Publications by authors named "Ridder F"

Objective: To evaluate the safety and performance of an implantable near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy sensor for multi-metabolite monitoring of glucose, ketones, lactate, and ethanol.

Research Design And Methods: This is an early feasibility study (GLOW, NCT04782934) including 7 participants (4 with type 1 diabetes (T1D), 3 healthy volunteers) in whom the YANG NIR spectroscopy sensor (Indigo) was implanted for 28 days. Metabolic challenges were used to vary glucose levels (40-400 mg/dL, 2.

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Interleukin-12 (IL-12) is a potent driver of type 1 immunity. Paradoxically, in autoimmune conditions, including of the CNS, IL-12 reduces inflammation. The underlying mechanism behind these opposing properties and the involved cellular players remain elusive.

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COVID-19 can induce neurological sequelae, negatively affecting the quality of life. Unravelling this illness's impact on structural brain connectivity, white-matter microstructure (WMM), and cognitive performance may help elucidate its implications. This cross-sectional study aimed to investigate differences in these factors between former hospitalised COVID-19 patients (COV) and healthy controls.

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Background: Long-term sequelae of COVID-19 can result in reduced functionality of the central nervous system and substandard quality of life. Gaining insight into the recovery trajectory of admitted COVID-19 patients on their cognitive performance and global structural brain connectivity may allow a better understanding of the diseases' relevance.

Objectives: To assess whole-brain structural connectivity in former non-intensive-care unit (ICU)- and ICU-admitted COVID-19 survivors over 2 months following hospital discharge and correlate structural connectivity measures to cognitive performance.

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Objective: Real-time continuous glucose monitoring (RT-CGM) can improve metabolic control and quality of life (QoL), but long-term real-world data in children with type 1 diabetes (T1D) are scarce. Over a period of 24 months, we assessed the impact of RT-CGM reimbursement on glycemic control and QoL in children/adolescents with T1D treated with insulin pumps.

Research Design And Methods: We conducted a multicenter prospective observational study.

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Background & Aims: RNA interference therapy has been shown to reduce hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) levels in preclinical models, which could confer functional cure in patients with chronic hepatitis B. This phase IIa trial (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03365947) assessed the safety and efficacy of the small-interfering RNA JNJ-73763989 (JNJ-3989) plus a nucleos(t)ide analogue (NA), with/without the capsid assembly modulator JNJ-56136379 (JNJ-6379) in patients with chronic hepatitis B.

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Background: Exercise is part of type 1 diabetes (T1D) management due to its cardiovascular and metabolic benefits. However, despite using continuous glucose monitoring, many patients are reluctant to exercise because of fear for hypoglycaemia.

Aims: We assessed trends in glucose, lactate and ketones during anaerobic and aerobic exercise in people with T1D and compared incremental area under the curve (AUC) between both exercises.

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Aging exerts profound and paradoxical effects on the immune system, at once impairing proliferation, cytotoxicity and phagocytosis, and inducing chronic inflammation. Previous studies have focused on individual tissues or cell types, while a comprehensive multisystem study of tissue-resident and circulating immune populations during aging is lacking. Here we reveal an atlas of age-related changes in the abundance and phenotype of immune cell populations across 12 mouse tissues.

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Earlier identification of potentially efficacious treatments in early development trials requires on-treatment response markers. We hypothesized that mean week 12 or 24 HBsAg decline could be a useful marker for subsequent off-treatment sustained HBsAg clearance at the treatment arm level in HBV trials. We used individual patient data from the studies HBV 9901 (peginterferon [PEG-IFN] versus PEG-IFN+lamivudine for HBeAg-positive CHB), PARC (PEG-IFN±ribavirin for HBeAg-negative CHB) and published data from 0149 (PEG-IFN±tenofovir for HBeAg-positive and HBeAg-negative CHB) and LIRA-B (PEG-IFN for HBeAg-positive CHB) to define the relationship between mean week HBsAg decline and HBsAg loss at 6 months post-treatment.

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Programs defining tissue-resident macrophage identity depend on local environmental cues. For alveolar macrophages (AMs), these signals are provided by immune and nonimmune cells and include GM-CSF (CSF2). However, evidence to functionally link components of this intercellular cross talk remains scarce.

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Interim analyses are routinely used to monitor accumulating data in clinical trials. When the objective of the interim analysis is to stop the trial if the trial is deemed futile, it must ideally be conducted as early as possible. In trials where the clinical endpoint of interest is only observed after a long follow-up, many enrolled patients may therefore have no information on the primary endpoint available at the time of the interim analysis.

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Background: Advances in diabetes technology have been exponential in the last few decades. With evolution in continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) systems and its progressive automation in control of insulin delivery, these advances have changed type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) management. These novel technologies have the potential to improve glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c), reduce hypoglycaemic events, increase time spent in range and improve quality of life (QoL).

