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Maria Mostyka

Researcher at NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital

Publications -  11
Citations -  1448

Maria Mostyka is an academic researcher from NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pneumonia & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 9 publications receiving 686 citations. Previous affiliations of Maria Mostyka include Cornell University & Cleveland Clinic.

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COVID-19 pulmonary pathology: a multi-institutional autopsy cohort from Italy and New York City.

TL;DR: COVID-19 pneumonia is a heterogeneous disease (tracheobronchitis, DAD, and vascular injury), but with consistent features in three centers, with Viral infection in areas of ongoing active injury contributes to persistent and temporally heterogeneous lung damage.
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Autopsy Findings in 32 Patients with COVID-19: A Single-Institution Experience.

TL;DR: This series of autopsies from patients with COVID-19 confirms the observation that the majority of severely affected patients have significant pulmonary pathology, however, many patients also have widespread microscopic thromboses, as well as characteristic findings in the liver and lymph nodes.
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Clinical significance of blue-green neutrophil and monocyte cytoplasmic inclusions in SARS-CoV-2 positive critically ill patients.

TL;DR: Identification of blue‐green cytoplasmic inclusions in neutrophils and/or monocytes on peripheral blood smears is a rare, and likely underreported, finding described in few case reports and small case series studies in critically ill patients with acute liver dysfunction and lactic acidosis.
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Crohn Disease Infrequently Affects the Appendix and Rarely Causes Granulomatous Appendicitis.

TL;DR: This article found that granulomatous inflammation in appendectomy specimens rarely heralds Crohn disease, even when patients have severe ileocolonic inflammation, and that the appendix was usually normal (26%) or showed fibrous obliteration (50%) in ileocolic resection specimens from patients with Crohn diseases.