Barbara Bohle focuses on Immunology, Immunoglobulin E, Allergy, Allergen and Food allergy. Many of her studies involve connections with topics such as Health economics and Immunology. Her Immunoglobulin E study incorporates themes from Molecular biology and Pollen.
In the field of Allergy, her study on Dander overlaps with subjects such as Declaration. Her work on Aeroallergen as part of general Allergen research is frequently linked to Gene chip analysis, thereby connecting diverse disciplines of science. Her work on Oral allergy syndrome as part of general Food allergy study is frequently connected to Cross-reactivity, therefore bridging the gap between diverse disciplines of science and establishing a new relationship between them.
Her primary scientific interests are in Immunology, Allergy, Allergen, Immunoglobulin E and Epitope. Her study in Immunology focuses on T cell, Immune system, Antibody, Immunotherapy and Food allergy. Her work deals with themes such as Alternative medicine, Provocation test, Asthma, Disease and Sensitization, which intersect with Allergy.
Her biological study spans a wide range of topics, including Plant lipid transfer proteins, Biochemistry and Microbiology. In her work, Escherichia coli is strongly intertwined with Recombinant DNA, which is a subfield of Immunoglobulin E. In her research, Artemisia vulgaris is intimately related to Mugwort, which falls under the overarching field of Epitope.
Her scientific interests lie mostly in Immunology, Immunoglobulin E, Allergy, Allergen and Antibody. Her Immunology study frequently intersects with other fields, such as Recombinant DNA. She has included themes like Western blot, Blocking antibody and Gene isoform in her Immunoglobulin E study.
She studies Allergy, focusing on Food allergy in particular. Her research integrates issues of Pollen, Immune system, Microbiology, Peripheral blood mononuclear cell and Basophil in her study of Allergen. The Immunoglobulin G and Seroprevalence research Barbara Bohle does as part of her general Antibody study is frequently linked to other disciplines of science, such as Cross-reactivity, therefore creating a link between diverse domains of science.
The scientist’s investigation covers issues in Immunology, Allergy, Immunoglobulin E, Allergen and Epitope. Her Recombinant DNA research extends to the thematically linked field of Immunology. Her work on Food allergy is typically connected to Safety Equipment as part of general Allergy study, connecting several disciplines of science.
Barbara Bohle works mostly in the field of Immunoglobulin E, limiting it down to concerns involving Sensitization and, occasionally, Placebo, Immune system, Allergic sensitization, T-cell receptor and Adverse effect. Her research investigates the connection with Allergen and areas like Blocking antibody which intersect with concerns in Heterologous and Peripheral blood mononuclear cell. Barbara Bohle focuses mostly in the field of Epitope, narrowing it down to matters related to Antigen-presenting cell and, in some cases, Antigen presentation, Molecular biology, Cytokine secretion, Proinflammatory cytokine and Flagellin.
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Sublingual immunotherapy induces IL-10–producing T regulatory cells, allergen-specific T-cell tolerance, and immune deviation
Barbara Bohle;Tamar Kinaciyan;Marianne Gerstmayr;Astrid Radakovics.
The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology (2007)
Immunological changes during specific immunotherapy of grass pollen allergy: reduced lymphoproliferative responses to allergen and shift from TH2 to TH1 in T‐cell clones specific for Phi p 1, a major grass pollen allergen
C. Ebner;U. Siemann;B. Bohle;M. Willheim.
Clinical & Experimental Allergy (1997)
EAACI Molecular Allergology User's Guide.
P.M Matricardi;J Kleine-Tebbe;H.J Hoffmann;R Valenta.
Applied Immunohistochemistry & Molecular Morphology (2016)
Apple allergy across Europe: how allergen sensitization profiles determine the clinical expression of allergies to plant foods.
Montserrat Fernández-Rivas;Suzanne Bolhaar;Eloina González-Mancebo;Riccardo Asero.
The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology (2006)
Oligodeoxynucleotides containing CpG motifs induce IL-12, IL-18 and IFN-gamma production in cells from allergic individuals and inhibit IgE synthesis in vitro.
Barbara Bohle;Beatrice Jahn-Schmid;Dieter Maurer;Dietrich Kraft.
European Journal of Immunology (1999)
EAACI: A European Declaration on Immunotherapy. Designing the future of allergen specific immunotherapy.
Moises A Calderon;Pascal Demoly;Roy Gerth van Wijk;Jean Bousquet.
Clinical and Translational Allergy (2012)
Allergen microarray: comparison of microarray using recombinant allergens with conventional diagnostic methods to detect allergen-specific serum immunoglobulin E.
B. Jahn-Schmid;C. Harwanegg;R. Hiller;B. Bohle.
Clinical & Experimental Allergy (2003)
FcεRI engagement of Langerhans cell–like dendritic cells and inflammatory dendritic epidermal cell–like dendritic cells induces chemotactic signals and different T-cell phenotypes in vitro
Natalija Novak;Rudolf Valenta;Barbara Bohle;Sylvia Laffer.
The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology (2004)
Alpha-Gal on bioprostheses: xenograft immune response in cardiac surgery.
K. Z. Konakci;B. Bohle;R. Blumer;W. Hoetzenecker.
European Journal of Clinical Investigation (2005)
IgE-mediated immediate-type hypersensitivity to the pyrazolone drug propyphenazone
Martin Himly;Beatrice Jahn-Schmid;Klaus Pittertschatscher;Barbara Bohle.
The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology (2003)
Medical University of Vienna
University of Salzburg
University of Salzburg
Medical University of Vienna
Medical University of Vienna
Paul Ehrlich Institut
Medical University of Vienna
University of Vienna
Medical University of Vienna
Medical University of Vienna
Profile was last updated on December 6th, 2021.
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