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Stephen A. Koff

Researcher at Ohio State University

Publications -  47
Citations -  3217

Stephen A. Koff is an academic researcher from Ohio State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hydronephrosis & Urethra. The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 47 publications receiving 3088 citations. Previous affiliations of Stephen A. Koff include Nationwide Children's Hospital & American Urological Association.

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The Assessment of Obstruction in the Newborn with Unilateral Hydronephrosis by Measuring the Size of the Opposite Kidney

TL;DR: Comparison of subgroups of neonates with unilateral hydronephrosis or multicystic renal dysplasia to normal controls demonstrated that compensatory changes do occur in the normal kidney and could be used as a diagnostic test for defining or excluding obstruction.
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Long-term outcome of transurethral puncture of ectopic ureteroceles: initial success and late problems.

TL;DR: Transurethral puncture of ectopic ureteroceles provides effective short-term correction of upper pole obstruction but it is not definitive therapy in the majority of cases, and most children still require open surgery.
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Preoperative treatment with human chorionic gonadotropin in infancy decreases the severity of proximal hypospadias and chordee.

TL;DR: HCG pretreatment in infancy produces disproportional penile enlargement, which advances the meatus distally to decrease the severity of hypospadias and chordee, and appears to improve surgical results.
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Nonoperative management of unilateral neonatal hydronephrosis

TL;DR: It is suggested that many newborn kidneys with severe hydronephrosis are not obstructed despite even profound initial decreases in renal function and that traditional tests for diagnosing obstruction are inaccurate in this age group.
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Guidelines to determine the size and shape of intestinal segments used for reconstruction.

TL;DR: The geometry of intact and detubularized intestinal segments was examined to establish guidelines in estimating the length of bowel required for urinary reconstruction and for the preferential use of bowel in its detubULARized form.