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Ruth A. Corrigan

Researcher at University of Edinburgh

Publications -  6
Citations -  366

Ruth A. Corrigan is an academic researcher from University of Edinburgh. The author has contributed to research in topics: Internal medicine & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications receiving 332 citations.

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Adhesion of Plasmodium falciparum -infected erythrocytes to human cells: molecular mechanisms and therapeutic implications

TL;DR: Further research is needed to realise the untapped potential of antiadhesion adjunctive therapies, which could revolutionise the treatment of severe malaria and reduce the high mortality rate of the disease.
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Causative Pathogens Do Not Differ between Early, Delayed or Late Fracture-Related Infections

TL;DR: Decisions on FRI treatment should not assume microbiological differences related to time since injury, as there is no evidence that the type of pathogens isolated in early, delayed or late infections were different.
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What Factors Affect Outcome in the Treatment of Fracture-Related Infection?

TL;DR: The data suggested that treatment decisions should not be based on time from injury alone, as other factors also affected the outcome, and further work to determine the best indications for DAIR, free flap reconstruction and local antibiotics is warranted.
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The Effect of Guideline-based Antimicrobial Therapy on the outcome of Fracture-Related Infections (EAT FRI Study).

TL;DR: In this article , the compliance with a guideline-based antibiotic regimen on the outcome of patients surgically treated for a fracture-related infection (FRI) was investigated, and the compliance was not associated with a worse outcome.
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Does the Use of Local Antibiotics Affect Clinical Outcome of Patients with Fracture-Related Infection?

TL;DR: The application of ALCs in treatment of FRI is likely to reduce the risk of recurrence of infection, as the high antibiotic concentrations of A LCs eradicate most pathogens regardless of susceptibility test results.