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Georg Osterhoff

Researcher at Leipzig University

Publications -  181
Citations -  3097

Georg Osterhoff is an academic researcher from Leipzig University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Fracture fixation. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 151 publications receiving 2095 citations. Previous affiliations of Georg Osterhoff include University of Zurich & University of British Columbia.

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Challenges of digitalization in trauma care

TL;DR: Thiser Beitrag beschreibt innovative Anwendungsmöglichkeiten, die mithilfe of Methoden wie „Big Data“, künstlicher Intelligenz (KI), „Intelligence Augmentation“ (IA) and „Machine Learning“ helfen könnte, die Schwerverletztenversorgung der Zukunft nachhaltig zu
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Suture button versus syndesmotic screw in ankle fractures - evaluation with 3D imaging-based measurements.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared syndesmosis congruity after fixation by syndesmotic screws (SYS) or a suture button system (SBS) using 3D computed imaging techniques.
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Does the accuracy of prehospital pelvic binder placement affect cardiovascular physiological parameters during rescue? A clinical study in patients with pelvic ring injuries

TL;DR: Incorrect placement of pelvic binders persists despite widespread implementation of the device, and displacement was always cranially and had no effect on preclinical fluids received or parameters of resuscitation on arrival.
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Cartilage decisively shapes the glenoid concavity and contributes significantly to shoulder stability

TL;DR: In this article , the authors investigated biomechanically the effect of cartilage loss in different dislocation directions on shoulder stability and concavity gradient in 11 human cadaveric glenoids.
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Quantifizierung des Behandlungserfolgs bei geriatrischen Sakrumfrakturen

TL;DR: There is a lack of standardized specific assessment procedures for functional outcome measurement after geriatric sacral fractures and until these are developed and validated, a parallel acquisition of mortality, the timed up and go test, the Oswestry disability index (ODI) and a generic healthcare questionnaire score seem to be most suitable.