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William W. Busse

Researcher at University of Wisconsin-Madison

Publications -  740
Citations -  62685

William W. Busse is an academic researcher from University of Wisconsin-Madison. The author has contributed to research in topics: Asthma & Eosinophil. The author has an hindex of 115, co-authored 697 publications receiving 56703 citations. Previous affiliations of William W. Busse include National Institutes of Health & University at Buffalo.

Papers
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The Relationship of Asthma Biologics to Remission for Asthma.

TL;DR: The concept of promoting treatment efforts to achieve disease remission in asthma is important, potentially achievable, and merits consideration for future guideline-directed care approaches.
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The Precipitation of Asthma by Upper Respiratory Infections

TL;DR: The relationship between viral URIs and asthma is complex and involves many organ systems: airway epithelium, autonomic nervous system control, and the immediate hypersensitivity system.
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Efficacy and safety of fluticasone furoate 100 μg and 200 μg once daily in the treatment of moderate-severe asthma in adults and adolescents: a 24-week randomised study

TL;DR: Improvements from baseline in trough FEV1 were observed after 24 weeks of treatment with both doses of Fluticasone furoate, with a numerically greater improvement inFEV1 observed in patients receiving FF 200 μg.
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Pathogenesis and pathophysiology of nocturnal asthma

TL;DR: This article reviews the many factors (allergen exposure, sleep, airway cooling, diminished clearance of mucous secretions) that have been identified as contributing to nocturnal asthma and suggests diurnal variations in hormone concentrations and in autonomic nervous system control are possible mechanisms.
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The effect of exercise on the granulocyte response to isoproterenol in the trained athlete and unconditioned individual.

TL;DR: Following exercise there was an increase in plasma catecholamines, a significant leukocytosis, and granulocytes from the immediate postexercise period responded less well to isoproterenol.