Partha Sinha MD, MBA, FACNM, FACR

Partha Sinha

Partha Sinha
MD, MBA, FACNM, FACR

Clinical Professor

Department of Nuclear Medicine

Jacobs School of Medicine & Biomedical Sciences


Specialty/Research Focus

Nuclear Medicine

Contact Information
105 Parker Hall
Buffalo, New York 14214
Phone: 716-862-8614
parthasi@buffalo.edu



Education and Training:

  • MBA, Management, George Washington University (2010)
  • Certificate, Certification Board of Nuclear Cardiology (2001)
  • Fellowship, Positron Emission Tomography, University of Pennsylvania (2000)
  • Residency, Nuclear Medicine, Montefiore Medical Center (1999)
  • Nuclear Medicine, University of Bombay (1993)
  • Biomedical Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology (1991)
  • University of Calcutta (1989)

Employment:

  • Professor, Nuclear Medicine, Jacobs School of Medicine and Biological Sciences, University at Buffalo (2020-present)
  • Service Chief, VA Western New York Health Care System (2016-present)
  • Associate Professor, Nuclear Medicine, University at Buffalo Jacobs School of Medicine & Biomedical Sciences (2016–2020)
  • Divisional Chief, Nuclear Medicine, University of Kentucky (2008–2016)
  • Associate Professor, Radiology, University of Kentucky (2007–2016)
  • Medical Director, Kentucky Metabolic Imaging (2000–2007)
  • Radiation Safety Officer, Kentucky Metabolic Imaging (2000–2007)
  • Assistant Professor, Radiology, University of Kentucky (2000–2006)
  • Chief Resident, Montefiore Medical Center (1998–1999)


Journal Articles:

See all (16 more)

Abstracts:

  • Sinha P, Conrad GR, Couch W. (2002) Change in SUV of solitary pulmonary nodules (SPN) in delayed 18F-FDG PET imaging: Benign vs malignant nodules. Journal of Nuclear Medicine, (May) 154P
  • Conrad GR, Sinha P, Couch W. (2002) The utility of delayed 18F-FDG PET imaging for the evaluation of solitary thoracic lesions. Clinical Nuclear Medicine, (May) 155P
  • Sinha P, Conrad GR, Imperi G. (2002) Gastric fundal standardized uptake values of 18-Fluoro-deoxyglucose in positron emission tomography: Diabetic Vs Non-Diabetic. Clinical Nuclear Medicine, (Mar) 230
  • Sinha P, Araujo LI. (2000) Significance of perfusion defects on 99mTc-MIBI scans that appear worse at rest. European Journal of Nuclear Medicine, (Aug) 1035
  • Zhuang HM, Sinha P, Pourdehnad M, Duarte PS, Alavi A. (2000) The crucial role of FDG-PET in the evaluation of liver metasases from colorectal cancer. Journal of Nuclear Medicine, (May) 35P
  • Zhuang HM, Duarte P, Pourdehnad M, Yamamoto AJ, Loman JC, Sinha P, Alavi A. (2000) Incidental findings should be included in the analysis of cost-effectiveness for evaluation of pulmonary nodules by FDG-PET. Clinical Positron Imaging, (Apr) 180


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Contact Information

105 Parker Hall
Buffalo, New York 14214
Phone: 716-862-8614
parthasi@buffalo.edu