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Bram H. Goldstein

Researcher at Memorial Hospital of South Bend

Publications -  124
Citations -  1444

Bram H. Goldstein is an academic researcher from Memorial Hospital of South Bend. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ovarian cancer & Gynecologic oncology. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 119 publications receiving 1291 citations. Previous affiliations of Bram H. Goldstein include Children's Hospital of Philadelphia & Hoag.

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Survival rate comparisons amongst cervical cancer patients treated with an open, robotic-assisted or laparoscopic radical hysterectomy: A five year experience.

TL;DR: It is suggested that, irrespective of operative approach, patients who underwent a radical hysterectomy for early stage cervical cancer attained similar 5-year disease free and overall survival outcomes.
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Pilot study assessing robotic laparoscopic hysterectomy and patient outcomes.

TL;DR: While the number of patients and nonrandomized nature of this single-institution experience are insufficient to draw any definitive conclusions regarding potential treatment efficacy, the patient postoperative stay and low complication rates suggest that this procedure is feasible and promising.
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Abraxane in the treatment of ovarian cancer: The absence of hypersensitivity reactions

TL;DR: Abraxane is a solvent free taxane, which can be administered without the pre-medications routinely used to prevent HSR, and may offer paclitaxel HSR patients the benefit of continued taxane treatment.
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The Impact of Frontal and Non-Frontal Brain Tumor Lesions on Wisconsin Card Sorting Test Performance.

TL;DR: The results suggest that the WCST is sensitive to the effects of low-grade brain tumors on executive functioning and committed significantly more perseverative errors than the right frontal group.
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Adherence to mammography and colorectal cancer screening in women 50-80 years of age the role of psychological distress.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the impact of women's attitudes and health beliefs regarding breast and colorectal cancer screening practices and found that women were far more likely to obtain regular mammography screening than an FOBT.