T
Todd H. Baron
Researcher at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Publications - 818
Citations - 40963
Todd H. Baron is an academic researcher from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The author has contributed to research in topics: Stent & Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography. The author has an hindex of 98, co-authored 795 publications receiving 36063 citations. Previous affiliations of Todd H. Baron include University of Rochester & Miles College.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Safety and Outcome of Endoscopic Snare Excision of the Major Duodenal Papilla
Ian D. Norton,Christopher J. Gostout,Todd H. Baron,Alex Geller,Bret T. Petersen,Maurits J. Wiersema +5 more
TL;DR: Snare excision of the major duodenal papilla was well tolerated and most complications were mild except for a small duodanal perforation.
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Endoscopy and antiplatelet agents. European Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ESGE) Guideline
Christian Boustière,Andrew Veitch,Geoffroy Vanbiervliet,Philippe Bulois,Pierre Henri Deprez,A. Laquière,René Laugier,Gilles Lesur,Patrick Mosler,B Nalet,Bertrand Napoleon,Bjorn Rembacken,N Ajzenberg,J P Collet,Todd H. Baron,J-M Dumonceau +15 more
TL;DR: This guideline makes graded, evidence-based, recommendations for the management of APA for all currently performed endoscopic procedures.
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ASGE guideline: complications of EUS
Brian C. Jacobson,Douglas G. Adler,Raquel E. Davila,William K. Hirota,Jonathan A. Leighton,Waqar A. Qureshi,Elizabeth Rajan,Marc J. Zuckerman,Robert D. Fanelli,Todd H. Baron,Douglas O. Faigel +10 more
TL;DR: This is one of a series of statements discussing the utilization of GI endoscopy in common clinical situations where little or no data exist from well-designed prospective trials, emphasis is given to results from large series and reports from recognized experts.
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ASGE guideline: The role of endoscopy in acute non-variceal upper-GI hemorrhage.
Douglas G. Adler,Jonathan A. Leighton,Raquel E. Davila,R. David Hambrick,William K. Hirota,Brian C. Jacobson,Waqar A. Quereshi,Elizabeth Rajan,Marc J. Zuckerman,Robert D. Fanelli,Todd H. Baron,Douglas O. Faigel +11 more
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Impact of Endoscopist Withdrawal Speed On Polyp Yield: Implications for Optimal Colonoscopy Withdrawal Time
D. T. Simmons,Gavin C. Harewood,Todd H. Baron,Bret T. Petersen,Kenneth K. Wang,F. Boyd-Enders,B. J. Ott +6 more
TL;DR: In 2002, a U.S. Multi‐Society Task Force on Colorectal Cancer recommended that the withdrawal phase for colonoscopy should average at least 6–10 min, based on 10 consecutive colonoscopies by two endoscopists with different adenoma miss rates.