Dr. Nancy E. Dunlap M.D.
Pulmonologist | Pulmonary Disease
619 19th Street South Birmingham AL, 35233About
Dr. Nancy Dunlap practices Pulmonology in Birmingham, AL. A pulmonologist is a physician who possesses specialized knowledge and skill in the diagnosis and treatment of pulmonary conditions and diseases. Dr. Dunlap manages patients who need life support and mechanical ventilation, and is specially trained in diseases and conditions of the chest, particularly pneumonia, asthma, tuberculosis, emphysema, and complicated chest infections.
Board Certification
Internal MedicineAmerican Board of Internal MedicineABIM- Critical Care Medicine
Provider Details
Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- In vitro evidence of two-component system phosphorylation between the Mycobacterium tuberculosis TrcR/TrcS proteins.
- Spot sputum screening: evaluation of an intervention in two homeless shelters.
- Preventable childhood tuberculosis in Alabama: implications and opportunity.
- The use of RFLP as a tool for tuberculosis control: utility or futility?
- Identification of a contaminating Mycobacterium tuberculosis strain with a transposition of an IS6110 insertion element resulting in an altered spoligotype.
- Value of Mycobacterium tuberculosis fingerprinting as a tool in a rural state surveillance program.
- Predictive model to identify positive tuberculosis skin test results during contact investigations.
- Expression, autoregulation, and DNA binding properties of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis TrcR response regulator.
- Molecular typing of Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains with a common two-band IS6110 pattern.
- Molecular differentiation of Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains without IS6110 insertions.
- A 'safe-site' for Salmonella typhimurium is within splenic polymorphonuclear cells.
- T helper/inducer (CD4+) cells prestimulated with PPD induce monocytes to produce interleukin-1 beta.
- In vitro natural killer and lymphokine-activated killer activity in patients with bronchogenic carcinoma.
- A 'safe-site' for Salmonella typhimurium is within splenic cells during the early phase of infection in mice.
- Corticosteroids in asthma.
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