Institution
University of Bologna
Education•Bologna, Emilia-Romagna, Italy•
About: University of Bologna is a education organization based out in Bologna, Emilia-Romagna, Italy. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Galaxy. The organization has 38387 authors who have published 115176 publications receiving 3460869 citations. The organization is also known as: Università di Bologna & UNIBO.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
Carlos III Health Institute1, University of Cologne2, University of Sydney3, Paris Descartes University4, Universidade Federal de Ciências da Saúde de Porto Alegre5, Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul6, Medical University of Graz7, University of California, San Diego8, University of Copenhagen9, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven10, University of Bologna11, University of the Witwatersrand12, RMIT University13, McGill University14, Hacettepe University15, University of Paris16, Utrecht University17, Mazandaran University of Medical Sciences18, Tel Aviv University19, Hospital General de México20, Istituto Giannina Gaslini21, Mahidol University22, Federal University of São Paulo23, King's College, Aberdeen24, Comenius University in Bratislava25, Boston Children's Hospital26, Hospital General Universitario Gregorio Marañón27, Complutense University of Madrid28, University Hospital Heidelberg29, University of California, Los Angeles30, American University of Beirut31, Innsbruck Medical University32, University of Lausanne33, Catholic University of Korea34, Goethe University Frankfurt35, Erasmus University Rotterdam36, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens37, Monash University38, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro39, Catholic University of the Sacred Heart40, University of Health Sciences Antigua41, National Institutes of Health42, Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences and Research Centre43, University of Pittsburgh44, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre45, University of Melbourne46, P. D. Hinduja Hospital and Medical Research Centre47, University of Southern California48, Duke University49, Singapore General Hospital50, NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital51, Cardiff University52, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio53, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia54, Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research55
TL;DR: Management of mucormycosis depends on recognising disease patterns and on early diagnosis, and limited availability of contemporary treatments burdens patients in low and middle income settings.
Abstract: Mucormycosis is a difficult to diagnose rare disease with high morbidity and mortality. Diagnosis is often delayed, and disease tends to progress rapidly. Urgent surgical and medical intervention is lifesaving. Guidance on the complex multidisciplinary management has potential to improve prognosis, but approaches differ between health-care settings. From January, 2018, authors from 33 countries in all United Nations regions analysed the published evidence on mucormycosis management and provided consensus recommendations addressing differences between the regions of the world as part of the "One World One Guideline" initiative of the European Confederation of Medical Mycology (ECMM). Diagnostic management does not differ greatly between world regions. Upon suspicion of mucormycosis appropriate imaging is strongly recommended to document extent of disease and is followed by strongly recommended surgical intervention. First-line treatment with high-dose liposomal amphotericin B is strongly recommended, while intravenous isavuconazole and intravenous or delayed release tablet posaconazole are recommended with moderate strength. Both triazoles are strongly recommended salvage treatments. Amphotericin B deoxycholate is recommended against, because of substantial toxicity, but may be the only option in resource limited settings. Management of mucormycosis depends on recognising disease patterns and on early diagnosis. Limited availability of contemporary treatments burdens patients in low and middle income settings. Areas of uncertainty were identified and future research directions specified.
842 citations
••
16 Mar 2009TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide an overview of ranging techniques together with the primary sources of TOA error (including propagation effects, clock drift, and interference) and describe fundamental TOA bounds (such as the Cramer-Rao bound and tighter Ziv-Zakai bound) in both ideal and multipath environments.
