Faten Zeglaoui
Tunis University
122 Papers
306 Citations
Faten Zeglaoui is an academic researcher from Tunis University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Disease. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 87 publications.
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Papers
Hypopigmentation as a side effect of melasma treatment with tranexamic acid intradermal microinjections.
TL;DR: Maintenance therapy was motivated by previous studies reporting greater recurrence rates with microinjections of TXA as compared to oral TA 250 mg twice daily, thus suggesting that intradermal TA injections should be administered frequently to achieve equivalent efficacy to Oral TA.
Retronychia of the toenails: a review with emphasis on pathogenesis, new diagnostic and management trends.
TL;DR: A systematic review of the literature on retronychia from inception to April 2018 with an emphasis on the pathogenesis and new diagnostic and management trends.
Ugly Duckling Concept for Melanoma Detection: A PCA-Based Outlier Detection Method with CNN-Based Feature Vectors
Jinen Daghrir,Lotfi Tlig,Moez Bouchouicha,Noureddine Litaiem,Faten Zeglaoui,Mounir Sayadi +5 more
- 03 Jul 2023
TL;DR: This paper proposes a novel approach to melanoma detection based on the “ugly duckling” concept, which suggests that nevi in the same individual usually resemble each other, and malignant melanomas often do not follow this pattern.
Acute generalized exanthematous pustulosis after COVID-19 treatment with hydroxychloroquine.
TL;DR: COVID-19 is, indeed, associated with an increased risk of venous thromboembolism, which is responsible for significant disease-relatedmortality, and specific recognition of this serious side effect is vital.
Risk factors for erysipelas of the leg in Tunisia: a multicenter case-control study.
Mourad Mokni,Alain Dupuy,Mohamed Denguezli,Raouf Dhaoui,Samir Bouassida,Montacer Amri,Sami Fenniche,Faten Zeglaoui,N. Doss,Rafiaa Nouira,Amel Ben Osman-Dhahri,Jamel Zili,Insaf Mokhtar,M. R. Kamoun,Abdelmajid Zahaf,Olivier Chosidow +15 more
TL;DR: The major role of local risk factors and the minor role of general risk factors for erysipelas of the leg were confirmed, in a setting different than the one previously studied.