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Richard S. Lazzaro

Researcher at Lenox Hill Hospital

Publications -  54
Citations -  541

Richard S. Lazzaro is an academic researcher from Lenox Hill Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Tracheobronchomalacia. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 40 publications receiving 410 citations. Previous affiliations of Richard S. Lazzaro include New York Methodist Hospital & North Shore University Hospital.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Practical Algorithmic Approach to the Diagnosis and Management of Solitary Pulmonary Nodules: Part 1: Radiologic Characteristics and Imaging Modalities

TL;DR: The morphologic characteristics and various imaging modalities available to further characterize SPN are described and the determination of pretest probability of malignancy is described and an algorithmic approach to the diagnosis of SPN is described.
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A Practical Algorithmic Approach to the Diagnosis and Management of Solitary Pulmonary Nodules: Part 2: Pretest Probability and Algorithm

TL;DR: An algorithmic approach to the diagnosis of the solitary pulmonary nodule (SPN), taking into account the significant medical history and social habits of the individual patient, as well as morphologic characteristics of the nodule.
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Cystic Lung Diseases: Algorithmic Approach

TL;DR: Using the results of the high-resolution CT scans as a starting point, and incorporating the patient's clinical history, physical examination, and laboratory findings, is likely to narrow the differential diagnosis of cystic lesions considerably.
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A prospective randomized comparison of Dacron and polytetrafluoroethylene aortic bifurcation grafts

TL;DR: The immediate postoperative morbidity and mortality rates were similar in the two groups, and the long-term complications were low in number and comparable.
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First series of minimally invasive, robot-assisted tracheobronchoplasty with mesh for severe tracheobronchomalacia.

TL;DR: Early follow‐up reveals significant improvement in pulmonary function testing and high patient satisfaction when compared with preoperative baseline, and long‐term follow-up is needed to demonstrate the durability of R‐TBP and substantiate its role in the management of patients with symptomatic, severe tracheobronchomalacia.