David W. Chang
University of Chicago
477 Papers
3.4K Citations
David W. Chang is an academic researcher from University of Chicago. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 67, co-authored 353 publications. Previous affiliations of David W. Chang include Cisco Systems, Inc. & MedStar Washington Hospital Center.
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Papers
Results of treatment of 385 patients with peritoneal surface spread of appendiceal malignancy.
TL;DR: Cytoreductive surgery and perioperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy can be used to salvage selected patients with peritoneal surface spread of appendiceal primary tumors.
606
A prospective analysis of 100 consecutive lymphovenous bypass cases for treatment of extremity lymphedema.
TL;DR: Indocyanine green lymphangiography accurately identified functional lymphatic vessels and may have a role in objectively assessing lymphedema severity and patient selection, particularly in patients with early-stage upper extremity lympheredema.
471
Biologically Targeted Magnetic Hyperthermia: Potential and Limitations.
David W. Chang,May Lim,Jeroen A.C.M. Goos,Jeroen A.C.M. Goos,Ruirui Qiao,Yun Yee Ng,Friederike M. Mansfeld,Friederike M. Mansfeld,Michael Jackson,Thomas P. Davis,Thomas P. Davis,Maria Kavallaris +11 more
TL;DR: There are numerous challenges that must be addressed before this technique can progress to the clinic and this review discusses these challenges and highlights the current understanding of targeted magnetic hyperthermia.
Morbidity and Mortality Analysis of 200 Treatments With Cytoreductive Surgery and Hyperthermic Intraoperative Intraperitoneal Chemotherapy Using the Coliseum Technique
Arvil D. Stephens,Robert Alderman,David W. Chang,Gary Edwards,Jesus Esquivel,Gilbert Sebbag,Mark A. Steves,Paul H. Sugarbaker +7 more
TL;DR: HIIC may be applied to select patients with peritoneal carcinomatosis from gastrointestinal malignancies with 27.0% major morbidity and 1.5% treatment-related mortality.
415
Effect of obesity on flap and donor-site complications in free transverse rectus abdominis myocutaneous flap breast reconstruction
David W. Chang,Bao Guang Wang,Geoffrey L. Robb,Gregory P. Reece,Michael J. Miller,Gregory R. D. Evans,Howard N. Langstein,Stephen S. Kroll +7 more
TL;DR: Obese and overweight patients undergoing breast reconstruction with free TRAM flaps had significantly higher total flap loss, flap hematoma, flap seroma, mastectomy skin flap necrosis, donor‐site infection, donor-site seroma and hernia compared with normalweight patients.
380