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Dive into the research topics where Guenter Karl Stalla is active.

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Featured researches published by Guenter Karl Stalla.


Clinical Endocrinology | 2009

Prevalence of mental disorders in acromegaly: a cross‐sectional study in 81 acromegalic patients

Caroline Sievers; Christina Dimopoulou; Hildegard Pfister; Roselind Lieb; B. Steffin; J. Roemmler; Jochen Schopohl; Marion Mueller; Harald Schneider; Marcus Ising; Hans-Ulrich Wittchen; Guenter Karl Stalla

Objective  Emotional and behavioural alterations have been described in acromegalic patients. However, the nature and psychopathological value of these changes remained unclear.


Fertility and Sterility | 2013

Twenty years of endocrinologic treatment in transsexualism: analyzing the role of chromosomal analysis and hormonal profiling in the diagnostic work-up

Matthias K. Auer; Johannes Fuss; Guenter Karl Stalla; Ap Athanasoulia

OBJECTIVE To demonstrate that adequate pubertal history, physical examination, and a basal hormone profile is sufficient to exclude disorders of sexual development (DSD) in adult transsexuals and that chromosomal analysis could be omitted in cases of unremarkable hormonal profile and pubertal history. DESIGN Retrospective chart analysis. SETTING Endocrine outpatient clinic of a psychiatric research institute. PATIENT(S) A total of 475 subjects (302 male-to-female transsexuals [MtF], 173 female-to-male transsexuals [FtM]). Data from 323 (192 MtF/131 FtM) were collected for hormonal and pubertal abnormalities. Information regarding chromosomal analysis was available for 270 patients (165 MtF/105 FtM). INTERVENTION(S) None. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S) Pubertal abnormalities, menstrual cycle, and hormonal irregularities in relation to chromosomal analysis conducted by karyotype or hair root analysis. RESULT(S) In the MtF group, 5.2% of the patients reported pubertal irregularities and 5.7% hormonal abnormalities, and in the FtM group 3.8% and 19.1%, respectively. Overall chromosomal abnormality in both groups was 1.5% (2.9% in the FtM and 0.6% in the MtF group). The aneuploidies found included one gonosomal aneuploidy (45,X[10]/47,XXX[6]/46,XX[98]), two Robertsonian translocations (45,XXder(14;22)(q10;q10)), and one Klinefelter syndrome (47,XXY) that had already been diagnosed in puberty. CONCLUSION(S) Our data show a low incidence of chromosomal abnormalities and thus question routine chromosomal analysis at the baseline evaluation of transsexualism, and suggest that it be considered only in cases of abnormal history or hormonal examination.


Molecular Pharmaceutics | 2015

Octreotide-Mediated Tumor-Targeted Drug Delivery via a Cleavable Doxorubicin–Peptide Conjugate

Marco Lelle; Stefka Kaloyanova; Christoph Freidel; Marily Theodoropoulou; Michael Musheev; Christof Niehrs; Guenter Karl Stalla; Kalina Peneva

Although recent methods for targeted drug delivery have addressed many of the existing problems of cancer therapy associated with undesirable side effects, significant challenges remain that have to be met before they find significant clinical relevance. One such area is the delicate chemical bond that is applied to connect a cytotoxic drug with targeting moieties like antibodies or peptides. Here we describe a novel platform that can be utilized for the preparation of drug-carrier conjugates in a site-specific manner, which provides excellent versatility and enables triggered release inside cancer cells. Its key feature is a cleavable doxorubicin-octreotide bioconjugate that targets overexpressed somatostatin receptors on tumor cells, where the coupling between the two components was achieved through the first cleavable disulfide-intercalating linker. The tumor targeting ability and suppression of adrenocorticotropic hormone secretion in AtT-20 cells by both octreotide and the doxorubicin hybrid were determined via a specific radioimmunoassay. Both substances reduced the hormone secretion to a similar extent, which demonstrated that the tumor homing peptide is able to interact with the relevant cell surface receptors after the attachment of the drug. Effective drug release was quickly accomplished in the presence of the physiological reducing agent glutathione. We also demonstrate the relevance of this scaffold in biological context in cytotoxicity assays with pituitary, pancreatic, and breast cancer cell lines.


European Neuropsychopharmacology | 2015

IGF-I in major depression and antidepressant treatment response

Anna Kopczak; Guenter Karl Stalla; Manfred Uhr; Susanne Lucae; J. Hennings; Marcus Ising; Florian Holsboer; Stefan Kloiber

We analyzed insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) in serum of 78 inpatients with depression and 92 healthy controls. Patients were selected according to remission status after 6 weeks of antidepressant treatment with remission defined by Hamilton depression rating scale (HAM-D) 21-item score <10 (39 remitters and 39 non-remitters). IGF-I was analyzed in patients at admission and after 6 weeks of psychopharmacological treatment. IGF-I levels were compared between patients and controls and between remitters and non-remitters with general linear model using age, gender, and body mass index as covariates. In patients, IGF-I levels were significantly higher at admission (p=3.29E-04) and in week 6 (p=0.002) compared to controls. Furthermore, non-remitters showed significantly higher IGF-I levels at admission (p=0.046) and a trend for higher IGF-I levels in week 6 (p=0.11) compared to remitters. In remitters change in IGF-I levels during treatment was significantly correlated with change in cortisol levels (p=0.019). A genetic association analysis of polymorphisms in 10 genes contributing to the IGF-I system (IGF1, IGF1R, IGFBP1 to IGFBP7, and IGFBPL1) in the currently largest genetic databases for major depression (Psychiatric Genomics Consortium) revealed nominal associations with susceptibility for depression and treatment response, although results did not remain significant after multiple testing correction. In our study, elevated IGF-I levels were significantly associated with depression and impaired treatment response. Based on these findings IGF-I signaling could play a role in the pathophysiology of depression and could possibly influence the response to antidepressant treatment.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2015

