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Kelly A. Richardson

Researcher at Vanderbilt University

Publications -  6
Citations -  137

Kelly A. Richardson is an academic researcher from Vanderbilt University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 4 publications receiving 84 citations.

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Inorganic Complexes and Metal-Based Nanomaterials for Infectious Disease Diagnostics.

TL;DR: This review of works from the past 20 years in which inorganic chemistry and nanotechnology were implemented in each of the core components that make up a diagnostic test highlights the detection of nucleic acids at the point of care as an emerging application of inorganic Chemistry.
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Low-Resource Nucleic Acid Extraction Method Enabled by High-Gradient Magnetic Separation.

TL;DR: This HGMS-enabled extraction method provides a robust instrument-free method for magnetic bead-based nucleic acids extraction, potentially suitable for field implementation of nucleic acid testing.
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Magnetically-enabled biomarker extraction and delivery system: towards integrated ASSURED diagnostic tools

TL;DR: A field deployable Magnetically-enabled Biomarker Extraction And Delivery System (mBEADS) that significantly improves limits of detection for several commercially available LFAs and balances sensitivity and practicality to align with the World Health Organization's ASSURED criteria for point-of-care (POC) testing.
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Rapid concentration and elution of malarial antigen histidine-rich protein II using solid phase Zn(II) resin in a simple flow-through pipette tip format

TL;DR: In this study, a flow-through pipette-based column was explored as a cost-effective means to capture and elute more Plasmodium falciparum histidine-rich protein II (HRPII) antigen, concentrating the biomarker available in large-volume lysed whole blood samples into volumes compatible with Plas modium falCIParum-specific RDTs.
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Ultraviolet light oxidation of fresh hemoglobin eliminates aggregate formation seen in commercially sourced hemoglobin.

TL;DR: In this paper , the appearance of dense cytoplasmic aggregates (CAgg) over time was observed in human endothelial cells with commercially sourced ferric hemoglobin and the CAgg were intensely autofluorescent, altered intracellular structures, formed in multiple cell types and with different media composition, and formed regardless of the presence or absence of cells.