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Angela Wade
Researcher at UCL Institute of Child Health
Publications - 67
Citations - 5189
Angela Wade is an academic researcher from UCL Institute of Child Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Spirometry. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 67 publications receiving 4802 citations. Previous affiliations of Angela Wade include Great Ormond Street Hospital & Boston Children's Hospital.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Fgf2 is expressed in human and murine embryonic choroid plexus and affects choroid plexus epithelial cell behaviour
TL;DR: Fgf2 expression early in the development of both human and rodent choroid plexus, and its ability to modulate behaviour and gene expression in CPe, supports the view that Fgf signalling plays a role in the maintenance of integrity and function of this specialized epithelium, and that this role is conserved between rodents and humans.
Journal Article
Community HIV/AIDS teams.
TL;DR: The findings of this study should assist doctors and nurses caring for patients with HIV and AIDS related illnesses in the community, and provide valuable data for service planners.
Exploring ethnic differences in lung function: the Size and Lung function In Children (SLIC) study protocol and feasibility
Sooky Lum,Samatha Sonnappa,Angela Wade,Seeromanie Harding,Jonathan C. K. Wells,P Trelevan,Tim J Cole,Chris Griffiths,Frank Kelly,Rachel Bonner,Bountziouka,Jane Kirkby,Simon Lee,Emma Raywood,Sarah Legg,Dave Sears,Janet Stocks +16 more
TL;DR: This is the first study to demonstrate the feasibility (in terms of consent and success rate) of undertaking complex physiological assessments within the school environment in children as young as 5 years of age, including those for DNA.
Journal ArticleDOI
Population-specific reference equations?
TL;DR: The authors demonstrate potentially important population differences, which call into question the application of ethnicity-specific reference equations in respiratory medicine, and believe it is likely that much of the population heterogeneity is likely to be based on ethnicity.
Journal ArticleDOI
Prevention of Morbidity in Sickle Cell Disease (POMS2a)—overnight auto-adjusting continuous positive airway pressure compared with nocturnal oxygen therapy: a randomised crossover pilot study examining patient preference and safety in adults and children
Jo Howard,Sophie A. Lee,Baba Inusa,Man Ying Edith Cheng,Cheema Bavenjit,Isabel Reading,Sally Ann Wakeford,Johanna Gavlak,Patrick B. Murphy,Nicholas Hart,Atul Gupta,Sati Sahota,Eufemia Jacob,Maria Chorozoglou,Carol Ossai,Maureen Gwam,Fenella J. Kirkham,Fenella J. Kirkham,Angela Wade,Christina Liossi,Christina Liossi +20 more
TL;DR: There was no difference in haematology or pulmonary function or evidence that pain was worse during or in washout after APAP, and it was decided to proceed with a Phase II trial of 6 months APAP versus standard care with further safety monitoring for bone marrow suppression and pain.