Gregory Dyba
3 Papers
Gregory Dyba is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Dysphagia. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 3 publications.
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Papers
Contemporary Outcomes after Treatment of Aberrant Subclavian Artery and Kommerell's Diverticulum.
Jonathan Bath,Mario D'Oria,Richard T. Rogers,Jill J. Colglazier,Drew J. Braet,Dawn M. Coleman,Salvatore T. Scali,Martin R. Back,Gregory A. Magee,Anastasia Plotkin,Philip Dueppers,Alexander Zimmermann,Rana O. Afifi,Sophia Khan,Devin S. Zarkowsky,Gregory Dyba,Michael C. Soult,Carlo Setacci,M. Lenti,Loay S. Kabbani,Mitchell R. Weaver,Daniele Bissacco,Santi Trimarchi,Jordan B. Stoecker,Grace J. Wang,Zoltán Szeberin,Enikő Pomozi,C. F. Moffatt,Hugh A. Gelabert,Shahed Tish,Andrew W. Hoel,Nicholas Cortolillo,Emily L. Spangler,Marc A. Passman,Giovanni De Caridi,F. Benedetto,Wei Zhou,Yousef H. Abuhakmeh,Daniel H. Newton,Christopher Liu,Giovanni Tinelli,Yamume Tshomba,Airi Katoh,Sammy S. Siada,Manar Khashram,S.E Gormley,J R Mullins,Zachary C. Schmittling,Thomas S. Maldonado,Amani D. Politano,Paweł Rynio,Arkadiusz Kazimierczak,Alexander Gombert,Houman Jalaie,Paolo Spath,Enrico Gallitto,Martin Czerny,Tim Berger,Mark G. Davies,Francesco Stilo,Nunzio Montelione,Luca Mezzetto,Gian Franco Veraldi,Sandro Lepidi,Peter F. Lawrence,Karen Woo +65 more
TL;DR: Aberrant subclavian artery (ASA) and Kommerell's diverticulum (KD) are rare vascular anomalies that may be associated with lifestyle-limiting and life-threatening complications as discussed by the authors .
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International Multi-Institutional Experience with Presentation and Management of Aortic Arch Laterality in Aberrant Subclavian Artery and Kommerell's Diverticulum.
Jonathan Bath,Richard T. Rogers,Jill J. Colglazier,Drew J. Braet,Dawn M. Coleman,Salvatore T. Scali,Martin R. Back,Gregory A. Magee,Anastasia Plotkin,Philip Dueppers,Alexander Zimmermann,Rana O. Afifi,Sophia Khan,Devin S. Zarkowsky,Gregory Dyba,Michael C. Soult,Kevin Mani,Anders Wanhainen,Carlo Setacci,M. Lenti,Loay S. Kabbani,Mitchell R. Weaver,Daniele Bissacco,Santi Trimarchi,Jordan B. Stoecker,Grace J. Wang,Zoltán Szeberin,Enikő Pomozi,Hugh A. Gelabert,Shahed Tish,Andrew W. Hoel,Nicholas Cortolillo,Emily L. Spangler,Marc A. Passman,Giovanni De Caridi,F. Benedetto,Wei Zhou,Yousef H. Abuhakmeh,Daniel H. Newton,Christopher Liu,Giovanni Tinelli,Yamume Tshomba,Airi Katoh,Sammy S. Siada,Manar Khashram,J R Mullins,Zachary C. Schmittling,Thomas S. Maldonado,Amani D. Politano,Paweł Rynio,Arkadiusz Kazimierczak,Alexander Gombert,Houman Jalaie,Paolo Spath,Enrico Gallitto,Martin Czerny,Tim Berger,Mark G. Davies,Francesco Stilo,Nunzio Montelione,Luca Mezzetto,Gian Franco Veraldi,Mario D'Oria,Sandro Lepidi,Peter F. Lawrence,Karen Woo +65 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors compared the outcomes of ASA/KD repair in patients with a left versus right aortic arch and found that patients in RAA were more likely to undergo repair due to symptoms (72.7% vs. 55.9%, P = 0.01), and more likely with dysphagia (57.6% vs 39.1%, P < 0.06).
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Morbidity and Long-Term Patient Reported Outcomes Following Advanced Carotid Body Tumor Resection.
TL;DR: The reported risk of a cranial nerve (CN) injury is up to 1 in 4 patients in large registries of carotid body tumor (CBT) resection from November 2013 through October 2020 as mentioned in this paper .
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