Ari Bergman
Columbia University
12 Papers
29 Citations
Ari Bergman is an academic researcher from Columbia University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Prostatectomy & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 12 publications. Previous affiliations of Ari Bergman include Columbia University Medical Center.
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Papers
Pain and Analgesic Use After Robot-Assisted Radical Prostatectomy
Solomon L. Woldu,Aaron C. Weinberg,Ari Bergman,Edan Y. Shapiro,Ruslan Korets,Piruz Motamedinia,Ketan K. Badani +6 more
TL;DR: After RARP, most patients experience mild/moderate abdominal discomfort, which improves steadily over several days, and there is a quick decline in the average opiate pain medication use that corresponds to the subjective improvement in pain symptoms.
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The da vinci robot system eliminates multispecialty surgical trainees' hand dominance in open and robotic surgical settings.
Gina M. Badalato,Edan Y. Shapiro,Michael B. Rothberg,Ari Bergman,Arindam RoyChoudhury,Ruslan Korets,Trushar Patel,Ketan K. Badani +7 more
TL;DR: The robotic technique reduces hand dominance in surgical trainees across all task domains, which contributes to the known advantages of robotic surgery.
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Dorsal penile nerve block for robot-assisted radical prostatectomy catheter related pain: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial.
Aaron C. Weinberg,Solomon L. Woldu,Ari Bergman,Arindam RoyChoudhury,Trushar Patel,William Berg,Christel Wambi,Ketan K. Badani +7 more
TL;DR: The data does not support the routine use of a dorsal penile nerve block with bupivacaine following RARP, and there were no differences in reported catheter-related discomfort or bladder spasm-associated discomfort at any of the measured time points.
•Journal Article
Outcomes with delayed dorsal vein complex ligation during robotic assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy.
TL;DR: Delayed DVC ligation after apical dissection is a safe approach with comparable surgical outcomes during RALP and therefore has become standard practice at the authors' institution.
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Laparoscopic pyelolithotomy with intraperitoneal ultrasonic lithotripsy: report of a novel minimally invasive technique for intracorporeal stone ablation.
TL;DR: The case of a 71-year-old Hispanic woman with a 4-cm stone in the renal pelvis of a kidney with thin parenchyma is presented, which avoids the need to extend the 12-mm trocar incision for stone extraction.
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