Publications by authors named "Z Dwight"

Article Synopsis
  • Telehealth provides a convenient and efficient way for individuals to access healthcare remotely, emphasizing the need for reliable self-collection methods for blood testing.
  • A study tested a 60-biomarker health surveillance panel on 8 healthy individuals comparing self-collected capillary blood to traditional venous blood methods, finding significant similarity and unique biosignatures for each person.
  • Advanced mass spectrometry techniques identified a large number of proteins and FDA-approved biomarkers in both capillary and venous blood, supporting the feasibility of using self-collected samples for comprehensive health monitoring.
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Recent surges in large-scale mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomics studies demand a concurrent rise in methods to facilitate reliable and reproducible data analysis. Quantification of proteins in MS analysis can be affected by variations in technical factors such as sample preparation and data acquisition conditions leading to batch effects, which adds to noise in the data set. This may in turn affect the effectiveness of any biological conclusions derived from the data.

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Background: Extreme PCR in <30 s and high-speed melting of PCR products in <5 s are recent advances in the turnaround time of DNA analysis. Previously, these steps had been performed on different specialized instruments. Integration of both extreme PCR and high-speed melting with real-time fluorescence monitoring for detection and genotyping is presented here.

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Mutations in IDH1/2 genes are a marker of good prognosis for glioma patients, associated with low grade gliomas and secondary glioblastomas. Immunohistochemistry and Sanger sequencing are current standards for IDH1/2 genotyping while many other methods exist. The aim of this study was to validate Competitive amplification of differentially melting amplicons (CADMA) PCR for IDH genotyping by comparison with SNaPshot assay and two immunohistochemical methods.

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