Steven Orlov
University of Toronto
17 Papers
125 Citations
Steven Orlov is an academic researcher from University of Toronto. The author has contributed to research in topics: Thyroglobulin & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 16 publications. Previous affiliations of Steven Orlov include St. Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton.
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Papers
Induction of Painless Thyroiditis in Patients Receiving Programmed Death 1 Receptor Immunotherapy for Metastatic Malignancies
TL;DR: The anti-PD-1 mAb is a novel exogenous cause of PTS and provides new insight into the possible perturbations of the immune network that may modulate the development of endogenous PTS, including cases of sporadic and postpartum thyroiditis.
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Structure-Function Relationship Between Corneal Nerves and Conventional Small-Fiber Tests in Type 1 Diabetes
Gavasker A. Sivaskandarajah,Elise M. Halpern,Leif E. Lovblom,Alanna Weisman,Steven Orlov,Vera Bril,Bruce A. Perkins +6 more
TL;DR: Small nerve fiber structural morphology assessed by IVCCM correlated well with functional measures of small nerve fiber injury, andCNFL, CNFD, and CNBD demonstrated clear structure-function relationships.
100
Heart Rate Variability and Sensorimotor Polyneuropathy in Type 1 Diabetes
TL;DR: HRV may be a biomarker for clinical DSP and is associated cross-sectionally with both early and late measures of neuropathy, as well as with validated measures of large and small fiber neuropathy.
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Promoting resource stewardship: Reducing inappropriate free thyroid hormone testing.
Julie A. Gilmour,Julie A. Gilmour,Alanna Weisman,Steven Orlov,Steven Orlov,Robert J. Goldberg,Alyse S. Goldberg,Hayley Baranek,Geetha Mukerji,Geetha Mukerji +9 more
TL;DR: The implementation of a reflex fT4 strategy after education was feasible in reducing overall testing by 49% and was effective in promoting resource stewardship.
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The impact of common variation in the definition of diabetic sensorimotor polyneuropathy on the validity of corneal in vivo confocal microscopy in patients with type 1 diabetes: a brief report.
TL;DR: The consensus definition for diabetic sensorimotor polyneuropathy allows for subtle variation in specific diagnostic criteria, and it is found that common variations in these criteria do not impact the diagnostic validity of corneal nerve fiber length.
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