scispace - formally typeset
T

Thirumalaisamy P. Velavan

Researcher at University of Tübingen

Publications -  186
Citations -  6148

Thirumalaisamy P. Velavan is an academic researcher from University of Tübingen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 167 publications receiving 3766 citations. Previous affiliations of Thirumalaisamy P. Velavan include Center for Excellence in Education & Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The COVID-19 epidemic.

TL;DR: The current outbreak of the novel coronavirus Covid-19 (coronavirus disease 2019; previously 2019-nCoV), epi-centered in Hubei Province of the People's Republic of China, has spread to many other countries and the incidence in other Asian countries, in Europe and North America remains low so far.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mild versus severe COVID-19: Laboratory markers.

TL;DR: In hospitalized patients, clinicians should consider low lymphocyte count as well as the serum levels of CRP, D-dimers, ferritin and IL-6 which may be used in risk stratification to predict severe and fatal COVID-19.
Journal ArticleDOI

Asymptomatic SARS Coronavirus 2 infection: Invisible yet invincible.

TL;DR: The data addressed here show that characteristics of asymptomatic and prescyptomatic infection are not identical, and younger age correlates strongly with asymPTomatic and mild infections, and children as hidden drivers.
Journal ArticleDOI

A global metagenomic map of urban microbiomes and antimicrobial resistance

David Danko, +681 more
- 24 Jun 2021 - 
TL;DR: This paper presented a global atlas of 4,728 metagenomic samples from mass-transit systems in 60 cities over three years, representing the first systematic, worldwide catalog of the urban microbial ecosystem.
Journal ArticleDOI

Parasite Infection, Carcinogenesis and Human Malignancy

TL;DR: This review provides an overview of the mechanisms of parasitic infection-induced carcinogenicity and suggests that Strongyloides stercoralis may be a relevant co-factor in HTLV-1-related T cell lymphomas.