
Paul Gleich
· Assistant professorUniversity of Minnesota · Urology
Active 1975–2015
About
Dr. Paul Gleich has been involved in medical education since he began his practice in urology in 1982. Initially, Dr. Gleich was a faculty member of the Frederic Foley urology training program, and he later became chairman and director of the program. He merged his program with the University of Minnesota urology training program and went into private practice. Though continuing his educational activities in private practice, he rejoined the Medical School faculty in 2009 with an emphasis in medical student education.
Research topics
- Medicine
- Surgery
- General surgery
- Radiology
- Urology
Selected publications
Hygiene monitoring in a hospital immunohaematological laboratory
Transfusion Clinique et Biologique · 2015-10-01
articleSenior authorBladder outlet obstruction: Diagnosis and medical management
The consultant · 2012-01-01
article1st authorCorrespondingOur thanks to reviewers in 2011
The consultant · 2011-12-01
articleComplete urethral duplication: Description of surgical approach mimicking distal epispadias repair
Journal of Pediatric Urology · 2011-08-18 · 15 citations
articleOur thanks to reviewers in 2007
The consultant · 2007-12-01
articleHematuria: Is it from UTI or something more serious?
The consultant · 2004-05-01
article1st authorCorrespondingThe presence of blood in the urine is a significant finding that calls for prompt evaluation. Gross hematuria usually indicates a serious problem; its correlation with malignancy-typically a transitional cell carcinoma-isfairly high. Microscopically detectable blood is less likely to signal a mojor underlying condition; a finding of 0 to 3 red cells per high-power field is probably innocent. The workup for gross and microscopic hematuria focuses on disturbances of urinary tract function and indudes a history and physical examination, urinalysis, rodiologic imaging, urine cytology, and cystoscopy. The presence of hematuria, proteinuria, and rend insufficiency warrants referral to a nephrologist. A search for the cause of microscopic hematuria is much less likely than a workup for gross hematuria to uncover a lifethreatening condition. If the hematuria persists, repeat the urinalysis and cytology every 6 months until the problem resolves or 3 years have passed.
Scrotal masses: Benign or serious?
The consultant · 2001-01-01
article1st authorCorrespondingWhen to consider tuberculosis in evaluating hematuria
The consultant · 1999-12-01
article1st authorCorrespondingHematuria: Just UTI - Or something more ominous?
The consultant · 1999-08-01
article1st authorCorrespondingProstatitis: A state-of-the-art review of diagnosis and therapy
The consultant · 1998-02-01
review1st authorCorresponding
Frequent coauthors
- 32 shared
Alexander S. Cass
- 21 shared
Michael G. Luxenberg
- 11 shared
C. E. Smith
New York University
- 9 shared
C.E. Smith
Johnson & Johnson (Israel)
- 8 shared
Melvin P. Bubrick
Hennepin County Medical Center
- 5 shared
C.F. Johnson
Hennepin County Medical Center
- 5 shared
Chery Smith
University of Minnesota
- 4 shared
Hossein Aliabadi
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