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Dive into the research topics where Friedhelm Sayk is active.

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Featured researches published by Friedhelm Sayk.


International Journal of Cancer | 2002

HER2 overexpression in muscle‐invasive urothelial carcinoma of the bladder: Prognostic implications

Stefan Krüger; Georg Weitsch; Hartwig Büttner; Arne Matthiensen; Torsten Böhmer; Tim Marquardt; Friedhelm Sayk; Alfred C. Feller; Andreas Böhle

The HER2 (c‐erbB‐2) receptor is overexpressed in a variety of human malignant tumors and, in breast carcinoma, has been identified as a target for anti‐HER2–directed therapy with the monoclonal antibody (MAb) trastuzumab. The aim of this retrospective study was to evaluate immunohistochemic HER2 expression in a large cohort of muscle‐invasive urothelial cell carcinomas of the urinary bladder and to compare the results to pathologic characteristics and survival. Paraffin‐embedded tumor specimens from 138 patients undergoing radical cystectomy for muscle‐invasive bladder carcinoma were studied immunohistochemically with the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)‐approved HercepTest (Dako, Glostrup, Denmark). HER2 overexpression was observed in 57 of 138 tumors (41%) and occurred more frequently in high‐grade carcinomas than in low‐grade carcinomas (p = 0.036). No significant relationship with HER2 overexpression was registered for tumor staging and lymph node status. Kaplan‐Meier curves showed a significantly worse disease‐related survival (p = 0.034) in patients with HER2‐overexpressing tumors compared to those without HER2 overexpression. In addition to lymph node status (p = 0.0001; relative risk [RR] = 2.93), HER2 status (p = 0.020; RR = 2.22) was identified as an independent predictor for disease‐related survival in a multivariate analysis. These results suggest that HER2 expression might provide additional prognostic information in patients with muscle‐invasive bladder carcinomas. Because many of these patients harbor HER2‐overexpressing tumors, clinical trials evaluating the efficacy of trastuzumab in bladder carcinoma are warranted.


JAMA | 2012

Association Between Azithromycin Therapy and Duration of Bacterial Shedding Among Patients With Shiga Toxin–Producing Enteroaggregative Escherichia coli O104:H4

Martin Nitschke; Friedhelm Sayk; Christoph Härtel; Rahel T. Roseland; Susanne Hauswaldt; Jürgen Steinhoff; Klaus Fellermann; Inge Derad; Peter Wellhöner; Jürgen Büning; Bettina Tiemer; Alexander Katalinic; Jan Rupp; Hendrik Lehnert; Werner Solbach; Johannes K.-M. Knobloch

CONTEXT An outbreak of Shiga toxin-producing enteroaggregative Escherichia coli (STEC O104:H4) infection with a high incidence of hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) occurred in Germany in May 2011. Antibiotic treatment of STEC infection is discouraged because it might increase the risk of HUS development. However, antibiotic therapy is widely used to treat enteroaggregative E coli infection. In the German outbreak, a substantial number of patients received prophylactic azithromycin treatment as part of a therapeutic regimen with the C5 antibody eculizumab. OBJECTIVE To analyze the duration of bacterial shedding in patients with STEC infection who did and did not receive oral azithromycin therapy. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PATIENTS At a single center in Lübeck, Germany, 65 patients with STEC infection, including patients with HUS as well as STEC-infected outpatients without manifestation of HUS, were investigated between May 15 and July 26, 2011, and were monitored for a mean of 39.3 days after onset of clinical symptoms. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE Carriage of STEC after azithromycin therapy. RESULTS Twenty-two patients received oral azithromycin and 43 patients did not receive antibiotic treatment. Among antibiotic-treated patients, long-term STEC carriage (>28 days) was observed in 1 of 22 patients (4.5%; 95% CI, 0%-13.3%) compared with 35 of 43 patients (81.4%; 95% CI, 69.8%-93.0%) who were not treated with antibiotics (P < .001). All 22 patients receiving azithromycin treatment had at least 3 STEC-negative stool specimens after the completion of treatment, and no recurrence of STEC was observed in these patients. As proof of principle, 15 patients who initially were not treated with antibiotics and were long-term STEC carriers were treated with oral azithromycin given for 3 days and subsequently had negative stool specimens. CONCLUSION Treatment with azithromycin was associated with a lower frequency of long-term STEC O104:H4 carriage.


