87 results on '"Cant, B"'
Search Results
2. Human T-cell leukaemia/lymphoma virus risk may be enhanced in some selected donor populations
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Price, J., Cant, B. A., Barbara, J. A. J., and Tedder, R. S.
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- 2001
3. RhD TYPING ON OLYMPUS PK7200
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Patel, A, Knight, R C, Proctor, S, and Cant, B
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- 1999
4. CLINICAL UTILITY OF ANTI-HBc SCREENING
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Allain, J-P, Hewitt, P, Tedder, R, Reeves, I, Cant, B, Wenham, D, Barbara, J, and Williamson, L
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- 1997
5. DONOR INTERVIEWS: THE FIRST SIX MONTHS IN SOUTH THAMES: P67
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Doughty, H A, Callaghan, I, and Cant, B
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- 1996
6. Brainstem Disorders and Coma: Evaluation and Monitoring Using Evoked Potentials and Brainstem Reflexes
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Cant, B. R., Joynt, R. J., editor, Weindl, A., editor, Struppler, Albrecht, editor, and Weindl, Adolf, editor
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Association scan of 14,500 nonsynonymous SNPs in four diseases identifies autoimmunity variants
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Burton, PR, Clayton, DG, Cardon, LR, Craddock, N, Deloukas, P, Duncanson, A, Kwiatkowski, DP, McCarthy, MI, Ouwehand, WH, Samani, NJ, Todd, JA, Donnelly, P, Barrett, JC, Davison, D, Easton, D, Evans, DM, Leung, HT, Marchini, JL, Morris, AP, Spencer, CC, Tobin, MD, Attwood, AP, Boorman, JP, Cant, B, Everson, U, Hussey, JM, Jolley, JD, Knight, AS, Koch, K, Meech, E, Nutland, S, Prowse, CV, Stevens, HE, Taylor, NC, Walters, GR, Walker, NM, Watkins, NA, Winzer, T, Jones, RW, McArdle, WL, Ring, SM, Strachan, DP, Pembrey, M, Breen, G, St Clair, D, Caesar, S, Gordon-Smith, K, Jones, L, Fraser, C, Green, EK, Grozeva, D, Hamshere, ML, Holmans, PA, Jones, IR, Kirov, G, Moskivina, V, Nikolov, I, O'Donovan, MC, Owen, MJ, Collier, DA, Elkin, A, Farmer, A, Williamson, R, McGuffin, P, Young, AH, Ferrier, IN, Ball, SG, Balmforth, AJ, Barrett, JH, Bishop, TD, Iles, MM, Maqbool, A, Yuldasheva, N, Hall, AS, Braund, PS, Dixon, RJ, Mangino, M, Stevens, S, Thompson, JR, Bredin, F, Tremelling, M, Parkes, M, Drummond, H, Lees, CW, Nimmo, ER, Satsangi, J, Fisher, SA, Forbes, A, Lewis, CM, Onnie, CM, Prescott, NJ, Sanderson, J, Matthew, CG, Barbour, J, Mohiuddin, MK, Todhunter, CE, Mansfield, JC, Ahmad, T, Cummings, FR, Jewell, DP, Webster, J, Brown, MJ, Lathrop, MG, Connell, J, Dominiczak, A, Marcano, CA, Burke, B, Dobson, R, Gungadoo, J, Lee, KL, Munroe, PB, Newhouse, SJ, Onipinla, A, Wallace, C, Xue, M, Caulfield, M, Farrall, M, Barton, A, Bruce, IN, Donovan, H, Eyre, S, Gilbert, PD, Hilder, SL, Hinks, AM, John, SL, Potter, C, Silman, AJ, Symmons, DP, Thomson, W, Worthington, J, Dunger, DB, Widmer, B, Frayling, TM, Freathy, RM, Lango, H, Perry, JR, Shields, BM, Weedon, MN, Hattersley, AT, Hitman, GA, Walker, M, Elliott, KS, Groves, CJ, Lindgren, CM, Rayner, NW, Timpson, NJ, Zeggini, E, Newport, M, Sirugo, G, Lyons, E, Vannberg, F, Hill, AV, Bradbury, LA, Farrar, C, Pointon, JJ, Wordsworth, P, Brown, MA, Franklyn, JA, Heward, JM, Simmonds, MJ, Gough, SC, Seal, S, Stratton, MR, Rahman, N, Ban, M, Goris, A, Sawcer, SJ, Compston, A, Conway, D, Jallow, M, Rockett, KA, Bumpstead, SJ, Chaney, A, Downes, K, Ghori, MJ, Gwilliam, R, Hunt, SE, Inouye, M, Keniry, A, King, E, McGinnis, R, Potter, S, Ravindrarajah, R, Whittaker, P, Widden, C, Withers, D, Cardin, NJ, Ferreira, T, Pereira-Gale, J, Hallgrimsdo'ttir, IB, Howie, BN, Su, Z, Teo, YY, Vukcevic, D, Bentley, D, Mitchell, SL, Newby, PR, Brand, OJ, Carr-Smith, J, Pearce, SH, Reveille, JD, Zhou, X, Sims, AM, Dowling, A, Taylor, J, Doan, T, Davis, JC, Savage, L, Ward, MM, Learch, TL, Weisman, MH, and Brown, M
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Linkage disequilibrium ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Genotype ,Population ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Genome-wide association study ,Autoimmunity ,Breast Neoplasms ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Aminopeptidases ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Linkage Disequilibrium ,Article ,Minor Histocompatibility Antigens ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Spondylitis, Ankylosing ,Receptors, Immunologic ,education ,Genetic association ,education.field_of_study ,Ankylosing spondylitis ,Thyroiditis, Autoimmune ,Chromosome Mapping ,Receptors, Interleukin ,medicine.disease ,Endoplasmic reticulum aminopeptidase 2 ,Genetics, Population ,Haplotypes ,Case-Control Studies ,Immunology ,North America - Abstract
We have genotyped 14,436 nonsynonymous SNPs (nsSNPs) and 897 major histocompatibility complex (MHC) tag SNPs from 1,000 independent cases of ankylosing spondylitis (AS), autoimmune thyroid disease (AITD), multiple sclerosis (MS) and breast cancer (BC). Comparing these data against a common control dataset derived from 1,500 randomly selected healthy British individuals, we report initial association and independent replication in a North American sample of two new loci related to ankylosing spondylitis, ARTS1 and IL23R, and confirmation of the previously reported association of AITD with TSHR and FCRL3. These findings, enabled in part by increased statistical power resulting from the expansion of the control reference group to include individuals from the other disease groups, highlight notable new possibilities for autoimmune regulation and suggest that IL23R may be a common susceptibility factor for the major 'seronegative' diseases.
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- 2016
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8. Genome-wide and fine-resolution association analysis of malaria in West Africa
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Muminatou, Jallow, Yik Ying Teo, Small, Kerrin S., Rockett, Kirk A., Panos, Deloukas, Clark, Taane G., Katja, Kivinen, Bojang, Kalifa A., Conway, David J., Margaret, Pinder, Giorgio, Sirugo, Fatou Sisay Joof, Stanley, Usen, Sarah, Auburn, Bumpstead, Suzannah J., Susana, Campino, Alison, Coffey, Andrew, Dunham, Fry, Andrew E., Angela, Green, Rhian, Gwilliam, Hunt, Sarah E., Michael, Inouye, Jeffreys, Anna E., Alieu, Mendy, Aarno, Palotie, Simon, Potter, Jiannis, Ragoussis, Jane, Rogers, Kate, Rowlands, Elilan, Somaskantharajah, Pamela, Whittaker, Claire, Widden, Peter, Donnelly, Bryan, Howie, Jonathan, Marchini, Andrew, Morris, Miguel, Sanjoaquin, Eric Akum Achidi, Tsiri, Agbenyega, Angela, Allen, Olukemi, Amodu, Patrick, Corran, Abdoulaye, Djimde, Amagana, Dolo, Doumbo, Ogobara K., Chris, Drakeley, Sarah, Dunstan, Jennifer, Evans, Jeremy, Farrar, Hien Tt, Fernando D., Horstmann, R. D., Ibrahim, M., Karunaweera, N., Kokwaro, G., Koram, K. A., Lemnge, M., Makani, J., Marsh, K., Michon, P., David, Modiano, Molyneux, M. E., Mueller, I., Parker, M., Peshu, N., Plowe, C. V., Puijalon, O., Reeder, J., Reyburn, H., Riley, E. M., Sakuntabhai, A., Singhasivanon, P., Sirima, S., Tall, A., Taylor, T. E., Thera, M., Troye Blomberg, M., Williams, T. N., Wilson, M., Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium Kwiatkowski, D. P., Epidemiology Network: Achidi, Malaria Genomic E. A., Agbenyega, T., Ahmad, T., Alcock, D., Allen, S., Amenga Etego, L., Amodu, O., Apinjoh, T. O., Attwood, A. P., Auburn, S., Ball, S. G., Balmforth, A. J., Ban, M., Barbour, J., Barnwell, D., Barrett, J. C., Barrett, J. H., Barton, A., Bentley, D., Bishop, D. T., Bojang, K., Boorman, J. P., Bougouma, E., Bradbury, L. A., Braga Marcano, C. A., Braund, P. S., Bredin, F., Breen, G., Brown, M. A., Brown, M. J., Bruce, I. N., Bryan, C., Bull, S., Bumpstead, S. J., Burke, B., Burton, P. R., Caesar, S., Campino, S., Cant, B., Cardin, N. J., Cardon, L. R., Carucci, D., Caulfield, M., Chaney, A., Clark, T., Clayton, D. G., Collier, D. A., Compston, A., Compston, D. A., Connell, J., Conway, D., Cook, K., Corran, P., Craddock, N., Cummings, F. R., Davison, D., Deloukas, P., Devries, J., Dewasurendra, R., Diakite, M., Dixon, R. J., Djimde, A., Dobson, R., Dolo, A., Dominiczak, A., Donnelly, P., Donovan, H., Doumbo, O., Downes, K., Doyle, A., Drakeley, C., Drummond, H., Duffy, P., Duncanson, A., Dunger, D. B., Dunstan, S., Duombo, O., Easton, D., Elkin, A., Elliott, K. S., Elzein, A., Enimil, A., Evans, D., Evans, J., Everson, U., Eyre, S., Farmer, A., Farrall, M., Farrar, C., Farrar, J., Fernando, D., Ferreira, T., Ferrier, I. N., Fisher, S. A., Fitzpatrick, K., Forbes, A., Franklyn, J. A., Fraser, C., Frayling, T. M., Freathy, R. M., Ghansah, A., Ghori, J., Gilbert, P. D., Gordon Smith, K., Goris, A., Gottlieb, M., Gough, S. C., Green, A., Green, E. K., Groves, C. J., Grozeva, D., Gungadoo, J., Gwilliam, R., Hall, A. S., Hallgrimsdóttir, I. B., Hamshere, M. L., Hart, L., Hattersley, A. T., Heward, J. M., Hider, S. L., Tran Tinh Hien, Hill, A. V., Hilton, E., Hinks, A. M., Hitman, G. A., Holmans, P. A., Horstmann, Rolf D., Howie, B. N., Hubbart, C., Hughes, C., Hunt, S. E., Hussein, A., Hussey, J. M., Muntaser, Ibrahim, Iles, M. M., Inouye, M., Ishengoma, D., Jallow, M., Jeffreys, A. E., Jewell, D. P., John, Sl, Jolley, J. D., Jones, I. R., Jones, L., Jones, R. W., Nadira, Karunaweera, Keniry, A., King, E., Kirov, G., Kivinen, K., Knight, A. S., Koch, K., Gilbert, Kokwaro, Koram, Kwadwo A., Lango, H., Lathrop, G. M., Lee, K. L., Lees, C. W., Martha, Lemnge, Leung, H. T., Lewis, C. M., Lin, E., Lindgren, C. M., Ly, A., Macinnis, B., Julie, Makani, Mangano, Valentina, Mangino, M., Manjurano, A., Manning, L., Mansfield, J. C., Manske, M., Maqbool, A., Marchini, J. L., Kevin, Marsh, Maslen, G., Mathew, C. G., Mcardle, W. L., Mccarthy, M. I., Mccreight, M., Mcginnis, R., Mcguffin, P., Meech, E., Mendy, A., Pascal, Michon, Mohiuddin, M. K., Molyneux, Malcolm E., Morris, A. P., Moskvina, V., Moyes, C., Ivo, Mueller, Munroe, P. B., Mutabingwa, T., Ndila, C. M., Newhouse, S. J., Newport, M., Nikolov, I., Nimmo, E. R., Nutland, S., Nyirongo, V., O'Donovan, M. C., Oluoch, T., Onipinla, A., Onnie, C. M., Ouwehand, W. H., Owen, M. J., Michael, Parker, Parkes, M., Pembrey, M., Pereira Gale, J., Perry, J. R., Norbert, Peshu, Plowe, Christopher V., Pointon, J. J., Potter, C., Potter, S., Prescott, N. J., Prowse, C. V., Odile, Puijalon, Quyen, N. T., Ragoussis, J., Rahman, N., Ravindrarajah, R., Rayner, N. W., John, Reeder, Hugh, Reyburn, Riley, Eleanor M., Ring, S. M., Risley, P., Rockett, K. A., Rogers, J., Rowlands, K., Anavaj, Sakuntabhai, Samani, N. J., Sanderson, J., Sanjoaquin, M., Satsangi, J., Sawcer, S. J., Seal, S., Shields, B. M., Silman, A. J., Simmonds, M. J., Pratap, Singhasivanon, Sodiomon, Sirima, Sirugo, G., Small, K. S., Somaskantharajah, E., Spencer, C. C., St Clair, D., Stevens, H. E., Stevens, M., Stevens, S., Strachan, D. P., Stratton, M. R., Su, Z., Suriyaphol, P., Symmons, D. P., Adama, Tall, Taylor, N. C., Taylor, Terrie E., Teo, Y., Teo, Y. Y., Mahamadou, Thera, Thompson, J. R., Thomson, W., Timpson, N. J., Tobin, M. D., Todd, J. A., Todhunter, C. E., Toure, O., Tremelling, M., Marita Troye Blomberg, Vanderwal, A., Vukcevic, D., Walker, M., Walker, N. M., Wallace, C., Walters, G. R., Walton, R., Watkins, N. A., Watson, R., Webster, J., Weedon, M. N., Whittaker, P., Widmer, B., Williams, Thomas N., Williamson, R., Michael, Wilson, Winzer, T., Withers, D., Wordsworth, P., Worthington, J., Wrigley, R., Xue, M., Young, A. H., Yuldasheva, N., and Zeggini, E.
