Publications by authors named "Per Hansen"

Article Synopsis
  • The study investigated the impact of an 8-week preoperative low-load blood flow restricted resistance training (BFR-RT) program on knee osteoarthritis (OA) patients scheduled for total knee arthroplasty (TKA) compared to conventional care with no exercise.
  • Results showed no significant differences in physical function or patient-reported outcomes between the BFR-RT and the usual care group at 3 and 12 months post-surgery.
  • However, BFR-RT led to notable improvements in lower limb strength at 3 months postoperatively, indicating that it may enhance muscle strength but not necessarily overall physical function post-TKA.
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Prymnesins, produced by the haptophyte Prymnesium parvum, are considered responsible for fish kills when this species blooms. Although their toxic mechanism is not fully understood, membrane disruptive properties have been ascribed to A-type prymnesins. Currently it is suggested that pore-formation is the underlying cause of cell disruption.

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Unicellular eukaryotic plankton communities (protists) are the major basis of the marine food web. The spring bloom is especially important, because of its high biomass. However, it is poorly described how the protist community composition in Arctic surface waters develops from winter to spring.

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Background: In 2011, as the first European country, Denmark introduced the non-organ-specific cancer patient pathway (CPP) for patients presenting with non-specific symptoms and signs of cancer (NSSC). The proportion of patients with cancer over time is unknown.

Methods: A retrospective cohort study of all patients with a NSSC-CPP investigational course in the province of Funen to the Diagnostic Centre in Svendborg from 2014 to 2021 was performed to evaluate the proportion of patients with cancer and serious disease over time.

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Harmful algal blooms kill fish populations worldwide, as exemplified by the haptophyte microalga Prymnesium parvum. The suspected causative agents are prymnesins, categorized as A-, B-, and C-types based on backbone carbon atoms. Impacts of P.

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Jellyfish as a potential sustainable food material has recently gained increasing interest. However, with their soft gel-like texture and easy spoilage, it remains challenging to achieve desirable edible structures from jellyfish. The culinary preparation of jellyfish is a complex process and extends beyond conventional cooking methods.

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Ocean acidification is caused by rising atmospheric partial pressure of CO (pCO) and involves a lowering of pH combined with increased concentrations of CO and dissolved in organic carbon in ocean waters. Many studies investigated the consequences of these combined changes on marine phytoplankton, yet only few attempted to separate the effects of decreased pH and increased pCO. Moreover, studies typically target photoautotrophic phytoplankton, while little is known of plastidic protists that depend on the ingestion of plastids from their prey.

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Prymnesium parvum is a toxin-producing haptophyte that causes harmful algal blooms worldwide, which are often associated with massive fish-kills and subsequent economic losses. In here, we present nuclear and plastid genome assemblies using PacBio HiFi long reads and DNBseq short reads for the two P. parvum strains UTEX 2797 and CCMP 3037, representing producers of type A prymnesins.

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Emphysematous osteomyelitis (EO) is a rare and dangerous infection characterized by the presence of intraosseous gas. In this case report, a 65-year-old man with primary central nervous system lymphoma had recurrent infections and pain in his shoulders. Urine and blood cultures revealed Klebsiella pneumoniae.

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Despite constant advances in cancer research, the treatment of pancreatic adenocarcinoma remains extremely challenging. The intratumoral immunotherapy approach that was developed by our research group and was based on a combination of mannan-BAM, TLR ligands, and anti-CD40 antibody (MBTA) showed promising therapeutic effects in various murine tumor models, including a pancreatic adenocarcinoma model (Panc02). However, the efficacy of MBTA therapy in the Panc02 model was negatively correlated with tumor size at the time of therapy initiation.

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Protist plankton are major members of open-water marine food webs. Traditionally divided between phototrophic phytoplankton and phagotrophic zooplankton, recent research shows many actually combine phototrophy and phagotrophy in the one cell; these protists are the "mixoplankton." Under the mixoplankton paradigm, "phytoplankton" are incapable of phagotrophy (diatoms being exemplars), while "zooplankton" are incapable of phototrophy.

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Marine microorganisms have the potential to disperse widely with few obvious barriers to gene flow. However, among microalgae, several studies have demonstrated that species can be highly genetically structured with limited gene flow among populations, despite hydrographic connectivity. Ecological differentiation and local adaptation have been suggested as drivers of such population structure.

