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Haq Nawaz

Researcher at University of Pittsburgh

Publications -  20
Citations -  994

Haq Nawaz is an academic researcher from University of Pittsburgh. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pancreatitis & Acute pancreatitis. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 20 publications receiving 805 citations. Previous affiliations of Haq Nawaz include Mayo Clinic & Aga Khan University.

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Developmental dysplasia of the hip

TL;DR: Treatment of developmental dysplasia of the hip depends on age at presentation and outcomes are much better when the child is treated early, particularly during the first six months of life.
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Elevated serum triglycerides are independently associated with persistent organ failure in acute pancreatitis.

TL;DR: Elevated serum TGs in AP patients are independently and proportionally correlated with persistent organ failure regardless of etiology, and TG-mediated lipotoxicity may be an attractive target to design novel interventions for severe AP.
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Revised Atlanta and Determinant-Based Classification: Application in a Prospective Cohort of Acute Pancreatitis Patients

TL;DR: Atlanta 2012 and DBC severity categories accurately reflected clinical outcomes in the authors' cohort and were superior to Atlanta 1992, which can guide the selection of homogeneous patient populations for clinical research and provide an accurate spectrum of disease severity categories in the clinical setting.
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Performance Characteristics of Endoscopic Ultrasound in the Staging of Pancreatic Cancer: A Meta-Analysis

TL;DR: EUS is an accurate pre-operative tool in the assessment of nodal staging, vascular invasion and resectability in patients with pancreatic cancer and it is found that the specificities of EUS were comparable in studies where both imaging techniques were performed.
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Acute health effects of the Tasman Spirit oil spill on residents of Karachi, Pakistan

TL;DR: Results suggest that the occurrence of increased symptoms among the exposed group is more likely to be due to exposure to the crude oil spill, and there was a trend of decreasing symptom-specific PORs with increase in distance from the spill site.