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Matthew Kroh

Researcher at Cleveland Clinic

Publications -  177
Citations -  3840

Matthew Kroh is an academic researcher from Cleveland Clinic. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Sleeve gastrectomy. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 150 publications receiving 3144 citations. Previous affiliations of Matthew Kroh include Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai & Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine.

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Can diabetes be surgically cured? Long-term metabolic effects of bariatric surgery in obese patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus.

TL;DR: Bariatric surgery can induce a significant and sustainable remission and improvement of type 2 diabetes (T2DM) remission and other metabolic risk factors in severely obese patients and surgical intervention within 5 years of diagnosis is associated with a high rate of long-term remission.
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Novel Robotic da Vinci Instruments for Laparoendoscopic Single-site Surgery

TL;DR: R-LESS kidney surgery using the VeSPA instruments is feasible and efficient in the porcine model and offers a wide range of motion, instrument and scope stability, improved ergonomics, and minimal instrument clashing.
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First human surgery with a novel single-port robotic system: cholecystectomy using the da Vinci Single-Site platform.

TL;DR: The first human experience performing cholecystectomy with a novel robotic single-port platform using the da Vinci Single-Site system is presented and availability of this new semi-rigid, robotic surgery platform may increase access to the potential advantages of single-site surgery.
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Influence of pouch and stoma size on weight loss after gastric bypass

TL;DR: The current definition of a "normal" size pouch/stoma is associated with optimal weight loss after RYGB, although this might need to be reviewed.
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Laparoscopic gastric plication for treatment of severe obesity

TL;DR: The initial experience has suggested that a reduction in gastric capacity can be achieved by way of plication of the anterior stomach and greater curvature, and the use of laparoscopic GCP warrants additional investigation as a primary bariatric procedure.