Institution
Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital
Healthcare•Exeter, United Kingdom•
About: Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital is a healthcare organization based out in Exeter, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Randomized controlled trial. The organization has 2282 authors who have published 2526 publications receiving 78866 citations. The organization is also known as: RD&E.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Evidence that higher BMI leads to a higher risk of psoriasis is provided, which supports the prioritization of therapies and lifestyle interventions aimed at controlling weight for the prevention or treatment of this common skin disease.
Abstract: In a mendelian randomization study, Ashley Budu-Aggrey and co-workers study the influence of body mass index on psoriasis.
109 citations
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TL;DR: The inheritance of a glucokinase mutation in 1 child reduced his intrauterine growth by reducing fetal insulin secretion and the implications for obstetric management of patients with glucokin enzyme mutations are discussed.
109 citations
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TL;DR: Palliative treatment by intracavitary irradiation using the 'Selectron' has been used in 40 patients with advanced carcinoma (all histological types) and Relief of dysphagia occurred in 65%.
108 citations
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TL;DR: Patients with hairy‐cell leukaemia and peripheral cytopenias were given human lymphoblastoid interferon (Wellferon), 3 megaunits daily or 6 megaunit on alternate days intramuscularly, for 4–24 weeks.
Abstract: Seventeen patients with hairy-cell leukaemia (HCL) and peripheral cytopenias were given human lymphoblastoid interferon (Wellferon), 3 megaunits daily or 6 megaunits on alternate days intramuscularly, for 4-24 weeks. Twelve of the patients had undergone splenectomy, three had no palpable spleen and had therefore not been offered surgery, and two patients with substantial splenomegaly were given interferon (IFN) as treatment of first choice. Toxic effects were minor except in one patient who experienced a severe form of somnolence syndrome. In all patients hairy cells (HCs) were cleared from the blood and platelet and Hb levels improved in 2-14 weeks. Neutrophils were improved in 14/17 of the patients. In the two patients with splenomegaly, the spleen became impalpable after 5-8 weeks therapy, and haematological improvement occurred at 12-14 weeks. HC infiltration of the marrow was reduced in all patients, but was complete (less than 5%) in only two, both of whom had impalpable spleens. Immunological surface-marker studies confirmed that light-chain-restricted B cells disappeared from the blood in parallel with the clearance of morphological HCs. There was no evidence of HC maturation and no increase in phenotypic NK cells. T cells were moderately reduced and the relatively greater reduction of Leu 2a+ suppressor cells resulted in increased Leu 3a+/2a+ helper/suppressor ratios in 11/17 of the patients. Early experience in the six patients who have stopped IFN suggests that, after an initial further increase in Hb and neutrophil levels, HCs gradually return with slow deterioration of haematological parameters. Interferon is now the treatment of choice for patients becoming cytopenic post-splenectomy or for patients without splenomegaly. IFN is effective first-line therapy in patients with splenomegaly, but further work is needed to establish whether the agent should replace splenectomy in such patients. Some form of maintenance or re-treatment therapy will probably be necessary.
108 citations
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TL;DR: Evaluation of healing at split skin graft donor sites, dressed half with chitosan and half with a conventional dressing showed that chitOSan facilitated rapid wound re-epithelialisation and the regeneration of nerves within a vascular dermis.
108 citations
Authors
Showing all 2288 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Andrew T. Hattersley | 146 | 768 | 106949 |
Timothy M. Frayling | 133 | 500 | 100344 |
Gordon D.O. Lowe | 105 | 560 | 44327 |
Rod S Taylor | 104 | 524 | 39332 |
Sian Ellard | 97 | 636 | 36847 |
Zoltán Kutalik | 90 | 321 | 42901 |
Michael N. Weedon | 87 | 201 | 60701 |
Masud Husain | 81 | 398 | 25682 |
David Melzer | 80 | 328 | 33458 |
Jonathan Mill | 78 | 301 | 36343 |
A. John Camm | 76 | 368 | 49804 |
David Silver | 74 | 227 | 81103 |
Jason D. Warren | 73 | 384 | 20588 |
Nicholas J. Talbot | 71 | 240 | 29205 |
Andrew R. Wood | 70 | 214 | 36203 |