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Salvatore Badalamenti

Researcher at University of Kiel

Publications -  89
Citations -  5139

Salvatore Badalamenti is an academic researcher from University of Kiel. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hemodialysis & Renal function. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 85 publications receiving 4185 citations. Previous affiliations of Salvatore Badalamenti include University of Barcelona & Schering-Plough.

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Genomewide Association Study of Severe Covid-19 with Respiratory Failure.

David Ellinghaus, +145 more
TL;DR: A 3p21.31 gene cluster is identified as a genetic susceptibility locus in patients with Covid-19 with respiratory failure and a potential involvement of the ABO blood-group system is confirmed.
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Randomized comparative study of therapeutic paracentesis with and without intravenous albumin in cirrhosis

TL;DR: Results indicate that intravenous albumin infusion is important in avoiding renal and electrolyte complications and activation of endogenous vasoactive systems in cirrhotics with ascites who are treated with repeated large-volume paracentesis.
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Prognostic value of arterial pressure, endogenous vasoactive systems, and renal function in cirrhotic patients admitted to the hospital for the treatment of ascites

TL;DR: In patients with cirrhosis and ascites, parameters estimating systemic hemodynamics and renal function are better predictors of survival than those routinely used to estimate hepatic function.
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Predictive value of ALT levels for histologic findings in chronic hepatitis C: A European collaborative study

TL;DR: Almost all HCV RNA–positive patients with elevated ALT levels have some degree of fibrosis, and an important proportion of patients with persistently normal ALT values also show some histologic signs of Fibrosis.
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Total paracentesis associated with intravenous albumin management of patients with cirrhosis and ascites

TL;DR: Results indicate that total paracentesis associated with intravenous albumin can be safely performed in cirrhotic patients with tense ascites and suggest that these patients could be treated in a single-day hospitalization regime.