Sarah E Brown
University of Maryland, Baltimore County
4 Papers
5 Citations
Sarah E Brown is an academic researcher from University of Maryland, Baltimore County. The author has contributed to research in topics: Corpus albicans & Malaria. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 4 publications.
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Papers
The Vaginal Microbiota and Behavioral Factors Associated With Genital Candida albicans Detection in Reproductive-Age Women.
Sarah E Brown,Jennifer A. Schwartz,Courtney K. Robinson,D Elizabeth OʼHanlon,L. Latey Bradford,Xin He,Katrina Mark,Vincent M. Bruno,Jacques Ravel,Rebecca M. Brotman +9 more
TL;DR: The data suggest that L. crispatus-dominated vaginal microbiota is thought to protect women from both development of bacterial vaginosis and incidence of sexually transmitted infections; however, the data suggest it may also be a risk factor for vaginal C. albicans detection.
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Patterns in On-time, Daily Submission of a Short Web-Based Personal Behavior Survey in a Longitudinal Women's Health Study.
Hannah R Crowder,Sarah E Brown,Christina A. Stennett,Elizabeth Johnston,Amelia M. Wnorowski,Katrina Mark,Rebecca M. Brotman +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluated compliance with submitting a short Web-based personal behavior survey daily during a 10-week study (n = 52 women/3419 diaries) and found that 50% of diaries were submitted within 24 hours of the email prompt, and 19% were missing or submitted more than 3 days late.
The effect of local variation in malaria transmission on the prevalence of sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine resistant haplotypes and selective sweep characteristics in Malawi
Elena Artimovich,Atupele Kapito-Tembo,Paul Pensulo,Osward M. Nyirenda,Sarah E Brown,Sudhaunshu Joshi,Terrie E. Taylor,Don P. Mathanga,Ananias A. Escalante,Miriam K. Laufer,Shannon Takala-Harrison +10 more
TL;DR: The results do not show an effect of local variation in malaria transmission, as inferred from parasite prevalence, on SP-resistant haplotype prevalence.
The vaginal microbiota and behavioral factors associated with genital candida albicans detection in reproductive-age women
Sarah E Brown,Vincent M. Bruno,Jennifer A. Schwartz,L. Latey Bradford,Jacques Ravel,Rebecca M. Brotman +5 more
TL;DR: Reproductive tract isolates of Megasphaera fall within the Meg asphaera genus by phylogeny, but are sufficiently different to warrant designation as three new MegAsphaera species.
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