Jon S. Agustsson
University of Basel
12 Papers
Jon S. Agustsson is an academic researcher from University of Basel. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Obstructive sleep apnea. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 3 publications.
Chat about Author
Papers
Light-Controlled Conductance Switching of Ordered Metal−Molecule−Metal Devices
Sense Jan van der Molen,Jianhui Liao,Tibor Kudernac,Jon S. Agustsson,Laetitia Bernard,Michel Calame,Bart J. van Wees,Ben L. Feringa,Christian Schönenberger +8 more
TL;DR: Reversible, light-controlled conductance switching of molecular devices based on photochromic diarylethene molecules, in which neighboring particles are bridged by switchable molecules, is demonstrated.
Cyclic conductance switching in networks of redox-active molecular junctions.
Jianhui Liao,Jon S. Agustsson,Songmei Wu,Christian Schönenberger,Michel Calame,Yann R. Leroux,Marcel Mayor,Olivier Jeannin,Ying-Fen Ran,Shi-Xia Liu,Silvio Decurtins +10 more
TL;DR: Successive oxidation and reduction cycles demonstrated a clear switching behavior of the molecular junction conductance, showing the potential of interlinked nanoparticle arrays as chemical sensors.
128
Sleep apnea endotypes: from the physiological laboratory to scalable polysomnographic measures
Eysteinn Finnsson,Eydís Arnardóttir,Wan-Ju Cheng,Raichel M. Alex,Þóra Sigmarsdóttir,Snorri Helgason,Liang Wen Hang,Jon S. Agustsson,Andrew Wellman,Scott A. Sands +9 more
- 24 May 2023
TL;DR: In this article , the authors provide an overview of current methods for OSA endotyping, focusing on the Endo-Phenotyping Using Polysomnography (PUP) method and its cloud-based extension, PUPpy.
Continuous positive airway pressure and adherence in patients with different endotypes of obstructive sleep apnea.
TL;DR: In this article , the authors conducted a retrospective analysis of data obtained from 225 patients with moderate-to-severe OSA from a single sleep centre and found that patients with high arousal threshold, high collapsibility, high loop gain, or high upper airway gain were associated with longer CPAP use hours per night.
5
Endotypic traits of supine position and supine-predominant obstructive sleep apnea in Asian patients.
Wan-Ju Cheng,Eysteinn Finnsson,Jon S. Agustsson,Scott A Sands,Liang-Wen Hang +4 more
TL;DR: Inadequate upper airway compensation appears to be a crucial underlying pathology in patients with spOSA, and spOSA is a prevalent phenotype of OSA in Asian patients.
4