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Stacie M. Jones
Researcher at University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
Publications - 271
Citations - 17872
Stacie M. Jones is an academic researcher from University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Peanut allergy & Food allergy. The author has an hindex of 57, co-authored 248 publications receiving 15657 citations. Previous affiliations of Stacie M. Jones include Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine & Boston Children's Hospital.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Development and validation of educational materials for food allergy
Scott H. Sicherer,Perla A. Vargas,Marion Groetch,Lynn Christie,S.K. Carlisle,Sally Noone,Stacie M. Jones +6 more
TL;DR: This food allergy educational curriculum for parents, now available online at no cost, showed high levels of satisfaction and efficacy and remained above a favorable mean score of 6: straight-forward, organized, interesting, relevant, and recommend to others.
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Safety, clinical, and immunologic efficacy of a Chinese herbal medicine (Food Allergy Herbal Formula-2) for food allergy
Julie Wang,Stacie M. Jones,Jacqueline A. Pongracic,Ying Song,Nan Yang,Scott H. Sicherer,Melanie M. Makhija,Rachel G. Robison,Erin Moshier,James Godbold,Hugh A. Sampson,Xiu-Min Li +11 more
TL;DR: The Food Allergy Herbal Formula-2 (FAHF-2) is a 9-herb formula based on traditional Chinese medicine that blocks peanut-induced anaphylaxis in a murine model.
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Epinephrine Absorption in Children With a History of Anaphylaxis
TL;DR: This single-blind, single-dose, parallel-group study on the clinical pharmacology of epinephrine in allergic children with a history of anaphylaxis found it to be safe and effective.
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Systematic review of antimicrobial therapy in patients with acute rhinosinusitis.
TL;DR: Over 70% of patients with acute rhinosinusitis are improved after 7 days, with or without antimicrobial therapy, and about 7 patients must be treated to achieve one additional positive outcome at 7 to 12 days above and beyond spontaneous resolution.
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Integrative transcriptomic analysis reveals key drivers of acute peanut allergic reactions
Corey T. Watson,Corey T. Watson,Ariella Cohain,Robert S. Griffin,Yoojin Chun,Alexander Grishin,H. Hacyznska,Gabriel E. Hoffman,Noam D. Beckmann,Hardik Shah,Peter Dawson,Alice K. Henning,Robert J. Wood,A.W. Burks,Stacie M. Jones,D. Y. M. Leung,Scott H. Sicherer,Hugh A. Sampson,Andrew J. Sharp,Eric E. Schadt,Supinda Bunyavanich +20 more
TL;DR: The authors profile blood transcriptomes during double-blind, placebo-controlled oral challenge in peanut-allergic children to identify gene and cell composition changes, and construct causal networks to detect key allergic reaction drivers.