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Marcel Cosgarea

Researcher at Iuliu Hațieganu University of Medicine and Pharmacy

Publications -  48
Citations -  334

Marcel Cosgarea is an academic researcher from Iuliu Hațieganu University of Medicine and Pharmacy. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Hearing loss. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 40 publications receiving 263 citations. Previous affiliations of Marcel Cosgarea include Yahoo!.

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The place of CEUS in distinguishing benign from malignant cervical lymph nodes: a prospective study.

TL;DR: It is found that CEUS is most useful for the evaluation of the lymph nodes with uncertain aspect at gray scale and Doppler evaluation, and ROC analysis confirmed the higher degree of diagnostic accuracy of CEUS in comparison with conventional techniques for some parameters such as enhancement pattern.
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Genetic variants in the RELN gene are associated with otosclerosis in multiple European populations

TL;DR: A replication study that includes four additional populations from Europe and confirms the presence of allelic heterogeneity in chr7q22.1 located in the RELN gene that is associated with otosclerosis in Belgian–Dutch and French populations further implicate RELN in the pathogenesis of otos sclerosis.
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The impact of vocal rehabilitation on quality of life and voice handicap in patients with total laryngectomy

TL;DR: The EORTC and the VHI questionnaires offer more information regarding life after laryngectomy and the global health status and VHI scores showed a statistically significant correlation between speaker groups.
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Perineural invasion of the major and minor nerves in laryngeal and hypopharyngeal cancer

TL;DR: Major nerves do not constitute a way of spreading in the squamous cell carcinoma of the larynx and hypopharynx, whereas minor nerves remain a potential one in patients with squamouscell carcinoma who underwent total or partial laryngectomy.
Journal Article

Protective effect of L-N-acetylcysteine against gentamycin ototoxicity in the organ cultures of the rat cochlea.

TL;DR: The results demonstrate that L-NAC can protect cochlear cells against gentamycin toxicity, and also demonstrate that Aminoglycosides are large-scale antibiotics, extremely useful for the treatment of several Gram-negative bacterial infections, but their use is limited by the extremely severe side effects.