Emily Marie Schultz

TitleGraduate Student
InstitutionBaylor College of Medicine
DepartmentImmunology & Microbiology
Address
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    Publications listed below are automatically derived from MEDLINE/PubMed and other sources, which might result in incorrect or missing publications. Faculty can login to make corrections and additions.
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    PMC Citations indicate the number of times the publication was cited by articles in PubMed Central, and the Altmetric score represents citations in news articles and social media. (Note that publications are often cited in additional ways that are not shown here.) Fields are based on how the National Library of Medicine (NLM) classifies the publication's journal and might not represent the specific topic of the publication. Translation tags are based on the publication type and the MeSH terms NLM assigns to the publication. Some publications (especially newer ones and publications not in PubMed) might not yet be assigned Field or Translation tags.) Click a Field or Translation tag to filter the publications.
    1. Aloisio GM, Nagaraj D, Murray AM, Schultz EM, McBride T, Aideyan L, Nicholson EG, Henke D, Ferlic-Stark L, Rajan A, Kambal A, Johnson HL, Mosa E, Stossi F, Blutt SE, Piedra PA, Avadhanula V, Aloisio GM, Nagaraj D, Murray AM, Schultz EM, McBride T, Aideyan L, Nicholson EG, Henke D, Ferlic-Stark L, Rajan A, Kambal A, Johnson HL, Mosa E, Stossi F, Blutt SE, Piedra PA, Avadhanula V. Infant-derived human nasal organoids exhibit relatively increased susceptibility, epithelial responses, and cytotoxicity during RSV infection. J Infect. 2024 Dec; 89(6):106305. PMID: 39389204.
      Citations: 2     Fields:    
    2. Aloisio GM, Nagaraj D, Murray AM, Schultz EM, McBride T, Aideyan L, Nicholson EG, Henke D, Ferlic-Stark L, Rajan A, Kambal A, Johnson HL, Mosa E, Stossi F, Blutt SE, Piedra PA, Avadhanula V. Pediatric human nose organoids demonstrate greater susceptibility, epithelial responses, and cytotoxicity than adults during RSV infection. bioRxiv. 2024 Feb 01. PMID: 38352333; PMCID: PMC10862794.
      Citations:    
    3. Schultz EM, Jones TJ, Xu S, Dean DD, Zechmann B, Barr KL. Cerebral Organoids Derived from a Parkinson's Patient Exhibit Unique Pathogenesis from Chikungunya Virus Infection When Compared to a Non-Parkinson's Patient. Pathogens. 2021 Jul 20; 10(7). PMID: 34358063; PMCID: PMC8308834.
      Citations:    
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