28 results match your criteria: "Academic Clinic Munich-Bogenhausen[Affiliation]"

Article Synopsis
  • Sulfur mustard (SM) is a toxic chemical agent that causes severe skin lesions and impairs wound healing, with no current effective treatments available.
  • Research identified a pathomechanism involving the miRNA miR-497-5p and survivin, which leads to keratinocyte dysfunction after SM exposure.
  • Inhibiting miR-497-5p improved keratinocyte proliferation and differentiation, and using lipid-nanoparticles to deliver the inhibitor promoted skin recovery in human biopsies, suggesting potential therapeutic strategies for SM exposure.
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Chronic Gastro-Duodenal Ulcerative Disease and the Death of Father Stephan Schätzl from Viechtwang (Austria).

J Relig Health

August 2023

Legal Medicine Section, Department of Public Health and Pediatric Sciences, University of Turin, Turin, Italy.

Stephan Schätzl was the parish priest of Viechtwang, Upper Austria. He lived in the aftermath of the Peace of Augsburg in a period of schism between Roman Catholics and Lutherans. His portrait, depicted only 6 days before his demise in 1590, shows that he had extreme ante mortem cachexia.

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We describe here the results of a multidisciplinary study on an infant mummy from 16th century Upper Austria buried in the crypt of the family of the Counts of Starhemberg. The macroscopic-anthropological, radiological (whole-body CT scan), histological (skin tissue), and radiocarbon isotope investigations suggested a male infant of 10-18 months' age, most likely dying between 1550 and 1635 CE (probably Reichard Wilhelm, 1625-1626 CE), that presented with evidence of metabolic bone disease with significant bilateral flaring of costochondral joints resembling "rachitic rosary" of the ribs, along with straight long bones and lack of fractures or subperiosteal bleeding residues. Although incompletely developed, the osteopathology points toward rickets, without upper or lower extremities long bone deformation.

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There exist numerous reports on violence in South American populations which shed a particular light on life and living conditions in those historic communities. Most studies have been performed on collections of isolated skulls. Whole-body investigations especially on well-preserved mummified human remains are rare.

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Madelung's disease in a rare 14th century Franco-Flemish woolen tapestry.

Lancet Diabetes Endocrinol

September 2022

Laboratoire Anthropologie Archéologie Biologie, Université Paris-Saclay, UVSQ UFR des Sciences de la Santé, Montigny-le-Bretonneux, France; Dipartimento di Culture e Società, Università di Palermo, Palermo, Italy; The Ronin Institute, Montclair, NJ 07043, USA. Electronic address:

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Deficiency in X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis protein (XIAP) is the cause for X-linked lymphoproliferative syndrome 2 (XLP2). About one-third of these patients suffer from severe and therapy-refractory inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), but the exact cause of this pathogenesis remains undefined. Here, we used XIAP-deficient mice to characterize the mechanisms underlying intestinal inflammation.

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We describe the peculiar facial morphology of a carved head dating to the end of the Roman Republican period (40 BCE) which displays evident unilateral asymmetry. A comprehensive discussion of the different etiologies is provided and a contextualization of this condition in the broader frame of Roman artistic verism is offered. This case study contributes to the knowledge of disease presentation in the ancient world, with a special focus on the anatomy of soft tissue pathology.

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In Graeco-Roman times in the Lower-Egyptian Fayoum region, a painted portrait was traditionally placed over the face of a deceased individual. These mummy portraits show considerable inter-individual diversity. This suggests that those portraits were created separately for each individual.

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Hydroxy-chloroquine to treat COVID-19 - infected patients: Some lessons from medical anthropology and history of medicine.

Ethics Med Public Health

August 2020

Laboratory anthropology, archaeology, biology (LAAB), Paris-Saclay university (UVSQ), 2, avenue de la Source de la Bièvre, 78180 Montigny-Le-Bretonneux, France.

It is certainly too early to take stock of Professor Raoult's intuitions, and moreover, that is not the aim of this short article. Nevertheless, experience has shown that in times of unprecedented health crises, prescriptions often turn out to be adventurous, especially when it comes to a new virus. The collective imagination around a remedy often takes the place of a guarantee or, on the contrary, a safeguard.

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Why paleomedicine is useful for medical education.

Postgrad Med J

February 2021

Legal Medicine Section, Department of Public Health and Paediatric Sciences, University of Turin, Turin, Italy.

What is the place of medico-historical cases in the professional practice of the disciplinary field of medicine and biology? How can these patients from the past be used for teaching and continuing medical education? How to justify their place in biomedical publications? In this article, we explain all the legitimacy of paleomedicine, and the need to intensify such research in the form of a well-individualised branch of paleopathology and the history of medicine.

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