J
John R. Ingram
Researcher at Cardiff University
Publications - 160
Citations - 3218
John R. Ingram is an academic researcher from Cardiff University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hidradenitis suppurativa & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 129 publications receiving 2129 citations. Previous affiliations of John R. Ingram include University Hospital of Wales & Cardiff and Vale University Health Board.
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Adalimumab vs Methotrexate for the Treatment of Chronic Plaque Psoriasis
TL;DR: This research presents a novel and scalable approach to regenerative medicine called “Smart Dermatology,” which aims to provide real-time information about the immune system’s response to topical corticosteroids.
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International collaboration and rapid harmonization across dermatologic COVID-19 registries.
Esther E. Freeman,Devon E. McMahon,George J. Hruza,Alan D. Irvine,Phyllis I. Spuls,Catherine H. Smith,Satveer K. Mahil,Leslie Castelo-Soccio,Kelly M. Cordoro,Irene Lara-Corrales,Haley B. Naik,Raed Alhusayen,John R. Ingram,Steven R. Feldman,Esther A. Balogh,Michael D. Kappelman,Dmitri Wall,Nekma Meah,Rodney Sinclair,Marie Beylot-Barry,Matthew Fitzgerald,Lars E. French,Henry W. Lim,Christopher E.M. Griffiths,Carsten Flohr +24 more
TL;DR: International Collaboration and Rapid Harmonization across Dermatologic COVID-19 Registries and J Am Acad Dermatol 2020.
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Comparative study of enema retention and preference in ulcerative colitis.
TL;DR: There was no significant difference in patient preference or overall duration of retention for the four enemas, including a nicotine enema, in patients with ulcerative colitis in a randomised order.
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Case reports in dermatology: loved by clinicians, loathed by editors, and occasionally important.
TL;DR: The BJD is unique among clinical dermatology journals for publishing basic and applied research of translational significance, and the best case reports should interest multiple stakeholders, particularly clinicians, clinical academics and skin scientists.
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Single-cell analysis implicates Th17 to Th2 cell plasticity in the pathogenesis of palmoplantar pustulosis.
Danielle McCluskey,Natashia Benzian-Olsson,Satveer K. Mahil,Nina Karoliina Hassi,Christian Wohnhaas,A. David Burden,Christopher E.M. Griffiths,John R. Ingram,Nick J. Levell,R Parslew,Andrew Pink,Nick J. Reynolds,Richard B. Warren,Sudha Visvanathan,Patrick Baum,Jonathan Barker,Catherine H. Smith,Francesca Capon +17 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors applied bulk and single-cell RNA sequencing (RNA-Seq) methods to the analysis of skin biopsy samples and peripheral blood mononuclear cells.