A. Aissa
Tunis University
46 Papers
57 Citations
A. Aissa is an academic researcher from Tunis University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 13 publications.
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Papers
Living With Bipolar Disorder in the Time of Covid-19: Biorhythms During the Severe Lockdown in Cagliari, Italy, and the Moderate Lockdown in Tunis, Tunisia
Mauro Giovanni Carta,Uta Ouali,Alessandra Perra,Azza Ben Cheikh Ahmed,Laura Boe,A. Aissa,Stefano Lorrai,Giulia Cossu,Alessandro Aresti,Antonio Preti,Fethi Nacef +10 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors followed patients with bipolar disorder living in two geographically close cities (Cagliari and Tunis), but with different lockdown conditions: less severe in Tunis, and a similar difference appeared at t1.
Affective disorders in multiple sclerosis
Mohamed Amine Said,S. Ouanes,Rahma Nefzi,A. Aissa,H. Maatallah,H. Ben Ammar,Zouhaier Elhechmi +6 more
TL;DR: Despite the fact that the higher prevalence of affective disorders in multiple sclerosis is well established, these disorders still remain underdiagnosed and undertreated.
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The relationship between childhood trauma and theory of mind in schizophrenia
TL;DR: The results underline the necessity of investigating psychosocial mechanisms underlying the development of social cognition deficits, including deficits in TOM, and suggest a relationship between specific kinds of CT and TOM deficits.
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Establishing a clinical high‐risk program in Tunisia, North Africa: A pilot study in early detection and identification
Joseph Ventura,Lamia Jouini,A. Aissa,Amine Larnaout,Rahma Nefzi,Malek Ghazzai,Sélima Jelili,Feten Fekih-Romdhane,Uta Ouali,Fethi Nacef +9 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed a clinical high risk program (CHiRP) in Tunisia and recruited 10 patients who were exhibiting possible signs of clinical high-risk (CHR) and evaluated them to determine if they met criteria for a CHR group such as Attenuated Psychosis.
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Association of high-sensitivity C-reactive protein with susceptibility to Schizophrenia in Tunisian population.
Fayza Ayari,A. Ben Chaaben,H Ben Ammar,Rahma Nefzi,Nesrine Ouni,Ons Mihoub,Hajer Abaza,A. Aissa,Hayet Douik,Sonia Gara,Amine Larnaout,A. Salmi,A. Ben Ammar El Gaaied,Marion Leboyer,Z. El Hechmi,Fethi Guemira,Ryad Tamouza +16 more
TL;DR: In this article, the potential association between circulating levels of the C-reactive protein (CRP), a crucial inflammatory marker, and Schizophrenia in Tunisian patients and healthy controls (HC) cohorts was analyzed.
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