Contact

Vice Dean for Research

Prof Dr. Andrea Hildebrandt

+49 (0)441 798-5523

Research officers

Dr. Beena Punnamoottil
Dr. Janina Lange

+49 (0)441 798-2142

+49 (0)441 798-5261

Address address

Postal address

University of Oldenburg
School VI - Medicine and Health Sciences
Ammerländer Heerstraße 114-118
26129 Oldenburg

Visitor address

Building V03, 3rd floor, wing M.
Ammerländer Heerstraße 138
26129 Oldenburg

Research networks and projects

Research networks are organised partnerships between different research institutions, universities and corporate partners. They are designed to join forces and drive forward interdisciplinary research projects that go beyond the capacities of individual institutions.

Research centres

Neurosensory technology

How does our brain create an inner image of the world around us based on the signals from our sensory organs? Doctors, neurobiologists, psychophysicists, psychologists, acousticians, engineers, biochemists and neurogeneticists are working on this question on an interdisciplinary basis. The focus is on the processes that create the first sensory building blocks in the sensory organs from the flood of sensory impressions - and the processes that construct a perception from this in the brain. The experts pay particular attention to analysing the interactions between different sensory impressions.

Neurosensory science is one of eleven research focuses at the University of Oldenburg. So far, over 30 working groups have been established in this area, with the Research Centre Neurosensory Science forming the umbrella organisation. It bundles the interdisciplinary activities of the working groups and actively promotes co-operation with non-university institutions. The centre's scientists also see the targeted promotion of young scientists as an important task.

Managing Director

Prof Dr Michael Winklhofer

uol.de/neurosensorics

Cluster of excellence

Hearing4all

The "Hearing4all" cluster of excellence is literally dedicated to "hearing for all". Through improved individualised hearing diagnostics and the provision of personal hearing aids, the scientists want to significantly improve the communication situation of those affected.

The aim of the centre of excellence is to support and coordinate joint research between the universities at the internationally recognised and well-networked cluster locations of Oldenburg and Hanover. In doing so, it contributes to sustainable, cross-university joint structures that combine basic research with clinical and translational research.

Scientific management

Prof Dr Dr Birger Kollmeier

Managing Director

Ansgar Rudolph

https:// hearing4all.de/

Interview with Prof Dr Birger Kollmeier

Oldenburg Hearing Centre gGmbH

NaviSense

The scientific mission of the NaviSense cluster of excellence is to develop a comprehensive, interdisciplinary understanding of the mechanisms used by animals for navigation and how these mechanisms can inspire technology and impact society, ecology and biodiversity.

Further information can be found here.

Participants (PIs and cooperation partners) of Faculty VI:

Prof. Dr Andreas Hein (PI)

Prof. Dr. Jan Clemens (PI)

Prof. Dr. Martin Greschner  (Cooperation partner)

Collaborative Research Centres

Collaborative Research Centre SFB1330 HAPPAA: "Hearing Acoustics: Perceptive Principles, Algorithms and Applications"

The Collaborative Research Centre (CRC) 1330 "Hearing Acoustics: Perceptive Principles, Algorithms and Applications" (HAPPAA for short) has set itself the goal of researching the principles of speech communication in detail and supporting and promoting the population's ability to communicate by improving hearing aids.

Head

Prof Dr Volker Hohmann

Office

PD Dr Jörn Anemüller (Scientific Management)

Dr Karin Klink (project management)

https:// uol.de/sfb1330

TransRegio TRR359 PILOT: Perinatal Development of Immune Cell Topology

At birth, the newborn's immune system is suddenly confronted with microorganisms, food and numerous other environmental influences. How do the infant's immune cells prepare for this moment during pregnancy and at birth? How do external influences and genetic factors interact to shape the immune system during the first weeks of life? And what are the consequences of disruptive events such as premature birth or neonatal infections?

