Fiona M. Wood
University of Western Australia
377 Papers
1K Citations
Fiona M. Wood is an academic researcher from University of Western Australia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 335 publications. Previous affiliations of Fiona M. Wood include Government of Western Australia & Curtin University.
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Papers
A peptide inhibitor of c‐Jun promotes wound healing in a mouse full‐thickness burn model
TL;DR: Wounds that were treated with the peptide reepithelialized faster than controls, while cell death surrounding the wound site was markedly reduced 24 hours postinjury, suggesting that the prevention of apoptosis as well as the proliferative effects of this peptide contribute to the wound healing process.
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Volume measurement using the Polhemus FastSCAN 3D laser scanning: a novel application for burns clinical research.
TL;DR: The Polhemus FastSCAN system provides a noncontact method of limb volume measurement but the change detectable by this technique was too large for monitoring the efficacy of acute burn edema interventions, demonstrating the limitations as a clinical or research tool in the burn environment.
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Burn injury and long-term nervous system morbidity: a population-based cohort study
Thirthar P Vetrichevvel,Sean M. Randall,Mark W. Fear,Fiona M. Wood,Fiona M. Wood,James Boyd,Janine M. Duke +6 more
TL;DR: Burn injury appears to be associated with increased nervous system-related morbidity for many years after burn injury for children and adults who are hospitalised for a burn injury in Western Australia.
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Treatment of a large congenital melanocytic nevus with dermabrasion and autologous cell suspension (ReCELL®): a case report.
TL;DR: An illustrated case of a healthy, term, 4 week-old male neonate with a large CMN on his face, where Dressings were no longer required by the 8th post-operative day, and excellent skin pigmentation and texture was achieved by 5 months post-op.
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A population-based comparison study of the mental health of patients with intentional and unintentional burns
Thirthar P Vetrichevvel,Thirthar P Vetrichevvel,Sean M. Randall,Fiona M. Wood,Fiona M. Wood,Suzanne Rea,Suzanne Rea,James Boyd,Janine M. Duke +8 more
TL;DR: Intentional burn patients experienced significantly higher pre- and post-burn mental health morbidity along with significant adverse outcome in comparison with unintentional burns.