T
Timothy M. Uyeki
Researcher at Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Publications - 338
Citations - 47420
Timothy M. Uyeki is an academic researcher from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The author has contributed to research in topics: Influenza A virus subtype H5N1 & Influenza A virus. The author has an hindex of 86, co-authored 309 publications receiving 42818 citations. Previous affiliations of Timothy M. Uyeki include National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases & University of California, San Francisco.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Antivirals for treatment of influenza: a systematic review and meta-analysis of observational studies
Jonathan C. Hsu,Nancy Santesso,Reem A. Mustafa,Jan Brozek,Yao Long Chen,Jessica Hopkins,Adrienne Cheung,Gayane Hovhannisyan,Liudmila Ivanova,Signe Flottorp,Ingvil von Mehren Sæterdal,Arthur Wong,Jinhui Tian,Timothy M. Uyeki,Elie A. Akl,Pablo Alonso-Coello,Fiona Smaill,Holger J. Schünemann +17 more
TL;DR: Meta-analyses of the few studies providing effects with adjustment for confounders suggest that, in high-risk populations, oral oseltamivir may reduce mortality and pneumonia associated with influenza A and inhaled zanamivIR may provide a net benefit over no treatment of influenza.
Journal Article
Probable limited person-to-person transmission of highly pathogenic avian influenza A (H5N1) virus in China. Commentaries
James H. Stein,Judith S. Currier,Nguyen Tran Hien,Jeremy Farrar,Peter Horby,Hua Wang,Zijian Feng,Yuelong Shu,Hongjie Yu,Lei Zhou,Rongqiang Zu,Yang Huai,Jie Dong,Changjun Bao,Le-ying Wen,Hong Wang,Peng Yang,Wei Zhao,Libo Dong,Minghao Zhou,Qiaohong Liao,Haitao Yang,Min Wang,Xiaojun Lu,Zhiyang Shi,Wei Wang,Ling Gu,Fengcai Zhu,Qun Li,Weidong Yin,Weizhong Yang,Dexin Li,Timothy M. Uyeki,Yu Wang +33 more
TL;DR: Limited, non-sustained person-to-person transmission of H5N1 virus probably occurred in this family cluster of two individuals infected with highly pathogenic avian influenza A (H5n1) virus in Jiangsu Province, China.
Journal ArticleDOI
Isolation and Characterization of Avian Influenza Viruses, Including Highly Pathogenic H5N1, from Poultry in Live Bird Markets in Hanoi, Vietnam, in 2001
Doan C. Nguyen,Timothy M. Uyeki,Samadhan Jadhao,Taronna R. Maines,Michael W. Shaw,Yumiko Matsuoka,Catherine B. Smith,Thomas Rowe,Xiuhua Lu,Henrietta Hall,Xiyan Xu,Amanda Balish,Alexander Klimov,Terrence M. Tumpey,David E. Swayne,Lien P. T. Huynh,Ha K. Nghiem,Hanh T. Nguyen,Long T. Hoang,Nancy J. Cox,Jacqueline M. Katz +20 more
TL;DR: It is established that HP H5N1 viruses with properties similar to viruses isolated in Hong Kong and mainland China circulated in Vietnam as early as 2001, suggest a common source for H5n1 viruses circulating in these Asian countries, and provide a framework to better understand the recent widespread emergence of HP H3N2 viruses in Asia.
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Epidemiology of avian influenza A H7N9 virus in human beings across five epidemics in mainland China, 2013–17: an epidemiological study of laboratory-confirmed case series
Xiling Wang,Hui Jiang,Peng Wu,Timothy M. Uyeki,Luzhao Feng,Shengjie Lai,Lili Wang,Xiang Huo,Ke Xu,Enfu Chen,Xiaoxiao Wang,Jianfeng He,Min Kang,Renli Zhang,Jin Zhang,Jiabing Wu,Shixiong Hu,Hengjiao Zhang,Xiaoqing Liu,Weijie Fu,Jianming Ou,Shenggen Wu,Ying Qin,Zhijie Zhang,Yujing Shi,Juanjuan Zhang,Jean Artois,Vicky J. Fang,Hongbo Zhu,Yi Guan,Marius Gilbert,Peter Horby,Gabriel M. Leung,George F. Gao,George F. Gao,Benjamin J. Cowling,Hongjie Yu +36 more
TL;DR: This epidemiological study aimed to describe the epidemiological characteristics, clinical severity, and time-to-event distributions of patients infected with A H7N9 in the 2016-17 epidemic compared with previous epidemics.
Journal ArticleDOI
Low Sensitivity of Rapid Diagnostic Test for Influenza
Timothy M. Uyeki,Ramakrishna Prasad,Charles J. Vukotich,Samuel Stebbins,Charles R. Rinaldo,Yu Hui Ferng,Stephen Morse,Elaine Larson,Allison E. Aiello,Brian Davis,Arnold S. Monto +10 more
TL;DR: The QuickVue Influenza A+B Test was used to test nasal swab specimens obtained from persons with influenza-like illness in 3 different populations, and the test sensitivity was low for all populations, whereas the specificity was high.