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Imed Gaaloul
Researcher at SIDI
Publications - 8
Citations - 140
Imed Gaaloul is an academic researcher from SIDI. The author has contributed to research in topics: Heart disease & Myocarditis. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 8 publications receiving 118 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Coxsackievirus B detection in cases of myocarditis, myopericarditis, pericarditis and dilated cardiomyopathy in hospitalized patients.
Imed Gaaloul,Samira Riabi,Rafik Harrath,T. C. Hunter,Khaldoun B. Hamda,Assia B. Ghzala,Sally A. Huber,Mahjoub Aouni +7 more
TL;DR: The present findings demonstrate a higher prevalence of viral heart infections, suggesting that CV-B may significantly contribute to heart infections.
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Implementation of ISO 22000 in cereal food industry “SMID” in Tunisia
TL;DR: In this article, a wheat grinding company has implemented the ISO 22000 system involving essentially the prerequisite programs (PRPs) and the HACCP principals and the objective of this study is to determine food safety practices and procedures related to the food safety management system (ISO 22000).
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An outbreak of West Nile Virus infection in the region of Monastir, Tunisia, 2003
TL;DR: The phylogenetic analysis revealed that isolates of WNV were closely related to the Tunisian strain 1997 (PAH001) and the Israeli one (Is-98).
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Postmortem diagnosis of infectious heart diseases: A mystifying cause of Sudden Infant Death
TL;DR: Health professionals are urged to adopt systematically long intensive heart care in infants with underlying vulnerability as well as new diagnostic approaches including histopathology complemented with IHC and molecular pathology.
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Study of Coxsackie B viruses interactions with Coxsackie Adenovirus receptor and Decay-Accelerating Factor using Human CaCo-2 cell line
Samira Riabi,Rafik Harrath,Imed Gaaloul,Lamjed Bouslama,Dorsaf Nasri,Mahjoub Aouni,Sylvie Pillet,Bruno Pozzetto +7 more
TL;DR: Within a given serotype, variations exist in the capacity of virus isolates to bind to specific receptors, and variants with different additional ligands may arise during infection in humans as well as in tissue culture.