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Alkis Togias

Researcher at National Institutes of Health

Publications -  317
Citations -  27723

Alkis Togias is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Asthma & Allergy. The author has an hindex of 74, co-authored 288 publications receiving 24567 citations. Previous affiliations of Alkis Togias include University of Genoa & Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

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Allergic rhinitis and its impact on asthma (ARIA) 2008 update (in collaboration with the World Health Organization, GA(2)LEN and AllerGen)

Jean Bousquet, +95 more
- 01 Apr 2008 - 
TL;DR: The ARIA guidelines for the management of allergic rhinitis and asthma are similar in both the 1999 ARIA workshop report and the 2008 Update as discussed by the authors, but the GRADE approach is not yet available.
Journal ArticleDOI

Allergic Rhinitis and its Impact on Asthma (ARIA) guidelines—2016 revision

Jan Brozek, +59 more
TL;DR: The 2016 revision of the ARIA guidelines provides both updated and new recommendations about the pharmacologic treatment of AR, addressing the relative merits of using oral H1‐antihistamines, intranasal H1-antihistsamines, IntranasAL corticosteroids, and leukotriene receptor antagonists either alone or in combination.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rhinosinusitis: Establishing definitions for clinical research and patient care

TL;DR: An expert panel from multiple disciplines developed definitions for rhinosinusitis and outlined strategies for design of clinical trials and reached consensus on definitions and strategies for clinical research on acute presumed bacterial rhinosineitis, chronic rhinosinitis with polyposis, and classic allergic fungal rhinusitis.
Journal Article

Down-regulation of Fc(epsilon)RI expression on human basophils during in vivo treatment of atopic patients with anti-IgE antibody.

TL;DR: The responsiveness of the cells to IgE-mediated stimulation using anti-IgE Ab was marginally decreased while the response of the same cells to stimulation with dust mite Ag, Dermatophagoides farinae, was reduced by approximately 90%.