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Michael T. Eadon

Researcher at Indiana University

Publications -  83
Citations -  1572

Michael T. Eadon is an academic researcher from Indiana University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Kidney disease. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 69 publications receiving 987 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael T. Eadon include Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis & Rush University Medical Center.

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TNF-mediated damage to glomerular endothelium is an important determinant of acute kidney injury in sepsis.

TL;DR: The findings confirm the important role of glomerular endothelial injury, possibly by a decreased VEGF level, in the development and progression of AKI and albuminuria in the LPS model of sepsis in the mouse.
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Rationale and design of the Kidney Precision Medicine Project

Ian H. de Boer, +181 more
- 01 Mar 2021 - 
TL;DR: The Kidney Precision Medicine Project (KMP) as discussed by the authors aims to ethically and safely obtain kidney biopsies from participants with chronic kidney disease (CKD) or acute kidney injury (AKI) and create a reference kidney atlas, and characterize disease subgroups to stratify patients based on molecular features of disease, clinical characteristics, and associated outcomes.
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Quantitative Three-Dimensional Tissue Cytometry to Study Kidney Tissue and Resident Immune Cells.

TL;DR: Volumetric Tissue Exploration and Analysis (VTEA) as mentioned in this paper is a 3D image analysis software designed for efficient exploration and quantitative analysis of large, complex 3D microscopy datasets.
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Ternary complex formation of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 Env, CD4, and chemokine receptor captured as an intermediate of membrane fusion.

TL;DR: As the time of cell coincubation at 23°C was prolonged, more cells quickly fused upon the raising of the temperature to 37°C, and the increase quantitatively correlated with the greater percentage of fusion that was resistant to drugs, therefore the pronounced kinetic delay in HIV Env-induced fusion is caused predominantly by the time needed for ternary complexes to form.