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William F. Young

Researcher at Mayo Clinic

Publications -  353
Citations -  29861

William F. Young is an academic researcher from Mayo Clinic. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pheochromocytoma & Primary aldosteronism. The author has an hindex of 78, co-authored 321 publications receiving 26051 citations. Previous affiliations of William F. Young include University of Toronto & University of Michigan.

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Pheochromocytoma and paraganglioma: An endocrine society clinical practice guideline

TL;DR: This evidence-based guideline recommends minimally invasive adrenalectomy for most pheochromocytomas with open resection for most paragangliomas and suggests personalized management with evaluation and treatment by multidisciplinary teams with appropriate expertise to ensure favorable outcomes.
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International Standards for Neurological and Functional Classification of Spinal Cord Injury. American Spinal Injury Association.

TL;DR: The International Standards Booklet for Neurological and Functional Classification of Spinal Cord Injury (ISBWC) as mentioned in this paper is a standard for the classification of spinal cord injury. But it is not a classification of neurological disorders.
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The Management of Primary Aldosteronism: Case Detection, Diagnosis, and Treatment: An Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline

TL;DR: This guideline recommends that all patients with primary aldosteronism undergo adrenal computed tomography as the initial study in subtype testing and to exclude adrenocortical carcinoma and advises that an experienced radiologist should establish/exclude unilateral primary aldehydes using bilateral adrenal venous sampling.
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Case Detection, Diagnosis, and Treatment of Patients with Primary Aldosteronism : An Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline

TL;DR: The Task Force developed clinical practice guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of patients with primary aldosteronism and recommended that patients with bilateral adrenal hyperplasia, or those unsuitable for surgery, optimally be treated medically by mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists.
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The incidentally discovered adrenal mass

TL;DR: A 68-year-old woman is incidentally found to have a left adrenal mass, 2.8 cm in diameter, on abdominal computed tomography that was ordered to evaluate right lower abdominal discomfort (which has since resolved), and her physical examination is unremarkable.