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Kjeld Møllgård

Researcher at University of Copenhagen

Publications -  141
Citations -  6211

Kjeld Møllgård is an academic researcher from University of Copenhagen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Choroid plexus & Cerebrospinal fluid. The author has an hindex of 45, co-authored 137 publications receiving 5518 citations. Previous affiliations of Kjeld Møllgård include University of Melbourne & Copenhagen University Hospital.

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Markers for blood-brain barrier integrity: how appropriate is Evans blue in the twenty-first century and what are the alternatives?

TL;DR: A combination of different sized, visualizable dextrans and radiolabeled molecules currently seems to be the most appropriate approach for qualitative and quantitative assessment of barrier integrity.
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The rights and wrongs of blood-brain barrier permeability studies: a walk through 100 years of history

TL;DR: Evidence for belief in immaturity of the blood-brain barrier has held the field back for decades, and evidence for this belief is of poor experimental quality, often misinterpreted and often not properly cited.
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The development of the human blood-brain and blood-CSF barriers.

TL;DR: The development of the human blood‐brain and blood‐CSF barriers is studied to establish barriers that block the flow of blood to the brain and CSF to cells inside the brain.
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Lack of correlation between tight junction morphology and permeability properties in developing choroid plexus.

TL;DR: An alternative approach is described here, in which the freeze-fracture technique has been used to study tight junctions of the sheep choroid plexus during foetal development, and the results obtained suggest that there is no change in the ultra-structural features of Tight junctions which have previously been suggested to correlate with transepithelial permeability, in spite of considerable changes in permeability.
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Monodelphis domestica (grey short-tailed opossum): an accessible model for studies of early neocortical development.

TL;DR: The general pattern of development of the characteristic layers of the immature neocortex and the subsequent development of a six-layered adult neocortex is similar to that found in eutherian species, however there are some differences.