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Dive into the research topics where D. Chambers is active.

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Featured researches published by D. Chambers.


Critical Care Medicine | 2015

Detailed Characterization of a Long-Term Rodent Model of Critical Illness and Recovery

Neil E. Hill; Saima Saeed; Rahul Phadke; Matthew Ellis; D. Chambers; Duncan Wilson; Josiane Castells; Jerome Morel; Damien G. Freysennet; Stephen Brett; Kevin G. Murphy; Mervyn Singer

Objective:To characterize a long-term model of recovery from critical illness, with particular emphasis on cardiorespiratory, metabolic, and muscle function. Design:Randomized controlled animal study. Setting:University research laboratory. Subjects:Male Wistar rats. Interventions:Intraperitoneal injection of the fungal cell wall constituent, zymosan or n-saline. Measurements and Main Results:Following intervention, rats were followed for up to 2 weeks. Animals with zymosan peritonitis reached a clinical and biochemical nadir on day 2. Initial reductions were seen in body weight, total body protein and fat, and muscle mass. Leg muscle fiber diameter remained subnormal at 14 days with evidence of persisting myonecrosis, even though gene expression of regulators of muscle mass (e.g., MAFbx, MURF1, and myostatin) had peaked on days 2–4 but normalized by day 7. Treadmill exercise capacity, forelimb grip strength, and in vivo maximum tetanic force were also reduced. Food intake was minimal until day 4 but increased thereafter. This did not relate to appetite hormone levels with early (6 hr) rises in plasma insulin and leptin followed by persisting subnormal levels; ghrelin levels did not change. Serum interleukin-6 level peaked at 6 hours but had normalized by day 2, whereas interleukin-10 remained persistently elevated and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol persistently depressed. There was an early myocardial depression and rise in core temperature, yet reduced oxygen consumption and respiratory exchange ratio with a loss of diurnal rhythmicity that showed a gradual but incomplete recovery by day 7. Conclusions:This detailed physiological, metabolic, hormonal, functional, and histological muscle characterization of a model of critical illness and recovery reproduces many of the findings reported in human critical illness. It can be used to assess putative therapies that may attenuate loss, or enhance recovery, of muscle mass and function.


PLOS ONE | 2018

A novel high-throughput immunofluorescence analysis method for quantifying dystrophin intensity in entire transverse sections of Duchenne muscular dystrophy muscle biopsy samples

Valentina Sardone; Matthew J. Ellis; Silvia Torelli; L. Feng; D. Chambers; Deborah Eastwood; Caroline Sewry; Rahul Phadke; Jennifer E. Morgan; Francesco Muntoni

Clinical trials using strategies aimed at inducing dystrophin expression in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) are underway or at advanced planning stage, including splice switching antisense oligonucleotides (AON), drugs to induce read-through of nonsense mutations and viral mediated gene therapy. In all these strategies, different dystrophin proteins, often internally deleted, are produced, similar to those found in patients with the milder DMD allelic variant, Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD). The primary biological endpoint of these trials is to induce functional dystrophin expression. A reliable and reproducible method for quantification of dystrophin protein expression at the sarcolemma is crucial to monitor the biochemical outcome of such treatments. We developed a new high throughput semi quantitative fluorescent immunofluorescence method for quantifying dystrophin expression in transverse sections of skeletal muscle. This technique is completely operator independent as it based on an automated scanning system and an image processing script developed with Definiens software. We applied this new acquisition-analysis method to quantify dystrophin and sarcolemma-related proteins using paediatric control muscles from cases without a neuromuscular disorder as well as DMD and BMD samples. The image analysis script was instructed to recognize myofibres immunostained for spectrin or laminin while dystrophin was quantified in each identified myofibre (from 2,000 to over 20,000 fibres, depending on the size of the biopsy). We were able to simultaneously extrapolate relevant parameters such as mean sarcolemmal dystrophin, mean spectrin and laminin intensity, fibre area and diameter. In this way we assessed dystrophin production in each muscle fibre in samples of DMD, BMD and controls. This new method allows the unbiased quantification of dystrophin in every myofibre within a transverse muscle section and will be of help for translational research projects as a biological outcome in clinical trials in DMD and BMD.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Impact of ghrelin on body composition and muscle function in a long-term rodent model of critical illness

Neil E. Hill; Kevin G. Murphy; Saima Saeed; Rahul Phadke; D. Chambers; Duncan Wilson; Stephen J. Brett; Mervyn Singer

