H
Harry B. Greenberg
Researcher at Stanford University
Publications - 441
Citations - 36848
Harry B. Greenberg is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Rotavirus & Virus. The author has an hindex of 100, co-authored 433 publications receiving 34941 citations. Previous affiliations of Harry B. Greenberg include Baylor College of Medicine & United States Department of Commerce.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Phenotypic and functional status of intrahepatic T cells in chronic hepatitis C.
Jinhui Wang,Jinhui Wang,Tyson H. Holmes,Laura Ladron de Guevara,Ramsey Cheung,Teresa L. Wright,Xiao-Song He,Harry B. Greenberg +7 more
TL;DR: The percentage of intrahepatic CD45RO+ and CD28+ T cells correlated with the degree of liver inflammation, which suggests that memory T cells at relatively early stages of differentiation are directly involved in liver inflammation.
Journal ArticleDOI
Reconciliation of Rotavirus Temperature-Sensitive Mutant Collections and Assignment of Reassortment Groups D, J, and K to Genome Segments
TL;DR: Rotavirus ts mutation groups are now mapped to 9 of the 11 rotavirus genome segments, and possible segment locations of the two remaining unmapped ts mutant groups are discussed.
Book ChapterDOI
25 – Development of a Mucosal Rotavirus Vaccine
Margaret E. Conner,Mary K. Estes,Paul A. Offit,H Fred Clark,Manuel A. Franco,Ningguo Feng,Harry B. Greenberg +6 more
Journal ArticleDOI
Identification and Characterization at the Single-Cell Level of Cytokine-Producing Circulating Cells in Children With Dengue.
Federico Perdomo-Celis,Felipe Romero,Doris M. Salgado,Rocío Vega,Jairo A. Rodríguez,Juana Angel,Manuel A. Franco,Harry B. Greenberg,Carlos F. Narváez +8 more
TL;DR: CPCCs could be a new immune parameter with potential use to evaluate pathogenesis in dengue virus infection ranging clinically from mild to severe disease.
Journal Article
Hepatitis G virus infection in hemodialysis patients and the effects of interferon treatment.
F Umlauft,D T Wong,Peter A. Underhill,Peter J. Oefner,L Jin,Martina Urbanek,K Gruenewald,Harry B. Greenberg +7 more
TL;DR: The data suggest that HCV-infected hemodialysis patients are at substantial risk of acquiring HGV infection and that HGV infections are prevalent in this population, and thatHGV infections become chronic but are responsive to interferon treatment.