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Cornelia Blume

Researcher at Leibniz University of Hanover

Publications -  67
Citations -  2038

Cornelia Blume is an academic researcher from Leibniz University of Hanover. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Kidney transplantation. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 54 publications receiving 1700 citations. Previous affiliations of Cornelia Blume include Hannover Medical School & University of Düsseldorf.

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Mycophenolate Mofetil versus Cyclophosphamide for Induction Treatment of Lupus Nephritis

Gerald B. Appel, +98 more
TL;DR: Although most patients in both treatment groups experienced clinical improvement, the study did not meet its primary objective of showing that MMF was superior to IVC as induction treatment for lupus nephritis.
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Hydrogels for 3D mammalian cell culture: a starting guide for laboratory practice

TL;DR: Current examples of performance-based hydrogel design for 3D cell culture applications are reviewed, with a major emphasis on how standard analytical protocols and imaging techniques are being adapted to analysis of 3d cell culture in hydrogels systems.
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Increase of infectious complications in ABO-incompatible kidney transplant recipients—a single centre experience

TL;DR: The results, in line with the extended experience of other groups, demonstrate favourable short-term allograft survival and function after ABOi renal transplantation after desensitization with antigen-specific IA, IVIG and rituximab.
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Three dimensional spheroid cell culture for nanoparticle safety testing.

TL;DR: The obtained results demonstrate the importance of 3D cell culture studies for nanoparticle safety testing, since some effects cannot be revealed in 2D cell growth, and suggest better models for mimicking in vivo conditions is essential.
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Different models of transition to adult care after pediatric kidney transplantation: a comparative study.

TL;DR: The use of a specialized transition clinic is associated with fewer changes in medication and care and a higher level of patient satisfaction, but this was not associated with a lower increase in GFR one yr after transition.