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Thomas Papadopoulos

Researcher at Paracelsus Private Medical University of Salzburg

Publications -  93
Citations -  6658

Thomas Papadopoulos is an academic researcher from Paracelsus Private Medical University of Salzburg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cancer & Colorectal cancer. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 90 publications receiving 6130 citations. Previous affiliations of Thomas Papadopoulos include University of Erlangen-Nuremberg & University of Würzburg.

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Standardized surgery for colonic cancer: complete mesocolic excision and central ligation--technical notes and outcome.

TL;DR: This technique is focused on an intact package of the tumour and its main lymphatic drainage and this technique is nowadays accepted worldwide for optimal rectal cancer surgery.
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Combined-Modality Treatment and Selective Organ Preservation in Invasive Bladder Cancer: Long-Term Results

TL;DR: TUR with RCT is a reasonable option for patients seeking an alternative to radical cystectomy and Ideal candidates are those with early-stage and unifocal tumors, in whom a complete TUR is accomplished.
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The prognostic inhomogeneity in pT3 rectal carcinomas

TL;DR: An extended pT classification (pT1, pT2,pT3a, p t3b, p T4) allows an improved prediction of outcome in rectal carcinoma patients and enables the identification of stage II patients who might not benefit from adjuvant treatment.
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Importance of Kupffer cells for T-cell-dependent liver injury in mice.

TL;DR: The results suggest that KCs play an important role in T cell activation-induced liver injury by contributing TNF, and that Plasma TNF levels are poor diagnostic markers for the severity of TNF-dependent liver inflammation.
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Survivin as a radioresistance factor, and prognostic and therapeutic target for radiotherapy in rectal cancer.

TL;DR: Transfection with survivin short interfering RNA increased levels of G2-M arrest and levels of DNA double-strand breaks in irradiated cells, indicating that cell cycle and DNA repair mechanisms may be associated with apoptosis induction in tumor cells that are otherwise resistant to killing by radiation.