Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Dr. Michael A. Palese, is an American urologist specializing in robotic, laparoscopic and endoscopic surgery, with a special emphasis on robotic surgeries relating to kidney cancer and kidney stone disease.
Although kidney stones should not be considered a disease that primarily affects “white, middle-aged” men anymore, Dr. Gregory Tasian, a pediatric urologist at the Children’s Hospital of ...
Dr. Yaniv Larish sees dozens of patients each week at Fifth Avenue Urology in New York City. A urologist and surgeon, he treats all kinds of conditions, from complex kidney stones to incontinence ...
Kamran has contributed significantly to the medical education literature. Widely used scientifically developed and validated urology surgical curricula include Robot assisted prostatectomy training curriculum for prostate cancer surgery training, [18] Radical nephrectomy curriculum for kidney cancer surgical training, [19] and Percutaneous nephrolithotomy (PCNL) for kidney stone surgery ...
Jay Y. Gillenwater (born July 27, 1933 in Kingsport) is professor emeritus at the University of Virginia.He is former chair of the Department of Urology at the School of Medicine of the University of Virginia, was president of the American Urological Association, editor of the Journal of Urology, member of the NIH Advisory Council of Diabetes, Digestive, and Kidney Diseases, and president of ...
Urologists and nephrologists agree: If you have a kidney stone, chances are you won't miss the signs, because they hurt. Many women who've both given birth and passed kidney stones say that the ...
Author Isaac Asimov suffered from kidney stones, and wrote about how his pain was treated with morphine, saying that he feared becoming addicted to morphine if he ever needed it again. [44] During the 1980s, his problem with kidney stones developed into kidney disease, which resulted in multiple hospitalizations. [45]
"The idea is if you have a kidney stone you can come and get the work done and the removal in 24 hours. The average wait time to see a urologist for a kidney stone can be two weeks," Bloomfield said.