Background Patients with multiple injuries or sepsis requiring intensive care treatment invariably develop a catabolic state with resultant loss of lean body mass, for which there are currently no effective treatments. Recovery can take months and mortality is high. We hypothesise that treatment with the orexigenic and anti-inflammatory gastric hormone, ghrelin may attenuate the loss of body mass following critical illness and improve recovery. Methods Male Wistar rats received an intraperitoneal injection of the fungal cell wall derivative zymosan to induce a prolonged peritonitis and consequent critical illness. Commencing at 48h after zymosan, animals were randomised to receive a continuous infusion of ghrelin or vehicle control using a pre-implanted subcutaneous osmotic mini-pump, and continued for 10 days. Results Zymosan peritonitis induced significant weight loss and reduced food intake with a nadir at Day 2 and gradual recovery thereafter. Supra-physiologic plasma ghrelin levels were achieved in the treated animals. Ghrelin-treated rats ate more food and gained more body mass than controls. Ghrelin increased adiposity and promoted carbohydrate over fat metabolism, but did not alter total body protein, muscle strength nor muscle morphology. Muscle mass and strength remained significantly reduced in all zymosan-treated animals, even at ten days post-insult. Conclusions Continuous infusion of ghrelin increased body mass and food intake, but did not increase muscle mass nor improve muscle function, in a long-term critical illness recovery model. Further studies with pulsatile ghrelin delivery or additional anabolic stimuli may further clarify the utility of ghrelin in survivors of critical illness.


Neuromuscular Disorders | 2015

Assessment of a panel of antibodies to myosin heavy chains applied to human skeletal muscle biopsies

L. Feng; D. Chambers; N. Bhardwaj; R. Phadke; Francesco Muntoni; C. Sewry

G.P.185 Assessment of a panel of antibodies to myosin heavy chains applied to human skeletal muscle biopsies L. Feng *, D. Chambers , N. Bhardwaj , R. Phadke , F. Muntoni , C. Sewry 3 1 Dubowitz Neuromuscular Centre, Great Ormond Street Hospital and Institute of Child Health, London WC1N 1EH, UK; 2 UCL Institute of Neurology, National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, London WC1N 3BG, UK; 3 Centre for Inherited Neuromuscular Disorder, RJAH Orthopaedic Hospital NHS Trust, Oswestry, UK


Neuromuscular Disorders | 2014

G.P.36

E. Rivas; R. Phadke; Matthew J. Ellis; D. Chambers; L. Feng; C. Sewry


Presented at: 118th Meeting of the British-Neuropathological-Society, Royal Coll Phys, London, ENGLAND. (2017) | 2017

Muscle fibre size revisited: updated age-stratified normative data in histologically normal/minimal change (HN/MC) paediatric quadriceps biopsies using a high-throughput automated digital script

L. Feng; Matthew J. Ellis; E. Curtis-Wetton; D. Chambers; A Matthews; Adnan Y. Manzur; Francesco Muntoni; C. Sewry; R. Phadke


Neuromuscular Disorders | 2017

A semi-automated image processing method for quantify dystrophin coverage at the sarcolemma membrane of each individual muscle fibre

Valentina Sardone; A. Jones; Matthew J. Ellis; Silvia Torelli; L. Feng; D. Chambers; R. Phadke; C. Sewry; J.E. Morgan; F. Muntoni


Neuromuscular Disorders | 2016

Optimizing dystrophin quantification in DMD and BMD patients: A new semi-automated acquisition and analysis method

Valentina Sardone; Matthew J. Ellis; Silvia Torelli; L. Feng; D. Chambers; R. Phadke; C. Sewry; J.E. Morgan; Francesco Muntoni


Neuromuscular Disorders | 2016

Muscle biopsies reprocessed for electron microscopy from paraffin blocks and frozen tissue produce material of sufficient quality for diagnostic use

C. Timson; D. Chambers; L. Feng; F. Muntoni; C. Sewry; R. Phadke


Neuromuscular Disorders | 2016

Muscle fibre size revisited: Updated age-stratified normative data in histologically normal/minimal change (HN/MC) paediatric quadriceps biopsies using a high-throughput automated digital script

L. Feng; Matthew Ellis; E. Curtis-Wetton; D. Chambers; A Matthews; Adnan Y. Manzur; Francesco Muntoni; C. Sewry; Rahul Phadke

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C. Sewry

Great Ormond Street Hospital

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R. Phadke

UCL Institute of Neurology

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L. Feng

UCL Institute of Child Health

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Francesco Muntoni

Great Ormond Street Hospital

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Matthew J. Ellis

Baylor College of Medicine

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Adnan Y. Manzur

Great Ormond Street Hospital

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Matthew Ellis

UCL Institute of Neurology

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Rahul Phadke

University College London

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A Matthews

Great Ormond Street Hospital

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M. Scoto

UCL Institute of Child Health

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