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Dive into the research topics where Yaron Sternbach is active.

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Featured researches published by Yaron Sternbach.


Seminars in Vascular Surgery | 2010

Ruptured Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm: Endovascular Program Development and Results

Manish Mehta; Paul B. Kreienberg; Sean P. Roddy; Philip S.K. Paty; John B. Taggert; Yaron Sternbach; Jeffery Hnath; Kathleen J. Ozsvath; Benjamin B. Chang; Dhiraj M. Shah; R. Clement Darling

Improvements in endovascular technology and techniques have allowed us to treat patients in ways we never thought possible. Today endovascular treatment of ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysms is associated with markedly decreased morbidity and mortality when compared to the open surgical approach, yet there are several fundamental obstacles in our ability to offer these endovascular techniques to most patients with ruptured aneurysms. This article will focus on the technical aspects of endovascular aneurysm repair for rupture, with particular attention to developing a standardized multidisciplinary approach that will help ones ability to deal with not just the technical aspects of these procedures, but also address some of the challenges including: the availability of preoperative CT, the choice of anesthesia, percutaneous vs. femoral cut-down approach, use of aortic occlusion balloons, need for bifurcated vs. aorto-uniiliac stentgrafts, need for adjunctive procedures, diagnosis and treatment of abdominal compartment syndrome, and conversion to open surgical repair.


Surgery | 2003

Carotid endarterectomy then and now: outcome and cost-effectiveness of modern practice

Karl A. Illig; Cynthia K. Shortell; Renyu Zhang; Yaron Sternbach; Jeffrey M. Rhodes; Mark G. Davies; Kenneth Ouriel; William Tansky; Marcia Johansson; Richard M. Green

BACKGROUNDnDuring the past decade, our practice of performing carotid endarterectomy (CEA) has changed dramatically, most notably by an abrupt shift from routine to selective preoperative angiography, reliance on defined care plans with full-time nurse practitioner oversight, and increasing reliance on eversion endarterectomy and cervical block anesthesia. This study was designed to determine whether these shifts in policy have been associated with lower costs without sacrificing clinical outcome.nnnMETHODSnAll patients undergoing CEA from July 1993 to December 2000 were identified, and inpatient and outpatient charts were reviewed. Cost data were obtained from the central hospital accounting system and converted to 2001 dollars. Thirty-day outcomes and costs were quantified each year and compared between each of 2 temporally well-defined groups: those undergoing routine versus selective angiography and those cared for before and after defined patient care protocols were instituted.nnnRESULTSnA total of 1168 CEAs were analyzed. Thirty-day combined stroke and death rate was 3.1%, and no trends or significant differences over time were seen. From 1993 to 2000 the cost of CEA fell from


Annals of Surgery | 2016

Regionalization of Emergent Vascular Surgery for Patients With Ruptured Aaa Improves Outcomes

Courtney J. Warner; Sean P. Roddy; Benjamin B. Chang; Paul B. Kreienberg; Yaron Sternbach; John B. Taggert; Kathleen J. Ozsvath; Steven C. Stain; R. Clement Darling

9302 to


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2002

Benefits of external beam irradiation for peripheral arterial bypass: preliminary report on a phase I study

Arvind Soni; Karl A. Illig; Yaron Sternbach; Paul Anthony; Phillip Jacob; Gopal Reddy; John Storey; Richard Gerety; Jacqueline P. Williams; Michael C. Schell; David L. Waldman; Philip Rubin; Richard M. Green; Paul Okunieff

6216 (P<.0002), and length of stay was reduced 1 full day (P=.005). Institution of selective angiography was associated with an immediate cost savings of approximately


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2002

Hemodynamic benefits of regional anesthesia for carotid endarterectomy

Yaron Sternbach; Karl A. Illig; Renyu Zhang; Cynthia K. Shortell; Jeffrey M. Rhodes; Mark G. Davies; Sean P. Lyden; Richard M. Green

2000 per case (P<.0001), and nurse practitioner oversight along with institution of defined clinical protocols with a


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2004

Relationship of proximal fixation to postoperative renal dysfunction in patients with normal serum creatinine concentration

Scott M. Surowiec; Mark G. Davies; Allison J. Fegley; William J. Tanski; Vicken N Pamoukian; Yaron Sternbach; David L. Waldman; Richard M. Green

