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Aus dem Inhalt dieser Ausgabe: Artikel und Miszellen: Karl E. Grözinger: Manfred Voigts zum Sechzigsten - 2.5.2006 Caspar Battegay: Wie nicht erinnern? - Die Frage nach der Jüdischkeit in Heinrich Heines autobiographischen Texten Edith Lutz: Heinrich Heine im "Verein für Cultur und Wissenschaft der Juden" Jakob Hessing: Wahrheit und Dichtung - Die Damaskusaffäre und Heines Der Rabbi von Bacharach Elvira Grözinger: Im Venusberg. Zu Gesundheit und Krankheit bei Heinrich Heine zwischen Eros und Thanatos Sabine Bierwirth: Meilenstein der Zeitgeschichtsschreibung: Heinrich Heines Berichte über die Judenverfolgung in Damaskus 1840 Hans Otto Horch: Die unheilbar große Brüderkrankheit - Zum programmatischen Zeitgedicht Das neue Israelitische Hospital zu Hamburg von H. Heine Hendrik Madsen: Vom Überleben der toten Schrift - Eine medientheoretisch orientierte Lektüre des Jeremiabuches Manfred Voigts: Moses Mendelssohn und Franz Kafka: Die Heilige Schrift Olivia Franz-Klauser: Samaritanerforschung im 19. Jahrhundert: Die Anfänge der historischen Kritik im Schatten religiöser Vorurteile, gezeigt an der Rezeption Moritz Heidenheims (1824-1898) Rezensionen: Mark R. Cohen: Unter Kreuz und Halbmond. Die Juden im Mittelalter (Daniel Jütte) Erika Timm: Historische jiddische Semantik. (Karl E. Grözinger) David B. Ruderman, Giuseppe Veltri (Hrsg.): Cultural Intermediaries. Jewish Intellectuals in Early Modern Italy (Daniel Jütte) Gian Maria Varanini, Reinhold C. Mueller (Hrsg.): Ebrei nella Terraferma veneta del Quattrocento (Daniel Jütte) Stefanie B. Siegmund: The Medici State and the Ghetto of Florence (Daniel Jütte) Johannes Mordstein: Selbstbewußte Untertänigkeit (Robert Jütte) Werner Heegewaldt, Oliver Sander (Hrsg.): Salomo Sachs (Elvira Grözinger) Philipp Theisohn: Die Urbarkeit der Zeichen. Zionismus und Literatur - eine andere Poetik der Moderne (Joachim Schlör) Jascha Nemtsov: Die Neue Jüdische Schule in der Musik (Susanne Hudak-Laziç) Ines Sonder: Gartenstädte in Eretz Israel. (Robert Jütte) Cilly Kugelmann (Hrsg.): Weihnukka. Geschichten von Weihnachten und Chanukka. (Daniel Jütte) Moshe Zimmermann, Yotam Hotam (Hrsg.): Zweimal Heimat. Die Jeckes zwischen Mitteleuropa und Nahost. (Anat Feinberg) Birgit Schlachter: Schreibweisen der Abwesenheit. (Elvira Grözinger) Jüdische Studien in aller Welt: Juden und Judentum im Iran - Einige zufällige und weniger zufällige Reiseeindrücke (Hans-Michael Haußig) Nachrichten Rückblicke
This is the eleventh of a series of miscellaneous contributions, by various authors, where hitherto unpublished data relevant to both the Med-Checklist and the Euro+Med (or Sisyphus) projects are presented. This instalment deals with the families Anacardiaceae, Asparagaceae (incl. Hyacinthaceae), Bignoniaceae, Cactaceae, Compositae, Cruciferae, Cyperaceae, Ericaceae, Gramineae, Labiatae, Leguminosae, Orobanchaceae, Polygonaceae, Rosaceae, Solanaceae and Staphyleaceae. It includes new country and area records and taxonomic and distributional considerations for taxa in Bidens, Campsis, Centaurea, Cyperus, Drymocallis, Engem, Hoffmannseggia, Hypopitys, Lavandula, Lithraea, Melilotus, Nicotiana, Olimarabidopsis, Opuntia, Orobanche, Phelipanche, Phragmites, Rumex, Salvia, Schinus, Staphylea, and a new combination in Drimia.
Background: Optimal antibiotic exposure is a vital but challenging prerequisite for achieving clinical success in ICU patients. Objectives: To develop and externally validate a population pharmacokinetic model for continuous-infusion meropenem in critically ill patients and to establish a nomogram based on a routinely available marker of renal function. Methods: A population pharmacokinetic model was developed in NONMEM (R) 7.3 based on steady-state meropenem concentrations (C-ss) collected during therapeutic drug monitoring. Different serum creatinine-based markers of renal function were compared for their influence on meropenem clearance (the Cockcroft-Gault creatinine clearance CLCRcG, the CLCR bedside estimate according to Jelliffe, the Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration equation and the four-variable Modification of Diet in Renal Disease equation). After validation of the pharmacokinetic model with independent data, a dosing nomogram was developed, relating renal function to the daily doses required to achieve selected target concentrations (4/8/16 mg/L) in 90% of the patients. Probability of target attainment was determined for efficacy (C-ss >= 8 mg/L) and potentially increased likelihood of adverse drug reactions (C-ss >32 mg/L). Results: In total, 433 plasma concentrations (3.20-48.0 mg/L) from 195 patients (median/P-0.05 - P-0.95 at baseline: weight 77.0/55.0-114 kg, CLCRCG 63.0/19.6-168 mL/min) were used for model building. We found that CLCRCG best described meropenem clearance (CL = 7.71 L/h, CLCRCG = 80 mL/min). The developed model was successfully validated with external data (n = 171, 73 patients). According to the nomogram, daily doses of 910/1480/2050/2800/ 3940 mg were required to reach a target C-ss = 8 mg/L in 90% of patients with CLCRCG = 20/50/80/120/180 mL/min, respectively. A low probability of adverse drug reactions (<0.5%) was associated with these doses. Conclusions: A dosing nomogram was developed for continuous-infusion meropenem based on renal function in a critically ill population.
