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Paolo Bonanni

Researcher at University of Florence

Publications -  343
Citations -  8050

Paolo Bonanni is an academic researcher from University of Florence. The author has contributed to research in topics: Vaccination & Population. The author has an hindex of 47, co-authored 297 publications receiving 6651 citations. Previous affiliations of Paolo Bonanni include Health Science University & University of Pisa.

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Hepatitis A booster vaccination: is there a need?

TL;DR: There is no evidence to lend support to HAV booster vaccination after a full primary vaccination course in a healthy individual, and further investigations are needed before deciding if boosters can be omitted in special patient-groups.
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Idiopathic photosensitive occipital lobe epilepsy.

TL;DR: Ten neurologically normal patients aged 8–30 years who had recurrent episodes of visually induced occipital seizures with age‐related onset and specific mode of precipitation are studied, finding that these patients have an idiopathic localization‐related epilepsy with age-related onset, and underrecognized type of epilepsy.
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Multilobar polymicrogyria, intractable drop attack seizures, and sleep-related electrical status epilepticus

TL;DR: Age-related secondary bilateral synchrony underlying ESES may be facilitated in multilobar polymicrogyria, and the good seizure outcome contrasts with that usually found in the presence of cortical malformations.
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Autosomal recessive Rolandic epilepsy with paroxysmal exercise-induced dystonia and writer's cramp : Delineation of the syndrome and gene mapping to chromosome 16p12-11.2

TL;DR: It is shown that idiopathic focal disorders such as epilepsy and dystonia, can be caused by the same genetic abnormality, may have a transient expression, and may be inherited as an autosomal recessive trait.
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Lack of cortical contrast gain control in human photosensitive epilepsy

TL;DR: It is concluded that cortical mechanisms of contrast gain control for pattern stimuli of relatively low temporal frequency and high luminance contrast are lacking or severely impaired in photosensitive subjects.