Steven Z. Brandeis

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Steven Z. Brandeis, M.D.

Clinical Assistant Professor;
Departments of Surgery (Surgery) and Surgery (Administration)

Clinical Addresses

251 EAST 33 STREET, 2ND FLOOR
NEW YORK, NY 10016
Hours: Mon. 12:30 - 4:45; Thu. 9:30 - 4:45
Handicap Access: yes
Phone: 212-696-5411
Fax: 212-696-5906


Additional Clinical Addresses

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Medical Specialties

Colon-Rectal Surgery, General Surgery, Cancer

Medical Expertise

Colon-Rectal Surgery, Hernia Surgery, Proctology Surgery, Hemorrhoidectomy, Minimally Invasive Surgery, Cancer Surgery, Gastrointestinal Surgery, Laparoscopic Colon/Rectal Surg, Colon Cancer, General Surgery

Insurance

AETNA HMO, AETNA INDEMNITY, AETNA MEDICARE, AETNA POS, AETNA PPO, Cigna HMO/POS, Cigna PPO, EBCBS CHLD HLTH, EBCBS EPO, EBCBS HLTHY NY, EBCBS HMO, EBCBS INDEMNITY, EBCBS MEDIBLUE, EBCBS POS, EBCBS PPO, GHI CBP, GREATWEST PPO, HEALTHPLUS CHLD HLTH, HEALTHPLUS FAM HLTH, HIP ACCESS I, HIP ACCESS II, HIP CHLD HLTH, HIP EPO/PPO, HIP FAM HLTH, HIP HMO, HIP MEDICAID, HIP MEDICARE, HIP POS, HealthPlus Medicaid, LOCAL 1199 PPO, MAGNACARE PPO, METROPLUS CHLD HLTH, METROPLUS FAM HLTH, MULTIPLAN/PHCS PPO, MetroPlus Medicaid, NYS EMPIRE PLAN, OXFORD FREEDOM, Oxford Liberty, Oxford Medicare, UHC EPO, UHC HMO, UHC POS, UHC PPO, UHC TOP TIER

Insurance Disclaimer: Insurance listed above may not be accepted at all office locations. Please confirm prior to each visit. The information presented here may not be complete or may have changed.

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Board Certification

1982 — Colon & Rectal Surgery
2001 — Surgery

Education

1975 — New York University School of Medicine, Medical Education
1975-1980 — NYU Medical Center (Surgery (Gen)), Residency Training
1980-1981 — Muhlenberg Regional Medical Center (Colorectal Surgery), Clinical Fellowships

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All data from NYU Health Sciences Library Faculty Bibliography — -

Contact:
http://hsl.med.nyu.edu/faculty-bibliography-search#about

Rectal perforation during barium enema. Report of a case
Cordone RP; Brandeis SZ; Richman H
1988 Jul;31(7):563-569, Diseases of the colon & rectum
Perforation of the colon or rectum during the course of barium-enema examination is estimated to occur in approximately 500 patients annually in the United States. It has been over 30 years since the last collective review on this subject reported a prohibitively high mortality and morbidity. Since that time, much has been learned about the treatment of patients with peritonitis and bowel perforation, many new and more effective antibiotics have become available, and the management of shock has become infinitely more sophisticated. A review of recently reported cases suggests that the mortality rate and possibly the early morbidity have fallen markedly. Late complications such as adhesive small-bowel obstruction and retroperitoneal fibrosis with ureteral stenosis are well described, but data on the incidence of these long-term sequelae are still not available
— id: 38648, year: 1988, vol: 31, page: 563, stat: Journal Article,