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The list below presents publications from the Faculty of Health, with the most recent at the top. Sort by: Date Author Title. Displaying results to out of Health Research Publications. Hayashi, Y. Of Worms and Men: Inflammatory and acute phase responses to nanosilver. Hede Christensen, B. Intratester reliability for quantifying the neuromuscular control of the quadriceps during semi-squat. Hedegaard, E. Hedelund, L. Fractional CO2 laser resurfacing for atrophic acne scars: a randomized controlled trial with blinded response evaluation. Lasers in Surgery and Medicine , 44 6 , Hedsund, C. Gastrointestinal transit times and motility in patients with cystic fibrosis. Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology , 47 , Prognose og behandling af nonalkoholisk fedtleversygdom og steatohepatitis. Heederik, D. Primary prevention: exposure reduction, skin exposure and respiratory protection. European Respiratory Review , 21 , Heiberg, I. Pattern recognition receptor responses in children with chronic hepatitis B virus infection. Journal of Clinical Virology. Heiberg, J. Postoperative right bundle branch blocks long-term effect on the hearts right ventricle in children operated for ventricular septal defect. Heide, M. Pain recurrence after shaving of rectovaginal endometriosis. Heidenreich, A. Therapies used in prostate cancer patients by European urologists: data on indication with a focus on expectations, perceived barriers and guideline compliance related to the use of bisphosphonates. Urologia Internationalis , 89 1 , Heintzelmann, S. Heisterberg, M. Prevalence of allergic contact dermatitis caused by hydroxyisohexyl 3-cyclohexene carboxaldehyde has not changed in Denmark. Contact Dermatitis. Supplement , 67 1 , Heitz-Mayfield, L. Anti-infective surgical therapy of peri-implantitis. A month prospective clinical study. Clinical Oral Implants Research , 23 2 , Hejlesen, J. A 2-year follow-up of 86 patients. Helenius, D. Family load estimates of schizophrenia and associated risk factors in a nation-wide population study of former child and adolescent patients up to forty years of age. Schizophrenia Research , , Helgadottir, A. Stefansson, K. Apolipoprotein a genetic sequence variants associated with systemic atherosclerosis and coronary atherosclerotic burden but not with venous thromboembolism. Journal of the American College of Cardiology , 60 8 , Helleberg, M. Causes of death among Danish HIV patients compared with population controls in the period Infection: A Journal of Infectious Diseases , 40 6 , Decreasing rate of multiple treatment modifications among individuals who initiated antiretroviral therapy in in the Danish HIV Cohort Study. Antiviral Therapy. Late presenters, repeated testing, and missed opportunities in a Danish nationwide HIV cohort. Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases , 44 4 , Retention in a public health care system with free access to treatment: a Danish nationwide HIV cohort study. AIDS , 26 6 , Hellmund, G. Poster session presented at Forskningens Dag , Aalborg, Denmark. Hellum, C. An action card - treatment of suspected unexpected serious adverse reaction in clinical trials. Helqvist, L. European Journal of Cancer Care , 21 6 , Helverskov, J. Classification and Outcome of Eating Disorders. Helweg-Larsen, J. Pyogenic brain abscess, a 15 year survey. Hemmingsen, R. Fini Schulsinger. Hempel, C. Erythropoietin treatment alleviates ultrastructural myelin changes induced by murine cerebral malaria. Malaria Journal , 11 , Heneghan, C. Self-Monitoring Trialist Collaboration Self-monitoring of oral anticoagulation: systematic review and meta-analysis of individual patient data. Lancet , , Henningsen, K. Candidate hippocampal biomarkers of susceptibility and resilience to stress in a rat model of depression. Molecular and Cellular Proteomics , 11 7. Low maternal care exacerbates adult stress susceptibility in the chronic mild stress rat model of depression. Behavioural Pharmacology , 23 8 , The neural basis of cognitive deficits studied in the chronic mild stress rat model of depression. Henriksen, C. GenBank Accession No. Herlin, T. Best Practice , 5 18 , Juvenil idiopatisk artritis. Jacobsen, C. Manniche, K. Tarp Eds. FADL's Forlag. Tocilizumab for the treatment of systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis. Expert Review of Clinical Immunology , 8 6 , Hermann, K. Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases , 71 8 , Hermansen, K. Coffee can protect against disease. Dagbladet Politiken. Kaffe, Sundhed og Sygdom. Liraglutide suppresses postprandial triglyceride TG and apolipoprotein B48 ApoB48 responses to a fat-rich meal in patientes with type 2 diabetes. Hermund, N. Reimplantation of cultivated human bone cells from the posterior maxilla for sinus floor augmentation: Histological results from a randomized controlled clinical trial. Clinical Oral Implants Research , 23 9 , Herner, E. De kommunale sundhedstjenesters webredskab. Herrmann, R. Measurement of the dose averaged LET in mixed particle fields using alanine detectors. Hersoug, L. The relationship of glutathione-S-transferases copy number variation and indoor air pollution to symptoms and markers of respiratory disease. Clinical Respiratory Journal , 6 3 , Hertz, J. In Kognitiv terapi - nyeste udvikling pp. Displaying results to out of Previous Next. Search publications from all of AU. Revised Webredaktionen, Health.
