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Fergus Shanahan

Researcher at National University of Ireland

Publications -  727
Citations -  59181

Fergus Shanahan is an academic researcher from National University of Ireland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Inflammatory bowel disease & Gut flora. The author has an hindex of 117, co-authored 705 publications receiving 51963 citations. Previous affiliations of Fergus Shanahan include Imperial College London & Mater Misericordiae Hospital.

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The Changing Phenotype of Inflammatory Bowel Disease

TL;DR: The emergence of obesity in patients with IBD, elderly onset disease, mortality rates, colorectal cancer risk, the burden of medications and comorbidities, and the improvement in surgical treatment with a decrease in surgical rates in recent decades are discussed.
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The hybrid science of diet, microbes, and metabolic health

TL;DR: New evidence is provided linking dietary fat and intestinal microbial metabolism with the risk of atherosclerosis, including a previously unknown pathway, with the first steps of which include microbial action on dietary phosphatidylcholine to generate proatherosclerotic metabolites.
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The role of pure iterative reconstruction in conventional dose CT enterography.

TL;DR: Pure IR considerably improves image quality of conventional dose CTE images and therefore its use should be expanded beyond low dose protocols to improving image quality at conventional dose CT imaging.
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Sport and recreation-related injuries and fracture occurrence among emergency department attendees: implications for exercise prescription and injury prevention

TL;DR: Fall and subsequent upper-limb injury was the commonest mechanism underlying SRI fracture and patient education regarding the dangers of unsupervised play and recreation represents a means of reducing the burden of SRI.
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Extending the scope in celiac disease.

TL;DR: A century has passed since Samuel Gee's description of the "coeliac affection" and a definitive break-through in this disease came about 40 years ago with the recognition that the elimination of diet led to remission.