S
Stephen S. Raab
Researcher at Memorial University of Newfoundland
Publications - 80
Citations - 6021
Stephen S. Raab is an academic researcher from Memorial University of Newfoundland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Fine-needle aspiration & Cytopathology. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 79 publications receiving 5791 citations. Previous affiliations of Stephen S. Raab include University of Iowa & Henry Ford Health System.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Direct visual inspection for cervical cancer screening.
Eric J. Suba,Stephen S. Raab +1 more
TL;DR: For their report on direct visual inspection for cervical carcinoma screening, the authors recommend to link visual inspection with immediateablative treatment, an experimental strategy that they refer to as ‘screen and treat’.
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p53 protein overexpression in smooth muscle tumors of the uterus
TL;DR: Examination of p53 overexpression in a variety of uterine smooth muscle tumors showed that tumor stage was the only independent predictor of length of survival, and further studies are warranted to determine the significance and replicability of these findings.
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Can glandular lesions be diagnosed in pap smear cytology
TL;DR: The ability of some of the Bethesda system categories for glandular lesions to describe what they purport to describe is questionable and the Bethesda System category of atypical glandular cells of undetermined significance (AGUS) is a misnomer.
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Microtubule-associated protein-2: a new sensitive and specific marker for pulmonary carcinoid tumor and small cell carcinoma.
Yulin Liu,Charles D. Sturgis,Dana Marie Grzybicki,Katherine Jasnosz,Peter R. Olson,Ming Tong,David D. Dabbs,Stephen S. Raab,Jan F. Silverman +8 more
TL;DR: MAP-2 is a new sensitive and specific marker for the pulmonary tumors of neuroendocrine differentiation and it is recommended that MAP-2 be added to immunohistochemical panels to separate non-neuroendocrine from neuro endocrine lung tumors.
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De novo establishment and cost-effectiveness of Papanicolaou cytology screening services in the Socialist Republic of Vietnam.
TL;DR: The absence of cervical screening in Vietnam and other developing countries is due in large part to the perceived expense of implementing Papanicolaou cytology screening services, although the cost‐effectiveness of establishing such services has never been studied in a developing country.