Publications by authors named "Frank Boehme"

Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates head/neck pain in patients with spontaneous cervical artery dissection, finding it to be a common symptom affecting about 80.6% of participants.
  • Pain was predominantly described as pulling in nature and often radiated to the neck, with a median intensity rated at 5 out of 10.
  • While pain generally resolved within about 13.5 days, a significant number of patients (25.6%) reported novel recurring headaches at follow-up, showcasing variability in their pain experiences.
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Background: Three motor phenotypes have been described in PD: postural instability and gait difficulty (PIGD) dominant, tremor-dominant (TD), and indeterminate (IND) subtype. These phenotypes have been associated with different cognitive trajectories, motor outcomes, and biomarkers profiles. However, whether motor subtype classifications change with treatment and disease progression is not well established.

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Unlike other malignant bone tumors including osteosarcomas and Ewing sarcomas with a peak incidence in adolescents and young adults, conventional and dedifferentiated chondrosarcomas mainly affect people in the 4th to 7th decade of life. To date, the cell type of chondrosarcoma origin is not clearly defined. However, it seems that mesenchymal stem and progenitor cells (MSPC) in the bone marrow facing a pro-proliferative as well as predominantly chondrogenic differentiation milieu, as is implicated in early stage osteoarthritis (OA) at that age, are the source of chondrosarcoma genesis.

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Background: Potentially modifiable risk factors including obesity, diabetes, hypertension, and smoking are associated with Alzheimer disease (AD) and represent promising targets for intervention. However, the causality of these associations is unclear. We sought to assess the causal nature of these associations using Mendelian randomization (MR).

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New tuberculosis drug regimens are creating new priorities for drug susceptibility testing (DST) and surveillance. To minimise turnaround time, rapid DST will need to be prioritised, but developers of these assays will need better data about the molecular mechanisms of resistance. Efforts are underway to link mutations with drug resistance and to develop strain collections to enable assessment of new diagnostic assays.

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In a double-blind quadruple cross-over study the effect of a new alpha-glucosidase inhibitor (BAY g 5421) on postprandial blood glucose, serum insulin, and serum triglyceride increases was tested in 24 male healthy volunteers. They received before a standardized breakfast 50, 100, or 200 mg of BAY g 5421 or a placebo per os. The dose-time-response relationships were calculated and the drug tolerance was assessed.

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In blind studies the effects of a new alpha-glucosidase inhibitor (BAY g 5421) were tested in normal weight and overweight male volunteers after oral application of 75, 150, or 300 mg of BAY g 5421 or placebo per os before three standardized main meals of one day. Before and three hours after each meal blood glucose, serum insulin, and serum triglyceride levels were determined. In addition, safety studies were performed.

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