Publications by authors named "Schroeter A"

Aseptic filling of biopharmaceutical products requires a grade A cleanroom environment, preferably ensured by isolators in grade C surroundings. Isolators are decontaminated before the start of filling processes using vaporized hydrogen peroxide (VHP) and filling starts at pre-defined residual VHP levels (e.g.

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  • The study investigates the impact of older donor organs on younger recipients in organ transplantation, hypothesizing that aging donor organs can induce cellular senescence in younger mice.
  • Results showed that young and middle-aged mice receiving older organs exhibited increased senescent cells in various tissues and experienced diminished physical performance and cognitive abilities within 30 days.
  • Treatment with senolytics, which target and eliminate senescent cells, was found to reduce harmful effects of the old organs and improve physical performance in younger recipients, suggesting a potential strategy for enhancing transplant outcomes.
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  • Machine perfusion (EVMP) is a new method used for preserving solid organs, particularly in organ transplants, that improves upon traditional cold preservation by allowing for better monitoring and reducing damage during preservation.
  • This technique has broadened the donor pool by including organs from expanded criteria donors, such as those from circulatory death cases, and shows potential for treating and modifying diseased organs.
  • The review discusses key differences in EVMP applications for various organs (kidney, liver, lung, heart) and explores both the benefits and limitations of this technique, highlighting the need for interdisciplinary approaches in its development.
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Biological sex affects immunity broadly, with recognized effects on the incidence and severity of autoimmune diseases, infections, and malignancies. Consequences of sex on alloimmunity and outcomes in solid organ transplantation are less well defined. Clinical studies have shown that donor and recipient sex independently impact transplant outcomes, which are further modified by aging.

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  • - Vascularized composite allotransplantation (VCA) is a new surgical method that helps treat severe injuries, such as losing limbs or facial injuries, by transplanting various tissue types like skin, bone, and muscle.
  • - The body's immune system often rejects VCA grafts, especially those with skin, due to their strong antigenicity, which challenges the balance between accepting and rejecting the transplant.
  • - Recent research is uncovering the immune cells involved in graft rejection, aiming to develop targeted therapies that could improve the management of VCA transplant patients and potentially reduce the need for lifelong immunosuppression.
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  • Myelinated axons transmit signals in the brain through action potentials, but accurately mapping their crossing paths is challenging due to influence from unrelated brain structures.
  • Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) can specifically detect myelinated axons by identifying distinct peaks in their scattering patterns, allowing for better resolution of fiber crossings.
  • The study demonstrates SAXS's effectiveness in various brain samples and positions it as a reliable tool for validating fiber orientations obtained from other imaging techniques like diffusion MRI and microscopy.
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Diabetic wounds are characterized by drug-resistant bacterial infections, biofilm formation, impaired angiogenesis and perfusion, and oxidative damage to the microenvironment. Given their complex nature, diabetic wounds remain a major challenge in clinical practice. Reactive oxygen species (ROS), which have been shown to trigger hyperinflammation and excessive cellular apoptosis, play a pivotal role in the pathogenesis of diabetic wounds.

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The kinetics of the transfer of the chelate, ethylenediamine tetraacetate (EDTA), from Calcium(II) to Copper(II) in imidazole (Im) buffers near neutral pH, corresponding to the conversion, [Cu(II)Im]→ [Cu(II)EDTA], are characterized with stopped-flow absorption spectroscopy and implemented as a tool for calibrating the interval between mixing and freezing, the freeze-quench time ( ), of a rapid freeze-quench (RFQ) apparatus. The kinetics of this reaction are characterized by monitoring changes in UV-visible spectra (300 nm) due to changes in the charge-transfer band associated with the Cu ions upon EDTA binding. Stopped-flow measurements show that the rates of conversion of the Cu ions exhibit exponential kinetics on millisecond time scales at pH values less than 6.

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  • * It introduces StandardRat, a standardized fMRI acquisition protocol for rats that has been tested across 20 research centers to enhance data integration.
  • * The standardized protocol and processing pipeline improve the reliability of detecting functional connectivity patterns and are made publicly available to foster collaboration in the neuroimaging field.
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Aims: Globally, burn-related morbidity and mortality still remain high. In order to identify regional high-risk populations and to suggest appropriate prevention measure allocation, we aimed at analyzing epidemiological characteristics, etiology and outcomes of our 14-year experience with an intensive care unit (ICU) burn patient population.

Methods: A retrospective observational study was conducted including patients treated between March 2007 and December 2020 in our intensive care burn unit.

