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Timothy J. Craig
Researcher at Pennsylvania State University
Publications - 493
Citations - 21287
Timothy J. Craig is an academic researcher from Pennsylvania State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hereditary angioedema & Asthma. The author has an hindex of 69, co-authored 458 publications receiving 18340 citations. Previous affiliations of Timothy J. Craig include University of Bristol & San Diego State University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Phase II study results of a replacement therapy for hereditary angioedema with subcutaneous C1-inhibitor concentrate
Bruce L. Zuraw,Marco Cicardi,Hilary Longhurst,Jonathan A. Bernstein,Huamin Henry Li,Markus Magerl,Inmaculada Martinez-Saguer,Syed M. Rehman,Petra Staubach,Henrike Feuersenger,R. Parasrampuria,Jagdev S. Sidhu,Jonathan M. Edelman,Timothy J. Craig +13 more
TL;DR: Long‐term prophylaxis with twice‐weekly intravenous injections of plasma‐derived C1‐inhibitor (pdC1‐INH) has been established as an effective treatment for HAE.
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Aeroallergen sensitization correlates with PC20 and exhaled nitric oxide in subjects with mild-to-moderate asthma
Timothy J. Craig,Tonya S. King,Robert F. Lemanske,Michael E. Wechsler,Nikolina Icitovic,Ronald R. Zimmerman,Stephen I. Wasserman +6 more
TL;DR: Ninety-five percent of patients with mild-to-moderate asthma might have an allergic component, and measures used to characterize asthma, such as IgE, exhaled nitric oxide, and PC(20) values, are correlated with aeroallergen sensitization.
Journal ArticleDOI
Clinical and entomological factors influence the outcome of sting challenge studies
David B.K. Golden,Nancy L. Breisch,Robert G. Hamilton,Miles W. Guralnick,Albert Greene,Timothy J. Craig,Anne Kagey-Sobotka +6 more
TL;DR: Allergic reactions to sting challenge are determined by the species of yellow jacket used, the severity of previous sting reactions, and the degree of skin test sensitivity, but not by the time of year.
Journal ArticleDOI
Predicting objective function weights from patient anatomy in prostate IMRT treatment planning
TL;DR: This study demonstrates a proof of concept that patient anatomy can be used to predict appropriate objective function weights for treatment planning and serves as a starting point for iterative treatment plan design or may provide information about the most clinically relevant region of the Pareto surface to explore.
Journal ArticleDOI
Studies of the ATPase activity of the ABC protein SUR1.
Heidi de Wet,Michael V. Mikhailov,Constantina Fotinou,Mathias Dreger,Timothy J. Craig,Catherine Vénien-Bryan,Frances M. Ashcroft +6 more
TL;DR: The data demonstrate that the ATPase activity of sulfonylurea receptor 1 differs from that of the isolated nucleotide‐binding domains, suggesting that the transmembrane domains may influence the activity of the protein.