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Eric S. Orman
Researcher at Indiana University
Publications - 35
Citations - 882
Eric S. Orman is an academic researcher from Indiana University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cirrhosis & Liver transplantation. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 35 publications receiving 667 citations. Previous affiliations of Eric S. Orman include University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill & Indiana University Health.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Alcoholic liver disease: Pathogenesis, management, and novel targets for therapy
TL;DR: The natural history, risk factors, pathogenesis, and current treatments for ALD are reviewed, and the findings of recent translational studies and potential therapeutic targets are discussed.
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Decreasing Mortality Among Patients Hospitalized With Cirrhosis in the United States From 2002 Through 2010
TL;DR: Improvements in cirrhosis care may have contributed to increases in patient survival beyond those attributable to general improvements in inpatient care, and further improvements might require an increased use of proven therapies and the development of new treatments.
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Intestinal metaplasia recurs infrequently in patients successfully treated for Barrett's esophagus with radiofrequency ablation.
Eric S. Orman,Hannah P. Kim,William J. Bulsiewicz,Cary C. Cotton,Evan S. Dellon,Melissa Spacek,Xiaoxin Chen,Ryan D. Madanick,Sarina Pasricha,Nicholas J. Shaheen +9 more
TL;DR: In patients with BE and dysplasia or early cancer who achieved CE-IM, BE recurred in ∼5%/year, and subjects undergoing RFA for dysplastic BE should be retained in endoscopic surveillance.
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Declining liver graft quality threatens the future of liver transplantation in the United States
Eric S. Orman,Maria E. Mayorga,Stephanie B. Wheeler,Rachel M. Townsley,Hector Toro-Díaz,Paul H. Hayashi,A. Sidney Barritt +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) database to inform a 20-year discrete event simulation estimating liver transplant volume from 2010 to 2030, in part because of worsening donor organ quality.
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Paracentesis Is Associated With Reduced Mortality in Patients Hospitalized With Cirrhosis and Ascites
TL;DR: Paracentesis is underused for patients admitted to the hospital with ascites; the procedure is associated with increased short-term survival and practice guidelines derived from expert opinion are supported.