Publications by authors named "Silke Wegener"

Aims/hypothesis: Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is a heterogeneous condition. Given such variability among patients, the ability to recognise distinct GDM subgroups using routine clinical variables may guide more personalised treatments. Our main aim was to identify distinct GDM subtypes through cluster analysis using routine clinical variables, and analyse treatment needs and pregnancy outcomes across these subgroups.

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Introduction: Women with migration background present specific challenges related to risk stratification and care of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM). Therefore, this study aims to investigate the role of ethnic origin on the risk of developing GDM in a multiethnic European cohort.

Methods: Pregnant women were included at a median gestational age of 12.

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Introduction: Previous studies indicated an association between fetal overgrowth and maternal obesity independent of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM). However, the underlying mechanisms beyond this possible association are not completely understood. This study investigates metabolic changes and their association with fetal and neonatal biometry in overweight and obese mothers who remained normal glucose-tolerant during gestation.

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Objectives: With an increasing incidence of labor induction the socioeconomic costs are increasing and the burden on hospital capacities is rising. In addition, the worldwide SARS-CoV-2 pandemic asks for improvements in patient care during pregnancy and delivery while decreasing the patient-staff contact. Here, we are retrospectively analyzing and comparing a mechanical ripening device that is utilized as an outpatient procedure to misoprostol and dinoprostone as inpatient induction methods in a low risk cohort.

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Background: Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus type 2 infections in pregnancy have been associated with maternal morbidity, admission to intensive care, and adverse perinatal outcomes such as preterm birth, stillbirth, and hypertensive disorders of pregnancy. It is unclear whether medically assisted reproduction additionally affects maternal and neonatal outcomes in women with COVID-19.

Objective: To evaluate the effect of medically assisted reproduction on maternal and neonatal outcomes in women with COVID-19 in pregnancy.

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Aim: The misoprostol vaginal insert (MVI) was reported to be more effective than dinoprostone but discussed critically because of high rates of fetal heart rate changes due to uterine tachysystole. The aim of this study was to investigate the outcome of induced labor using the MVI compared to off-label orally-administered misoprostol (OM).

Methods: Retrospective study including a total of 401 patients with singleton pregnancies in whom labor was induced at ≥36 0/7 gestational weeks with MVI (203) or OM (198).

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Chronic activation of the Janus kinase (JAK)/signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) signaling pathways is a hallmark of a variety of B-cell lymphomas, including classical Hodgkin lymphoma (cHL). Constitutive JAK/STAT signaling is crucial for survival and proliferation of Hodgkin/Reed-Sternberg (HRS) cells, the malignant cells of cHL. Although the molecular basis of this constitutive JAK/STAT signaling in cHL has not been completely understood, accumulating reports highlight the role of an inactivation or reduced expression of negative JAK/STAT regulators such as silencer of cell signaling 1 (SOCS1) or protein-tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B) in this process.

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The precise role of hormones binding to Gαq protein-coupled receptors (H-GαqPCRs) in chronic heart diseases remains poorly understood. To address this, we used a model of cultured adult rat ventricular myocytes stimulated with endothelin-1 (ET-1) or phenylephrine (PE) over a period of 8 days in vitro (DIV). Chronically treated cells showed an increased number of arrhythmogenic Ca(2+) transients when electrically paced at 0.

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Increased Rac1 activity and its concomitant elevation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels is believed to be involved in the development of cardiac diseases such as hypertrophy and arrhythmia. To study the effects of activated Rac1 on the properties of isolated ventricular myocytes we used a transgenic mouse model (RacET) expressing constitutively active Rac1. Concurrent with dilated cardiomyopathy global Ca(2+) handling as well as single cell contractility was substantially decreased.

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Background: In cancer cells the three-dimensional (3D) telomere organization of interphase nuclei into a telomeric disk is heavily distorted and aggregates are found. In Hodgkin's lymphoma quantitative FISH (3D Q-FISH) reveals a major impact of nuclear telomere dynamics during the transition form mononuclear Hodgkin (H) to diagnostic multinuclear Reed-Sternberg (RS) cells. In vitro and in vivo formation of RS-cells is associated with the increase of very short telomeres including "t-stumps", telomere loss, telomeric aggregate formation and the generation of "ghost nuclei".

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Focussing on the role of chlorocatechol 1,2-dioxygenase (CC12O), an oxygen-dependent key enzyme in the aerobic catabolism of chlorobenzene (CB), Pseudomonas veronii strain UFZ B549, Acidovorax facilis strain UFZ B530, and a community of indigenous groundwater bacteria were amended with CB degradation under either oxic or hypoxic conditions. All cultures readily degraded CB at high oxygen availability, but had differing abilities to completely degrade CB when exposed to oxygen limitation. For the three cultures very distinct oxygen half-saturation constants (0.

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