PILOT (TRR 359 "Perinatal Development of Immune Cell Topology") is a transregional Collaborative Research Centre funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) that aims to gain new insights into the complex adaptations of the early immune system. This SFB is coordinated by the University of Freiburg.

Subproject leader

Prof Dr Anne Hilgendorff

https://www.perinatal-immunity.de/en

SFB 1372: Magnetoreception and navigation in vertebrates

The central goal of the Collaborative Research Centre is to gain a comprehensive and multidisciplinary understanding of magnetoreception and navigation in vertebrates, from the biophysical mechanisms to the natural behaviour of navigating animals, taking into account all intermediate steps.

Further information can be found here.

Participants (PIs) of School VI

Prof. Dr. Martin Greschner 

Prof. Dr. Karl-Wilhelm Koch

Research Training Groups

Research Training Group 2969: Hearable-centred assistance: from sensor to participation - HEARAZ

The vision of the HEARAZ research group is the comprehensive inter- and transdisciplinary training of young researchers for the efficient development of a new generation of networked technical assistance systems close to hearing ("hearables") and their integration into life and health practice. This vision will be realised conceptually and technologically through the networking of hearing aids with sensors and external devices.

Speakers:

Prof. Dr Andreas Hein

Prof. Dr Tanja Schultz (University of Bremen)

www.hearaz.de/en/team-en/

Research Training Group 2783: Neuromodulation of motor and cognitive functions in the healthy and diseased brain

The Neuromodulation Research Training Group comprises various research projects on neuromodulation of motor and cognitive functions in brain health. Non-invasive neuromodulation has become increasingly important to promote functional recovery after damage to the central nervous system. Although neuromodulation is considered promising, neuromodulatory approaches face several challenges, for example large interindividual differences in treatment success and insufficient knowledge about the neuronal mechanisms involved in improving function. The aim of the Research Training Group is to provide a transdisciplinary research environment that drives innovation in neuromodulation to pave the way for patient-tailored interventions in the rehabilitation of neurological disorders.

Speakers:

Prof Dr Christiane Thiel

Dr Cornelia Kranczioch

https:// uol.de/neuromodulation

Research Training Group of the SFB 1330 HAPPAA: Hearing Acoustics: Perceptive Principles, Algorithms and Applications

Speaker

Prof Dr Volker Hohmann

Office

Dr Jörn Anemüller (Scientific Management)

Dr Karin Klink (Project Management)

https://uol.de/sfb1330

Structure-building networks and alliances

Cross-Border Institute of Healthcare Systems and Prevention (CBI)

Launched in February 2019, the CBI is a joint initiative of the School V - School of Medicine and Health Sciences at the University of Oldenburg and the University of Groningen/University Medical Centre Groningen. The Aletta Jacobs School of Public Health in Groningen and the Department of Health Research at the University of Oldenburg act as coordinators of the CBI. The CBI is designed as a unit for co-operation between Groningen and Oldenburg on health-related issues.

Contact persons

Dr Daniela Gornyk (Oldenburg)

Dr Adriana Pérez Fortis (Groningen)

https://uol.de/en/cbi

Network University Medicine (NUM)

The coronavirus pandemic is leading to major changes in society, healthcare and the economy worldwide and poses major challenges for everyone. The "Network of University Medicine (NUM)", funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF), was founded at the beginning of 2020 to better coordinate Covid-19 research and disseminate best practices.

The network pools the expertise of the 36 participating university medical centres in Germany. Within the NUM, the focus is on clinical and healthcare research and the development of guidelines and best practices. The aim is to optimise patient care and create a Germany-wide infrastructure for clinical research and studies.

Local contact persons

Dr Janina Lange & Dr Jessica Monsees (local staff unit)

tbd (site spokespersons)

Further information on the NUM at the UMO can be found here.

General information about the NUM can be found here.

