7 results match your criteria: "Imperial College School of Medicine Hammersmith Campus[Affiliation]"
Pediatr Med Chir
November 2003
Robert Steiner Magnetic Resonance Unit and Imaging Science Department, Imperial College School of Medicine Hammersmith Campus, Du Cane Road, London W12 OHS, UK.
Stat Med
November 2000
Department of Medical Statistics and Evaluation, Imperial College School of Medicine (Hammersmith Campus), Du Cane Road, London W12 0NN, U.K.
The age-specific reference interval is a commonly used screening tool in medicine. It involves estimation of extreme quantile curves (such as the 5th and 95th centiles) of a reference distribution of clinically normal individuals. It is crucial that models used to estimate such intervals fit the data extremely well.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStat Med
August 2000
Department of Medical Statistics and Evaluation, Imperial College School of Medicine (Hammersmith campus), Ducane Road, London W12 0NN, U.K.
In medicine and epidemiology monotonic curves are important as models for relations which prior knowledge or scientific reasoning dictate should increase or decrease consistently with the predictor value. An example is the monotonically increasing relation between cigarette consumption and the risk of coronary heart disease. In this paper I propose a new class of monotonic non-linear models which generalizes the well-known power and exponential transformations of a covariate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStat Med
July 2000
Department of Medical Statistics and Evaluation, Imperial College School of Medicine (Hammersmith campus), Ducane Road, London W12 0NN, U.K.
Low-dimensional parametric models are well understood, straightforward to communicate to other workers, have very smooth curves and may easily be checked for consistency with background scientific knowledge or understanding. They should therefore be ideal tools with which to represent smooth relationships between a continuous predictor and an outcome variable in medicine and epidemiology. Unfortunately, a seriously restricted set of such models is used routinely in practical data analysis - typically, linear, quadratic or occasionally cubic polynomials, or sometimes a power or logarithmic transformation of a covariate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStat Med
May 2000
Department of Medical Statistics and Evaluation, Imperial College School of Medicine (Hammersmith campus), Ducane Road, London W12 0NN, U.K.
The determination of the functional form of the relationship between an outcome variable and one or more continuous covariates is an important aspect of the modelling of medical data. For correct interpretation of the data it is essential that the functional form be specified at least approximately correctly. I show that for given model complexity, logarithmic transformation of a covariate can greatly improve the fit of one of the most useful and convenient non-parametric regression models, the cubic smoothing spline.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem J
October 1998
Cell Signalling Laboratory, Department of Metabolic Medicine, Imperial College School of Medicine-Hammersmith Campus, 150 Du Cane Road, London W12 0NN, UK.
We identified SH2-Balpha as an insulin-receptor-binding protein based on interaction screening in yeast hybrid systems and co-precipitation in cells. SH2-Balpha contains pleckstrin-homology ('PH') and Src homology 2 (SH2) domains and is closely related to APS (adapter protein with a PH domain and an SH2 domain) and lnk, adapter proteins first identified in lymphocytes. SH2-Balpha is ubiquitously expressed and is present in rat epididymal adipose tissue, liver and skeletal muscle, physiological sites of insulin action.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Immunol
July 1998
Department of Infectious Diseases, Imperial College School of Medicine (Hammersmith Campus), London, United Kingdom.
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection is an important cause of lower respiratory tract illness, the severity of which may be partly due to cellular recruitment. RSV infection activates chemokine secretion from airway epithelial cells by largely unknown mechanisms. We investigated the regulation of RSV-induced activation of the chemokine RANTES in the bronchial epithelial cell line BEAS-2B and primary normal human tracheobronchial epithelial cultures.
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