Martin J. C. van Gemert
University of Amsterdam
149 Papers
1.8K Citations
Martin J. C. van Gemert is an academic researcher from University of Amsterdam. The author has contributed to research in topics: Laser & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 146 publications. Previous affiliations of Martin J. C. van Gemert include University of Texas at Austin & St. Joseph Hospital.
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Papers
Acardiac twin pregnancies part II: Fetal risk of chorangioma and sacrococcygeal teratoma predicted by pump/acardiac umbilical vein diameters.
Martin J. C. van Gemert,Peter G. J. Nikkels,K. Marieke Paarlberg,Jeroen P. H. M. van den Wijngaard,Helena M. Gardiner +4 more
TL;DR: Risk prediction of these rare fetal tumors may be possible based on application of data on excess cardiac output fractions from pump/acardiac UVD ratios and will require future clinical validation.
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Arterio-venous flow between monochorionic twins determined during intra-uterine transfusion.
Martin J. C. van Gemert,Jeroen P. H. M. van den Wijngaard,Enrico Lopriore,Suzanne A. Pasman,Frank P.H.A. Vandenbussche +4 more
TL;DR: Because incomplete laser therapy occurs frequently, and some cases require an intra-uterine transfusion, this method may allow collecting a wealth of net inter-twin flow data from clinicians involved in laser therapy of TTTS.
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Discordant fetal growth patterns in monochorionic twin pregnancies described by simple algebraic relations
TL;DR: The simple algebraic relations derived to identify trends of fetal discordant growth show evidence that clinical TTTS and non-TTTS manifestations are quantifiable and may contribute to future risk stratification in monochorionic twin pregnancies.
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Pediatric Condition Falsification Misdiagnosed by Misjudged Weight Growth from the Curve of Measured Weights.
Martin J. C. van Gemert,Marianne Vlaming,Eric Osinga,Cornelis M. A. Bruijninckx,H. A. Martino Neumann,Pieter J. J. Sauer +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, a boy, 3.18 kg birthweight (P25 curve), lost weight between age 56 to120 days and his pediatrician continuously interpreted his low weight as insufficient growth, despite prescribing 3 times the normal caloric intake, concluded that the mother purposely malnourished her son, diagnosed PCF, and the boy was separated from his family (days 502-755 of age).
Thrombosis of anastomoses may affect the staging sequence of twin-twin transfusion syndrome.
TL;DR: The results suggest that rapid alterations in the net inter-twin transfusion, e.g. due to thrombosis of placental anastomoses, may produce a different staging sequence than in TTTS caused by chronic inter- TWS, and aid an improved knowledge of TTTS pathophysiology under conditions of a rapidly changing cardiovascular function.
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