HiGHmed

The HiGHmed consortium is part of the Medical Computing Science Initiative (MII) and is funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF). It pools the expertise of 12 university hospitals and university medical centres in Germany as well as other partners from science and industry. Innovative, interoperable solutions for medical Computing Science are being developed within the consortium. The aim is to make medical patient data accessible for clinical research and teaching and thus improve patient care in a future-oriented manner. To this end, so-called data integration centres (DIZ/MeDIC) are being set up at the participating locations.

Project leader at the site

Prof Dr Antje Wulff (site spokesperson)

Marc Wilken (Head of the local DIZ)

Further information on the local DIZ can be found here.

Further information on the HiGHmed initiative can be found here.

Intersectoral care for vulnerable groups (INGVER)

The Intersectoral Care of Vulnerable Groups - INGVER project at University Medicine Oldenburg (UMO) is dedicated to improving the care of vulnerable groups through a cross-sectoral, individualised and interdisciplinary approach. These groups - including high-risk babies, oncological patients and older people - have specific, sometimes complex medical and psychosocial needs that require intensive and personalised care.

Project leader

Prof Dr Andreas Hein

https://uol.de/ingver

Care Innovation Centre (PIZ)

Due to current developments in care, the conception of new solutions and their implementation in care practice, which includes carers, those being cared for and the conditions of use, is of great importance. Other factors such as ethical and legal concerns and context-specific framework conditions in the various care settings must also be urgently taken into account. The Nursing Innovation Centre (PIZ) research project, funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF), addresses this issue and brings together research on technology development, needs analysis in practice, evaluation of new technologies, skills development and reflection on ethics and responsibility.

Site spokespersons

Prof Dr Andreas Hein

www.pflegeinnovationszentrum.de/partner/

Oldenburg Research Network for Emergency and Intensive Care Medicine (OFNI)

The "Oldenburg Research Network for Emergency and Intensive Care Medicine" is one of the focal points of the Scientific Centre "Care Systems and Patient-Oriented Research" at the School V - School of Medicine and Health Sciences at the University of Oldenburg.

Spokespersons

Dr Insa Seeger

Dr Kirsten Habbinga

https://uol.de/ofni

(Clinical) research groups

Research Group 5022: Medicine and the time structure of a good life

Management:

Prof Dr Mark Schweda

https:// for5022.de/de/startseite/

Research Group 5489: Investigations into the ambivalence of the AHR signalling pathway in skin diseases

Participants:

Prof Dr Karin Loser

https:// gepris.dfg.de/gepris/projekt/495676076

Research Group 2690: Translational Pruritus Research

Career development programmes

Heisenberg programme

The Everyday Brain: Towards Capturing Temporal Dynamics Beyond the Lab

Dr Martin Bleichner

Junior research groups

Neurophysiology of everyday life (Emmy Noether junior research group)

Transparent EEG for measuring noise perception in everyday situations

Dr Martin Bleichner

Nutrition and functionality in old age (BMBF)

As-Tra - User-centred development, evaluation and implementation of a technical assistance system for older people to sustainably improve their nutrition and exercise situation

PD Dr habil. Rebecca Diekmann

 

Intramural research networks and projects

Profile initiatives and areas of potential

The profile initiatives and areas of potential are intended to strengthen collaborative and clinical research and cross-departmental cooperation and further expand UMO's clinical research profile.

The care priorities and research strengths of the collaborating partner hospitals are optimally utilised through these intramural funding programmes, creating an attractive environment for science and research.

Profile Initiative Early Development

Every year in Germany, around 67,000 children are born prematurely, before the 37th week of pregnancy. At 8.6% of live births, Germany has one of the highest premature birth rates in Europe. The associated healthcare costs are high and the consequences of premature birth are of particular social significance. In particular, children born before the 32nd week of pregnancy regularly show complex developmental disorders (from visual and hearing impairments to behavioural problems). This can lead to lifelong problems in coping with everyday life and social integration. The aim of the profile initiative is to optimise development prospects after a premature birth
. To this end, biological and psychological mechanisms of early development are being researched and a Generation Oldenburg (GenO) cohort of premature babies is being set up.

