2 Matching Annotations
  1. Jul 2018
    1. On 2015 Jan 30, NephJC - Nephrology Journal Club commented:

      This review was discussed on January 6th and 7th in the open online nephrology journal club, #NephJC, on twitter. Introductory comments are available at the NephJC website. It was a fascinating discussion, which served to help understand the physiology and functions of the distal convoluted tubule. It had more than 70 participants, including nephrologists, physiologists, basic scientists and nephrology fellows. The first author, Arohan ‘Ro’ Subramanya, and the section editor, Melanie Hoenig also joined in the discussion. A transcript and a curated (i.e. Storified) version of the tweetchat are available from the NephJC website.

      The CJASN should be commended for commissioning  this series, and moreover, for making it freely available. It will remain an extremely useful resource for providing understanding of basic renal physiology, at the same time providing a glimpse into the ongoing cutting edge research in this field.  

      Interested individuals can track and join in the conversation by following @NephJC or #NephJC, or visit the webpage at NephJC.com.


      This comment, imported by Hypothesis from PubMed Commons, is licensed under CC BY.

  2. Feb 2018
    1. On 2015 Jan 30, NephJC - Nephrology Journal Club commented:

      This review was discussed on January 6th and 7th in the open online nephrology journal club, #NephJC, on twitter. Introductory comments are available at the NephJC website. It was a fascinating discussion, which served to help understand the physiology and functions of the distal convoluted tubule. It had more than 70 participants, including nephrologists, physiologists, basic scientists and nephrology fellows. The first author, Arohan ‘Ro’ Subramanya, and the section editor, Melanie Hoenig also joined in the discussion. A transcript and a curated (i.e. Storified) version of the tweetchat are available from the NephJC website.

      The CJASN should be commended for commissioning  this series, and moreover, for making it freely available. It will remain an extremely useful resource for providing understanding of basic renal physiology, at the same time providing a glimpse into the ongoing cutting edge research in this field.  

      Interested individuals can track and join in the conversation by following @NephJC or #NephJC, or visit the webpage at NephJC.com.


      This comment, imported by Hypothesis from PubMed Commons, is licensed under CC BY.