S
Sebastien Haneuse
Researcher at Harvard University
Publications - 238
Citations - 8367
Sebastien Haneuse is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Population. The author has an hindex of 40, co-authored 193 publications receiving 6458 citations. Previous affiliations of Sebastien Haneuse include Vanderbilt University & The Forsyth Institute.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Glucose Levels and Risk of Dementia
Paul K. Crane,Rod L. Walker,Rebecca A. Hubbard,Ge Li,David M. Nathan,Hui Zheng,Sebastien Haneuse,Suzanne Craft,Thomas J. Montine,Steven E. Kahn,Wayne C. McCormick,Susan M. McCurry,James D. Bowen,Eric B. Larson +13 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that higher glucose levels may be a risk factor for dementia, even among persons without diabetes.
Journal ArticleDOI
Using the E-Value to Assess the Potential Effect of Unmeasured Confounding in Observational Studies
TL;DR: Results from a large, multisite observational study of the association between bariatric surgery and long-term macrovascular disease outcomes among patients with severe obesity and type 2 diabetes found thatbariatric surgery was associated with a 40% lower incidence of macrov vascular disease at 5 years.
Journal ArticleDOI
Association Between Acute Care and Critical Illness Hospitalization and Cognitive Function in Older Adults
William J. Ehlenbach,Catherine L. Hough,Paul K. Crane,Sebastien Haneuse,Shannon S. Carson,J. Randall Curtis,Eric B. Larson +6 more
TL;DR: Among a cohort of older adults without dementia at baseline, those who experienced acute care hospitalization and critical illness hospitalization had a greater likelihood of cognitive decline compared with those who had no hospitalization.
Journal ArticleDOI
Pathological correlates of dementia in a longitudinal, population-based sample of aging
Joshua A. Sonnen,Eric B. Larson,Paul K. Crane,Sebastien Haneuse,Ge Li,Gerald Schellenberg,Suzanne Craft,James B. Leverenz,James B. Leverenz,Thomas J. Montine +9 more
TL;DR: The goal was to determine the independent pathological correlates associated with dementia in a typical US population.
Journal Article
Glucose levels and risk of dementia
Paul K. Crane,Rod L. Walker,Rebecca A. Hubbard,Ge Li,David M. Nathan,Hui Zheng,Sebastien Haneuse,Suzanne Craft,Thomas J. Montine,Steven E. Kahn,Wayne C. McCormick,Susan M. McCurry,James D. Bowen,Eric B. Larson +13 more
TL;DR: The Adult Changes in Thought (ACW) study as discussed by the authors used 35,264 clinical measurements of glucose levels and 10,208 measurements of glycated hemoglobin levels from 2067 participants without dementia to examine the relationship between diabetes levels and the risk of dementia.