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Follow friends and authors, share adventures, and get outside. But can he transcend the sport and become the next Hermann Maier? New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! His boots creak in the packed snow. He plants his poles and leans forward as the Longines clock beeps down the count. The big Norwegian takes a final deep breath, and then, with coaches barking encouragement from behind him, he heaves himself across the start wand. Young Aksel A young Aksel, exhausted post-skiing. Aksel in Portillo A downhill run in Portillo. A live eagle, twitching on the gloved hand of its tamer, watches over the proceedings. The downhill is the marquee event of skiing—the fastest, longest, and most dangerous of the alpine races. In the years since it was added to the World Cup tour in , it has become a renowned speed event, admired for its steep technical turns but also widely considered treacherous. As in all downhills, skiers at Birds of Prey reach jittery speeds in excess of 80 miles per hour. Downhill racers are basically test pilots, always exploring the outer limits of the aircraft—only, in their case, they are the aircraft. A commentator breaks in over the music to announce that Svindal is on course, and when his determined form flashes across the JumboTron the crowds go wild. Screaming in the stands are plenty of recovering downhillers—guys with hounded looks who understand the rush of speed and long to return to a place they know, deep inside their stapled bones, they have no business being. Nearly all sports champions have a defining moment that exposes something profound in their character and summons a previously unseen dimension of greatness. For Svindal that moment began on a training run here at Birds of Prey almost exactly four years ago, on this same downhill course. It was November 27, , a cold, overcast Tuesday. Svindal was 24 years old then, the reigning king of the World Cup ski-racing circuit. Going into the race, he was right where he wanted to be: first place in the standings for best overall World Cup skier. A dearth of storms that fall had forced Beaver Creek officials to spray down layer after layer of artificial snow. The coverage was still a little thin in places, and the course was erratic, full of unforgiving bumps and dips. The third skier out of the chute, Austrian Andreas Buder , promptly crashed, bruising his heel so severely that he would be out of commission for weeks. Several other skiers remarked on the tricky conditions. A few moments into his run that day, Svindal dropped over the Brink, a terrifying transition roughly akin to plummeting over a waterfall. Within seconds, he accelerated from 35 mph to At six feet three inches and pounds, Svindal is one of the biggest skiers on the World Cup circuit, and his considerable mass helped him gather even more speed in the midsection of the course. By the time he flew over the Screech Owl jump, Svindal realized he was having one of the runs of his life. He had never gone faster, never skied a tighter line or felt so in tune with the flow of the mountain. It was almost surreally quiet, only the wind gushing in his ears and the occasional fan hooting somewhere beyond the safety fences. Just before the lip on that fateful morning, Svindal hit a slight compression that threw him off balance. With all the speed he was carrying, his skis scooted out in front of him, just a little, so that when he reached the jump, he was leaning back —exactly the wrong posture. In the updraft, his skis tipped backward, throwing him into a long, terrible arc. He attempted to correct himself, trying in vain to best the laws of physics. His arms instinctively flailed in desperation—rolling down the windows, as racers say—but it was no use. As he vaulted through the air, his body kept rotating backward. Svindal had given up trying to right himself and was twisting his torso sideways, to the snow, in order to protect his neck from the coming fall. At this point, he was traveling 72 mph—flying, but not in the right way. When he finally collided with the