Alison Gardner
University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
5 Papers
2 Citations
Alison Gardner is an academic researcher from University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Gene knockdown. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 4 publications.
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Papers
Randomized Comparison of Cooked and Noncooked Diets in Patients Undergoing Remission Induction Therapy for Acute Myeloid Leukemia
Alison Gardner,Gloria Mattiuzzi,Stefan Faderl,Gautam Borthakur,Guillermo Garcia-Manero,Sherry Pierce,Mark Brandt,Elihu H. Estey +7 more
TL;DR: In patients treated in a PE, a neutropenic diet did not prevent major infection or death.
•Journal Article
Eat your vegetables.
TL;DR: The article by Fox and Freifeld presents a comprehensive history of the rationale for the neutropenic diet, along with important studies of this diet.
2
Fluconazole versus Amphotericin B in the treatment of Hematogenous Candidiasis: A matched cohort study
Elias Anaissie,Shahe Vartivarian,Dima Abi-Said,Omrum Uzun,Helio Pinczowski,Dimitrios P. Kontoyiannis,Pierre Khoury,Kostas Papadakis,Alison Gardner,Issam I Raad,Joyce Gilbreath,Gerald P. Bodey +11 more
TL;DR: Fluconazole is effective and better tolerated than amphotericin B for the treatment of hematogenous candidiasis in cancer patients and there were no differences in survival rates or causes of death.
Human nuclear hormone receptor activity contributes to malaria parasite liver stage development.
Nimisha Mittal,Chadwick T. Davis,Peter G. McLean,Jaeson Calla,Karla P. Godinez-Macias,Alison Gardner,David Healey,Pamela Orjuela-Sánchez,Sabine Ottilie,Elizabeth A. Winzeler +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors used high-content imaging for host-cellular pathway deconvolution, highlighting host lipid metabolism as a drug-able human pathway and providing new chemical biology tools for studying host-parasite interactions.
Diagnosing fungal infections in neutropenic patients.
TL;DR: Fungal infections are among the most serious complications in neutropenic patients and healthcare professionals' inability to recognize the infections when they occur has compromised management.