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A. Graham Pockley

Researcher at Nottingham Trent University

Publications -  65
Citations -  3197

A. Graham Pockley is an academic researcher from Nottingham Trent University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Heat shock protein & Immunotherapy. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 65 publications receiving 2459 citations. Previous affiliations of A. Graham Pockley include University of Nottingham & Technische Universität München.

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Guidelines for the use of flow cytometry and cell sorting in immunological studies (second edition)

Andrea Cossarizza, +462 more
TL;DR: These guidelines are a consensus work of a considerable number of members of the immunology and flow cytometry community providing the theory and key practical aspects offlow cytometry enabling immunologists to avoid the common errors that often undermine immunological data.
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Guidelines for the use of flow cytometry and cell sorting in immunological studies

Andrea Cossarizza, +246 more
TL;DR: A rapid search in PubMed shows that using "flow cytometry immunology" as a search term yields more than 68 000 articles, the first of which is not about lymphocytes as mentioned in this paper.
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Risk factors for cardiovascular disease in patients with periodontitis

TL;DR: Serological differences in subjects with periodontitis, some of which involve established risk factors for atherosclerosis, might provide insight into the reported epidemiological association betweenperiodontitis and cardiovascular disease.
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Influence of opioids on immune function in patients with cancer pain: from bench to bedside

TL;DR: There is a potential association between systemic opioid administration and shorter survival in cancer patients with a prognosis of months to years, but studies have not been designed to primarily assess survival, as a consequence of which causality cannot be apportioned.
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Molecular chaperones and protein-folding catalysts as intercellular signaling regulators in immunity and inflammation.

TL;DR: It is proposed that molecular chaperones and protein‐folding catalysts are “moonlighting” proteins that function as homeostatic immune regulators but may also under certain circumstances, contribute to tissue pathology.