ground , along a stretch of course known as the Abyss, Svindal had sailed feet through the air. He came in from his runs, and we hunkered down in the hotel bar, a smoky cave with coved ceilings, a fire crackling in the corner, and the resident Saint Bernard snoring on the Spanish-tile floors. Svindal has dark brown curly hair and a warm face that turns deep tan on the slopes. As is true of most Norwegians, his manners are impeccable, and so is his English. Olympic gold medalist Ted Ligety , a friend on the World Cup tour. His whiskers seem to change monthly, even daily. On this day, he had an impressive case of helmet hair going and an emerging flavor saver. We ordered a couple of bottles of Escudo beer and talked for a while about his skiing aspirations. In the Winter Olympic races in Whistler, British Columbia, he took home three medals—a gold in super-G , a silver downhill , and a bronze giant slalom. All told he has won 15 World Cup races, two World Cup overall titles, and four world championship gold medals. He skis with a steadiness and a humility rare in a sport notoriously prone to psychodrama and egocentricity. Everyone can get behind this guy. The likable Vike has something else—a quality almost as unique, and certainly as bankable, as world-class talent. Then there was Tomba , the Hermanator , and, most recently, Bode who remains the reigning star on the World Cup even though his results have been erratic and his cocky, sometimes cryptic comments have at times made him polarizing. Needless to say, Svindal is a celebrity in Norway—his face plastered on billboards, a frequent guest on television shows, his exploits lauded across the nation. But his fame extends far beyond Scandinavia. Ladies like him, gents like him, fellow competitors like him. But, alas, Svindal is taken. The year-old Mancuso, widely known as Super Jules, is herself something of a pinup model. Mancuso and Svindal seem to lead a charmed existence together—when their frenetic traveling schedules permit. When I asked him Svindal demurred. But it just sounds like a bunch of blah blah blah. Still, Svindal does seem to enjoy the glam life, and he embraces his celebrity—up to a point. He heard worried voices carrying over the snow. Svindal, thinking like a racer, checked for the usual racer injuries: He felt the bones of his legs and arms. He flexed his knees, shrugged his shoulders, arched his back. Everything seemed OK. As a trauma team arrived with a sled, Svindal looked back and saw smears and spatters of red on the snow. There was a gash in the backside of his Lycra racing suit, and a large crimson stain was growing around him. That blood should not be there. At the Vail Valley Medical Center, emergency room doctors immediately set to work assessing the damage. He had a few cracked ribs, broken front teeth, cuts and contusions all over his face. His nose lay to one side, and an eye was swollen up. X-rays also revealed that he had sustained five facial fractures. But none of this particularly worried the doctors. What concerned them was that gash in his racing suit. When they snipped away the fabric, they made an extremely troubling determination: apparently, one of his skis, releasing upon impact, had become a weapon—a flying saber, basically. Waxed for maximum speed and edged sharp as a razor, it had hurtled down the slope alongside its former occupant. After he got out of intensive care, there would be further surgeries to fix his nose and the broken bones in his face. For two weeks, as Svindal stewed in his bed while happy skiers carved down the slopes just outside the hospital, he began to plot his comeback to the World Cup. As long as I get back, percent. All he could think about was the World Cup. In the aftermath of his surgery, Svindal had lost nearly 40 pounds of muscle mass. For a long time, he was simply too weak to get out of bed. Tentatively, he started shuffling around the house, then around the neighborhood—donning a big hat so that no one would recognize him. He was often dizzy and easily exhausted, but slowly his strength returned. He began lifting weights again, riding a bike, running. I will return when I feel strong enough to win races. They have to calibrate precisely where and when they need to push their skiing to the absolute edge. Continually making that calibration, in every kind of snow and weather condition over the long haul of more than 40 World Cup races every season, reveals a kind of deep cumulative judgment, an intimate knowledge of self. Like many Norwegians, he learned to ski when he was three. He was a big, determined kid who giggled a lot. His brother, Simen, came along a couple of years later, and during wintertime the little boys loved to strap on nordic skis and scoot around the garden. Alpine skiing ran deep in