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Yoram Cohen

Researcher at Tel Aviv University

Publications -  157
Citations -  5299

Yoram Cohen is an academic researcher from Tel Aviv University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Diffusion MRI & Diffusion (business). The author has an hindex of 40, co-authored 157 publications receiving 4923 citations. Previous affiliations of Yoram Cohen include Sheba Medical Center & University of Catania.

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Electrochemical characterization of a self-assembled double strand copper complex composed of three Cu+ and two ligands containing bis(bipyridine) bithiophene

TL;DR: In this paper, cyclic voltammetry was performed on the self-assembled double strand copper complex of 5,5′-bis at ambient temperature and dynamic 1 H NMR indicate that the double strand complexes of 1 dissociate at a temperature higher than 90°C.
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Increased plasma and optic nerve levels of IL-6, TNF-alpha, and MIP-2 following induction of ischemic optic neuropathy in mice.

TL;DR: Proinflammatory cytokines may play a role in the pathogenesis of rAION and levels of IL-6, TNF-α, and MIP-2 were measured in plasma by ELISA and in the optic nerves by RT-PCR.
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Fluorinated smart micelles as enzyme-responsive probes for 19F-magnetic resonance

TL;DR: Two distinct labeling approaches were used to study the ability of smart PEG-dendron hybrids to be turned OFF at the assembled micellar state and to turn ON their 19F-MR signal upon enzymatic activation.
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The effect of the rotational angle on MR diffusion indices in nerves: Is the rms displacement of the slow-diffusing component a good measure of fiber orientation?

TL;DR: The present study examines the effect of the rotational angle (alpha), i.e. the angle between the diffusion sensitizing gradients and the main axis of the fibers in the nerves, on different NMR indices and finds that the most sensitive index to therotational angle is the rms displacement of the slow-diffusing component extracted from the high b-value q-space diffusion MR experiment.

Original contributions White matter changes in multiple sclerosis: correlation of q-space diffusion MRI and 1 H MRS

TL;DR: High b-value diffusion imaging can detect tissue damage in the NAWM of MS patients and provides additional information which is clinically relevant for detection of tissue damage not seen in conventional imaging techniques.