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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Journal ArticleDOI
Maternal treatment with opioid analgesics and risk for birth defects.
Geert W. ‘t Jong,Gideon Koren +1 more
Book
Herbal Medicines in Pregnancy and Lactation: An Evidence-Based Approach
TL;DR: Herbal Medicines in Pregnancy and Lactation focuses entirely on the therapeutics, safety and risk information of herbs and supplements used during pregnancy and lactation for obstetricians, maternal-fetal medicine specialists, and primary care physicians.
Journal ArticleDOI
Effects of aspirin consumption during pregnancy on pregnancy outcomes: meta-analysis.
TL;DR: For women with moderate- and high-risk pregnancies, aspirin treatment seemed to have a small but significant effect on reducing the rate of preterm deliveries, but did not reduce the rateof perinatal death.
Journal ArticleDOI
Prevalence of fetal ethanol exposure in a regional population-based sample by meconium analysis of fatty acid ethyl esters.
TL;DR: Meconium FAEE analysis demonstrates a fivefold increase in sensitivity over currently used methods of self-report-based screening in Ontario for the detection of ethanol-exposed pregnancies in a clinical setting.
Journal ArticleDOI
Population pharmacokinetic study of benznidazole in pediatric Chagas disease suggests efficacy despite lower plasma concentrations than in adults.
Jaime Altcheh,Guillermo Moscatelli,Guido Mastrantonio,Samanta Moroni,Norberto Giglio,María Elena Marson,Griselda Ballering,Margarita Bisio,Gideon Koren,Facundo Garcia-Bournissen +9 more
TL;DR: Observed benznidazole plasma concentrations in children were markedly lower than those previously reported in adults (treated with comparable mg/kg doses), possibly due to a higher CL/F in smaller children, which was associated to a high therapeutic response in this cohort.