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Gerhard S. Mundinger

Researcher at Boston Children's Hospital

Publications -  92
Citations -  2029

Gerhard S. Mundinger is an academic researcher from Boston Children's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Transplantation & Retrospective cohort study. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 90 publications receiving 1680 citations. Previous affiliations of Gerhard S. Mundinger include University of Maryland, Baltimore & University of Washington Medical Center.

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Characteristic Indocyanine Green Lymphography Findings in Lower Extremity Lymphedema: The Generation of a Novel Lymphedema Severity Staging System Using Dermal Backflow Patterns

TL;DR: Characteristic indocyanine green lymphography patterns are consistent and correlate with clinical severity, and supported the generation of a novel anatomical lymphedema severity staging system, the dermal backflow staging system.
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The intravascular stenting method for treatment of extremity lymphedema with multiconfiguration lymphaticovenous anastomoses.

TL;DR: The intravascular stenting method facilitated multiconfiguration lymphaticovenous anastomoses capable of decompressing both antegrade and retrograde lymphatic flow, resulting in durable reduction of both upper and lower extremity lymphedema.
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Vascularized bone marrow-based immunosuppression inhibits rejection of vascularized composite allografts in nonhuman primates.

TL;DR: Heterotopically transplanted facial segment VCA with VBM treated only with tacrolimus and mycophenolate mofetil demonstrated prolonged rejection‐free survival, compared to VCA without VBM that demonstrated early rejection episodes and graft loss, which support an immunomodulatory role of VBM in VCA that reduces immunosuppressive requirements while providing improved outcomes.
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Antibiotics and Facial Fractures: Evidence-Based Recommendations Compared with Experience-Based Practice

TL;DR: Frequent use of pre- and postoperative antibiotics in upper and midface fractures is not supported by literature recommendations, but with low-level evidence, and higher level studies may better guide clinical antibiotic prescribing practices.
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Ocular injury, visual impairment, and blindness associated with facial fractures: a systematic literature review.

TL;DR: Existing studies exploring ocular injuries, visual impairment, and blindness associated with facial fractures offer conflicting data, and specifically directed studies are required so that significant correlations between specific fracture patterns and specific ocular diseases can be drawn.