C
Chin Yen Tay
Researcher at University of Western Australia
Publications - 49
Citations - 1042
Chin Yen Tay is an academic researcher from University of Western Australia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Helicobacter pylori & Population. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 43 publications receiving 829 citations. Previous affiliations of Chin Yen Tay include University of New South Wales.
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Fucoidans Disrupt Adherence of Helicobacter pylori to AGS Cells In Vitro
TL;DR: Preliminary data to determine, in vitro, if fucoidans can inhibit the growth of H. pylori and its ability to adhere to gastric epithelial cells (AGS), and the basis for further studies on the clinical use of sulphated polysaccharides as complementary therapeutic agents are provided.
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Pertactin negative Bordetella pertussis demonstrates higher fitness under vaccine selection pressure in a mixed infection model
Azadeh Safarchi,Sophie Octavia,Laurence Don Wai Luu,Chin Yen Tay,Vitali Sintchenko,Nicholas Wood,Helen Marshall,Peter McIntyre,Ruiting Lan +8 more
TL;DR: An in vivo competition assay in mice immunised with ACV and in naïve (control) mice is used to compare the proportion of colonisation with recent clinical Prn positive and Prn negative B. pertussis strains from Australia, finding greater ability of Prnnegative strains to colonise ACV-immunised mice.
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Helicobacter pylori eradication in Western Australia using novel quadruple therapy combinations.
TL;DR: Helicobacter pylori eradication rates with standard triple therapy are declining worldwide, and new treatment combinations for antibiotic resistant H.pylori strains are required, especially for patients with penicillin allergy.
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Population structure of Helicobacter pylori among ethnic groups in Malaysia: recent acquisition of the bacterium by the Malay population.
TL;DR: The majority of the Malay and Indian H. pylori isolates share the same origin while the Malaysian Chinese H.pylori is distinctive, and statistical analysis allowed us to identify population segregation sites that divide the H. Pylori populations and the subpopulations.
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Dietary supplementation of black soldier fly (Hermetica illucens) meal modulates gut microbiota, innate immune response and health status of marron (Cherax cainii, Austin 2002) fed poultry-by-product and fishmeal based diets.
TL;DR: PBM + BSF diet proved to be a superior diet in terms of improved health status, gut microbiota and up-regulated expression of cytokine genes for marron culture.