S
Scott H. Sicherer
Researcher at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Publications - 426
Citations - 36246
Scott H. Sicherer is an academic researcher from Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. The author has contributed to research in topics: Food allergy & Peanut allergy. The author has an hindex of 93, co-authored 394 publications receiving 31981 citations. Previous affiliations of Scott H. Sicherer include Johns Hopkins University & Mount Sinai Hospital.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Epinephrine for First-aid Management of Anaphylaxis.
TL;DR: This clinical report from the American Academy of Pediatrics is an update of the 2007 clinical report on this topic and provides information to help clinicians identify patients at risk of anaphylaxis and new information aboutEpinephrine and epinephrine autoinjectors (EAs).
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Food allergen advisory labeling and product contamination with egg, milk, and peanut
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Allergic eosinophilic gastroenteritis with protein-losing enteropathy: intestinal pathology, clinical course, and long-term follow-up.
Mirna Chehade,Margret S. Magid,S. Mofidi,Anna Nowak-Wegrzyn,Hugh A. Sampson,Scott H. Sicherer +5 more
TL;DR: Although all patients had excellent response to therapy with amino acid-based formula and tolerated gradual introduction of some foods with time, food-responsive disease persisted in all patients over 2.5 to 5.5 years of follow-up, and food hypersensitivities did not completely resolve over up to 5 years.
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Precautionary labelling of foods for allergen content: are we ready for a global framework?
Katrina J. Allen,Katrina J. Allen,Katrina J. Allen,Paul Turner,Paul Turner,Ruby Pawankar,Stephen L Taylor,Scott H. Sicherer,Gideon Lack,Gideon Lack,Nelson Rosario,Motohiro Ebisawa,Gary Wong,E. N. Clare Mills,Kirsten Beyer,Alessandro Fiocchi,Hugh A. Sampson +16 more
TL;DR: For an international framework to be considered to help roadmap a solution to the weaknesses of the current systems, and discuss the role of legislation in facilitating this.
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Long-term treatment with egg oral immunotherapy enhances sustained unresponsiveness that persists after cessation of therapy
Stacie M. Jones,A. Wesley Burks,Corinne A. Keet,Brian P. Vickery,Amy M. Scurlock,Robert A. Wood,Andrew H. Liu,Scott H. Sicherer,Alice K. Henning,Robert Lindblad,Peter Dawson,Cecilia Berin,David Fleischer,Donald Y.M. Leung,Marshall Plaut,Hugh A. Sampson +15 more
TL;DR: SU after eOIT is enhanced with longer duration of therapy and increases the likelihood of tolerating unbaked egg in the diet.