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Tohid Mahmoudi

Researcher at Tabriz University of Medical Sciences

Publications -  10
Citations -  347

Tohid Mahmoudi is an academic researcher from Tabriz University of Medical Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Pandemic. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 8 publications receiving 156 citations.

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Lateral flow assays towards point-of-care cancer detection: A review of current progress and future trends

TL;DR: An overview of recent advances, the current challenges and available solutions in cancer biomarkers detection via LFTS focusing on the sensitivity enhancement by various detection systems is provided.
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Recent advancements in structural improvements of lateral flow assays towards point-of-care testing

TL;DR: In this paper, the structural improvements of LFAs considering antibody immobilization, manipulation of the membrane, and single and dual detection mode LFAs, all these aspects focused on the visual, fluorescent, magnetic, surface-enhanced Raman scattering, electrochemical, and nanozyme-based detection.
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Dengue virus: a review on advances in detection and trends – from conventional methods to novel biosensors

TL;DR: The optical, electrochemical, microfluidic, enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), and smartphone-based biosensors are the main approaches which developed for detection of different biomarkers and serotypes of Dengue virus.
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Phytochemicals toward Green (Bio)sensing

TL;DR: This review highlights how phytochemicals have been tailored and used for a wide variety of optical and electrochemical (bio)sensing and bioimaging applications, after classifying and introducing them according to their chemical structures.
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On-Site Detection of Carcinoembryonic Antigen in Human Serum

TL;DR: In this article, a cellulose-based lateral flow strips were used to detect CEA in human serum using a smartphone-based system and the corresponding immunoreaction was reported by polydopamine-modified gold nanoparticles in order to boost the signal intensity and improve the surface blocking and signal-to-noise relationship.