Rahul S. Subbarayan

ORCID: 0000-0002-7707-6834
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About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • Head and Neck Cancer Studies
  • Radiation Dose and Imaging
  • Body Contouring and Surgery
  • Cancer Immunotherapy and Biomarkers
  • Global Cancer Incidence and Screening
  • Cardiovascular Effects of Exercise
  • Hearing, Cochlea, Tinnitus, Genetics
  • Muscle and Compartmental Disorders
  • Immune Response and Inflammation
  • Cervical Cancer and HPV Research
  • Cleft Lip and Palate Research
  • Vestibular and auditory disorders
  • Glaucoma and retinal disorders
  • Frailty in Older Adults
  • Occupational and environmental lung diseases
  • Immune cells in cancer

University of Kansas Medical Center
2017-2019

University Medical Center
2018

University Hospital and Clinics
2018

Primary Source
2017

Objective: To compare the proportion of peripheral versus nonperipheral dizziness etiologies among all patients, inclusive those presenting primarily or as referrals, to rank diagnoses in order frequency, determine whether not age and sex predict diagnosis, which subgroups tended undergo formal vestibular testing. Study Design: Retrospective cohort. Setting: Academic neurotology clinic. Patients: Age greater than 18 clinic patients with chief complaint dizziness. Intervention(s): None. Main...

10.1097/mao.0000000000001429 article EN Otology & Neurotology 2017-05-12

Data regarding outcomes after major head and neck ablation reconstruction in the growing geriatric population (specifically ≥80 years of age) are limited. Such information would be extremely valuable preoperative discussions with elderly patients about their surgical risks expected functional outcomes.To identify patient factors associated 30-day postoperative complications, 90-day mortality, decline; to explore whether an association exists between type reconstructive procedure outcome;...

10.1001/jamaoto.2019.2768 article EN JAMA Otolaryngology–Head & Neck Surgery 2019-10-10

Objectives/Hypothesis Human papillomavirus (HPV) is a DNA virus that causes cancer in multiple sites. Although sexual activity the primary means of oropharyngeal HPV acquisition, studies suggest transmission through occupational exposure from medical instruments and surgical fumes. We assess if aerosolization HPV16 via electrocautery places otolaryngologists at risk for exposure. Study Design Animal human laboratory model. Methods Plasmid (pLXSN16E6E7) expressing p16 E6/E7 genes was...

10.1002/lary.28383 article EN The Laryngoscope 2019-11-11
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