scispace - formally typeset
G

Glenda C. Gobe

Researcher at University of Queensland

Publications -  332
Citations -  13263

Glenda C. Gobe is an academic researcher from University of Queensland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Kidney & Kidney disease. The author has an hindex of 52, co-authored 313 publications receiving 11725 citations. Previous affiliations of Glenda C. Gobe include Princess Alexandra Hospital & Translational Research Institute.

Papers
More filters
Journal Article

Patterns of cell death.

TL;DR: Biochemically, there is distinctive internucleosome cleavage of DNA in apoptosis, which is quite different from the random DNA degradation observed in necrosis.
Book ChapterDOI

Anatomical methods in cell death

TL;DR: This chapter describes methods for studying the morphology of cell death and the criteria used in identifying apoptosis and necrosis and concludes that electron microscopy provides the most reliable method for recognizing the two processes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Internucleosomal DNA cleavage should not be the sole criterion for identifying apoptosis.

TL;DR: Evidence is presented that questions the validity of using DNA electrophoresis in isolation for identifying apoptosis.
Journal Article

Morphologic, biochemical, and molecular evidence of apoptosis during the reperfusion phase after brief periods of renal ischemia.

TL;DR: Application of these analytical techniques to renal vascular injury has distinguished that brief periods of complete ischemia initiates a form of cell death (apoptosis) during a subsequent reperfusion phase that is drastically different from cellular necrosis induced by prolonged severe ischemía.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oxidative stress, anti‐oxidant therapies and chronic kidney disease

TL;DR: There has been little effort to measure patient oxidative stress levels before the use of any anti‐oxidants therapies to optimize outcome, and the majority of studies investigating anti-oxidant treatments in CKD patients show a reduction in oxidative stress and many show improved renal function.