Publications by authors named "R Elbracht"

Importance Of The Field: Miniaturization is a significant driver for many life-science applications and a key technology for personalized medicine. Innovations in microfluidics will make ex vivo testing in in vivo-like environment possible, thus, allowing novel pathways for drug discovery.

Areas Covered In This Review: This review covers the application of miniaturization technologies, namely microfluidics for cell-based assay development.

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Flow cytometric T-cell analysis is capable of adding valuable information for balancing immunosuppression in transplant recipients as it can take into account individual effects of immunosuppressive drugs on each patient as well as effects of other drugs which may modify the overall immunosuppression. Studies suggest that HMG-CoA-reductase-inhibitors (statins) reduce the frequency of organ rejection, although the precise mechanism of this effect is unknown. We therefore evaluated the effect of fluvastatin on size and activation of T-cell subpopulations and NK-cell activity in renal transplant recipients.

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Glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) has been defined as a major target antigen in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM). To identify the molecular ligands triggering a T cell response to GAD, a panel of human GAD65-specific T lymphocyte lines was generated from peripheral blood of three recent onset IDDM patients. All lines derived from a patient expressing the high-risk-conferring HLA-DR*0301/ *0401 haplotypes recognized a single epitope localized between amino acid positions 270 and 283 of GAD65, a stretch that is located in close proximity to the homology region shared with Coxsackie virus P2-C protein.

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In diabetic patients, several factors contribute to volume expansion and have to be counteracted by humoral and neuronal feedback control systems. We investigated N-terminal proatrial natriuretic factor (ANF1-98) and digoxin-like immunoreactive factor (DLIF), which are two counteracting hormones, and their interrelationship, with additional consideration given to autonomic nervous function in diabetic patients. ANF1-98 and DLIF were measured in 64 diabetic patients.

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The aim of this study was to compare the intensity of typical late complications in diabetic patients (n = 65, 28 type I, 37 type II) who were not on glycoside drugs with low vs. high serum levels of digoxin-like immunoreactive factor (DLIF: group I, n = 42, DLIF < or = the detection limit of 0.2 ng ml-1; and group II, n = 23, mean +/- SEM: 1.

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