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Agnieszka Gniadek
Researcher at Jagiellonian University Medical College
Publications - 66
Citations - 434
Agnieszka Gniadek is an academic researcher from Jagiellonian University Medical College. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 53 publications receiving 283 citations. Previous affiliations of Agnieszka Gniadek include Jagiellonian University & State Higher Vocational School in Tarnow.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Incidence, Microbiological Profile and Risk Factors of Healthcare-Associated Infections in Intensive Care Units: A 10 Year Observation in a Provincial Hospital in Southern Poland.
TL;DR: In ICU patients pneumonia and bloodstream infections were the most frequently found and Acinetobacter baumannii strains were most often isolated from clinical materials taken from HAI patients and showed resistance to many groups of antibiotics.
Journal Article
The risk factors for hospital-acquired pneumonia in the Intensive Care Unit
Marta Wałaszek,Alicja Kosiarska,Agnieszka Gniadek,Małgorzata Kołpa,Zdzisław Wolak,Wiesław Dobroś,Jolanta Siadek +6 more
TL;DR: This study evaluated the risk factors for VAP associated with a patient and the used invasive treatment in Intensive Care Unit (ICU) in the St. Luke District Hospital in Tarnów between 2010 and 2014 and found that patient's underlying diseases had an impact on the incidence of VAP.
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Dietary phytoestrogens and biomarkers of their intake in relation to cancer survival and recurrence: a comprehensive systematic review with meta-analysis.
Agnieszka Micek,Justyna Godos,Tomasz Brzostek,Agnieszka Gniadek,Claudia Favari,Pedro Mena,Massimo Libra,Daniele Del Rio,Fabio Galvano,Giuseppe Grosso +9 more
TL;DR: A significant inverse association among higher dietary isoflavone intake, higher serum/plasma enterolactone concentrations, and overall mortality and cancer recurrence was found.
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Occurrence of fungi and cytotoxicity of the species: Aspergillus ochraceus, Aspergillus niger and Aspergillus flavus isolated from the air of hospital wards.
TL;DR: It was determined that there were significant differences in the levels of cytotoxicity of the analyzed fungi and such statement may not provide grounds for a definite conclusion about the compared species of fungi that display a more cytotoxic effect than others.
Journal Article
Intensive care unit environment contamination with fungi.
Agnieszka Gniadek,Anna B. Macura +1 more
TL;DR: Yeast-like fungi Rhodotorula rubra and moulds Aspergillus sp.