Publications by authors named "C Z Dinlenc"

Surgical experience is associated with superior outcomes in complex urologic cases, such as prostatectomy, nephrectomy, and cystectomy. The question remains whether experience is predictive of outcomes for less complex procedures, such as ureteroscopy (URS). Our study examined how case volume and endourology-fellowship training impacts URS outcomes.

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Objective: To evaluate a single surgeon's 20-year experience with robotic radical prostatectomy.

Methods: Patients who had undergone robot-assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy by a single surgeon were identified via an IRB approved prospectively maintained prostate cancer database. Patients were divided into 5-year cohorts (cohort A 2001-2005; cohort B 2006-2010; cohort C 2011-2015; cohort D 2016-2021) for analysis.

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Purpose: Infection of a penile prosthesis is a devastating complication that necessitates the removal of all device components. Many aspects of preoperative and intraoperative infection prophylaxis practices have been examined but the specific relevant factors remain unknown. We determined whether use of a mandatory checklist of perioperative practices believed to reduce the risk of prosthesis infection would impact patient safety.

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Introduction: Nephrolithiasis in the United States has been on the rise during the past several decades. Temperature has been shown to directly correlate with increased stone disease. We examine the association between climactic factors and monthly urolithiasis presentation rates for 6 years at a single institution in New York City.

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Purpose: To correlate clinical low-risk prostate cancers with pathologic outcomes in men who are considered for active surveillance (AS), interstitial radiation therapy, or radical prostatectomy (RP).

Patients And Methods: Clinical and pathologic data of 76 consecutive patients who underwent RP by a single surgeon between October 2001 and July 2008 were reviewed. The retrospective review identified men with clinical low-risk disease--defined as a prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level <10 ng/mL, no Gleason pattern >3, no >2 cores positive, and no core >50%--who would also have been considered for AS and/or brachytherapy based on these features.

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