Output list
Book chapter
A Puzzling Question: How Can Different Phenotypes Possibly Have Indistinguishable Disease Symptoms?
Published 2019
Embracing Complexity in Health, 59 - 67
Homeostasis is a cardinal feature of our body’s response to changes in the environment. However, there are circumstances under which seemingly small changes may have much greater impact through emergent phenomena affecting the development of life as well as disease. Revisiting Peter Macklem’s paper “Emergent phenomena and the secrets of life” inspired a review of our current understanding of key concepts of emergent behavior at the “edge of chaos” between liquids and crystals where the spontaneous development of self-organized order occurs that is essential for both the development of life and the control of homeostasis. These phenomena occur at all length scales from the molecular to the whole-body level. During asthma attacks for example, bronchoconstriction within the airway tree results in the emergence of self-organized clustering of severe airway constriction causing large ventilation defects, while other areas of the lungs remain well-ventilated. This transition from stable open airways (homeostasis) to the regional clustering of severe airway constriction occurs at a critical point in the interactions among airways. The critical point itself can be shifted by several factors including increase in airway wall thickness, which is linked to airway inflammation and remodeling in asthma. However, injury of the airways may be caused by severe airway constriction within ventilation defects. That means that different asthma phenotypes causing increased airway wall thickness would shift the critical point of airway stability and promote the emergence of ventilation defects leading to symptoms independent of the phenotype. In summary, the example shows how different underlying processes (phenotypes) may affect or trigger disease-specific emergent phenomena that cause symptoms without phenotype-specific characteristics.
Book chapter
Modellierung und Simulation: Methodik und Applikation
Published 2014
Biomedizinische Technik - Faszination, Einführung, Überblick, 169 - 206
Modelle verbergen sich hinter den meisten biomedizintechni-schen Problemlösungen. Mit der Methodik der Modellierung und Simulation wirdeine Brücke zwischen lebenden und nicht-lebenden Systemen durch einheitlicheAbstraktion der Realität geschlagen. Das Modell bildet die dem Nutzer entsprechendseiner Zielstellung als relevant erscheinenden Eigenschaften ab und wird als Repräsentation oder auch als Ersatz der Wirklichkeit verwendet. Modellierung undSimulation sind leistungsfähige Werkzeuge, um komplexe interdisziplinäre Problemezu lösen, und tragen zur Verständigung und zur gemeinsamen Herangehensweise vonArzt bzw. Biologen und Ingenieur, Naturwissenschaftler, Mathematiker, Informatikerwie auch Ökonomen bei.
Book chapter
Pulmonary functional imaging with positron emission tomography
Published 2014
Mechanics of Breathing: New Insights from New Technologies: Second Edition, 283 - 308
In most diseases of the lung, both function and structure are spatially heterogeneous. As a result, global measures of lung function obtained from measurements at the mouth may be insensitive to localized pathological changes in the lungs and usually fail to detect the true extent of the functional impairment. With the development of imaging methods capable of providing detailed information in three dimensions, the field of functional imaging has emerged to fill these gaps.