Eric M. Nelsen
Mayo Clinic
14 Papers
101 Citations
Eric M. Nelsen is an academic researcher from Mayo Clinic. The author has contributed to research in topics: Esophagus & Barrett's esophagus. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 13 publications.
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Papers
Metabolic syndrome as a risk factor for Barrett esophagus: a population-based case-control study.
Cadman L. Leggett,Eric M. Nelsen,Jianmin Tian,Cathy B. Schleck,Alan R. Zinsmeister,Kelly T. Dunagan,G. Richard Locke,Kenneth K. Wang,Nicholas J. Talley,Nicholas J. Talley,Prasad G. Iyer +10 more
TL;DR: The metabolic syndrome is associated with BE independent of reflux symptoms, which may reflect a reflux-independent pathway of BE pathogenesis.
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Distribution of Body Fat and Its Influence on Esophageal Inflammation and Dysplasia in Patients With Barrett's Esophagus
Eric M. Nelsen,Yujiro Kirihara,Naoki Takahashi,Qian Shi,Jason T. Lewis,Vikneswaran Namasivayam,Navtej S. Buttar,Kelly T. Dunagan,Ganapathy A. Prasad +8 more
TL;DR: GEJ and visceral fat are associated with BE, and with increased esophageal inflammation and high-grade dysplasia in BE subjects, independent of BMI.
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Diagnosis and Management of Barrett’s Esophagus
TL;DR: Recommendations for the management of subjects diagnosed with Barrett esophagus include periodic endoscopic surveillance to detect the development of high-grade dysplasia or adenocarcinoma.
20
Severe Anion Gap Metabolic Acidosis From Acetaminophen Use Secondary to 5-Oxoproline (Pyroglutamic Acid) Accumulation
Ladan Zand,Angela K. Muriithi,Eddie L. Greene,Qi Qian,Ziad M. El-Zoghby,Pablo Moreno Franco,Eric M. Nelsen +6 more
TL;DR: Two cases of high anion gap metabolic acidosis secondary to 5-oxoproline accumulation resulting from acetaminophen consumption are reported: the first case caused by acute one-time ingestion of large quantities of acetamine, and the second cases caused by chronic repeated ingestion in a patient with chronic liver disease.
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Anti-synthetase syndrome presenting as cryptogenic organizing pneumonia.
Qusay Haydour,Melissa A. Wells,Sara S. McCoy,Eric M. Nelsen,Patricio Escalante,Eric L. Matteson +5 more
TL;DR: A patient presenting with pulmonary symptoms who had positive anti-Jo-1 antibodies and cryptogenic organizing pneumonia features on biopsy is reported, which is a rare reported finding.
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