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Matthew B. Grisham

Researcher at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

Publications -  351
Citations -  30238

Matthew B. Grisham is an academic researcher from Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nitric oxide & Colitis. The author has an hindex of 92, co-authored 349 publications receiving 29002 citations. Previous affiliations of Matthew B. Grisham include University Medical Center New Orleans & LSU Health Sciences Center New Orleans.

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Zymosan-induced bacterial translocation: a study of mechanisms.

TL;DR: Zymosan-induced intestinal mucosal injury and bacterial translocation do not require complement activation, or the release of macrophage or mast cell products and appear to be mediated by xanthine oxidase-generated products and associated with disruption of the normal ileal and hepatic oxidant-antioxidant balance.
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5-Aminosalicylic acid concentration in mucosal interstitium of cat small and large intestine.

TL;DR: The results of this study suggest that the mucosal interstitial concentration of 5-ASA in the terminal ileum and colon are approximately 100 μg/ml (654 μM) and 20 μg/ML (164 μM), respectively; and the rate of 5 -ASA absorption is approximately seven times greater than that in the colon.
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Splenectomy attenuates streptococcal cell wall-induced arthritis and alters leukocyte activation.

TL;DR: The result of splenectomy was attenuation of SCW-induced arthritis and changes in mediators of inflammation, including T cell subsets, proinflammatory cytokines, and NO production.
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Induction of Foxp3-Expressing Regulatory T-Cells by Donor Blood Transfusion Is Required for Tolerance to Rat Liver Allografts

TL;DR: It is concluded that preoperative DST, in the absence of liver allograft transplantation, induces the formation of CD4+ T-cells that are not themselves Tregs but give rise directly or indirectly to fully functionalCD4+CD45RC−Foxp3+Tregs when transferred into MHC mismatched recipients prior to LTx.
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Granulocyte turnover in the feline intestine.

TL;DR: The results of this study indicate that the average life-span of resident granulocytes varies significantly between different regions of the gastrointestinal tract, with the intestinal mucosa exhibiting at1/2 comparable to that previously reported for circulating feline neutrophils.