Publications by authors named "S Haenel"

Purpose: Adequate patient allocation is pivotal for optimal resource management in strained healthcare systems, and requires detailed knowledge of clinical and virological disease trajectories. The purpose of this work was to identify risk factors associated with need for invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV), to analyse viral kinetics in patients with and without IMV and to provide a comprehensive description of clinical course.

Methods: A cohort of 168 hospitalised adult COVID-19 patients enrolled in a prospective observational study at a large European tertiary care centre was analysed.

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Article Synopsis
  • Drylands play a significant role in carbon dioxide uptake due to litter decomposition, which is influenced by both biotic (microbial) and abiotic (photochemical and thermal) processes.
  • Recent findings suggest that nighttime microbial degradation, facilitated by the absorption of dew and water vapor, significantly contributes to litter decay in dry conditions, contrary to traditional models that focus solely on precipitation.
  • Experiments across the Mediterranean indicate that microbial activity and photodegradation enhance each other, highlighting the need to understand these interactions for better predictions of carbon turnover and global carbon sequestration trends.
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Background: Paraquat is a highly toxic herbicide, which not only leads to acute organ damage, but also to pulmonary fibrosis. There are only anecdotal reports of rescue lung transplantation, as paraquat is stored and only slowly released from different tissues. Bridging the time to complete depletion of paraquat from the body could render this exceptional therapy strategy possible, but not much is known on the time interval after which transplantation can safely be performed.

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Background: Journal articles and databases are two major modes of communication in the biological sciences, and thus integrating these critical resources is of urgent importance to increase the pace of discovery. Projects focused on bridging the gap between journals and databases have been on the rise over the last five years and have resulted in the development of automated tools that can recognize entities within a document and link those entities to a relevant database. Unfortunately, automated tools cannot resolve ambiguities that arise from one term being used to signify entities that are quite distinct from one another.

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