Institution
Tehran University of Medical Sciences
Education•Tehran, Iran•
About: Tehran University of Medical Sciences is a education organization based out in Tehran, Iran. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Medicine. The organization has 35661 authors who have published 57234 publications receiving 878523 citations. The organization is also known as: TUMS.
Topics: Population, Medicine, Cancer, Randomized controlled trial, Health care
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In conclusion, acute poisonings, particularly self‐poisonings, are common in Iran and since medical documentation is not routinely provided in this country the results of this retrospective study can be used for surveillance.
Abstract: Drugs and chemicals are almost easily available in Iran. Natural toxins as poisonous plants and animals also exist in most parts of the country. Therefore, acute poisonings, either intentional or accidental and also drug abuse/addiction are common in Iran. In spite of these difficulties there is no center for poison control and surveillance in this country to gather information and analyse data. The files of a systematic randomised ten percent of all hospital-referred poisoned patients from 21 March 1993 to 20 March 2000 in Imam Reza (p) University Hospital of Mashhad (71589 cases) were screened retrospectively. Young adults (40.3%) and school children (22.9%) were the most vulnerable group. Mean age was 22.3 (S.D. 14.38) years with a minimum of less than one and a maximum of 98 years old. A female predominance was found (53.4%). Intentional poisoning was more common (54.4%) than accidental exposures (45.2%). Fourteen cases were classified as criminal poisoning. 79.7% of exposures were via ingestion, followed by dermal exposures (14.1%), and inhalation (6.2%). The majority (83.7%) of patients were from urban areas. Most patients (68.6%) were treated in the Emergency Toxicology Clinic and discharged, 19.2% were temporarily hospitalized and 11.3% were hospitalized for 24 hr. Main groups of poisons were pharmaceuticals (61.4%), chemicals (22.8%), and natural toxins (16.6%). The overall number of poisoned patients was higher in spring and summer (62.8%). In conclusion, acute poisonings, particularly self-poisonings, are common in Iran. Since medical documentation is not routinely provided in this country the results of this retrospective study can be used for surveillance. Establishment of fluent data gathering and analysis within the local health system are challenges for the future.
143 citations
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TL;DR: The aim of this communication is to provide some evidence linking the overweight/obesity and their impacts on different dimensions of health and to initiate some intervention measures to monitor and control this growing epidemic.
Abstract: The aim of this communication is to provide some evidence linking the overweight/obesity and their impacts on different dimensions of health. We reviewed the related studies published from 1990 up till now through PubMed Central/Medline, which provide evidence linking obesity with health related issues. It is a risk factor for metabolic disorders and leads to serious health consequences for individuals and burden for the health care system as a whole. Literature search showed that it is related to at least 18 co-morbidities which are attributable to overweight and obesity. Moreover obese individuals more often suffer from significant joint pains, disorders and it also has social as well as psychological impairments. It is high time that countries facing the problems of obesity initiate some intervention measures to monitor and control this growing epidemic.
143 citations
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TL;DR: Distinguishing histologic and geographic features as well as interactions among age, sex, and subsite further support classification of EBV-associated gastric cancer as a distinct aetiologic entity.
Abstract: Meta-analyses of the published literature indicate that about 9% of gastric cancers contain Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), with consistent and significant differences by sex and anatomic subsite. This study aimed to identify additional determinants of EBV positivity and their joint effects. From 15 international populations with consistent laboratory testing for EBV, we pooled individual-level data for 5081 gastric cancer cases including information on age, sex, subsite, histologic type, diagnostic stage, geographic region, and period of diagnosis. First, we combined population-specific EBV prevalence estimates using random effects meta-analysis. We then aggregated individual-level data to estimate odds ratios of EBV positivity in relation to all variables, accounting for within-population clustering. In unadjusted analyses, EBV positivity was significantly higher in males, young subjects, non-antral subsites, diffuse-type histology, and in studies from the Americas. Multivariable analyses confirmed significant associations with histology and region. Sex interacted with age (P=0.003) and subsite (P=0.002) such that male predominance decreased with age for both subsites. The positivity of EBV was not significantly associated with either stage or time period. Aggregating individual-level data provides additional information over meta-analyses. Distinguishing histologic and geographic features as well as interactions among age, sex, and subsite further support classification of EBV-associated gastric cancer as a distinct aetiologic entity.
143 citations
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TL;DR: Ex vivo investigations revealed better insulin transport across the colon membrane of rats for nanoparticles made with quaternized derivatives than those made of chitosan, and enhanced colon absorption of insulin by using these nanoparticles compared to free insulin in diabetic rats.
142 citations
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TL;DR: In vitro drug release test was carried out to prove the effectiveness of this novel type of nanocomposite beads as a controlled drug delivery system.
142 citations
Authors
Showing all 35946 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Graeme J. Hankey | 137 | 844 | 143373 |
Paul D.P. Pharoah | 130 | 794 | 71338 |
Jerome Ritz | 120 | 644 | 47987 |
Reza Malekzadeh | 118 | 900 | 139272 |
Robert N. Weinreb | 117 | 1124 | 59101 |
Javad Parvizi | 111 | 969 | 51075 |
Omid C. Farokhzad | 110 | 329 | 64226 |
Ali Mohammadi | 106 | 1149 | 54596 |
Alexander R. Vaccaro | 102 | 1179 | 39346 |
John R. Speakman | 95 | 667 | 34484 |
Philip J. Devereaux | 94 | 443 | 110428 |
Rafael Lozano | 94 | 265 | 126513 |
Mohammad Abdollahi | 90 | 1045 | 35531 |
Ingmar Skoog | 89 | 458 | 28998 |
Morteza Mahmoudi | 83 | 334 | 26229 |