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Linkage disequilibrium ,Hemoglobin, Sickle ,Population ,Genome-wide association study ,Locus (genetics) ,Biology ,Population stratification ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Severity of Illness Index ,Linkage Disequilibrium ,Article ,Gene mapping ,Reference Values ,Ethnicity ,Genetics ,Humans ,education ,Genetic association ,education.field_of_study ,Polymorphism, Genetic ,Chromosome Mapping ,Genetic Variation ,Malaria ,Gambia ,Imputation (genetics) ,Genome-Wide Association Study - Abstract
We report a genome-wide association (GWA) study of severe malaria in The Gambia. The initial GWA scan included 2,500 children genotyped on the Affymetrix 500K GeneChip, and a replication study included 3,400 children. We used this to examine the performance of GWA methods in Africa. We found considerable population stratification, and also that signals of association at known malaria resistance loci were greatly attenuated owing to weak linkage disequilibrium (LD). To investigate possible solutions to the problem of low LD, we focused on the HbS locus, sequencing this region of the genome in 62 Gambian individuals and then using these data to conduct multipoint imputation in the GWA samples. This increased the signal of association, from P = 4 × 10(-7) to P = 4 × 10(-14), with the peak of the signal located precisely at the HbS causal variant. Our findings provide proof of principle that fine-resolution multipoint imputation, based on population-specific sequencing data, can substantially boost authentic GWA signals and enable fine mapping of causal variants in African populations.
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- 2009
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9. Hypothesis-based analysis of gene-gene interactions and risk of myocardial infarction
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Lucas G1, Lluís-Ganella C, Subirana I, Musameh MD, Gonzalez JR, Nelson CP, Sentí M, Myocardial Infarction Genetics Consortium, Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium, Schwartz SM, Siscovick D, O'Donnell CJ, Melander O, Salomaa V, Purcell S, Altshuler D, Samani NJ, Kathiresan S, Elosua R, Voight BF, Musunuru K, Ardissino D, Mannucci PM, Anand S, Engert JC, Schunkert H, Erdmann J, Reilly MP, Rader DJ, Morgan T, Spertus JA, Stoll M, Girelli D, McKeown PP, Patterson CC, Siscovick DS, Peltonen L, Merlini PA, Berzuini C, Bernardinelli L, Peyvandi F, Tubaro M, Celli P, Ferrario M, Fetiveau R, Marziliano N, Casari G, Galli M, Ribichini F, Rossi M, Bernardi F, Zonzin P, Piazza A, Yee J, Friedlander Y, Marrugat J, Lucas G, Sala J, Ramos R, Meigs JB, Williams G, Nathan DM, MacRae CA, Havulinna AS, Berglund G, Deloukas P, Donnelly P, Farrall M, Gough SC, Hall AS, Hattersley AT, Hill AV, Kwiatkowski DP, Mathew CG, McCarthy MI, Ouwehand WH, Parkes M, Pembrey M, Rahman N, Stratton MR, Todd JA, Worthington J, Burton PR, Clayton DG, Cardon LR, Craddock N, Duncanson A, Barrett JC, Davison D, Easton D, Evans D, Leung HT, Marchini JL, Morris AP, Spencer CC, Tobin MD, Attwood AP, Boorman JP, Cant B, Everson U, Hussey JM, Jolley JD, Knight AS, Koch K, Meech E, Nutland S, Prowse CV, Stevens HE, Taylor NC, Walters GR, Walker NM, Watkins NA, Winzer T, Jones RW, McArdle WL, Ring SM, Strachan DP, Ball SG, Balmforth AJ, Barrett JH, Bishop D, Iles MM, Maqbool A, Braund PS, Dixon RJ, Mangino M, Stevens S, Thompson JR, Bumpstead SJ, Chaney A, Downes K, Ghori MJ, Gwilliam R, Hunt SE, Inouye M, Keniry A, King E, McGinnis R, Potter S, Ravindrarajah R, Whittaker P, Widden C, Cardo LR, Cardin NJ, Ferreira T, Pereira-Gale J, Hallgrimsdottir IB, Howie BN, Su Z, Teo YY, Vukcevic D, Lucas, G1, Lluís-Ganella, C, Subirana, I, Musameh, Md, Gonzalez, Jr, Nelson, Cp, Sentí, M, Myocardial Infarction Genetics, Consortium, Wellcome Trust Case Control, Consortium, Schwartz, Sm, Siscovick, D, O'Donnell, Cj, Melander, O, Salomaa, V, Purcell, S, Altshuler, D, Samani, Nj, Kathiresan, S, Elosua, R, Voight, Bf, Musunuru, K, Ardissino, D, Mannucci, Pm, Anand, S, Engert, Jc, Schunkert, H, Erdmann, J, Reilly, Mp, Rader, Dj, Morgan, T, Spertus, Ja, Stoll, M, Girelli, D, Mckeown, Pp, Patterson, Cc, Peltonen, L, Merlini, Pa, Berzuini, C, Bernardinelli, L, Peyvandi, F, Tubaro, M, Celli, P, Ferrario, M, Fetiveau, R, Marziliano, N, Casari, G, Galli, M, Ribichini, F, Rossi, M, Bernardi, F, Zonzin, P, Piazza, A, Yee, J, Friedlander, Y, Marrugat, J, Lucas, G, Sala, J, Ramos, R, Meigs, Jb, Williams, G, Nathan, Dm, Macrae, Ca, Havulinna, A, Berglund, G, Deloukas, P, Donnelly, P, Farrall, M, Gough, Sc, Hall, A, Hattersley, At, Hill, Av, Kwiatkowski, Dp, Mathew, Cg, Mccarthy, Mi, Ouwehand, Wh, Parkes, M, Pembrey, M, Rahman, N, Stratton, Mr, Todd, Ja, Worthington, J, Burton, Pr, Clayton, Dg, Cardon, Lr, Craddock, N, Duncanson, A, Barrett, Jc, Davison, D, Easton, D, Evans, D, Leung, Ht, Marchini, Jl, Morris, Ap, Spencer, Cc, Tobin, Md, Attwood, Ap, Boorman, Jp, Cant, B, Everson, U, Hussey, Jm, Jolley, Jd, Knight, A, Koch, K, Meech, E, Nutland, S, Prowse, Cv, Stevens, He, Taylor, Nc, Walters, Gr, Walker, Nm, Watkins, Na, Winzer, T, Jones, Rw, Mcardle, Wl, Ring, Sm, Strachan, Dp, Ball, Sg, Balmforth, Aj, Barrett, Jh, Bishop, D, Iles, Mm, Maqbool, A, Braund, P, Dixon, Rj, Mangino, M, Stevens, S, Thompson, Jr, Bumpstead, Sj, Chaney, A, Downes, K, Ghori, Mj, Gwilliam, R, Hunt, Se, Inouye, M, Keniry, A, King, E, Mcginnis, R, Potter, S, Ravindrarajah, R, Whittaker, P, Widden, C, Cardo, Lr, Cardin, Nj, Ferreira, T, Pereira-Gale, J, Hallgrimsdottir, Ib, Howie, Bn, Su, Z, Teo, Yy, and Vukcevic, D
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Heredity ,Epidemiology ,Myocardial Infarction ,lcsh:Medicine ,Genome-wide association study ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Cardiovascular ,Logistic regression ,Risk Factors ,Cardiac and Cardiovascular Systems ,lcsh:Science ,Genetics ,0303 health sciences ,Multidisciplinary ,Medicine (all) ,030305 genetics & heredity ,Genomics ,Genetic Epidemiology ,Medicine ,Research Article ,Human ,Risk ,Genotype ,Genotypes ,Reproducibility of Result ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Biology ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,03 medical and health sciences ,Genome Analysis Tools ,Genome-Wide Association Studies ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Risk factor ,Allele frequency ,Genetic Association Studies ,030304 developmental biology ,Genetic association ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (all) ,Complex Traits ,Risk Factor ,lcsh:R ,Reproducibility of Results ,Human Genetics ,Epistasis, Genetic ,Odds ratio ,Genetic epidemiology ,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (all) ,Genetics of Disease ,Epistasis ,Genetic Polymorphism ,Infart de miocardi -- Epidemiologia ,lcsh:Q ,Population Genetics ,Genome-Wide Association Study - Abstract
The genetic loci that have been found by genome-wide association studies to modulate risk of coronary heart disease explain only a fraction of its total variance, and gene-gene interactions have been proposed as a potential source of the remaining heritability. Given the potentially large testing burden, we sought to enrich our search space with real interactions by analyzing variants that may be more likely to interact on the basis of two distinct hypotheses: a biological hypothesis, under which MI risk is modulated by interactions between variants that are known to be relevant for its risk factors; and a statistical hypothesis, under which interacting variants individually show weak marginal association with MI. In a discovery sample of 2,967 cases of early-onset myocardial infarction (MI) and 3,075 controls from the MIGen study, we performed pair-wise SNP interaction testing using a logistic regression framework. Despite having reasonable power to detect interaction effects of plausible magnitudes, we observed no statistically significant evidence of interaction under these hypotheses, and no clear consistency between the top results in our discovery sample and those in a large validation sample of 1,766 cases of coronary heart disease and 2,938 controls from the Wellcome Trust Case-Control Consortium. Our results do not support the existence of strong interaction effects as a common risk factor for MI. Within the scope of the hypotheses we have explored, this study places a modest upper limit on the magnitude that epistatic risk effects are likely to have at the population level (odds ratio for MI risk 1.3–2.0, depending on allele frequency and interaction model).