European Respiratory Journal | 2004

Phagocytes transmit Chlamydia pneumoniae from the lungs to the vasculature.

Jens Gieffers; G. van Zandbergen; Jan Rupp; Friedhelm Sayk; S. Krüger; S. Ehlers; Werner Solbach; Matthias Maass

Chlamydia pneumoniae, a major cause of community-acquired pneumonia, primarily infects the respiratory tract. Chronic infection of nonrespiratory sites, such as the vascular wall, the brain or blood monocytes, requires evasion from the lungs and spreading via the bloodstream. The cell types involved in dissemination are insufficiently characterised. In this study, New Zealand White rabbits were infected intratracheally with C. pneumoniae, and lung manifestation and systemic dissemination were monitored by polymerase chain reaction and immunohistochemistry. Infection of the lungs was characterised by an early phase dominated by granulocytes and a late phase dominated by alveolar macrophages (AM). Granulocytes, AM and alveolar epithelial cells acted as host cells for chlamydiae, which remained detectable for up to 8 weeks. AM transported the pathogen to the peribronchiolar lymphatic tissue, and subsequently C. pneumoniae entered the spleen and the aorta via dissemination by peripheral blood monocytes. In conclusion, Chlamydia pneumoniae-infected alveolar macrophages transmigrate through the mucosal barrier, and give the pathogen access to the lymphatic system and the systemic circulation. Infected peripheral blood monocytes are the vector system within the bloodstream and transmit the infection to the vascular wall. This is the first description of granulocytes acting as a reservoir for Chlamydia pneumoniae early in infection.


Hypertension | 2007

To Dip or Not to Dip: On the Physiology of Blood Pressure Decrease During Nocturnal Sleep in Healthy Humans

Friedhelm Sayk; Christoph Becker; Christina Teckentrup; Hl Fehm; Jan Struck; Jens Peter Wellhoener; Christoph Dodt

That sleep is accompanied by a blood pressure decrease is well known; however, the underlying physiology deserves further investigation. The present study examines in healthy subjects 2 main questions: is this dipping actively evoked? and what are the consequences of nondipping for daytime blood pressure? Nocturnal blood pressure was extrinsically elevated in 12 sleeping subjects to mean daytime values by continuously infused phenylephrine. This nondipping significantly lowered morning blood pressure during rest and 3 hours after resuming physical activity compared with a control condition (isotonic saline). Neither muscle sympathetic nerve activity nor sensitivity of &agr;-adrenoceptors was reduced. However, the set point for initiation of regulatory responses through the baroreflex was clearly shifted toward lower blood pressure levels. Our results support the hypothesis of an actively regulated central mechanism for blood pressure resetting and set point consolidation of the baroreflex during nighttime sleep. This is suggested by the fact that extrinsically induced nondipping induces sustained decrease in blood pressure during the following morning through an actively lowered baroreflex set point.


Circulation | 1999

Detection of Chlamydia pneumoniae But Not Cytomegalovirus in Occluded Saphenous Vein Coronary Artery Bypass Grafts

Claus Bartels; Matthias Maass; Gregor Bein; Rainer Malisius; Nicole Brill; J. F. Matthias Bechtel; Friedhelm Sayk; Alfred C. Feller; Hans-Hinrich Sievers

BACKGROUND A causal relation between atherosclerosis and chronic infection with Chlamydia pneumoniae and/or cytomegalovirus (CMV) has been suggested. Whether the unresolved problem of venous coronary artery bypass graft occlusion is related to infection with C pneumoniae and/or CMV has not been addressed. METHODS AND RESULTS Thirty-eight occluded coronary artery vein grafts and 20 native saphenous veins were examined. Detection of C pneumoniae DNA was performed by use of nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Homogenisates from the specimen were cultured for identification of viable C pneumoniae. Both conventional PCR and quantitative PCR for detection of CMV DNA were applied. Differential pathological changes (degree of inflammation, smooth muscle cell proliferation [MIB-1]) were determined and correlated to the detection of both microorganisms. C pneumoniae DNA could be detected in 25% of occluded vein grafts. Viable C pneumoniae was recovered from 16% of occluded vein grafts. Except for 1 native saphenous vein, all control vessels were negative for both C pneumoniae detection and culture. All pathological and control specimens were negative for CMV DNA detection. Pathological changes did not correlate with C pneumoniae detection. CONCLUSIONS Occluded aorto-coronary venous grafts harbor C pneumoniae but not CMV. The detection of C pneumoniae in occluded vein grafts warrants further investigation.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2010

