Jose Diego Caceres

Researcher

Last publication 2025 Last refreshed 2026-05-16

faculty

7 h-index 18 pubs 333 cited

Biography and Research Information

OverviewAI-generated summary

Jose Diego Caceres' research focuses on pulmonary diseases and their various presentations and causes. His work includes evidence-based reviews of medical technologies, such as robotic bronchoscopy for lesion biopsy. Caceres has published on conditions including asbestos-associated pulmonary disease, combined pulmonary fibrosis and emphysema, and healthcare-associated pneumonia. He has also investigated atypical presentations of conditions like eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. His collaborative network includes Anand N. Venkata, Nikhil Meena, Siddharthan Vaithilingam, and Susanne K. Jeffus, all affiliated with the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, with whom he has co-authored multiple publications. Caceres' scholarship metrics include an h-index of 5, 13 total publications, and 203 total citations.

Metrics

  • h-index: 7
  • Publications: 18
  • Citations: 333

Selected Publications

  • Oddities Galore: An Atypical Presentation of Eosinophilic Granulomatosis With Polyangiitis (2025)
  • Asbestos-associated pulmonary disease (2023)
    16 citations DOI OpenAlex
  • A 72-Year-Old Woman With Dyspnea, Multiple Pulmonary Nodules, and Mediastinal Lymphadenopathy (2022)
    2 citations DOI OpenAlex
  • A 34-Year-Old Man With Lightheadedness and Dyspnea (2022)
  • Chryseobacterium gleum Causing Healthcare-Associated Pneumonia in an Adult Male With Diffuse Large B Cell Lymphoma (2021)
    5 citations DOI OpenAlex
  • Robotic Bronchoscopy for Peripheral Pulmonary Lesion Biopsy: Evidence-Based Review of the Two Platforms (2021)
    18 citations DOI OpenAlex

View all publications on OpenAlex →

Collaboration Network

12 Collaborators 5 Institutions 2 Countries

Top Collaborators

View profile →
View profile →
View profile →
View profile →
View profile →

Similar Researchers

Based on overlapping research topics