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Purpose Of Review: Older donors have the potential to close the gap between demand and supply in solid organs transplantation. Utilizing older organs, at the same time, has been associated with worse short- and long-term outcomes. Here, we introduce potential mechanisms on how treatments during machine perfusion (MP) may safely improve the utilization of older organs.

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Myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSC) are defined as a group of myeloid cells with potent immunoregulatory functions that have been shown to be involved in a variety of immune-related diseases including infections, autoimmune disorders, and cancer. In organ transplantation, MDSC promote tolerance by modifying adaptive immune responses. With aging, however, substantial changes occur that affect immune functions and impact alloimmunity.

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Aims: Patients with psychiatric comorbidity have been shown to experience high rates of burn injury. Burn epidemiology, etiology, and outcomes have been sparsely documented for patients with major psychiatric disorders. The aim of this study was to analyze the epidemiologic characteristics and outcomes in intensive care burn patients with pre-existing and acute major psychiatric disorders .

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Transplant centers around the world have been using extended criteria donors to remedy the ongoing demand for lung transplantation. With a rapidly aging population, older donors are increasingly considered. Donor age, at the same time has been linked to higher rates of lung ischemia reperfusion injury (IRI).

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In this cross-sectional study we aimed to quantify the somatosensory dysfunction in the hand in people with diabetes with distal symmetrical polyneuropathy (DSPN) in hands and explore early signs of nerve dysfunction in people with diabetes without DSPN in hands. The clinical diagnosis of DSPN was confirmed with electrodiagnosis and corneal confocal microscopy. Thermal and mechanical nerve function in the hand was assessed with quantitative sensory tests.

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Objectives: The plethora of self-administered questionnaires to assess positive psychosocial factors complicates questionnaire selection. This study aimed to identify and reach consensus on the most suitable self-administered questionnaires to assess resilience, optimism, pain acceptance and social support in people with pain.

Design: A three-round modified Delphi study.

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: Multiscale imaging holds particular relevance to neuroscience, where it helps integrate the cellular and molecular biological scale, which is most accessible to interventions, with holistic organ-level evaluations, most relevant with respect to function. Being inextricably interdisciplinary, multiscale imaging benefits substantially from incremental technology adoption, and a detailed overview of the state-of-the-art is vital to an informed application of imaging methods. : In this article, we lay out the background and methodological aspects of multimodal approaches combining functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) with simultaneous optical measurement or stimulation.

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Patients with extrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) face considerable morbidity including septic complications after surgery. The aim of this study was to characterize the bacterial spectrum of the common hepatic duct (CHD) and its clinical relevance regarding morbidity and mortality after resection of extrahepatic CCA. We retrospectively analyzed data from 205 patients undergoing surgery for extrahepatic CCA in our department between January 2000 and March 2015.

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Older organs provide a substantial unrealized potential with the capacity to close the gap between demand and supply in organ transplantation. The potential of senolytics in improving age-related conditions has been shown in various experimental studies and early clinical trials. Those encouraging data may also be of relevance for transplantation.

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Intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC) is a rare disease with poor outcome, despite advances in surgical and non-surgical treatment. Recently, studies have reported a favorable long-term outcome of "very early" ICC (based on tumor size and absence of extrahepatic disease) after hepatic resection and liver transplantation, respectively. However, the prognostic value of tumor size and a reliable definition of early disease remain a matter of debate.

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Pericytes play essential roles in blood-brain barrier integrity and their dysfunction is implicated in neurological disorders such as stroke although the underlying mechanisms remain unknown. Hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1), a master regulator of injury responses, has divergent roles in different cells especially during stress scenarios. On one hand HIF-1 is neuroprotective but on the other it induces vascular permeability.

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Myelin insulates neuronal axons and enables fast signal transmission, constituting a key component of brain development, aging and disease. Yet, myelin-specific imaging of macroscopic samples remains a challenge. Here, we exploit myelin's nanostructural periodicity, and use small-angle X-ray scattering tensor tomography (SAXS-TT) to simultaneously quantify myelin levels, nanostructural integrity and axon orientations in nervous tissue.

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Intense efforts are underway to develop functional imaging modalities for capturing brain activity at the whole organ scale with high spatial and temporal resolution. Functional optoacoustic (fOA) imaging is emerging as a new tool to monitor multiple hemodynamic parameters across the mouse brain, but its sound validation against other neuroimaging modalities is often lacking. Here we investigate mouse brain responses to peripheral sensory stimulation using both fOA and functional ultrasound (fUS) imaging.

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