To assess nutritional consequences associated with lake oligotrophication for aquatic consumers, we analyzed the elemental and biochemical composition of natural seston and concomitantly conducted laboratory growth experiments in which the freshwater key herbivore Daphnia was raised on natural seston of the nowadays (2008) oligotrophic Lake Constance throughout an annual cycle. Food quality mediated constraints on Daphnia performance were assessed by comparing somatic growth rates with seston characteristics (multiple regression analysis) and by manipulating the elemental and biochemical composition of natural seston experimentally (nutrient supplementation). Results were compared to similar experiments carried out previously (1997) during a mesotrophic phase of the lake. In the oligotrophic phase, particulate carbon and phosphorus concentrations were lower, fatty acid concentrations were higher, and the taxonomic composition of phytoplankton was less diverse, with a more diatom- and cryptophytes-dominated community, compared to the previous mesotrophic phase. Multiple regression analysis indicated a shift from a simultaneous limitation by food quantity (in terms of carbon) and quality (i.e. a-linolenic acid) during the mesotrophic phase to a complex multiple nutrient limitation mediated by food quantity, phosphorus, and omega-3 fatty acids in the following oligotrophic phase. The concomitant supplementation experiments also revealed seasonal changes in multiple resource limitations, i.e. the prevalent limitation by food quantity was accompanied by a simultaneous limitation by either phosphorus or omega-3 fatty acids, and thus confirmed and complemented the multiple regression approach. Our results indicate that seasonal and annual changes in nutrient availabilities can create complex co-limitation scenarios consumers have to cope with, which consequently may also affect the efficiency of energy transfer in food webs.
Ciboria ploettneriana, Schroeteria decaisneana, and S. poeltii produce morphologically very similar apothecia emerging from fallen stromatized seeds of Veronica spp., the former two on V. hederifolia agg. in temperate central Europe and S. poeltii on V. cymbalaria in mediterranean southern Europe. They are described and illustrated in detail based on fresh collections or moist chamber cultures of infected seeds. A key is provided to differentiate the three species from their teleomorphs. For the first time, connections between two teleomorphs and two Schroeteria anamorphs are reported. Members of the anamorph-typified genus Schroeteria are known as host-specific plant parasites that infect seeds of different Veronica spp. In earlier times, they were classified in the Ustilaginales (Basidiomycota), but since more than 30 years, they are referred to as false smut fungi producing smut-like chlamydospores, based on light microscopic and ultrastructural studies which referred them to the Sclerotiniaceae (Helotiales). During the present study, rDNA sequences were obtained for the first time from chlamydospores of Schroeteria bornmuelleri (on V. rubrifolia), S. decaisneana (on V. hederifolia), S. delastrina (generic type, on V. arvensis), and S. poeltii (on V. cymbalaria) and from apothecia of C. ploettneriana, S. decaisneana, and S. poeltii. As a result, the anamorph-teleomorph connection could be established for S. decaisneana and S. poeltii by a 100% ITS similarity, whereas C. ploettneriana could not be connected to a smut-like anamorph. Ciboria ploettneriana in the here-redefined sense clustered in our combined phylogenetic analyses of ITS and LSU in relationship of Sclerotinia s.l., Botrytis, and Myriosclerotinia rather than Ciboria, but its placement was not supported. Its affiliation in Ciboria was retained until a better solution is found. Also Schroeteria poeltii clustered unresolved in this relationship but with a much higher molecular distance. The remaining three Schroeteria spp. formed a strongly supported monophyletic group, here referred to as "Schroeteria core clade", which clustered with medium to high support as a sister clade of Monilinia jezoensis, a member of the Monilinia alpina group of section Disjunctoriae. We observed ITS distances of 5-6.3% among members of the Schroeteria core clade, but 13.8-14.7% between this clade and S. poeltii, which appears to be correlated with the deviating chlamydospore morphology of S. poeltii. Despite its apparent paraphyly, Schroeteria is accepted here in a wide sense as a genus distinct from Monilinia, particularly because of its very special anamorphs. A comparable heterogeneity in rDNA analyses was observed in Monilinia and other genera of Sclerotiniaceae. Such apparent heterogeneity should be met with skepticism, however, because the inclusion of protein-coding genes in phylogenetic analyses resulted in a monophyletic genus Monilinia. More sclerotiniaceous taxa should be analysed for protein-coding genes in the future, including Schroeteria. Four syntype specimens of Ciboria ploettneriana in B were reexamined in the present study, revealing a mixture of the two species growing on V. hederifolia agg. Based on its larger ascospores in comparison with S. decaisneana, a lectotype is proposed for C. ploettneriana.