D
Dietrich W. Lübbers
Researcher at Max Planck Society
Publications - 171
Citations - 4293
Dietrich W. Lübbers is an academic researcher from Max Planck Society. The author has contributed to research in topics: Optode & Carotid body. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 171 publications receiving 4221 citations. Previous affiliations of Dietrich W. Lübbers include University of Ulm & University of Hamburg.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Optical Fluorescence and Its Application to an Intravascular Blood Gas Monitoring System
John L. Gehrich,Dietrich W. Lübbers,Norbert Opitz,Douglas R. Hansmann,William W. Miller,James K. Tusa,Maseo Yafuso +6 more
TL;DR: An optical fluorescence based intravascular blood gas monitoring system has been developed which is particularly suited for the critical care and surgical settings and which has a sensor probe that can be introduced into the patient via a radial artery catheter.
Journal ArticleDOI
The cutaneous uptake of atmospheric oxygen contributes significantly to the oxygen supply of human dermis and epidermis
TL;DR: A malfunction in capillary oxygen transport cannot be the initiator of the development of superficial skin defects such as those observed in chronic venous incompetence and peripheral arterial occlusive disease.
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Nephron pO2 and renal oxygen usage in the hypertensive rat kidney
William J. Welch,H. Baumgärtl,H. Baumgärtl,Dietrich W. Lübbers,Christopher S. Wilcox,Christopher S. Wilcox +5 more
TL;DR: A precapillary O2 shunt reduces the pO2 of cortical nephrons in SHRs because of less efficient O2 usage for Na+ transport.
Journal ArticleDOI
The oxygen supply of the rat kidney: measurements of int4arenal pO2.
H. P. Leichtweiss,Dietrich W. Lübbers,Dietrich W. Lübbers,Ch. Weiss,H. Baumgärtl,H. Baumgärtl,W. Reschke +6 more
TL;DR: It follows from the data presented that even at high venous O2-pressures and high meanpO2-values in the parenchyma regions of local anoxia may exist, especially under the conditions of the cell-free perfusion.
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Heterogeneities and profiles of oxygen pressure in brain and kidney as examples of the pO2 distribution in the living tissue
Dietrich W. Lübbers,H. Baumgärtl +1 more
TL;DR: In a respiring normoxic tissue local P°1 may vary between values close to the arterial P°2 and values of almost zero P° 2, which is very well suited to create the necessary P°3 gradients.