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Robert McKenna

Researcher at University of Florida

Publications -  481
Citations -  23708

Robert McKenna is an academic researcher from University of Florida. The author has contributed to research in topics: Carbonic anhydrase & Carbonic anhydrase II. The author has an hindex of 78, co-authored 457 publications receiving 21349 citations. Previous affiliations of Robert McKenna include University of South Carolina & Florida State University College of Arts and Sciences.

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Surgical resection of stage IIIA and stage IIIB non-small-cell lung cancer after concurrent induction chemoradiotherapy. A Southwest Oncology Group trial.

TL;DR: This combined modality therapy has been well tolerated and has been associated with high response and resectability rates in both stage IIIA and stage IIIB non-small-cell lung cancer, providing a firm basis for subsequent phase III clinical trials.
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Video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery lobectomy at 20 years: A consensus statement

Tristan D. Yan, +54 more
TL;DR: The present Consensus Statement represents a collective agreement among 50 international experts to establish a standardized practice of VATS lobectomy for the thoracic surgical community after 20 years of clinical experience.
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Is lobectomy by video-assisted thoracic surgery an adequate cancer operation?

TL;DR: The VATS lobectomy for bronchogenic carcinoma appears to be a safe operation, with the same survival as expected for a lobectomy done by thoracotomy.
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Structural annotation of human carbonic anhydrases

TL;DR: The favourable properties of hCA II such as fast kinetics, easy expression and purification, high solubility and intermediate heat resistance have made it an attractive candidate for numerous industrial applications.
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Structurally mapping the diverse phenotype of adeno-associated virus serotype 4

TL;DR: The crystal structure of AAV serotype 4 (AAV4), one of the most diverse serotypes with respect to capsid protein sequence and antigenic reactivity, is determined, and differences in loop topologies at subunit interfaces are consistent with the inability of A AV2 and AAV4 VPs to combine for mosaic capsid formation in efforts to engineer novel tropisms.