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Wilhelm Merton : Rede bei der von dem Magistrat der Stadt Frankfurt a.M. im Bürgersaal des Rathauses am 2. Januar 1917 veranstalteten Gedächtnisfeier (1917)
Stein, Philipp
Variations in seasonal solar insolation are associated with a history of suicide attempts in bipolar I disorder (2021)
Bauer, Michael ; Glenn, Tasha ; Achtyes, Eric D. ; Agaoglu, Esen ; Altınbaş, Kürşat ; Andreassen, Ole A. ; Angelopoulos, Elias ; Ardau, Raffaella ; Arrua Vares, Edgar ; Aydin, Memduha ; Ayhan, Yavuz ; Baethge, Christopher Jan ; Bauer, Rita ; Baune, Bernhard T. ; Balaban, Ceylan ; Becerra-Palars, Claudia ; Behere, Aniruddh P. ; Behere, Prakash B. ; Belete, Habte ; Belete, Tilahun ; Belizario, Gabriel Okawa ; Bellivier, Frank ; Belmaker, Robert H. ; Benedetti, Francesco ; Berk, Michael ; Bersudsky, Yuly ; Bicakci, Şule ; Birabwa-Oketcho, Harriet ; Bjella, Thomas D. ; Brady, Conan ; Cabrera, Jorge ; Cappucciati, Marco ; Castro, Angela Marianne Paredes ; Chen, Wei-Ling ; Cheung, Eric Y. Wo ; Chiesa, Silvia ; Crowe, Marie ; Cuomo, Alessandro ; Dallaspezia, Sara ; Del Zompo, Maria ; Desai, Pratikkumar ; Dodd, Seetal ; Donix, Markus ; Etain, Bruno ; Fagiolini, Andrea ; Fellendorf, Frederike T. ; Ferensztajn-Rochowiak, Ewa ; Fiedorowicz, Jess G. ; Fountoulakis, Kostas N. ; Frye, Mark A. ; Geoffroy, Pierre A. ; Gonzalez-Pinto, Ana ; Gottlieb, John F. ; Grof, Paul ; Haarman, Bartholomeus C. M. ; Harima, Hirohiko ; Hasse-Sousa, Mathias ; Henry, Chantal ; Høffding, Lone ; Houenou, Josselin ; Imbesi, Massimiliano ; Isometsä, Erkki T. ; Ivkovic, Maja ; Janno, Sven ; Johnsen, Simon ; Kapczinski, Flávio ; Karakatsoulis, Gregory N. ; Kardell, Mathias ; Kessing, Lars Vedel ; Kim, Seong Jae ; König, Barbara ; Kot, Timur L. ; Koval, Michael ; Kunz, Mauricio ; Lafer, Beny ; Landén, Mikael ; Larsen, Erik R. ; Lenger, Melanie ; Lewitzka, Ute ; Licht, Rasmus W. ; Lopez-Jaramillo, Carlos ; MacKenzie, Alan ; Madsen, Helle Østergaard ; Madsen, Simone Alberte Kongstad A. ; Mahadevan, Jayant ; Mahardika, Agustine ; Manchia, Mirko ; Marsh, Wendy ; Martinez-Cengotitabengoa, Monica ; Martiny, Klaus ; Mashima, Yuki ; McLoughlin, Declan M. ; Meesters, Ybe ; Melle, Ingrid ; Meza-Urzúa, Fátima ; Ming, Mok Yee ; Monteith, Scott ; Moorthy, Muthukumaran ; Morken, Gunnar ; Mosca, Enrica ; Mozzhegorov, Anton A. ; Munoz, Rodrigo ; Mythri, Starlin V. ; Nacef, Fethi ; Nadella, Ravi K. ; Nakanotani, Takako ; Nielsen, René Ernst ; O‘Donovan, Claire ; Omrani, Adel ; Osher, Yamima ; Ouali, Uta ; Pantovic-Stefanovic, Maja ; Pariwatcharakul, Pornjira ; Petite, Joanne ; Pfennig, Andrea ; Pica Ruiz, Yolanda ; Pilhatsch, Maximilian ; Pinna, Marco ; Pompili, Maurizio ; Porter, Richard ; Quiroz, Danilo ; Rabelo-da-Ponte, Francisco Diego ; Ramesar, Raj ; Rasgon, Natalie ; Ratta-apha, Woraphat ; Ratzenhofer, Michaela ; Redahan, Maria ; Reddy, M. S. ; Reif, Andreas ; Reininghaus, Eva Z. ; Richards, Jenny Gringer ; Ritter, Philipp ; Rybakowski, Janusz K. ; Sathyaputri, Leela ; Scippa, Ângela M. ; Simhandl, Christian ; Severus, Emanuel ; Smith, Daniel ; Smith, José ; Stackhouse Jr., Paul W. ; Stein, Dan J. ; Stilwell, Kellen ; Strejilevich, Sergio ; Su, Kuan-Pin ; Subramaniam, Mythily ; Sulaiman, Ahmad Hatim ; Suominen, Kirsi ; Tanra, Andi J. ; Tatebayashi, Yoshitaka ; Teh, Wen Lin ; Tondo, Leonardo ; Torrent, Carla ; Tuinstra, Daniel ; Uchida, Takahito ; Vaaler, Arne E. ; Veeh, Julia ; Vieta, Eduard ; Viswanath, Biju ; Yoldi-Negrete, Maria ; Yalcinkaya, Oguz Kaan ; Young, Allan H. ; Zgueb, Yosra ; Whybrow, Peter C.
