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Norbert Nemeth

Researcher at University of Debrecen

Publications -  138
Citations -  1901

Norbert Nemeth is an academic researcher from University of Debrecen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Erythrocyte deformability & Hematocrit. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 132 publications receiving 1632 citations. Previous affiliations of Norbert Nemeth include Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg.

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New guidelines for hemorheological laboratory techniques

TL;DR: This document, supported by both the International Society for clinical Hemorheology and the European Society for Clinical HemorHeology and Microcirculation, proposes new guidelines for hemorheology.
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Parameterization of red blood cell elongation index--shear stress curves obtained by ektacytometry.

TL;DR: In this article, two approaches have been proposed to calculate the maximal RBC elongation index (EImax) and the shear stress required for one-half of this maximal deformation (SS1/2): linear Lineweaver-Burke (LB) model and Streekstra-Bronkhorst (SB) model.
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Comparison of three commercially available ektacytometers with different shearing geometries

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared three ektacytometer instruments for measuring deformability of red blood cells (RBC): LORCA (Laser-assisted Optical Rotational Cell Analyzer), Rheodyn SSD (Myrenne GmbH, Roetgen, Germany) and RheoScan-D (RheoMeditech, Seoul, Korea).
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Effects of storage duration and temperature of human blood on red cell deformability and aggregation

TL;DR: Results indicate that for normal blood, RBC deformability over 0.3-50 Pa is stable up to six hours regardless of storage temperature, but should be limited to four hours for RBC aggregation; storage at 4 degrees C may prolong the storage period up to 12 hours for aggregation but not deformability measurements.
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Comparison of three instruments for measuring red blood cell aggregation.

TL;DR: The International Society for Clinical Hemorheology organized a workshop to compare three instruments for measuring RBC aggregation: LORCA, Myrenne Aggregometer and RheoScan-A as discussed by the authors.