23 research outputs found

    Editorial: Special Issue “Biomarkers in Interstitial Cystitis/Bladder Pain Syndrome (IC/BPS)”

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    Interstitial Cystitis/Bladder Pain Syndrome (IC/BPS) is a disabling chronic disease of still unknown origin and complex pathophysiology. The disease affects mainly female patients, with a female to male ratio of about 9 to 1. Prevalence ranges from 52 to 500/100,000 in females and 8 to 41/100,000 in males. The diagnosis of IC/BPS is mainly hampered by the lack of appropriate biomarkers and, therefore, extensive clinical examinations are required to exclude “confusable” diseases [1]. In consequence, most patients experience several years of ineffective treatments of various urinary tract symptoms often associated with, but by themselves not characteristic of, IC/BPS. Unequivocal diagnosis of IC/BPS is the prerequisite to find more effective therapeutic approaches. Therefore, more specific biomarkers are needed to facilitate IC/BPS diagnosis and to stratify patients for treatment at earlier stages of the disease. In this Special Issue, we gathered reviews and original work elucidating the current developments in IC/BPS biomarker research

    Biomarkers in the Light of the Etiopathology of IC/BPS

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    In this review, we focused on putatively interesting biomarkers of interstitial cystitis/bladder pain syndrome (IC/BPS) in relation to the etiopathology of this disease. Since its etiopathology is still under discussion, the development of novel biomarkers is critical for the correct classification of the patients in order to open personalized treatment options, on the one hand, and to separate true IC/BPS from the numerous confusable diseases with comparable symptom spectra on the other hand. There is growing evidence supporting the notion that the classical or Hunner-type IC (HIC) and the non-Hunner-type IC (NHIC) are different diseases with different etiopathologies and different pathophysiology at the full-blown state. While genetic alterations indicate close relationship to allergic and autoimmune diseases, at present, the genetic origin of IC/BPS could be identified. Disturbed angiogenesis and impairment of the microvessels could be linked to altered humoral signaling cascades leading to enhanced VEGF levels which in turn could enhance leucocyte and mast cell invasion. Recurrent or chronic urinary tract infection has been speculated to promote IC/BPS. New findings show that occult virus infections occurred in most IC/BPS patients and that the urinary microbiome was altered, supporting the hypothesis of infections as major players in IC/BPS. Environmental and nutritional factors may also influence IC/BPS, at least at a late state (e.g., cigarette smoking can enhance IC/BPS symptoms). The damage of the urothelial barrier could possibly be the result of many different causality chains and mark the final state of IC/BPS, the causes of this development having been introduced years ago. We conclude that the etiopathology of IC/BPS is complex, involving regulatory mechanisms at various levels. However, using novel molecular biologic techniques promise more sophisticated analysis of this pathophysiological network, resulting in a constantly improvement of our understanding of IC/BPS and related diseases

    Report on the First Working Group Meeting of the “AG Marketing”

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    This contribution reports on the first meeting of the new formed working group “Data Analysis and Classification in Marketing (AG Marketing)” of the data science society (GfKl) held at the KIT, Karlsruhe, November 14th – 15th, 2019. The abstracts of the presentations given reflect the ongoing trend to exploit a large variety of digital data sources for marketing purposes and the need for advanced and innovative analysis methods

    A framework for a European network for a systematic environmental impact assessment of genetically modified organisms (GMO)

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    The assessment of the impacts of growing genetically modified (GM) crops remains a major political and scientific challenge in Europe. Concerns have been raised by the evidence of adverse and unexpected environmental effects and differing opinions on the outcomes of environmental risk assessments (ERA). The current regulatory system is hampered by insufficiently developed methods for GM crop safety testing and introduction studies. Improvement to the regulatory system needs to address the lack of well designed GM crop monitoring frameworks, professional and financial conflicts of interest within the ERA research and testing community, weaknesses in consideration of stakeholder interests and specific regional conditions, and the lack of comprehensive assessments that address the environmental and socio economic risk assessment interface. To address these challenges, we propose a European Network for systematic GMO impact assessment (ENSyGMO) with the aim directly to enhance ERA and post-market environmental monitoring (PMEM) of GM crops, to harmonize and ultimately secure the long-term socio-political impact of the ERA process and the PMEM in the EU. These goals would be achieved with a multi-dimensional and multi-sector approach to GM crop impact assessment, targeting the variability and complexity of the EU agro-environment and the relationship with relevant socio-economic factors. Specifically, we propose to develop and apply methodologies for both indicator and field site selection for GM crop ERA and PMEM, embedded in an EU-wide typology of agro-environments. These methodologies should be applied in a pan-European field testing network using GM crops. The design of the field experiments and the sampling methodology at these field sites should follow specific hypotheses on GM crop effects and use state-of-the art sampling, statistics and modelling approaches. To address public concerns and create confidence in the ENSyGMO results, actors with relevant specialist knowledge from various sectors should be involved

    Die Bedeutung des Wohnumfeldes fuer die Freizeitgestaltung aelterer Menschen eine Analyse von Freizeitbeduerfnissen und partizipatorischen Planungsmoeglichkeiten

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    SIGLEUB Bonn(5)-U4-95-543 / FIZ - Fachinformationszzentrum Karlsruhe / TIB - Technische InformationsbibliothekDEGerman

    Die praktische Arbeit, die Handarbeit besaĂź hohen Stellenwert

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    Burkhard Poste: Schulreform in Sachsen 1918-1923. Eine vergessene Tradition deutscher Schulgeschichte. (Studien zur Bildungsreform. Bd. 20.) Frankfurt a.M./Bern: Lang 1993 [Rezension]

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    Rezension von: Burkhard Poste: Schulreform in Sachsen 1918-1923. Eine vergessene Tradition deutscher Schulgeschichte. (Studien zur Bildungsreform. Bd. 20.) Frankfurt a.M./Bern: Lang 1993, 654 S
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