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Georg N. Duda

Researcher at Charité

Publications -  613
Citations -  31004

Georg N. Duda is an academic researcher from Charité. The author has contributed to research in topics: Bone healing & Bone regeneration. The author has an hindex of 81, co-authored 563 publications receiving 25802 citations. Previous affiliations of Georg N. Duda include Humboldt University of Berlin & University of Ulm.

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A 5-mm femoral defect in female but not in male rats leads to a reproducible atrophic non-union.

TL;DR: This study showed that even under uneventful healing conditions in terms of age and bone defect size, there is a sex-specific advanced healing in male compared to female subjects.
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Straining of the intact and fractured proximal humerus under physiological-like loading.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the straining in a fractured bone of poor quality leads to considerably higher bone strains than in a more healthy bone, and new concepts for the surgical treatment of complex fractures of the proximal humerus should take bone distribution into account and thereby allow effective treatment of fractures in osteoporotic patients.
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[Age- and gender-related distribution of bone mineral density and mechanical properties of the proximal humerus].

TL;DR: Findings provide an insight into the fracture mechanism of the proximal humerus and should be the basis for designing structure-oriented implants with improved implant-bone stability in osteoporotic patients.
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T Lymphocytes Influence the Mineralization Process of Bone.

TL;DR: This work presents, for the first time, a direct link between immune cells and matrix formation during bone healing after fracture and illustrates specifically the role of T cells in the collagen organization process and the lack thereof in the absence of T Cells.
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The Metabolic Microenvironment Steers Bone Tissue Regeneration.

TL;DR: A schematic overview on metabolic links that have a high potential to drive tissue regeneration is provided, as bone is, aside from liver, the only tissue that can regenerate without excessive scar tissue formation.