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Prof. Lex William Doyle

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The University of Melbourne
Victoria, Australia
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1-10 of 60 online sources for Lex Doyle

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    www.lilaussieprems.com.au/blogs/08/premature-babies-are - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 8/9/2007    Last Visited: 7/5/2008  

    * Prof Lex Doyle is head of Clinical Research Development, Royal Women's Hospital

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    www.pediatrics.uottawa.ca/eng/cme_visiting_prof_program - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 2/15/2008    Last Visited: 3/8/2008  

    Dr. Lex Doyle, Associate Professor of Neonatal Pediatrics, University of Melbourne

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    www.thewomens.org.au/HealthConference - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 3/19/2007    Last Visited: 3/19/2007  

    Speakers will include; Professor Colin Morley, Professor Lex Doyle, Associate Professor Peter Davis, Dr Sue Jacobs, Dr Michael Stewart, Ms Nisha Brown, Ms Bev O'Sullivan, Dr Neil Roy.

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    www.health.adelaide.edu.au/og/research/mpctu.html - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 3/10/2007    Last Visited: 3/10/2007  

    Prof Caroline Crowther, A/Prof Ross Haslam, Prof Janet Hiller, Prof Lex Doyle, Prof Jeffrey Robinson,

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    www.jacksonwomenshealth.yourmd.com/ypol/user/userMain.a - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 10/19/2002    Last Visited: 7/2/2003  

    Peter Anderson, Ph.D., of the Murdoch Childrens Research Institute, Melbourne, and Lex W. Doyle, M.D., of the University of Melbourne, Australia, and participants with the Victorian Infant Collaborative Study Group, conducted a study to determine the cognitive, educational, and behavioral outcome of ELBW and very preterm infants born in the 1990s compared with normal birth weight (NBW) controls.

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    www.aushealthcare.com.au/newsletter/ehcb/071119_0744.ht - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 7/2/2008    Last Visited: 7/2/2008  

    Prof Lex Doyle of the Royal Women's Hospital said caffeine was the first treatment ever shown to reduce disabilities common in severely premature babies."Very premature babies tend to forget to breath and drop their oxygen and heart rates, but if you give them caffeine they have far fewer of those pauses and you can reduce the time they are needed on a ventilator," he said.

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    www.neonatalsociety.org/Original_Pages/Autumn05Prog.asp - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/1/2002    Last Visited: 10/16/2007  

    Professor Lex DoyleDepartment of Obstetrics and Gynaecology,

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    wombatcollaboration.net/modules.php?name=Content&pa=sho - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/15/2007    Last Visited: 12/4/2007  

    Professor Lex Doyle (University of Melbourne)

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    www.lilaussieprems.com.au/blogs/07/brain-challenge-for- - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 7/1/2007    Last Visited: 7/5/2008  

    Lex Doyle, a consultant pediatrician at the Royal Women's Hospital who is working on the study with Dr Inder, said although the differences in brain development uncovered so far were concerning "it's still too early to know for sure what these MRI changes were showing".
    ...
    There was no doubt that premature babies had a higher risk of long-term problems, Professor Doyle said, but "you've got to remember that most of them don't have developmental problems; most of them are OK".

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    www.vics-infantstudy.org.au/current.htm - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/18/2007    Last Visited: 6/24/2009  

    Research team leader Professor Lex Doyle said that the survival rate of babies of birth weight 500-999 grams born in Victoria had improved from one in four to three in four in less than 18 years.

    He said that one of the major reasons for the increased survival is that most of these tiny babies are now born in one of the three major maternity hospitals in the State.

    When Prof Doyle started working with premature babies in 1975 there were few specialised intensive care beds and ventilators were not suitable for tiny babies.

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