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Joaquim Monteiro

Researcher at University of Porto

Publications -  13
Citations -  339

Joaquim Monteiro is an academic researcher from University of Porto. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Health care. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 13 publications receiving 273 citations. Previous affiliations of Joaquim Monteiro include Health Sciences North & University of Valencia.

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SLC19A1, SLC46A1 and SLCO1B1 Polymorphisms as Predictors of Methotrexate-Related Toxicity in Portuguese Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that SLC19A1, SLC46A1 and SLCO1B1 genotypes may help to identify patients with increased risk of MTX-related overall toxicity and that SLP2 and SLP3 genotypes, and S LC19A 1 haplotypes mayhelp to identify Patients with increasedrisk of MTx-related gastrointestinal toxicity.
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Drug-related problems in institutionalized, polymedicated elderly patients: opportunities for pharmacist intervention

TL;DR: The results reinforce the need for the implementation of pharmaceutical care services to institutionalized elderly, necessary to improve medicines efficacy and safety, better clinical outcomes and cost reduction.
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Vancomycin therapeutic drug monitoring and population pharmacokinetic models in special patient subpopulations

TL;DR: An overview of the current knowledge on vancomycin TDM and population pharmacokinetic (PPK) models relevant to specific patient subpopulations is presented and can be useful to redirect research efforts to address the detected knowledge gaps.
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Future perspectives of Smartphone applications for rheumatic diseases self-management.

TL;DR: There is a great opportunity for mobile health in using Smartphone applications for RD self-management, and it is important to foresee its future applicability in order to meet the needs of the twenty-first century.
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Performance of anesthetic depth indexes in rabbits under propofol anesthesia: prediction probabilities and concentration-effect relations.

TL;DR: Single-scale and multiscale permutation entropies may be promising measures of propofol anesthetic depth when corrected for burst suppression and may be a promising animal model for electroencephalographic studies because it provides a good-quality signal.