Publications by authors named "D Gehrke"

Traditionally, there is a widely held belief that drug dispersion after intrathecal (IT) delivery is confined locally near the injection site. We posit that high-volume infusions can overcome this perceived limitation of IT administration. To test our hypothesis, subject-specific deformable phantom models of the human central nervous system were manufactured so that tracer infusion could be realistically replicated over the entire physiological range of pulsating cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) amplitudes and frequencies.

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In patients with coronary artery disease where standard revascularization procedures are not appropriate, transmyocardial laser revascularization (TMLR) represents an innovative technique which is currently validated worldwide. Initially, it has been assumed that myocardial perfusion of ischemic regions could be instantly improved by inducing TMLR channels, which, however, might not be confirmed in ongoing studies. Indeed, the gain in O2 diffusion surface obtained by 20 patent TMLR channels is only 6 cm2 which accounts for just 0.

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Chromaffin cells of the adrenal medulla were used to study the release of neurotrophic factors operationally defined by their capacity to promote the in vitro survival of embryonic neurons from the peripheral and central nervous system. Chromaffin cells are closely related to sympathetic neurons in terms of their transmitters and specific proteins and, like sympathetic neurons, receive preganglionic cholinergic, aminergic and peptidergic neuronal inputs. The issue of whether chromaffin cells store and secrete neurotrophic factors is therefore pertinent to the question whether trophic mechanisms may be involved in neuronal interactions and what modes of secretion are employed to liberate neurotrophic factors from neurons.

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We report the case of a 28-year old asthmatic female patient, who developed an acute heart failure beginning with diarrhea, fever, and dyspnea 5 weeks after delivery. After improvement of all vital functions and dismissal from hospital care unit a marked blood hypereosinophilia, left ventricular congestive heart failure, pericardium effusion and fever up to 40 degrees C followed. Endomycardial, bone marrow and skeletal muscle biopsies and the pericardial fluid showed a marked eosinophilic infiltration or polymyositis, respectively, which could be treated successfully with steroids and azathioprin.

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Ischemic, reperfused porcine hearts were used to investigate whether the spin trap agent PBN (N-tert-butyl-alpha-phenylnitrone) attenuates postischemic cell death by scavenging of free radicals. The left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) was ligated distally in 16 pigs for 45 min and then reperfused for 3 h. PBN (coronary concentration approximately 1 mM) was infused into the LAD of eight pigs during the first 45 min of reperfusion.

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