Publications by authors named "Laila Baratali"

Background: Chronic exposure to high iron levels increases diabetes risk partly by inducing oxidative stress, but the consequences of acute iron administration on beta cells are unknown. We tested whether the acute administration of iron for the correction of iron deficiency influenced insulin secretion and the production of reactive oxygen species.

Methods: Single-center, double-blinded, randomized controlled trial conducted between June 2017 and March 2020.

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Psychotherapy diminishes depression relapses when antidepressants are reduced or stopped. Delayed antibiotic therapy is effective and safe while treating community-acquired respiratory infection. Physical rehabilitation after hospitalization due to acute cardiac decompensation is useful in frail patients.

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Background: Whether genetic background and/or dietary behaviors influence weight gain in middle-aged subjects is debated.

Objective: To assess whether genetic background and/or dietary behaviors are associated with changes in obesity markers (BMI, weight, and waist and hip circumferences) in a Swiss population-based cohort.

Methods: Cross-sectional and prospective (follow-up of 5.

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Chemotherapy is associated with transient or permanent cognitive dysfunction ranging from subjective complaints to measurable deficits in working memory, attention and language. Given that old age may be related to cognitive decline, the interaction between chemotherapy-induced cognitive impairment and the effects of age is of growing concern in view of our aging population. Chemotherapy-associated cognitive dysfunction may have an additive impact on pre-existing age-related cognitive performance decline, which calls for awareness in its detection, to reduce impact on quality of life and improve management of older patients.

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The year 2015 gave us many scientific publications, among whom some will have an impact on our daily practice and some will influence our way of considering some well known diseases. Chief residents in the Service of internal medicine of the Lausanne University hospital, gathered like every year, to share their readings together in order to presentyou a small part of the many publications of 2015, which have been considered to have an impact on our future daily practice.

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Pneumococcal diseases are the first cause of bacterial infections in adult and in the aged adult. While its considerable morbi-mortality is potentially preventable through vaccination, the interest of anti-pneumococcal vaccination in these populations is still debated. Effectiveness appraisal of current anti-pneumococcal vaccines and the perspectives in terms of preventive strategies against Streptococcus pneumoniae infections in the adult population are presented.

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