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Nancy S. Peress

Researcher at Stony Brook University

Publications -  28
Citations -  1628

Nancy S. Peress is an academic researcher from Stony Brook University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Choroid plexus & Immunoglobulin G. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 28 publications receiving 1586 citations. Previous affiliations of Nancy S. Peress include University of Vermont.

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HIV-associated disease of the nervous system: review of nomenclature and proposal for neuropathology-based terminology.

TL;DR: Herbert Budka 1, Clayton A. Wiley 2, Paul Kleihues 3, Juan Artigas 4, Arthur K. Asbury 5, Eun-Sook Cho 6, David R. Cornblath 7, Mauro C. Dal Canto 8, Umberto DeGirolami 9, Dennis Dickson 10, Leon G. Epstein 11, Margaret M. Esiri 12, Felice Giangaspero 13, Georg Gosztonyi 14,
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Lewy bodies of Parkinson's disease contain neurofilament antigens.

TL;DR: Immunocytochemical reactions of Lewy bodies were examined with antisera to several filamentous proteins of the nervous system and positive reactions were found with those against neurofilaments, suggesting an abnormal organization of the neuronal cytoskeleton may be a pathological feature of Parkinson's disease.
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Biodistribution of boronophenylalanine in patients with glioblastoma multiforme: boron concentration correlates with tumor cellularity.

TL;DR: The tumor:blood 10B concentration ratio derived from this analysis provides a rationale for estimating the fraction of the radiation dose to viable tumor cells resulting from the boron neutron capture reaction based on measuredboron concentrations in the blood at the time of BNCT without the need for analysis of tumor samples from individual patients.
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Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 in spinal cords of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome patients with myelopathy: expression and replication in macrophages

TL;DR: A role for HIV-1-infected macrophages locally in the pathogenesis of vacuolar myelopathy is suggested and added to the body of evidence that these cells play a role systemically in the development of HIV- 1-related disease.