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Luan-Yin Chang

Researcher at National Taiwan University

Publications -  274
Citations -  10245

Luan-Yin Chang is an academic researcher from National Taiwan University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Enterovirus 71 & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 47, co-authored 253 publications receiving 9154 citations. Previous affiliations of Luan-Yin Chang include Boston Children's Hospital & National Health Research Institutes.

Papers
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Clinical features and risk factors of pulmonary oedema after enterovirus-71-related hand, foot, and mouth disease

TL;DR: Evaluating the clinical features, laboratory findings, risk factors, and outcome of EV71-related diseases in Taiwan found hyperglycaemia was the most significant prognostic factor for pulmonary oedema and CNS involvement with severe sequelae was a significant association.
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Neurodevelopment and Cognition in Children after Enterovirus 71 Infection

TL;DR: Enterovirus 71 infection with CNS involvement and cardiopulmonary failure may be associated with neurologic sequelae, delayed neurodevelopment, and reduced cognitive functioning.
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Genome-wide association study identifies FCGR2A as a susceptibility locus for Kawasaki disease.

Chiea Chuen Khor, +117 more
- 01 Dec 2011 - 
TL;DR: The involvement of the FCGR2A locus may have implications for understanding immune activation in Kawasaki disease pathogenesis and the mechanism of response to intravenous immunoglobulin, the only proven therapy for this disease.
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Pyogenic liver abscess as endemic disease, Taiwan.

TL;DR: Increasing incidence and microbiologic shift might have changed the manifestation of this condition.
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Risk Factors of Enterovirus 71 Infection and Associated Hand, Foot, and Mouth Disease/Herpangina in Children During an Epidemic in Taiwan

TL;DR: Intrafamilial and kindergarten transmissions among preschool children were major modes of disease transmission during the widespread EV71 epidemic in Taiwan in 1998 and an increased incidence of EV71 infection in young children occurred more often in geographic areas with increased mortality rates.