11 results match your criteria: "Magdeburg University Medical School[Affiliation]"

Diagnostic management of benign and malignant pheochromocytoma.

Exp Clin Endocrinol Diabetes

March 2007

Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Magdeburg University Medical School.

As rare and thus often overlooked hormone-secreting tumors, pheochromocytomas pose a particular diagnostic challenge. Difficulties involve biochemical confirmation, localizing, and detection of malignancy. Measurement of free plasma metanephrines, genetic testing and specific imaging procedures--such as MIBG and octreotide scintigraphy or fluorodopamine PET--represent a considerable progress, and the management of benign pheochromocytomas has become very effective.

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Unlabelled: Wound healing in diabetes is impaired, and nonhealing ulceration represent clinically relevant complications. Persistently high levels of matrix metalloproteases (MMPs) contribute to wound chronicity. Thus, the topical use of protease inhibitors might influence wound healing and promote transition from a chronic to an acute wound.

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Aims/hypothesis: The complex process of wound healing is regulated by various growth factors. The systemic character of diabetes mellitus favors the chronification of diabetic wounds. In this study, the in vitro effects of platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF)-BB on the expression of cytokines and matrix metalloproteases (MMPs) in fibroblasts of Type 2 diabetic patients and healthy controls were investigated.

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Giant intrasellar carotid aneurysm - an unusual cause of panhypopituitarism.

Exp Clin Endocrinol Diabetes

October 2005

Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Magdeburg University Medical School, Germany.

Carotid artery aneurysms represent a very rare cause of pituitary failure. We describe the case of a female patient harbouring a giant aneurysm of the left carotid artery that subsequently led to panhypopituitarism. Interestingly, the late postoperative course was complicated by severe hyponatremia, whose origin may have been due to inappropriate ADH secretion.

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Insulin affects the neuronal response in the medial temporal lobe in humans.

Neuroendocrinology

July 2005

Department of Neurology II, Magdeburg University Medical School, Otto von Guericke University, Magdeburg, Germany.

In recent years, clear evidence has accumulated that insulin affects central nervous functions. Besides controlling metabolic processes such as energy homeostasis by the regulation of food intake through hypothalamic receptors, the peptide hormone also appears to be capable of modulating cognitive functions. Experimental and clinical evidence for insulin supports effects on learning and memory.

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Central nervous effects of leptin and insulin on hippocampal leptin and insulin receptor expression following a learning task in Wistar rats.

Neuropsychobiology

April 2005

Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Magdeburg University Medical School, Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg, Magdeburg, Germany.

Insulin and leptin are well known to be involved in the regulation of food intake and body weight. Recent studies have suggested that both hormones may also affect memory and learning processes. We explored whether the intrahippocampal administration of insulin or leptin improved spatial memory formation in rats following a radial maze task and whether the insulin and leptin receptor expression in different areas of the hippocampus was affected.

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Central nervous and metabolic effects of intranasally applied leptin.

Endocrinology

June 2004

Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Magdeburg University Medical School, 39120 Magdeburg, Germany.

In obesity, due to the resistance of leptin receptors at the blood brain barrier, increased peripheral leptin levels cannot act appropriately at brain sites relevant for appetite regulation. In this study, we focused on the intranasal application of leptin. This mode of administration provides a promising tool for a direct access of peptides to the brain by circumventing the blood brain barrier.

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Although neuroendocrine changes after induction of hypoglycemia, in patients with diabetes and healthy persons, are thoroughly investigated, cognitive adaptation processes are still insufficiently understood. Changes in cognitive functions are mainly investigated by psychometric tests, which represent a summation of different cognitive processes. We aimed at dissecting cognitive adaptation into single components, i.

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The expression of the drug resistance-related proteins glutathione S-transferases (GST) and P-glycoprotein (Pgp) was analyzed quantitatively in samples of 53 astrocytic gliomas (eight WHO grade 1, 11 WHO grade 2, 9 WHO grade 3 and 25 glioblastomas, WHO grade 4). Sections of these tumors were immunohistochemically stained with antibodies to Pgp (MDR1-gene product) and to GST subclasses alpha, mu and pi. Pgp expression was not detected in tumor cells of the majority of low-grade astrocytomas (69%) and the percentage of Pgp stained cells generally increased with tumor grade.

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