C
C.E. Garner
Researcher at Bristol Royal Infirmary
Publications - 7
Citations - 615
C.E. Garner is an academic researcher from Bristol Royal Infirmary. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dimethyl disulfide & Campylobacter. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 7 publications receiving 542 citations. Previous affiliations of C.E. Garner include University of the West of England.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Volatile organic compounds from feces and their potential for diagnosis of gastrointestinal disease
C.E. Garner,S. Smith,B P J de Lacy Costello,Paul D. White,R. Spencer,Chris Probert,Norman M. Ratcliffe +6 more
TL;DR: Findings in this work could lead the way to the development of a rapid diagnostic device based on VOC detection for gastrointestinal disease diagnosis.
Journal ArticleDOI
Analysis of faecal volatile organic compounds in preterm infants who develop necrotising enterocolitis: a pilot study.
C.E. Garner,Andrew K Ewer,Kalifa Elasouad,Francis Power,Rosemary Greenwood,Norman M. Ratcliffe,Ben de Lacy Costello,Chris Probert +7 more
TL;DR: This pilot study shows that VOC extraction from faeces may be used to identify infants that are at risk of developing NEC.
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A pilot study of faecal volatile organic compounds in faeces from cholera patients in Bangladesh to determine their utility in disease diagnosis.
TL;DR: The volatile organic compounds in faecal samples collected from cholera patients in Bangladesh to determine biomarkers that could be used for disease diagnosis were analyzed and a biomarker was identified.
Journal ArticleDOI
An analysis of volatiles in the headspace of the faeces of neonates
B P J de Lacy Costello,Richard J. Ewen,Andrew K Ewer,C.E. Garner,Chris Probert,Norman M. Ratcliffe,S. Smith +6 more
TL;DR: A gas chromatography/mass spectrometry analysis of the headspace from the faeces of neonates was undertaken to record the volatiles associated with preterm babies on a neonatal unit, and 2-Ethyl-1-hexanol was considerably more abundant in the neonate stool compared to adult stool, and probably reflects high exposure to plastic materials containing plasticizers.
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Towards point of care testing for C. difficile infection by volatile profiling, using the combination of a short multi-capillary gas chromatography column with metal oxide sensor detection
N D McGuire,Richard J. Ewen,B P J de Lacy Costello,C.E. Garner,Chris Probert,K Vaughan,Norman M. Ratcliffe +6 more
TL;DR: Rapid volatile profiling of stool sample headspace was achieved using a combination of short multi-capillary chromatography column (SMCC), highly sensitive heated metal oxide semiconductor (MOS) sensor and artificial neural network (ANN) software.