Bret T. Petersen
Mayo Clinic
295 Papers
1.3K Citations
Bret T. Petersen is an academic researcher from Mayo Clinic. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Pancreatitis. The author has an hindex of 70, co-authored 295 publications. Previous affiliations of Bret T. Petersen include University of Pittsburgh & University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston.
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Papers
A lexicon for endoscopic adverse events: report of an ASGE workshop.
Peter B. Cotton,Glenn M. Eisen,Lars Aabakken,Todd H. Baron,Matthew M. Hutter,Brian C. Jacobson,Klaus Mergener,Albert A. Nemcek,Bret T. Petersen,John L. Petrini,Irving M. Pike,Linda Rabeneck,Joseph Romagnuolo,John J. Vargo +13 more
TL;DR: Describing these deviations from the plan as ‘‘unplanned events’’ fits nicely and is perhaps better avoided.
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Diagnosis of autoimmune pancreatitis: the Mayo Clinic experience.
Suresh T. Chari,Thomas C. Smyrk,Michael J. Levy,Mark Topazian,Naoki Takahashi,Lizhi Zhang,Jonathan E. Clain,Randall K. Pearson,Bret T. Petersen,Santhi Swaroop Vege,Michael B. Farnell +10 more
TL;DR: D diagnosis of autoimmune pancreatitis can be made in patients with > or =1 of these criteria: diagnostic histology, characteristic imaging on computed tomography and pancreatography with elevated serum IgG4 level, or response to steroid therapy of pancreatic/extrapancreatic manifestations of AIP.
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Immunoglobulin G4–Associated Cholangitis: Clinical Profile and Response to Therapy
Amaar Ghazale,Suresh T. Chari,Lizhi Zhang,Thomas C. Smyrk,Naoki Takahashi,Michael J. Levy,Mark Topazian,Jonathan E. Clain,Randall K. Pearson,Bret T. Petersen,Santhi Swaroop Vege,Keith D. Lindor,Michael B. Farnell +12 more
TL;DR: IAC should be suspected in unexplained biliary strictures associated with increased serum IgG4 and unexplained pancreatic disease, especially with proximal strictures, and the role of immunomodulatory drugs for relapses needs further study.
859
Study of recurrence after surgical resection of intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm of the pancreas.
Suresh T. Chari,Dhiraj Yadav,Thomas C. Smyrk,Eugene P. DiMagno,Laurence J. Miller,Massimo Raimondo,Jonathan E. Clain,Ian A. Norton,Randall K. Pearson,Bret T. Petersen,Maurits J. Wiersema,Michael B. Farnell,Michael G. Sarr +12 more
TL;DR: Invasive intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm recurs frequently even after a complete "curative" resection and portends poor survival, and survival is excellent regardless of the degree of epithelial dysplasia in the tumor.
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