Wolf Osterode
Medical University of Vienna
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Wolf Osterode.
Journal of Crohns & Colitis | 2013
Julia Palkovits; Gottfried Novacek; Marietta Kollars; Gregor Hron; Wolf Osterode; Peter Quehenberger; Paul A. Kyrle; Harald Vogelsang; Walter Reinisch; Pavol Papay; Ansgar Weltermann
BACKGROUND Circulating procoagulant microparticles (MPs) are thought to be involved in the pathogenesis of venous thromboembolism in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). However, the exposure of tissue factor, the primary initiator of coagulation activation, on microparticles (TF(+)MPs) and its association with hemostasis activation has not yet been studied in IBD patients. METHODS In this case-control study 49 IBD patients (28 Crohns disease, 21 ulcerative colitis) and 49 sex- and age-matched, healthy controls were included. Clinical disease activity (Crohns Disease Activity Index and Clinical Activity Index, respectively) was assessed and IBD-related data were determined by chart review. Numbers, cellular origin and procoagulant activity of TF(+)MPs in plasma were determined using flow cytometry and a chromogenic activity assay. D-dimer and high-sensitive C-reactive protein (CRP) served as markers for coagulation activation and inflammation, respectively. The primary endpoint was the number of TF(+)MPs in IBD patients compared to controls. RESULTS Median number (interquartile range) of TF(+)MPs was higher in IBD patients than in controls (14.0 (11.9-22.8)×10(3)/mL vs. 11.9 (11.9-19.1)×10(3)/mL plasma, P=0.029). This finding was due to generally higher plasma levels of MPs from platelets and leukocytes in IBD patients. However, the number of TF(+)MPs was neither correlated with their procoagulant activity and D-dimer nor with disease activity and CRP. CONCLUSIONS Increased numbers of circulating TF(+)MPs represent a new facet of hemostatic abnormalities in IBD. However, the lack of association with activation of the coagulation system and disease activity questions their pathogenetic role for venous thromboembolism in this patient group.
Chronobiology International | 2018
Wolf Osterode; Sandra Schranz; Galateja Jordakieva
ABSTRACT Mental and physical stress is common in physicians during night shifts. Neurocognitive effects of sleep deprivation as well as alterations in hormonal and metabolic parameters have previously been described. The aim of this crossover study was to evaluate the effects of night-shift work with partial sleep deprivation on steroid hormone excretion and possible associations with mood, sleep characteristics and cognitive functions in physicians. In total, 34 physicians (mean age 42 ± 8.5 years, 76.5% male) from different departments of the General Hospital of Vienna, Austria, were randomly assigned to two conditions: a regular day shift (8 h on duty, condition 1) and a continuous day-night shift (24 h on duty, condition 2). In both conditions, physicians collected a 24 h urine sample for steroid hormone concentration analysis and further completed psychological tests, including the sleep questionnaire (SF-A), the questionnaire for mental state (MDBF) and the computer-assisted visual memory test (FVW) before and at the end of their shifts, respectively. Although mean sleep deprivation during night shift was relatively small (~1.5 h) the impairment in participants’ mental state was high in all three dimensions (mood, vigilance and agitation, p ≤ 0.001). Sleep quality (SQ), feeling of being recovered after sleep and mental balance decreased (p ≤ 0.001), whereas mental exhaustion increased (p < 0.05). Moreover, we could show a nearly linear relationship between most of these self-rating items. Testing visual memory participants made significantly more mistakes after night shift (p = 0.011), however, mostly in incorrectly identified items and not in correctly identified ones (FVW). SQ and false identified items were negatively correlated, whereas SQ and time of reaction were positively associated. It is assumed that after night shift, a tendency exists to make faster wrong decisions. SQ did not influence correctly identified items in FVW. In contrast to previous investigations, we found that only excretion rates for pregnanetriol and androsterone/etiocholanolone ratios (p < 0.05, respectively) were slightly reduced in 24-h urine samples after night shift. A considerable stimulation of the adrenocortical axis could not be affirmed. In general, dehydroepiandrosteron (DHEA) was negatively associated with the sense of recreation after sleep and with the time of reaction and positively correlated with correctly identified items in the FVW test. These results, on the one hand, are in line with previous findings indicating that stress and sleep deprivation suppress gonadal steroids, but, on the other hand, do not imply significant adrenocortical-axis stimulation (e.g. an increase of cortisol) during the day-night shift.
International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health | 2006
Richard Maier; Andrea Egger; Alfred Barth; Robert Winker; Wolf Osterode; Michael Kundi; Christian Wolf; Hugo W. Ruediger
International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health | 2005
Robert Winker; A. Barth; E. Valic; Richard Maier; Wolf Osterode; Alexander Pilger; Hugo W. Rüdiger
International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health | 2005
Sophie Ziegler; Carina Zöch; Michael E. Gschwandtner; Gerald Eckhardt; Ursula Windberger; Erich Minar; Hugo W. Rüdiger; Wolf Osterode
Wiener Klinische Wochenschrift | 2005
Robert Winker; Alfred Barth; Elisabeth Ponocny-Seliger; Alexander Pilger; Wolf Osterode; Hugo W. Rüdiger
Clinical Hemorheology and Microcirculation | 2007
Roberto Plasenzotti; Ursula Windberger; F. Ulberth; Wolf Osterode; Udo Losert
Hormone and Metabolic Research | 1995
Wolf Osterode; Peter Nowotny; H. Vierhapper; Werner Waldhäusl
Wiener Klinische Wochenschrift | 2009
Sandra Schranz; Wolf Osterode
Wiener Klinische Wochenschrift | 2005
Robert Winker; Alfred Barth; Elisabeth Ponocny-Seliger; Alexander Pilger; Wolf Osterode; Hugo W. Rüdiger