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Steven E. Ross

Researcher at Cooper University Hospital

Publications -  124
Citations -  6734

Steven E. Ross is an academic researcher from Cooper University Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Injury Severity Score & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 46, co-authored 124 publications receiving 6339 citations. Previous affiliations of Steven E. Ross include University of Kansas & Cooper Hospital.

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Blunt splenic injury in adults: Multi-institutional Study of the Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma.

TL;DR: Successful nonoperative management was associated with higher blood pressure and hematocrit, and less severe injury based on ISS, Glasgow Coma Scale, grade of splenic injury, and quantity of hemoperitoneum.
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Status of nonoperative management of blunt hepatic injuries in 1995: a multicenter experience with 404 patients.

TL;DR: Current data would suggest that 50 to 80% of all adult patients with blunt hepatic injuries are candidates for nonoperative management, irrespective of grade of injury or degree of hemoperitoneum, and thus merit constant re-evaluation and close observation in critical care units.
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Isolated traumatic brain injury: age is an independent predictor of mortality and early outcome.

TL;DR: The mortality from TBI is higher in the geriatric population at all levels of head injury, in addition, functional outcome at hospital discharge is worse and age itself is an independent predictor for mortality in TBI.
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Emergency general surgery: definition and estimated burden of disease.

TL;DR: The first list of ICD-9 diagnoses codes that define the scope of EGS based on current clinical practices is provided, with wide implications for EGS workforce training, access to care, and research.
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Delayed brain injury after head trauma: significance of coagulopathy.

TL;DR: It is concluded that clotting studies at admission are of value in predicting the occurrence of delayed injury and if coagulopathy is discovered in the patient with head injury early follow-up CT scanning is advocated to discover progressive and new intracranial lesions that are likely to occur.