S
Scott Sullivan
Researcher at Medical University of South Carolina
Publications - 45
Citations - 4840
Scott Sullivan is an academic researcher from Medical University of South Carolina. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pregnancy & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 40 publications receiving 4198 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
2017 Guidelines of the American Thyroid Association for the Diagnosis and Management of Thyroid Disease During Pregnancy and the Postpartum
Erik K. Alexander,Elizabeth N. Pearce,Gregory A. Brent,Rosalind S. Brown,Herbert Chen,Chrysoula Dosiou,William A. Grobman,Peter Laurberg,John Lazarus,Susan J. Mandel,Robin P. Peeters,Scott Sullivan +11 more
TL;DR: The revised guidelines for the management of thyroid disease in pregnancy include recommendations regarding the interpretation of thyroid function tests in pregnancy, iodine nutrition, thyroid autoantibodies and pregnancy complications, thyroid considerations in infertile women, hypothyroidism in pregnancy and thyrotoxicosis in pregnancy.
Journal ArticleDOI
Management of Thyroid Dysfunction during Pregnancy and Postpartum: An Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline
Leslie J. De Groot,Marcos Abalovich,Erik K. Alexander,Nobuyuki Amino,Linda A. Barbour,Rhoda H. Cobin,Creswell J Eastman,John H. Lazarus,Dominique Luton,Susan J. Mandel,Jorge H. Mestman,Joanne Rovet,Scott Sullivan +12 more
TL;DR: Practice guidelines are presented for diagnosis and treatment of patients with thyroid-related medical issues just before and during pregnancy and in the postpartum interval, including evidence-based approaches to assessing the cause of the condition, treating it, and managing hypothyroidism.
Journal ArticleDOI
Administration of cefazolin prior to skin incision is superior to cefazolin at cord clamping in preventing postcesarean infectious morbidity: a randomized, controlled trial.
TL;DR: In this paper, a prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial was conducted to determine whether the administration of prophylactic cefazolin prior to skin incision was superior to administration at the time of umbilical cord clamping for the prevention of postcesarean infectious morbidity.
Journal ArticleDOI
Development and validation of a spontaneous preterm delivery predictor in asymptomatic women.
George R. Saade,Kim A. Boggess,Scott Sullivan,Glenn Markenson,Jay D. Iams,Dean V. Coonrod,Leonardo Pereira,M. Sean Esplin,Larry Cousins,Garrett K. Lam,Matthew K. Hoffman,Robert D. Severinsen,Trina Pugmire,Jeff S. Flick,Angela C. Fox,Amir J. Lueth,Sharon R. Rust,Emanuele Mazzola,ChienTing Hsu,Max T. Dufford,Chad Bradford,Ilia Ichetovkin,Tracey C. Fleischer,Ashoka D. Polpitiya,Gregory C. Critchfield,Paul Kearney,J. Jay Boniface,Durlin E. Hickok +27 more
TL;DR: A serum-based molecular predictor identifies asymptomatic pregnant women atrisk of spontaneous preterm delivery, which may provide utility in identifying women at risk at an early stage of pregnancy to allow for clinical intervention.
Journal ArticleDOI
Administration of cefazolin prior to skin incision is superior to cefazolin at cord clamping in preventing postcesarean infectious morbidity
TL;DR: Administration of prophylactic cefazolin prior to skin incision resulted in a decrease in both endomyometritis and total postcesarean infectious morbidity, compared with administration at the time of cord clamping.