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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Freeman Hospital1, St Thomas' Hospital2, Imperial College London3, University of Cambridge4, Leicester Royal Infirmary5, Manchester Royal Infirmary6, Royal Free Hospital7, Royal Liverpool University Hospital8, Royal United Hospital9, St George's Hospital10, University College Hospital11, University of Liverpool12
TL;DR: In this national sample, fenestrated endovascular repair has been performed with a high degree of technical and clinical success, and late survival and target vessel patency are satisfactory.
Abstract: Background—Fenestrated endovascular repair of abdominal aortic aneurysms has been proposed as an alternative to open surgery for juxtarenal and pararenal abdominal aortic aneurysms. At present, the evidence base for this procedure is predominantly limited to single-center or single-operator series. The aim of this study was to present nationwide early results of fenestrated endovascular repair in the United Kingdom. Methods and Results—All patients who underwent fenestrated endovascular repair between January 2007 and December 2010 at experienced institutions in the United Kingdom(>10 procedures) were retrospectively studied by use of the GLOBALSTAR database. Site-reported data relating to patient demographics, aneurysm morphology, procedural details, and outcome were recorded. Data from 318 patients were obtained from 14 centers. Primary procedural success was achieved in 99% (316/318); perioperative mortality was 4.1%, and intraoperative target vessel loss was observed in 5 of 889 target vessels (0.6%)....
143 citations
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TL;DR: Universal, user-friendly educational tools are required to familiarise physicians with pain mechanisms, sensitisation and multi-mechanistic management, and also to improve communication between physicians and their pain patients, so that realistic expectations of treatment can be established.
Abstract: Background: Although chronic pain affects around 20% of adults in Europe and the USA, there is substantial evidence that it is inadequately treated. In June 2009, an international group of pain specialists met in Brussels to identify the reasons for this and to achieve consensus on strategies for improving pain management.
142 citations
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TL;DR: Curcumin is safe and tolerable in combination with FOLFOX chemotherapy, and is perceived by patients as an acceptable daily adjunct to chemotherapy.
141 citations
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TL;DR: Large volume spacers such as the Fisonair, Nebuhaler, and Volumatic delivered significantly more DSCG and salbutamol than the smaller spacers tested.
Abstract: BACKGROUND: A study was performed to determine in vitro the difference in drug output of seven currently available spacer devices when used with different inhaled medications. METHODS: A glass multistage liquid impinger (MSLI) was used to determine the amount of disodium cromoglycate (DSCG, 5 mg), salbutamol (100 micrograms), or budesonide (200 micrograms) obtained in various particle size ranges from metered dose inhalers (MDIs) actuated directly into the MSLI or via one of seven different spacer devices; the Fisonair, Nebuhaler, Volumatic, Inspirease, Aerochamber, Aerosol Cloud Enhancer, and Dynahaler. RESULTS: In particles smaller than 5 microns in diameter the dose of DSCG recovered from the Fisonair and Nebuhaler was 118% and 124%, respectively, of that recovered using the MDI alone. The dose recovered from the smaller volume spacers was 90% (Inspirease), 36% (Aerochamber), 33% (Aerosol Cloud Enhancer), and 21% (Dynahaler) of that from the MDI alone. The Volumatic increased the amount of salbutamol in particles smaller than 5 microns to 117% of that from the MDI, and the Inspirease and Aerochamber spacers decreased it by nearly 50%. The amount of budesonide in small particles recovered after use of the Nebuhaler, Inspirease, and the Aerochamber was 92%, 101%, and 78%, respectively, of that from the MDI alone. CONCLUSIONS: Under the test conditions used, large volume spacers such as the Fisonair, Nebuhaler, and Volumatic delivered significantly more DSCG and salbutamol than the smaller spacers tested. The differences between spacers were less for budesonide than the other medications studied. This study shows that there are significant differences in the amount of drug available for inhalation when different spacers are used as inhalational aids with different drugs. Spacer devices need to be fully evaluated for each drug prescribed for them.
141 citations
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TL;DR: The development of a HeLa-specific DNA diagnostic test: a single duplex detection PCR assay targeting an L1 retrotransposon insertion that appears to be unique to the HeLa cell line is reported.
Abstract: The HeLa cell line is the oldest, most widely distributed, permanent human cell line. As a nearly ubiquitous inhabitant of laboratories using tissue culture techniques, its aggressive growth characteristics make it a problematic contaminant that can overgrow less robust cell lines. Consequently, HeLa contamination is common in both the research laboratory and cell line repository contexts, and its detection is hampered by the lack of a rapid, sensitive and robust assay. Here we report the development of a HeLa-specific DNA diagnostic test: a single duplex detection PCR assay targeting an L1 retrotransposon insertion. All HeLa clones from a geographically diverse panel were positive by this assay, and the particular L1 insertion we identified appears to be unique to the HeLa cell line. The assay can detect very low levels of HeLa contamination (<1%), and can be performed on un-purified cell pellets, allowing rapid routine screening.
140 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 |