scispace - formally typeset
F

Faisal Qureshi

Researcher at Wayne State University

Publications -  115
Citations -  3623

Faisal Qureshi is an academic researcher from Wayne State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Placenta & Prenatal diagnosis. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 108 publications receiving 3325 citations. Previous affiliations of Faisal Qureshi include Brigham and Women's Hospital.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Amniotic Infection Syndrome: Nosology and Reproducibility of Placental Reaction Patterns

TL;DR: A complete set of the placental reaction patterns seen with amniotic fluid infection was assembled and validated in the hope that this might provide a standardized diagnostic framework useful for practicing pathologists.
Journal ArticleDOI

Funisitis and chorionic vasculitis: the histological counterpart of the fetal inflammatory response syndrome

TL;DR: Fetuses with funisitis had significantly higher rates of clinical and histological chorioamnionitis, and neonatal infectious morbidity (proven + suspected sepsis) than fetuses withoutfunisitis and those without inflammation had a significantly higher rate of histological signs of inflammation in the extraplacental membranes and umbilical cord.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ovarian cancer: changes in patterns at diagnosis and relative survival over the last three decades.

TL;DR: Over time, relative survival of women who had primary invasive EOC diagnosed improved, although older patients (60 years or older) and African Americans continued to have the poorest survival.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sequential urinalysis improves evaluation of fetal renal function in obstructive uropathy.

TL;DR: Last urine values together with pattern-of-change trend analysis after serial vesicocenteses improve diagnostic precision in fetuses with complete obstructive uropathy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pre-eclampsia and expression of heparin-binding EGF-like growth factor

TL;DR: In pre-eclampsia, deficient HB-EGF signalling during placental development could impair trophoblast survival, differentiation, and invasion, leading to poor placental perfusion and hypertension.