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Frederick Maynard

Researcher at University of Michigan

Publications -  35
Citations -  3930

Frederick Maynard is an academic researcher from University of Michigan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Spinal cord injury & Rehabilitation. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 35 publications receiving 3801 citations. Previous affiliations of Frederick Maynard include Veterans Health Administration & MetroHealth.

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International Standards for Neurological and Functional Classification of Spinal Cord Injury

TL;DR: International Standards for Neurological and Functional Classification of Spinal Cord Injury are published and will be used for clinical practice.
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Neurologic recovery after traumatic spinal cord injury: data from the model spinal cord injury systems

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented data on neurologic recovery gathered by the Model Spinal Cord Injury (SCI) Systems over a 10-year period. And they found that SCI caused by violence is more likely than SCI from nonviolent etiologies to result in a complete injury.
Journal Article

Epidemiology of spasticity following traumatic spinal cord injury.

TL;DR: Two epidemiologic studies of spasticity at discharge and first annual follow-up in patients with traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) are reported, indicating importance of controlling the above significantly related factors.
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Incidence, Characteristics, and Outcome of Spinal Cord Injury at Trauma Centers in North America

TL;DR: The TRISS method overpredicted the mortality rate among patients with multiple injuries, but not among those with isolated injury, and a program for better national surveillance and prevention of spinal cord injury is warranted.
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Urinary Infection and Complications During Clean Intermittent Catheterization Following Spinal Cord Injury

TL;DR: A prospective study of urinary complications during an interval of clean intermittent catheterization at initial hospitalization in a spinal cord injury unit found that antibacterial prophylaxis significantly reduced the likelihood of laboratory infection but not the probability of clinical infection.