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William Wallace

Researcher at Royal Hospital for Sick Children

Publications -  166
Citations -  11429

William Wallace is an academic researcher from Royal Hospital for Sick Children. The author has contributed to research in topics: Fertility preservation & Cancer. The author has an hindex of 50, co-authored 159 publications receiving 10261 citations. Previous affiliations of William Wallace include Air Force Research Laboratory & University of Edinburgh.

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Accuracy of cell typing in nonsmall cell lung cancer by EBUS/EUS–FNA cytological samples

TL;DR: Endoscopic ultrasound-guided transbronchial or transoesophageal lymph node aspiration is increasingly used as a method of diagnosing nonsmall cell carcinoma and cell type, as assessed by morphology with or without immunohistochemistry, was correlated with that reported in the paired histological samples.
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A novel model for human interstitial lung disease: hapten-driven lung fibrosis in rodents.

TL;DR: A novel model of chronic pulmonary fibrosis in rodents induced by a single intratracheal instillation of a well‐characterized fluorescent haptenic antigen, fluorescein isothiocyanate, which results in an acute inflammatory response involving a granulocytic infiltrate, which disappears over a week and is replaced by a chronic mononuclear infiltrate in which T lymphocytes predominate.
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Circulating antibodies to lung protein(s) in patients with cryptogenic fibrosing alveolitis.

TL;DR: Patients with cryptogenic fibrosing alveolitis have a high frequency of plasma IgG autoantibodies to protein(s) within lung tissue associated with alveolar lining cells, believed to be the site where immunological injury occurs in cryptogenic FibrosingAlveolitIS.
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Role of inflammation in nocturnal asthma.

TL;DR: There are increases in inflammatory cell populations in the airway fluid at night in asthmatic but not in normal subjects, and the results have shown a nocturnal increase in eosinophil cationic protein levels in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid.
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Investigation of suppression of the hypothalamic–pituitary–gonadal axis to restore spermatogenesis in azoospermic men treated for childhood cancer

TL;DR: HPG axis suppression with MPA-testosterone for > or =12 weeks did not restore spermatogenesis in azoospermic men treated with gonadotoxic radiotherapy and chemotherapy for childhood cancer.