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Brian R. Davidson

Researcher at University College London

Publications -  591
Citations -  24232

Brian R. Davidson is an academic researcher from University College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Liver transplantation & Transplantation. The author has an hindex of 75, co-authored 557 publications receiving 21214 citations. Previous affiliations of Brian R. Davidson include Royal Free Hospital & Leicester Royal Infirmary.

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Cost-effectiveness of preoperative biliary drainage for obstructive jaundice in pancreatic and periampullary cancer

TL;DR: There are significant cost savings to be gained by avoiding routine PBD in patients with resectable pancreatic and periampullary cancer where PBD is still routinely used in this context; this economic evidence should be used to support the clinical argument for a change in practice.
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The effect of circulating antigen and radiolabel stability on the biodistribution of an indium labelled antibody

TL;DR: The results have shown that successful antibody imaging can be carried out despite high levels of circulating antigen, that large doses of unlabelled antibody are required to prevent immune complex formation and that removal of non specifically bound 111In does not reduce the liver uptake of radioactivity.
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Dimensions of ecological validity for usability evaluations in clinical settings.

TL;DR: A case study on designing the evaluation of a novel device to support laparoscopic liver surgery is presented and seven primary dimensions of ecological validity encountered in clinical usability evaluations are identified.
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Performance of image guided navigation in laparoscopic liver surgery - A systematic review.

TL;DR: A systematic review of the state-of-the-art navigated image guidance systems (IGS) is presented in this paper, which provides an overview of their current capabilities and limitations.
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Invasive amoebiasis: an unusual presentation.

TL;DR: A 63 year old Asian woman who presented with three week's abdominal pain was found to have a hard right iliac fossa mass and rectal ulceration, and there are no previous reports of a paracaecal amoeboma with fistulae to either the appendix, or urinary bladder.