Thomas E. Kimber
University of Adelaide
10 Papers
59 Citations
Thomas E. Kimber is an academic researcher from University of Adelaide. The author has contributed to research in topics: Deep brain stimulation & Dystonia. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 10 publications. Previous affiliations of Thomas E. Kimber include Royal Adelaide Hospital.
Chat about Author
Papers
Updates and advances in the treatment of Parkinson disease
Michael Hayes,Michael Hayes,Victor S.C. Fung,Victor S.C. Fung,Thomas E. Kimber,Thomas E. Kimber,John D. O'Sullivan +6 more
TL;DR: Stem cell transplantation as currently being trialled is predominantly a symptomatic therapy targeting only limited regions of the brain affected by PD, and will need to be proven to be not only as effective but as safe as currently available device‐assisted therapies.
42
Long-term adherence to apomorphine infusion in patients with Parkinson disease: a 10-year observational study.
Thomas E. Kimber,Thomas E. Kimber,Jing Fang,Lynda Jane Huddy,Philip D. Thompson,Philip D. Thompson +5 more
TL;DR: This is the first Australian study of the long‐term adherence to apomorphine infusion (AI) in patients with PD, and it is shown that this treatment is safe and effective.
29
An update on Tourette syndrome.
TL;DR: Tourette syndrome appears to involve dysfunction of limbic and somatosensory “traffic” through the basal ganglia, within corticostriatal-thalamocortical circuits.
22
Ibrutinib monotherapy as effective treatment of central nervous system involvement by chronic lymphocytic leukaemia.
Constantine S. Tam,Constantine S. Tam,Thomas E. Kimber,Thomas E. Kimber,John F. Seymour,John F. Seymour +5 more
TL;DR: Lehmann, S., Gabriel, S.B., Moran, J.S., Sullivan, P.F., Sklar, P., Gronberg, H., Hultman, C.M., McCarthy, M.L. & Kristensen, V.N. (2015) Leukemia-associated somatic mutations drive distinct patterns of agerelated clonal hemopoiesis.
12
Segmental Dystonia in the Context of Dextromethorphan Abuse: A New Cause of Delayed Onset Drug-Induced Dystonia?
TL;DR: A case of segmental (cranial and respiratory) dystonia in a patient with a long history of dextromethorphan abuse is reported and it is postulate that this might represent a form of delayedonset dySTONia secondary to this medication.
6