Institution
St Bartholomew's Hospital
Healthcare•London, United Kingdom•
About: St Bartholomew's Hospital is a healthcare organization based out in London, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Cancer. The organization has 11054 authors who have published 13229 publications receiving 501102 citations. The organization is also known as: St. Bartholomew's Hospital & The Royal Hospital of St Bartholomew.
Topics: Population, Cancer, Pregnancy, Diabetes mellitus, Transplantation
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: A study of the effect of high-dose intravenous IgG in 25 adults with autoimmune thrombocytopenia confirmed the predictable rise in the platelet count seen during the infusion and previously reported in children.
227 citations
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TL;DR: Patients with acute hemispheric stroke and elderly controls with no neurological disease were assessed for visuo-spatial neglect, using a modified neglect test battery, and neglect was found to be equally common in patients with right hemisphere and left hemisphere stroke three days after stroke.
Abstract: Forty four consecutive patients with acute hemispheric stroke and forty seven elderly controls with no neurological disease were assessed for visuo-spatial neglect, using a modified neglect test battery. Neglect was found to be equally common in patients with right hemisphere and left hemisphere stroke three days after stroke (72% versus 62%). It was more severe in those with a right hemisphere stroke and resolved more frequently in those with a left hemisphere stroke. The battery was validated against an occupational therapist9s assessment of neglect on self-care tasks. The inter-observer reliability was good and it was possible to monitor changes over time with the battery.
226 citations
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TL;DR: The epidemiology of, and the clinical burden related to, adhesions following gynaecological surgery are studied to establish a cause-and-effect relationship between surgery and adhesion formation.
225 citations
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TL;DR: Findings provide further evidence that LC1 is involved in the anti-inflammatory action of glucocorticosteroids and suggest that this protein may act as an endogenous regulator of IL-1 action.
Abstract: IL-1 is a pro-inflammatory cytokine which controls many features of the immune and inflammatory response. When injected into a mouse 6-day-old air-pouch, human rIL-1 (1 to 100 ng) induced in a dose-dependent fashion a migration of PMN that could be reliably assessed 4 h after injection. Both IL-1 alpha and IL-1 beta were active in this model. The effect of the cytokine was inhibited by local administration of actinomycin D (1 to 10 micrograms), alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (200 micrograms), and a mAb recognizing IL-1R type I (10 micrograms). Indomethacin (1 mg/kg), an inhibitor of cyclo-oxygenase, and BW4AC (2 mg/kg), a selective lipoxygenase inhibitor, were without effect but moderate inhibition was seen with the platelet-activating factor antagonist WEB2086 (1 to 10 mg/kg). The glucocorticoid dexamethasone (0.015 to 1.5 mg/kg) potently inhibited the elicitation of neutrophils induced by IL-1 when given systemically 2 h before the cytokine. The steroid-induced anti-inflammatory protein lipocortin 1 (LC1) also produced a dose-dependent inhibition of PMN migration into the pouch with an ED50 of approximately 0.15 to 0.21 mg/kg. The denatured protein was without effect. Passive immunization of mice with a polyclonal sheep antiserum or a mAb raised against LC1 abolished the inhibitory action of dexamethasone whereas preimmune serum or control IgG were without significant effect. These findings provide further evidence that LC1 is involved in the anti-inflammatory action of glucocorticosteroids and suggest that this protein may act as an endogenous regulator of IL-1 action.
225 citations
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TL;DR: The results define the wide range of ligands for extracellular matrix receptors in osteoclasts in vitro and establish which of these proteins are important in osteoclast adhesion and osteoclastic bone resorption in vivo.
Abstract: The ligand binding ability of rat osteoclast adhesion receptors was investigated in an attachment assay using osteoclasts disaggregated from bone. Osteoclasts adhered well to the Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD)-containing proteins osteopontin (bone sialoprotein I) and BSP (bone sialoprotein II), vitronectin, fibrinogen, von Willebrand factor, and fibronectin. Osteoclasts also adhered, but less strongly, to type I collagen. No attachment of osteoclasts was observed to thrombospondin, tenascin, laminin, or a range of non-RGD-containing bone proteins and proteins from other sources. The attachment of osteoclasts to all ligands was abolished in the presence of GRGDSP peptide, indicating the involvement of the RGD cell binding sequence in ligand binding. Attachment of osteoclasts to all substrates, with the exception of type I collagen, was also strongly inhibited by the addition of monoclonal antibody F11 to the beta 3 integrin subunit, indicating that a beta 3 integrin, probably the vitronectin receptor, was involved. Attachment to type I collagen was blocked by EDTA chelation of divalent cations and was not significantly affected by anti-beta 3 or anti-beta 1 antibodies; when taken with the inhibition by RGD peptide, this suggests the involvement of various receptors, possibly including nonintegrin collagen receptors, in the binding of osteoclasts to this protein. These results define the wide range of ligands for extracellular matrix receptors in osteoclasts in vitro. It remains to be established which of these proteins are important in osteoclast adhesion and osteoclastic bone resorption in vivo.
225 citations
Authors
Showing all 11065 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Philippe Froguel | 166 | 820 | 118816 |
Geoffrey Burnstock | 141 | 1488 | 99525 |
Michael A. Kamm | 124 | 637 | 53606 |
David Scott | 124 | 1561 | 82554 |
Csaba Szabó | 123 | 958 | 61791 |
Roger Williams | 122 | 1455 | 72416 |
Derek M. Yellon | 122 | 638 | 54319 |
Walter F. Bodmer | 121 | 579 | 68679 |
John E. Deanfield | 120 | 497 | 61067 |
Paul Bebbington | 119 | 583 | 46341 |
William C. Sessa | 117 | 383 | 52208 |
Timothy G. Dinan | 116 | 689 | 60561 |
Bruce A.J. Ponder | 116 | 403 | 54796 |
Alexandra J. Lansky | 114 | 632 | 54445 |
Glyn Lewis | 113 | 734 | 49316 |