Jonathan R. Kerr
Department of Microbiology
Royal Brompton Hospital
Imperial College London
Sydney St
United Kingdom
Name/email consistency: high
- Single-nucleotide polymorphisms associated with symptomatic infection and differential human gene expression in healthy seropositive persons each implicate the cytoskeleton, integrin signaling, and oncosuppression in the pathogenesis of human parvovirus B19 infection. Kerr, J.R., Kaushik, N., Fear, D., Baldwin, D.A., Nuwaysir, E.F., Adcock, I.M. J. Infect. Dis. (2005)
- Circulating cytokines and chemokines in acute symptomatic parvovirus B19 infection: negative association between levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines and development of B19-associated arthritis. Kerr, J.R., Cunniffe, V.S., Kelleher, P., Coats, A.J., Mattey, D.L. J. Med. Virol. (2004)
- Successful intravenous immunoglobulin therapy in 3 cases of parvovirus B19-associated chronic fatigue syndrome. Kerr, J.R., Cunniffe, V.S., Kelleher, P., Bernstein, R.M., Bruce, I.N. Clin. Infect. Dis. (2003)
- Cytokines in parvovirus B19 infection as an aid to understanding chronic fatigue syndrome. Kerr, J.R., Tyrrell, D.A. Curr. Pain. Headache. Rep (2003)
- Cytokine gene polymorphisms associated with symptomatic parvovirus B19 infection. Kerr, J.R., McCoy, M., Burke, B., Mattey, D.L., Pravica, V., Hutchinson, I.V. J. Clin. Pathol. (2003)