G
Geoffrey C. Gurtner
Researcher at Stanford University
Publications - 478
Citations - 32002
Geoffrey C. Gurtner is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Wound healing & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 76, co-authored 423 publications receiving 25985 citations. Previous affiliations of Geoffrey C. Gurtner include Duke University & York University.
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Grabb and Smith's plastic surgery: Seventh edition
Charles H. Thorne,Kevin C. Chung,Arun K. Gosain,Arun K. Gosain,Geoffrey C. Gurtner,Babak J. Mehrara,Babak J. Mehrara,J. Peter Rubin,Scott L. Spear +8 more
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Delivery of mesenchymal stem cells in a biomimetic collagen hydrogel enhances cutaneous wound healing
Kristine C. Rustad,Victor W. Wong,Michael Sorkin,Jason P. Glotzbach,Dean Nehama,Melanie R. Major,Jayakumar Rajadas,Michael T. Longaker,Geoffrey C. Gurtner +8 more
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Pullulan-collagen hydrogel scaffold as a dermal substitute
Michael G. Galvez,Victor W. Wong,Edward I. Chang,Melanie R. Major,Lyonel Carre,Ramalaxmareddy Kandimalla,Kirit A. Bhatt,Jayakumar Rajadas,Michael T. Longaker,Geoffrey C. Gurtner +9 more
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Inhibiting Fibroblast Mechanotransduction Modulates Severity of Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis.
Artem A. Trotsyuk,Kellen Chen,Sun Hyung Kwon,Kun Cathy Ma,Dominic Henn,Alana M. Mermin-Bunnell,Smiti Mittal,Jagannath Padmanabhan,Madelyn R. Larson,Sydney R. Steele,Dharshan Sivaraj,Clark A. Bonham,Chikage Noishiki,Melanie Rodrigues,Yuanwen Jiang,Serena Jing,Simiao Niu,Arhana Chattopadhyay,David P. Perrault,Melissa C Leeolou,Katharina S. Fischer,Gurupranav Gurusankar,Hudson Choi Kussie,Derrick C. Wan,Michael Januszyk,Michael T. Longaker,Geoffrey C. Gurtner +26 more
TL;DR: The authors reported that Ipf is a progressive fibrotic lung disease that affects 63 in every 100,000 Americans, and its etiology remains unknown, although inflammatory pathways appear.
Journal ArticleDOI
Filamin A Mediates Wound Closure by Promoting Elastic Deformation and Maintenance of Tension in the Collagen Matrix
TL;DR: Fibroblasts have a central role in wound healing via matrix production, remodeling, and contraction, and their role as mechanoresponsive cells during tissue repair is evident, but the molecular mechanisms of this process remain uncertain this paper.