Q. A. Hamid
Hammersmith Hospital
8 Papers
76 Citations
Q. A. Hamid is an academic researcher from Hammersmith Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Enteroendocrine cell & Calcitonin gene-related peptide. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 8 publications.
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Papers
•Journal Article
The immunolocalization of protein gene product 9.5 using rabbit polyclonal and mouse monoclonal antibodies.
P. O. Wilson,P. C. Barber,Q. A. Hamid,B. F. Power,Amar P. Dhillon,Jurgen Rode,I. N. Day,R. J. Thompson,J. M. Polak +8 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the potential of protein gene product (PGP) 9.5 as a marker of the nervous and neuroendocrine systems was assessed in human, rat and guinea-pig tissues.
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Duodenal gangliocytic paragangliomas: a study of 10 cases with immunocytochemical neuroendocrine markers.
Q. A. Hamid,A.E. Bishop,Jurgen Rode,Amar P. Dhillon,B.F. Rosenberg,R.J. Reed,Richard K. Sibley,J. M. Polak +7 more
TL;DR: Ten cases of duodenal paraganglioma were studied by conventional histologic and immunocytochemical techniques at both light and electron microscopic levels, and immunoreactivity for neuron-specific enolase and protein gene product 9.5 was seen in each component.
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Endocrine differentiation in inflamed urinary bladder epithelium with metaplastic changes.
Q. A. Hamid,Jurgen Rode,Adrienne M. Flanagan,Amar P. Dhillon,Anne E. Bishop,M. Stratton,D. J. Evans,J. M. Polak +7 more
TL;DR: Several types of metaplasia can occur in human bladder epithelium under certain pathological conditions, and endocrine cells were demonstrated, between the epithelial cells, in 40 out of 50 cases of cystitis glandularis or cystica, investigated using histochemical and immunocytochemical methods.
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Neuron-specific enolase and its mRNA are highly expressed in large congenital nevi: a study using immunocytochemistry, biochemical assay, and in situ hybridization.
Q. A. Hamid,Anne E. Bishop,David R. Springall,C. Adams,J.M. Polak,A. A. Quaba,A. A. Al Nafussi,Paul J. Marangos,Edward I. Ginns +8 more
TL;DR: It is shown that neuron-specific enolase and its mRNA are expressed to a greater extent in large congenital nevi compared with the smaller lesions, which might prove to be a useful indicator of those lesions at risk of malignant transformation.
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