Gian Benedetto Melis
University of Cagliari
226 Papers
2.6K Citations
Gian Benedetto Melis is an academic researcher from University of Cagliari. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Estrogen. The author has an hindex of 46, co-authored 226 publications. Previous affiliations of Gian Benedetto Melis include University of Pisa.
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Papers
Hirsutism and hyperandrogenism associated with hyperreactio luteinalis in a singleton pregnancy: a case report.
TL;DR: Conservative management with close monitoring of patients with hyperreactio luteinalis represents the best approach in such rare cases.
21
Endometriosis in Adolescence
TL;DR: Treatment of endometriosis usually consists of oral contraceptives and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, but emerging new technologies provide new options, in particular the use of serological markers.
The chronic administration of cabergoline normalizes androgen secretion and improves menstrual cyclicity in women with polycystic ovary syndrome
Anna Maria Paoletti,Angelo Cagnacci,Gian Franco Depau,Marisa Orrù,Silvia Ajossa,Gian Benedetto Melis +5 more
TL;DR: The administration of cabergoline is capable to normalize androgen levels and to improve menstrual cyclicity in PCOS-affected women and may represent an useful treatment for menstrual irregularities of PCOS patients.
21
No recurrence of mature ovarian teratomas after laparoscopic cystectomy
Valerio Mais,Silvia Ajossa,Giorgio Mallarini,Stefano Guerriero,Marco P. Oggiano,Gian Benedetto Melis +5 more
TL;DR: There were no recurrences of teratomas in both arms of the study, suggesting that laparoscopy has the same efficacy as laparotomy.
21
“An unnecessary cut?” multilevel health systems analysis of drivers of caesarean sections rates in Italy: a systematic review
Valentina Laurita Longo,Valentina Laurita Longo,Valentina Laurita Longo,Emmanuel Nene Odjidja,Thierry Kamba Beia,Thierry Kamba Beia,Manuela Neri,Karina Kielmann,Irene Gittardi,Amanda Isabella Di Rosa,Michela Boldrini,Gian Benedetto Melis,Giovanni Scambia,Giovanni Scambia,Antonio Lanzone,Antonio Lanzone +15 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors systematically summarized existing evidence relevant to the factors driving the phenomenon of increasing Caesarean section (CS) rates using Italy as a case study using the PRISMA guidelines to report findings.