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S Sblano

Researcher at University of Bari

Publications -  5
Citations -  58

S Sblano is an academic researcher from University of Bari. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Diffuse axonal injury. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 5 publications receiving 48 citations.

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A case of suicide by ingestion of caffeine.

TL;DR: An autopsy case involving a 31 year-old man who intentionally took a large amount of caffeine tablets in the form of a weight loss supplement as part of a suicide plan is described, with death attributed to acute caffeine toxicity.
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Discrepancies between clinical and autoptic diagnoses in Italy: evaluation of 879 consecutive cases at the "Policlinico of Bari" teaching hospital in the period 1990-2009

TL;DR: The authors underline the crucial importance of autopsy as an essential tool to address unresolved clinical questions and highlight previously undiagnosed medical conditions.
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An immunohistochemical study of pulmonary surfactant apoprotein A (SP-A) in forensic autopsy materials

TL;DR: The present immunohistochemical study shows the SP-A staining distribution among a selected forensic material to evaluate the effect of fluid accumulation in the lung interstitium and alveoli commonly related to pulmonary edema and suggests that edema fluid can produce some kind of molecular alterations ofSP-A affecting immunostaining expression.
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Stress‐Related Temporary Hearing Loss—Evaluation of Bio‐Humoral Parameters: Forensic and Criminological Applications

TL;DR: The results show a worse perception of the frequencies of the human voice under stress; these findings could have a dual value: in the legal field, concerning criminal liability, and on the operative context, regarding the efficiency of verbal communication among law enforcement officers in situations inducing intense emotional stress.
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β-App immunoreactivity as diagnostic tool of Diffuse Axonal Injury (DAI)

TL;DR: For a complete assessment of blunt head injuries, particularly those without head gross damage or suffering for minimal external injury, an appropriate evaluation of the central brain regions can be strongly supported by microscopic findings such as small haemorrhages and axonal β-APP immunoreactivity.