Julia Boyle
University of Surrey
35 Papers
279 Citations
Julia Boyle is an academic researcher from University of Surrey. The author has contributed to research in topics: Polysomnography & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 30 publications.
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Papers
Regulatory approval and a first‐in‐human phase I clinical trial of a monoclonal antibody produced in transgenic tobacco plants
Julian K.-C. Ma,Jürgen Drossard,David J. M. Lewis,Friedrich Altmann,Julia Boyle,Paul Christou,Tom Cole,Philip J. Dale,Craig J. van Dolleweerd,Valerie Isitt,Dietmar Katinger,Martin Lobedan,Hubert Mertens,Mathew J. Paul,Thomas W. Rademacher,Markus Sack,Penelope Hundleby,Gabriela Stiegler,Eva Stoger,Richard M. Twyman,Brigitta Vcelar,Rainer Fischer +21 more
TL;DR: The successful completion of the clinical trial of the HIV-neutralizing human monoclonal antibody 2G12 marks a significant milestone in the commercial development of plant-derived pharmaceutical proteins.
252
The Effects of Rhodiola rosea L. Extract on Anxiety, Stress, Cognition and Other Mood Symptoms.
TL;DR: Rhodiola rosea L (Vitano®) presented a favourable safety tolerability profile and it is unlikely that the findings were the result of placebo effects as changes appeared gradual and were specific to certain psychological measures.
80
Sedation and antihistamines: an update. Review of inter-drug differences using proportional impairment ratios.
TL;DR: An extensive review of the literature collated the results of studies of H1 receptor antagonists to determine the extent to which a particular AH produced impairments on a battery of psychometric tests by calculating a proportional impairment ratio for each AH.
60
Allergy medication in Japanese volunteers: treatment effect of single doses on nocturnal sleep architecture and next day residual effects.
TL;DR: It is suggested that a single nocturnal dose of fexofenadine has advantages over the first-generation antihistamine chlorpheniramine, being free of disruption of night-time sleep and detrimental effects on cognitive performance the next day.
59
A hidden pandemic? An umbrella review of global evidence on mental health in the time of COVID-19
Marlee Bower,Scarlett Smout,Amarina Donohoe-Bales,Lily Teesson,Ellen Boulle Lauria,Julia Boyle,Philip J. Batterham,Alison L. Calear,Julia Riches,Anna Grager,Kevin Gournay,Olivia Green,Maree Teesson +12 more
TL;DR: Despite high volumes of reviews, the diversity of findings and dearth of longitudinal studies within reviews means clear links between COVID-19 and mental health are not available, although existing evidence indicates probable associations.