Enno Gentz
Charité
9 Papers
92 Citations
Enno Gentz is an academic researcher from Charité. The author has contributed to research in topics: Genotype frequency & Elastography. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 9 publications. Previous affiliations of Enno Gentz include Humboldt University of Berlin.
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Papers
Use of Intestinal Ultrasound to Monitor Crohn’s Disease Activity
Torsten Kucharzik,Bianca M. Wittig,Ulf Helwig,Norbert Börner,Alexander Rössler,Stefan Rath,Christian Maaser,Axel Naumann,Gregor Pelster,Jörg Spengler,Carsten Büning,Enno Gentz,Harald Matthes,Dieter Nürnberg,Adelheid Jung,Jochen Maul,Daniel C. Baumgart,Deike Strobel,Gabriele Manok,Matthias Breidert,Michael Scheurlen,Andreas Stallmach,Uwe Will,Thomas Krause,Rolf-Achim Krüger,Niels Teich,Ingolf Schiefke,Annette Krummenerl,Klaus Fellermann,Rüdiger Kilian,Volker Meister,Stefan Mielck,Diether Ludwig,Stefan Schanz,Robert Kihn,Robert Manfred Hoffmann,Barbara Lanyi,Robert Ehehalt,Burghard Wilborn,Franz Ludwig Dumoulin,Wolfgang Mohl,Andreas Lügering,Thomas Krummenerl,Jan Heidemann,Matthias Pichler,Hans Allescher,Frank Meyer-Hilse,Gerd-Rüdiger Franke,Oliver Bachmann,Martin Fähndrich +49 more
TL;DR: Bowel ultrasonography seems to be an ideal follow‐up method to evaluate early transmural changes in disease activity, in response to medical treatment.
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Multifrequency time-harmonic elastography for the measurement of liver viscoelasticity in large tissue windows.
Heiko Tzschätzsch,Selcan Ipek-Ugay,Manh Nguyen Trong,Jing Guo,Jonathan Eggers,Enno Gentz,Thomas Fischer,Michael Schultz,Jürgen Braun,Ingolf Sack +9 more
TL;DR: F multifrequency time-harmonic elastography based on time-resolved A-line ultrasound has recently been developed for measuring liver viscoelasticity in wide soft tissue windows and at greater depths and is useful for the diagnosis of cirrhosis in large tissue windows.
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DLG5 variants in inflammatory bowel disease.
Carsten Büning,Lars Geerdts,Thomas Fiedler,Enno Gentz,Ghyslaine Pitre,Wolf Reuter,W Luck,Sabine Buhner,T Molnár,Ferenc Nagy,János Lonovics,Axel Dignass,Olfert Landt,Renate Nickel,Janine Genschel,Herbert Lochs,Hartmut H.-J. Schmidt,Heiko Witt +17 more
TL;DR: It is found that DLG5 is not a relevant disease susceptibility gene for IBD in German or Hungarian subjects and there is no evidence thatDLG5 variants are involved in altered gastrointestinal permeability in CD.
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Possible role of MDR1 two-locus genotypes for young-age onset ulcerative colitis but not Crohn's disease.
Thomas Fiedler,Carsten Büning,W Reuter,G. Pitre,Enno Gentz,Hartmut H.-J. Schmidt,Janine Büttner,Johann Ockenga,T Gerloff,C Meisel,Herbert Lochs,Ivar Roots,Karla Köpke,Andreas Johne +13 more
TL;DR: While overall genotype distribution did not differ, combined MDR1 genotypes derived from positions 2677 and 3435 are possibly associated with young age onset of UC and severe course of disease in this patient group.
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The c.1-260C>T Promoter Variant of CD14 but Not the c.896A>G (p.D299G) Variant of Toll-Like Receptor 4 (TLR4) Genes Is Associated with Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Daniel C. Baumgart,Carsten Büning,Lars Geerdts,Hartmut H.-J. Schmidt,Janine Genschel,Thomas Fiedler,Enno Gentz,T Molnár,Ferenc Nagy,János Lonovics,Herbert Lochs,Bertram Wiedenmann,Renate Nickel,Heiko Witt,Axel Dignass +14 more
TL;DR: IBD appears to be associated with the CD14 c.1-260C>T promoter variant in Germans and Hungarians, but not with the TLR4 c.896A>G (p.D299G) variant.
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