G
Giorgio Assennato
Researcher at ARPA-E
Publications - 88
Citations - 1499
Giorgio Assennato is an academic researcher from ARPA-E. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Environmental exposure. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 87 publications receiving 1410 citations. Previous affiliations of Giorgio Assennato include University of Bari & Johns Hopkins University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Sperm count suppression without endocrine dysfunction in lead-exposed men.
Giorgio Assennato,Claudio Paci,Michael E. Baser,Raffaele Molinini,Roberto Gagliano Candela,Bruno M. Altamura,Riccardo Giorgino +6 more
TL;DR: A direct toxic effect of increased lead absorption on sperm production or transport in man is suggested.
Journal Article
Epidemiology of hearing problems among adults in Italy
TL;DR: The study was conducted in Bari, Florence, Milan, Padua, Palermo with questionnaire and audiological assessment; neither stage showed any gross bias arising from the particular cities chosen.
Journal ArticleDOI
Occupational exposure and urological cancer
TL;DR: Renal cell cancer has been observed as an occupational disease in cases of very high exposure to trichloroethylene having led to narcotic or prenarcotic symptoms.
Journal ArticleDOI
Type I allergy to natural rubber latex and type IV allergy to rubber chemicals in health care workers with glove‐related skin symptoms
TL;DR: This study highlights the importance of knowing the type I and type IV allergens in latex gloves before deciding whether or not to use them in clinical practice.
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Risk factors for spread of primary adult onset blepharospasm: a multicentre investigation of the Italian movement disorders study group.
G. Defazio,Alfredo Berardelli,G. Abbruzzese,Vincenzo Coviello,Francesco Carella,M. T. De Berardinis,Giuseppe Galardi,Paolo Girlanda,S. Maurri,M. Mucchiut,Alberto Albanese,M. Basciani,Laura Bertolasi,Rocco Liguori,Nicola Tambasco,L. Santoro,Giorgio Assennato,Paolo Livrea +17 more
TL;DR: It is confirmed that patients presenting initially with blepharospasm are most likely to experience some spread of dystonia within a few years of the onset of blephrospasm and suggest that head or face trauma with loss of consciousness preceding the onset, age at onset, and female sex may be relevant to spread.