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L. W. Poulter

Researcher at Royal Free Hospital

Publications -  38
Citations -  1463

L. W. Poulter is an academic researcher from Royal Free Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: T cell & Asthma. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 38 publications receiving 1443 citations.

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Activated, Cytotoxic CD8+ T Lymphocytes Contribute to the Pathology of Asthma Death

TL;DR: Novel evidence is provided of an aberrant CD8(+) T-cell population, possibly in response to viral infection in subjects who die of acute asthma, that is higher in the AD group than the control group.
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Lung immunopathology in cases of sudden asthma death

TL;DR: Sudden asphyxic asthma is associated with inflammatory infiltrates both of proximal and distal lung tissues, and this infiltrate contains large numbers of CD8+ T-cells, suggesting distinct qualitative as well as quantitative characteristics in the immunopathology of sudden asthma death.
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Allergen-induced Cytokine Production in Atopic Disease and Its Relationship to Disease Severity

TL;DR: In vitro allergen-induced cytokine production in atopic asthmatics correlated with symptomatic disease activity, and is aller gen-specific, is concluded.
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Lung function and immunopathological changes after inhaled corticosteroid therapy in asthma

TL;DR: Six patients with asthma, maintained on inhaled beta 2-agonists alone, were treated with inhaled corticosteroid for a period of three months, revealing a T-cell-dominated inflammation in the bronchial wall of all subjects and marked reductions observed in the overall numbers of T-lymphocytes, the number of CD45RO+ T-cells, and the numbers of macrophages with the phenotype of antigen presenting cells.
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Immunological/physiological relationships in asthma: potential regulation by lung macrophages.

TL;DR: The links between T-cell-mediated inflammation and bronchial hyperresponsiveness are identified, and a hypothesis for asthma pathogenesis in which the combination of immunological and physiological abnormalities may result in the promotion of disease is proposed.