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Christopher N.H. Bui

Researcher at University of California, Irvine

Publications -  20
Citations -  745

Christopher N.H. Bui is an academic researcher from University of California, Irvine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Rotator cuff & Bankart repair. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 20 publications receiving 615 citations. Previous affiliations of Christopher N.H. Bui include Veterans Health Administration & University of California, Los Angeles.

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What Is the Critical Value of Glenoid Bone Loss at Which Soft Tissue Bankart Repair Does Not Restore Glenohumeral Translation, Restricts Range of Motion, and Leads to Abnormal Humeral Head Position?

TL;DR: Glenoid defects of 15% or more of the largest anteroposterior glenoid width should be considered the critical bone loss amount at which soft tissue repair cannot restore glenohumeral translation, restricts rotational range of motion, and leads to abnormal humeral head position.
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Discovery-Based Science Education: Functional Genomic Dissection in Drosophila by Undergraduate Researchers

Jiong Chen, +146 more
- 15 Feb 2005 - 
TL;DR: The UCLA Undergraduate Consortium for Functional Genomics provides the answer to how to combine professional-quality research with discovery-based undergraduate education.
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Effect of scapular orientation on shoulder internal impingement in a cadaveric model of the cocking phase of throwing.

TL;DR: Increasing internal scapular rotation and decreasing upward scAPular rotation significantly increase glenohumeral contact pressure and the area of impingement of the rotator cuff tendon between the greater tuberosity and glenoid during simulated throwing motion.
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Biomechanical evaluation of short-segment posterior instrumentation with and without crosslinks in a human cadaveric unstable thoracolumbar burst fracture model.

TL;DR: Crosslinks, when added to short-segment posterior fixation, improve stiffness and decrease motion in axial rotation, but do not restore baseline stability in this corpectomy model, which is inadequate in restoring stability in flexion with injuries of this severity.