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Kamis Gaballah

Researcher at Ajman University of Science and Technology

Publications -  24
Citations -  271

Kamis Gaballah is an academic researcher from Ajman University of Science and Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Cancer. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 19 publications receiving 207 citations. Previous affiliations of Kamis Gaballah include King's College London & University of Sharjah.

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Evaluation of trigeminal nerve injuries in relation to third molar surgery in a prospective patient cohort. Recommendations for prevention

TL;DR: Chronic pain is often a symptom after TMS-related nerve injury, resulting in significant functional problems, and better dissemination of good practice in TMS will significantly minimize these complex nerve injuries and prevent unnecessary suffering.
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Oral cancer in the UAE: a multicenter, retrospective study.

TL;DR: Oral cancer is not an uncommon disease in the UAE and elective neck dissections to detect lymph node metastasis should be more routinely performed, in particular for tongue carcinomas because of the early neck involvement potential.
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Molecular markers for diagnosis and prognosis.

TL;DR: The overall evidence is insufficient to alter clinical practice or to consider restricting clinical trials of new adjuvant to subsets of patients, identified on the basis of the use of molecular markers, but it is optimistic that in the near future clinical research incorporating specific markers may provide new criteria for defining risk of relapse or of developing a new primary tumour.
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Needle stick injuries among dental students: risk factors and recommendations for prevention

TL;DR: It was showed that students are at the highest risk of NSIs at the fourth year of their 5-year BDS course and a non-recapping policy with immediate disposal of either the conventional or safety syringe systems after injection would prevent all clearance-related NSIs sustained by nurses.
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Tissue engineering of oral dysplasia.

TL;DR: The strains of dysplastic oral keratinocytes with an extended or immortal lifespan provided a reproducible resource of epithelia showing mild (DOK), moderate (POE9n) or severe (D20) dysplasia when maintained under defined conditions.