Doron S. Stember
Cornell University
5 Papers
132 Citations
Doron S. Stember is an academic researcher from Cornell University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nocturia & Retrospective cohort study. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 5 publications. Previous affiliations of Doron S. Stember include NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital.
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Papers
Nocturia in Adults: Etiology and Classification
TL;DR: The etiology of nocturia was classified into one of three groups: nocturnal polyuria, in which voided urine volume during the hours of sleep exceeds 35% of the 24‐hr output, and mixed (NP + NDO); polyuria (24‐hr urine output >2,500 cc) was classified separately.
Evaluation of the etiology of nocturia in men: The nocturia and nocturnal bladder capacity indices
TL;DR: A discriminating threshold of NBCi >2 as highly significant in defining diminished NBC as a factor in the etiology of nocturia, and Ni of 1.5 as a threshold greater than whichnocturia may be attributed to nocturnal urine overproduction in excess of maximum bladder capacity are proposed.
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Contemporary management of male infertility.
TL;DR: An overview of male reproductive medicine, which has been revolutionized in the past two decades by dramatic scientific and therapeutic advances, is presented.
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Patent
Process for implantation of an inflatable penile prosthesis and device used in the process
Doron S. Stember,Peter J. Stahl +1 more
- 13 Jun 2014
TL;DR: In this article, a surgical process and a device used in the process, to prevent post-operative migration of the pump of an inflatable penis prosthesis system within the scrotum is described.
1
Long-term followup of augmentation enterocystoplasty and continent diversion in patients with benign disease.
Jerry G. Blaivas,Jeffrey P. Weiss,Pretik Desai,Adam J. Flisser,Doron S. Stember,Peter J. Stahl +5 more
TL;DR: AC and urinary diversion provide a safe and effective long-term therapy in patients with refractory neurogenic bladder but stomal problems in patients With benign urological disorders continue to be a source of complications.