530 (P<.05) decline in nonoperating room-related costs.nnnCONCLUSIONSnChanges in policy from routine to selective angiography, reliance on defined postoperative care pathways, eversion endarterectomy, and cervical block anesthesia have been associated with significant cost savings, with no compromise in clinical outcome at our institution.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2004

Divergent outcomes after percutaneous therapy for symptomatic renal artery stenosis

Nayan Sivamurthy; Scott M. Surowiec; Eva Culakova; Jeffrey M. Rhodes; David E. Lee; Yaron Sternbach; David L. Waldman; Richard M. Green; Mark G. Davies

Objective: Safe and efficient endovascular aneurysm repair (EVAR) for ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm (r-AAA) requires advanced infrastructure and surgical expertise not available at all US hospitals. The objective was to assess the impact of regionalizing r-AAA care to centers equipped for both open surgical repair (r-OSR) and EVAR (r-EVAR) by vascular surgeons. Methods: A retrospective review of all patients with r-AAA undergoing open or endovascular repair in a 12-hospital region. Patient demographics, transfer status, type of repair, and intraoperative variables were recorded. Outcomes included perioperative morbidity and mortality. Results: Four hundred fifty-one patients with r-AAA were treated from 2002 to 2015. Three hundred twenty-one patients (71%) presented initially to community hospitals (CHs) and 130 (29%) presented to the tertiary medical center (MC). Of the 321 patients presenting to CH, 133 (41%) were treated locally (131 OSR; 2 EVAR) and 188 (59%) were transferred to the MC. In total, 318 patients were treated at the MC (122 OSR; 196 EVAR). At the MC, r-EVAR was associated with a lower mortality rate than r-OSR (20% vs 37%, P = 0.001). Transfer did not influence r-EVAR mortality (20% in r-EVAR presenting to MC vs 20% in r-EVAR transferred, P > 0.2). Overall, r-AAA mortality at the MC was 20% lower than CH (27% vs 46%, P < 0.001). Conclusions: Regionalization of r-AAA repair to centers equipped for both r-EVAR and r-OSR decreased mortality by approximately 20%. Transfer did not impact the mortality of r-EVAR at the tertiary center. Care of r-AAA in the US should be centralized to centers equipped with available technology and vascular surgeons.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2002

Technical considerations for late removal of aortic endografts

Sean P. Lyden; JoAnne McNamara; Yaron Sternbach; Karl A. Illig; David L. Waldman; Richard M. Green

PURPOSEnTo perform a Phase I study to determine the safety and feasibility of using external beam radiotherapy to prevent neointimal hyperplasia in patients after surgical bypass of occluded infrainguinal arteries.nnnMETHODS AND MATERIALSnAll patients undergoing operative infrainguinal bypass for chronic ischemia were eligible for enrollment, although those requiring a prosthetic graft were preferentially considered. Immediately after bypass, the distal anastomosis was marked with clips, and the baseline anatomy of the anastomosis was documented with an intraoperative angiogram. The distal anastomotic site and 2 cm of surrounding tissues were irradiated to a total dose of 30 Gy, delivered in 10 fractions. The first dose was given within 48 h of surgery.nnnRESULTSnTwenty-one patients were enrolled in this study. No anastomotic or wound problems or any other short-term complications of the treatment developed. However, at a mean follow-up of 10 months (range 3-18), 12 (57%) of the 21 grafts had occluded. Angiography was performed in 2 patients after successful thrombolysis and demonstrated normal anastomoses without residual stenosis. Evidence of stenosis at the irradiated anastomosis was seen in only 1 of the 21 patients by ongoing ultrasound surveillance.nnnCONCLUSIONnFractionated external irradiation to a total dose of 30 Gy delivered to the distal surgical anastomosis immediately after operative bypass has no short-term complications and was associated with an apparently low rate of intimal hyperplasia. However, any possible gains made by reducing the neointimal hyperplasia at the site of anastomosis were significantly diminished by the high frequency of thrombotic events.


Annals of Vascular Surgery | 2001

Clinical Implications of Internal Iliac Artery Embolization in Endovascular Repair of Aortoiliac Aneurysms

Sean P. Lyden; Yaron Sternbach; David L. Waldman; Richard M. Green


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2003

Is the rationale for carotid angioplasty and stenting in patients excluded from NASCET/ACAS or eligible for ARCHeR justified?

Karl A. Illig; Renyu Zhang; William J. Tanski; Curt Benesch; Yaron Sternbach; Richard M. Green

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Karl A. Illig

University of South Florida

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