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  1. Article

    Open Access

    Apheresis: What Should a Clinician Know?

    Apheresis is a treatment option for severe dyslipidemia which has been introduced approximately 40 years ago to clinical practice. This article reviews recent apheresis research progresses, including apheresis...

    Klaus G. Parhofer in Current Atherosclerosis Reports (2023)

  2. Article

    Open Access

    Oral Lipid-Lowering Treatments Beyond Statins: Too Old and Outdated or Still Useful?

    For many years, the lipid-lowering armamentarium consisted of statins and/or ezetimibe and/or bile acid sequestrants and/or fibrates. Now, with the availability of new drugs mostly injectables, the field has c...

    Klaus G. Parhofer in Current Atherosclerosis Reports (2021)

  3. No Access

    Article

    Positionspapier zur Lipidtherapie bei Patienten mit Diabetes mellitus

    Klaus G. Parhofer, Andreas L. Birkenfeld, Wilhelm Krone, Michael Lehrke in Der Diabetologe (2019)

  4. Article

    Open Access

    Current Role of Lipoprotein Apheresis

    Lipoprotein apheresis is a very efficient but time-consuming and expensive method of lowering levels of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, lipoprotein(a)) and other apoB containing lipoproteins, including tr...

    Gilbert Thompson, Klaus G. Parhofer in Current Atherosclerosis Reports (2019)

  5. Article

    Open Access

    Interleukin-6 predicts inflammation-induced increase of Glucagon-like peptide-1 in humans in response to cardiac surgery with association to parameters of glucose metabolism

    Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) is an incretin hormone, which gets secreted in response to nutritional stimuli from the gut mediating glucose-dependent insulin secretion. Interestingly, GLP-1 was recently foun...

    Corinna Lebherz, Florian Kahles, Katja Piotrowski in Cardiovascular Diabetology (2016)

  6. No Access

    Article

    Stärken und Grenzen randomisierter Studien zur Lipidtherapie

    Zunehmend enden Interventionsstudien zu wesentlichen therapeutischen Fragestellungen mit einem nicht signifikanten Ergebnis für den primären Endpunkt. Das prägt auch das Bild der randomisierten Studien im Bere...

    Eberhard Windler, Prof. Dr. med. Gerald Klose, Klaus G. Parhofer in CardioVasc (2014)

  7. Article

    Open Access

    Circulating concentrations of GLP-1 are associated with coronary atherosclerosis in humans

    GLP-1 is an incretine hormone which gets secreted from intestinal L-cells in response to nutritional stimuli leading to pancreatic insulin secretion and suppression of glucagon release. GLP-1 further inhibits ...

    Katja Piotrowski, Melanie Becker, Julia Zugwurst in Cardiovascular Diabetology (2013)

  8. Article

    Open Access

    Metabolic syndrome predicts vascular changes in whole body magnetic resonance imaging in patients with long standing diabetes mellitus

    Although diabetic patients have an increased rate of cardio-vascular events, there is considerable heterogeneity with respect to cardiovascular risk, requiring new approaches to individual cardiovascular risk ...

    Hannes M Findeisen, Sabine Weckbach, Renée G Stark in Cardiovascular Diabetology (2010)

  9. Article

    Open Access

    MMP-1 serum levels predict coronary atherosclerosis in humans

    Myocardial infarction results as a consequence of atherosclerotic plaque rupture, with plaque stability largely depending on the lesion forming extracellular matrix components. Lipid enriched non-calcified les...

    Michael Lehrke, Martin Greif, Uli C Broedl, Corinna Lebherz in Cardiovascular Diabetology (2009)

  10. Article

    Open Access

    Effect of the angiotensin receptor blocker irbesartan on metabolic parameters in clinical practice: the DO-IT prospective observational study

    A number of intervention studies have shown that therapy with angiotensin receptor blockers, such as irbesartan, can improve metabolic parameters and reduce the incidence of diabetes mellitus. It is unknown wh...

    Klaus G Parhofer, Felix Münzel, Michael Krekler in Cardiovascular Diabetology (2007)

  11. Article

    Open Access

    Genetic variants of adiponectin receptor 2 are associated with increased adiponectin levels and decreased triglyceride/VLDL levels in patients with metabolic syndrome

    Adiponectin acts as an antidiabetic, antiinflammatory and antiatherogenic adipokine. These effects are assumed to be mediated by the recently discovered adiponectin receptors AdipoR1 and AdipoR2.

    Uli C Broedl, Michael Lehrke, Elisabeth Fleischer-Brielmaier in Cardiovascular Diabetology (2006)

  12. Article

    Open Access

    Differential effects of fenofibrate versus atorvastatin on the concentrations of E-selectin and vascular cellular adhesion molecule-1 in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus and mixed hyperlipoproteinemia: a randomized cross-over trial

    Diabetic dyslipoproteinemia is characterized by hypertriglyceridemia, low HDL-cholesterol and often elevated LDL-cholesterol and is a strong risk factor for atherosclerosis. Adhesion molecule levels are elevat...

    Klaus Empen, Robert JA Frost, H Christian Geiss, Carsten Otto in Cardiovascular Diabetology (2003)