Risto Kaaja
Professor, Internal Medicine (Department of Clinical Medicine)
riskaa@utu.fi +358 46 922 5738 Kiinamyllynkatu 4-8 Turku |
Diabetes; Obstetric Medicine; Hypertension; Thrombophilia related to pregnancy; gender differences in diseases
Professor Risto Kaaja (MD, PhD, University of Helsinki) studied medicine in the Faculté Libre de Médecine de Lille, France and specialized in internal medicine in 1986. Thereafter by clinical work in the Women´s Hospital of Helsinki University Hospital (1986-2008) and research became a specialist in obstetric medicine. In January 2009 he was appointed as Professor of Internal Medicine at the University of Turku.
Pr. Kaaja has over 200 original publications, 50 reviews in international and local medical journals and books. His main interests have been related to interactions between different medical conditions and pregnancy, above all pre-eclampsia and it´s connections to cardiovascular health later in women´s life. In 2005 he wrote a review on this topic (Pregnancy- a window to women´s health) in JAMA with Pr Ian Greer. He has also written many papers on autoimmune diseases, thromboembolic complications and treatment with low molecular weight heparins. In diabetes, his studies have covered introductions of new insulin analogues during pregnancy and he has been investigator in all pivotal insulin analogue studies concerning safety and efficacy during pregnancy. He has been supervisor in 10 thesis, and opponent in 11 thesis in Finland and abroad.
Teaching responsabilities: 1) Internal medicine and obstetric medicine for medical students and future dentists, 2) Internal medicine specialisation programme for MDs
Special interest areas: obstetric medicine, diabetes and metabolic syndrome in women, gender differences in internal medicine
- Thromboprophylaxis for recurrent miscarriage in women or without thrombophilia. HABENOX: a randomised multicentre trial (2011)
- Thrombosis and Haemostasis
- Vascular complications in diabetic pregnancy (2011)
- Thrombosis Research
- Factor V Leiden as risk factor for unexplained stillbirth--a population-based nested case-control study (2010)
- Thrombosis Research
- (2010)
- Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica ScandinavicaDiabetic Medicine
- Hypoglycemia in type 1 diabetic pregnancy: role of preconception insulin aspart treatment in a randomized study (2010)
- Diabetes Care
- Imbalance of the autonomic nervous system at night in women with gestational diabetes (2010)
- Is deep vein thrombosis different during pregnancy? (2010)
- Canadian Medical Association Journal
- Oral contraceptives and venous thromboembolism consensus opinion from an international workshop held in Berlin, Germany in December 2009. (2010)
- Journal of Family Planning and Reproductive Health Care
- Pregnancy and childbirth in carriers of the lamin A/C-gene mutation (2010)
- European Journal of Heart FailureMolecular Human Reproduction
- Secular trend in the menopausal age in Finland 1997-2007 and correlation with socioeconomic, reproductive and lifestyle factors (2010)
- MaturitasProstaglandins, Leukotrienes and Essential Fatty Acids
- Blood group AB and factor V Leiden as risk factors for pre-eclampsia: a population-based nested case-control study (2009)
- Thrombosis Research
- Do mitochondrial mutations cause recurrent miscarriage? (2009)
- Free fatty acid profiles in preeclampsia (2009)
- Metabolic syndrome and carotid intima media thickness in the Health 2000 Survey (2009)
- Atherosclerosis
- Oral inflammatory burden and preterm birth (2009)
- Journal of Periodontology
- Pre-eclampsia is a risk factor of carotid artery atherosclerosis (2009)
- Cerebrovascular Diseases
- Study of p53 gene mutations and placental expression in recurrent miscarriage cases (2009)
- Reproductive BioMedicine Online
- A relationship between insulin sensitivity and vasodilation in women with a history of preeclamptic pregnancy (2008)
- Hypertension
- Central sympatholytic therapy has anti-inflammatory properties in hypertensive postmenopausal women (2008)
- Journal of Hypertension
- Detection of pregnancies with high risk of fetal macrosomia among women with gestational diabetes mellitus (2008)
- Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica