Publications by authors named "Christian Alex"

Article Synopsis
  • Venous thromboembolism (VTE) is a common complication during acute COVID-19, but the long-term risk associated with it remains unclear.
  • This study focused on Swedish individuals aged 18-84 who were either hospitalized or tested positive for COVID-19, comparing their VTE rates to a matched control group without COVID-19.
  • Results showed that hospitalized COVID-19 patients had significantly increased long-term risks for pulmonary embolism (PE) and deep venous thrombosis (DVT), while non-hospitalized individuals had similar VTE risks as those without COVID-19.
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High body mass index (BMI) is associated with severe COVID-19 but findings regarding the need of intensive care (IC) and mortality are mixed. Using electronic health records, we identified all patients in western Sweden hospitalised with COVID-19 to evaluate 30-day mortality or assignment to IC. Adjusted logistic regression models were used to estimate odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for outcomes.

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Background: Every person who is in the need of long-term care (according to German Social Code SGB XI §14) fulfills the requirements of disability according to German Social Code SGB IX, § 2. The right of participation and autonomy must be specially protected and realized for persons with long-term care needs because these persons have a limited capacity to advance their interests. The rights of people in the need of long-term care or assistance are protected not only by the national constitution but also by the UN Disability Rights Convention.

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In addition to the consideration of individual medicine, social medicine focuses on the social references of health and sickness. In this context, it reflects the structures of the entire health care system, its functions and its functional deficits. It deals with the specific interaction between medicine and society and functions such as a link to the classical social sciences (1).

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Objective: Exercise has widely documented cardioprotective effects, but the mechanisms underlying these effects are not entirely known. Previously, we demonstrated that aerobic but not strength training lowered resting heart rate and increased cardiac vagal regulation, changes that were reversed by sedentary deconditioning. Here, we focus on the sympathetic nervous system and test whether aerobic training lowers levels of cardiovascular sympathetic activity in rest and that deconditioning would reverse this effect.

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