Mathew Fakhoury
Smith Institute
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Featured researches published by Mathew Fakhoury.
BJUI | 2014
Sammy E. Elsamra; Mathew Fakhoury; Hector Motato; Justin I. Friedlander; Daniel M. Moreira; Joel H. Hillelsohn; Brian Duty; Zeph Okeke; Arthur D. Smith
To evaluate perspectives of urologists viewing live case demonstrations (LCD) and taped case demonstrations (TCD).
The Journal of Urology | 2015
David Leavitt; Piruz Motamedinia; Shamus Moran; Michael Siev; Philip T. Zhao; Nithin Theckumparampil; Mathew Fakhoury; Sammy E. Elsamra; David M. Hoenig; Arthur D. Smith; Zeph Okeke
PURPOSE Activities of daily living provide information about the functional status of an individual and can predict postoperative complications after general and oncological surgery. However, they have rarely been applied to urology. We evaluated whether deficits in activities of daily living could predict complications after percutaneous nephrolithotomy and how this compares with the Charlson comorbidity index and the ASA(®) (American Society of Anesthesiologists(®)) classification. MATERIALS AND METHODS We retrospectively reviewed the records of all patients who underwent percutaneous nephrolithotomy between March 2013 and March 2014. Those with complete assessment of activities of daily living were included in analysis. Perioperative outcomes, complications and hospital length of stay were examined according to the degree of deficits in daily living activities. RESULTS Overall 176 patients underwent a total of 192 percutaneous nephrolithotomies. Deficits in activities of daily living were seen in 16% of patients, including minor in 9% and major in 7%. Complications developed more frequently in those with vs without deficits in daily living activities (53% vs 31%, p = 0.029) and length of stay was longer (2.0 vs 4.5 days, p = 0.005). On multivariate logistic regression activities of daily living were an independent predictor of complications (OR 1.11, p = 0.01) but ASA classification and Charlson comorbidity index were not. CONCLUSIONS Activities of daily living are easily evaluated prior to surgery. They independently predict complications following percutaneous nephrolithotomy better than the Charlson comorbidity index or the ASA classification. Preoperative assessment of daily living activities can help risk stratify patients and may inform treatment decisions.
International Journal of Biomedical Data Mining | 2014
Ardeshir R Rastinehad; Mathew Fakhoury; Simpa Salami; Oksana Yaskiv; Omid Rofeim; Robert Villani; Eran Ben-Levi
Intraductal carcinoma of the prostate (IDC-P) is an aggressive form of prostate cancer (CaP) with clinical and pathological features distinguishing it from high-grade prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia (HG-PIN). IDC-P is characterized by a high volume and high-grade disease, with an aggressive behavior. We present the case of a 63-year-old male with diagnostic MRI imaging indicative of IDC-P. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of IDC-P identified with multi-parametric MRI.
The Journal of Urology | 2017
Mathew Fakhoury; Barbara Gordon; Barbara Shorter; Matthew R. Cohn; Elizabeth Cabezon; James Wysock; Marc A. Bjurlin
RESULTS: 217 PCNLs were completed at our institution between 2010-2015 for stones >2cm. 72 patients (75 kidneys) had large staghorn calculus that met our size criteria. 3 of these were excluded. Overall 28 (39%) of patients were found to have infection stones, either struvite or carbonate. 44(61%) stones were composed of metabolic based stones without any infectious composition. The primary compositions in the metabolic stone group were calcium phosphate (52%), Uric Acid (18%), calcium oxalate (18%), and cystine (12%). In patients with purely metabolic stones, 65% of patients with primarily calcium phosphate hydroxyapatite had positive pre-op urine cultures, while only 12.5% of patients with primary calcium oxalate stones had positive pre-op urine cultures. Preoperative urine cultures revealed Proteus present (4.5% vs 46.4%) for non-infectious and infectious stones. E. Coli was present in preoperative urine cultures (15.9% vs 3.5%) for non-infectious and infectious stones. Proteus was the most common bacteria in infectious stones, while E. Coli was most common with metabolic stones. Infectious stones were 3.2 times as likely to have at least a Clavien-Dindo Grade 1 complication as metabolic stones (p1⁄40.017). CONCLUSIONS: In our study more staghorn calculus were composed of metabolic stones than infectious stones. Calcium phosphate was the most common stone composition for staghorn calculi differing from historical reports of staghorn calculi being primarily infectious. Patients with calcium phosphate stones also had a high rate of positive urine cultures. More research is needed on the cause of this paradigm shift.
The Journal of Urology | 2015
Michael Siev; Piruz Motamedinia; David Leavitt; Mathew Fakhoury; Kevin Barcohana; David M. Hoenig; Arthur D. Smith; Zeph Okeke
The Journal of Urology | 2014
Paras Shah; Manaf Alom; Arvin K. George; Louis R. Kavoussi; Lee Richstone; Daniel M. Moreira; Mathew Fakhoury; Nithin Theckumparampil; Nikhil Wainganker; Sammy Elsamra; Jessica Kreshover; Soroush Rais-Bahrami; Michael Schwartz; Simpa Salami
The Journal of Urology | 2018
Maria Ruden; Christopher Olivares; Mathew Fakhoury; Patricia Vidal; Courtney M.P. Hollowell; Sarah P. Psutka
The Journal of Urology | 2015
Michael Siev; Paras Shah; David Leavitt; Simpa Salami; Vinoth Birabaharan; Mathew Fakhoury; Manaf Alom; Jessica Kreshover; Lee Richstone; Manish Vira; Louis R. Kavoussi
The Journal of Urology | 2015
Mathew Fakhoury; Manaf Alom; Michael Siev; Kai-Wen Chuang; Philip Zhao; Lee Richstone
The Journal of Urology | 2014
Simpa Salami; Mathew Fakhoury; Laura Ryniker; Oksana Yaskiv; Baris Turkbey; Eran Ben-Levi; Robert Villani; Manish Vira; Ardeshir R. Rastinehad