Sentences with phrase «immunologist peter»

Dawkins is the latest in a long line of stylish British scientific litterateurs that runs through immunologist Peter Medawar and geneticist J. B. S. Haldane all the way back to Darwin's original «bulldog,» biologist Thomas Henry Huxley.
Such infections «are the really nasty things for patients,» says immunologist Peter Nibbering at Leiden University Medical Center in the Netherlands.

Not exact matches

Not only microbes protect against asthma evidently, but also farm animals: Petting cats and cows and drinking farm milk can also prevent asthma, as the team of researchers headed up by Remo Frei of the Swiss Institute of Allergy and Asthma Research from the University of Zurich in cooperation with the Center for Allergy Research and Education (CK - CARE) in Davos and the Children's Hospital of Eastern Switzerland in St. Gallen: «Early childhood contact with animals and the consumption of food of animal origin seems to regulate the inflammatory reactions of the immune system,» says immunologist Frei.
«After the weirdness of Abbott and the obtuse ideology of the hard right, we all hope for a better day,» says Peter Doherty, an immunologist at the University of Melbourne and Nobel laureate who criticized the last government.
«But if I were a betting person, I'd bet on the metazoan - to - bacteria transfer,» says Peter Armstrong, a comparative immunologist at the University of California, Davis.
A new perspective on mortality came in the 1950s from distinguished British immunologist Sir Peter Medawar.
The research, which was funded as part of a collaboration with the University of Oxford, involved professor Peter Andrew from the University of Leicester's Department of Infection, Immunity and Inflammation and professor Chris Bayliss from the University of Leicester's Department of Genetics and Genome Biology, the hepatobiliary and pancreatic surgeon Ashley Dennison from Leicester's Hospitals, the immunologist Luisa Martinez - Pomares from the University of Nottingham and the expert in bacterial pathogenesis Richard Moxon from the University of Oxford.
Several leading veterinary immunologists believe that repeated vaccination of a pet that is adequately protected for a disease can aggravate immune mediated and allergic disease.
Several leading veterinary immunologists believe that repeated vaccination of a pet that is adequately protected against a disease can aggravate immune mediated and allergic disease.
With support from a Duke / NC State Translational Research Grant from the Duke Clinical & Translational Science Institute, Eward and colleague Jonathan Fogle, a veterinary immunologist at NC State, are working to improve those odds for people and their pets by capitalizing on aspects of the disease that are unique to canines.
Veterinary immunologist Ian Tizard writes, «You can have a negative titer and if the pet is exposed, memory cells can respond within hours to regenerate enough antibodies for protective immunity.»
Dr. Cynda Crawford, a UF veterinary immunologist studying the disease, has said there is no reason for pet owners to panic and that they can continue bringing their dogs to places where canines congregate.
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