Marc Hartert
University of Mainz
6 Papers
42 Citations
Marc Hartert is an academic researcher from University of Mainz. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cardiothoracic surgery & Organ transplantation. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 6 publications.
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Papers
Contemporary spinal cord protection during thoracic and thoracoabdominal aortic surgery and endovascular aortic repair: a position paper of the vascular domain of the European Association for Cardio-Thoracic Surgery
Christian D. Etz,Ernst Weigang,Marc Hartert,Lars Lönn,Carlos A. Mestres,Roberto Di Bartolomeo,Jean Bachet,Thierry Carrel,Martin Grabenwöger,Marc A.A.M. Schepens,Martin Czerny,Martin Czerny +11 more
TL;DR: This study is meant to support physicians caring for patients in need of any kind of thoracic or thoracoabdominal aortic repair in decision-making algorithms in order to understand, prevent or reverse ischaemic SCI.
268
A follicular dendritic cell sarcoma of the mediastinum with immature T cells and association with myasthenia gravis.
Marc Hartert,Philipp Ströbel,Manfred Dahm,Wilfred Nix,Alexander Marx,Christian-Friedrich Vahl +5 more
TL;DR: A case of an FDC tumor of the mediastinum associated with paraneoplastic myasthenia gravis in a 39-year-old man, which contained a major proportion of immature T cells, which may be connected to this patient's very unusual clinical presentation with autoimmune phenomena.
29
Cross-Clamping a Porcelain Aorta: An Alternative Technique for High-Risk Patients.
Marc Hartert,Lars Oliver Conzelmann,Uwe Mehlhorn,Nalan Schnelle,Christian Werner,Christian-Friedrich Vahl +5 more
TL;DR: Cross-clamping with "open proximal ascending aorta" is effective and the incidence of stroke and systemic embolization in patients with porcelain aortA is low compared to literature.
8
Impact of previous cardiovascular surgery on postoperative morbidity and mortality after major pulmonary resection for non-small cell lung cancer.
TL;DR: Major pulmonary resections for NSCLC can be performed safely in patients with previous cardiovascular surgical history who are fulfilling the common cardiopulmonary criteria of operability, and Operative risk in this subpopulation is comparable to that in patients without cardiovascular comorbidity.
6
Minimum cause - maximum effect: the travelogue of a bullet
TL;DR: This case report illustrates that the management of even minimum gunshot wounds requires a maximum variety of surgical skills.