D
Daniel Picus
Researcher at Washington University in St. Louis
Publications - 125
Citations - 5987
Daniel Picus is an academic researcher from Washington University in St. Louis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Percutaneous & Gallbladder. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 124 publications receiving 5653 citations.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
International guidelines for the diagnosis and management of hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia
Marie E. Faughnan,Valerie A. Palda,Guadalupe Garcia-Tsao,Urban W. Geisthoff,Jamie McDonald,Deborah D. Proctor,J Spears,Dale H. Brown,Elisabetta Buscarini,Mark S. Chesnutt,Vincent Cottin,Arupa Ganguly,James R. Gossage,Alan E. Guttmacher,Robert H. Hyland,Shelley J. Kennedy,Joshua R. Korzenik,J J Mager,A P Ozanne,Jay F. Piccirillo,Daniel Picus,Henri Plauchu,Mary Porteous,Reed E. Pyeritz,Douglas A. Ross,Carlo Sabbà,Karen L. Swanson,Peter B. Terry,M C Wallace,C.J.J. Westermann,Robert I. White,Lawrence H. Young,Roberto Zarrabeitia +32 more
TL;DR: The goal of this international HHT guidelines process was to develop evidence-informed consensus guidelines regarding the diagnosis of HHT and the prevention of H HT-related complications and treatment of symptomatic disease.
Journal ArticleDOI
Dialysis access grafts: anatomic location of venous stenosis and results of angioplasty.
TL;DR: Performance of serial venous angioplasty procedures may help prolong the life of a graft, but the patency rates diminish with subsequent interventions.
Journal ArticleDOI
Detection of focal hepatic masses: prospective evaluation with CT, delayed CT, CT during arterial portography, and MR imaging.
Jay P. Heiken,P. J. Weyman,Joseph K. T. Lee,Dennis M. Balfe,Daniel Picus,Elizabeth M. Brunt,M. W. Flye +6 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that for preoperative detection of focal hepatic masses, CTAP is the most accurate technique available to most radiologists.
Journal ArticleDOI
Computed tomography in the staging of esophageal carcinoma.
TL;DR: CT was found to be highly accurate in predicting tumor size and assessing invasion of the tracheobronchial tree and spread to the liver, adrenals, and celiac and left gastric nodes and insensitive in detecting metastatic spread to local periesophageal nodes.
Journal ArticleDOI
Type II endoleak after endovascular abdominal aortic aneurysm repair: a conservative approach with selective intervention is safe and cost-effective
Eric Steinmetz,Brian G. Rubin,Luis A. Sanchez,Eric T. Choi,Patrick J. Geraghty,Jack Baty,Robert W. Thompson,M. Wayne Flye,David M. Hovsepian,Daniel Picus,Gregorio A. Sicard +10 more
TL;DR: Selective intervention to treat type II endoleak that persists for 6 months and is associated with aneurysm enlargement seems to be both safe and cost-effective.