J
John T. Sinnott
Researcher at University of South Florida
Publications - 100
Citations - 1044
John T. Sinnott is an academic researcher from University of South Florida. The author has contributed to research in topics: Transplantation & Heart transplantation. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 99 publications receiving 928 citations. Previous affiliations of John T. Sinnott include University of Texas at Austin & Tampa General Hospital.
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Journal Article
Lipodystrophy and dyslipidemia among patients taking first-line, World Health Organization-recommended highly active antiretroviral therapy regimens in Western India.
Sanjay Pujari,Ameet Dravid,Eknath Naik,Shobha Bhagat,Kaley Tash,Jeffrey P. Nadler,John T. Sinnott +6 more
TL;DR: There is a high prevalence of lipodystrophy, dyslipidemia, and hyperglycemia in patients taking long-term WHO-recommended generic HAART regimens in western India, and interventions to address these complications need to be incorporated into antiretroviral scale-up programs.
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Editorial NeuroAIDS review
Paul Shapshak,Pandjassarame Kangueane,Robert K. Fujimura,Deborah Commins,Francesco Chiappelli,Elyse J. Singer,Andrew J. Levine,Alireza Minagar,Francis J. Novembre,Charurut Somboonwit,Avindra Nath,John T. Sinnott +11 more
TL;DR: Highlights from the spectrum of NeuroAIDS research predominantly related to human immunodeficiency virus-1 clade B (HIV-1B) are reviewed below.
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Respiratory syncytial virus.
TL;DR: Respiratory syncytial virus is the most important cause of lower respiratory tract infection in outpatients, as well as the major viral cause of nosocomial illness in pediatric inpatients.
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Rapidly Progressive Herpetic Retinal Necrosis: A Blinding Disease Characteristic of Advanced AIDS
L. David Ormerod,Julie A. Larkin,Curtis A. Margo,Peter R. Pavan,Matthew M. Menosky,Daniel O. Haight,Jeffrey P. Nadler,Bienvenido G. Yangco,Scott M. Friedman,Robert M. Schwartz,John T. Sinnott +10 more
TL;DR: Combined intravenous and intravitreal therapy with foscarnet and ganciclovir may be the best current management and research advances are needed urgently.
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The Detection of Airborne Mycobacterium tuberculosis Using Micropore Membrane Air Sampling and Polymerase Chain Reaction
Stephen M. Mastorides,Richard L. Oehler,John N. Greene,John T. Sinnott,Michael Kranik,Ramon L. Sandin +5 more
TL;DR: The preliminary findings indicate that the technique of Micropore membrane air sampling with PCR analysis has important applications in the epidemiology and diagnosis of MTb.