D
Dale C. Snover
Researcher at University of Minnesota
Publications - 160
Citations - 20700
Dale C. Snover is an academic researcher from University of Minnesota. The author has contributed to research in topics: Adenoma & Colonoscopy. The author has an hindex of 53, co-authored 156 publications receiving 19645 citations. Previous affiliations of Dale C. Snover include Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Follow-up after liver transplantation for protoporphyric liver disease.
Joseph R. Bloomer,Jeffrey M. Rank,William D. Payne,Dale C. Snover,Harvey L. Sharp,R. Jeff Zwiener,Robert L. Carithers +6 more
TL;DR: Liver transplantation can be performed successfully in patients with protoporphyric liver disease, with intermediate survival rates comparable to the general transplant population, however, disease may recur in the graft, particularly if there are complications that cause cholestasis.
Journal ArticleDOI
Progressive bile duct injury after thiabendazole administration
TL;DR: This case represents an example of "idiosyncratic" drug-induced liver damage in which the primary target of injury is the bile duct.
Journal ArticleDOI
Neuromas of the appendix. A light-microscopic, immunohistochemical and electron-microscopic study of 20 cases.
TL;DR: It is concluded that appendiceal neuroma is a rather common entity, and that most cases of so-called fibrous obliteration actually represent appendices diagnosed as “fibrous obliterations.”
Journal ArticleDOI
Comparison of immunohistochemical and fluorescence in situ hybridization assessment of HER-2 status in routine practice.
Michelle M Dolan,Dale C. Snover +1 more
TL;DR: The results strongly support the practice of performing FISH in all cases with immunohistochemical scores of 2+, particularly in routine practice, in which interobserver variability in immunohistsochemical scoring among multiple pathologists is likely to be high.
Journal Article
Graft-versus-host disease of the gastrointestinal tract.
TL;DR: Mucosal biopsy is of limited usefulness in the diagnosis of chronic GVHD; therefore, upper and lower GIT biopsies may provide diagnostic information not evident in biopsy from a single site.