A
Asif Muneer
Researcher at University College Hospital
Publications - 206
Citations - 2696
Asif Muneer is an academic researcher from University College Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Penile cancer & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 172 publications receiving 1928 citations. Previous affiliations of Asif Muneer include University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust & National Institute for Health Research.
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Mean velocity and peak systolic velocity can help determine ischaemic and non-ischaemic priapism.
C. von Stempel,Evangelos Zacharakis,Clare Allen,Navin Ramachandran,Miles Walkden,Suks Minhas,Asif Muneer,David Ralph,A. Freeman,Alex Kirkham +9 more
TL;DR: In the present cohort, PSV <50 cm/s and MV <6.5 cm/s were predictive of ischaemic priapism and post-shunt DUS findings were extremely variable and did not predict histology or clinical outcome.
Journal ArticleDOI
The investigation of putative agents, using an in vitro model, to prevent cavernosal smooth muscle dysfunction during low-flow priapism.
TL;DR: To investigate the effect of putative agents for preventing irreversible smooth muscle dysfunction, using an in vitro model of low‐flow priapism, as failure of detumescence results in a high incidence of erectile dysfunction.
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Human Papillomavirus Infection and Vaccination in Males.
TL;DR: HPV vaccination appears to be the only reliable method to provide protection against new HPV infections in men, and male vaccination is both a safe and efficacious option preventing both HPV infection and its long-term consequences.
Journal ArticleDOI
Which patients with ischaemic priapism require further investigation for malignancy
Mark Johnson,Marcus Hallerstrom,Hussain M. Alnajjar,Thomas Johnson,Marta Skrodzka,Giovanni Chiriaco,Asif Muneer,David Ralph +7 more
TL;DR: An abnormally low haemoglobin value was found in 82% of the men with IP and appears to have a very poor prognosis with an 18-month mortality of 64% and warrants further investigation in IP.
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Adverse outcomes in SAR-CoV-2 (COVID-19) and SARS virus related pregnancies with probable vertical transmission.
Gulam Bahadur,Roy Homburg,Wai Yoong,Cheentan Singh,Mamta Bhat,Phalguni Kotabagi,Santanu Acharya,Judith A.F. Huirne,Pablo Alexis Doreski,Mariusz Łukaszuk,Asif Muneer +10 more
TL;DR: An increasing number of reports centre around mildly infected women showing no evidence of fetal infection while a few reports suggesting vertical transmission require further validation, and some data suggesting intrapartum vertical transmission from mother to baby cannot be dismissed.