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- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Identification of ADAMTS7 as a novel locus for coronary atherosclerosis and association of ABO with myocardial infarction in the presence of coronary atherosclerosis: two genome-wide association studies
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Reilly MP, Li M, He J, Ferguson JF, Stylianou IM, Mehta NN, Burnett MS, Devaney JM, Knouff CW, Thompson JR, Horne BD, Stewart AF, Assimes TL, Wild PS, Allayee H, Nitschke PL, Patel RS, Myocardial Infarction Genetics Consortium, Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium, Martinelli N, Girelli D, Quyyumi AA, Anderson JL, Erdmann J, Hall AS, Schunkert H, Quertermous T, Blankenberg S, Hazen SL, Roberts R, Kathiresan S, Samani NJ, Epstein SE, Rader DJ, Qasim AN, DerOhannessian SL, Qu L, Cappola TP, Chen Z, Matthai W, Hakonarson HH, Wilensky R, Kent KM, Lindsay JM, Pichard AD, Satler L, Waksman R, Knoupf CW, Walker MC, Waterworth DM, Mosser V, Braund PS, Wright B, Balmforth AJ, Ball SG, Chen L, Wells GA, McPherson R, Lackner K, Munzel TF, Schillert A, Schnabel R, Zeller T, Ziegler A, Absher D, Hlatky MA, Iribaren C, Knowles JW, Linsel Nitschke P, König IR, Hengstenberg C, Nahrstaedt J, Peters A, Schreiber S, Wichmann E, Willenborg C, Su S, Bouzyk M, Vaccarino V, Zafari AM, Carlquist JF, Muhlestein JB, Olivieri O, Barnard J, Hartiala J, Tang WH, Burton PR, Clayton DG, Cardon LR, Craddock N, Deloukas P, Duncanson A, Kwiatkowski DP, McCarthy MI, Ouwehand WH, Todd JA, Donnelly P, Barrett JC, Davison D, Easton D, Evans DM, Leung HT, Marchini JL, Morris AP, Spencer CC, Tobin MD, Attwood AP, Boorman JP, Cant B, Everson U, Hussey JM, Jolley JD, Knight AS, Koch K, Meech E, Nutland S, Prowse CV, Stevens HE, Taylor NC, Walters GR, Walker NM, Watkins NA, Winzer T, Jones RW, McArdle WL, Ring SM, Strachan DP, Pembrey M, Breen G, St Clair D, Caesar S, Gordon Smith K, Jones L, Fraser C, Green EK, Grozeva D, Hamshere ML, Holmans PA, Jones IR, Kirov G, Moskvina V, Nikolov I, O'Donovan MC, Owen MJ, Collier DA, Elkin A, Farmer A, Williamson R, McGuffin P, Young AH, Ferrier IN, Barrett JH, Bishop DT, Iles MM, Maqbool A, Yuldasheva N, Dixon RJ, Mangino M, Stevens S, Bredin F, Tremelling M, Parkes M, Drummond H, Lees CW, Nimmo ER, Satsangi J, Fisher SA, Forbes A, Lewis CM, Onnie CM, Prescott NJ, Sanderson J, Mathew CG, Barbour J, Mohiuddin MK, Todhunter CE, Mansfield JC, Ahmad T, Cummings FR, Jewell DP, Webster J, Brown MJ, Lathrop M, Connell J, Dominiczak A, Marcano CA, Burke B, Dobson R, Gungadoo J, Lee KL, Munroe PB, Newhouse SJ, Onipinla A, Wallace C, Xue M, Caulfield M, Farrall M, Barton A, Bruce IN, Donovan H, Eyre S, Gilbert PD, Hider SL, Hinks AM, John SL, Potter C, Silman AJ, Symmons DP, Thomson W, Worthington J, Dunger DB, Widmer B, Frayling TM, Freathy RM, Lango H, Perry JR, Shields BM, Weedon MN, Hattersley AT, Hitman GA, Walker M, Elliott KS, Groves CJ, Lindgren CM, Rayner NW, Timpson NJ, Zeggini E, Newport M, Sirugo G, Lyons E, Vannberg F, Hill AV, Bradbury LA, Farrar C, Pointon JJ, Wordsworth P, Brown MA, Franklyn JA, Heward JM, Simmonds MJ, Gough SC, Seal S, Stratton MR, Rahman N, Ban M, Goris A, Sawcer SJ, Compston A, Conway D, Jallow M, Rockett KA, Bumpstead SJ, Chaney A, Downes K, Ghori MJ, Gwilliam R, Hunt SE, Inouye M, Keniry A, King E, McGinnis R, Potter S, Ravindrarajah R, Whittaker P, Widden C, Withers D, Cardin NJ, Ferreira T, Pereira Gale J, Hallgrimsdóttir IB, Bowie BN, Su Z, Teo YY, Vukcevic D, Bentley D, Meigs JB, Williams G, Nathan DM, MacRae CA, O'Donnell CJ, Ardissino D, Merlini PA, Berzuini C, Bernardinelli L, Peyvandi F, Tubaro M, Celli P, Ferrario M, Fetiveau R, Marziliano N, Galli M, Ribichini F, Rossi M, Bernardi F, Zonzin P, Piazza A, Mannucci PM, Schwartz SM, Siscovick DS, Yee J, Friedlander Y, Elosua R, Marrugat J, Lucas G, Subirana I, Sala J, Ramos R, Salomaa V, Havulinna AS, Peltonen L, Melander O, Berglund G, Voight BF, Hirschhorn JN, Asselta R, Duga S, Spreafico M, Musunuru K, Daly MJ, Purcell S, Surti A, Guiducci C, Gianniny L, Mirel D, Parkin M, Burtt N, Gabriel SB, CASARI , GIORGIO NEVIO, Reilly, Mp, Li, M, He, J, Ferguson, Jf, Stylianou, Im, Mehta, Nn, Burnett, M, Devaney, Jm, Knouff, Cw, Thompson, Jr, Horne, Bd, Stewart, Af, Assimes, Tl, Wild, P, Allayee, H, Nitschke, Pl, Patel, R, Myocardial Infarction Genetics, Consortium, Wellcome Trust Case Control, Consortium, Martinelli, N, Girelli, D, Quyyumi, Aa, Anderson, Jl, Erdmann, J, Hall, A, Schunkert, H, Quertermous, T, Blankenberg, S, Hazen, Sl, Roberts, R, Kathiresan, S, Samani, Nj, Epstein, Se, Rader, Dj, Qasim, An, Derohannessian, Sl, Qu, L, Cappola, Tp, Chen, Z, Matthai, W, Hakonarson, Hh, Wilensky, R, Kent, Km, Lindsay, Jm, Pichard, Ad, Satler, L, Waksman, R, Knoupf, Cw, Walker, Mc, Waterworth, Dm, Mosser, V, Braund, P, Wright, B, Balmforth, Aj, Ball, Sg, Chen, L, Wells, Ga, Mcpherson, R, Lackner, K, Munzel, Tf, Schillert, A, Schnabel, R, Zeller, T, Ziegler, A, Absher, D, Hlatky, Ma, Iribaren, C, Knowles, Jw, Linsel Nitschke, P, König, Ir, Hengstenberg, C, Nahrstaedt, J, Peters, A, Schreiber, S, Wichmann, E, Willenborg, C, Su, S, Bouzyk, M, Vaccarino, V, Zafari, Am, Carlquist, Jf, Muhlestein, Jb, Olivieri, O, Barnard, J, Hartiala, J, Tang, Wh, Burton, Pr, Clayton, Dg, Cardon, Lr, Craddock, N, Deloukas, P, Duncanson, A, Kwiatkowski, Dp, Mccarthy, Mi, Ouwehand, Wh, Todd, Ja, Donnelly, P, Barrett, Jc, Davison, D, Easton, D, Evans, Dm, Leung, Ht, Marchini, Jl, Morris, Ap, Spencer, Cc, Tobin, Md, Attwood, Ap, Boorman, Jp, Cant, B, Everson, U, Hussey, Jm, Jolley, Jd, Knight, A, Koch, K, Meech, E, Nutland, S, Prowse, Cv, Stevens, He, Taylor, Nc, Walters, Gr, Walker, Nm, Watkins, Na, Winzer, T, Jones, Rw, Mcardle, Wl, Ring, Sm, Strachan, Dp, Pembrey, M, Breen, G, St Clair, D, Caesar, S, Gordon Smith, K, Jones, L, Fraser, C, Green, Ek, Grozeva, D, Hamshere, Ml, Holmans, Pa, Jones, Ir, Kirov, G, Moskvina, V, Nikolov, I, O'Donovan, Mc, Owen, Mj, Collier, Da, Elkin, A, Farmer, A, Williamson, R, Mcguffin, P, Young, Ah, Ferrier, In, Barrett, Jh, Bishop, Dt, Iles, Mm, Maqbool, A, Yuldasheva, N, Dixon, Rj, Mangino, M, Stevens, S, Bredin, F, Tremelling, M, Parkes, M, Drummond, H, Lees, Cw, Nimmo, Er, Satsangi, J, Fisher, Sa, Forbes, A, Lewis, Cm, Onnie, Cm, Prescott, Nj, Sanderson, J, Mathew, Cg, Barbour, J, Mohiuddin, Mk, Todhunter, Ce, Mansfield, Jc, Ahmad, T, Cummings, Fr, Jewell, Dp, Webster, J, Brown, Mj, Lathrop, M, Connell, J, Dominiczak, A, Marcano, Ca, Burke, B, Dobson, R, Gungadoo, J, Lee, Kl, Munroe, Pb, Newhouse, Sj, Onipinla, A, Wallace, C, Xue, M, Caulfield, M, Farrall, M, Barton, A, Bruce, In, Donovan, H, Eyre, S, Gilbert, Pd, Hider, Sl, Hinks, Am, John, Sl, Potter, C, Silman, Aj, Symmons, Dp, Thomson, W, Worthington, J, Dunger, Db, Widmer, B, Frayling, Tm, Freathy, Rm, Lango, H, Perry, Jr, Shields, Bm, Weedon, Mn, Hattersley, At, Hitman, Ga, Walker, M, Elliott, K, Groves, Cj, Lindgren, Cm, Rayner, Nw, Timpson, Nj, Zeggini, E, Newport, M, Sirugo, G, Lyons, E, Vannberg, F, Hill, Av, Bradbury, La, Farrar, C, Pointon, Jj, Wordsworth, P, Brown, Ma, Franklyn, Ja, Heward, Jm, Simmonds, Mj, Gough, Sc, Seal, S, Stratton, Mr, Rahman, N, Ban, M, Goris, A, Sawcer, Sj, Compston, A, Conway, D, Jallow, M, Rockett, Ka, Bumpstead, Sj, Chaney, A, Downes, K, Ghori, Mj, Gwilliam, R, Hunt, Se, Inouye, M, Keniry, A, King, E, Mcginnis, R, Potter, S, Ravindrarajah, R, Whittaker, P, Widden, C, Withers, D, Cardin, Nj, Ferreira, T, Pereira Gale, J, Hallgrimsdóttir, Ib, Bowie, Bn, Su, Z, Teo, Yy, Vukcevic, D, Bentley, D, Meigs, Jb, Williams, G, Nathan, Dm, Macrae, Ca, O'Donnell, Cj, Ardissino, D, Merlini, Pa, Berzuini, C, Bernardinelli, L, Peyvandi, F, Tubaro, M, Celli, P, Ferrario, M, Fetiveau, R, Marziliano, N, Casari, GIORGIO NEVIO, Galli, M, Ribichini, F, Rossi, M, Bernardi, F, Zonzin, P, Piazza, A, Mannucci, Pm, Schwartz, Sm, Siscovick, D, Yee, J, Friedlander, Y, Elosua, R, Marrugat, J, Lucas, G, Subirana, I, Sala, J, Ramos, R, Salomaa, V, Havulinna, A, Peltonen, L, Melander, O, Berglund, G, Voight, Bf, Hirschhorn, Jn, Asselta, R, Duga, S, Spreafico, M, Musunuru, K, Daly, Mj, Purcell, S, Surti, A, Guiducci, C, Gianniny, L, Mirel, D, Parkin, M, Burtt, N, and Gabriel, Sb
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Linkage disequilibrium ,ABO ,ADAMTS7 Protein ,ADAMTS7 ,Genome-wide association study ,Coronary Angiography ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Linkage Disequilibrium ,ABO Blood-Group System ,Coronary artery disease ,Gene Frequency ,ABO blood group system ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Genetic predisposition ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,cardiovascular diseases ,Myocardial infarction ,Genetic risk factor ,genetic locus ,Coronary atherosclerosis ,Aged ,business.industry ,coronary atherosclerosis ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,ADAM Proteins ,myocardial infarction ,Genetic Loci ,Cardiology ,Myocardial infarction complications ,Female ,business ,coronary artery disease ,Genome-Wide Association Study - Abstract
BACKGROUND: We tested whether genetic factors distinctly contribute to either development of coronary atherosclerosis or, specifically, to myocardial infarction in existing coronary atherosclerosis. METHODS: We did two genome-wide association studies (GWAS) with coronary angiographic phenotyping in participants of European ancestry. To identify loci that predispose to angiographic coronary artery disease (CAD), we compared individuals who had this disorder (n=12,393) with those who did not (controls, n=7383). To identify loci that predispose to myocardial infarction, we compared patients who had angiographic CAD and myocardial infarction (n=5783) with those who had angiographic CAD but no myocardial infarction (n=3644). FINDINGS: In the comparison of patients with angiographic CAD versus controls, we identified a novel locus, ADAMTS7 (p=4·98×10(-13)). In the comparison of patients with angiographic CAD who had myocardial infarction versus those with angiographic CAD but no myocardial infarction, we identified a novel association at the ABO locus (p=7·62×10(-9)). The ABO association was attributable to the glycotransferase-deficient enzyme that encodes the ABO blood group O phenotype previously proposed to protect against myocardial infarction. INTERPRETATION: Our findings indicate that specific genetic predispositions promote the development of coronary atherosclerosis whereas others lead to myocardial infarction in the presence of coronary atherosclerosis. The relation to specific CAD phenotypes might modify how novel loci are applied in personalised risk assessment and used in the development of novel therapies for CAD. FUNDING: The PennCath and MedStar studies were supported by the Cardiovascular Institute of the University of Pennsylvania, by the MedStar Health Research Institute at Washington Hospital Center and by a research grant from GlaxoSmithKline. The funding and support for the other cohorts contributing to the paper are described in the webappendix.
