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Yori Gidron
Researcher at university of lille
Publications - 57
Citations - 976
Yori Gidron is an academic researcher from university of lille. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cancer & Psychosocial. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 57 publications receiving 727 citations. Previous affiliations of Yori Gidron include Free University of Brussels & Vrije Universiteit Brussel.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Effects of short and prolonged transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation on heart rate variability in healthy subjects.
M. De Couck,Renata Cserjesi,Ralf Caers,Wobbe P. Zijlstra,D. Widjaja,N. Wolf,Olivier Luminet,Jens Ellrich,Jens Ellrich,Yori Gidron,Yori Gidron +10 more
TL;DR: Results show limited effects of t-VNS on HRV, and are discussed in light of neuroanatomical and statistical considerations and future directions are proposed.
Journal ArticleDOI
You may need the vagus nerve to understand pathophysiology and to treat diseases.
TL;DR: Evidence is provided for the hypothesis that adequate vagal nerve activity reduces the risk of major diseases, via common basic mechanisms and interim risk factors, and vagal activity is proposed to moderate the effects of risk factors on developing such illnesses.
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Vagal nerve activity predicts overall survival in metastatic pancreatic cancer, mediated by inflammation
TL;DR: The relationship between vagal nerve activity, indexed by heart rate variability (HRV), and overall survival in patients with advanced pancreatic cancer is examined, and it is proposed that the mechanism may involve neuroimmuno-modulation.
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Association Between Symptoms of Central Sensitization and Cognitive Behavioral Factors in People With Chronic Nonspecific Low Back Pain: A Cross-sectional Study.
Eva Huysmans,Kelly Ickmans,Dries Van Dyck,Jo Nijs,Yori Gidron,Nathalie Roussel,Andrea Polli,Maarten Moens,Lisa Goudman,Margot De Kooning +9 more
TL;DR: Analyzing the relationship between symptoms of central sensitization (CS) and important cognitive behavioral and psychosocial factors in a sample of patients with chronic nonspecific low back pain found symptoms of CS were significantly associated withPsychosocial and cognitive behavioral factors.
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Relationship between loneliness and proangiogenic cytokines in newly diagnosed tumors of colon and rectum.
Bina Nausheen,Norman J. Carr,Robert Peveler,Rona Moss-Morris,Clare Verrill,Elizabeth Robbins,Karen Nugent,Alex M. Baker,Mary Judd,Yori Gidron +9 more
TL;DR: VEGF is suggested to be an angiogenic mechanism through which loneliness may lead to worse cancer-related outcomes, and targeted psychosocial and immunotherapeutic interventions for cancer patients with low social support are discussed.