0000000000905032

AUTHOR

Lamyaa Yousif

showing 2 related works from this author

Testicular cancer risk associated with occupational radiation exposure: a systematic literature review.

2010

Testicular cancer is a rare disease, affecting mainly young men aged 15-49. There have been some recent reports that it might be associated with radiation exposure. We have systematically reviewed this topic. English-language articles published between 1990 and 2008 studying the relationship between occupational radiation exposure and testicular cancer were included. Risk of bias was assessed using a modified version of the EPHPP checklist. For ionising radiation we subdivided study populations into occupational groups. No pooled analysis was performed due to the heterogeneity of studies. Seven case-control and 30 cohort studies were included in the review. For radiation workers, one incide…

OncologyMalemedicine.medical_specialtyNeoplasms Radiation-InducedRadiation DosageRisk AssessmentOccupational medicineTesticular NeoplasmsRadiation MonitoringRisk FactorsInternal medicineOccupational ExposuremedicineHumansRisk factorWaste Management and DisposalSurvival rateTesticular cancerbusiness.industryIncidence (epidemiology)IncidencePublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthCancerGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseSurvival AnalysisSurgeryOccupational DiseasesSurvival RateMeta-analysisbusinessCohort studyJournal of radiological protection : official journal of the Society for Radiological Protection
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Testicular cancer and viral infections: A systematic literature review and meta-analysis

2013

In 1984, Newell and coworkers were the first to suggest that testicular cancer might have a viral etiology since it showed similar characteristics to Hodgkin's lymphoma. A systematic literature review and meta-analysis was conducted to investigate a possible association between viral infections (EBV, CMV, Parvovirus B19, HPV, and HIV) and testicular cancer. Articles published from 1985 through June 2010 were located from MEDLINE and EMBASE databases, 21 articles were finally included in the review. For infection with EBV, CMV, Parvovirus B19, and HIV the pooled OR were 4.80 (95% CI 0.98–23.54), 1.85 (95% CI 0.92–3.70), 2.86 (95% CI 0.35–23.17), and 1.79 (95% CI 1.45–2.21) respectively. No p…

medicine.medical_specialtybiologybusiness.industryParvovirusvirusesHPV infectionvirus diseasesmedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationViral IdentificationVirologyLymphomaInfectious DiseasesSystematic reviewVirologyMeta-analysisEpidemiologyMedicinebusinessTesticular cancerJournal of Medical Virology
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