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Eric Henderson

Researcher at Dartmouth–Hitchcock Medical Center

Publications -  219
Citations -  8572

Eric Henderson is an academic researcher from Dartmouth–Hitchcock Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Engineering. The author has an hindex of 45, co-authored 197 publications receiving 7780 citations. Previous affiliations of Eric Henderson include Dartmouth College & University of California, Los Angeles.

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Fracture fixation in the operative management of hip fractures (FAITH) : an international, multicentre, randomised controlled trial

Aaron Nauth, +551 more
- 15 Apr 2017 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the effect of a sliding hip screw versus cancellous screws on the risk of reoperation and other key outcomes, and found that the sliding hip screws showed no advantage in terms of hip fracture healing, relieve pain, treat infection, or improve function.
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Classification of failure of limb salvage after reconstructive surgery for bone tumours: a modified system Including biological and expandable reconstructions

TL;DR: The modifications were prepared using an earlier, evidence-based model with subclassification based on the existing medical literature to provide a means of reporting failures of limb salvage in order to allow the interpretation of outcome following reconstructive surgery.
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Functional protein nanoarrays for biomarker profiling.

TL;DR: The size reduction realized by functional protein nanoarrays creates opportunities for novel applications including highly multiplexed single cell analysis and integration with microfluidics and other “lab‐on‐a‐chip” technologies.
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G-wires: self-assembly of a telomeric oligonucleotide, d(GGGGTTGGGG), into large superstructures.

TL;DR: The results described here extend the understanding of the structural potential of G-rich nucleic acids and may provide insight into the possible roles ofG-rich sequences and the novel structures they can form in biological systems.
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Three-dimensional imaging of living neurons and glia with the atomic force microscope

TL;DR: The atomic force microscope was used to directly image hippocampal neurons and glia and to selectively remove cells from the culture substratum to reconstruct three-dimensional cell structure and detect sub-cellular features such as the nucleus, mitochondria and filaments.