youcef, S., Besson, A., Claus, G., Colledani, C., Dorokhov, M., Dritsa, C., Dulinski, W., Froehlich, I., Goffe, M., Grandjean, D., Heini, S., Himmi, A., Hu, C., Jaaskelainen, K., Muentz, C., Shabetai, A., Stroth, J., Szelezniak, M., Valin, I., and Winter, M.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors (MAPS) are proposed as a technology for various vertex detectors in nuclear and particle physics. We discuss the mechanisms of ionizing radiation damage on MAPS hosting the the dead time free, so-called self bias pixel. Moreover, we discuss radiation hardened sensor designs which allow operating detectors after exposing them to irradiation doses above 1 Mrad
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- 2009
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48. Spectroscopic evidence for adsorption of natural organic matter on microplastics.
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Paul, Andrea, Reese, Michelle, Goldhammer, Tobias, Schmalsch, Claudia, Weber, Jens, and Bannick, Claus G.
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DISSOLVED organic matter ,HUMIC acid ,PLASTIC marine debris ,MICROPLASTICS ,HUMUS ,GEL permeation chromatography ,LOW density polyethylene - Abstract
The interaction of microcroplastics (MP) with dissolved organic matter, especially humic substances, is of great importance in understanding the behavior of microplastics in aquatic ecosystems. Surface modification by humic substances plays an essential role in transport and interaction of MP with abiotic and biotic components. Previous studies on the interaction between MP and humic substances were largely based on a model compound, humic acid (Sigma‐Aldrich). In our work, we therefore investigated the interaction of natural organic matter (NOM) sampled from a German surface water with low‐density polyethylene particles (LDPE). High‐pressure size exclusion chromatography (HPSEC) and UV/vis absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy were used to characterize the incubation solutions after modifications due to the presence of LDPE, and Raman spectroscopy was used to characterize the incubated microplastics. While the studies of the solutions generally showed only very small effects, Raman spectroscopic studies allowed clear evidence of the binding of humic fractions to MP. The comparison of the incubation of NOM and a lignite fulvic acid which also was tested further showed that specific signatures of the humic substances used could be detected by Raman spectroscopy. This provides an elegant opportunity to conduct broader studies on this issue in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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49. Modeling study of the effect of placebo and medical therapy on storage and voiding symptoms, nocturia, and quality of life in men with prostate enlargement at risk for progression
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Gravas, Stavros, primary, Manuel-Palacios, Juan, additional, Chavan, Chandrashekhar, additional, Roehrborn, Claus G., additional, Oelke, Matthias, additional, Averbeck, Marcio Augusto, additional, Biswas, Arunangshu, additional, García, Llenalia María, additional, Mohamed, Khadeeja, additional, and Cortes, Vanessa, additional
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- 2023
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50. Urinary [TIMP-2] × [IGFBP-7] for predicting acute kidney injury in patients undergoing orthotopic liver transplantation
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Judith Schiefer, Paul Lichtenegger, Gabriela A. Berlakovich, Walter Plöchl, Claus G. Krenn, David M. Baron, Joanna Baron-Stefaniak, and Peter Faybik
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Acute kidney injury ,Liver transplantation ,Urinary biomarker ,TIMP-2 ,IGFBP-7 ,Diseases of the genitourinary system. Urology ,RC870-923 - Abstract
Abstract Background The product of the concentrations of urinary tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-2 and insulin-like growth factor binding protein-7 (urinary [TIMP-2] × [IGFBP-7]) has been suggested as biomarker for early detection of acute kidney injury (AKI) in various clinical settings. However, the performance of urinary [TIMP-2] × [IGFBP-7] to predict AKI has never been assessed in patients undergoing orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT). Thus, the aim of this study was to assess the early predictive value of urinary [TIMP-2] × [IGFBP-7] for the development of AKI after OLT. Methods In this observational study, urinary [TIMP-2] × [IGFBP-7] was measured in samples from adult OLT patients. AKI was diagnosed and classified according to KDIGO criteria. Areas under the receiver operating curves (AUC) were calculated to assess predictive values of urinary [TIMP-2] × [IGFBP-7] for the development of AKI. Results Forty patients (mean age 55 ± 8 years) were included. Twenty-eight patients (70%) developed AKI stage 1, 2, or 3 within 48 h after OLT. Urinary [TIMP-2] × [IGFBP-7] was not predictive for AKI at the end of OLT (AUC: 0.54, CI [0.32–0.75], P = 0.72), at day 1 (AUC: 0.60, CI [0.41–0.79], P = 0.31), or day 2 after OLT (AUC: 0.63, CI [0.46–0.8], P = 0.18). Conclusion Based on our results, routine clinical use of urinary [TIMP-2] × [IGFBP-7] cannot be recommended for risk assessment of AKI in patients undergoing OLT.
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- 2019
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