the family. But something went wrong during the delivery, and she started to hemorrhage. She died the next day. The infant—a boy—was saved, but after 18 months languishing on respirators and other machines, he too died. Aksel and Simen proved to be prodigies. He qualified for his first World Cup race in But while training in Oppdal in , he suffered a terrible fall going off a jump and broke his back in six places. Though at first the doctors thought he might have to live the rest of his life in a wheelchair, he recovered—but was forced to give up racing forever. When it comes to ski racing, Norway has long been known for doing a lot with a little. Yet Norway has produced some of the all-time greats in alpine skiing. Svindal was lucky enough to come up through the ranks at a time when two of them— Lasse Kjus and Kjetil Aamodt—were just beginning to peak. But you never heard anything negative said about them. There was just a universal respect and affection. And Aksel was the junior skier watching them—like Kobe grew up watching Jordan. From then on his star steadily rose, and at exactly the same time that Kjus and Aamodt were waning. Kjus retired in , Aamodt a year later. It was perfect kismet, both for Svindal and for Norway. He lifted the pressure off of them and put it all on his shoulders. He inherited the kingdom. A few skiers over the years have criticized him for being a bit too conservative. When I watched Svindal training on the slopes of Portillo, I was struck by how obsessively involved he is in the process of designing and perfecting his skis—now all the more so, given controversial new International Ski Federation ratings taking effect next year that mandate a radical reshaping supposedly for better safety of all GS skis worn in World Cup races. This one was too rigid in the tail. That one had too much pop. This one needed more forgiving flex in a certain kind of snow. For Svindal, there was no getting around the fact that his own ski had come within a few inches of literally unmanning him. If he ever wanted to ski competitively again—particularly in the downhill—he would have to reclaim his nerve and get his head around the crash. When he initially got back on skis in late February , he realized, with considerable dread, that the Birds of Prey downhill at Beaver Creek would be one of the very first races in his return to the World Cup. He thought about it all the time. He wondered how he would approach it or if he even could approach it. He visited a sports shrink, who gave him dubious advice—something about how he should just try to trick himself into thinking it was an ordinary race, an ordinary jump. As they say in Alcoholics Anonymous, the first step is to admit that you have a problem. Through the summer and early fall, as Birds of Prey loomed ever closer on the calendar, Svindal closely analyzed the mistakes that had led up to his crash. When he got to Colorado, Svindal slipped the Birds of Prey course carefully. He lingered at the Golden Eagle Jump and assayed it like a golfer studies a green before a clutch putt. He devised a plan for how to run the race. In his mind, he would separate the jump from the rest of the course; he would conceptually isolate it and put it in a clean little box. When he reached Golden Eagle, he would dial it back just a hair—undercook it. He would reapportion the risk, in other words, and simply accept the inescapable fact that the Golden Eagle Jump scared the living shit out of him. Finally, race day came—December 5, Bjorn was there in the crowd, surrounded by well-wishers waving Norwegian flags. Svindal started off well and floored it through the flats. When he crossed the finish, he doubled over panting, then turned to see his time: 1 minute, He was. The crowds erupted in wolf howls of joy. Svindal pumped his poles in the air and drank in the glory while Bjorn watched through tears. A year after nearly dying on this same storied slope, Aksel Lund Svindal had won it all. Svindal stood on the podium clutching his gold medal. I think I will need some time to fully understand what is happening to me today. Three years later—December 2, —I stand in the Birds of Prey crowds as Svindal tucks across the finish and skids to a stop. This time his downhill run has been solid but not enough to make the podium: fifth place. Bode Miller will go on to win, putting down one of the best performances of his career. Svindal clicks out of his skis and walks over to the media barricade. I ask him if he ever thinks of his mom on good days like this. And what about Birds of Prey? Svindal waves his hand dismissively. Search Search. Svindal training in Portillo, Chile. Jonathan Selkowitz. Published: Jan 24, Updated: Jun 26, Photo: Jonathan Selkowitz.
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