P
Pejman Rohani
Researcher at University of Georgia
Publications - 222
Citations - 15148
Pejman Rohani is an academic researcher from University of Georgia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 52, co-authored 192 publications receiving 13386 citations. Previous affiliations of Pejman Rohani include Boston Children's Hospital & Sea Mammal Research Unit.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Evaluation of Acute Severe Hepatitis of Unknown Origin in Three Children in Iran: A case series
TL;DR: In this article , three children with severe acute hepatitis of unknown origin in a hospital medical center in Iran were admitted to the hospital with jaundice and showed markedly elevated liver enzymes and total and direct bilirubin in these patients.
Journal ArticleDOI
The Effect of Nutritional Consultation on the Level of Malnutrition and Growth Indices in Children with Cystic Fibrosis
Naghi Dara,Farid Imanzadeh,Seyed Ramin Madani,Saleheh Tajalli,Pejman Rohani,Amirhossein Hosseini,Parastoo Ashtigoo,Sayeh Hatefi,Zahra Fazeli Farsani,Mahmoud Hajipour,Katayoun Khatami,Aliakbar Sayyari,Beheshteh Olang +12 more
TL;DR: According to the results, the early growth assessment in hospitalized and outpatient, diagnosis of malnutrition and nutritional intervention will be useful in improving the severity ofnutrition and growth indices in children with CF.
Posted ContentDOI
Asymptomatic Bordetella pertussis infections in young African infants and their mothers identified within a longitudinal cohort
Christopher J. Gill,Christian E. Gunning,William B. MacLeod,Lawrence Mwananyanda,Donald M. Thea,Rachel Pieciak,Geoffrey Kwenda,Zachariah Mupila,Pejman Rohani +8 more
TL;DR: A longitudinal analysis of 17,442 nasopharyngeal samples collected from a cohort of 1,320 Zambian mother/infant pairs is presented, finding that full-range CT values provide valuable insights into pertussis epidemiology in this population, and illuminate the infection arc within individuals.
Posted ContentDOI
Five approaches to the suppression of SARS-CoV-2 without intensive social distancing
TL;DR: A conceptual framework represented by two mathematical models that differ in strategy are introduced and it is found both strategies may be effective, although both require extensive testing and work within a relatively narrow range of conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI
Transmission models indicate Ebola virus persistence in non-human primate populations is unlikely
TL;DR: Stochastic transmission models of EVD in non-human primates assuming high case-fatality probabilities and experimentally observed or field-observed parameters did not allow viral persistence, suggesting that non- human primate populations are highly unlikely to sustain EVD-causing infection for prolonged periods.