N Evangelinakis
National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
13 Papers
39 Citations
N Evangelinakis is an academic researcher from National and Kapodistrian University of Athens. The author has contributed to research in topics: Endometriosis & Pregnancy. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 13 publications.
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Papers
•Journal Article
Prevalence of severe pelvic inflammatory disease and endometriotic ovarian cysts: a 7-year retrospective study.
Grammatikakis I,N Evangelinakis,George Salamalekis,V. Tziortzioti,C Samaras,Charalampos Chrelias,Dimitrios Kassanos +6 more
TL;DR: The prevalence of PID in women with endometriosis is sufficiently higher than the prevalence in the general population to report that the condition can easily confuse the physician in setting the diagnosis.
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Laparoscopic Treatment of 1522 Adnexal Masses: An 8-Year Experience
Grammatikakis I,Pantelis Trompoukis,Stefanos Zervoudis,C. Mavrelos,P. Economides,V. Tziortzioti,N Evangelinakis,Dimitrios Kassanos +7 more
TL;DR: Laroscopic surgery seems to offer significant advantages such as reduced hospital stay, less adverse effects, better quality of life, and superior vision especially on surgical treatment of cases like endometriosis.
Giant chorioangioma treated with interstitial laser coagulation.
George Konstantinos Papaioannou,N Evangelinakis,Ploutarchos Kourtis,Anastasia E. Konstantinidou,Nikolaos Papantoniou +4 more
TL;DR: Prenatal therapy may be performed when there are ultrasound features of fetal compromise and the gestation is non-viable, and therapeutic interventions include direct injection of various chemicals and laser coagulation on tumour's feeding vessels.
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•Journal Article
Endometrium and ovarian cancer synchronous to endometriosis--a retrospective study of our experience of 7 years.
TL;DR: Women with synchronous primary cancers of the endometrium and ovary have distinct clinical characteristics including younger age, premenopausal status, and nulliparity, suggesting that a hormonal ‘field effect’ may account for the development of these simultaneous endometrioid cancers.
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Angiopoietin-2 primes infection-induced preterm delivery.
Electra N. Polyzou,N Evangelinakis,Aikaterini Pistiki,Antigone Kotsaki,Charalampos Siristatidis,Charalambos Chrelias,Emmanuel Salamalekis,Demetrios Kassanos,Evangelos J. Giamarellos-Bourboulis +8 more
TL;DR: Results indicate that Ang-2 accelerated the phenomena of PTD induced by LPS, which is related with deprivation of fetal perfusion.
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