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Katharina Schmidt-Bleek

Researcher at Charité

Publications -  98
Citations -  5100

Katharina Schmidt-Bleek is an academic researcher from Charité. The author has contributed to research in topics: Bone healing & Bone regeneration. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 85 publications receiving 3793 citations. Previous affiliations of Katharina Schmidt-Bleek include Humboldt University of Berlin & Free University of Berlin.

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Macrophages in bone fracture healing: Their essential role in endochondral ossification.

TL;DR: Cumulative data illustrate their so far unreported highly important role in endochondral ossification and the necessity of a fine balance in M1/M2 macrophage function, which appears mandatory to fracture healing and successful regeneration.
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The Early Fracture Hematoma and Its Potential Role in Fracture Healing

TL;DR: The regenerative fracture healing process and the close interplay between the skeletal and immune systems are summarized and a better understanding of immune reactions in the hematoma may have implications for bone tissue engineering strategies are discussed.
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A review of biomaterials in bone defect healing, remaining shortcomings and future opportunities for bone tissue engineering: The unsolved challenge.

TL;DR: This review aims to provide an overview on endogenous cascades of bone material formation and how these are transferred to new perspectives in biomaterial-driven approaches in bone regeneration.
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The need for transparency and good practices in the qPCR literature

Stephen A. Bustin, +83 more
- 01 Nov 2013 - 
TL;DR: Two surveys of over 1,700 publications whose authors use quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) reveal a lack of transparent and comprehensive reporting of essential technical information.
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Terminally Differentiated CD8+ T Cells Negatively Affect Bone Regeneration in Humans

TL;DR: The study revealed that delayed fracture healing significantly correlated with enhanced levels of terminally differentiated CD8+ effector memory T (TEMRA) cells (CD3+CD8+CD11a++CD28−CD57+ T cells) in peripheral blood.