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Benjamin W. Corn

Researcher at Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center

Publications -  193
Citations -  5492

Benjamin W. Corn is an academic researcher from Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Radiation therapy & Cancer. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 182 publications receiving 5138 citations. Previous affiliations of Benjamin W. Corn include Drexel University & Shaare Zedek Medical Center.

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Stereotactic radiosurgery and fractionated stereotactic radiotherapy for the treatment of acoustic schwannomas: comparative observations of 125 patients treated at one institution

TL;DR: SRS and SRT represent comparable noninvasive treatments for acoustic schwannomas in both sporadic and NF-2 patient groups and may therefore be preferable to alternatives including surgery, SRS, or possibly observation in patients with serviceable hearing.
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Vaginal stenosis and sexual function following intracavitary radiation for the treatment of cervical and endometrial carcinoma

TL;DR: High-dose radiation for either cervical or endometrial carcinoma at standard doses with or without hysterectomy can cause a decrease in vaginal length as compared to the normal vaginal length documented by Masters and Johnson.
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Irradiation-related ischemic heart disease.

TL;DR: A clear association between thoracic radiotherapy and ischemic heart disease was observed among older clinical studies using radiotherapeutic techniques that are no longer optimal by today's standards, but this relationship could not be confirmed in modern studies in which treatment factors were more carefully controlled.
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Impact of improved irradiation technique, age, and lymph node sampling on the severe complication rate of surgically staged endometrial cancer patients: a multivariate analysis

TL;DR: Severe complications associated with adjuvant RT for endometrial cancer were increased among patients who were older or underwent LNS or received suboptimal RT technique, suggesting Pelvic RT using proper methods can be delivered with acceptable risks.