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Yohannes W. Woldeamanuel
Researcher at Stanford University
Publications - 39
Citations - 871
Yohannes W. Woldeamanuel is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Migraine & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 33 publications receiving 611 citations. Previous affiliations of Yohannes W. Woldeamanuel include Addis Ababa University & College of Health Sciences, Bahrain.
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Migraine affects 1 in 10 people worldwide featuring recent rise: A systematic review and meta-analysis of community-based studies involving 6 million participants.
TL;DR: The result showed a pattern of rising global migraine prevalence, which affects one in ten people worldwide featuring recent rise among females, students, and urban residents.
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Sensory, psychological, and metabolic dysfunction in HIV-associated peripheral neuropathy: A cross-sectional deep profiling study
Tudor Phillips,Matthew Brown,Juan D. Ramirez,James R. Perkins,Yohannes W. Woldeamanuel,Yohannes W. Woldeamanuel,Amanda C de C Williams,Christine A. Orengo,David L.H. Bennett,Istvan Bodi,Sarah Cox,Christoph Maier,Elena K. Krumova,Andrew S.C. Rice,Andrew S.C. Rice +14 more
TL;DR: Study participants with HIV‐associated sensory polyneuropathy (HIV‐SN) had higher plasma triglyceride concentrations, depression, anxiety, catastrophizing scores, and prevalence of insomnia than HIV participants without HIV‐SN.
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Cancer in Ethiopia
TL;DR: Ethiopia has a population of more than 84 million people and is expected to become the ninth most populous country in the world by 2050, but oncology services are wholly inadequate--no cancer registry exists, and only one cancer centre, with a handful of doctors and nurses, struggles to serve the entire country.
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The place of corticosteroids in migraine attack management: A 65-year systematic review with pooled analysis and critical appraisal
TL;DR: It is suggested that with corticosteroid treatment, recurrent headaches become milder than pretreated headaches and later respond to nonsteroidal therapy, a reasonable option for managing resistant, severe, or prolonged migraine attacks.
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The impact of regular lifestyle behavior in migraine: a prevalence case–referent study
TL;DR: Evaluated the differences in migraine occurrence among participants who do and do not maintain the RLB triumvirate to find out whether engaging in regular lifestyle behavior helps quell chronic migraine.