Publications by authors named "Johannes Zeidler"

Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to assess how well antibodies from vaccinated and infected individuals respond to different SARS-CoV-2 variants, which is key for effective public health strategies.
  • Researchers compared sera from various groups, including critically ill patients and those who were vaccinated, using a specialized testing method to analyze antibody binding to viral proteins.
  • Results showed that vaccinated individuals had stronger antibody responses compared to non-critically ill infected individuals, but there was a notable decrease in antibody binding to variants of concern compared to the original virus, highlighting the need for tailored testing approaches for new variants.
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Article Synopsis
  • COVID-19, caused by SARS-CoV-2, is a global emergency affecting critically ill patients, who exhibit varying humoral responses based on their COVID-19 status.
  • Blood samples showed that COVID-19 positive patients had higher body mass indexes, more frequent bilateral pneumonia, and a mortality rate of 50%.
  • Anti-SARS-CoV-2 serological responses on ICU days 1, 3, and later peak at different times, indicating that immune response timing may help in disease management and guiding therapies, despite not being linked to mortality.
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Background: Although salt intake derived from data on urinary sodium excretion in free-living populations has been used in public policy, a population study on urinary sodium excretion has not been done in Canada. We assessed dietary sodium and potassium intake using a 24-hour urine collection in a large survey of urban and rural communities from 4 Canadian cities and determined the association of these electrolytes with blood pressure (BP).

Methods: One thousand seven hundred consecutive individuals, aged 37-72 years, attending their annual follow-up visits of the ongoing Prospective and Urban Rural Epidemiology (PURE) study in Vancouver, Hamilton, Ottawa, and Quebec City, Canada, collected a 24-hour urine sample using standardized procedures.

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Iodine deficiency is the most common preventable cause of intellectual disabilities in children. Global health initiatives to ensure optimum nutrition thus require continuous monitoring of population-wide iodine intake as determined by urinary excretion of iodide. Current methods to analyze urinary iodide are limited by complicated sample pretreatment, costly infrastructure, and/or poor selectivity, posing restrictions to large-scale epidemiological studies.

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The prevalence of smoking in HIV-infected subjects is high. As a smoking cessation aid, varenicline (Champix(®), Pfizer, Saint-Laurent, QC, Canada or Chantix(®), Pfizer, Mission, KS) has not been previously evaluated in HIV-infected smokers. In this multicenter pilot open label study, varenicline 1.

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Objectives: To investigate whether monitoring concentrations of mycophenolic acid (MPA) in the serum or plasma of persons who receive a solid organ transplant will result in a lower incidence of transplant rejections and adverse events versus no monitoring of MPA. To investigate whether the incidence of rejection or adverse events differs according to MPA dose or frequency, type of MPA, the form of MPA monitored, the method of MPA monitoring, or sample characteristics. To assess whether monitoring is cost-effective versus no monitoring.

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Incorporation studies with 13C-, 15N-, and 2H-labeled substrates, followed by NMR analysis, show that the pyrimidine unit of thiamin (Vitamin B1) originates from a C5N fragment, derived from C-2',2,N,C-6,5,5' of pyridoxol (Vitamin B6) and an N-C-N fragment derived from L-histidine. Urocanic acid serves as an intermediate on the route of the N-C-N fragment of histidine into the thiamin pyrimidine.

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The biosynthetic origin of the C(3) unit, C-6,5,5', of pyridoxamine was investigated in two yeasts, Candida utilis ATCC 9256 and Saccharomyces cerevisiae ATCC 7752. The incorporation patterns within pyridoxamine bishydrochloride derived from variously multiply (13)C- and (2)H-labeled samples of glycerol and glyceraldehyde, established by NMR spectroscopy, indicate that the three-carbon unit C-6,5,5' of pyridoxamine is derived intact from a triose.

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In separate experiments cultures of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae ATTC 7752 were grown in the presence of [5',5'-2H2]- or of [2',2',5',5'-2H4]-3-hydroxy-2,4,5-tri(hydroxymethyl)pyridine (i.e., 2'-hydroxypyridoxol).

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