Jacqueline Palace
University of Oxford
455 Papers
1.5K Citations
Jacqueline Palace is an academic researcher from University of Oxford. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Neuromyelitis optica. The author has an hindex of 74, co-authored 391 publications. Previous affiliations of Jacqueline Palace include Guy's Hospital & Walton Centre.
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Papers
A randomised double-blind placebo-controlled feasibility trial of flavonoid-rich cocoa for fatigue in people with relapsing and remitting multiple sclerosis
Shelly Coe,Jo Cossington,Johnny Collett,Andrew Soundy,Hooshang Izadi,Martin Ovington,Luke Durkin,Maja Kirsten,Miriam E. Clegg,A Cavey,Derick T Wade,Jacqueline Palace,Gabriele C. DeLuca,Kim Chapman,Jane-Marie Harrison,Elizabeth Buckingham,Helen Dawes +16 more
TL;DR: A flavonoid beverage demonstrates the potential to improve fatigue and fatigability in RRMS.
Potentially adaptive functional changes in cognitive processing for patients with multiple sclerosis and their acute modulation by rivastigmine.
TL;DR: It is suggested that recruitment of medial prefrontal cortex is a form of adaptive brain plasticity that compensates, in part, for relative deficits in processing related to the reduced right prefrontal cortex activity with multiple sclerosis.
Antibodies to aquaporin-1 are not present in neuromyelitis optica
Kathrin Schanda,Patrick Waters,Hannah Holzer,Fahmy Aboulenein-Djamshidian,M. Isabel Leite,Jacqueline Palace,Sandra Vukusic,Romain Marignier,Thomas Berger,Markus Reindl +9 more
TL;DR: A recombinant live cell immunofluorescence assay (CBA) for AQP1 antibodies based on the authors' AQP4 antibody assay was developed, which was validated in a blinded cohort of patients with NMOSD or MS from Lyon and Oxford.
Quantitative spinal cord MRI in MOG-antibody disease, neuromyelitis optica and multiple sclerosis.
Romina Mariano,Silvia Messina,Adriana Roca-Fernandez,Maria Isabel Leite,Yazhuo Kong,Yazhuo Kong,Jacqueline Palace +6 more
TL;DR: Analysis of spinal cord MRI data suggests a predominant central grey matter component to MOG-antibody myelitis could be partially responsible for the significant residual sphincter dysfunction in multiple sclerosis.
Low Myo‐inositol indicating astrocytic damage in a case series of neuromyelitis optica
Olga Ciccarelli,David L. Thomas,Enrico De Vita,Claudia A. M. Wheeler-Kingshott,Carolina Kachramanoglou,Raj Kapoor,Siobhan M. Leary,Lucy Matthews,Jacqueline Palace,Declan T. Chard,David Miller,Ahmed T. Toosy,Alan J. Thompson +12 more
TL;DR: Lower myo‐inositol/creatine values, suggesting astrocytic damage, were consistently found within the NMO lesions when compared with healthy controls and patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), who showed at least 1 demyelinating lesion at the same cord level.