麻豆视频入口

If you need help accessing our website, call 855-698-9991
NYU Langone Provider

Manish S. Parikh, MD

NYU Langone Provider
  • Specialties: General Surgery, Bariatric Surgery
  • Treats: Adults
  • Language: English
View Locations

As a general and bariatric surgeon at NYU Langone General Surgery Associates and director of bariatric surgery at Bellevue Hospital Center, I am dedicated to providing care that emphasizes empathy, precision, and collaboration. I believe patients deserve personalized treatment tailored to their unique medical history, values, and goals.

I specialize in treating patients with a range of conditions, including obesity and metabolic diseases, biliary pathology, hernias, benign colon diseases, and solid organ removal. My expertise in advanced laparoscopic techniques, such as laparoscopic common bile duct exploration and laparoscopic adrenalectomy (surgical removal of the adrenal glands), allows me to offer minimally invasive options that promote quicker recovery and better outcomes. My research interests include the effects of metabolic surgery on diabetes and obesity-related diseases, as well as the genetic basis of obesity and its impact on surgical success.

With more than 15 years of experience, I bring a wealth of knowledge and a commitment to continuous improvement and innovation. My team and I prioritize communication and collaboration across disciplines to ensure that patients receive coordinated, compassionate care. We stay at the forefront of medical advances, integrating the latest practices and clinical guidelines to enhance patient outcomes.

My journey into medicine was driven by a fascination with the human body and a desire to make a tangible difference in people鈥檚 lives. I chose surgery because it combines critical thinking, technical skill, and immediate impact. The intensity and precision of the operating room, along with the collaborative spirit of the surgical team, inspired me to pursue this path. My dedication to teaching and research has been recognized with several awards, including the Health and Hospitals Corporation Doctors Day Award and the NYU Grossman School of Medicine鈥檚 Julia Zelmanovich Young Alumni Award.


Conditions and Treatments

Conditions
  • abdominal hernia
  • adrenal gland disorders
  • appendicitis
  • appendix tumor
  • biliary disease
  • epigastric hernia
  • femoral hernia
  • gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD)
  • hiatal hernia
  • incarcerated hernia
  • inguinal hernia
  • paraesophageal hernia
  • sports hernia
  • umbilical hernia
  • ventral hernia
Treatments
  • abdomen surgery
  • colorectal surgery
  • fundoplication
  • minimally invasive surgery
  • stomach bypass

Positions
  • Professor,
  • Chief, Perioperative Services at BHC
Board Certifications
  • American Board of Surgery - General Surgery, 2006
Education and Training
  • Fellowship, New York Presbyterian - Weill Cornell Medical Center, Laparoscopic Surgery, 2007
  • Residency, New York University, Surgery, 2006
  • MD from New York University, 2001

Is this your profile?

This provider accepts the following insurance plans.

View All Accepted Plans This list of insurances changes regularly, and insurance plans listed may not be accepted at all office locations for this provider. Before your appointment, please confirm with your insurance company that this provider accepts your insurance.

Manish S. Parikh, MD does not accept insurance.

Locations and Appointments

NYU Langone General Surgery Associates

530 1st Avenue, Suite 6C, New York, NY 10016

Interests

bariatric surgery, laparoscopic surgery

Research Summary

Many insurance payors mandate that candidates for bariatric surgery participate in a medically-supervised weight management program (MSWM) as a prerequisite for obtaining surgery. However, there is little evidence to support the underlying hypothesis that MSWM improves post-operative compliance and outcomes. Requiring MSWM participation may actually delay medically benefical treatment. To our knowledge, there is no randomized study specifically addressing the effect of a pre-operative insurance-mandated MSWM program on post-surgical weight loss or weight maintenance. Furthermore, prior studies have not addressed the potentially deleterious issue of drop-off, i.e. the degree to which a 6-month MSWM requirement results in otherwise eligible patients becoming ineligible for surgery. Our goal in this study is to conduct a rigorous, single-site pilot study that will address these important research questions. Our current structure of close collaboration between an outpatient medical weight loss clinic / referral center and a bariatric surgery program, along with the unique demographic of our patients and current wait time to surgery, provide an ideal setting to test whether an insurance-mandated MSWM program provides any benefit above and beyond usual care. In a one-year randomized controlled trial (see Figure), we propose to study this question in an underserved, urban population that already faces many barriers to care. Patients whose insurance does not require such a mandated program and who meet NIH consensus criteria will be randomized to a six-month MSWM program or usual care, and followed for outcomes postoperatively at 3 months, 6 months, and 1 year. Our primary outcome of interest is the percent of excess weight loss. Secondary outcomes include measures of patient behavior change (adherence, activation, and dietary behavior change) and patient satisfaction. We anticipate our study will provide results relevant to many stakeholders: for patients and their providers evidence that typical bariatric program practices provide equivalent or improved clinical results over MSWM programs; for administrators and policymakers data to counter the undue burdens imposed by insurance mandates; and for researchers additional evidence on patient behavior factors related to improved postoperative clinical outcomes.

Another ongoing areas of research:

1. Disparities in access to bariatric surgery in underserved/minority patients with severe obesity

2. The role of metabolic/bariatric surgery in patients with Type 2 Diabetes and Body Mass Index > 35

3. The prevalence of thrombophilia in patients undergoing sleeve gastrectomy 

4. Surgical strategies to reduce leak after laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy

5. The mechanism of portal vein thrombosis after laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy

Academic Contact

Academic office

462 First Avenue

15S6A

New York, NY 10016

Phone

212-562-3917

Fax

212-263-8640

  • Vanegas, Sally M; Curado, Silvia; Zhou, Boyan; Illenberger, Nicholas; Merriwether, Ericka N; Armijos, Evelyn; Schmidt, Ann Marie; Ren-Fielding, Christine; Parikh, Manish; Elbel, Brian; Alem谩n, Jos茅 O; Jay, Melanie

    Obesity (Silver Spring). 2025 Jun 16;

  • Zahid, Sohail; Schlamp, Florencia; Gildea, Michael A; Lin, Bing-Xue; Chaloemtoem, Ariya; Falis, Marcin; Parikh, Manish; Fisher, Edward A; Hornemann, Thorsten; Vaisar, Tomas; Heffron, Sean P

    Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, & vascular biology. 2025 Feb ; 45(2):e48-e62

  • Cuva, Dylan; Parikh, Manish; Brown, Avery; Somoza, Eduardo; Saunders, John K; Park, Julia; Lipman, Jeffrey; Einersen, Peter; Chui, Patricia

    Surgical endoscopy. 2025 Feb ; 39(2):1050-1055

Related News