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Alan A. Cohen

Researcher at Université de Sherbrooke

Publications -  135
Citations -  5822

Alan A. Cohen is an academic researcher from Université de Sherbrooke. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 116 publications receiving 4376 citations. Previous affiliations of Alan A. Cohen include Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Sherbrooke & St. Michael's Hospital.

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Immunosenescence and Inflamm-Aging As Two Sides of the Same Coin: Friends or Foes?

TL;DR: Recent cumulative data suggest that, without the existence of the immunosenescence/inflamm-aging duo, human longevity would be greatly shortened and it may be more suitable to aim to maintain general homeostasis and function by appropriately improving immune-inflammatory-functions.
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Adult and child malaria mortality in India: a nationally representative mortality survey

TL;DR: Despite uncertainty as to which unattended febrile deaths are from malaria, the lower bound greatly exceeds the WHO estimate of only 15,000 malaria deaths per year in India and should be reconsidered, as should the lowWHO estimate of adult malaria deaths worldwide.
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Eleven Telomere, Epigenetic Clock, and Biomarker-Composite Quantifications of Biological Aging: Do They Measure the Same Thing?

TL;DR: Results suggested that various proposed approaches to quantifying biological aging may not measure the same aspects of the aging process, and further systematic evaluation and refinement of measures of biological aging is needed to furnish outcomes for geroprotector trials.
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Inflamm-aging does not simply reflect increases in pro-inflammatory markers

TL;DR: Results show that PCA can uncover a novel biological structure in the relationships among inflammatory markers, and that key axes of this structure play important roles in chronic disease.
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No simple answers for ecological immunology: relationships among immune indices at the individual level break down at the species level in waterfowl

TL;DR: It is concluded that one measure of each assay type may be required to maximally characterize immune function in studies of a single species, while the same is not true in studies among species.