Sympathetic Function in Human Carriers of Melanocortin-4 Receptor Gene Mutations

Friedhelm Sayk; Dennis Heutling; Christoph Dodt; K. Alexander Iwen; J. Peter Wellhoner; Susann Scherag; Anke Hinney; Johannes Hebebrand; Hendrik Lehnert

CONTEXT Melanocortinergic pathways clearly appear to be involved in obesity-associated sympathetic overactivity and its hemodynamic and thermoregulatory consequences. Individuals with dysfunctional mutations in the melanocortin-4 receptor gene (MC4R) are subject to obesity without developing hypertension. OBJECTIVE This study aimed at characterizing the impact of the MC4R on sympathetic nerve traffic relevant to the cardiovascular system in humans. PARTICIPANTS Participants included eight heterozygous carriers of MC4R mutations leading to a reduced function and control subjects matched for gender, age, and body mass index. MEASUREMENTS We investigated vasoconstrictive muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA), a direct measure of central sympathetic nervous outflow. MSNA was recorded microneurographically from the peroneal nerve at supine rest and during apnea-induced sympathoexcitation. Sympathetic activity was correlated with serum leptin levels and hemodynamic and anthropometric data. RESULTS Individuals with MC4R impairment due to functional MC4R mutations were characterized by an inverse correlation between MSNA with body mass index and leptin levels, with the most obese subjects having the lowest MSNA. Resting MSNA, diastolic blood pressure, and heart rate tended to be lower in MC4R mutation carriers, and stimulated MSNA during apnea was significantly lower as compared with control subjects. CONCLUSION The fact that obese subjects with MC4R mutations show an inverse relationship between obesity and MSNA suggests that central sympathetic outflow to the vasculature might depend on functional melanocortinergic pathways. Their dysfunction could explain reduced sympathoexcitability, lower sympathetic nerve-induced lipolysis, and the fact that blood pressure is rarely elevated in this type of obesity.


Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2011

Contribution of norepinephrine to emotional memory consolidation during sleep

Sabine Groch; Ines Wilhelm; Susanne Diekelmann; Friedhelm Sayk; Steffen Gais; Jan Born

BACKGROUND There is increasing evidence indicating that slow wave sleep (SWS) supports memory consolidation. This effect may in part originate from phasic noradrinergic (NE) activity occurring during SWS in the presence of tonically lowered NE levels. Here, we examined whether NE supports the consolidation of amygdala-dependent emotional memory during SWS. METHODS In a double-blind cross-over study, 15 men learned emotional and neutral materials (stories, pictures) in the evening before a 3-h period of early SWS-rich retention sleep, during which either placebo or clonidine, an α2-adrenoceptor agonist which blocks locus coeruleus NE release, was intravenously infused. Memory retrieval as well as affective ratings and heart rate responses to the pictures were assessed 23 h after learning. RESULTS Clonidine reduced plasma NE levels but had no effect on SWS. While retention of story content words and pictures per se remained unaffected, clonidine distinctly blocked the superiority of emotional compared to neutral memory for temporal order, with this superiority of emotional over neutral memories observed only in the placebo condition. Heart rate responses to pictures were not affected, but whereas under placebo conditions familiar negative pictures were rated less arousing and with a more negative valence compared to pictures not seen before; these differences were abolished after clonidine. CONCLUSION Given that memory for the temporal order of events depends on the hippocampus to a greater extent than item memory, our findings suggest that NE activity during early SWS-rich sleep facilitates consolidation of memories that involve both, a strong amygdalar and hippocampal component.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2008

Endotoxemia causes central downregulation of sympathetic vasomotor tone in healthy humans

Friedhelm Sayk; Alexander Vietheer; Bernhard Schaaf; Peter Wellhoener; Gunther Weitz; Hendrik Lehnert; Christoph Dodt

