Diagnosis (2024)

California

Lorenzo Rossaro, M.D.
Professor and Chief
Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology
University of California, Davis
Internal Medicine – Transplant
HSF 2nd Floor
2233 Stockton Blvd.
Sacramento, CA 95817
Phone: (916) 734-8686
Fax: (916) 734-8698
E-mail: lorenzo.rossaro@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu

Henrietta Salazar
UCLA School of Medicine
Department of Neurology
710 Westwood Plaza
Los Angeles, CA 90095
USA
Phone: (310) 206-9799
Fax (310) 206-9819
E-mail: hsalazar@ucla.edu

Valentina Medici MD, FAASLD
Department of Internal Medicine
Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology
University of California Davis
Sacramento, California
vmedici@ucdavis.edu
phone 916 734 3751

Connecticut

Pramod K. Mistry, MD, PhD, FRCP, FAASLD,
Professor of Medicine and Pediatrics,
Professor of Cellular & Molecular Physiology,
Pramod K. Mistry MD, PhD
Internal Medicine
Yale School of Medicine and Yale New Haven Hospital.
New Haven, CT
PRAMOD.MISTRY@YALE.EDU
203 785 3412

Dr. Michael Schilsky
Yale University School of Medicine
333 Cedar Street/1080 LMP
P.O. Box 208019
New Haven, CT 06520-8019
E-Mail: Michael.schilsky@yale.edu
To schedule an appointment with Dr. Schilsky,
contact Ms. Eta Kaplan at 203-737-1592

Georgia

Lance L Stein MD
Piedmont Transplant Institute
Piedmont Atlanta Hospital
(Additional satellite clinic office locations in Athens, Albany, Dalton, Macon, savannah – all in Georgia)
Clin asst prof of medicine, Mercer university school of medicine
1968 Peachtree Road NW
77 Building, 5th Floor
Office 404-605-4669
Lance.stein@piedmont.org

Michigan

University of Michigan Hospital
Fred Askari, M.D., Ph.D.
Director
Associate Professor
University of Michigan Hospital
Liver Clinic
1st floor Taubman Center Area G
Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109
Phone: 800-333-9013
Fax: 734-763-4574
Appointments 800-333-9013
E-mail:faskari@umich.edu

Dr. George Brewer
Phone: 734-332-7810
E-mail: brewergj@umich.edu

Dr. Joseph Eisenach
Phone: (816) 478-2000
E-mail: jbeisenach@AOL.com

New York

Elizabeth Verna, MD
Columbia University Medical
633 W 168th Street
New York, NY 10032
202-305-0914

Miodra Velickovic, M.D.
Movement Disorders Center
Box 1637
Department of Neurology
The Mount Sinai Medical Center
5 East Street, 1st Floor
New York, NY 10029-6574
Phone: (212) 241-5607
E-mail: miodrag.velickovic@mssm.edu

Ohio

Pierre M. Gholam, MD, FAASLD, AGAF
Medical Director, Liver Center of Excellence
Digestive Health Institute
University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center
Director, Multidisciplinary Hepatobiliary Tumor Program
Seidman Cancer Center
Professor of Medicine
Division of Gastroenterology and Liver Disease
Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine
11100 Euclid Avenue
Cleveland OH 44106
P (216) 286-6757
F (216) 844-7480

James Squireds, MD
Veena Venkat, MD
Simon Horslen, MD
Children’s Hospital Pittsburg
4401 Penn Avenue
Pittsburg, PA 15213
412-692-5180

Arthur Mcullough, MD
Cleveland Clinic
9500 Euclid Avenue
Cleveland, OH 44195
216-444-6526 (apt)
216-444-6521 (desk)
216-444-2766 (Hepatology dept)

Tennessee

Peter Hedera, M.D.
Assistant Professor
Department of Neurology
Vanderbilt University
465 21st Avenue, South
6140 MRB III
Nashville, TN 37232-8552
USA
Phone: (615) 936-3920
Fax: (615) 322-5517
E-mail: peter.hedera@vanderbilt.edu

Texas

Tamir Miloh, MD
Director of Pediatric Hepatology and Liver Transplant Medicine
Texas Children’s Hospital
Associate Professor, Baylor College of Medicine
Phone: 832-822-3671
tamiloh@texaschildrens.org

