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Gloria Lim

Researcher at University of Toronto

Publications -  9
Citations -  592

Gloria Lim is an academic researcher from University of Toronto. The author has contributed to research in topics: Comparative genomic hybridization & Intensive care unit. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 9 publications receiving 340 citations.

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Effectiveness of therapeutic heparin versus prophylactic heparin on death, mechanical ventilation, or intensive care unit admission in moderately ill patients with covid-19 admitted to hospital: RAPID randomised clinical trial.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated the effects of therapeutic heparin compared with prophylactic hepharmin among moderately ill patients with covid-19 admitted to hospital wards.
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High-resolution mapping of amplifications and deletions in pediatric osteosarcoma by use of CGH analysis of cDNA microarrays.

TL;DR: Microarray CGH analysis of the chromosomal imbalances of OS confirm the overall pattern observed by use of metaphase CGH and provides a more precise refinement of the boundaries of genomic gains and losses that characterize this tumor.
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Defining a 0.5-Mb Region of Genomic Gain on Chromosome 6p22 in Bladder Cancer by Quantitative-Multiplex Polymerase Chain Reaction

TL;DR: These findings demonstrate the power of QM-PCR to narrow the regions identified by CGH to facilitate identifying specific candidate oncogenes and also represents the first study identifying DNA copy number increases for DEK in bladder cancer.
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Combined spectral karyotyping, multicolor banding, and microarray comparative genomic hybridization analysis provides a detailed characterization of complex structural chromosomal rearrangements associated with gene amplification in the osteosarcoma cell line MG-63.

TL;DR: In this article, spectral karyotyping (SKY), multicolor banding (mBAND) analysis, and microarray comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) were used to refine the analysis of chromosomes with amplifications and small intrachromosomal rearrangements such as inverted duplications and interstitial deletions present in the osteosarcoma cell line MG-63.