Publications by authors named "Linus Dubs"

To improve risk stratification in extracranial internal carotid artery disease (CAD), patients who would benefit maximally from revascularization must be identified. In cardiology, the fractional flow reserve (FFR) has become a reference standard for evaluating the functional severity of coronary artery stenosis, and noninvasive surrogates thereof relying on computational fluid dynamics (CFD) have been developed. Here, we present a CFD-based workflow using digital twins of patients' carotid bifurcations derived from computed tomography angiography for the noninvasive functional assessment of CAD.

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Pulmonary Endarterectomy and Treatment for Chronic Thromboembolic Pulmonary Hypertension Chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension is a relatively rare disease which mostly evolves as a complication of acute pulmonary embolism resulting from the fibrotic organization of residual thrombotic material despite adequate anticoagulation leading to precapillary pulmonary hypertension and persistence of its symptoms. The elevated pulmonary vascular resistance leads to right ventricular heart failure, its symptoms and reduced prognosis. The therapy of choice is the pulmonary endarterectomy, which leads to a reduction of symptoms, optimization of the hemodynamics and improved prognosis.

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Aims: Chronic lung allograft dysfunction (CLAD) after lung transplantation (Tx) is the clinical result of chronic airway rejection lesions (CARL), histomorphologically described as either obliterative remodeling of small airways or alveolar fibroelastosis, or as a combination of both. We here investigated the CD26-inhibitory effect on CD26-expressing CARL.

Main Methods: CARL were induced by BALB/c → C57BL/6 mouse Tx under mild immunosuppression.

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Background: Several mouse lung transplantation (Tx) models have been proposed for the study of chronic airway fibrosis (CAF), the most prevalent complication seen in human lung transplant recipients, termed chronic lung allograft dysfunction. Alternatively, it has been called for to establish an experimental animal model for restrictive allograft syndrome, another phenotype of chronic lung allograft dysfunction. However, these mouse transplant models exhibit significant heterogeneity in consistency and reproducibility.

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