Publications by authors named "L J J van de Peppel"

The commercialization of a growing number of wearable devices has been enabled within recent years due to the availability of miniaturized sensor modalities, the development of new materials, and the scalability of flexible electronics. With the increase in resource shortages within healthcare, there is a demand to translate wearable devices from the commercial consumer stand-point to the medical field. Clinical-grade signal quality, wearability, and comfort all need to be tailored to a wearable design.

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The use of compounds produced by hosts or symbionts for defence against antagonists has been identified in many organisms, including in fungus-farming termites (Macrotermitinae). The obligate mutualistic fungus Termitomyces plays a pivotal role in plant biomass decomposition and as the primary food source for these termites. Despite the isolation of various specialized metabolites from different Termitomyces species, our grasp of their natural product repertoire remains incomplete.

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is one of the few basidiomycete fungi that produce asexual spores (conidia) on the mushroom. The role of these conidia in the fungal lifecycle is not known. We tested whether conidia are being utilized in local dispersal by looking for signatures of clonality in 21 samples from three localities separated by about three kilometres in Murillo, Colombia.

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Article Synopsis
  • This study looked at whether doing surgery early is better than just treating patients with trauma-related brain bleeding (t-ICH) without surgery.
  • They checked the results of 367 patients, where some had surgery and others didn't, to see how well they recovered after 6 months.
  • The study found that early surgery might help people with certain types of injuries, but for milder injuries, not having surgery seemed to work better.
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  • A recent study called RESCUE-ASDH looked at two types of brain surgeries for treating a specific brain injury called acute subdural hematoma (ASDH).
  • The research included data from many hospitals across Europe and Israel, tracking how often each surgery was used and the outcomes for patients over a few years.
  • Results showed that there was a big difference among hospitals in how often they chose to use decompressive craniectomy (DC) compared to craniotomy, with some hospitals using DC for a lot of their patients, while others used it much less.
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