Abstract: Over the coming decades, high-definition situationally-aware networks have the potential to create revolutionary applications in the social, scientific, commercial, and military sectors Ultrawide bandwidth (UWB) technology is a viable candidate for enabling accurate localization capabilities through time-of-arrival (TOA)-based ranging techniques These techniques exploit the fine delay resolution property of UWB signals by estimating the TOA of the first signal path Exploiting the full capabilities of UWB TOA estimation can be challenging, especially when operating in harsh propagation environments, since the direct path may not exist or it may not be the strongest In this paper, we first give an overview of ranging techniques together with the primary sources of TOA error (including propagation effects, clock drift, and interference) We then describe fundamental TOA bounds (such as the Cramer-Rao bound and the tighter Ziv-Zakai bound) in both ideal and multipath environments These bounds serve as useful benchmarks in assessing the performance of TOA estimation techniques We also explore practical low-complexity TOA estimation techniques and analyze their performance in the presence of multipath and interference using IEEE 802154a channel models as well as experimental data measured in indoor residential environments
840 citations
•
University of Milano-Bicocca1, University of Brescia2, University of Bologna3, University Hospital of Lausanne4, Queen Mary University of London5, Ghent University6, University of Barcelona7, University of Glasgow8, Istanbul University9, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven10, Hannover Medical School11, Manchester Royal Infirmary12, Gdańsk Medical University13, University of Münster14, University of Valencia15, Complutense University of Madrid16, University of Amsterdam17, University of Milan18
TL;DR: This article estimated glomerular filtration rate of the human glomerus and showed that the estimated rate can be improved by using the enzyme GFR-BPBP-DBPDBPdiastolic blood pressure
Abstract: ACEangiotensin-converting enzymeBPblood pressureDBPdiastolic blood pressureeGFRestimated glomerular filtration rateESCEuropean Society of CardiologyESHEuropean Society of HypertensionETendothelinIM...
837 citations
••
TL;DR: The results presented indicate that the conformation of PrP sc functions as a template in directing the formation of nascent PrPSc and suggest a mechanism to explain strains of prions where diversity is encrypted in the conformed PrP Sc.
Abstract: The fundamental event in prion diseases seems to be a conformational change in cellular prion protein (PrPC) whereby it is converted into the pathologic isoform PrPSc. In fatal familial insomnia (FFI), the protease-resistant fragment of PrPSc after deglycosylation has a size of 19 kilodaltons, whereas that from other inherited and sporadic prion diseases is 21 kilodaltons. Extracts from the brains of FFI patients transmitted disease to transgenic mice expressing a chimeric human-mouse PrP gene about 200 days after inoculation and induced formation of the 19-kilodalton PrPSc fragment, whereas extracts from the brains of familial and sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease patients produced the 21-kilodalton PrPSc fragment in these mice. The results presented indicate that the conformation of PrPSc functions as a template in directing the formation of nascent PrPSc and suggest a mechanism to explain strains of prions where diversity is encrypted in the conformation of PrPSc.
836 citations
••
TL;DR: New exponential bounds for the Gaussian Q function and its inverse are presented and a quite accurate and simple approximate expression given by the sum of two exponential functions is reported for the general problem of evaluating the average error probability in fading channels.
Abstract: We present new exponential bounds for the Gaussian Q function (one- and two-dimensional) and its inverse, and for M-ary phase-shift-keying (MPSK), M-ary differential phase-shift-keying (MDPSK) error probabilities over additive white Gaussian noise channels. More precisely, the new bounds are in the form of the sum of exponential functions that, in the limit, approach the exact value. Then, a quite accurate and simple approximate expression given by the sum of two exponential functions is reported. The results are applied to the general problem of evaluating the average error probability in fading channels. Some examples of applications are also presented for the computation of the pairwise error probability of space-time codes and the average error probability of MPSK and MDPSK in fading channels.
835 citations
Authors
Showing all 39076 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Anil K. Jain | 183 | 1016 | 192151 |
H. S. Chen | 179 | 2401 | 178529 |
Stefan Schreiber | 178 | 1233 | 138528 |
Alvio Renzini | 162 | 908 | 95452 |
David H. Adams | 155 | 1613 | 117783 |
Roberto Romero | 151 | 1516 | 108321 |
Thomas E. Starzl | 150 | 1625 | 91704 |
Paolo Boffetta | 148 | 1455 | 93876 |
Kypros H. Nicolaides | 147 | 1302 | 87091 |
J. Fraser Stoddart | 147 | 1239 | 96083 |
Fabio Finelli | 147 | 542 | 111128 |
Jack Hirsh | 146 | 734 | 86332 |
Kjell Fuxe | 142 | 1479 | 89846 |
Andrew Ivanov | 142 | 1812 | 97390 |
Peter Lang | 140 | 1136 | 98592 |