Publications by authors named "E Speckmann"

Background: Severe falls escalate the risk of future falls and functional decline as indicated by recent global guidelines. To establish effective falls prevention, individuals at highest risk must be thoroughly studied and, therefore, successfully recruited.

Objective: Recruiting from an emergency department (ED) may mitigate common selection biases, such as overrepresentation of individuals with a higher social status and healthier lifestyle.

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Widespread alterations in the expression of various genes could contribute to the pathogenesis of epilepsy. The expression levels of various genes, including major inhibitory and excitatory receptors, ion channels, cell type-specific markers, and excitatory amino acid transporters, were assessed and compared between the human epileptic hippocampus and amygdala, and findings from autopsy controls. Moreover, the potential correlation between molecular alterations in epileptic brain tissues and the clinical characteristics of patients undergoing epilepsy surgery was evaluated.

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Background: Calcium signaling is described as a relevant factor in synchronization of neurons and increased excitability in epileptogenesis. Aim of the present investigations was to test the antiepileptic effect of the classical inorganic calcium channel blockers cobalt (Co), manganese (Mn) and magnesium (Mg).

Methods: Experiments were carried out on hippocampal slices of guinea pigs.

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Autoimmune diseases of the central nervous system (CNS) like multiple sclerosis (MS) are characterized by inflammation and demyelinated lesions in white and grey matter regions. While inflammation is present at all stages of MS, it is more pronounced in the relapsing forms of the disease, whereas progressive MS (PMS) shows significant neuroaxonal damage and grey and white matter atrophy. Hence, disease-modifying treatments beneficial in patients with relapsing MS have limited success in PMS.

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Neuropathological findings in the amygdala obtained from patients with mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) indicate varying degrees of histopathological alterations, such as neuronal loss and gliosis. The mechanisms underlying cellular damage in the amygdala of patients with MTLE have not been fully elucidated. In the present study, we assess cellular damage, determine the receptor expression of major inhibitory and excitatory neurotransmitters, and evaluate the correlation between the expression of various receptors and cell damage in the basolateral complex and the centromedial areas in the amygdala specimens resected during brain surgery on 30 patients with medically intractable MTLE.

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