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Results for “"Sara V. Flanagan"”

8 results

International consensus statement on allergy and rhinology: Allergic rhinitis – 2023

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Sarah K. Wise, Cecelia Damask, Lauren T. Roland, Charles S. Ebert et al.

Journal: International Forum of Allergy & RhinologyYear: 2023Citations: 438

BACKGROUND: In the 5 years that have passed since the publication of the 2018 International Consensus Statement on Allergy and Rhinology: Allergic Rhinitis (ICAR-Allergic Rhinitis 2018), the literature has expanded substantially. The ICAR-Allergic Rhinitis 2023 update presents 144 individual topics ...

Health SciencesMedicineImmunology and AllergyOpen Access
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Arsenic in tube well water in Bangladesh: health and economic impacts and implications for arsenic mitigation

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Sara V. Flanagan, Richard B. Johnston, Yan Zheng

Journal: Bulletin of the World Health OrganizationYear: 2012Citations: 381

A national drinking water quality survey conducted in 2009 furnished data that were used to make an updated estimate of chronic arsenic exposure in Bangladesh. About 20 million and 45 million people were found to be exposed to concentrations above the national standard of 50 µg/L and the World Healt...

Physical SciencesEnvironmental ScienceEnvironmental ChemistryOpen Access
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Recessive mutations in the <i>INS</i> gene result in neonatal diabetes through reduced insulin biosynthesis

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Intza Garin, Emma L. Edghill, İldem Akerman, Oscar Rubio‐Cabezas et al.

Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of SciencesYear: 2010Citations: 209

Heterozygous coding mutations in the INS gene that encodes preproinsulin were recently shown to be an important cause of permanent neonatal diabetes. These dominantly acting mutations prevent normal folding of proinsulin, which leads to beta-cell death through endoplasmic reticulum stress and apopto...

Health SciencesMedicineSurgeryOpen Access
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Bendamustine, thalidomide and dexamethasone combination therapy for relapsed/refractory myeloma patients: results of the MUK<i>one</i> randomized dose selection trial

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Steve Schey, Sarah Brown, Avie‐Lee Tillotson, Kwee Yong et al.

Journal: British Journal of HaematologyYear: 2015Citations: 20

There is a significant unmet need in effective therapy for relapsed myeloma patients once they become refractory to bortezomib and lenalidomide. While data from the front line setting suggest bendamustine is superior to melphalan, there is no information defining optimal bendamustine dose in multipl...

Health SciencesMedicineHematology
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Sanitation coverage in Bangladesh since the millennium: consistency matters

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Yan Zheng, Sally Adel Hakim, Quamrun Nahar, A. van Agthoven et al.

Journal: Journal of Water Sanitation and Hygiene for DevelopmentYear: 2013Citations: 20

Household surveys in Bangladesh between 1994 and 2009 assessed sanitation access using questions that differed significantly over time, resulting in apparently inconsistent findings. Applying the WHO and UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme's 2008 definition for open defecation and improved sanitation ...

Health SciencesNursingNutrition and DieteticsOpen Access
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Increasing acceptance of chlorination for household water treatment: observations from Bangladesh

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Sara Flanagan Sara Flanagan, Xiaoguang Meng Xiaoguang Meng, Yan Zheng

Journal: WaterlinesYear: 2013Citations: 9

Point-of-use water treatment, especially chlorination, is an effective intervention to reduce diarrhoea, a leading cause of death for children under five. Yet success in chlorination uptake has been limited. One obstacle is objection to treated water's taste/odour. Protective chlorine residuals that...

Health SciencesNursingNutrition and DieteticsOpen Access
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Recessive TMEM167A variants cause neonatal diabetes, microcephaly, and epilepsy syndrome

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Enrico Virgilio, Sylvia Tielens, Georgia Bonfield, Fang‐Shin Nian et al.

Journal: Journal of Clinical InvestigationYear: 2025Citations: 4

Understanding the genetic causes of diseases that affect pancreatic β cells and neurons can give insights into pathways essential for both cell types. Microcephaly, epilepsy, and diabetes syndrome (MEDS) is a congenital disorder with two known etiological genes, IER3IP1 and YIPF5. Both genes encode ...

Health SciencesMedicineSurgeryOpen Access
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Reviews

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Asa McKercher, Bartholomaeus Zielinski, Tyler Turek, Jatinder Mann et al.

Journal: British Journal of Canadian StudiesYear: 2014
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