G
Gideon Koren
Researcher at Ariel University
Publications - 2007
Citations - 88165
Gideon Koren is an academic researcher from Ariel University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pregnancy & Population. The author has an hindex of 129, co-authored 1994 publications receiving 81718 citations. Previous affiliations of Gideon Koren include McGill University Health Centre & University of Western Ontario.
Papers
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Prevalence of depression during pregnancy: systematic review.
TL;DR: Rates of depression, especially during the second and third trimesters of pregnancy, are substantial, and clinical and economic studies to estimate maternal and fetal consequences are needed.
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Effect of neonatal circumcision on pain response during subsequent routine vaccination
TL;DR: Circum circumcised infants showed a stronger pain response to subsequent routine vaccination than uncircumcised infants, and preoperative treatment with Emla attenuated the painresponse to vaccination.
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Birth defects after maternal exposure to corticosteroids: prospective cohort study and meta-analysis of epidemiological studies
Laura Y. Park-Wyllie,Paolo Mazzotta,Anne Pastuszak,Myla E Moretti,Lizanne Beique,Laura Hunnisett,Mark H. Friesen,Sheila Jacobson,S. Kasapinovic,Debra Chang,Orna Diav-Citrin,David Chitayat,Irena Nulman,Thomas R. Einarson,Gideon Koren +14 more
TL;DR: Although prednisone does not represent a major teratogenic risk in humans at therapeutic doses, it does increase by an order of 3.4-fold the risk of oral cleft, which is consistent with the existing animal studies.
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Survival in medically treated patients with homozygous beta-thalassemia.
Nancy F. Olivieri,David G. Nathan,James H. MacMillan,Alan S. Wayne,Peter P. Liu,Allison McGee,Marie Martin,Gideon Koren,Alan R. Cohen +8 more
TL;DR: Univariate analysis demonstrated that factors affecting cardiac disease-free survival were age at the start of chelation therapy and life-table analysis to estimate freedom from cardiac disease over time.
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Hair cortisol as a biological marker of chronic stress: current status, future directions and unanswered questions.
TL;DR: Because of its ability to provide a long-term, month-by-month measure of systemic cortisol exposure, hair cortisol analysis is becoming a useful tool, capable of answering clinical questions that could previously not be answered by other tests.