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Managing type 1 diabetes (T1DM) is challenging and requires intensive glucose monitoring and titration of insulin in order to reduce the risk of complications. The use of continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) systems, either flash or intermittently scanned glucose monitoring (isCGM) or real-time (RT) CGM, has positively affected the management of type 1 diabetes with the potential to lower HbA1c, enhance time spent in range, reduce frequency and time spent in hypoglycemia and hyperglycemia, lower glycemic variability, and improve quality of life. In recent years, both CGM and pump technology have advanced, with improved functional features and integration, including low glucose suspend (LGS), predictive low glucose suspend (PLGS), and hybrid closed-loop (HCL) systems.

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Background: Type 2 immunity serves to resist parasitic helminths, venoms, and toxins, but the role and regulation of neutrophils during type 2 immune responses are controversial. Helminth models suggested a contribution of neutrophils to type 2 immunity, whereas neutrophils are associated with increased disease severity during type 2 inflammatory disorders, such as asthma.

Objective: We sought to evaluate the effect of the prototypic type 2 cytokines IL-4 and IL-13 on human neutrophils.

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Purpose: This study aimed at studying the MR imaging appearance of the tibiotalar ligament in asymptomatic volunteers.

Materials And Methods: Fourty-two ankles were imaged on a 3T MR system using proton density weighted images with fat saturation (TR, 2969 ms; TE 30 ms; NA, 2; slice thickness, 2.5 mm).

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Type 2 immune responses contribute to the resistance to helminths and toxins as well as several physiological processes. Although they usually do not participate in type 2 immune responses, neutrophils have been shown in mice to enhance the anti-helminth response, but they also contribute to increased target tissue damage. Increased pathology and morbidity is also observed in type 2 immune-mediated disorders, such as allergic asthma, when neutrophils become a predominant subset of the infiltrate.

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Influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) cause acute infections of the respiratory tract. Since the viruses both cause illnesses with similar symptoms, researchers often try to apply knowledge gleaned from study of one virus to the other virus. This can be an effective and efficient strategy for understanding viral dynamics or developing treatment strategies, but only if we have a full understanding of the similarities and differences between the two viruses.

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Article Synopsis
  • A first DTI atlas for white matter tracts in the feline brain was created to highlight the significance of DTI in understanding brain anatomy in cats, compared to previously published dog brain images.
  • The study involved analyzing DTI MR images from four cats euthanized for non-neurological reasons, using advanced imaging techniques shortly after death.
  • Findings revealed notable differences in brain structure between cats and dogs, particularly with the limbic system's prominence in cats and the overall characteristics of white matter fiber bundles.
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Inhibiting the human ether-a-go-go-related gene (hERG)-encoded potassium ion channel is positively correlated with QT-interval prolongation in vivo, which is considered a risk factor for the occurrence of Torsades de Pointes (TdP). A pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic model was developed for four compounds that reached the clinic, to relate drug-induced QT-interval change in awake dogs and humans and to derive a translational scaling factor a 1. Overall, dogs were more sensitive than humans to QT-interval change, an a 1 of 1.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to assess temperature changes in the uterus of pregnant miniature pigs during MR imaging at 3 T by using fiber-optic temperature sensors placed in different locations.
  • Three imaging regimens were compared: low-SAR, normal SAR, and high-SAR, with results showing increasing temperature rises in that order.
  • The study concluded that while temperature increases varied by imaging protocol, third trimester temperatures were not significantly different from those in the first or second trimesters, with cumulative increases in high-SAR imaging reaching up to 2.5°C.
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Safety pharmacology studies are performed to assess whether compounds may provoke severe arrhythmias (e.g. Torsades de Pointes, TdP) and sudden death in man.

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It is unknown whether interim analyses portend final study results. Fatigue, pressure to complete trials and recruitment differences may mitigate against this. We examined the similarity of efficacy results of the first and second half of recruited patients to complete trials and explore possible intervening variables.

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Improvements in the understanding of the Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) life-cycle have led to the identification of targets and the development of drugs affecting the intracellular reproduction of the virus. These advancements have presented new modeling challenges as the classic models have focused on describing the macroscopic viral kinetics only. Our primary objective is to apply the existing theory of Physiologically Structured Population (PSP) modeling to describe dynamics of viral RNA (vRNA) in infected hepatocytes of patients receiving treatment with Direct-acting Antiviral Agents (DAA).

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Objective: The purpose of this study is to investigate the distal insertions of the semimembranosus tendon with MR imaging, correlated with findings in cadavers.

Materials And Methods: Four fresh cadaveric specimens were studied with 3-T MR imaging. Sequences included proton density (PD) sequences (TE, 13; TR, 4957; FOV, 170 × 170; matrix, 424 × 413; NA, 2; slice thickness, 2.

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