Spokespersons:

Prof. Dr Axel Heep

Prof Dr med Yulia Golub

Prof Dr med Eduard Malik

University Diagnostics Centre profile initiative

In the profile initiative "University Diagnostics Centre", partner institutions from the Department of Health Services Research and the Department for Human Medicine of School VI as well as the affiliated Institute of Computing Science (OFFIS e.V.) have joined forces to expand the existing clinical structures and further develop synergistic processes for patient care and research. The strength of the profile initiative lies in the combination of diagnostic subjects with IT expertise in the fields of data management and data analysis and thus aims at interdisciplinary, data-driven analysis with the help of machine learning. In a step-by-step concept, the individual data entities are processed in a three-year project planning step-by-step via stage 0 (no data integration, largely manual evaluation) and stage 1 (data integration completed, largely manual evaluation) and then analysed in two selected clinical questions (early detection of sepsis, faster pathogen identification of lung infection), first as a single modality stage 2 (use of machine learning methods) and finally in stage 3 in a multimodal approach (use of machine learning methods).
The evaluation methods created in this way can then be used as prototypes for numerous other questions and are suitable for a wide variety of co-operations at the Oldenburg site and beyond.

Speakers:

Prof. Dr med Astrid Petersmann

Prof. Dr Nils Strodthoff

Potential area mobileHealth

The aim of the interdisciplinary potential area of mobile health (mHealth) is to develop basic principles and prototype solutions for applications for mobile, digital health support via smartphone. This area of potential thus ties in with the current digital transformation in the healthcare sector. The intended preclinical diagnostics and counselling through mobile applications should serve as an information and support system and thus also benefit the idea of "patient empowerment".

The potential area of mHealth has laid the foundation for good cooperation beyond the departments through joint work and projects and successfully acquired the HEARAZ Research Training Group in 2024.

Spokespersons

Prof. Dr Andreas Hein

Prof. Dr Birger Kollmeier

Prof Dr Bernd Meyer

Projects:

Potential area Rare Diseases

Diseases are typically labelled "rare" if they affect fewer than one in 2,000 people in the population. They are often referred to as "orphans of medicine", as for many of their diseases not even the cause is known and effective therapies are mostly lacking.

The potential area pursues the common strategy of researching causes, pathomechanisms and signalling pathways in the context of rare neuronal diseases and using the knowledge gained to enable new approaches for improved patient treatment.

You can find further information on the potential area here.

Spokespersons:

Prof. Dr Anja Bräuer

Prof Dr John Neidhardt

Prof Dr Ulrike Raap

Projects

Research pool

The aim of the research pool is to establish competitive clinical research at the School V - School of Medicine and Health Sciences.

Further information on how to apply can be found here.

2024

  • Stuckenschneider, T., Himmelmann, L.: SeFallED 2.0 - Long-term trajectories of functional progression after a severe fall with presentation in the emergency department (FP 2024-093)
  • Zieschang, T., Koschate-Storm, J.: Sympathetic nervous system (SNS) response following unannounced loss of balance during walking in older adults with and without cognitive impairment (CI) (FP 2024-095)
  • Loser, K., Geier, C.B.: Exploring the role of PDLIM1 in immune homeostasis (FP 2024-096)
  • Aukema, S.M., Kullik, M., Hitz, M., Behrens, Y.: Ending a diagnostic Odyssey: multi-omic diagnostics including RNA-Sequencing, Long-Read Whole Genome Sequencing and Methylation Profiling as a comprehensive diagnostic strategy for children with (severe) developmental delay without a genetic diagnosis. (FP- 2024-097)
  • Theilmeier, G.: Transfer of a vascular organoid/spheroid model to primary vascular cells from an RGS5/apoE-deficient mouse line established in Okdenburg for the preparation of a DFG application on the role of RGS5 in aortic aneurysm formation and dissection (FP 2024-098)
  • Keine, C., Ashida, G., Milenkovic, I., Wang, C.: Investigating the impact of synaptic input variability on the neuronal encoding of sound. (FP 2024-099)

