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Gael E. Phillips

Researcher at Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital

Publications -  24
Citations -  701

Gael E. Phillips is an academic researcher from Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Scars & Burn injury. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 24 publications receiving 629 citations. Previous affiliations of Gael E. Phillips include University of Queensland & Boston Children's Hospital.

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Leiomyosarcoma of the saphenous vein in a child with 12-year follow-up

TL;DR: The case of a 2-year-old girl who underwent three local excisions with two courses of adjuvant chemotherapy over 3 years for a leiomyosarcoma of a saphenous vein tributary has shown no evidence of further recurrence or metastases suggesting that cure has been achieved.

A randomised controlled trial of amniotic membrane in the treatment of a standardised burn injury in the merino lamb

TL;DR: This study provides the first laboratory evidence that AM may reduce scar formation after burn injury, and results in reduced scar tissue as assessed histopathologically and reduced alpha-smooth muscle actin (alphaSMA) content.
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A randomised controlled trial of amniotic membrane in the treatment of a standardised burn injury in the merino lamb.

TL;DR: In this paper, Amniotic membrane (AM) is used as a dressing in thermal injuries, which has been shown to reduce scar formation after deep dermal burn wound in lambs.
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Conjunctival myxoma – atypical presentation of a rare tumour: case report and review of literature

TL;DR: This case of conjunctival myxoma adds to the small number of documented cases, by demonstrating an atypical presentation, and emphasises the importance of excisional biopsies for diagnosing indeterminate conjunctive lesions.

The optimal temperature of first aid treatment for partial thickness burn injuries

TL;DR: Evidence is provided to support the current first aid guidelines of cold tap water for 20 minutes as being beneficial in helping to heal the burn wound and that colder water at 2 °C is also beneficial.