J. Manuel Sarmiento
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
26 Papers
41 Citations
J. Manuel Sarmiento is an academic researcher from Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Hazard ratio. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 20 publications.
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Papers
Survival and prognostic factors of anaplastic gliomas.
Miriam A Nuno,Kurtis Birch,Debraj Mukherjee,J. Manuel Sarmiento,Keith L. Black,Chirag G. Patil +5 more
TL;DR: First-course radiation, younger age, female sex, treatment in recent years, and surgery were associated with improved survival in anaplastic astrocytoma patients, and age was the most prominent predictor of survival in AO patients.
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Early versus delayed postoperative radiotherapy for treatment of low‐grade gliomas
TL;DR: It is found that early postoperative radiotherapy is associated with an increase in time to progression compared to observation (and delayed radiotherapy upon disease progression) for people with LGG but does not significantly improve overall survival.
Multiple resections and survival of recurrent glioblastoma patients in the temozolomide era
Alicia Ortega,J. Manuel Sarmiento,Diana Ly,Miriam A Nuno,Debraj Mukherjee,Keith L. Black,Chirag G. Patil +6 more
TL;DR: After adjusting for age at diagnosis, multiple resections were not an independent predictor of OS in the glioblastoma cohort treated in the temozolomide era.
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Proposed Diagnostic Criteria, Classification Schema, and Review of Literature of Notochord- Derived Ecchordosis Physaliphora
TL;DR: A set of diagnostic criteria based on features consistently cited in the literature is proposed, including location, T1-hypointensity, T2-hyperintensity, and lack of enhancement following gadolinium (Gd) contrast administration for ecchordosis physaliphora.
Interspinous device versus laminectomy for lumbar spinal stenosis: a comparative effectiveness study
Chirag G. Patil,J. Manuel Sarmiento,Beatrice Ugiliweneza,Debraj Mukherjee,Miriam A Nuno,John C. Liu,Sartaaj Walia,Shivanand P. Lad,Maxwell Boakye,Maxwell Boakye +9 more
TL;DR: Twelve-month reoperation rates and index hospitalization costs were significantly higher among patients who underwent ID compared with laminectomy for LSS, and the ID patients had significantly higher re operation rates than laminationectomy patients at 12 months follow-up.
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