2023

  • Looe, H. K.: Physics-informed deep learning for the rapid dose prediction in adaptive radiation therapy (ART) (FP 2023-078)
  • Limberg, M., Raap, U.: Role of IL-31/IL31RA axis in human neutrophils in pruritic skin inflammation (FP 2023-079)
  • Radulovic, T., Hartmann A.-M., Milenkovic, I.: Developmental impact of KCC2 phosphorylation on synaptic development in the lateral superior olive (LSO) (FP 2023-082)
  • Noster, J., Kinast, V.: HepSurf - Identification of entry receptors of (re-)emerging viruses (FP 2023-085)
  • Hipp, M.S., Bräuer, A., Vonk, D.: Development of novel sensors for cell surface localisation of APP to screen for factors that influence the level of APP in Alzheimer's disease (FP 2023-086)

2022

  • Neidhardt, J., Foijer, F.: Translational read-through therapies to treat inherited diseases (FP 2022-064)
  • Petersmann, A., Griesinger, F., Günther, U., Hitz, M.-P., Wulff, A., Zieschang, T., Hurlemann, R.: Evaluation of workflows: Process, data and sample quality in multicentre interdisciplinary research projects (FP 2022-067).
  • Hamprecht, A., Noster, J.: Transcriptome analyses of bacterial antibiotic resistance plasmid carriers (FP 2022-068)
  • Gieldon, L., Hitz, M.-P., Perez Riverol, A., Audain, E.: Identification of hereditary predisposition by3rd generation sequencing (PF 2022-069)
  • Woitzik, J., von Dijk, M., Dömer, P.: Adaptation of neurointensive care treatment of traumatic brain injury patients using electrocorticographic monitoring of spreading depolarisations (FP 2022-070)
  • Rauch, B., Weyhe, D., Uslar V.N., Meyer, U.: Organoid cultures of colon carcinoma as a 3D model for the investigation of cytostatic resistance and the significance of the S1P signalling system for carcinoma growth (FP 2022-071)
  • Hamprecht, A., Hitz, M.-P., Voss, A.: Analysis of Proteus lineages in humans, animals and the environment and their impact on antibiotic resistance (FP 2022-072)
  • Bräuer, A.U., Hausmann J.; Revealing new therapeutic targets for Niemann-Pick disease type C (FP 2022-073)

2021

  • Griesinger, F., Willbornb, K., Roeper, J., Ansmann, L.: Adherence of therapy recommendations from multidisciplinary tumour boards in different types of healthcare organisations (FP 2021-058)
  • Helgers, S., Dömer, P.: Influence of chronically induced cortical spreading depolarisations on arteriogenesis and neurogenesis after ischaemic strokes (FP 2021-060)
  • Heep, A. Plösch, T.: Molecular characterisation on neonatal hypoxic-ischaemic brain injury in a rat model (FP 2021-061)
  • Arlt, A., Bockhorn, M.: Role of liquid biopsy, analysis of circulating tumor cells and oraganoids in the diagnosis and therapy of upper-GI and hepato-pancreatico cancers (GI- and HPB-CA) (FP 2021-057)
  • Kinast, V., Hamprecht, A.: Characterisation of SLC35F5 as a Hepatitis E Virus Entry Factor Candidate (FP 2021-062)
  • Ulrike Raap, Karin Loser: Alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone and its impact on MDSC generation in skin cancer (PB Onco 2021-017):
  • Johannes Woitzik, Patrick Dömer, Simeon Helgers, Benjamin Zimmermann, Christian Mathys, Johannes Hoffmann Double Vision - mit dem Zweiten sieht man besser (PB Onco 2021-016):
  • Alexander Arlt, Maximilian Bockhorn: Role of liquid biopsy, analysis of circulating tumour cells ans organoids in the diagnosis and therapy of upper-GI and hepato-pancreatico-bilary cancers (GI- and HPB-CA) (FP 2021-057)

