Publications by authors named "Niklas Hartmann"

Myocardial infarction initiates cardiac remodeling and is central to heart failure pathogenesis. Following myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury, monocytes enter the heart and differentiate into diverse subpopulations of macrophages. Here we show that deletion of Hif1α, a hypoxia response transcription factor, in resident cardiac macrophages led to increased remodeling and overrepresentation of macrophages expressing arginase 1 (Arg1).

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Inflammation, fibrosis and metabolic stress critically promote heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). Exposure to high-fat diet and nitric oxide synthase inhibitor N[w]-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) recapitulate features of HFpEF in mice. To identify disease-specific traits during adverse remodeling, we profiled interstitial cells in early murine HFpEF using single-cell RNAseq (scRNAseq).

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Mixed reality (MxR) enables the projection of virtual three-dimensional objects into the user's field of view via a head-mounted display (HMD). This phantom model study investigated three different workflows for navigated common femoral arterial (CFA) access and compared it to a conventional sonography-guided technique as a control. A total of 160 punctures were performed by 10 operators (5 experts and 5 non-experts).

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Article Synopsis
  • This study looked at how well a new mixed reality (MiR) technique works for a medical procedure compared to the usual method.
  • The researchers tested this on a model by doing a total of 60 needle punctures: 30 using MiR and 30 with the conventional method.
  • Results showed that both methods had good success rates, but the MiR technique’s angles of entry were slightly different compared to the conventional method.
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To investigate the usability of Mixed-Reality (MR) during patient education in patients scheduled for abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) repair. Consecutive patients scheduled for elective AAA repair were block-randomized in either the Mixed-Reality group (MR group) or the conventional group (control group). Patients of both groups were educated about open and endovascular repair of their respective AAA.

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Background: "Mixed reality" (MR) allows the projection of virtual objects into the user's field of view through a head-mounted display (HMD). In the interventional and surgical treatment of vascular diseases MR applications could be of future benefit. The following scoping review aims to provide orientation on the current application of the aforementioned technologies in the field of vascular surgery and to define research goals for the future.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study looks at how well a Mixed Reality Viewer (MRV) works for understanding the blood vessels in patients with a certain condition called abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA).
  • Researchers used special scans (CTAs) of 50 patients to see if the MRV could help. They compared it to a regular way of looking at the scans on a computer screen.
  • The MRV did a good job for most things like spotting calcification and dilatation, but the regular viewer was better at finding some specific arteries. They suggest that the MRV could be very useful in hospitals, but it needs some improvements.
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Percutaneous femoral arterial access is daily practice in a variety of medical specialties and enables physicians worldwide to perform endovascular interventions. The reported incidence of percutaneous femoral arterial access complications is 3-18% and often results from suboptimal puncture location due to insufficient visualization of the target vessel. The purpose of this proof-of-concept study was to evaluate the feasibility and the positional error of a mixed-reality (MR)-assisted puncture of the common femoral artery in a phantom model using a commercially available navigation system.

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To determine whether the genospecies composition of Lyme disease spirochetes is spatially stratified, we collected questing Ixodes ricinus ticks in neighboring plots where rodents, birds, and lizards were present as reservoir host and compared the prevalence of various genospecies. The overall prevalence of spirochetes in questing ticks varied across the study site. Borrelia lusitaniae appeared to infect adult ticks in one plot at the same frequency as did Borrelia afzelii in the other plots.

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