Andrew Bush
National Institutes of Health
996 Papers
5.3K Citations
Andrew Bush is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Asthma. The author has an hindex of 99, co-authored 935 publications. Previous affiliations of Andrew Bush include Imperial College London & University of Tennessee Health Science Center.
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Papers
Primary ciliary dyskinesia syndrome associated with abnormal ciliary orientation in infants
TL;DR: The two cases of phenotypic primary ciliary dyskinesia in the presence of normal ciliary ultrastructure but abnormal ciliary orientation in infants supports the contention that measurement of cili orientation should be part of the assessment of ciliary structure and function in cases of possiblePrimary ciliary DyskinesIA, in particular when the ultrast structure of individual cilia appear to be normal.
Use of cough swabs in a cystic fibrosis clinic
TL;DR: Cough swabs taken from cystic fibrosis children are audited prospectively and compared with concomitant sputum samples in 30 expectorating patients to find a positive cough swab is a strong predictor ofSputum culture.
Objective monitoring of cough in children with cystic fibrosis
TL;DR: A modification of the previously described ambulatory cough recording device (LR 100) was validated to determine how accurately children with CF assess levels of cough and to assess the change in cough when treated with intravenous antibiotics for a respiratory exacerbation.
Translating Asthma: Dissecting the Role of Metabolomics, Genomics and Personalized Medicine.
TL;DR: Breathomics should be an exhaled breath based tool with a rapid result that can be used as a routine in the clinic, and at the moment, there are as yet no clinical applications in children of –omics technology.
Rebreathing method for the simultaneous measurement of oxygen consumption and effective pulmonary blood flow during exercise.
TL;DR: There was good agreement between rebreathing estimates of oxygen consumption and values measured during a second exercise test by the conventional open circuit argon dilution method, and coefficients of variation ofoxy consumption and effective pulmonary blood flow measured by rebreathers were usually less than 10% even during maximal exertion.