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- 2011
11. Congenital anterior abdominal wall defects. Rate of abdominal wall defects is higher in Scotland than England and Wales
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Chalmers, J., Forrest, J., Cant, B., and Hollinsworth, M.
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Letter - Published
- 1997
12. Exceptionally large area photodetection
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Howorth, Jon, primary, Hay, Nigel, additional, Cant, B. A., additional, Monastyrskiy, M. A., additional, Greenfield, D. E., additional, and Joseph, Charles L., additional
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- 2009
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13. Guidelines for microplate techniques in liquid-phase blood grouping and antibody screening
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Voak, D., primary, Napier, J.A.F., additional, Boulton, F.E., additional, Cann, R., additional, Finney, R.D., additional, Fraser, I.D., additional, Wagstaff, W., additional, Waters, A.H., additional, Wood, J.K., additional, Brazier, D., additional, Cant, B., additional, Hedley, G., additional, Knight, R., additional, Milkins, C., additional, Poole, G.D., additional, Ross, D.W., additional, Sangster, J., additional, and Scott, M., additional
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- 2008
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14. P66 The UK Blood Service/Wellcome Trust Control Collection: a unique public resource of control samples for disease association studies
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Winzer, T., primary, Cant, B., additional, Taylor, N., additional, Masters, J., additional, Kneight, A., additional, Attwood, T., additional, Boorman, J., additional, Koch, K., additional, Nutland, S., additional, Watkins, N., additional, and Ouwehand, W. H., additional
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- 2006
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15. An exploration of the views of gay and bisexual men in one London borough of both their primary care needs and the practice of primary care practitioners
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Cant, B., primary
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- 2002
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16. Sexual health of teenagers
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Noone, A., primary, Chalmers, J., additional, Hollinsworth, M., additional, McIntyre, K., additional, Cant, B., additional, Seamark, C. J, additional, Reiss, H. E, additional, Nicoll, A., additional, and Catchpole, M., additional
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- 1999
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17. Prevalence and genotype of hepatitis C virus infection in pregnant women and blood donors in Ghana
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Wansbrough-Jonesl, M.H., primary, Frimpong, E., additional, Cant, B., additional, Harris, K., additional, Evans, M.R.W., additional, and Teo, C.G., additional
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- 1998
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18. Congenital anterior abdominal wall defects
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Luck, C., primary, Scrutton, J., additional, Chalmers, J., additional, Forrest, J., additional, Cant, B., additional, Hollinsworth, M., additional, Dillon, E, additional, Renwick, M, additional, Rankin, J, additional, Stringer, M. D, additional, and Mason, G., additional
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- 1997
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19. Uvulopalatopharyngoplasty in severe idiopathic obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome.
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Walker, E B, Frith, R W, Harding, D A, and Cant, B R
- Abstract
Eleven patients with severe obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome, which was fully reversed by treatment with nasal continuous positive airways pressure, underwent uvulopalatopharyngoplasty. All patients were followed for at least 12 months after surgery. One patient with large tonsils was cured. Of the remaining 10 patients, two showed minimal objective improvement at 12 months and the rest were unchanged. Four patients subsequently developed cardiac failure due to obstructive sleep apnoea. Thus uvulopalatopharyngoplasty was not effective in these patients with severe idiopathic obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 1989
20. Severe obstructive sleep apnoea treated with long term nasal continuous positive airway pressure.
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Frith, R W and Cant, B R
- Abstract
Seven patients with the severe obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome were treated with nasal continuous positive airway pressure for from three to 22 months. This treatment reversed all symptoms due to the syndrome in every patient and continued to be used in five patients. One patient stopped treatment after eight months and subsequently remained incapacitated and another underwent tracheostomy at the time of transphenoidal hypophysectomy. Nasal continuous positive airway pressure is a safe, non-invasive treatment, which may be used in the presence of cardiac and respiratory failure. It is able fully to reverse upper airway obstruction and can be used at home on a long term basis. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 1985
21. Central somatosensory conduction after head injury.
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Hume, Ann L. and Cant, B. R.
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- 1981
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22. Central somatosensory conduction time in comatose patients.
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Hume, Ann L., Cant, B. R., and Shaw, N. A.
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- 1979
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23. Monitoring by compressed spectral array in prolonged coma.
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Cant, B. R. and Shaw, N. A.
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- 1984
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24. Genome-wide association study identifies eight loci associated with blood pressure
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Newton-Cheh, C, Johnson, T, Gateva, V, Tobin, MD, Bochud, M, Coin, L, Najjar, SS, Zhao, JH, Heath, SC, Eyheramendy, S, Papadakis, K, Voight, BF, Scott, LJ, Zhang, F, Farrall, M, Tanaka, T, Wallace, C, Chambers, JC, Khaw, K, Nilsson, P, Van Der Harst, P, Polidoro, S, Grobbee, DE, Onland-Moret, NC, Bots, ML, Wain, LV, Elliot, KS, Teumer, A, Luan, J, Lucas, G, Kuusisto, J, Burton, PR, Hadley, D, McArdle, WL, Brown, M, Dominiczak, A, Newhouse, SJ, Samani, NJ, Webster, J, Zeggini, E, Beckmann, JS, Bergmann, S, Lim, N, Song, K, Vollenweider, P, Waeber, G, Waterworth, DM, Yuan, X, Groop, L, Orho-Melander, M, Allione, A, Di Gregorio, A, Guarrera, S, Panico, S, Ricceri, F, Romanazzi, V, Sacerdote, C, Vineis, P, Barroso, I, Sandhu, MS, Luben, RN, Crawford, GJ, Jousilahti, P, Perola, M, Boehnke, M, Bonnycastle, LL, Collins, FS, Jackson, AU, Mohlke, KL, Stringham, HM, Valle, TT, Willer, CJ, Bergman, RN, Morken, MA, Döring, A, Gieger, C, Illig, T, Meitinger, T, Org, E, Pfeufer, A, Wichmann, HE, Kathiresan, S, Marrugat, J, O'Donnell, CJ, Schwartz, SM, Siscovick, DS, Subirana, I, Freimer, NB, Hartikainen, A, McCarthy, MI, O'Reilly, PF, Peltonen, L, Pouta, A, De Jong, PE, Snieder, H, Van Gilst, WH, Clarke, R, Goel, A, Hamsten, A, Altshuler, D, Jarvelin, M, Elliott, P, Lakatta, EG, Forouhi, N, Wareham, NJ, Loos, RJF, Deloukas, P, Lathrop, GM, Zelenika, D, Strachan, DP, Soranzo, N, Williams, FM, Zhai, G, Spector, TD, Peden, JF, Watkins, H, Ferrucci, L, Caulfield, M, Munroe, PB, Berglund, G, Melander, O, Matullo, G, Uiterwaal, CS, van