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Andrew G. Nicholson
Researcher at National Institutes of Health
Publications - 512
Citations - 87875
Andrew G. Nicholson is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Lung cancer & Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. The author has an hindex of 113, co-authored 477 publications receiving 73860 citations. Previous affiliations of Andrew G. Nicholson include National Yang-Ming University & University College London.
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Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis A Composite Physiologic Index Derived from Disease Extent Observed by
Athol U. Wells,Sujal R. Desai,Michael B. Rubens,Nicole S L Goh,Derek Cramer,Andrew G. Nicholson,Thomas V. Colby,David M. Hansell +7 more
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Pulmonary hyalinising granuloma: A rare cause of multiple lung nodules in lung cancer clinic.
TL;DR: A case of Pulmonary Hyalinising Granuloma presenting with mild to moderate FDG positive nodules in an individual with a high risk of cancer is reported.
Journal Article
Interobserver variation in the classification of thymic lesions including biopsies and resection specimens in an international digital microscopy panel
J. Wolf,J. Wolf,Hans Blaauwgeers,Alexander Marx,F. van Nederveen,Andrew G. Nicholson,Anja C. Roden,P. Stroebel,Wim Timens,A. Weissferdt,J.H. von der Thusen,M A den Bakker +11 more
TL;DR: This study investigated the reproducibility of the WHO classification among a large group of international pathologists with expertise in thymic pathology and by using whole slide imaging to facilitate rapid diagnostic turnover.
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Successful treatment of progressive diffuse PEComatosis
Kay Lawson,Toby M. Maher,Toby M. Maher,David M. Hansell,David M. Hansell,Andrew G. Nicholson,Andrew G. Nicholson +6 more
TL;DR: A 43-yr-old, nonsmoking female undergoing gynaecological surgery for menorrhagia was noted to have reduced arterial oxygen saturation and, on direct questioning, reported longstanding, mild, exercise-limiting dyspnoea; following clinicopathological review, it was felt that the lack of imaging features characteristic of LAM, the loss of S-100 positivity characteristic of a …
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Exercise-induced haemoptysis: a thoroughbred cause?
TL;DR: The authors report a novel case of exercise-induced haemoptysis with an unexpected underlying pathology and provides a pragmatic overview of the diagnosis and management of the pulmonary vein stenosis.