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E. Dinkel

Researcher at University of Freiburg

Publications -  23
Citations -  827

E. Dinkel is an academic researcher from University of Freiburg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neonatal hepatitis & Choledochal cysts. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 23 publications receiving 798 citations. Previous affiliations of E. Dinkel include University of Zurich & University of Mainz.

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Kidney size in childhood. Sonographical growth charts for kidney length and volume.

TL;DR: Growth charts for kidney length and volume in childhood are constructed and provide the basis for objective intra- and interindividual determination of renal size.
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Pancreatic lesions in the von Hippel-Lindau syndrome.

TL;DR: Because multiple pancreatic cysts did not cause major clinical symptoms and because follow-up examinations over an average period of 5 years did not show significant progression of the lesions, it is concluded that these patients usually do not require surgical treatment.
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Sonographic biometry of liver and spleen size in childhood.

TL;DR: In 194 healthy children of all ages, sonographic measurements of the liver and spleen were performed on standardized section planes and normal values showed an approximately linear increase in the course of development and correlated best with the body length.
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Renal growth in patients nephrectomized for Wilms tumour as compared to renal agenesis.

TL;DR: Parenchymal mass increase achieved 188% of the volume of a healthy kidney within at least 4 years of life and afterwards paralleled the physiological growth documented in healthy kidney pairs, and compensatory growth in congenital solitary kidneys and in patients with Wilms tumour was monitored.
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Real-time ultrasound in Crohn's disease: characteristic features and clinical implications.

TL;DR: In proven Crohn's disease the findings in follow-up match the clinical course and may delineate complications, such as ileus, abscess, hydronephrosis, gallstones or involvement of parenchymal organs, as seen in 15 patients, so ultrasound will restrict repeated x-ray studies and support patient management.