der Schouw, YT, Numans, ME, Ernst, F, Homuth, G, Völker, U, Elosua, R, Laakso, M, Connell, JM, Mooser, V, Salomaa, V, Tuomilehto, J, Laan, M, Navis, G, Seedorf, U, Syvänen, A, Tognoni, G, Sanna, S, Uda, M, Scheet, P, Schlessinger, D, Scuteri, A, Dörr, M, Felix, SB, Reffelmann, T, Lorbeer, R, Völzke, H, Rettig, R, Galan, P, Hercberg, S, Bingham, SA, Kooner, JS, Bandinelli, S, Meneton, P, Abecasis, G, Thompson, JR, Braga Marcano, CA, Barke, B, Dobson, R, Gungadoo, J, Lee, KL, Onipinla, A, Wallace, I, Xue, M, Clayton, DG, Leung, H, Nutland, S, Walker, NM, Todd, JA, Stevens, HE, Dunger, DB, Widmer, B, Downes, K, Cardon, LR, Kwiatkowski, DP, Barrett, JC, Evans, D, Morris, AP, Lindgren, CM, Rayner, NW, Timpson, NJ, Lyons, E, Vannberg, F, Hill, AVS, Teo, YY, Rockett, KA, Craddock, N, Attwood, AP, Bryan, C, Bumpstead, SJ, Chaney, A, Ghori, J, William, RG, Hunt, SE, Inouye, M, Keniry, E, King, E, McGinnis, R, Potter, S, Ravindrarajan, R, Whittaker, P, Withers, D, Bentley, D, Groves, CJ, Duncanson, A, Ouwehand, WH, Boorman, JP, Cant, B, Jolley, JD, Knight, AS, Koch, K, Taylor, NC, Watkins, NA, Winzer, T, Braund, PS, Dixon, RJ, Mangino, M, Stevens, S, Donnely, P, Davidson, D, Marchini, JL, Spencer, ICA, Cardin, NJ, Ferreira, T, Pereira-Gale, J, Hallgrimsdottir, IB, Howie, BN, Su, Z, Vukcevic, D, Easton, D, Everson, U, Hussey, JM, Meech, E, Prowse, CV, Walters, GR, Jones, RW, Ring, SM, Prembey, M, Breen, G, St Clair, D, Ceasar, S, Gordon-Smith, K, Fraser, C, Green, EK, Grozeva, D, Hamshere, ML, Holmans, PA, Jones, IR, Kirov, G, Moskovina, V, Nikolov, I, O'Donovan, MC, Owen, MJ, Collier, DA, Elkin, A, Farmer, A, Williamson, R, McGruffin, P, Young, AH, Ferrier, IN, Ball, SG, Balmforth, AJ, Barrett, JH, Bishop, DT, Iles, MM, Maqbool, A, Yuldasheva, N, Hall, AS, Bredin, F, Tremelling, M, Parkes, M, Drummond, H, Lees, CW, Nimmo, ER, Satsangi, J, Fisher, SA, Lewis, CM, Onnie, CM, Prescott, NJ, Mathew, CG, Forbes, A, Sanderson, J, Mathew, C, Barbour, J, Mohiuddin, MK, Todhunter, CE, Mansfield, JC, Ahmad, T, Cummings, FR, Jewell, DP, Barton, A, Bruce, IN, Donovan, H, Eyre, S, Gilbert, PD, Hider, SL, Hinks, AM, John, SL, Potter, C, Silman, AJ, Symmons, DPM, Thomson, W, Worthington, J, Frayling, TM, Freathy, RM, Lango, H, Perry, JRB, Weedon, MN, Hattersley, AT, Shields, BM, Hitman, GA, Walker, M, Newport, M, Sirugo, G, Conway, D, Jallow, M, Bradbury, LA, Pointon, JL, Brown, MA, Farrar, C, Wordsworth, P, Franklyn, JA, Heward, JM, Simmonds, MJ, Cough, SCL, Seal, S, Stratton, MR, Ban, M, Goris, A, Sawcer, SJ, Compston, A, Newton-Cheh, C, Johnson, T, Gateva, V, Tobin, MD, Bochud, M, Coin, L, Najjar, SS, Zhao, JH, Heath, SC, Eyheramendy, S, Papadakis, K, Voight, BF, Scott, LJ, Zhang, F, Farrall, M, Tanaka, T, Wallace, C, Chambers, JC, Khaw, K, Nilsson, P, Van Der Harst, P, Polidoro, S, Grobbee, DE, Onland-Moret, NC, Bots, ML, Wain, LV, Elliot, KS, Teumer, A, Luan, J, Lucas, G, Kuusisto, J, Burton, PR, Hadley, D, McArdle, WL, Brown, M, Dominiczak, A, Newhouse, SJ, Samani, NJ, Webster, J, Zeggini, E, Beckmann, JS, Bergmann, S, Lim, N, Song, K, Vollenweider, P, Waeber, G, Waterworth, DM, Yuan, X, Groop, L, Orho-Melander, M, Allione, A, Di Gregorio, A, Guarrera, S, Panico, S, Ricceri, F, Romanazzi, V, Sacerdote, C, Vineis, P, Barroso, I, Sandhu, MS, Luben, RN, Crawford, GJ, Jousilahti, P, Perola, M, Boehnke, M, Bonnycastle, LL, Collins, FS, Jackson, AU, Mohlke, KL, Stringham, HM, Valle, TT, Willer, CJ, Bergman, RN, Morken, MA, Döring, A, Gieger, C, Illig, T, Meitinger, T, Org, E, Pfeufer, A, Wichmann, HE, Kathiresan, S, Marrugat, J, O'Donnell, CJ, Schwartz, SM, Siscovick, DS, Subirana, I, Freimer, NB, Hartikainen, A, McCarthy, MI, O'Reilly, PF, Peltonen, L, Pouta, A, De Jong, PE, Snieder, H, Van Gilst, WH, Clarke, R, Goel, A, Hamsten, A, Altshuler, D, Jarvelin, M, Elliott, P, Lakatta, EG, Forouhi, N, Wareham, NJ, Loos, RJF, Deloukas, P, Lathrop, GM, Zelenika, D, Strachan, DP, Soranzo, N, Williams, FM, Zhai, G, Spector, TD, Peden, JF, Watkins, H, Ferrucci, L, Caulfield, M, Munroe, PB, Berglund, G, Melander, O, Matullo, G, Uiterwaal, CS, van der Schouw, YT, Numans, ME, Ernst, F, Homuth, G, Völker, U, Elosua, R, Laakso, M, Connell, JM, Mooser, V, Salomaa, V, Tuomilehto, J, Laan, M, Navis, G, Seedorf, U, Syvänen, A, Tognoni, G, Sanna, S, Uda, M, Scheet, P, Schlessinger, D, Scuteri, A, Dörr, M, Felix, SB, Reffelmann, T, Lorbeer, R, Völzke, H, Rettig, R, Galan, P, Hercberg, S, Bingham, SA, Kooner, JS, Bandinelli, S, Meneton, P, Abecasis, G, Thompson, JR, Braga Marcano, CA, Barke, B, Dobson, R, Gungadoo, J, Lee, KL, Onipinla, A, Wallace, I, Xue, M, Clayton, DG, Leung, H, Nutland, S, Walker, NM, Todd, JA, Stevens, HE, Dunger, DB, Widmer, B, Downes, K, Cardon, LR, Kwiatkowski, DP, Barrett, JC, Evans, D, Morris, AP, Lindgren, CM, Rayner, NW, Timpson, NJ, Lyons, E, Vannberg, F, Hill, AVS, Teo, YY, Rockett, KA, Craddock, N, Attwood, AP, Bryan, C, Bumpstead, SJ, Chaney, A, Ghori, J, William, RG, Hunt, SE, Inouye, M, Keniry, E, King, E, McGinnis, R, Potter, S, Ravindrarajan, R, Whittaker, P, Withers, D, Bentley, D, Groves, CJ, Duncanson, A, Ouwehand, WH, Boorman, JP, Cant, B, Jolley, JD, Knight, AS, Koch, K, Taylor, NC, Watkins, NA, Winzer, T, Braund, PS, Dixon, RJ, Mangino, M, Stevens, S, Donnely, P, Davidson, D, Marchini, JL, Spencer, ICA, Cardin, NJ, Ferreira, T, Pereira-Gale, J, Hallgrimsdottir, IB, Howie, BN, Su, Z, Vukcevic, D, Easton, D, Everson, U, Hussey, JM, Meech, E, Prowse, CV, Walters, GR, Jones, RW, Ring, SM, Prembey, M, Breen, G, St Clair, D, Ceasar, S, Gordon-Smith, K, Fraser, C, Green, EK, Grozeva, D, Hamshere, ML, Holmans, PA, Jones, IR, Kirov, G, Moskovina, V, Nikolov, I, O'Donovan, MC, Owen, MJ, Collier, DA, Elkin, A, Farmer, A, Williamson, R, McGruffin, P, Young, AH, Ferrier, IN, Ball, SG, Balmforth, AJ, Barrett, JH, Bishop, DT, Iles, MM, Maqbool, A, Yuldasheva, N, Hall, AS, Bredin, F, Tremelling, M, Parkes, M, Drummond, H, Lees, CW, Nimmo, ER, Satsangi, J, Fisher, SA, Lewis, CM, Onnie, CM, Prescott, NJ, Mathew, CG, Forbes, A, Sanderson, J, Mathew, C, Barbour, J, Mohiuddin, MK, Todhunter, CE, Mansfield, JC, Ahmad, T, Cummings, FR, Jewell, DP, Barton, A, Bruce, IN, Donovan, H, Eyre, S, Gilbert, PD, Hider, SL, Hinks, AM, John, SL, Potter, C, Silman, AJ, Symmons, DPM, Thomson, W, Worthington, J, Frayling, TM, Freathy, RM, Lango, H, Perry, JRB, Weedon, MN, Hattersley, AT, Shields, BM, Hitman, GA, Walker, M, Newport, M, Sirugo, G, Conway, D, Jallow, M, Bradbury, LA, Pointon, JL, Brown, MA, Farrar, C, Wordsworth, P, Franklyn, JA, Heward, JM, Simmonds, MJ, Cough, SCL, Seal, S, Stratton, MR, Ban, M, Goris, A, Sawcer, SJ, and Compston, A
- Abstract
Elevated blood pressure is a common, heritable cause of cardiovascular disease worldwide. To date, identification of common genetic variants influencing blood pressure has proven challenging. We tested 2.5 million genotyped and imputed SNPs for association with systolic and diastolic blood pressure in 34,433 subjects of European ancestry from the Global BPgen consortium and followed up findings with direct genotyping (N ≤ 71,225 European ancestry, N ≤ 12,889 Indian Asian ancestry) and in silico comparison (CHARGE consortium, N = 29,136). We identified association between systolic or diastolic blood pressure and common variants in eight regions near the CYP17A1 (P = 7 × 10−24), CYP1A2 (P = 1 × 10−23), FGF5 (P = 1 × 10−21), SH2B3 (P = 3 × 10−18), MTHFR (P = 2 × 10−13), c10orf107 (P = 1 × 10−9), ZNF652 (P = 5 × 10−9) and PLCD3 (P = 1 × 10−8) genes. All variants associated with continuous blood pressure were associated with dichotomous hypertension. These associations between common variants and blood pressure and hypertension offer mechanistic insights into the regulation of blood pressure and may point to novel targets for interventions to prevent cardiovascular disease.
