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Noa Benaroya-Milshtein

Researcher at Tel Aviv University

Publications -  28
Citations -  720

Noa Benaroya-Milshtein is an academic researcher from Tel Aviv University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tourette syndrome & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 20 publications receiving 550 citations.

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Environmental enrichment in mice decreases anxiety, attenuates stress responses and enhances natural killer cell activity.

TL;DR: EE has a beneficial effect on anxiety‐like behaviour, stress response andNK cell activity, and the effect on NK cell activity is promising, due to the role of NK cells in host resistance.
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European Multicentre Tics in Children Studies (EMTICS): protocol for two cohort studies to assess risk factors for tic onset and exacerbation in children and adolescents

TL;DR: The EMTICS study is, to the authors' knowledge, the largest prospective cohort assessment of the contribution of different genetic and environmental factors to the risk of developing tics in putatively predisposed individuals and in young individuals with chronic tic disorders.
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Subjective versus objective measures of tic severity in Tourette syndrome - The influence of environment.

TL;DR: Tic expression is significantly influenced by the environment, and subjective measures of tic expression may be misleading, which has implications for refining the clinical assessment of tics, improving research methodology, and developing new therapeutic strategies.
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Environmental enrichment augments the efficacy of idiotype vaccination for B-cell lymphoma.

TL;DR: It is reported that environmental enrichment mediated a statistically significant improvement of the outcome of immunotherapy in an experimental model of B-cell lymphoma, and enriched tumor-bearing mice had statistically significant prolonged survival.
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Specific executive control impairments in Tourette syndrome: The role of response inhibition.

TL;DR: This finding of impaired response inhibition in TS may imply that rehabilitation of this inhibition component could prove to be an important therapeutic strategy in adults with TS.