The Development of Neuroendocrine Disturbances over Time: Longitudinal Findings in Patients after Traumatic Brain Injury and Subarachnoid Hemorrhage

Anna Kopczak; Carmen Krewer; M. Schneider; Ilonka Kreitschmann-Andermahr; H. J. Schneider; Guenter Karl Stalla

Previous reports suggest that neuroendocrine disturbances in patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI) or aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) may still develop or resolve months or even years after the trauma. We investigated a cohort of n = 168 patients (81 patients after TBI and 87 patients after SAH) in whom hormone levels had been determined at various time points to assess the course and pattern of hormonal insufficiencies. Data were analyzed using three different criteria: (1) patients with lowered basal laboratory values; (2) patients with lowered basal laboratory values or the need for hormone replacement therapy; (3) diagnosis of the treating physician. The first hormonal assessment after a median time of three months after the injury showed lowered hormone laboratory test results in 35% of cases. Lowered testosterone (23.1% of male patients), lowered estradiol (14.3% of female patients) and lowered insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) values (12.1%) were most common. Using Criterion 2, a higher prevalence rate of 55.6% of cases was determined, which correlated well with the prevalence rate of 54% of cases using the physicians’ diagnosis as the criterion. Intraindividual changes (new onset insufficiency or recovery) were predominantly observed for the somatotropic axis (12.5%), the gonadotropic axis in women (11.1%) and the corticotropic axis (10.6%). Patients after TBI showed more often lowered IGF-I values at first testing, but normal values at follow-up (p < 0.0004). In general, most patients remained stable. Stable hormone results at follow-up were obtained in 78% (free thyroxine (fT4) values) to 94.6% (prolactin values).


Scientific Reports | 2016

12-months metabolic changes among gender dysphoric individuals under cross-sex hormone treatment : a targeted metabolomics study

Matthias K. Auer; Alexander Cecil; Yasmin Roepke; Charlotte Bultynck; Charlotte Pas; Johannes Fuss; Cornelia Prehn; Rui Wang-Sattler; Jerzy Adamski; Guenter Karl Stalla; Guy T'Sjoen

Metabolomic analyses in epidemiological studies have demonstrated a strong sexual dimorphism for most metabolites. Cross-sex hormone treatment (CSH) in transgender individuals enables the study of metabolites in a cross-gender setting. Targeted metabolomic profiling of serum of fasting transmen and transwomen at baseline and following 12 months of CSH (N = 20/group) was performed. Changes in 186 serum metabolites and metabolite ratios were determined by targeted metabolomics analysis based on ESI-LC-MS/MS. RandomForest (RF) analysis was applied to detect metabolites of highest interest for grouping of transwomen and transmen before and after initiation of CSH. Principal component analysis (PCA) was performed to check whether group differentiation was achievable according to these variables and to see if changes in metabolite levels could be explained by a priori gender differences. PCA predicted grouping of individuals-determined by the citrulline/arginine-ratio and the amino acids lysine, alanine and asymmetric dimethylarginine - in addition to the expected grouping due to changes in sex steroids and body composition. The fact that most of the investigated metabolites did, however, not change, indicates that the majority of sex dependent differences in metabolites reported in the literature before may primarily not be attributable to sex hormones but to other gender-differences.


Published in <b>2018</b> | 2018

Effects of Sex Hormone Treatment on the Metabolic Syndrome in Transgender Individuals: Focus on Metabolic Cytokines

Matthias K. Auer; Thomas Ebert; Maik Pietzner; Justine Defreyne; Johannes Fuss; Guenter Karl Stalla; Guy T'Sjoen


Journal of Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2017

Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome Is Less Frequent in Patients With Well-Controlled Acromegaly Treated With Somatostatin Analogues, Pegvisomant or in Combination

Burkhard L. Herrmann; Guenter Karl Stalla; K Laubner; Martin Bidlingmaier; Dagmar Fuehrer-Sakel


Brain Injury | 2016

Neuroendocrine disturbances years after traumatic brain injury and subarachnoid haemorrhage-Is there a reason for screening of hypopituitarism years after injury?

Anna Kopczak; Carmen Krewer; M. Schneider; H. J. Schneider; Guenter Karl Stalla


18th European Congress of Endocrinology | 2016

Body image perception in acromegaly is not associated with objective acromegalic changes, but depends on depressive symptoms

Christina Dimopoulou; Sarah Miriam Leistner; Marcus Ising; Harald Schneider; Jochen Schopohl; Sandra Rutz; Robert P. Kosilek; Richard Frohner; Guenter Karl Stalla; Caroline Sievers

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Harald Schneider

Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf

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