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Annalisa Saracino

Researcher at University of Foggia

Publications -  50
Citations -  758

Annalisa Saracino is an academic researcher from University of Foggia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Viral load. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 50 publications receiving 721 citations. Previous affiliations of Annalisa Saracino include University of Liverpool.

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Detection of human herpesvirus 8 in cervicovaginal secretions and seroprevalence in human immunodeficiency virus type 1-seropositive and -seronegative women.

TL;DR: Human herpesvirus 8 DNA is only rarely detectable in CV secretions and semen of HHV-8-infected individuals, and was more common in HIV-1- Infected than uninfected women.
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HIV-1 subtypes and circulating recombinant forms (CRFs) from HIV-infected patients residing in two regions of central and southern Italy.

TL;DR: Although non‐B subtypes principally infect non‐Italian patients, in Italy they can no longer be considered exclusively restricted to subjects from endemic areas, and social and epidemiological changes are responsible for an increasing circulation of non‐ B subtypes in Italy.
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Importance of baseline prognostic factors with increasing time since initiation of highly active antiretroviral therapy: Collaborative analysis of cohorts of HIV-1 infected patients

Jonathan A C Sterne, +806 more
TL;DR: Compared with other patient groups, injection drug users and patients with advanced immunodeficiency at baseline experience substantially increased rates of AIDS and death up to 6 years after starting HAART.
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Co-receptor switch during HAART is independent of virological success.

TL;DR: The occurrence of a tropism shift in both directions was independent of HAART use, irrespective of its efficacy, and the CD4 count nadir was the only baseline characteristic able to predict an R5‐to‐X4 viral shift.
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Prevalence and clinical features of HIV and malaria co-infection in hospitalized adults in Beira, Mozambique.

TL;DR: Malaria infection was rare in HIV-positive individuals treated with CTX for opportunistic infections, while no independent anti-malarial effect for NNRTIs was noted.