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Meltwater runoff from glaciers carries particles, so-called glacial flour that may affect planktonic organisms and the functioning of marine ecosystems. Protist microplankton is at the base of marine food webs and thus plays an important role in sustaining important ecosystem services. To assess the effect of glacial flour on photoautotrophic, heterotrophic and mixotrophic microplankton, the spatial distribution of these trophic groups was studied in four Greenlandic fjords during summer.

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Article Synopsis
  • Marine ciliates like Strombidium cf. basimorphum can utilize chloroplasts from their prey for photosynthesis but aren't effective at using dissolved inorganic nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorus for growth.
  • * Research found that low concentrations of these inorganic nutrients led to higher prey carbon content, which in turn boosted ciliate growth and feeding.
  • * Conversely, high nutrient concentrations resulted in lower prey carbon content, limiting the ciliate's growth, demonstrating its reliance on nutrient-rich prey rather than dissolved inorganic nutrients.
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Prymnesium parvum causes harmful algal blooms worldwide that are often associated with massive fish-kills and subsequent economic losses. Most of our knowledge of the toxicity of P. parvum derives from bioassays since methods for the identification and quantification of their toxins have been lacking.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study evaluates the Live Fluorescently Labelled Algae (LFLA) technique for measuring microzooplankton herbivory, focusing on its interaction with mixoplankton, which can photosynthesize and consume prey.
  • Short experiments were conducted with various mixoplanktonic and protozooplanktonic grazers under different conditions, finding LFLA effective for tracking ingestion and digestion rates, especially in a short timeframe (ideally within 1 hour).
  • However, challenges arise due to potential biases in feeding mechanisms and size or species selectivity; the authors suggest using two different fluorochromes to improve accuracy when assessing grazing rates.
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The gill of teleost fish is a multifunctional organ involved in many physiological processes, including protection of the mucosal gill surface against pathogens and other environmental antigens by the gill-associated lymphoid tissue (GIALT). Climate change associated phenomena, such as increasing frequency and magnitude of harmful algal blooms (HABs) put extra strain on gill function, contributing to enhanced fish mortality and fish kills. However, the molecular basis of the HAB-induced gill injury remains largely unknown due to the lack of high-throughput transcriptomic studies performed on teleost fish in laboratory conditions.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates how mixoplankton (which can photosynthesize and consume other organisms) impacts the estimation of grazing rates in plankton communities using the common dilution grazing technique.
  • - Findings reveal that measuring chlorophyll levels is not effective for identifying phytoplankton presence in the presence of mixoplankton, while counting specific cell types can provide some insights into grazing behavior and interactions.
  • - The research suggests that both daytime and nighttime experiments are important for understanding grazing activities, and recommends routine examination of plankton communities in dilution experiments to improve accuracy, with a future focus on computational models to unravel mixoplankton’s ecological role.
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Cells in the tumor microenvironment of Follicular lymphoma (FL) express checkpoint molecules such as programmed death ligands 1 and 2 (PD-L1 and PD-L2) and are suppressing anti-tumor immune activity. Stimulation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) with PD-L1 (IO103) or PD-L2 (IO120) peptides can activate specific T cells inducing anti-regulatory functions including cytotoxicity against PD-L1/PD-L2-expressing cells. In this study, we vaccinated eight FL patients with PD-L1 and PD-L2 peptides following treatment with standard chemotherapy.

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Many marine ciliate species retain functional chloroplasts from their photosynthetic prey. In some species, the functionality of the acquired plastids is connected to the simultaneous retention of prey nuclei. To date, this has never been documented in plastidic species.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Prymnesium parvum is a harmful algae known for causing fish kills globally, with toxicity linked to polyketide compounds called prymnesins, divided into A, B, and C types.
  • - This study examined the transcriptomes of nine P. parvum strains with varying toxin production, finding numerous type I polyketide synthases (PKSs) and potential trade-offs between toxin levels and basic metabolic processes.
  • - Results suggest metabolic costs are associated with high toxin production, providing insights into prymnesin biosynthesis and aiding in the development of monitoring tools for future algal blooms.
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Many species of the ciliate genus can acquire functional chloroplasts from a wide range of algal prey and are thus classified as generalist non-constitutive mixotrophs. Little, however, is known about the influence of irradiance and prey availability on their ability to exploit the photosynthetic potential of the chloroplasts, and how this may explain their spatial and temporal distribution in nature. In this study, inorganic carbon uptake, growth, and ingestion rates were measured for cf.

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