Marie Krantz
Boston Children's Hospital
18 Papers
131 Citations
Marie Krantz is an academic researcher from Boston Children's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Transplantation & Liver transplantation. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 18 publications. Previous affiliations of Marie Krantz include University of Gothenburg.
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Papers
The essence of living parental liver donation--donors' lived experiences of donation to their children.
TL;DR: The essence of living parental liver donation was found to be the struggle for holistic confirmation, the total lack of choice, facing the fear of death and the transition from health to illness.
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Transplanted children's experiences of daily living: children's narratives about their lives following transplantation.
TL;DR: The aim of the present study was to illuminate the meaning of transplanted children's experiences of daily living and to optimize the outcome and quality of life after organ transplantation in children.
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Stable long-term renal function after pediatric liver transplantation.
Gustaf Herlenius,Sverker Hansson,Marie Krantz,Michael Olausson,Carola Kullberg-Lindh,Styrbjörn Friman +5 more
TL;DR: Stable long‐term renal function after pediatric liver transplantation after Pediatr Transplantation 2010.
21
Chronic kidney disease--a common and serious complication after intestinal transplantation.
Gustaf Herlenius,Mattias Fägerlind,Marie Krantz,Johan Mölne,Michael Olausson,Markus Gäbel,Vanda Friman,Mihai Oltean,Styrbjörn Friman +8 more
TL;DR: Measurements of glomerular filtration rate may help to identify those individuals at risk for developing chronic kidney disease to implement renal sparing strategies and consistently overestimated GFR by approximately 30% compared with measured GFR.
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Histologic activity of childhood chronic hepatitis B related to viremia levels, genotypes, mutations, and epidemiologic factors.
TL;DR: Severe HBeAg-negative hepatitis with high HBV DNA levels and mutations in the core promoter or precore regions seems to be less common in children than in adults, and C-1858 strains may be more pathogenic.
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