S
Susan B. Shurin
Researcher at National Institutes of Health
Publications - 59
Citations - 5833
Susan B. Shurin is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neutropenia & Vincristine. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 59 publications receiving 5472 citations. Previous affiliations of Susan B. Shurin include University of Massachusetts Amherst & Strong Memorial Hospital.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Grand challenges in global mental health
Pamela Y. Collins,Vikram Patel,Vikram Patel,Sarah S. Joestl,Dana March,Dana March,Thomas R. Insel,Abdallah S. Daar,Abdallah S. Daar,Isabel Altenfelder Santos Bordin,E. Jane Costello,Maureen S. Durkin,Christopher G. Fairburn,Roger I. Glass,Wayne Hall,Yueqin Huang,Steven E. Hyman,Kay Redfield Jamison,Sylvia Kaaya,Shitij Kapur,Arthur Kleinman,Adesola Ogunniyi,Angel Otero-Ojeda,Mu-ming Poo,Vijayalakshmi Ravindranath,Barbara J. Sahakian,Shekhar Saxena,Peter Singer,Dan J. Stein,Warwick P Anderson,Muhammad A. Dhansay,Wendy Ewart,Anthony G. Phillips,Susan B. Shurin,Mark Walport +34 more
TL;DR: A consortium of researchers, advocates and clinicians announces here research priorities for improving the lives of people with mental illness around the world, and calls for urgent action and investment.
Journal ArticleDOI
Mutations in a member of the ADAMTS gene family cause thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura
Gallia Levy,William C. Nichols,Eric C.-Y. Lian,Tatiana Foroud,Jeanette N. McClintick,Beth McGee,Angela Y. Yang,David R. Siemieniak,Kenneth R. Stark,Ralph A. Gruppo,Ravindra Sarode,Susan B. Shurin,Visalam Chandrasekaran,Sally P. Stabler,Hernan Sabio,Eric E. Bouhassira,Jefferson D. Upshaw,David Ginsburg,Han-Mou Tsai +18 more
TL;DR: In this article, the ADAMTS family of zinc metalloproteinase genes (ADAMTS13) was identified as the molecular mechanism responsible for TTP, and it was shown that the deficiency of ADADTS13 is the molecular mechanisms responsible for the development of TTP.
Journal ArticleDOI
T-cell lymphomas containing Epstein-Barr viral DNA in patients with chronic Epstein-Barr virus infections.
James F. Jones,Susan B. Shurin,Carlos R. Abramowsky,Raymond R. Tubbs,Cosimo G. Sciotto,Raymond Wahl,Julie Sands,Dirk Gottman,Ben Z. Katz,Jeffrey Sklar +9 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that EBV may infect T cells and contribute to lymphomas in selected patients with severe EBV infections.
Journal ArticleDOI
The risks and benefits of long-term use of hydroxyurea in sickle cell anemia: A 17.5 year follow-up
Martin H. Steinberg,William F. McCarthy,Oswaldo Castro,Samir K. Ballas,F. Danny Armstrong,Wally R. Smith,Kenneth I. Ataga,Paul Swerdlow,Abdullah Kutlar,Laura DeCastro,Myron A. Waclawiw,Eugene P. Orringer,Susan Jones,D. Strayhorn,Wendell F. Rosse,George Phillips,D. Peace,A. Johnson-Telfair,Lisa Daitch,Paul F. Milner,A. Tracy,S. Valdez,G. E. Allen,J. Moshang,B. Scott,Carolyn Bigelow,A. Anderson,V. Sabahi,T. Harrington,W. Labrousse,Charles H. Pegelow,D. Temple,E. Case,R. Harrell,S. Childerie,Stephen H. Embury,B. Schmidt,D. Davies,Yogen Saunthararajah,Mabel Koshy,N. Talischy-Zahed,L. Dorn,G. Pendarvis,M. McGee,Margaret Telfer,A. Davis,O. C. Onyekwere,C. Nwokolo,Helga Finke,Elliott Perlin,J. Siteman,M. Bryan,T. Saunders,Y. Barber,P. Gascon,P. Di Paolo,S. Gargiulo,James R. Eckman,E. Carter-Randall,J. H. Bailey,A. Platt,L. Waller,G. Ramirez,V. Knors,S. Hernandez,E. M. Rodriguez,E. Wilkes,Elliott Vichinsky,Ward Hagar,C. Hoehner,E. Hackney-Stevens,S. Claster,A. Earles,K. Kleman,K. McLaughlin,L. White,B. Maddox,L. Usry,A. Brenner,K. Williams,R. O'Brien,K. Genther,Susan B. Shurin,Brian W. Berman,K. Chiarucci,L. Keverline,Nancy F. Olivieri,J. Chow,M. Hui,D. Shaw,N. Lewis,Maureen Okam,Elyse Mandell,A. Palmer,Kenneth Bridges,B. Tynan,C. Winograd,Rita Bellevue,Harvey Dosik,M. Sheikhai,P. Ryans,H. Souffrant,Brian Adler,L. Eskridge,Josef T. Prchal,J. Braddock,T. McArdle,Timothy M. Carlos,A. Roundtree-Schmotzer,D. Gardner +109 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that long‐term use of hydroxyurea is safe and might decrease mortality, while no longer the product of a randomized study because of the ethical concerns of withholding an efficacious treatment.
Journal ArticleDOI
A Neutrophil Disorder Induced by Capnocytophaga, a Dental Micro-Organism
TL;DR: Capnocytophaga, a gram-negative anaerobe implicated in the pathogenesis of periodontal disease, was recovered from two patients with a history of dental infections and abnormalities of neutrophil morphology and function disappeared after eradication of the capnocyTophaga infections.