Institution
Leicester Royal Infirmary
Healthcare•Leicester, United Kingdom•
About: Leicester Royal Infirmary is a healthcare organization based out in Leicester, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Carotid endarterectomy. The organization has 5300 authors who have published 6204 publications receiving 208464 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: PAPI-1 and PAPI-2 contribute directly and synergistically in a major way to the virulence of PA14, and it is suggested that analysis of island-minus strains may be a more appropriate way than individual gene knockouts to assess the contributions to virulenceof large, horizontally acquired segments of DNA.
Abstract: Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a leading cause of hospital-acquired pneumonia and severe chronic lung infections in cystic fibrosis patients. The reference strains PA14 and PAO1 have been studied extensively, revealing that PA14 is more virulent than PAO1 in diverse infection models. Among other factors, this may be due to two pathogenicity islands, PAPI-1 and PAPI-2, both present in PA14 but not in PAO1. We compared the global contributions to virulence of PAPI-1 and PAPI-2, rather than that of individual island-borne genes, using murine models of acute pneumonia and bacteremia. Three isogenic island-minus mutants (PAPI-1-minus, PAPI-2-minus, and PAPI-1-minus, PAPI-2-minus mutants) were compared with the wild-type parent strain PA14 and with PAO1. Our results showed that both islands contributed significantly to the virulence of PA14 in acute pneumonia and bacteremia models. However, in contrast to the results for the bacteremia model, where each island was found to contribute individually, loss of the 108-kb PAPI-1 island alone was insufficient to measurably attenuate the mutant in the acute pneumonia model. Nevertheless, the double mutant was substantially more attenuated, and exhibited a lesser degree of virulence, than even PAO1 in the acute pneumonia model. In particular, its ability to disseminate from the lungs to the bloodstream was markedly inhibited. We conclude that both PAPI-1 and PAPI-2 contribute directly and synergistically in a major way to the virulence of PA14, and we suggest that analysis of island-minus strains may be a more appropriate way than individual gene knockouts to assess the contributions to virulence of large, horizontally acquired segments of DNA.
83 citations
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TL;DR: It is likely that extreme salt restriction will lower blood-pressure, but it would be premature to advocate such massive public-health measures as reducing the sodium content of food.
83 citations
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TL;DR: The AT1 receptor is expressed by human PASMCs in vivo and in vitro and is coupled to activation of MAPK and increased DNA and protein synthesis in vitro, consistent with the hypothesis that ANG II may be involved in human pulmonary vascular remodeling.
Abstract: To determine a potential role for the renin-angiotensin system in the growth of human pulmonary artery (PA) smooth muscle, we studied the localization of angiotensin (ANG) II-receptor subtypes by a...
83 citations
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TL;DR: The concept of remote radiological anthropological measurement of bones, so‐called tele‐anthro‐radiology, is introduced and the role that this could play in providing the facility for standardization of protocols, international peer review and quality assurance schemes is introduced.
Abstract: Anthropological examination of defleshed bones is the gold standard for osteological measurement in forensic practice. However, multi-detector computed tomography (MDCT) offers the opportunity of three-dimensional imaging of skeletal elements, allowing measurement of bones in any plane without defleshing. We present our experiences of the examination of 15 human lower limbs in different states of decomposition using MDCT. We present our method of imaging and radiological measurement of the bones including sex assessment. The radiological measurements were undertaken by three professional groups--anthropology, radiology, and forensic pathology--both at the site of scanning and at a remote site. The results were compared to anthropological oestological assessment of the defleshed bones. We discuss the limitations of this technique and the potential applications of our observations. We introduce the concept of remote radiological anthropological measurement of bones, so-called tele-anthro-radiology and the role that this could play in providing the facility for standardization of protocols, international peer review and quality assurance schemes.
83 citations
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TL;DR: TCCS and MRA are both noninvasive techniques that can be used to study the acute stroke patient and both yield information regarding the pathophysiology of acute stroke and may be useful techniques in deciding on therapeutic interventions.
Abstract: Background and Purpose We sought to compare the ability of transcranial color-coded Doppler sonography (TCCS) and magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) to identify circulatory changes that occur after acute stroke.
Methods Forty-four patients with a clinical diagnosis of acute stroke were studied with both TCCS and MRA within 24 hours of stroke onset. The appearances of all vessels identified on MRA were divided into three categories: normal, attenuated, and absent vessels. The basal cerebral arteries were identified with the use of TCCS, and their velocities were measured with pulsed-wave Doppler. The side-to-side asymmetry was calculated and expressed as an asymmetry index.
Results Five patients could not be studied with TCCS because of lack of a suitable acoustic window. An additional 4 patients were too restless to tolerate MRA scanning. Three patients had intracerebral hemorrhages, 2 patients had intracerebral gliomas, and the remaining 30 patients had cerebral infarctions. In the group of patients with acute cerebral infarction, TCCS identified 10 patients with normal asymmetry indices, 1 patient with an increased asymmetry index, 9 patients with decreased asymmetry indices, and 10 patients with occlusion of the symptomatic middle cerebral artery (MCA). MRA identified 8 normal angiograms, 6 patients had attenuated MCA branch vessels, 4 patients had MCA branch occlusions, 2 angiograms demonstrated MCA main stem attenuation, and 10 angiograms showed MCA occlusion.
Conclusions TCCS and MRA are both noninvasive techniques that can be used to study the acute stroke patient. They both yield information regarding the pathophysiology of acute stroke and may be useful techniques in deciding on therapeutic interventions. The findings agree closely with each other, and these techniques may be useful in the long-term follow-up of stroke patients.
83 citations
Authors
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Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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George Davey Smith | 224 | 2540 | 248373 |
Nilesh J. Samani | 149 | 779 | 113545 |
Peter M. Rothwell | 134 | 779 | 67382 |
John F. Thompson | 132 | 1420 | 95894 |
James A. Russell | 124 | 1024 | 87929 |
Paul Bebbington | 119 | 583 | 46341 |
John P. Neoptolemos | 112 | 648 | 52928 |
Richard C. Trembath | 107 | 368 | 41128 |
Andrew J. Wardlaw | 92 | 311 | 33721 |
Melanie J. Davies | 89 | 814 | 36939 |
Philip Quirke | 89 | 378 | 34071 |
Kenneth J. O'Byrne | 87 | 629 | 39193 |
David R. Jones | 87 | 707 | 40501 |
Keith R. Abrams | 86 | 355 | 30980 |
Martin J. S. Dyer | 85 | 373 | 24909 |