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Rita Gobet

Researcher at Boston Children's Hospital

Publications -  56
Citations -  1354

Rita Gobet is an academic researcher from Boston Children's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hypospadias & Vesicoureteral reflux. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 56 publications receiving 1151 citations. Previous affiliations of Rita Gobet include University of Zurich.

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The Pediatric Penile Perception Score: an instrument for patient self-assessment and surgeon evaluation after hypospadias repair.

TL;DR: The Pediatric Penile Perception Score is a reliable instrument to assess penile self-perception in children after hypospadias repair, and for appraisal of the surgical result by parents and uninvolved urologists.
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Cross-linking of the dermo-epidermal junction of skin regenerating from keratinocyte autografts. Anchoring fibrils are a target for tissue transglutaminase.

TL;DR: Tissue transglutaminase appears to play an important role not only in cross-linking of the papillary dermis but also of the dermo-epidermal junction in particular in regenerating skin.
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A bilayered hybrid microfibrous PLGA--acellular matrix scaffold for hollow organ tissue engineering.

TL;DR: A bilayered hybrid scaffold comprising unique traits of polymeric microfibers and naturally derived acellular matrices holds potential for engineering of bladder and other hollow organs.
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Fibrillin and Elastin Expression in Skin Regenerating From Cultured Keratinocyte Autografts: Morphogenesis of Microfibrils Begins At the Dermo-epidermal Junction and Precedes Elastic Fiber Formation

TL;DR: It is suggested that the cutaneous microfibrillar apparatus develops simultaneously at both the dermo-epidermal junction and the reticular dermis and is a prerequisite for elastic fiber formation and in addition, it might be a driving force for the formation of the papilla-rete ridge pattern.
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Engineering functional bladder tissues

TL;DR: The combination of smart scaffolds with controlled topography, the ability to deliver multiple trophic factors and an optimal cell source will allow for the engineering of functional bladder tissues in the near future.