A
A. Corrias
Publications - 2
Citations - 341
A. Corrias is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hepatitis C virus. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 2 publications receiving 326 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
A significant sex--but not elective cesarean section--effect on mother-to-child transmission of hepatitis C virus infection
Antonio Amoroso,F. Asensi-Botet,A. Pereda,V. Balossini,Gianni Bona,M. Zaffaroni,A. Bandelloni,A. Coscia,C. Fabris,S. Aime,C. Belloni,G. Bossi,B. Salati,Charles A. Boucher,Wilma Buffolano,Karina Butler,L. Cabero Roura,J. M. Bertran Sanges,P. Cigna,L. M. Ciria,C. Servera Ginard,G. Claret Teruel,C. Fortuny,Oriol Coll,A. Corrias,R. Ledda,S. Floris,A. De Maria,J. Echeverria,G. Cilla,Marcello Lanari,E. Tridapalli,Valentina Venturi,Giacomo Faldella,B. Fischler,A. B. Bohlin,S. Lindgren,G. Lindh,Vania Giacomet,M. Merlo,C. Figini,Paola Erba,Alessandra Viganò,S. Hannam,G. Mieli-Vergani,A. Hatzakis,C. Inchley,H. O. Fjaerli,A. Maccabruni,M. Marcellini,M. R. Sartorelli,P. Martin Fontelos,Antonio Mazza,J. Y.Q. Mok,A. Mur,M. Viñolas,D. M. Paternoster,P. Grella,Susanne Polywka,Isabella Quinti,Anna Maria Casadei,A. Rojahn,A. Berg,R. Rosso,S. Ferrando,Dante Bassetti,J. Ruiz Contreras,A. Manzanares,A. Ruiz Extremera,Filippo Salvini,Gian Vincenzo Zuccotti,T. Schmitz,I. Grosch-Wörner,C. Feiterna Sperling,T. Piening,Angela Vegnente,Raffaele Iorio,A. Versace,S. Garetto,L. Lazier,S. Bressio,C. Riva,A Alfarano,R. Wejstal,G. Norkrans,A.R. Zanetti,Elisabetta Tanzi,Pier-Angelo Tovo,Lucy Pembrey,Marie-Louise Newell +89 more
TL;DR: The results strongly suggest that women should neither be offered an elective CS nor be discouraged from breast-feeding on the basis of HCV infection alone, and the sex association is an intriguing finding that probably reflects biological differences in susceptibility or response to infection.
Journal ArticleDOI
Features of children perinatally infected with HIV-1 surviving longer than 5 years. Italian Register for HIV Infection in Children.
M. De Martino,Pier-Angelo Tovo,Laura Galli,Clara Gabiano,Fabrizio Veglia,C. Giaquinto,S. Tulisso,A. Loy,G. Ferraris,Gian Vincenzo Zuccotti,M.C. Schoeller,Alberto Vierucci,Paola Marchisio,Guido Castelli Gattinara,Désirée Caselli,P. Dallacasa,C. Fundarò,M. Stegagno,Gianfranco Anzidei,A. Soresina,F. Chiappe,M. Ruggeri,P. Cocchi,Rita Consolini,P L Mazzoni,G. Benaglia,S. Risso,F. Ciccimarra,G. L. Forni,V. Portelli,D. Demattia,Antonio Mazza,T. Bezzi,A. Corrias,I. Ragazzini,G. Gambaretto,F. Bassanetti,M. T. Cecchi,E. Micheletti,P. Osimani,M. Sticca,L Tarallo,Alfredo Guarino,P. Falconieri +43 more
TL;DR: The study shows that aCD4 cell decrease early in life can be predictive of outcome, and a substantial number of children do survive after early childhood; severe diseases; low CD4 cell numbers, and p24 antigenaemia do not necessarily preclude long-term survival.