Experimental endotoxemia as a model of the initial septic response affects the autonomic nervous system with profound cardiovascular sequelae. Whether the postsynaptic sympathoneural activity to the muscle vascular bed is altered in the early septic phase remains to be determined. The present study aimed to elucidate the early effects of LPS on muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) and cardiovascular regulation in healthy humans. Young, healthy volunteers randomly received either an LPS bolus (4 ng/kg body wt, n = 11) or placebo (saline; n = 7). Experimental baroreflex assessment (baseline measurements followed by infusion of vasoactive drugs nitroprusside/phenylephrine) was done prior to and 90 min following LPS or placebo challenge. MSNA, heart rate, blood pressure, and blood levels of catecholamines, TNF-alpha and IL-6 were measured sequentially. Endotoxin but not placebo-induced flu-like symptoms and elevated cytokine levels. In contrast to placebo, LPS significantly suppressed MSNA burst frequency 90 min after injection [mean +/- SE: 12.1 +/- 2.9 vs. 27.5 +/- 3.3 burst/min (post- vs. pre-LPS); P < 0.005] but increased heart rate [78.4 +/- 3.1 vs. 60.6 +/- 2.0 beats/min (post- vs. pre-LPS); P < 0.001]. Baseline blood pressure was not altered, but baroreflex testing demonstrated a blunted MSNA response and uncoupling of heart rate modulation to blood pressure changes in the endotoxin group. We conclude that endotoxin challenge in healthy humans has rapid suppressive effects on postsynaptic sympathetic nerve activity to the muscle vascular bed and alters baroreflex function which may contribute to the untoward cardiovascular effects of sepsis.


Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology | 2004

Effect of facial cooling and cold air inhalation on sympathetic nerve activity in men

Silke Heindl; Jan Struck; Peter Wellhöner; Friedhelm Sayk; Christoph Dodt

In nine healthy subjects, cold stimuli were administered to the forehead and hand, to the oral and nasal cavities via ice cubes and to the bronchial system via inhalation of cold air (-25 degrees C). Blood pressure, heart rate and muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) from the peroneal nerve were recorded. MSNA expressed as total activity increased during cold air inhalation, cooling of the forehead (P < 0.001, ANOVA), hand and mouth (P < or = 0.05), paralleled by a rise in blood pressure during cold air inhalation and cooling of the forehead and hand (P < 0.01). Cooling of the forehead provoked a faster increase of MSNA expressed as total activity (P < 0.05) and higher levels of diastolic blood pressure (P = 0.05) compared with cooling of the hand. Bradycardia was observed only during cooling of the nasal cavity (P < 0.001) and the forehead (P < 0.05). It is concluded that cooling of the skin and mucous membranes of the tracheobronchial tract elicits sympathetically mediated hemodynamic adaptations, probably via stimulation of cold-sensitive afferents.


Diagnostic Pathology | 2009

Mortality in human sepsis is associated with downregulation of Toll-like receptor 2 and CD14 expression on blood monocytes

Bernhard Schaaf; Karen Luitjens; Torsten Goldmann; Tobias van Bremen; Friedhelm Sayk; Christoph Dodt; Klaus Dalhoff; Daniel Droemann

Pattern recognition receptors are a key component of the first line host defense against infection, recognizing specific microbial products. We hypothesize that monocyte hyporesponsiveness in human sepsis is associated with a downregulation of the pattern recognition receptors Toll-like receptor (TLR)-2 and TLR4.Protein expression of CD14, TLR2 and TLR4 on blood monocytes was examined using flow cytometry from 29 patients with sepsis and 14 healthy controls. In addition LPS stimulated TNF-α and IL-10 production was studied in a 24 hour whole blood assay.We found an increased expression of CD14, TLR2 and TLR4 in patients with sepsis compared to controls (p < 0.01). In patients with sepsis, death was associated with significant lower CD14 and TLR2 expression at admission (CD14: 25.7 +- 19.1 vs 39.1 +- 17.3 mean fluorescence intensity [MFI], p = 0.02; TLR2: 21.8 +- 9.4 vs. 30.9 +- 9.6, p = 0.01). At 72 hours the TLR2 expression on monocytes was associated with the IL-10 inducibility after LPS stimulation (r = 0.52, p = 0.02) and the CD14 expression with the IL-6, IL-10 and TNF inducibility.We conclude that septic patients are characterized by an increased expression of CD14, TLR2 and TLR4 on monocytes compared to controls. Death is associated with downregulation of TLR2 and CD14 expression on monocytes correlating with reduced cytokine inducibility. We suggest that CD14 and TLR2 are a key factor in monocyte hyporesponsibility during severe sepsis.

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Dennis Heutling

Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg

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