Zobrazeno 1 - 9
of 9
pro vyhledávání: '"J. G. Goldring"'
Autor:
James C. Moon, Peter Kellman, Robert G. Bell, George Thornton, Yousuf Razvi, Thomas A. Treibel, Paramjit S. Jeetley, Gabriella Captur, Clare Coyle, Liza Chacko, Luke Howard, Abhishek Shetye, Anthony Wolff, Michael Jacobs, Toby Hillman, Rupert Negus, Hui Xue, Onn Min Kon, Meg Coleman, Daniel S Knight, Tushar Kotecha, Jamil Mayet, Melissa Heightman, Georgina Russell, Kavitha Vimalesvaran, Ben Ariff, Palmira Mathurdas, Niket Patel, Marianna Fontana, Donald Leith, James T Brown, Lucy E Lamb, Deepa Gopalan, Charlotte Manisty, Graham D. Cole, Iain Pierce, J. G. Goldring, Prapa Kanagaratnam, Rishi K Patel, Kartik Kumar
Publikováno v:
European Heart Journal. 42:1866-1878
Background Troponin elevation is common in hospitalized COVID-19 patients, but underlying aetiologies are ill-defined. We used multi-parametric cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) to assess myocardial injury in recovered COVID-19 patients. Method
Autor:
Swapna Mandal, A Saigal, J. G. Goldring, A. J. Shah, D. Miller, C. N. Niklewicz, M Lipman, Joseph Barnett, John R. Hurst, E. Wey, Hannah Jarvis, A. Hunter, N. G. Jain, Ibrahim Abubakar, H. M. Bintalib, CJ Smith, G. Seligmann, S. B. Naidu, Simon E. Brill
Publikováno v:
COVID-19: clinical features and risk.
P97 Table 1Demographics and clinical characteristics of participants at hospital admission and follow up for wave 1 and 2 admissions Wave 1 Wave 2 p-value N = 400 N = 400 Demographics and Lifestyle Age (years) (Median, IQR) 61 (50 -74) 61 (51 - 74) 0
Autor:
S. B. Naidu, Marc Lipman, Simon E. Brill, Ibrahim Abubakar, E. Wey, Hannah Jarvis, A. J. Shah, D. Miller, A Saigal, J. G. Goldring, Swapna Mandal, John R. Hurst
Publikováno v:
COVID-19 recovery: predicting long term outcomes.
Autor:
Simon E. Brill, A Saigal, Swapna Mandal, S. B. Naidu, John R. Hurst, AJ Shah, M Lipman, Hannah Jarvis, J. G. Goldring
Publikováno v:
The care needs of those recovering from COVID-19
Background: Patients discharged from hospital following admission for COVID-19 may have on-going sequelae and require multidisciplinary input to ensure optimal recovery and early detection of complications We evaluated our COVID-19 follow-up service
Autor:
A Saigal, J. G. Goldring, John R. Hurst, Swapna Mandal, A. J. Shah, Jamie Brown, S. B. Naidu, M Lipman, T. Sood
Publikováno v:
The clinical experiences of post-COVID-19 recovery
Background During the COVID-19 pandemic patients were often discharged following assessment within the Emergency Department (ED). However, to our knowledge no data exists on whether these patients are likely to have a better trajectory of recovery. W
Autor:
Anthony Wolff, Michael Jacobs, Liza Chacko, Yousuf Razvi, Daniel S Knight, Paramjit S. Jeetley, James C. Moon, Peter Kellman, Marianna Fontana, Rupert Negus, James T Brown, Lucy E Lamb, Tushar Kotecha, J. G. Goldring, Niket Patel, Hui Xue
Publikováno v:
Circulation
Background: Hospitalised COVID-19 patients frequently have acute myocardial injury with elevated troponin levels Underlying aetiologies are ill-defined We use
Autor:
Colette Smith, J. G. Goldring, Marc Lipman, Simon E. Brill, AJ Shah, John R. Hurst, Swapna Mandal, S. B. Naidu, A Saigal, Hannah Jarvis
Publikováno v:
The European Respiratory Journal
article-version (AM) Accepted Manuscript
article-version (AM) Accepted Manuscript
During previous severe coronavirus outbreaks, 15% of survivors suffered from depression and 33% from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) at a mean follow-up of 22.6 and 32.2 months respectively [1]. A recent systematic review identified that whilst
Publikováno v:
Thorax. 68:A109.1-A109
Introduction and Objectives Last year we presented data highlighting the on-going role for Abrams pleural biopsy in areas with high tuberculosis incidence (1). Feedback reiterated on-going need, but highlighted concerns regarding the attainment of tr
Autor:
J. G. Goldring, I Abubakar, Susan Hopkins, Ian Cropley, S Burns, J Reading, John R. Hurst, M Lipman, N Shah, M Yousefzadeh, Tabitha Mahungu
Publikováno v:
Thorax. 68:A125.2-A126
Introduction Non-Tuberculous Mycobacteria (NTM) are often isolated from patient samples, though their clinical relevance can be unclear. Treatment is not always effective and management decisions are usually based on repeat isolates with compatible c