Cornelius Hermann
University of Ulm
15 Papers
13 Citations
Cornelius Hermann is an academic researcher from University of Ulm. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 9 publications.
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Papers
Identifying a Diagnostic Window for the Use of Gene Expression Profiling to Predict Acute Radiation Syndrome.
Patrick Ostheim,Omoleye Coker,Simone Schüle,Cornelius Hermann,Stephanie E. Combs,Klaus-Rüdiger Trott,Michael J. Atkinson,Matthias Port,Michael Abend +8 more
TL;DR: The results indicate that the diagnostic window for detecting HARS-predictive changes in gene expression may be opened as early as 2 h for most (75%) and at 4 h postirradiation for all individuals examined.
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Acute radiation syndrome-related gene expression in irradiated peripheral blood cell populations.
Patrick Ostheim,Alan Don Mallawaratchy,Thomas Müller,Simone Schüle,Cornelius Hermann,Tanja Popp,Stefan Eder,Stephanie E. Combs,Matthias Port,Michael Abend +9 more
TL;DR: In a nuclear or radiological event, an early diagnostic tool is needed to distinguish the worried well from those individuals who may later develop life-threatenFing hematologic acute radiation syn...
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Preparing for a "dirty bomb" attack: the optimum mix of medical countermeasure resources.
TL;DR: In this article, the suitability of radioactivity screening equipment for triage purposes was analyzed and the most efficient mix of screening units and antidote daily doses was determined for radiological emergencies.
A comparison of thyroidal protection by iodine and perchlorate against radioiodine exposure in Caucasians and Japanese
Alexis Rump,Stefan Eder,Cornelius Hermann,Andreas Lamkowski,Manabu Kinoshita,Tetsuo Yamamoto,Michael Abend,Nariyoshi Shinomiya,Matthias Port +8 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of radioiodine exposure and the protective efficacy of thyroid blocking by stable iodine at the officially recommended dosages (100 milligrams in Germany, 76 milligram in Japan) or perchlorate were compared.
A comparison of the chemo- and radiotoxicity of thorium and uranium at different enrichment grades
TL;DR: In this article , the authors compared the chemo-and radiotoxicity of both metals, taking into account deterministic radiation damages reflected by acute radiation sickness and stochastic radiation damages leading to long-term health impairments (e.g., tumor induction).
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