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Peter G. Gibson

Researcher at University of Newcastle

Publications -  774
Citations -  53254

Peter G. Gibson is an academic researcher from University of Newcastle. The author has contributed to research in topics: Asthma & Sputum. The author has an hindex of 103, co-authored 711 publications receiving 45722 citations. Previous affiliations of Peter G. Gibson include University of Sydney & National Health and Medical Research Council.

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Teaching old drugs new tricks: asthma therapy adjusted by patient perception or noninvasive markers.

TL;DR: Do three very different treatment approaches to asthma management constitute a new summer frock, working with and enhancing what the authors have, or are they more like cosmetic surgery, artificially covering a decay in asthma management that results from a mismatch between expectation and reality?
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What matters to people with severe asthma? Exploring add-on asthma medication and outcomes of importance

TL;DR: When trading off medication characteristics, the majority of patients with severe asthma chose the hypothetical medication with the best treatment efficacy, however, a subgroup of patients prioritised the medication's side-effect profile and mode of delivery to select their preferred medication.
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Airway Microbiome in Different Inflammatory Phenotypes of Asthma: A Cross-Sectional Study in Northeast China.

TL;DR: The diversity and composition of the airway microbiome was associated with the pathogenesis of asthma in different phenotypes from Northeast China and the diverse composition has been identified in the present study.
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Tackling asthma phenotypes in community studies

Peter G. Gibson
- 01 May 2009 - 
TL;DR: This approach integrates basic mechanisms with clinical asthma heterogeneity to yield endogenous asthma phenotypes, or “endotypes”, and it is possible to link the granulocyte response patterns to key immunological mechanisms, such as eosinophils with Th2 lymphocyte responses and neutrophils with dysfunctional innate immune responses.
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Involuntary glottal closure during inspiration in muscle tension dysphonia.

TL;DR: The purpose of this study was to examine respiratory function in a group of patients with muscle tension dysphonia (MTD) and found no significant differences in respiratory function between the groups of patients treated with and without MMD.