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Henning Hermanns

Researcher at University of Amsterdam

Publications -  60
Citations -  1687

Henning Hermanns is an academic researcher from University of Amsterdam. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neuropathic pain & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 51 publications receiving 1281 citations. Previous affiliations of Henning Hermanns include University of Düsseldorf.

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Post-anaesthesia pulmonary complications after use of muscle relaxants (POPULAR): a multicentre, prospective observational study.

Eva Kirmeier, +865 more
TL;DR: It is shown that the use of neuromuscular blocking drugs in general anaesthesia is associated with an increased risk of postoperative pulmonary complications, and Anaesthetists must balance the potential benefits of neurmuscular blockade against the increasedrisk of postoperatively pulmonary complications.
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Apoptosis induction by different local anaesthetics in a neuroblastoma cell line

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared the toxicity of local anaesthetics related to their physicochemical properties in human neuronal cells and calculated the concentrations that led to half-maximal neurotoxic effects (LD50).
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Molecular mechanisms of action of systemic lidocaine in acute and chronic pain: a narrative review

TL;DR: This narrative review focuses on available experimental evidence of the molecular mechanisms by which systemic lidocaine exerts its clinically documented analgesic effects, and highlights promising objectives for future research to further unravel these antinociceptive mechanisms.
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Local Anesthetic-Induced Neurotoxicity.

TL;DR: This review summarizes current knowledge concerning incidence, risk factors, and mechanisms of perioperative nerve injury, with focus on local anesthetic-induced neurotoxicity.
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Ketamine induces apoptosis via the mitochondrial pathway in human lymphocytes and neuronal cells

TL;DR: Ketamine at millimolar concentrations induces apoptosis via the mitochondrial pathway, independent of death receptor signalling, at higher concentrations necrosis is the predominant mechanism.