5 Papers
7 Citations
Eva Stein is an academic researcher from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Hepatic stellate cell. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 5 publications.
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Papers
Heavy daily alcohol intake at the population level predicts the weight of alcohol in cirrhosis burden worldwide
Eva Stein,Monica Cruz-Lemini,José Altamirano,Nambi Ndugga,David Couper,Juan G. Abraldes,Ramon Bataller,Ramon Bataller +7 more
TL;DR: On a population level heavy daily drinking significantly influences the impact of alcohol on the cirrhosis burden, and reducing heavy drinking should be considered as an important target for public health monitoring and policies.
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Supporting Option B+ scale up and strengthening the prevention of mother-to-child transmission cascade in central Malawi: results from a serial cross-sectional study
Michael E Herce,Tiwonge Mtande,Frank Chimbwandira,Innocent Mofolo,Christine Chingondole,Nora E. Rosenberg,Kathy E. Lancaster,Esmie Kamanga,Jacqueline Chinkonde,Wiza Kumwenda,Gerald Tegha,Mina C. Hosseinipour,Irving F. Hoffman,Francis Martinson,Eva Stein,Charles van der Horst +15 more
TL;DR: STF interventions, integrated within the MoH Option B+ program, achieved favorable HTC, maternal ART, infant prophylaxis, and EID services uptake, and a low proportion of infants found HIV-infected at first DNA PCR testing.
Diagnostic Approaches and Clinical End Points of Treatment in Alcoholic Liver Disease
Jaeyoun Cheong,Jaeyoun Cheong,Eva Stein,Ramon Bataller +3 more
- 01 Jan 2016
TL;DR: The phenotypes, natural history, and diagnostic approaches as well as the clinical end points of patients with ALD are described, which involve the reduction in the occurrence and severity of clinical complications and the improvement of tests indicative of liver failure.
4
Reversal of Cirrhosis
Gemma Odena,Eva Stein,Ramon Bataller +2 more
- 01 Jan 2015
TL;DR: The current evidence that cirrhosis is potentially reversible, the mechanisms leading to fibrosis progression and resolution and the potential targeted therapies for patients with advanced fibrosis are summarized.
2
1570Low rates of virologic failure among previously unmonitored patients in Malawi
Sarah E. Rutstein,Mina C. Hosseinipour,Alice Soko,Memory Mkandawire,Eva Stein,Charles Mclendon,Deborah Kamwendo,Mary Kadiwa,Eldee Paladar,Abdoulaye Dieng Sarr,Sundeep Gupta,Frank Chimbwandira,Reuben Mwenda,Ronald Mataya +13 more
TL;DR: This research presents a meta-analyses of the immune system’s response to infectious disease in Malawi using a probabilistic approach and shows clear patterns of infection and disease progression that can be traced to tick-borne diseases.