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Immunology

D-Index
47
Citations
13138
World Ranking
4473
National Ranking
387

Overview

Mikila R. Jacobson is affiliated with Imperial College London in the United Kingdom. Their research output primarily spans the field of medicine, with a focus on subfields including immunology and allergy, physiology, pulmonary and respiratory medicine, as well as dermatology.

The main topics addressed in their work include allergic rhinitis and sensitization, asthma and respiratory diseases, respiratory and cough-related research, food allergy and anaphylaxis research, and dermatology and skin diseases.

Notable recent papers by Jacobson include the following:

  • Repetitive nasal allergen challenge in allergic rhinitis: Priming and Th2-type inflammation but no evidence of remodelling (2020), published in Clinical & Experimental Allergy
  • Nasal and blood transcriptomic pathways underpinning the clinical response to grass pollen immunotherapy (2023), published in Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology

Frequent publication venues for their work are:

  • Clinical & Experimental Allergy
  • Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology

Frequent coauthors collaborating with Jacobson include:

  • Stephen R. Durham
  • Aarif O. Eifan
  • Nara Orban
  • Kayhan T. Nouri-Aria
  • Matthew C. Altman

Their research contributions show a concentration on mechanisms and clinical pathways relevant to allergic and respiratory diseases, particularly with an interest in immune response patterns and therapeutic interventions related to allergens and sensitizations.

Best Publications

  • Long-Term Clinical Efficacy of Grass-Pollen Immunotherapy

    Stephen R. Durham;Samantha M. Walker;Eva-Maria Varga;Mikila R. Jacobson

  • Eosinophils, T-lymphocytes, mast cells, neutrophils, and macrophages in bronchial biopsy specimens from atopic subjects with asthma: comparison with biopsy specimens from atopic subjects without asthma and normal control subjects and relationship to bronchial hyperresponsiveness.

    B L Bradley;M Azzawi;M Jacobson;B Assoufi

  • Allergen injection immunotherapy for seasonal allergic rhinitis

    Moises A Calderon;Bernadette Alves;Mikila Jacobson;Brian Hurwitz

  • Cytokine messenger RNA expression for IL-3, IL-4, IL-5, and granulocyte/macrophage-colony-stimulating factor in the nasal mucosa after local allergen provocation: relationship to tissue eosinophilia.

    S R Durham;S Ying;V A Varney;M R Jacobson

  • Grass Pollen Immunotherapy Induces Mucosal and Peripheral IL-10 Responses and Blocking IgG Activity

    Kayhan T. Nouri-Aria;Petra A. Wachholz;James N. Francis;Mikila R. Jacobson

  • Grass pollen immunotherapy inhibits allergen-induced infiltration of CD4+ T lymphocytes and eosinophils in the nasal mucosa and increases the number of cells expressing messenger RNA for interferon-γ

    Stephen R. Durham;Sun Ying;Veronica A. Varney;Mikila R. Jacobson

  • Influence of grass pollen immunotherapy on cellular infiltration and cytokine mRNA expression during allergen-induced late-phase cutaneous responses.

    V. A. Varney;Q. A. Hamid;M. Gaga;Sun Ying

  • Grass pollen immunotherapy induces Foxp3-expressing CD4(+)CD25(+) cells in the nasal mucosa

    Suzana Radulovic;Mikila R. Jacobson;Stephen R. Durham;Kayhan T. Nouri-Aria

  • Long-term tolerance after allergen immunotherapy is accompanied by selective persistence of blocking antibodies.

    Louisa K. James;Mohamed H. Shamji;Samantha M. Walker;Duncan R. Wilson

  • Immunohistology of the nasal mucosa in seasonal allergic rhinitis: Increases in activated eosinophils and epithelial mast cells

    A. M. Bentley;M. R. Jacobson;V. Cumberworth;J. R. Barkans

  • Increases in IL-12 messenger RNA+ cells accompany inhibition of allergen-induced late skin responses after successful grass pollen immunotherapy

    Q. A. Hamid;E. Schotman;M. R. Jacobson;S. M. Walker

  • Sublingual grass pollen immunotherapy is associated with increases in sublingual Foxp3‐expressing cells and elevated allergen‐specific immunoglobulin G4, immunoglobulin A and serum inhibitory activity for immunoglobulin E‐facilitated allergen binding to B cells

    G. W. Scadding;M. H. Shamji;M. R. Jacobson;D. I. Lee

  • Immunohistology of the nasal mucosa following allergen-induced rhinitis. Identification of activated T lymphocytes, eosinophils, and neutrophils.

    V. A. Varney;M. R. Jacobson;R. M. Sudderick;D. S. Robinson

  • Grass Pollen Immunotherapy Induces an Allergen-Specific IgA2 Antibody Response Associated with Mucosal TGF-β Expression

    Charles Pilette;Kayhan T. Nouri-Aria;Mikila R. Jacobson;Louisa K. Wilcock

  • Grass pollen sublingual immunotherapy for seasonal rhinoconjunctivitis: a randomized controlled trial.

    M. Torres Lima;D. Wilson;L. Pitkin;A. Roberts

  • Objective monitoring of nasal airway inflammation in rhinitis

    Peter H. Howarth;Carl G.A. Persson;Eli O. Meltzer;Mikila R. Jacobson

  • Grass pollen immunotherapy: efficacy and safety during a 4-year follow-up study

    S. M. Walker;V. A. Varney;M. Gaga;M. R. Jacobson

  • T Cells Are the Principal Source of Interleukin-5 mRNA in Allergen-induced Rhinitis

    Sun Ying;S. R. Durham;J. Barkans;K. Masuyama

  • Expression of ε germ-line gene transcripts and mRNA for the ε heavy chain of IgE in nasal B cells and the effects of topical corticosteroid

    Stephen R. Durham;Hannah J. Gould;Cortlandt P. Thienes;Mikila R. Jacobson

  • Grass pollen immunotherapy inhibits seasonal increases in basophils and eosinophils in the nasal epithelium

    D. R. Wilson;A.-Ma. Irani;S. M. Walker;M. R. Jacobson

Frequent Co-Authors

Stephen R. Durham
Stephen R. Durham Imperial College London
Qutayba Hamid
Qutayba Hamid University of Sharjah
Stephen J. Till
Stephen J. Till King's College London
A. B. Kay
A. B. Kay Imperial College London
Sun Ying
Sun Ying Capital Medical University
Clare M. Lloyd
Clare M. Lloyd Imperial College London
Hannah J. Gould
Hannah J. Gould King's College London
Lawrence B. Schwartz
Lawrence B. Schwartz Virginia Commonwealth University
Moises A. Calderon
Moises A. Calderon Imperial College London
Timothy J. Williams
Timothy J. Williams National Institutes of Health

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