25. PARVOVIRUS-LIKE PARTICLES IN HUMAN SERA
- Author
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Cossart, Y.E., primary, Cant, B., additional, Field, A.M., additional, and Widdows, D., additional
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Genome-wide association study identifies eight loci associated with blood pressure
- Author
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Peter Holmans, Udo Seedorf, Beverley M. Shields, Peter McGruffin, Arne Pfeufer, Steve Eyre, Nathalie J. Prescott, Michael Boehnke, Valentina Moskovina, Abiodun Onipinla, Leena Peltonen, Nadira Yuldasheva, Peter M. Nilsson, Valeria Romanazzi, Vincent Mooser, Göran Berglund, Alistair S. Hall, Dominic P. Kwiatkowski, Barry Widmer, Benjamin F. Voight, Stefania Bandinelli, Mark M. Iles, Sven Bergmann, Thomas Meitinger, James P. Boorman, Simonetta Guarrera, Nazneen Rahman, Murielle Bochud, Graham A. Hitman, Emma Keniry, Nelson B. Freimer, Richard Dobson, Francis S. Collins, Gerjan Navis, Jennifer L. Pointon, Richard N. Bergman, Ruth J. F. Loos, Roberto Lorbeer, Carolina A. Braga Marcano, Christian Gieger, Florian Ernst, Xin Yuan, Catherine Potter, Hazel E. Drummond, Allan H. Young, George Kirov, John F. Peden, Helen Stevens, David Clayton, Mattijs E. Numans, Katherine Gordon-Smith, Anne Farmer, Alastair Forbes, M. Khalid Mohiuddin, John A. Todd, Christopher G. Mathew, David A. Collier, Mark I. McCarthy, Francesca Bredin, Clive M. Onnie, Dan Davidson, Markus Perola, Pamela Whittaker, Yvonne T. van der Schouw, Rathi Ravindrarajan, I. C.A. Spencer, Teresa Ferreira, Nilesh J. Samani, Serge Hercberg, Gonçalo R. Abecasis, Christopher J. Groves, Nicholas John Craddock, Angela Döring, Edward G. Lakatta, Muminatou Jallow, Wendy L. McArdle, David Bentley, Susana Eyheramendy, Uwe Völker, Christopher Newton-Cheh, Jaspal S. Kooner, Hugh Watkins, Gavin Lucas, H. T. Leung, Marjo Ritta Jarvelin, Johanna Kuusisto, Wiek H. van Gilst, Wendy Thomson, Lou R. Cardon, Harold Snieder, Marju Orho-Melander, Patricia B. Munroe, Toshiko Tanaka, Jeffrey C. Barrett, Azhar Maqbool, Henry Völzke, John M. C. Connell, Elaine R. Nimmo, John R. B. Perry, Michael R. Stratton, Ralph McGinnis, Pekka Jousilahti, Michiel L. Bots, Ian Jones, Elizabeth Meech, Matthew A. Brown, Johannie Gungadoo, Jian'an Luan, Jilur Ghori, Richard J. Dixon, N. Charlotte Onland-Moret, Fulvio Ricceri, Anthony J. Balmforth, Catherine E. Todhunter, Inês Barroso, Sheila Bingham, Timo T. Valle, Fredrik O. Vannberg, Diana Zelenika, Stephen Sawcer, Anneli Pouta, David M. Evans, Cuno S. P. M. Uiterwaal, Pilar Galan, Georg Homuth, Hannah Donovan, David J. Conway, Paul Elliott, Alessandra Allione, Paul E. de Jong, Miles Parkes, Amy Chaney, John C. Chambers, Toby Johnson, Isaac Subirana, Vesela Gateva, Cathryn M. Lewis, Christopher J. O'Donnell, Hana Lango, David Schlessinger, Mark J. Caulfield, Thorsten Reffelmann, Jamie Barbour, Karen L. Mohlke, Sarah E. Hunt, Thilo Winzer, Frances M K Williams, Christopher Mathew, I. Wallace, Anuj Goel, Jaakko Tuomilehto, Louise V. Wain, Gabriel Crawford, Samantha L. Hider, Detelinea Grozeva, Elaine K. Green, Paul D. Gilbert, Peter S. Braund, Jaume Marrugat, Rainer Rettig, Pim van der Harst, Yik Ying Teo, Andrew P. Morris, Guiseppe Matullo, Serena Sanna, Cristen J. Willer, Suzannah Bumpstead, Niall C. Taylor, Jacques S. Beckmann, Pierre Meneton, Elin Org, Luigi Ferrucci, Doug Easton, Sheila Seal, Joanne M. Heward, Anne U. Jackson, Eleftheria Zeggini, Rachel M. Freathy, Maris Laan, Paul Wordsworth, Sarah Nutland, Kerstin Koch, Sian Ceasar, Anders Hamsten, Judith M. Hussey, Tariq Ahmad, Derek P. Jewell, Paul Scheet, Charlie W. Lees, C Farrar, Christopher Prowse, Markku Laakso, David St Clair, Kate Downes, Diederick E. Grobbee, Paul Burton, Simon C. Potter, Ian N. Bruce, Tim D. Spector, Anne Barton, H.-Erich Wichmann, Matthew J. Simmonds, David Hadley, Cecilia M. Lindgren, Gérard Waeber, Nigel W. Rayner, Melanie J. Newport, Manjinder S. Sandhu, Audrey Duncanson, Guangju Zhai, Simon Heath, Susan M. Ring, Alessandra Di Gregorio, Richard Williamson, Nicholas J. Wareham, Zhan Su, Olle Melander, John R. Thompson, Alexander Teumer, Sheila A. Fisher, Lachlan J. M. Coin, Leif Groop, Giovanni Tognoni, Amanda Elkin, Alan J. Silman, Jack Satsangi, Jane Worthington, Martin Farrall, John Webster, Niall Cardin, Neil Walker, Anna F. Dominiczak, Jeremy D. Sanderson, Damjan Vukcevic, Bryan Howie, Silvia Polidoro, Stephen G. Ball, Mark Tremelling, Stephen Newhouse, Stephen M. Schwartz, Lori L. Bonnycastle, Chris Wallace, Kijoung Song, Mario A. Morken, I. Nicol Ferrier, Beverley Barke, Paolo Vineis, Manuela Uda, Deborah P M Symmons, Emily J. Lyons, Mingzhan Xue, Timothy M. Frayling, Stephen C.L. Cough, David Withers, Adrian V. S. Hill, Suzanne Stevens, Jennifer Jolley, Marcus Dörr, Kirk A. Rockett, David B. Dunger, Mark Walker, Jayne A. Franklyn, Lisa Jones, David S. Siscovick, Ann-Christine Syvänen, Laura J. Scott, Morris J. Brown, Barbera Cant, Michael Inouye, Feng Zhang, Carlotta Sacerdote, Katherine S. Elliott, Jonathan Marchini, Peter Donnely, Michael John Owen, An Goris, Marcus Prembey, Andrew T. Hattersley, Gerome Breen, Marian L. Hamshere, Thomas Illig, Samer S. Najjar, Nicole Soranzo, Kay-Tee Khaw, Graham R. Walters, Willem H. Ouwehand, David P. Strachan, Martin D. Tobin, Alastair Compston, John C. Mansfield, David Altshuler, Salvatore Panico, Sekar Kathiresan, Dawn M. Waterworth, Michael N. Weedon, D. Timothy Bishop, Claire Bryan, Alexandra S. Knight, Kate L. Lee, Paul F. O'Reilly, Massimo Mangino, Michael Conlon O'Donovan, Jing Hua Zhao, Konstantinos A. Papadakis, Jennifer H. Barrett, Joanne Pereira-Gale, N J Timpson, Stephan B. Felix, Panos Deloukas, Nicholas A. Watkins, Anna-Liisa Hartikainen, Peter Vollenweider, Richard Jones, Anne Hinks, Fraser Cummings, Noha Lim, Linda A. Bradbury, Rhian G. William, Nita G. Forouhi, Roberto Eluosa, Ingeleif B. Hallgrimsdottir, Giorgio Sirugo, Robert Luben, Veikko Salomaa, Robert Clarke, Sally John, Ursula Everson, Emma King, Ivan Nikolov, Heather M. Stringham, Antony P. Attwood, Angelo Scuteri, Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium, Burton, PR., Clayton, DG., Cardon, LR., Craddock, N., Deloukas, P., Duncanson, A., Kwiatkowski, DP., McCarthy, MI., Ouwehand, WH., Samani, NJ., Todd, JA., Donnelly, P., Barrett, JC., Davison, D., Easton, D., Evans, D., Leung, HT., Marchini, JL., Morris, AP., Spencer, IC., Tobin, MD., Attwood, AP., Boorman, JP., Cant, B., Everson, U., Hussey, JM., Jolley, JD., Knight, AS., Koch, K., Meech, E., Nutland, S., Prowse, CV., Stevens, HE., Taylor, NC., Walters, GR., Walker, NM., Watkins, NA., Winzer, T., Jones, RW., McArdle, WL., Ring, SM., Strachan, DP., Pembrey, M., Breen, G., St Clair, D., Caesar, S., Gordon-Smith, K., Jones, L., Fraser, C., Green, EK., Grozeva, D., Hamshere, ML., Holmans, PA., Jones, IR., Kirov, G., Moskvina, V., Nikolov, I., O'Donovan, MC., Owen, MJ., Collier, DA., Elkin, A., Farmer, A., Williamson, R., McGuffin, P., Young, AH., Ferrier, IN., Ball, SG., Balmforth, AJ., Barrett, JH., Bishop, DT., Iles, MM., Maqbool, A., Yuldasheva, N., Hall, AS., Braund, PS., Dixon, RJ., Mangino, M., Stevens, S., Thompson, JR., Bredin, F., Tremelling, M., Parkes, M., Drummond, H., Lees, CW., Nimmo, ER., Satsangi, J., Fisher, SA., Forbes, A., Lewis, CM., Onnie, CM., Prescott, NJ., Sanderson, J., Mathew, CG., Barbour, J., Mohiuddin, MK., Todhunter, CE., Mansfield, JC., Ahmad, T., Cummings, FR., Jewell, DP., Webster, J., Brown, MJ., Lathrop, GM., Connell, J., Dominiczak, A., Braga Marcano, CA., Burke, B., Dobson, R., Gungadoo, J., Lee, KL., Munroe, PB., Newhouse, SJ., Onipinla, A., Wallace, I., Xue, M., Caulfield, M., Farrall, M., Barton, A., Bruce, IN., Donovan, H., Eyre, S., Gilbert, PD., Hider, SL., Hinks, AM., John, SL., Potter, C., Silman, AJ., Symmons, DP., Thomson, W., Worthington, J., Dunger, DB., Widmer, B., Frayling, TM., Freathy, RM., Lango, H., Perry, JR., Shields, BM., Weedon, MN., Hattersley, AT., Hitman, GA., Walker, M., Elliott, KS., Groves, CJ., Lindgren, CM., Rayner, NW., Timpson, NJ., Zeggini, E., Newport, M., Sirugo, G., Lyons, E., Vannberg, F., Hill, AV., Bradbury, LA., Farrar, C., Pointon, JJ., Wordsworth, P., Brown, MA., Franklyn, JA., Heward, JM., Simmonds, MJ., Gough, SC., Seal, S., Stratton, MR., Rahman, N., Ban, M., Goris, A., Sawcer, SJ., Compston, A., Conway, D., Jallow, M., Rockett, KA., Bryan, C., Bumpstead, SJ., Chaney, A., Downes, K., Ghori, J., Gwilliam, R., Hunt, SE., Inouye, M., Keniry, A., King, E., McGinnis, R., Potter, S., Ravindrarajah, R., Whittaker, P., Withers, D., Cardin, NJ., Ferreira, T., Pereira-Gale, J., Hallgrimsdóttir, IB., Howie, BN., Su, Z., Teo, YY., Vukcevic, D., Bentley, D., Life Course Epidemiology (LCE), Cardiovascular Centre (CVC), Lifestyle Medicine (LM), Groningen Kidney Center (GKC), Vascular Ageing Programme (VAP), and Medical Research Council (MRC)
- Subjects
Hemodynamics ,Genome-wide association study ,Blood Pressure ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Diastole ,11 Medical and Health Sciences ,POPULATION ,Genetics ,Genetics & Heredity ,RISK ,0303 health sciences ,education.field_of_study ,Econometric and Statistical Methods: General ,CELL-DIFFERENTIATION ,biology ,Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins ,Chromosome Mapping ,Steroid 17-alpha-Hydroxylase ,COMMON VARIANTS ,3. Good health ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,Europe ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,PUBLIC-HEALTH ,BARTTERS-SYNDROME ,Blood Pressure/genetics ,Cardiovascular Diseases/genetics ,Cardiovascular Diseases/physiopathology ,Cytochrome P-450 CYP1A2/genetics ,DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics ,Diastole/genetics ,European Continental Ancestry Group/genetics ,Fibroblast Growth Factor 5/genetics ,Genetic Variation ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Humans ,India ,Methylenetetrahydrofolate Reductase (NADPH2)/genetics ,Open Reading Frames/genetics ,Phospholipase C delta/genetics ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Proteins/genetics ,Steroid 17-alpha-Hydroxylase/genetics ,Systole/genetics ,Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,hypertension ,Fibroblast Growth Factor 5 ,Systole ,Population ,European Continental Ancestry Group ,METHYLENETETRAHYDROFOLATE REDUCTASE GENE ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,LOW-RENIN HYPERTENSION ,White People ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Open Reading Frames ,Fibroblast growth factor-5 ,Cytochrome P-450 CYP1A2 ,Geneeskunde(GENK) ,education ,Methylenetetrahydrofolate Reductase (NADPH2) ,Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing ,030304 developmental biology ,Genetic association ,genome-wide association ,Science & Technology ,MUTATIONS ,Proteins ,06 Biological Sciences ,POLYMORPHISM ,Blood pressure ,Methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase ,biology.protein ,biology.gene ,Phospholipase C delta ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Elevated blood pressure is a common, heritable cause of cardiovascular disease worldwide. To date, identification of common genetic variants influencing blood pressure has proven challenging. We tested 2.5 million genotyped and imputed SNPs for association with systolic and diastolic blood pressure in 34,433 subjects of European ancestry from the Global BPgen consortium and followed up findings with direct genotyping (N ≤ 71,225 European ancestry, N ≤ 12,889 Indian Asian ancestry) and in silico comparison (CHARGE consortium, N = 29,136). We identified association between systolic or diastolic blood pressure and common variants in eight regions near the CYP17A1 (P = 7 × 10(-24)), CYP1A2 (P = 1 × 10(-23)), FGF5 (P = 1 × 10(-21)), SH2B3 (P = 3 × 10(-18)), MTHFR (P = 2 × 10(-13)), c10orf107 (P = 1 × 10(-9)), ZNF652 (P = 5 × 10(-9)) and PLCD3 (P = 1 × 10(-8)) genes. All variants associated with continuous blood pressure were associated with dichotomous hypertension. These associations between common variants and blood pressure and hypertension offer mechanistic insights into the regulation of blood pressure and may point to novel targets for interventions to prevent cardiovascular disease.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The meaning and importance of vigilant attendance for the relatives of intensive care unit patients.