Background: Bipolar disorder is associated with circadian disruption and a high risk of suicidal behavior. In a previous exploratory study of patients with bipolar I disorder, we found that a history of suicide attempts was associated with differences between winter and summer levels of solar insolation. The purpose of this study was to confirm this finding using international data from 42% more collection sites and 25% more countries. Methods: Data analyzed were from 71 prior and new collection sites in 40 countries at a wide range of latitudes. The analysis included 4876 patients with bipolar I disorder, 45% more data than previously analyzed. Of the patients, 1496 (30.7%) had a history of suicide attempt. Solar insolation data, the amount of the sun’s electromagnetic energy striking the surface of the earth, was obtained for each onset location (479 locations in 64 countries). Results: This analysis confirmed the results of the exploratory study with the same best model and slightly better statistical significance. There was a significant inverse association between a history of suicide attempts and the ratio of mean winter insolation to mean summer insolation (mean winter insolation/mean summer insolation). This ratio is largest near the equator which has little change in solar insolation over the year, and smallest near the poles where the winter insolation is very small compared to the summer insolation. Other variables in the model associated with an increased risk of suicide attempts were a history of alcohol or substance abuse, female gender, and younger birth cohort. The winter/summer insolation ratio was also replaced with the ratio of minimum mean monthly insolation to the maximum mean monthly insolation to accommodate insolation patterns in the tropics, and nearly identical results were found. All estimated coefficients were significant at p < 0.01. Conclusion: A large change in solar insolation, both between winter and summer and between the minimum and maximum monthly values, may increase the risk of suicide attempts in bipolar I disorder. With frequent circadian rhythm dysfunction and suicidal behavior in bipolar disorder, greater understanding of the optimal roles of daylight and electric lighting in circadian entrainment is needed.
Screening for iron deficiency in surgical patients based on noninvasive zinc protoporphyrin measurements (2019)
Füllenbach, Christoph ; Stein, Philipp ; Glaser, Patricia ; Triphaus, Chris ; Lindau, Simone ; Choorapoikayil, Suma ; Schmitt, Elke ; Zacharowski, Kai ; Hintereder, Gudrun ; Hennig, Georg ; Homann, Christian ; Stepp, Herbert ; Spahn, Gabriela H. ; Kaserer, Alexander ; Schedler, Andreas ; Meybohm, Patrick ; Spahn, Donat Rudolf
Background: Approximately every third surgical patient is anemic. The most common form, iron deficiency anemia, results from persisting iron‐deficient erythropoiesis (IDE). Zinc protoporphyrin (ZnPP) is a promising parameter for diagnosing IDE, hitherto requiring blood drawing and laboratory workup. Study design and methods: Noninvasive ZnPP (ZnPP‐NI) measurements are compared to ZnPP reference determination of the ZnPP/heme ratio by high‐performance liquid chromatography (ZnPP‐HPLC) and the analytical performance in detecting IDE is evaluated against traditional iron status parameters (ferritin, transferrin saturation [TSAT], soluble transferrin receptor–ferritin index [sTfR‐F], soluble transferrin receptor [sTfR]), likewise measured in blood. The study was conducted at the University Hospitals of Frankfurt and Zurich. Results: Limits of agreement between ZnPP‐NI and ZnPP‐HPLC measurements for 584 cardiac and noncardiac surgical patients equaled 19.7 μmol/mol heme (95% confidence interval, 18.0–21.3; acceptance criteria, 23.2 μmol/mol heme; absolute bias, 0 μmol/mol heme). Analytical performance for detecting IDE (inferred from area under the curve receiver operating characteristics) of parameters measured in blood was: ZnPP‐HPLC (0.95), sTfR (0.92), sTfR‐F (0.89), TSAT (0.87), and ferritin (0.67). Noninvasively measured ZnPP‐NI yielded results of 0.90. Conclusion: ZnPP‐NI appears well suited for an initial IDE screening, informing on the state of erythropoiesis at the point of care without blood drawing and laboratory analysis. Comparison with a multiparameter IDE test revealed that ZnPP‐NI values of 40 μmol/mol heme or less allows exclusion of IDE, whereas for 65 μmol/mol heme or greater, IDE is very likely if other causes of increased values are excluded. In these cases (77% of our patients) ZnPP‐NI may suffice for a diagnosis, while values in between require analyses of additional iron status parameters.
National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) on admission predicts acute symptomatic seizure risk in ischemic stroke: a population-based study involving 135,117 cases (2020)
Zöllner, Johann Philipp ; Misselwitz, Björn ; Kaps, Manfred ; Stein, Marco ; Konczalla, Jürgen ; Roth, Christian ; Krakow, Karsten ; Steinmetz, Helmuth ; Rosenow, Felix ; Strzelczyk, Adam
The National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score is the most frequently used score worldwide for assessing the clinical severity of a stroke. Prior research suggested an association between acute symptomatic seizures after stroke and poorer outcome. We determined the frequency of acute seizures after ischemic stroke in a large population-based registry in a central European region between 2004 and 2016 and identified risk factors for acute seizures in univariate and multivariate analyses. Additionally, we determined the influence of seizures on morbidity and mortality in a matched case–control design. Our analysis of 135,117 cases demonstrated a seizure frequency of 1.3%. Seizure risk was 0.6% with an NIHSS score at admission <3 points and increased up to 7.0% with >31 score points. Seizure risk was significantly higher in the presence of acute non-neurological infections (odds ratio: 3.4; 95% confidence interval: 2.8–4.1). A lower premorbid functional level also significantly increased seizure risk (OR: 1.7; 95%CI: 1.4–2.0). Mortality in patients with acute symptomatic seizures was almost doubled when compared to controls matched for age, gender, and stroke severity. Acute symptomatic seizures increase morbidity and mortality in ischemic stroke. Their odds increase with a higher NIHSS score at admission.
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