Anne Soop
Karolinska Institutet
18 Papers
152 Citations
Anne Soop is an academic researcher from Karolinska Institutet. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sepsis & Nitric oxide. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 18 publications.
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Papers
The Scent of Disease Human Body Odor Contains an Early Chemosensory Cue of Sickness
Mats J. Olsson,Johan N. Lundström,Johan N. Lundström,Johan N. Lundström,Bruce A. Kimball,Bruce A. Kimball,Amy R. Gordon,Amy R. Gordon,Bianka Karshikoff,Nishteman Hosseini,Kimmo Sorjonen,Caroline Olgart Höglund,Carmen Solares,Anne Soop,John Axelsson,Mats Lekander,Mats Lekander +16 more
TL;DR: Chemosensory detection of the early innate immune response in humans represents the first experimental evidence that disease smells and supports the notion of a “behavioral immune response” that protects healthy individuals from sick ones by altering patterns of interpersonal contact.
Lipopolysaccharide Alters Motivated Behavior in a Monetary Reward Task: a Randomized Trial.
Julie Lasselin,Michael T. Treadway,Tamara E. Lacourt,Anne Soop,Mats J. Olsson,Bianka Karshikoff,Bianka Karshikoff,Sofie Paues-Göranson,John Axelsson,John Axelsson,Robert Dantzer,Mats Lekander,Mats Lekander +12 more
TL;DR: The results indicate that systemic inflammation induced by LPS administration causes motivational changes in young healthy subjects, which are associated with sleepiness, and sickness allows increased incentive motivation when the effort is deemed worthwhile.
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Circulating H3Cit is elevated in a human model of endotoxemia and can be detected bound to microvesicles
Sofie Paues Göranson,Charlotte Thålin,Annika Lundström,Lars Hållström,Julie Lasselin,Julie Lasselin,Håkan Wallén,Anne Soop,Fariborz Mobarrez +8 more
TL;DR: The results demonstrate that NETs can be detected in peripheral blood during endotoxemia by two distinct H3Cit-specific methods and propose a previously unrecognized mechanism by which H 3Cit may be disseminated throughout the vasculature by the binding to MVs.
Adenosine treatment attenuates cytokine interleukin-6 responses to endotoxin challenge in healthy volunteers.
Anne Soop,Cecilia Johansson,Paul Hjemdahl,Marianne Kristiansson,Hans Gyllenhammar,Nailin Li,Alf Sollevi +6 more
TL;DR: Systemic adenosine infusion counteracts the release of IL-6 in healthy volunteers, indicating an anti-inflammatory effect of adenosines which should be further explored.
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Multi-cellular activation in vivo by endotoxin in humans--limited protection by adenosine infusion.
TL;DR: The influence of adenosine infusion on inflammatory and hemostatic parameters was investigated in healthy males without (n = 10) or with intravenous endotoxin injection (4 ng/kg) as discussed by the authors.
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