2020

  • Witt, K., Pars, K. , Loser, K.: The role of pro-inflammatory CD20+ T cells in the progression of multiple sclerosis during systemic, long-term CD20+ B cell depletion therapy (FP 2020-050)
  • Helbing, T., Nickelsen, S., Shakoor, A.: Characterisation of Semaphorin 3F as a biomarker of myocardial dysfunction in post-cardiac arrest syndrome (FP 2020-052)
  • Bräuer, A.U., Griesinger, F., Koch, K.-W., Woitzik, J.: The role of the retinal degeneration protein 3 (RD3) in neuroblastoma cancer (FP 2020-048)
  • Scheele, D.: Social integration during psychiatric inpatient therapy as transdiagnostic predictor of treatment response (SANITY) (FP 2020-47)
  • Raap, U., Limberg, M.: Atopic dermatitis - novel functions of TRP channels in neuro immune interaction mechanism (FP 2020-053)
  • Koschate, J., Zieschang, T.: Cardiorespiratory fitness - influencing factor for fall risk and gait safety in older people? (FP 2020-054)
  • Bleichner, M.G., Weyhe, D.A., Cetin, T., Uslar, V., Debener, S.: Auditory workload during open laparoscopic surgery (Aabpolo) (FP 2020-055)
  • Frank Griesinger, Kay C. Willborn, Lucas Heukamp (PB Onco 2020-010):
    Establishment of a highly sensitive liquid biopsy methodology for monitoring disease progression in patients with lung cancer

2019

  • C. Bantel, S. Fudickar, S. Soer, M.F. Reneman, A.P. Wolff, R.S. Schiphorst Preuper, A. Hein: Machine learning for triaging patients with low back pain towards personalised care (FP 2019-035)
  • Sörös, P. Witt, K. Bräuer, A.: Clinical, behavioural, brain structural and biochemical markers of progression in Parkinson's disease (FP 2019-045)
  • Poppe, B., Brandenburg, S., Both, S., Looe, H. K., Willborn, K. C.: Improving patient dosimetry and electronic radiation hardness testing by LET characterisation of particle beams (FP2019-038)
  • Poppe, B., Brandenburg, S. (Uni Groningen), Both, S. (UMCG): Flash Irradiation and Dosimetry in Proton Beams (PB Onco 2019-006)
  • Winter, A., Engels, S. : Evaluation of One-Step Nucleic Acid Amplification (OSNA) for the detection of lymph node metastases in bladder penile carcinoma (PB Onco 2019-007)

2018

  • Diekmann, R., de Rooj, S., Scarano, M.: "Nutrition and mobility e-coach" - Development and testing of a technical assistance system with individualised, age-adapted feedback for the sustainable improvement of the nutritional situation and physical functionality in at-risk patients in geriatric rehabilitation (FP 2018-018)
  • Poppe, B., Brandenburg, S., Knopf, A.C., Looe, H. K., Willborn, K. C.: Improving patient dosimetry under non-reference conditions for proton beams (FP 2018-020):
  • Griesinger, F., Roeper, J., Ansmann, L.: Adherence to therapy recommendations from multidisciplinary tumour conferences in oncology - An investigation in different care organisations (FP-2018-021)
  • Leon De Wilde, R., Luz Angela Torres-de la Roche, L.A., Auffarth, J.: Retrospective study of clinical outcomes of patients with borderline ovarian tumours treated between 2009-2016 at Pius Hospital, Oldenburg (FP 2018-022)
  • Sahin Onur Güralp, S. O., Malik, E.: Investigation of the potential angiogenic and toxic effects of Ginkgo Biloba (Gb 761) during pregnancy in Wistar rats (FP 2018-023)
  • Lazovic, D., Hoffmann, F., Maus, U.: Functional capacityand utilisationof health servicesafter total knee arthroplasty(FInGK) (FP 2018-026)
  • Lazovic, D., Seeber, G.: Clinical Accuracy ot th Lateral-Anterior Drawer Test for Diagnosing for Posterior Cruciate Ligament Rupture (FP 2018-031)
  • Weyhe, D., Nanos, G., Uslar, V., Seeber, G., Lazovic, D.: Quality of Life and Functional Outcome after Endoscopic Total Extra-Peritoneal Inguinal Groin Hernia Repair with Double Mesh Technique (FP 2018-029)

