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Mark S. Granick

Researcher at Rutgers University

Publications -  211
Citations -  4816

Mark S. Granick is an academic researcher from Rutgers University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Trauma center & Skull fracture. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 206 publications receiving 4090 citations. Previous affiliations of Mark S. Granick include University of Pittsburgh & Medical College of Wisconsin.

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Telomeres shorten at equivalent rates in somatic tissues of adults

TL;DR: It is inferred that differences in telomere length between proliferative and minimally proliferative tissues (muscle and fat) are established during early life, and that in adulthood, stem cells of the four tissues replicate at a similar rate.
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Wound Dressings and Comparative Effectiveness Data.

TL;DR: The point of using advanced dressings is to improve upon specific wound characteristics to bring it as close to "ideal" as possible, and it is only after properly assessing the wound characteristics and obtaining knowledge about available products that the "ideals" dressing may be chosen.
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Necrotising fasciitis of upper and lower limb: A systematic review

TL;DR: This systematic review of necrotising fasciitis of the upper and lower extremities reports on the clinical characteristics, the predisposing factors, the associated diseases, the pathogenic bacteria, the surgical treatment and the final outcome in terms of limb loss and mortality.
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Toward a common language: surgical wound bed preparation and debridement.

TL;DR: How wound bed preparation has added to the authors' understanding of the pathophysiology of the nonhealing wound and has provided us with some general clinical concepts and the importance of surgical debridement in tissue preservation and the control of infection is discussed.
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The efficacy of negative pressure wound therapy in the management of lower extremity trauma: review of clinical evidence.

TL;DR: The existing clinical evidence justifies its application in lower limb injuries associated with soft tissue trauma and it was comparable to the standard dressing and wound coverage methods.