Publications by authors named "Martin M Zimmermann"

Objective: The relationship between diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) at diagnosis of type 1 diabetes and long-term glycemic control varies between studies. We aimed, firstly, to characterize the association of DKA and its severity with long-term HbA1c in a large contemporary cohort, and secondly, to identify other independent determinants of long-term HbA1c.

Research Design And Methods: Participants were 7,961 children and young adults diagnosed with type 1 diabetes by age 30 years from 2000 to 2019 and followed prospectively in the Australasian Diabetes Data Network (ADDN) until 31 December 2020.

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  • The study investigates the treatment of cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT) caused by vaccine-induced immune thrombotic thrombocytopenia (VITT) following adenovirus-based COVID-19 vaccinations.
  • Researchers analyzed data from 99 patients across 17 countries to assess adherence to recommended treatments, including immunomodulation and avoiding certain anticoagulants.
  • While overall adherence to these treatment guidelines did not significantly impact mortality, patients who received immunomodulation showed lower mortality rates compared to those who did not.
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Importance: Patients selected to receive neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) are usually those at higher risk of relapse, and there is a need to find better therapeutic options for these patients.

Objective: To determine the efficacy and safety outcomes for patients with hormone receptor (HR)-positive, ERBB2 (formerly HER2)-, high-risk early breast cancer enrolled in the randomized clinical trial monarchE who received NAC.

Design, Setting, And Participants: The monarchE randomized clinical trial was a multicenter, phase 3, open-label study that evaluated adjuvant treatment with abemaciclib plus endocrine therapy (ET) compared with ET alone in patients with HR+, ERBB2-, and node-positive early breast cancer who were at high risk of recurrence.

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Objective: Continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) is increasingly used in type 1 diabetes management; however, funding models vary. This study determined the uptake rate and glycemic outcomes following a change in national health policy to introduce universal subsidized CGM funding for people with type 1 diabetes aged <21 years.

Research Design And Methods: Longitudinal data from 12 months before the subsidy until 24 months after were analyzed.

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  • - During bone healing, mechanical strain plays a crucial role, and inhibiting sclerostin, a protein involved in the healing process, can promote bone formation; however, its effectiveness in mechanically unstable environments remains uncertain.
  • - In a study using mouse femoral osteotomy models with different stabilization methods, SclAb treatment resulted in greater bone volume overall but could not improve healing in cases with semirigid fixation, which typically leads to delayed healing.
  • - Findings indicated that while SclAb increased bone mass, it may produce negative effects in later healing stages, particularly under rigid fixation conditions, suggesting a need for careful consideration in therapeutic applications aimed at enhancing bone healing.
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A substantial part of age-related episodic memory decline has been attributed to the decreasing ability of older adults to encode and retrieve associations among simultaneously processed information units from long-term memory. In addition, this ability seems to share unique variance with reasoning. In this study, we therefore examined whether process-based training of the ability to learn and remember associations has the potential to induce transfer effects to untrained episodic memory and reasoning tasks in healthy older adults (60-75 years).

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As part of a search for new cardiotonic agents significantly sensitising the myocardial contractile proteins to calcium, together with cardiac cyclic AMP-PDE inhibitory activity, we have discovered that novel 5-substituted 3,6-dihydrothiadiazin-2-ones may fulfill both properties. The sensitising effect of the contractile proteins to calcium, assessed by the shift in the calcium sensitivity of canine cardiac myofibrillar magnesium-dependent ATPase, is determined by steric and electronic requirements. The requirements for phosphodiesterase inhibition, especially that of a near-planar arrangement for the phenyl and thiadiazin-2-one ring are consistent with those already described for analogous pyridazinones.

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