Soonie R. Patel
Croydon University Hospital
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Soonie R. Patel.
Pediatric Clinics of North America | 2008
Soonie R. Patel; Julia Chisholm; Paul T. Heath
Most children with cancer are immunocompromised during therapy and for a variable period after completion of therapy. They are at an increased risk of infections, including vaccine-preventable infections. There is a reduction in immunity to vaccine-preventable diseases after completion of standard-dose chemotherapy and after hematopoietic stem cell transplant. It is important to protect these children against vaccine-preventable diseases by reimmunization.
Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2010
Jessica Bate; Soonie R. Patel; Julia Chisholm; Paul T. Heath
In March 2002, the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health (RCPCH) introduced guidelines for re‐immunisation of children after completion of standard‐dose chemotherapy and after haematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT).
Archives of Disease in Childhood | 2012
Soonie R. Patel; Jessica Bate; Ray Borrow; Paul T. Heath
Children treated for acute leukaemia are at increased risk of infection with Streptococcus pneumoniae. The basis for this may include low levels of pneumococcal antibody but this has not been well studied. The authors measured serotype-specific pneumococcal IgG antibody concentrations in children treated for acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) and acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) ≥6 months after completion of standard-dose chemotherapy. Pneumococcal serotype-specific IgG antibody concentrations were low. None of the subjects had protective concentrations against all the heptavalent-pneumococcal conjugate vaccine serotypes. There was no significant difference in antibody concentrations between subjects with ALL and AML (p≥0.05). Children treated for ALL and AML generally have non-protective antibody concentrations against S pneumoniae. There is significant morbidity associated with pneumococcal disease in this patient group and strategies for vaccination are required.
Archive | 2014
Carl E Clarke; Soonie R. Patel; Rebecca Woolley; Natalie Ives; Caroline Rick; Francis Dowling; Keith Wheatley; Marion F Walker; Catherine Sackley
Objective: To explore the association between striatal dopaminergic deficits and cognitive impairment within a large cohort of early, drug-naive Parkinson’s disease patients and to test the hypothesis that executive dysfunction in Parkinson’s disease is caused by striatal dopaminergic depletion. Background: Cognitive impairment in Parkinson’s disease is common and influences patients’ everyday functioning, but the mechanisms of early cognitive decline are not known. Understanding of these mechanisms is important for the development of methods preventing cognitive decline in Parkinson’s disease. Previous studies suggest that the dopaminergic system influences cognition in PD. Methods: Neuropsychological and cerebral dopamine transporter SPECT imaging data of 339 Parkinson’s disease patients and 158 Healthy controls of the Parkinson’s Progression Markers Initiative study were analysed. Neuropsychological evaluation consisted of standardized tests of memory, visuospatial and executive function. SPECT imaging was performed with [123I]FP-CIT and specific binding ratios in left and right putamen and caudate nucleus were calculated. The association between specific binding ratios and cognition was performed using a cognitive composite z-score, domain z-scores and individual test scores. Multivariate general linear model regression analyses were performed including age, gender, education, and laterality as predictors and specific binding ratios as dependent variables. Results: Uncorrected analysis showed no associations between dopamine transporter imaging and memory and visuospatial domains. A small but significant positive association between specific binding ratios and the attention/executive domain was found, which was not significant after adjusting for age. However, in a moderated mediation model, we found that cognitive executive differences between controls and patients with Parkinson’s disease were mediated by an age-moderated dopaminergic deficit in the left caudate nucleus. Conclusions: Our findings support the hypothesis that nigrostriatal dopaminergic deficit contributes to executive impairment, but not to memory or visuospatial impairment in early Parkinson’s disease.Objective: To investigate whether spirography-based objective measures of motor dysfunctions are able to discriminate between Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients with different motor states (Off and ...Objective: This study aims to determine PPN’s electrophysiological activities in rats to help future studies and to investigate the effect of subthalamic nucleus stimulation on PPN. Background: Long-duration medical treatment of Parkinson patients causes complications and morbidity. Risks in destructive surgery are releatively high, new treatment methods such as stereotactic functional surgery has been proposed recently. While sensory and behavioral processes of pedunculopontine nucleus (PPN) are well known as a locomotor center, its role on initiating and sustaining motion function in primates or rats has been also demonstrated. All functions of PPN are not fully known yet, and its DBS has been proposed as an alternative therapeutic target in treating gait problems of Parkinson’s disease recently. Methods: In this study, 14 male wistar type healthy rats with average 292 (284-317) gram weight and with the same age group were used. In the sham group, two probes were inserted, one to the STN bilaterally and the other to the right PPN to record PPN’s electrophysiological activities. In the experiment group, in addition to the same procedures used in the sham group, STN was stimulated bilaterally at 0.5 Hz, 10 Hz, 60 Hz ve 130 Hz and PPN’s electrophysiological activities were recorded before and after bilateral STN stimulations. Results: Analyzing the neural activity after the 60 Hz stimulation, it revealed that STN has a stimulus effect on PPN neurons increasing the firing rate. The PPN neurons demonstrated three different patterns of firing, burst random and regular. The majority of the neurons (68%) exhibited a regular pattern of firing in the sham group. After bilateral STN stimulation with very low (0,5 Hz and 10 Hz) and high (130 Hz) frequencies the PPN neurons maintained their firing patterns. However, after 60 Hz stimulation of STN a significant percentage of neurons (82,1 %) fired with a more regular pattern. Conclusions: The results of this study provides additional information to our understanding on PPN’s electrophysiological activities. 60 Hz STN stimulation can increase the firing rates and changes the behaviour of the PPN neurons.Objective: To analyze the relationship between the electric field and the volume of tissue activated (VTA) during model-based investigations of deep brain stimulation (DBS).Background: An important ...This journal suppl. entitled: Supplement: Abstracts of the Eighteenth International Congress of Parkinsons Disease and Movement Disorders / Poster Presentation
Archives of Disease in Childhood | 2011
Jessica Bate; Julia Chisholm; Paul T. Heath; Judith Breuer; Rod Skinner; Sue Manley; Soonie R. Patel; Keith Wheatley; Mary Ramsay; Pamela Kearns; Sophie Hambleton
Archives of Disease in Childhood | 2014
Re Ling; Capsomidis A; Soonie R. Patel
Archive | 2007
Soonie R. Patel; Bernard Cohen; David W. Brown; Paul T. Heath
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2007
Roland Meisel; Dugmar Dilloo; Soonie R. Patel; B.J. Cohen; David W. Brown; Paul T. Heath
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2007
Soonie R. Patel; Miguel Ortín; B.J. Cohen; Ray Borrow; Diane Irving; Joanne Sheldon; Paul T. Heath; Julia Chisholm