2017

  • Rudy Leon de Wilde, Augustinus Bader, Lasse Leicher (FP 2017-003): The Role of mesothelial stem cells of the peritoneum in peritoneal adhesions after gynecological surgery
  • Anja Bräuer, Javad Mirzayan(FP 2017-005): Phospholipid profiles of brain diseases as biomarkers with therapeutic significance?
  • Javad Mirzayan, Jochem Rieger, Inga Schepers, Alexander Dreyer (FP 2017-006): Neuronal basis of functional characterisation of eloquent areas with MEG, ECoG and KES in the context of awake craniotomies
  • Andreas Radeloff (FP 2017-008): Improving the coupling of auditory neurones to cochlear implant electrodes
  • Cornelia Kranczioch and Karsten Witt (FP 2017-010): Alleviating Motor Symptoms in Parkinson's Disease with Functional Near Infrared Spectros- copy Guided Motor Imagery Training
  • Ulrike Raap, H. Meyer and Bernhard Gibbs(FP 2017-013): Role of immune checkpoint regulators in inflammatory skin diseases
  • Verena Uslar, Dirk Weyhe and Navid Tabriz (FP 2017-014): LogoAPP - Development of an app to support speech therapy after thyroid surgery
  • Christian Heinen, Nikolaos Bagias, Thomas Kretschmer, Anja U. Bräuer and Janniko R. Georgiadis (FP 2017-015): The Lumbosacral plexus - translating MRI into anatomy The lumbosacral plexus - from MRI to anatomy
  • Jale Özyurt, Aylin Mehren, Hermann L. Müller, Christiane M. Thiel (FP 2017-016): Increasing physical activity in patients with craniopharyngioma in childhood and adolescence

2016

  • Sanny Kappen, Verena Jürgens, Michael Freitag, Alexander Winter: Early detection of prostate cancer - An evaluation of the realities of specialist urological and general practitioner care and the resulting patient satisfaction
  • Svenja Engels, Alexander Winter: Evaluation of One-Step Nucleic Acid Amplification (OSNA) for the rapid detection of lymph node metastases in prostate cancer patients
  • Holger Gerullis: Systematic retrospective analysis and classification of selected urological surgical methods according to the IDEAL system
  • Navid Tabriz, Dirk Weyhe: Retrospective determination of the BRAF V600E mutation in papillary thyroid carcinomas from 2007-2015
  • Sabine Aisenbrey, Kathrin Thedieck, Hans Gerd Nothwang: SensiTOR: The role of the mTOR complexes for development and function of sensory systems
  • Achim Troja, Helge Meyer: Expression analysis of angiogenic and fibrosis-associated microRNAs in recurrent rectal cancer tumours

