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Giovanni William Oliverio

Researcher at University of Messina

Publications -  16
Citations -  241

Giovanni William Oliverio is an academic researcher from University of Messina. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cataract surgery & Visual acuity. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 16 publications receiving 85 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Ocular surface manifestation of COVID-19 and tear film analysis.

TL;DR: Ocular symptoms are common in patients with COVID-19; although, tear analysis did not reveal the presence of SARS-CoV-2.
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The Application of Structural Retinal Biomarkers to Evaluate the Effect of Intravitreal Ranibizumab and Dexamethasone Intravitreal Implant on Treatment of Diabetic Macular Edema.

TL;DR: DME associated with SDN and HRS represents a specific inflammatory pattern for which dexamethasone appears to be more effective, as demonstrated by functional improvement and morphological biomarker change.
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Optical Coherence Tomography Predictors of Favorable Functional Response in Naïve Diabetic Macular Edema Eyes Treated with Dexamethasone Implants as a First-Line Agent.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated the efficacy and safety of intravitreal dexamethasone 0.7 mg implant in treatment-naive DME patients and assessed the utility of OCT structural biomarkers as predictors of functional response after treatment.
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Ophthalmologic Manifestations of Primary Sjögren’s Syndrome

TL;DR: In this paper, the role of both the innate and adaptive immune system, participating actively in the induction and evolution of Sjogren's syndrome, was recognized, and the role played by the ocular surface inflammation is a central mechanism leading to the decrease of lacrimal secretion and keratoconjunctive alterations.
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Selective transepithelial ablation with simultaneous accelerated Corneal Cross-linking for corneal regularization of keratoconus: the STARE-X Protocol.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluated the changes in refractive outcomes and corneal aberrations in central and paracentral keratoconus after selective transepithelial topography-guided photorefractive keratectomy combined with accelerated CORNEAL crosslinking (STARE-X).