Ralph H. Hruban
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
1153 Papers
13.5K Citations
Ralph H. Hruban is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pancreatic cancer & Pancreas. The author has an hindex of 90, co-authored 1099 publications. Previous affiliations of Ralph H. Hruban include Reading Hospital & Thomas Jefferson University.
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Papers
A semicentennial of pancreatic pathology: the genetic revolution is here, but don't throw the baby out with the bath water!
TL;DR: The last fifty years have witnessed an explosion in understanding of the pathology of pancreatic diseases, and new tools have been developed that have unraveled the fundamental biological drivers of a number of Pancreatic diseases.
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Absorbable suture improves growth of venous anastomoses
A. Marc Gillinov,Anthony W. Lee,John M. Redmond,Kenton J. Zehr,Louis Jackson,Elizabeth A. Davis,Ralph H. Hruban,G. Melville Williams,Duke E. Cameron +8 more
TL;DR: Bilateral primary end-to-end anastomoses of transected external jugular veins in 10, 4-week-old piglets found polyglyconate had dissolved entirely in six cases and was present but in varying degrees of dissolution in the other four; in contrast, polypropylene was identifiable at all anastsomoses.
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The Johns Hopkins Department of Pathology Novel Organizational Model: A 25-Year-Old Ongoing Experiment.
Fred Sanfilippo,Kathleen H. Burns,Michael J. Borowitz,J. Brooks Jackson,Ralph H. Hruban +4 more
- 14 Nov 2018
TL;DR: Under 2 successive leaders, the Department of Pathology at Johns Hopkins has maintained its eminence across missions and financial performance, which supports the tenet that innovative and strategic organizational structures and functional alignments can provide sustainable competitive advantages in performance.
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Hepatic adenomatosis: spectrum of imaging findings.
TL;DR: In addition to such entities as multifocal hepatocellular carcinoma, metastases, and multiple focal nodular hyperplasia, hepatic adenomatosis should also be considered when confronted with multiple hypervascular liver lesions.
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The genetic classification of pancreatic neoplasia
TL;DR: The recent sequencing of all of the major types of cystic and noncystic neoplasms of the pancreas has revealed opportunities for molecular diagnoses and for personalized treatment.