Peter Thomas
Liverpool Hospital
10 Papers
4 Citations
Peter Thomas is an academic researcher from Liverpool Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Emergency department. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 7 publications.
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Papers
Validation of emergency and final diagnosis coding in transient ischemic attack: South Western Sydney transient ischemic attack study.
Darshan Ghia,Peter Thomas,Dennis Cordato,John M. Worthington,Cecilia Cappelen-Smith,Neil Griffith,Ibrahim Y Hanna,Suzanne Hodgkinson,Alan McDougall,Roy G. Beran +9 more
TL;DR: Half of the emergency diagnoses retained a TIA diagnosis after hospital admission, and in the setting of neurological admission there were small percentage differences between coded final diagnosis for TIA, stroke and mimic and diagnoses at expert review.
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Outcomes of patients with transient ischaemic attack after hospital admission or discharge from the emergency department.
Elias E Kehdi,Dennis Cordato,Peter Thomas,Roy G. Beran,Cecilia Cappelen-Smith,Neil Griffith,Ibrahim Y Hanna,Ibrahim Y Hanna,Alan McDougall,John M. Worthington,Suzanne Hodgkinson,Suzanne Hodgkinson +11 more
TL;DR: Compared outcomes at 28 days and 1 year between patients admitted to hospital and those discharged after presenting to the emergency department with transient ischaemic attack with TIA are compared.
Clinical outcomes following reperfusion therapy in acute ischemic stroke patients with infective endocarditis: a systematic review
TL;DR: AIS patients with IE, treated with IVT, EVT, or a combination of the two, experience worse clinical and safety outcomes than non-IE patients, and EVT yielded better functional outcomes, albeit with higher postreperfusion ICH rates, than IVT.
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Sjögren's syndrome, dysimmunoglobulinaemia and malignant disease.
TL;DR: The occurrence of carcinoma in situ in the stomach and dysimmunoglobulinaemia in a patient who had Sjögren's syndrome is described, believed to be the first report of such a case to be found in the literature.
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Decreasing presentations of seizures to emergency departments in a large Australian population.
Dennis Cordato,Dennis Cordato,Peter Thomas,Darshan Ghia,Darshan Ghia,S.R. Taneja,John M. Worthington,John M. Worthington,Alan McDougall,Alan McDougall,Suzanne Hodgkinson,Suzanne Hodgkinson,Ibrahim Y Hanna,Ibrahim Y Hanna,Neil Griffith,Neil Griffith,Cecilia Cappelen-Smith,Cecilia Cappelen-Smith,Roy G. Beran,Roy G. Beran,Roy G. Beran +20 more
TL;DR: Rates of presentation for epilepsy in WZS have fallen over the last decade, and most presentations were first seizures rather than recurrences, which may reflect improved levels of education and health care delivery.
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