He described the multifaceted Stormorken syndrome,[2] a mutations in f. VII, f. IX, Fibrinogen Oslo IV and V, all with clinical consequences.
Nearly thirty theses on different aspects emanated from the institute together with a host of single papers from its own staff and the many US and European visitors.
The most prominent of these was Holm Holmsen who made basic discoveries establishing platelets as secretory non-nucleated cells.
[3] Then, from 1980 to 1990, he was an assistant professor at Rikshospitalet, and from 1990 to 1995 he worked for the private company Nycomed, mainly within contrast media development.
In 1978–82, he was a member of several national and international committees and was visiting professor at Nobel Prize winner C. Heymans Institute in Ghent, Belgium and at The Temple University, Philadelphia.