Geoff Hide
Freeman Hospital
4 Papers
Geoff Hide is an academic researcher from Freeman Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Internal medicine & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 3 publications.
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Papers
Circulating tumour DNA is a promising biomarker for risk stratification of central chondrosarcoma with IDH1/2 and GNAS mutations.
Iben Lyskjaer,Christopher Davies,Christopher Davies,Anna-Christina Strobl,Anna-Christina Strobl,Joanna Hindley,Steven James,Radhesh K Lalam,William Cross,Geoff Hide,Kenneth S. Rankin,Kenneth S. Rankin,Lee Jeys,Roberto Tirabosco,Jonathan Stevenson,Paul O'Donnell,Paul O'Donnell,Paul Cool,Paul Cool,Adrienne M. Flanagan,Adrienne M. Flanagan +20 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the level of circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) in the blood of chondrosarcoma patients could be used to predict outcome, and the results are promising, they are based on a small number of patients, and therefore, introduction of this blood test into clinical practice as a complementary assay to current standard-of-care protocols would allow the assay to be assessed more stringently and developed for the treatment of patients with CS.
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The British Athletics Muscle Injury Classification grading system as a predictor of return to play following hamstrings injury in professional football players.
Craig Tears,Glen Rae,Geoff Hide,Raj Sinha,John Franklin,Peter Brand,Faraha Hasan,Paul Chesterton +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors investigated the British Athletics Muscle Injury Classification (BAMIC) grading system as a predictor of return to play (RTP) following primary hamstring strain injury (HSI) and its agreement with the Peetron's classification system in professional footballers.
Improved mediolateral load distribution without adverse laxity pattern in robot-assisted knee arthroplasty compared to a standard manual measured resection technique
TL;DR: The contention that robot-assisted total knee arthroplasty delivers improved tibiofemoral load sharing in time zero studies under defined conditions is supported, and such offers the promise of improved clinical performance and reduced implant wear.
A randomized, double-blind, controlled study of ultrasound-guided corticosteroid injection into the joint of patients with inflammatory arthritis
Joanna Cunnington,NJ Marshall,Geoff Hide,Claire Bracewell,John D. Isaacs,PN Platt,David Kane,David Kane +7 more
TL;DR: US guidance significantly improves the accuracy of joint injections, allowing a trainee to rapidly achieve higher accuracy than more experienced rheumatologists, and did not improve the short-term outcome of joint injection.