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Search: WFRF:(Lindh C)

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  • Alajbeg, Ivan, et al. (author)
  • Intraoralelectrostimulator for xerostomia relief : along-term, multicenter, open-label, uncontrolled, clinical trial
  • 2012
  • In: Oral surgery, oral medicine, oral pathology and oral radiology. - : Elsevier. - 2212-4403 .- 2212-4411. ; 113:6, s. 773-781
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • OBJECTIVE: A previous sham-controlled multinational study demonstrated the short-term efficacy and safety for xerostomia treatment of an intraoral device that delivers electrostimulation to the lingual nerve. The objective of this study was to test the hypothesis that those beneficial effects would be sustained over an 11-month period. STUDY DESIGN: The device was tested on a mixed sample of 94 patients with xerostomia in an open-label, uncontrolled, prospective multicenter trial. Statutory outcome assessments were done at 5th, 8th, and 11th months and analyzed by multiple comparisons. RESULTS: Improvements achieved at month 5 from baseline were sustained throughout the follow-up period for the primary outcome, xerostomia severity, and the secondary outcomes resting whole salivary flow rate, xerostomia frequency, oral discomfort, and difficulties in speech, swallowing, and sleeping. No significant side effects were detected. CONCLUSIONS: The beneficial effects of a removable intraoral electrostimulating device were sustained for an 11-month period.
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  • Barregård, Lars, 1948, et al. (author)
  • Human and Methodological Sources of Variability in the Measurement of Urinary 8-Oxo-7,8-dihydro-2 '-deoxyguanosine
  • 2013
  • In: Antioxidants and Redox Signaling. - : Mary Ann Liebert Inc. - 1523-0864 .- 1557-7716. ; 18:18, s. 2377-2391
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Aims: Urinary 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2'-deoxyguanosine (8-oxodG) is a widely used biomarker of oxidative stress. However, variability between chromatographic and ELISA methods hampers interpretation of data, and this variability may increase should urine composition differ between individuals, leading to assay interference. Furthermore, optimal urine sampling conditions are not well defined. We performed inter-laboratory comparisons of 8-oxodG measurement between mass spectrometric-, electrochemical- and ELISA-based methods, using common within-technique calibrants to analyze 8-oxodG-spiked phosphate-buffered saline and urine samples. We also investigated human subject- and sample collection-related variables, as potential sources of variability. Results: Chromatographic assays showed high agreement across urines from different subjects, whereas ELISAs showed far more inter-laboratory variation and generally overestimated levels, compared to the chromatographic assays. Excretion rates in timed 'spot' samples showed strong correlations with 24 h excretion (the 'gold' standard) of urinary 8-oxodG (r(p) 0.67-0.90), although the associations were weaker for 8-oxodG adjusted for creatinine or specific gravity (SG). The within-individual excretion of 8-oxodG varied only moderately between days (CV 17% for 24 h excretion and 20% for first void, creatinine-corrected samples). Innovation: This is the first comprehensive study of both human and methodological factors influencing 8-oxodG measurement, providing key information for future studies with this important biomarker. Conclusion: ELISA variability is greater than chromatographic assay variability, and cannot determine absolute levels of 8-oxodG. Use of standardized calibrants greatly improves intra-technique agreement and, for the chromatographic assays, importantly allows integration of results for pooled analyses. If 24 h samples are not feasible, creatinine- or SG-adjusted first morning samples are recommended.
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  • Horne, B D, et al. (author)
  • Pharmacogenetic warfarin dose refinements remain significantly influenced by genetic factors after one week of therapy
  • 2012
  • In: Thrombosis and Haemostasis. - 0340-6245 .- 2567-689X. ; 107:2, s. 232-240
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • By guiding initial warfarin dose, pharmacogenetic (PGx) algorithms may improve the safety of warfarin initiation. However, once international normalised ratio (INR) response is known, the contribution of PGx to dose refinements is uncertain. This study sought to develop and validate clinical and PGx dosing algorithms for warfarin dose refinement on days 6-11 after therapy initiation. An international sample of 2,022 patients at 13 medical centres on three continents provided clinical, INR, and genetic data at treatment days 6-11 to predict therapeutic warfarin dose. Independent derivation and retrospective validation samples were composed by randomly dividing the population (80%/20%). Prior warfarin doses were weighted by their expected effect on S-warfarin concentrations using an exponential-decay pharmacokinetic model. The INR divided by that "effective" dose constituted a treatment response index . Treatment response index, age, amiodarone, body surface area, warfarin indication, and target INR were associated with dose in the derivation sample. A clinical algorithm based on these factors was remarkably accurate: in the retrospective validation cohort its R2 was 61.2% and median absolute error (MAE) was 5.0 mg/week. Accuracy and safety was confirmed in a prospective cohort (N=43). CYP2C9 variants and VKORC1-1639 G→A were significant dose predictors in both the derivation and validation samples. In the retrospective validation cohort, the PGx algorithm had: R2= 69.1% (p<0.05 vs. clinical algorithm), MAE= 4.7 mg/week. In conclusion, a pharmacogenetic warfarin dose-refinement algorithm based on clinical, INR, and genetic factors can explain at least 69.1% of therapeutic warfarin dose variability after about one week of therapy.
