N
Naomi N. Gachanja
Researcher at University of Edinburgh
Publications - 3
Citations - 233
Naomi N. Gachanja is an academic researcher from University of Edinburgh. The author has contributed to research in topics: Inflammation & Macrophage. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 3 publications receiving 129 citations. Previous affiliations of Naomi N. Gachanja include Queen's University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Tissue-specific Immunopathology in Fatal COVID-19.
David A. Dorward,Clark D Russell,In Hwa Um,Mustafa Elshani,Stuart D. Armstrong,Rebekah Penrice-Randal,Tracey Millar,Chris E B Lerpiniere,Giulia Tagliavini,Catherine Hartley,Nadine Randle,Naomi N. Gachanja,Philippe M D Potey,Xiaofeng Dong,Alison M Anderson,Victoria L Campbell,Alasdair J Duguid,Wael Al Qsous,Ralph BouHaidar,J Kenneth Baillie,Kevin Dhaliwal,William A Wallace,Christopher Bellamy,Sandrine Prost,Colin Smith,Julian A. Hiscox,Julian A. Hiscox,Julian A. Hiscox,David J. Harrison,Christopher D. Lucas +29 more
TL;DR: Tissue-specific immunopathology occurs in COVID-19, implicating a significant component of the immune-mediated, virus-independent immunopathologic process as a primary mechanism in severe disease.
Posted ContentDOI
Tissue-specific tolerance in fatal Covid-19
David A. Dorward,Clark D Russell,In Hwa Um,Mustafa Elshani,Stuart D. Armstrong,Rebekah Penrice-Randal,Tracey Millar,Chrys Lerpiniere,Giulia Tagliavini,Catherine Hartley,Nadine Randle,Naomi N. Gachanja,Philippe M D Potey,Anderson Am,Campbell Vl,Duguid Aj,Wael Al Qsous,BouHaidar R,Baillie Jk,K. Dhaliwal,William Wallace,Christopher Bellamy,Sandrine Prost,Colin Smith,Julian A. Hiscox,David J. Harrison,Christopher D. Lucas +26 more
TL;DR: It is found that inflammation and organ dysfunction in fatal Covid-19 did not map to the widespread tissue and cellular distribution of SARS-CoV-2 RNA and protein, both between and within tissues.
Journal ArticleDOI
Epithelial Cells and Inflammation in Pulmonary Wound Repair.
Amanda Croasdell Lucchini,Naomi N. Gachanja,Adriano G. Rossi,David A. Dorward,Christopher D. Lucas +4 more
TL;DR: A recent review examines the pivotal role of pulmonary airway epithelial cells in initiating and moderating tissue repair and restitution as mentioned in this paper, highlighting that the lung has significant capacity to respond to injury by repairing and replacing damaged cells This occurs with the appropriate and timely resolution of inflammation and concurrent initiation of tissue repair programs.