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Gordon K. Klintworth
Researcher at Duke University
Publications - 180
Citations - 8106
Gordon K. Klintworth is an academic researcher from Duke University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Macular corneal dystrophy & Cornea. The author has an hindex of 49, co-authored 180 publications receiving 7741 citations. Previous affiliations of Gordon K. Klintworth include Baylor College of Medicine & Durham University.
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Sarcoidosis and its ophthalmic manifestations.
TL;DR: Of 532 cases of sarcoidosis in the southeastern United States, ocular manifestations were a prominent feature of the disease in 202 (38%) of the patients, and the incidence of central nervous system sarcoIDosis was increased when posterior segment involvement was observed.
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Transgenic mice expressing a hemopoietic growth factor gene (GM-CSF) develop accumulations of macrophages, blindness, and a fatal syndrome of tissue damage
Richard A. Lang,Donald Metcalf,R.Andrew Cuthbertson,Ian Lyons,Ed Stanley,Anne Kelso,George Kannourakis,D.James Williamson,Gordon K. Klintworth,T J Gonda,Ashley R. Dunn +10 more
TL;DR: A high proportion of transgenic mice die with muscle wasting when aged 2-4 months, possibly because of macrophage activation resulting from the high levels of GM-CSF.
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Quantification of keratan sulfate in blood as a marker of cartilage catabolism.
Eugene J.-M.A. Thonar,Mary Ellen Lenz,Gordon K. Klintworth,Bruce Caterson,Lauren M. Pachman,Paul B. Glickman,Robert S. Katz,John P. Huff,Klaus E. Kuettner +8 more
TL;DR: If the appearance of elevated levels of serumKS do indeed correlate with the extent of cartilage erosion or destruction in individuals with OA, measurements of serum KS levels will prove extremely useful in the assessment and diagnosis of this joint disease.
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The IC3D classification of the corneal dystrophies
Jayne S. Weiss,Hans Ulrik Møller,Walter Lisch,Shigeru Kinoshita,Anthony J. Aldave,Michael W. Belin,Tero Kivelä,Massimo Busin,Francis L. Munier,Berthold Seitz,John E. Sutphin,Cecilie Bredrup,Mark J. Mannis,Christopher J. Rapuano,Gabriel van Rij,Eung Kweon Kim,Gordon K. Klintworth +16 more
TL;DR: A new classification system for corneal dystrophies is developed, integrating up-to-date information on phenotypic description, pathologic examination, and genetic analysis with new genetic, clinical, and pathologic information.
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Axenfeld-Rieger syndrome. A spectrum of developmental disorders.
TL;DR: It has been suggested that a developmental arrest, in the third trimester of gestation, of tissues derived from the neural crest cells accounts for the ocular and most of the nonocular abnormalities in this group of disorders.