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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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Incidence of Major Malformations in Infants following Antidepressant Exposure in Pregnancy: Results of a Large Prospective Cohort Study:

TL;DR: As a group, antidepressant use in the first trimester of pregnancy is not associated with an increased risk for major malformation above the baseline, and no individual antidepressant was associated with a increased risk of a specific malformation.
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From type 2 diabetes to antioxidant activity : a systematic review of the safety and efficacy of common and cassia cinnamon bark

TL;DR: Common cinnamon showed weak to very weak evidence of efficacy in treating oral candidiasis in HIV patients and chronic salmonellosis and there was good scientific evidence that a species of cinnamon was not effective at eradicating H. pylori infection.
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Transport of glyburide by placental ABC transporters: implications in fetal drug exposure.

TL;DR: Evidence is the first to clearly indicate that glyburide is preferentially transported by BCRP and MRP3.
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Growth failure and bony changes induced by deferoxamine.

TL;DR: Both the decline in height percentile and the bony changes observed in well-chelated patients are directly related to deferoxamines therapy, implicating deferoxamine therapy as the cause of growth failure.
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The detection of cortisol in human sweat: implications for measurement of cortisol in hair.

TL;DR: It is suggested that perfuse sweating after intense exercise may increase cortisol concentrations detected in hair, which likely cannot be effectively decreased with conventional washing procedures and should be considered carefully in studies using hair cortisol as a biomarker of chronic stress.