- Author
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Plakas S, Taket A, Cant B, Fouka G, and Vardaki Z
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Attitude of Health Personnel, Critical Care, Female, Greece, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Professional-Family Relations, Qualitative Research, Stress, Psychological, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Adaptation, Psychological, Critical Care Nursing standards, Critical Illness psychology, Family psychology, Intensive Care Units standards, Visitors to Patients psychology
- Abstract
Aim: To explore the meaning of vigilant attendance for relatives of critically ill patients in Greece., Background: A plethora of international research has identified proximity to the patient to be a major concern for relatives of critically ill patients. Greece however follows a strict visiting policy in intensive care units (ICUs) so Greek relatives spend great amounts of time just outside the ICUs., Design: This qualitative study adopted the social constructionist version of grounded theory., Method: Data were collected from three ICUs in Athens through in depth interviews with 25 informants and approximately 10 h of observations outside the ICUs on 159 relatives., Findings: Vigilant attendance was one of the main coping mechanisms identified for relatives. Four subcategories were found to comprise vigilant attendance: (1) being as close as possible to feel relief, (2) being there to find out what is going on, (3) monitoring changes in the loved one and making own diagnosis and (4) interacting with the ICU professionals., Conclusion: Vigilant attendance describes the way in which relatives in Greece stayed outside the ICUs. Relatives felt satisfaction from being close as the best alternative for not actually being inside the ICU and they tried to learn what was going on by alternative methods. By seeing the patients, relatives were also able to make their own diagnoses and could therefore avoid relying solely on information given to them. However, a prerequisite for successful vigilant attendance was to get on well with doctors and nurses., Recommendations for Clinical Practice: Changes in visiting policies in Greece are needed to meet the needs of relatives adequately. Recommendations for changes with minimal investment of time and funding are made., (© 2013 British Association of Critical Care Nurses.)
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- 2014
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- View/download PDF
28. The experiences of families of critically ill patients in Greece: a social constructionist grounded theory study.
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Plakas S, Cant B, and Taket A
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Psychological, Adult, Aged, Empathy, Female, Greece, Grief, Humans, Life Change Events, Male, Middle Aged, Nursing Methodology Research, Nursing Theory, Professional-Family Relations, Psychological Theory, Qualitative Research, Research Design, Social Sciences, Surveys and Questionnaires, Attitude to Health, Critical Care psychology, Critical Illness nursing, Critical Illness psychology, Family psychology
- Abstract
Background: The experiences of patients' families in intensive care units (ICUs) are of international concern. In Greece however, adequate attention has not been paid to this issue., Objective: To explore the experiences of critical care patients' families in Greece., Setting: The intensive care units of 3 general district hospitals in the area of Athens, Greece., Methodology: The social constructionist version of grounded theory was used. In-depth interviews with 25 relatives of critically ill patients were carried out, and participant and non-participant observation was used to cross-validate the data obtained., Results: Seven major categories were identified, with 32 components across all categories. The experiences of families revolved around the two core categories of "Intense Emotions" and "Vigilant Attendance". The study conceptualised two new categories in this field, "Religiosity" and "Loss of Intimacy" and enhanced the category "Vigilant Attendance". Three further categories were identified, namely "Caring", "Dignity" and "Information". The various interrelationships between the categories were also examined., Conclusions: The study has examined the experience of Greek patients' families from a qualitative perspective and suggests that major changes need to be made in terms of management and support.
- Published
- 2009
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- View/download PDF
29. Exploring the implications for health professionals of men coming out as gay in healthcare settings.
- Author
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Cant B
- Subjects
- Adult, Ambulatory Care Facilities, Health Personnel psychology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Physician-Patient Relations, Sexual Behavior, Communication, Homosexuality, Male psychology, Physicians, Family psychology, Self Disclosure
- Abstract
Coming out as gay is a social process which redefines the relationship between the persons who have decided to disclose their homosexuality and their listeners. This paper, drawing upon Bakhtin's (1984) theories of dialogue, the coming-out literature of gay men and lesbians and contemporary literature on doctor-patient communication, explores the coming-out experiences of gay men with their general practitioners and sexual health clinic staff. The findings are based upon a study of 38 gay men and 12 health service managers in London. The informants were recruited purposively to reflect some of the diversity of the London setting; recruitment was carried out through the channels of gay voluntary organisations and through snowballing. Semi-structured interviews were conducted and a grounded-theory approach was adopted. It was found that coming out in general practice was often/mostly followed by silence/noncommunication on the part of the practitioner; coming out could, however, result in an improvement in communication if the patients were well supported and assertive. If coming out in sexual health clinics did not result in improved communication, the informants in this study were likely to change clinics until they did find improved communication. This paper raises questions about the communication and training needs of general practitioners. It also raises questions about inequalities of access to 'respectful' sexual health clinics; while men who are articulate about the narratives of their lives as gay men are able to exercise informed choices, there were grounds for concern about the choice behaviours of men who are less articulate about their life narratives.
- Published
- 2006
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30. Social networks, social support, health and HIV-positive gay men.
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White L and Cant B
- Subjects
- Adult, Chronic Disease psychology, Community Health Services, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pilot Projects, United Kingdom, HIV Seropositivity psychology, Homosexuality, Male psychology, Social Support
- Abstract
The present pilot study explored the experiences of social support on the part of a number of HIV-positive gay men. It drew upon the growing body of literature that highlights links between social support, and the health and well-being of people with chronic illnesses. In particular, it drew upon the way in which social network analysis can be used to illustrate patterns of both emotional support and instrumental support. The study informants were 30 HIV-positive gay men who were recruited through community support organisations which they accessed at the time of the study. The findings highlighted patterns of support among members of this marginalised community. At a time when access to treatment is extending the life expectancy of people infected with HIV and when, in the UK at least, there are major changes in the funding of HIV services, this paper raises pertinent questions about the impact of social support on people suffering from this illness and about the development of appropriate services.
- Published
- 2003
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31. Evaluation of a transcription-mediated amplification-based HCV and HIV-1 RNA duplex assay for screening individual blood donations: a comparison with a minipool testing system.
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Candotti D, Richetin A, Cant B, Temple J, Sims C, Reeves I, Barbara JA, and Allain JP
- Subjects
- Base Sequence, HIV Infections diagnosis, Hepatitis C diagnosis, Humans, Mass Screening, Molecular Sequence Data, Phylogeny, Predictive Value of Tests, Sensitivity and Specificity, Sequence Analysis, RNA, Blood Donors, HIV-1 genetics, Hepacivirus genetics, RNA, Viral blood, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction standards
- Abstract
Background: NAT was introduced for HCV RNA in 1999 to screen blood donations and improve the safety of the blood supply., Study Design and Methods: The performance of a NAT multiplex for HCV and HIV-1 RNA based on transcription-mediated amplification (TMA) was assessed with various sensitivity panels and by screening 50,000 serologically unscreened, first-time donor plasma samples. Results were compared with a routine NAT screening for HCV RNA by RT-PCR in pools of 96 plasma samples., Results: The TMA multiplex 95 percent sensitivity ranged between 22 and 54 IU per mL for HIV-1 and 15 and 20 IU per mL for HCV RNA. The rate of test failure was 8.6 percent but decreased to 4.7 percent when results of two critical periods of equipment malfunction were excluded. Test failure was related to human error, minute control contamination, and insufficient mixing of reagents at the extraction stage. All 31 repeatedly reactive samples (0.06%) were seropositive for HCV (29) or HIV-1 (2) and contained RNA detectable by discriminatory TMA and confirmatory RT-PCR, indicating 100 percent specificity. A direct comparison of TMA in individual samples and RT-PCR in plasma pools was possible on 27 HCV RNA-containing samples. Twenty-six samples were detected in plasma pools; the lack of detection of 1 sample was due to an identification error at the pooling stage., Conclusion: The HCV and HIV-1 multiplex NAT had high specificity and sensitivity.
- Published
- 2003
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32. An investigation of health behavior change in Vietnamese-born individuals living in Sydney, Australia.
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Brock K, Lockwood E, Cant BR, Bermingham M, and Tran-Dinh H
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- Acculturation, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Australia epidemiology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Emigration and Immigration, Female, Health Surveys, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Urban Population, Vietnam ethnology, Health Behavior
- Abstract
Objective: The purpose of this study was to look at rates of acculturation among Vietnamese immigrants, with particular emphasis on health behaviors., Design: A volunteer sample was surveyed., Setting/participants: The participants were drawn from inner and western Sydney, Australia. Participants were asked for their perception of their English fluency as a measure of likely exposure to health promotion advertising and their food, social, exercise, drinking, and smoking habits., Results: It was found that the longer the Vietnamese immigrants participants had lived in Australia, the less likely they were to smoke; in fact, the smoking rate of this population is as low as that of the Australian population as a whole. However the immigrants did not change their low rate of alcohol consumption. In addition, the Vietnamese who had lived longer in Australia significantly increased their daily exercise and started to eat more take-away foods., Conclusions: With respect to health promotion, these changes are mixed: smoking has decreased, but half the group had begun eating take-away foods; this factor, if combined with a lack of exercise, is likely to lead to obesity.
- Published
- 2001
33. Congenital anterior abdominal wall defects. Rate of abdominal wall defects is higher in Scotland than England and Wales.
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Chalmers J, Forrest J, Cant B, and Hollinsworth M
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- Congenital Abnormalities epidemiology, England epidemiology, Humans, Incidence, Infant, Newborn, Scotland epidemiology, Wales epidemiology, Abdominal Muscles abnormalities
- Published
- 1997
34. A comparison between electroencephalography and somatosensory evoked potentials for outcome prediction following severe head injury.
- Author
-
Hutchinson DO, Frith RW, Shaw NA, Judson JA, and Cant BR
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Brain physiopathology, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prognosis, Brain Injuries physiopathology, Electroencephalography, Evoked Potentials, Somatosensory
- Abstract
The value of somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) for the prediction of outcome following severe head injury (HI) is established. The role of the electroencephalogram (EEG) in this setting is uncertain. In this comparative study, SEPs and EEGs were recorded within 3 days of severe HI in 90 patients, and the results related to outcome at 6 months. Patients with an isoelectric EEG or an EEG with repeated isoelectric intervals died. Reactivity of the EEG to external stimulation tended to be associated with favorable outcome. Grading of the EEGs on the basis of frequency composition otherwise provided no prognostic information. The presence of SEP scalp potentials bilaterally predicted favorable outcome, particularly if the central conduction times were normal. Conversely, the absence of one of both scalp potentials was associated with unfavorable outcome. EEGs thus provided useful prognostic information in only a minority of patients. By comparison, SEPs allowed prediction of both favorable and unfavorable outcomes in a much larger number of patients, and were therefore prognostically superior.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Early prediction of outcome from cerebral trauma by somatosensory evoked potentials.