Washington

Sihoun Hahn, M.D., Ph.D.
Director, Biochemical Genetics Program
Seattle Children’s Hospital
4800 Sand Point Way NE, Mailstop: B-6594
Seattle, WA 98105
Phone: 206-987-7610
E-mail: sihahn@u.washington.edu

The pediatric team will see adult patients at the University of Washington.
For information/appointments (pediatric and adult) please contact:
Ashley Atkinson, RN, BSN, CPON
Appointments: Fax referral and records to (206) 985-3121
E-mail: Ashley.Atkinson@seattlechildrens.org

Kris Kowdley, M.D.
Associate Professor of Medicine
Division of Gastroenterology/Hepatology
University of Washington
Seattle, WA
Phone: (206) 598-2076
Fax: (206) 598-6706
E-mail: kkowdley@u.washington.edu

Diagnosis (2024)

FAQs

What is the definition of a diagnosis? ›

(DY-ug-NOH-sis) The process of identifying a disease, condition, or injury from its signs and symptoms. A health history, physical exam, and tests, such as blood tests, imaging tests, and biopsies, may be used to help make a diagnosis.

What is the difference between diagnosis and diagnoses? ›

Diagnosis is one; it is singular. Diagnoses is plural; more than one. The word is medical Latin (it follows Latin word construction), and comes from a Greek root meaning “to see through”.

What are the 3 types of diagnosis? ›

Types of medical diagnosis are:
  • Provisional: Based on physical exam and clinical findings.
  • Histopathological: Done by a pathologist after examining sample tissue under a microscope.
  • Final: Done based on provisional diagnosis and investigations.

What is diagnosis in one word? ›

: investigation or analysis of the cause or nature of a condition, situation, or problem.

Is a diagnosis a disability? ›

To make things more confusing, sometimes you may see or hear the terms “disability category” and “eligibility category” used interchangeably. An easy way to remember the difference is: Doctors give a diagnosis. School evaluators use diagnoses to help determine disability categories.

Does diagnosis mean results? ›

A diagnosis is an identification of a disease via examination. What follows is a prognosis, which is a prediction of the course of the disease as well as the treatment and results. A helpful trick is that a diagnosis comes before a prognosis, and diagnosis is before prognosis alphabetically.

Is disorder and diagnosis the same thing? ›

A disease is distinct and measurable. A disorder might indicate that a specific disease is possible but there is not enough clinical evidence for diagnosis. It may be clear you have an autoimmune disorder of some sort, but it may take time to receive a specific diagnosis like RA.

What are the two types of diagnosis? ›

Clinical diagnosis. A diagnosis made on the basis of medical signs and reported symptoms, rather than diagnostic tests. Laboratory diagnosis. A diagnosis based significantly on laboratory reports or test results, rather than the physical examination of the patient.

What comes before diagnosis? ›

This begins with the patient sharing their clinical history, and the physician conducting a physical examination. The patient's report of symptoms (what they say) and signs (findings from a physical exam) comprise the two main elements that most inform a diagnosis.

What is the most common diagnosis? ›

In 2018 there were approximately 860,386,000 visits to primary care offices. The top five diagnoses—essential hypertension, diabetes mellitus, osteoarthritis, depressive disorders, and acute respiratory infections—accounted for more than one-tenth of these visits.

What is the rule of 2 diagnosis? ›

The second rule, called “the AND rule,” yields a positive diagnosis only if both tests are positive and a negative diagnosis if either test is negative. That is, if test A and test B are both positive, then the combined result is positive, but if either or both are negative, then the combined result is negative.

What is the opposite of a diagnosis? ›

'Misdiagnosis' is the antonym for the noun 'diagnosis'. The corresponding verb is 'misdiagnose'.

What is the word for wrong diagnosis? ›

noun,plural mis·di·ag·no·ses [mis-dahy-uhg-noh-seez]. an incorrect diagnosis.

Is diagnosis a test? ›

A test used to help figure out what disease or condition a person has based on their signs and symptoms. Diagnostic tests may also be used to help plan treatment, find out how well treatment is working, and make a prognosis. There are many different types of diagnostic tests.

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