2015

  • Carsten Bantel, Katharina Koch, Christiane Thiel: Cerebral Consequences of Chronic Pain: The Sense of Numbers.
  • Helge Meyer, Björn Meyer: The immune checkpoint receptor V-domain Ig suppressor of T cell activation (VISTA) as a biomarker and potential immunotherapeutic target in colorectal carcinoma
  • Sven Meyer, Albrecht Elsässer, Christian Widera: Sex differences in post-myocardial-infarction remodeling, molecular signalling and the transition to heart failure with reduced or preserved ejection fraction - analysis of the interaction of sex with structural and functional alteration
  • Hermann Müller, Matthias Freund, Annika Hoffmann, F. Vahldiek: Investigation of cardiac structural and functional abnormalities in hypothalamic obesity after craniopharyngioma in childhood and adolescence
  • Alexandra Philipsen, Alexandra Lam, Jale Özyurt, Aylin Mehren, Mirko Brandes, Christiane Thiel: Effects of a sports intervention on cognitive functions in patients with ADHD
  • Gesine Seeber, Djordje Lazovic: The effectiveness of rehabilitation after a total hip arthroplasty (THA): a comparison of usual care in the Netherlands versus Germany
  • Rudy Leon De Wilde: Randomised, controlled clinical trial in endometriosis patients without completed family planning - comparison of peritoneal ablation by excision alone and excision plus application of adhesion prophylaxis
  • Florian Jelschen: Determination of the critical occlusion pressure of the systemic circulation using instantaneous pressure-flow velocity relationships under intraoperative conditions
  • Alexandra Lam: A case-control study on the significance of Toxoplasma gondii in adult attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and borderline personality disorder
  • Hermann Müller, Jale Özyurt, Anika Hoffmann, Christiane Thiel: Individual healing trial of craniopharyngioma patients with hypothalamic involvement of the tumour - neuropsychological effects of a single intranasal administration of oxytocin
  • Alexandra Lam: A case-control study on the significance of Toxoplasma gondii in adult attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and borderline personality disorder

2014

  • Alexander Winter, Friedhelm Wawroschek: Magnetometer-guided sentinel lymphadenectomy after labelling with superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles versus extended lymphadenectomy in prostate cancer: a comparison of detection rate and sensitivity
  • Anne-Christina Lüers, Frank Griesinger: Influence of mutation testing on therapy outcome in non-small cell metastatic lung cancer (NSCLC, stage IV): Care research study on personalised medicine in oncology based on patient records in 3 lung cancer centres
  • Frank Griesinger, Birger Kollmeier: AudioMoCS - Auditory monitoring for patients undergoing chemotherapy and radiotherapy
  • Rudy Leon De Wilde: Adhesion prophylaxis in surgical gynaecology
  • Jürgen Bauer, Andreas Hein: Analysis of the effect of the fall-preventive Otago exercise programme on older people with (pre-)frailty using conventional geriatric and technology-based assessments
  • Frank Griesinger: Induction therapy with intercalated TKI and chemotherapy in NSCLC with activating EGFR mutation stages II- IIIB: single arm phase II investigator initiated trial
  • Hermann Müller, Christiane Thiel: Influence of oxytocin on appetite regulation and social-emotional competences in paediatric and adolescent patients with craniopharyngioma
  • Rebecca Diekmann: The influence of obesity on the development of physical functionality in seniors during and after geriatric rehabilitation (AdiFuS) - A longitudinal analysis
  • Dalibor Antolovic et al: Lipid rafts from cell membranes as potential targets for new therapeutic approaches in cancer treatment - isolation from human tissue and their role in signal transduction in primary tumours and metastases
  • Christian Heinen, Thomas Kretschmer: In vivo visualisation of regenerating neuronal structures using high-frequency neurosonography
  • Thomas Kretschmer: Molecular biological investigations in continuity neuromas
  • Alexander Winter: Early detection and care of prostate cancer patients - a transnational comparison of the impact of guidelines and recommendations on PSA testing and an empirical evaluation of regional care heterogeneity
  • Dirk Weyhe, Susanne Richter: Progressive post-resection programme (pPRP) after pancreatic resection for malignancies and precancerous lesions of the pancreas
  • Amr Soliman, Eduard Malik: Angiogenesis parameters as prognostic factors for the performance of lymphonectomies in patients with endometrial carcinoma
  • Alexandra Philipsen, Mirko Brandes: Effects of a six-month exercise and health intervention on clinical and health outcomes in schizophrenic individuals
  • Oliver Weingärtner: Cholesterol metabolism and cardiovascular risk
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