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Paola Frati

Researcher at Sapienza University of Rome

Publications -  195
Citations -  2921

Paola Frati is an academic researcher from Sapienza University of Rome. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Health care. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 159 publications receiving 1916 citations. Previous affiliations of Paola Frati include American Board of Legal Medicine & University of Sannio.

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Neuroanatomy and cadaver dissection in Italy: History, medicolegal issues, and neurosurgical perspectives.

TL;DR: The object of the present paper was to trace the historical evolution of the Italian anatomical tradition, particularly neuroanatomical studies, in relation to the juridical regulations on the use of cadavers today.
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The Relationship Between Executive Functions and Capacity to Consent to Treatment in Acute Psychiatric Hospitalization

TL;DR: The strong association found between learning abilities and informed consent decision-making provide empirical evidence indicating possible cognitive enhancement strategies that may improve psychiatric patients' competency.
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Personalized Medicine and Adverse Drug Reactions: The Experience of An Italian Teaching Hospital.

TL;DR: This study highlights the great potential of pharmacogenomics in reducing adverse reactions and suggests the need for further pharmacogenomic clinical trials to better personalize drug treatment and to refine the current pharmacovigilance strategies.
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Body Image and Eating Disorders are Common among Professional and Amateur Athletes Using Performance and Image Enhancing Drugs: A Cross-Sectional Study.

TL;DR: PIED users and nonusers did not differ in socio-demographic characteristics, but differed in clinical and psychopathological features, with PIED users being characterized by higher physical activity levels, higher daily coffee and psychotropic medication use, and higher SCOFF scores suggesting higher risks for BIDs and EDs.
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Noise-induced hearing loss in workers exposed to urban stressors.

TL;DR: Novelty and industrial progress together with the intensification of vehicular traffic and the adoption of new social habits are the cause of an increasing noise pollution with possible negative effects on the auditory system.