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Yakov Gologorsky
Researcher at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Publications - 43
Citations - 1048
Yakov Gologorsky is an academic researcher from Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. The author has contributed to research in topics: Deep brain stimulation & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 38 publications receiving 832 citations. Previous affiliations of Yakov Gologorsky include Mount Sinai Health System & Mount Sinai Hospital.
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Journal ArticleDOI
An update to the Raymond–Roy Occlusion Classification of intracranial aneurysms treated with coil embolization
Justin R Mascitelli,Henry Moyle,Eric K. Oermann,Maritsa F Polykarpou,A Patel,Amish H. Doshi,Yakov Gologorsky,Joshua B. Bederson,Aman B. Patel +8 more
TL;DR: The MRRC has the potential to expand the definition of adequate coil embolization, possibly decrease procedural risk, and help endovascular neurosurgeons predict which patients need closer angiographic follow-up.
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Complications, outcomes, and need for fusion after minimally invasive posterior cervical foraminotomy and microdiscectomy
TL;DR: Minimally invasive PCF with or without MI-PCD is an excellent alternative for cervical radiculopathy secondary to foraminal stenosis or a laterally located herniated disc and Neck Disability Index scores improved significantly immediately postoperatively and continued to decrease gradually with time.
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Improving discharge data fidelity for use in large administrative databases.
TL;DR: Comparing the ICD-9-CM code(s) assigned by the medical coder according to the surgeon's indication based on a review of the medical chart to elucidate barriers to data fidelity may augment data fidelity and minimize coding errors.
Journal ArticleDOI
Deep brain stimulation in DYT1 dystonia: a 10-year experience.
TL;DR: GPi DBS is an effective therapy for DYT1-associated torsion dystonia and Statistically significant efficacy is maintained for up to 7 years.
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Pallidal deep brain stimulation for DYT6 dystonia
Fedor Panov,Michele Tagliati,Laurie J. Ozelius,Tania Fuchs,Yakov Gologorsky,Tyler Cheung,Marat Avshalumov,Susan B. Bressman,Rachel Saunders-Pullman,Donald J. Weisz,Ron L. Alterman +10 more
TL;DR: DYT6 patients appear to respond less robustly to GPi-DBS than their DYT1 counterparts, most likely reflecting differences in the underlying pathophysiology of these distinct genetic disorders.