M
Mark Weidenbecher
Researcher at Case Western Reserve University
Publications - 19
Citations - 721
Mark Weidenbecher is an academic researcher from Case Western Reserve University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Cartilage. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 15 publications receiving 537 citations. Previous affiliations of Mark Weidenbecher include University of Erlangen-Nuremberg.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Effects of olfactory training in patients with olfactory loss
TL;DR: The aim of this investigation was to determine whether patients with olfactory loss would benefit from “Training” with odors in terms of an improvement of their general Olfactory function and to produce both an improved sensitivity towards the odors used in the Training process and an overall increase of o aroma function.
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Internal carotid artery injury during functional endoscopic sinus surgery and its management.
TL;DR: Four cases with an ICA bleeding during sphenoidotomy are presented and an emergency plan to manage the heavy arterial bleeding is presented.
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Fabrication of a neotrachea using engineered cartilage.
TL;DR: This study investigated the feasibility of scaffold‐free cartilage to tissue engineer a vascularized neotrachea in rabbits and found that tissue engineered cartilage offered a solution to long‐segment tracheal stenosis.
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Upper Airway Stimulation for Obstructive Sleep Apnea: Results from the ADHERE Registry:
Maurits Boon,Colin Huntley,Armin Steffen,Joachim T. Maurer,J. Ulrich Sommer,Richard Schwab,Erica R. Thaler,Ryan J. Soose,Courtney Chou,Patrick J. Strollo,Eric J. Kezirian,Stanley H. Chia,Kirk Withrow,Mark Weidenbecher,Kingman P. Strohl,Karl Doghramji,Benedikt Hofauer,Clemens Heiser,Adhere Registry Investigators +18 more
TL;DR: Across a multi-institutional registry, UAS therapy demonstrates significant improvement in subjective and objective OSA outcomes, good therapy adherence, and high patient satisfaction.
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Scaffold-free tissue-engineered cartilage implants for laryngotracheal reconstruction.
TL;DR: This study investigated the feasibility of using autologous chondrocytes to tissue‐engineer scaffold‐free cartilage grafts for LTR in rabbits to avoid degradation that often arises from an inflammatory reaction to scaffold carrier matrix.