- Author
-
Judson JA, Cant BR, and Shaw NA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Brain Injuries mortality, Brain Injuries physiopathology, Child, Female, Glasgow Coma Scale, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Predictive Value of Tests, Prognosis, Time Factors, Wounds, Nonpenetrating mortality, Wounds, Nonpenetrating physiopathology, Brain Injuries diagnosis, Evoked Potentials, Somatosensory
- Abstract
The prognostic value of short-latency somatosensory evoked potentials (SEP) during the first 4 days after severe head injury was studied in a group of 100 ICU patients. There was a strong association between the presence of bilateral cortical potentials and a good recovery or moderate disability 6 months after injury. In contrast, the bilateral or unilateral absence of cortical potential was associated with severe disability, persistent vegetative state, or death in a high percentage of patients. A reliable prediction of outcomes was obtained from SEP recorded within 24 h of head injury. Predictive accuracy was not influenced by the time of recording or cumulative analysis of consecutive daily SEP over the first 4 days after injury. Short-latency SEP can provide a reliable and accurate prognosis for sedated and curarized patients, and can have an important role in the management and triage of patients with severe head injury who are undergoing intensive therapy.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Electroencephalography and compressed spectral array in severe intracranial disease.
- Author
-
Cant BR and Shaw NA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Alpha Rhythm, Brain drug effects, Brain Death, Brain Diseases diagnosis, Cerebral Cortex physiopathology, Child, Child, Preschool, Delta Rhythm, Epilepsy physiopathology, Female, Hepatic Encephalopathy physiopathology, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Middle Aged, Theta Rhythm, Brain Diseases physiopathology, Electroencephalography
- Published
- 1979
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Myalgic encephalomyelitis.
- Author
-
Cant BR
- Subjects
- Humans, Encephalomyelitis diagnosis, Muscular Diseases diagnosis
- Published
- 1989
38. The effect of experimental concussion on somatosensory evoked potentials.
- Author
-
Shaw NA and Cant BR
- Subjects
- Animals, Male, Rats, Reticular Formation physiopathology, Somatosensory Cortex physiopathology, Synapses physiology, Synaptic Transmission, Brain Concussion physiopathology, Evoked Potentials, Somatosensory
- Abstract
Cortical somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) were recorded following experimental acceleration concussion in the rat. Immediately after head injury there was a general reduction in the amplitude of the SEP, and all its components were either temporarily abolished or increased in latency. The early components of the SEP recovered much more rapidly than did the amplitude and latencies of the later potentials. The purpose of the study was to investigate the relative effects of concussion on the lemniscal system (whose activity is reflected by the discrete early components of the SEP) and the reticular activating system (whose activity is reflected by the diffuse high amplitude late component of the SEP). Contrary to a widely accepted theory, there was a delay in transmission of somatosensory information through the lemniscal pathways as well as through the reticular system following head injury. Such an observation is consistent with recent studies of SEPs recorded from humans comatose after head trauma. As the changes in the morphology of the waveform of the SEP following concussion can be simulated by simply recording evoked potentials at high rates of stimulation, this suggests that the delays are caused by a failure or malfunction of synaptic transmission, but the level at which this is occurring remains to be determined.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The assessment of severe head injury by short-latency somatosensory and brain-stem auditory evoked potentials.
- Author
-
Cant BR, Hume AL, Judson JA, and Shaw NA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Coma physiopathology, Persons with Disabilities, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prognosis, Brain Stem physiopathology, Craniocerebral Trauma physiopathology, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Evoked Potentials, Somatosensory
- Abstract
The relative prognostic value of short-latency somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) and brain-stem auditory evoked potentials (BAEPs) was assessed in 35 patients with post-traumatic coma. Analysis of the evoked potentials was restricted to those recorded within the first 4 days following head injury. Abnormal SEPs were defined as an increase in central somatosensory conduction time or an absence of the initial cortical potential following stimulation of either median nerve. Abnormal BAEPs were classified as an increase in the wave I-V interval or the loss of any or all of its 3 most stable components (waves I, III and V) following stimulation of either ear. SEPs reliably predicted both good and bad outcomes. All 17 patients in whom SEPs were graded as normal had a favourable outcome and 15 of 18 patients in whom SEPs were abnormal had an unfavourable outcome. Although abnormal BAEPs were associated with an unfavourable outcome in almost all patients (6 of 7), only 19 of 28 patients with normal BAEPs had a favourable outcome. The finding of normal BAEPs was therefore of little prognostic significance. These results confirm the superiority and greater sensitivity of the SEP in detecting abnormalities of brain function shortly after severe head trauma.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Conduction time in central somatosensory pathways in man.
- Author
-
Hume AL and Cant BR
- Subjects
- Adult, Afferent Pathways physiology, Aged, Electrodes, Electroencephalography, Evoked Potentials, Female, Humans, Male, Methods, Middle Aged, Nervous System Diseases physiopathology, Time Factors, Neural Conduction, Sensation physiology
- Abstract
Simultaneous recording of the somatosensory evoked potential (SEP) from the neck and from the scalp allows investigation of conduction of somatosensory impulses within the central nervous system alone. The early components of the SEP produced by stimulation of the median nerve at the wrist were recorded from standardized electrode locations on the scalp and neck in 21 normal subjects. The peak latency of both the initial negative potential from the scalp, N20 (19.4 +/- 1.1 msec), and the major negative negative potential from the neck, N14 (13.8 +/- 0.9 MSEC), CORRElated positively with arm length and with height. The difference between the peak latencies of N20 and N14 (5.6 +/- 0.5 msec) was independent of both arm length and height. As the latency and distribution of N14 indicate that this potential probably arises from the dorsal column nuclei, the N20--N14 latency difference provides a measure of conduction time within central pathways which is independent of conduction time in the limbs and spinal cord. Recording of the SEP from the neck, simultaneously with that from the scalp, also facilitates clinical investigation of the somatosensory system.
- Published
- 1978
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. EEG prediction of post-traumatic epilepsy.
- Author
-
Cant BR
- Subjects
- Humans, Electroencephalography, Epilepsy, Post-Traumatic diagnosis
- Published
- 1976
42. Letter: Medical manpower planning.
- Author
-
Cant BR
- Subjects
- New Zealand, Emigration and Immigration, Health Planning, Physicians supply & distribution
- Published
- 1975
43. Pattern visual evoked potentials in the diagnosis of multiple sclerosis and other disorders.
- Author
-
Hume AL and Cant BR
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Multiple Sclerosis complications, Multiple Sclerosis physiopathology, Optic Neuritis complications, Pituitary Neoplasms physiopathology, Pseudotumor Cerebri physiopathology, Evoked Potentials, Multiple Sclerosis diagnosis, Visual Cortex physiopathology
- Abstract
The diagnostic value of pattern visual evoked potentials has been assessed in a pilot study of 22 patients with proven or suspected multiple sclerosis. Of 7 patients satisfying McAlpin's criteria for diagnosing definite multiple sclerosis, 6 had delayed potentials. Four of 5 patients with probable multiple sclerosis, and 5 of 10 patients with possible multiple sclerosis, had delayed potentials. Ten patients with delayed potentials had no history of optic neuritis. Changes in the evoked potential with other neurological conditions that may affect the visual system are also described.
- Published
- 1976
44. Central somatosensory conduction time from 10 to 79 years.
- Author
-
Hume AL, Cant BR, Shaw NA, and Cowan JC
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Child, Electric Stimulation, Evoked Potentials, Somatosensory, Female, Humans, Male, Median Nerve, Middle Aged, Neural Pathways physiology, Reaction Time physiology, Aging, Electroencephalography, Neural Conduction, Somatosensory Cortex physiology
- Abstract
Somatosensory evoked potentials were recorded simultaneously from the neck and scalp following stimulation of the median nerve at the wrist in 83 normal subjects aged 10-79 years. The central somatosensory conduction time was measured by subtracting the peak latency of the major response from the upper cervical area (N14) from that of the primary cortical response (N20). The central conduction time remained constant between 10 and 49 years but increased abruptly by approximately 0.3 msec between the fifth and sixth decades. Following this increase there was no further change in the central conduction time. Changes with age in the amplitude of N14 and N20 differed both from the changes in latency and from each other. The amplitude of N14 was stable between 10 and 39 years but then declined progressively. The amplitude of N20 deceased between 10 and 39 years and then increased until the end of the seventh decade.
- Published
- 1982
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Evoked potential monitoring of post-traumatic coma and its relation to outcome.
- Author
-
Cant BR
- Subjects
- Coma etiology, Humans, Monitoring, Physiologic, Prognosis, Reaction Time physiology, Coma physiopathology, Craniocerebral Trauma complications, Evoked Potentials
- Published
- 1987
46. Recovery process of the slow auditory response following head injury.
- Author
-
Cant BR, Gronwall DM, and Burgess R
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Audiometry methods, Female, Humans, Male, Time Factors, Craniocerebral Trauma physiopathology, Evoked Potentials
- Published
- 1975
47. Age-dependent changes in the latency of the pattern visual evoked potential.
- Author
-
Shaw NA and Cant BR
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Cerebral Cortex physiology, Electroencephalography, Evoked Potentials, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Aging, Form Perception physiology, Pattern Recognition, Visual physiology, Reaction Time physiology
- Abstract
Pattern visual evoked potentials were recorded from 71 normal subjects aged 16-72 years, using a range of 5 luminance levels. At lower levels the latency increased after the fourth decade, while there was little age-dependent increase in latency at higher levels.
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Age-dependent changes in the amplitude of the pattern visual evoked potential.
- Author
-
Shaw NA and Cant BR
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Child, Electroencephalography, Evoked Potentials, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pattern Recognition, Visual physiology, Photic Stimulation, Aging, Brain physiology
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Cerebral monitoring by compressed spectral array.
- Author
-
Burgess R, Cant BR, Hume AL, Priestley LC, and Shaw NA
- Subjects
- Adult, Computers, Costs and Cost Analysis, Electroencephalography economics, Encephalitis physiopathology, Female, Humans, Male, Sleep physiology, Electroencephalography methods, Monitoring, Physiologic methods
- Abstract
Application of a frequency analysis technique, the compressed spectral array (CSA), permits the display of cerebral activity recorded by the electroencephalogram (EEG) over long periods of time in a succinct, graphic manner. This report is a description of a system which is being developed to investigate long-term monitoring of the EEGs of critically ill patients. The computer-based methodology which has been used to implement this system is described, with illustrations of CSA-transformed EEGs.
- Published
- 1977
50. The effect of pentobarbital on central somatosensory conduction time in the rat.
- Author
-
Shaw NA and Cant BR
- Subjects
- Animals, Evoked Potentials, Male, Rats, Reaction Time, Brain physiology, Neural Conduction drug effects, Pentobarbital pharmacology
- Abstract
Somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) were recorded from skull electrodes in the rat. Central somatosensory conduction time was estimated by subtracting the peak latency of component II which is generated from the dorsal column nuclei and medial lemniscus from that of the primary cortical response. The mean was 2.67 +/- 0.10 msec during light pentobarbital anaesthesia. SEPs recorded during moderate anaesthesia showed delays of nearly 1 msec in anterior component III from the thalamus and sensory radiation, and the subsequent cortical potentials.
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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