Publications by authors named "S Rosendahl"

Inflammatory diseases of the human gastrointestinal tract are affected by the microbes that reside in the mucosal surfaces. Patients with inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) have altered bacterial and fungal intestinal compositions, including higher levels of fecal Candida yeasts. Ongoing research indicates that genetic and phenotypic diversity of Candida albicans may be linked with disease severity.

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During the COVID-19 pandemic the effectiveness of vaccines against SARS-CoV-2 in immunodeficient patients did not only affect the individual risk of these vulnerable patients but endangered the selection of new variants of concern due to prolonged virus shedding by these patients. In a tertiary center for pulmonary diseases, we investigated the immune response of 11 patients with primary humoral immunodeficiency and 13 healthy controls on the humoral and cellular level after full vaccination with a mRNA or vector vaccine against SARS-CoV-2. In the majority of patients (73%), we found antibodies against the Spike protein above the thresh-old of positivity.

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Introduction: Finding solutions to communicate difficulties in care interactions between health care professionals and older migrant patients may be facilitated by the use of digital translation tools. The aim was to explore older migrant patients' and health professionals' experiences using digital translation tools in transcultural care.

Methodology: A systematic qualitative literature review, based on nine quality assessed articles published 2009 to 2024 from five databases, and analyzed using thematic analysis.

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Background: Thai older adults are valuable resources in their society. The Thai health service system is challenged when it comes to ensuring that older Thai adults can continue to live healthy and independent lives in society. It is of great value to support independence and improve older people's active ageing.

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Signal regulatory protein alpha (SIRPα) is mainly expressed by cells of myeloid origin. This membrane glycoprotein is shown to be involved in regulation of different inflammatory conditions, such as colitis and arthritis. However, SIRPα has not been investigated in relationship to periodontitis, an inflammatory condition affecting the tooth supporting tissues.

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