Jens Möller
University of Lübeck
43 Papers
425 Citations
Jens Möller is an academic researcher from University of Lübeck. The author has contributed to research in topics: Necrotizing enterocolitis & Intensive care. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 43 publications.
Chat about Author
Papers
Enhanced interleukin-6 and interleukin-8 synthesis in term and preterm infants.
TL;DR: The results challenge the existing view of an immature inflammatory response by demonstrating that term infants and preterm infants display a higher percentage of IL-6– and IL-8–positive cells than adults.
Surfactant without Intubation in Preterm Infants with Respiratory Distress: First Multi-center Data
Angela Kribs,Christoph Härtel,E. Kattner,M. Vochem,H. Küster,Jens Möller,D. Müller,Hugo Segerer,Christian Wieg,Corinna Gebauer,Werner Nikischin,Axel von der Wense,Egbert Herting,B. Roth,W. Göpel +14 more
TL;DR: A new method of surfactant application was associated with a lower prevalence of mechanical ventilation and better pulmonary outcome, and a prospective controlled trial is required to determine whether this approach is superior to standard care.
117
Polymorphisms of genes involved in innate immunity: association with preterm delivery
Ch. Härtel,D. Finas,P. Ahrens,E. Kattner,Th. Schaible,D. Müller,Hugo Segerer,K. Albrecht,Jens Möller,Klaus Diedrich,W. Göpel +10 more
TL;DR: Although the homozygous maternal IL-6-174G genotype was found to be independently associated with preterm delivery in multivariate regression analysis, the incidence of intrauterine infection was not significantly increased in mothers of preterm VLBW-infants, carrying this or other polymorphisms of the innate immune system.
Selection pressure for the factor-V-Leiden mutation and embryo implantation
TL;DR: Investigation of mother-child pairs who had had successful in-vitro fertilisation by intracytoplasmic sperm injection as a model for human implantation suggests that improved implantation rate is an important genetic advantage of the factor-V-Leiden mutation.
91
Value of myocardial hypoxia markers (Creatinine kinase and its MB-fraction, troponin-T, QT-intervals) and serum creatinine for the retrospective diagnosis of perinatal asphyxia
TL;DR: None of the parameters studied was significantly different in patients with brain damage compared with asphyxiated infants without neurological sequelae, and troponin T has a high positive predictive value in the postnatal diagnosis of asphyxia.
67