Mathias Schlögl
University of Zurich
32 Papers
31 Citations
Mathias Schlögl is an academic researcher from University of Zurich. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Palliative care. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 20 publications.
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Papers
Comparative performance of current definitions of sarcopenia against the prospective incidence of falls among community-dwelling seniors age 65 and older.
Heike A. Bischoff-Ferrari,John Orav,John A. Kanis,René Rizzoli,Mathias Schlögl,Hannes B. Staehelin,Walter C. Willett,Bess Dawson-Hughes +7 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that the definitions of Baumgartner and Cruz-Jentoft best predict the rate of falls among sarcopenic versus non-sarcopenic community-dwelling seniors.
Maintaining Our Humanity Through the Mask: Mindful Communication During COVID-19.
TL;DR: Doctors and nurses who are more sensitive to nonverbal cues reinforce the perception of sincerity, dedication, and competence, which, in turn, improves measures around utilization of health services, functional status, and the overall provider-patient relationship.
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Risk Factors for the Development of Retinopathy in Prediabetes and Type 2 Diabetes: The Diabetes Prevention Program Experience.
Neil H. White,Qing Pan,William C. Knowler,Emily B. Schroeder,Dana Dabelea,Emily Y. Chew,Barbara A Blodi,Ronald N. Goldberg,Xavier Pi-Sunyer,Christine Darwin,Mathias Schlögl,David M. Nathan +11 more
TL;DR: HbA1c was an important risk factor for the development of DR across the entire glycemic range from prediabetes to T2D, and may occur in adults with predi diabetes and early in the course of T1D.
Benzodiazepines and/or neuroleptics for the treatment of delirium in palliative care?-a critical appraisal of recent randomized controlled trials.
TL;DR: A focused review for RCTs assessing pharmacotherapy with benzodiazepines and neuroleptics for the treatment of delirium in patients treated in a palliative care or hospice setting published in 2017 provided moderate evidence to adopt recommendations from other medical specialties to the field of palliatives care.
Reduced brown adipose tissue activity during cold exposure is a metabolic feature of the human thrifty phenotype.
Tim Hollstein,Karyne Lima Vinales,Kong Y. Chen,Aaron M. Cypess,Alessio Basolo,Mathias Schlögl,Jonathan Krakoff,Paolo Piaggi,Paolo Piaggi +8 more
TL;DR: In this article, the cold-induced brown adipose tissue activation (CIBA) is a determinant of CIT, and it was shown that thrifty individuals also have reduced CIBA.
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