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.
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Pregnancy and isotretinoin therapy
TL;DR: A 29-year-old woman was given isotretinoin for severe, recalcitrant acne during the first 3 months of treatment, but after deciding she wanted to become pregnant, the patient stopped taking the drug.
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Vitamin E: the evidence for multiple roles in cancer.
Lillian Sung,Mark L. Greenberg,Gideon Koren,George Tomlinson,Agnes Tong,David Malkin,Brian M. Feldman +6 more
TL;DR: There is insufficient evidence to support anticancer activity and attenuation of chemotherapy toxicity by vitamin E, and further research will be required before routine use of vitamin E in patients with cancer can be advocated in the clinical setting.
Journal Article
Arylamine N-acetyltransferase activity of the human placenta.
TL;DR: The kinetic data show that the activity of NAT in human placenta predominantly reflects the NAT1 enzyme, and there is evidence of NAT2 activity in some of the placental samples assayed, although the contribution of a small amount of NAT1 activity to the overall acetylation capacity of the placentA is likely to be small.
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Evaluation of pregnancy outcomes in patients with multiple sclerosis after fingolimod exposure.
Yvonne Geissbühler,Jere Vile,Gideon Koren,Morgane Guennec,Helmut Butzkueven,Hugh H. Tilson,Thomas M. MacDonald,Kerstin Hellwig +7 more
TL;DR: The prevalence of major malformations among live births does not appear to be significantly higher than those in the general population and the unexposed MS population and no specific pattern of birth defects was identified.
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Rates of fetal alcohol exposure among newborns in a high-risk obstetric unit
TL;DR: The results indicate that infants born in the high-risk obstetric unit had a 12-fold higher risk of screening positive for second and third trimester alcohol exposure compared with infantsBorn in the general population of Grey-Bruce (relative risk=12.04, 95% confidence interval=6.40-22.65, P<.0001).