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Günther Körmöczi
Prof. Günther Körmöczi, M.D., MMEDep. Head of the Dept. of Blood Group Serology and Transfusion Medicine, Head of Red Cell Laboratory and Granulocyte Immunology

Department of Blood Group Serology and Transfusion Medicine
Position: Associate Professor

T +43 1 40400 53200
guenther.koermoeczi@meduniwien.ac.at

Keywords

Blood Group; Granulocyte Immunology; Immunization; Immunohematology; Red Cell

Research interests

Many international research cooperations focusing on immunohematology, the genetic background and phenotypic characterization of blood group variants, hemogenetics, transplantation immunology, granulocyte physiology and inflammation. Further areas of interest include , hemolytic disease and immunization against different blood cells are investigated.

Techniques, methods & infrastructure

Specialized on immunohematologic studies, a wide array of extended serologic and molecular genetic methods as well as flow cytometry are employed.

Selected publications

  1. Dauber, E.-M. et al., 2018. Somatic mosaicisms of chromosome 1 at two different stages of ontogenetic development detected by Rh blood group discrepancies. Haematologica, 104(3), pp.632–638. Available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2018.201293.
  2. Buchta, C. et al., 2018. Evidence for the positive impact of ISO 9001 and ISO 15189 quality systems on laboratory performance – evaluation of immunohaematology external quality assessment results during 19 years in Austria. Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine (CCLM), 56(12), pp.2039–2046. Available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/cclm-2018-0482.
  3. Papay, P. et al., 2012. High Risk of Transfusion-induced Alloimmunization of Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease. The American Journal of Medicine, 125(7), pp.717.e1–717.e8. Available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amjmed.2011.11.028.
  4. Körmöczi, G.F. et al., 2007. Mosaicism due to myeloid lineage–restricted loss of heterozygosity as cause of spontaneous Rh phenotype splitting. Blood, 110(6), pp.2148–2157. Available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood-2007-01-068106.
  5. Körmöczi, G.F. et al., 2005. A comprehensive analysis of DEL types: partial DEL individuals are prone to anti-D alloimmunization. Transfusion, 45(10), pp.1561–1567. Available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1537-2995.2005.00584.x.