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Orna Aizenstein

Researcher at Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center

Publications -  49
Citations -  1068

Orna Aizenstein is an academic researcher from Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Population. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 42 publications receiving 908 citations. Previous affiliations of Orna Aizenstein include Tel Aviv University.

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Bilateral hippocampal lesion and a selective impairment of the ability for mental time travel

TL;DR: This case provides clinical support for the concept of mental time travel with its retrospective and prospective components and for the hippocampus being its critical neural substrate.
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Retropharyngeal and parapharyngeal abscess in children--epidemiology, clinical features and treatment.

TL;DR: Children with RPA most commonly present with restricted neck movements, fever and cervical lymphadenopathy, and rarely with respiratory distress or stridor, but many patients with R PA and PPA can be treated successfully without surgery.
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Differentiation between vasogenic-edema versus tumor-infiltrative area in patients with glioblastoma during bevacizumab therapy: a longitudinal MRI study.

TL;DR: Characterization of non-enhancing hyperintense FLAIR lesion area in GB patients can provide an MR-based biomarker, indicating a shift to an infiltrative progression pattern, and may improve therapy response assessment in patients following bevacizumab therapy.
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Why we miss the diagnosis of appendicitis on abdominal CT: evaluation of imaging features of appendicitis incorrectly diagnosed on CT.

TL;DR: Increased awareness of the underlying factors common to most cases of the missed diagnosis of appendicitis on CT and increased radiologic vigilance in cases of atypical abdominal pain may enable us to further improve the diagnostic accuracy.
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Development of the fetal spinal cord: time of ascendance of the normal conus medullaris as detected by sonography.

TL;DR: A distinguishable ascent of the CM in relation to the vertebral column during fetal life was detected, and the results were statistically significant (P <.0001).