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  • Lenzini, P., et al. (author)
  • Integration of genetic, clinical, and INR data to refine warfarin dosing
  • 2010
  • In: Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics. - : Springer Science and Business Media LLC. - 0009-9236 .- 1532-6535. ; 87:5, s. 572-578
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Well-characterized genes that affect warfarin metabolism (cytochrome P450 (CYP) 2C9) and sensitivity (vitamin K epoxide reductase complex 1 (VKORC1)) explain one-third of the variability in therapeutic dose before the international normalized ratio (INR) is measured. To determine genotypic relevance after INR becomes available, we derived clinical and pharmacogenetic refinement algorithms on the basis of INR values (on day 4 or 5 of therapy), clinical factors, and genotype. After adjusting for INR, CYP2C9 and VKORC1 genotypes remained significant predictors (P < 0.001) of warfarin dose. The clinical algorithm had an R(2) of 48% (median absolute error (MAE): 7.0 mg/week) and the pharmacogenetic algorithm had an R(2) of 63% (MAE: 5.5 mg/week) in the derivation set (N = 969). In independent validation sets, the R(2) was 26-43% with the clinical algorithm and 42-58% when genotype was added (P = 0.002). After several days of therapy, a pharmacogenetic algorithm estimates the therapeutic warfarin dose more accurately than one using clinical factors and INR response alone.
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  • Luhr, O., et al. (author)
  • A retrospective analysis of nitric oxide inhalation in patients with severe acute lung injury in Sweden and Norway 1991-1994
  • 1997
  • In: Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica. - : Wiley. - 0001-5172 .- 1399-6576. ; 41:10, s. 1238-46
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • BACKGROUND: Patients with severe acute lung injury (ALI) have been treated compassionately on doctors' initiative with inhaled nitric oxide (INO) in Sweden and Norway since 1991. In 1994 the previously used technical grade nitric oxide was replaced by medical grade nitric oxide. METHODS: We have carried out a retrospective data collection on all identified adult patients treated with INO for >4 h during the period 1991-1994 focusing on safety aspects and patient outcome. We used the following exclusion criteria (1) Age <18 years, (2) Simultaneous treatment with extracorporeal removal of CO2 (3) NO inhalation period <4 h, (4) Incomplete or missing patient charts, (5) Use of INO in order to treat pulmonary hypertension following cardiac surgery, with little or no acute lung injury. RESULTS: Inclusion criteria were met by 56 out of 73 identified patients. Mean age was 48+/-19 years and the median duration of INO treatment was 102 h. PaO2/FIO2 ratio at start of treatment was 85 +/- 33 mm Hg with a lung injury score (LIS) of 3.2+/-0.8. The aetiology of the lung injury was pneumonia (n= 27), sepsis (n=12) and trauma (n=8). Survival to hospital discharge was 41% and survival after 180 d was 38%. Three serious adverse events were identified, two from technical failures of the INO delivery device and one withdrawal reaction necessitating slow weaning from INO. No methaemoglobin values >5% were reported during treatment. CONCLUSION: The overall mortality did not differ dramatically from historical controls with high mortality. Only a randomised study may determine whether INO as an adjunct to treatment alters the outcome in severe ALI. One cannot at present advocate the routine use of INO in patients with ALI outside such studies.
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  • Result 1-10 of 159
Type of publication
journal article (129)
conference paper (26)
other publication (2)
book chapter (2)
Type of content
peer-reviewed (131)
other academic/artistic (26)
pop. science, debate, etc. (2)
Author/Editor
Lindh, C (31)
Lindh, Christian (16)
Johansson, C. (11)
Lindh, Magnus, 1960 (10)
Fransson, K. (9)
Bargholtz, C (9)
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Lindh, K (9)
Holmberg, L (8)
Lindblad, B (8)
Andersson, M (8)
Lindh, Christian H. (8)
Kockum, K (7)
Holmberg, E. (7)
Carlsson, E. (7)
Weiss, G. (7)
Neiderud, J (7)
Martensson, L (7)
Sitnikova, I (7)
Ludvigsson, J (6)
Aman, J. (6)
Egevad, L (5)
Giwercman, Aleksande ... (5)
Fischler, B (5)
Lernmark, Åke (5)
Bornehag, Carl-Gusta ... (5)
Westphal, O (5)
Westin, Johan, 1965 (5)
Hanas, R. (5)
Bergström, Tomas, 19 ... (4)
Nilsson, Staffan, 19 ... (4)
Agerberth, B (4)
Gudmundsson, Anders (4)
Hagmar, Lars (4)
Landin-Olsson, Mona (4)
Pagels, Joakim (4)
Jönsson, Bo A (4)
Tuvemo, T (4)
Jakobsson, Kristina (4)
Delahunt, B (4)
Petersson, A. (4)
Ivarsson, Sten A. (4)
Andersen, Christina (4)
Norkrans, Gunnar, 19 ... (4)
Wierzbicka, Aneta (4)
Bonde, Jens Peter (4)
Toft, Gunnar (4)
Eriksson, Axel C. (4)
Forsander, Gun, 1951 (4)
Forsander, G (4)
Fumero, E (4)
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University
Karolinska Institutet (72)
Lund University (44)
Uppsala University (37)
University of Gothenburg (29)
Umeå University (9)
Linköping University (6)
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Chalmers University of Technology (6)
Karlstad University (6)
Royal Institute of Technology (5)
Malmö University (5)
Stockholm University (3)
Örebro University (3)
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (2)
Halmstad University (1)
Mälardalen University (1)
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Language
English (156)
Swedish (3)
Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Medical and Health Sciences (67)
Natural sciences (18)
Engineering and Technology (4)
Social Sciences (4)
Agricultural Sciences (1)

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