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Benjamin W. Starnes
Researcher at University of Washington
Publications - 143
Citations - 4077
Benjamin W. Starnes is an academic researcher from University of Washington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Aneurysm. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 123 publications receiving 2876 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The Society for Vascular Surgery practice guidelines on the care of patients with an abdominal aortic aneurysm
Elliot L. Chaikof,Ronald L. Dalman,Mark K. Eskandari,Benjamin M. Jackson,W. Anthony Lee,M. Ashraf Mansour,Tara M. Mastracci,Matthew W. Mell,M. Hassan Murad,Louis L. Nguyen,Gustavo S. Oderich,Madhukar S. Patel,Marc L. Schermerhorn,Benjamin W. Starnes +13 more
TL;DR: A door‐to‐intervention time of <90 minutes is suggested, based on a framework of 30‐30‐30 minutes, for the management of the patient with a ruptured aneurysm, and the Vascular Quality Initiative mortality risk score is suggested for mutual decision‐making with patients considering aneurYSm repair.
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Functional and survival outcomes in traumatic blunt thoracic aortic injuries: An analysis of the National Trauma Databank
Zachary M. Arthurs,Benjamin W. Starnes,Vance Y. Sohn,Niten Singh,Matthew J. Martin,Charles A. Andersen +5 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors determined the incidence of Blunt thoracic aortic injury (BAI) and analyzed both functional and survival outcomes at discharge compared with matched controls.
Journal ArticleDOI
Management of ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm in the endovascular era
Benjamin W. Starnes,Elina Quiroga,Carolyn M. Hutter,Nam T. Tran,Thomas S. Hatsukami,Mark H. Meissner,Gale Tang,Ted R. Kohler +7 more
TL;DR: In this article, an algorithm to promote endovascular aneurysm repair (EVAR) when feasible was implemented to reduce the 30-day mortality of rAAA patients.
Journal ArticleDOI
Physician-modified endovascular grafts for the treatment of elective, symptomatic, or ruptured juxtarenal aortic aneurysms
TL;DR: PMEG is a safe and effective alternative for treating patients with juxtarenal aneurysms who have no other alternatives for repair and potential for device-related complications.
Journal ArticleDOI
Results of the ANCHOR prospective, multicenter registry of EndoAnchors for type Ia endoleaks and endograft migration in patients with challenging anatomy
William D. Jordan,Manish Mehta,David Varnagy,William M. Moore,Frank R. Arko,James Joye,Kenneth Ouriel,Jean-Paul P.M. de Vries,Jean-Paul P. M. de Vries,Hans-Henning Eckstein,Joost A. van Herwaarden,Paul Bove,William T. Bohannon,Bram Fioole,Carlo Setacci,Timothy Resch,Vicente Riambau,Dierk Scheinert,Andrej Schmidt,Daniel G. Clair,Mohammed M. Moursi,Mark A. Farber,Joerg Tessarek,Giovanni Torsello,Mark F. Fillinger,Marc H. Glickman,John P. Henretta,Kim J. Hodgson,Jeffrey Jim,Barry T. Katzen,Evan C. Lipsitz,Mitchell W. Cox,Thomas C. Naslund,Venkatesh G. Ramaiah,Marc L. Schermerhorn,Peter Schneider,Benjamin W. Starnes,Carlos E. Donayre,Burkhart Zipfel,Nitin Malhotra,William T. Moore,Nicholas J.W. Cheshire,Colin Bicknell,Martin R. Back,Bart E. Muhs,Mahmoud B. Malas,Syed M. Hussain,NavYash Gupta,Dittmar Böckler,Eric L.G. Verhoeven,Michel M.P.J. Reijnen +50 more
TL;DR: Use of EndoAnchors to treat existing and acute type Ia endoleaks and endograft migration was successful in most cases and prophylactic use in patients with hostile aortic neck anatomy appears promising.