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Bjarne Møller-Madsen

Researcher at Aarhus University Hospital

Publications -  115
Citations -  2515

Bjarne Møller-Madsen is an academic researcher from Aarhus University Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mercury (element) & Sodium aurothiomalate. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 110 publications receiving 2268 citations. Previous affiliations of Bjarne Møller-Madsen include University of Bergen & Aarhus University.

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Osteochondritis dissecans : a multicenter study of the European Pediatric Orthopedic Society

TL;DR: Patients with a favorable situation at diagnosis have significantly better results afterconservative treatment than those who have undergone operation and when there are signs of dissection, the results are better after operative than after conservative treatment.
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Atropine Resistance of Transmurally Stimulated Isolated Human Bladder Muscle

TL;DR: Human detrusor strips obtained from patients undergoing reimplantation of ureters because of reflux, transvesical prostatectomy, or cysto-urethrectomy en bloc because of bladder malignancy revealed a frequency-dependent contractant response that was potentiated by physostigmine and abolished by tetrodotoxin.
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Silver amplification of mercury sulfide and selenide: a histochemical method for light and electron microscopic localization of mercury in tissue.

TL;DR: Examples of localization of mercury in the central nervous system and various organs from animals exposed to mercury chloride or methyl mercury chloride with or without additional sodium selenide treatment are presented.
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Neonatal Jaundice, Autism, and Other Disorders of Psychological Development

TL;DR: Exposure to jaundice in neonates was associated with increased risk of disorders of psychological development for children born at term and Parity and season of birth seem to play important roles.
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Localization of mercury in CNS of the rat. IV. The effect of selenium on orally administered organic and inorganic mercury.

TL;DR: The distribution and exact cellular localization of mercury in the brain and upper cervical spinal cord of the adult male Wistar rat has been determined using the autometallographic silver-enhancement technique.