J
John M. Davison
Researcher at Newcastle University
Publications - 118
Citations - 4213
John M. Davison is an academic researcher from Newcastle University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pregnancy & Transplantation. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 103 publications receiving 3989 citations. Previous affiliations of John M. Davison include Royal Victoria Infirmary & Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Patients with recurrent falls attending Accident & Emergency benefit from multifactorial intervention—a randomised controlled trial
TL;DR: Multifactorial intervention is effective at reducing the fall burden in cognitively intact older persons with recurrent falls attending Accident & Emergency, but does not reduce the proportion of subjects still falling.
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Etiology of non-cystic fibrosis bronchiectasis in adults and its correlation to disease severity
Sara Lonni,James D. Chalmers,Pieter Goeminne,Melissa J. McDonnell,Melissa J. McDonnell,Katerina Dimakou,Anthony De Soyza,Anthony De Soyza,Eva Polverino,Charlotte Van De Kerkhove,Robert Rutherford,John M. Davison,Edmundo Rosales,Alberto Pesci,Marcos I. Restrepo,Antoni Torres,Stefano Aliberti +16 more
TL;DR: Physicians should not be guided by disease severity in suspecting specific etiologies in patients with bronchiectasis, although idiopathic bronchiECTasis appears to be less common in Patients with the most severe disease.
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Altered osmotic thresholds for vasopressin secretion and thirst in human pregnancy.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors found that the apparent osmotic threshold for AVP secretion was 6 mosmol/kg lower during than after gestation, and the Posmol at which the subject experienced a conscious desire to drink was lower in pregnant (287 +/- 1.6 mg/kg) compared with postpartum subjects (298 +/- 2.6mg/ kg).
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Chronic kidney disease in pregnancy.
TL;DR: Pregnant women with chronic renal disease adapt poorly to a gestational increase in renal blood flow and this may accelerate their decline in renal function and lead to a poor pregnancy outcome.
Journal ArticleDOI
New aspects in the pathophysiology of preeclampsia
John M. Davison,Volker Homuth,Arun Jeyabalan,Kirk P. Conrad,S. Ananth Karumanchi,Susan E. Quaggin,Ralf Dechend,Friedrich C. Luft +7 more
TL;DR: Preeclamptic women have high circulating levels of asymmetric dimethyl arginine that could account for the generalized endothelial dysfunction observed in preeclampsia, and novel autoantibodies that may serve to activate angiotensin receptors are brought forth, raising the possibility that the treatment of preeclampptic women will soon be improved.