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The use of transcranial doppler to assess the need for shunt placement in awake patients undergoing carotid endarterectomy [Meeting Abstract]

Cutler, WM; Gold, MS; Kanchuger, MS
ISI:A1996UD16400064
ISSN: 0003-2999
CID: 53010

Aortic atheromatous disease, atherectomy and outcome in patients undergoing cardiac surgery [Meeting Abstract]

Kanchuger, MS; Sweeney, MN; Grossi, E; Marschall, KE
ISI:A1996UD16400031
ISSN: 0003-2999
CID: 53009

Cerebral physiologic effects of burst suppression doses of propofol during nonpulsatile cardiopulmonary bypass. CNS Subgroup of McSPI

Newman MF; Murkin JM; Roach G; Croughwell ND; White WD; Clements FM; Reves JG; Kanchuger M; Marschall K
Central nervous system (CNS) complications are common after cardiac surgery. Death due to cardiac causes has decreased, but the number of deaths due to CNS injury has increased. As a first stage in the evaluation of its cerebral protection potential, we evaluated the cerebral physiologic effects of burst suppression doses of propofol during nonpulsatile cardiopulmonary bypass. Thirty patients without history of cerebral vascular disease were randomized to two study groups: control group (n = 15) who received sufentanil and vecuronium, or propofol group (n = 15) who received the control anesthetic and propofol infused to maintain electroencephalogram (EEG) burst suppression. Catheters were placed in the radial artery and right jugular bulb for sampling of systemic arterial and jugular bulb venous blood. 133Xe clearance was used to determine cerebral blood flow (CBF) at the start of normothermic bypass, during stable hypothermia, and when rewarmed to 35-37 degrees C nasopharyngeal temperature. Pharmacologic burst suppression with propofol produced a statistically significant reduction in CBF, cerebral oxygen delivery (DO2), and cerebral metabolic rate (CMRO2) at each measurement interval (P < 0..05 vs control). Cerebral arterial venous oxygen difference (C(a-v)O2), and jugular bulb venous oxygen saturation (SJvO2) were not statistically different between groups, indicating maintenance of cerebral metabolic autoregulation (coupling). The reduction in CBF and CMRO2, prominent during the normothermic phases of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB), indicates a potential for propofol to reduce cerebral exposure to the embolic load during CPB
PMID: 7653803
ISSN: 0003-2999
CID: 45900

Effect of cannula length on aortic arch flow: protection of the atheromatous aortic arch

Grossi EA; Kanchuger MS; Schwartz DS; McLoughlin DE; LeBoutillier M 3rd; Ribakove GH; Marschall KE; Galloway AC; Colvin SB
Atheromatous disease in the transverse aortic arch is associated with an increased incidence of perioperative stroke. In addition, tissue erosion in the aortic arch is caused by the high-velocity jet emerging from an aortic cannula during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB), termed the 'sandblast effect'. To quantify this phenomenon, flow in the aortic arch was measured intraoperatively by epiaortic ultrasonography in 18 patients undergoing CPB. All were cannulated in the ascending aorta, 10 with a short (1.5 cm) cannula and 8 with a long (7.0 cm) cannula. The peak forward aortic flow velocities (mean +/- standard deviation) measured on the caudal luminal surface of the aortic arch were 0.80 +/- 0.23 m/s off CPB and 2.42 +/- 0.69 m/s on CPB (p < 0.001) for the short cannula and 0.53 +/- 0.20 m/s off CPB and 0.18 m/s on CPB for the long cannula. Thus, during CPB the peak forward aortic flow velocity with the short cannula was significantly greater (p < 0.001) than before CPB, whereas the long cannula produced a lower peak forward aortic flow velocity during CPB. Furthermore, Doppler examination revealed severe turbulence in the aortic arch in all patients with a short cannula. No arch turbulence, however, was seen in 7 patients with a long cannula, and only mild turbulence appeared in the remaining patient with a long cannula. These results show that use of a long aortic cannula results in a significant decrease in peak forward aortic flow velocity and turbulence in the aortic arch during CPB, which may reduce the risk of erosion or disruption of existing atheroma and ensuing embolic complications
PMID: 7887717
ISSN: 0003-4975
CID: 56874

The impact of echocardiographically-detected ascending aortic and aortic arch atheromatous disease on stroke and hospital costs with cardiac surgery [Meeting Abstract]

Sweeney MN; Kanchuger M; Arnaoudov P; Marschall K
ORIGINAL:0004887
ISSN: 0003-2999
CID: 47220

Risk factors for adverse neurologic outcome following intracardiac surgery [Meeting Abstract]

Wolman RL; Aggarwal A; Kanchuger M; Ley C; Newman M; Roach G; Marschall K; Mora-Mangano C; Nussmeier NA; McSPI Group
ORIGINAL:0004888
ISSN: 0003-2999
CID: 47221

THE PREVALENCE OF ATHEROMATOUS DISEASE OF THE ASCENDING AORTA AND ITS RELATIONSHIP TO SUCH DISEASE IN THE AORTIC-ARCH [Meeting Abstract]

TISSOT, M; KANCHUGER, M; GROSSI, E; ARMSTRONG, JM; MARSCHALL, K
ISI:A1994PJ09100167
ISSN: 0003-3022
CID: 52326

EPIAORTIC ULTRASONOGRAPHY IS SUPERIOR TO BIPLANE TRANSESOPHAGEAL ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY OR SURGICAL PALPATION IN DETECTING ASCENDING AORTIC ATHEROSCLEROSIS [Meeting Abstract]

KANCHUGER, M; MARSCHALL, K; TISSOT, M; ARMSTRONG, JM; GROSSI, E
ISI:A1994PJ09100110
ISSN: 0003-3022
CID: 52325

EPIAORTIC CONTINUOUS-WAVE AND COLOR-FLOW DOPPLER DEMONSTRATES A MAJOR DIFFERENCE IN FLOW PATTERNS BETWEEN TYPES OF ARTERIAL CANNULAS USED DURING CARDIOPULMONARY BYPASS [Meeting Abstract]

KANCHUGER, M; GROSSI, E; TISSOT, M; MARSCHALL, K
ISI:A1994PJ09100108
ISSN: 0003-3022
CID: 52324

Superiority of transesophageal echocardiography in detecting aortic arch atheromatous disease: identification of patients at increased risk of stroke during cardiac surgery

Marschall K; Kanchuger M; Kessler K; Grossi E; Yarmush L; Roggen S; Tissot M; Paglia S; Nacht A; Shrem S; et al.
It has been shown that transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) is useful in evaluating atheromatous disease of the aortic arch and that such disease is a risk factor for stroke in medical patients. Data obtained by traditional methods of evaluating the aortic arch prior to cardiac surgery, namely, chest x-ray (CXR) and cardiac catheterization (CATH), were compared with that detected by TEE. Images of the descending thoracic aorta and aortic arch seen on intraoperative TEE in 258 cardiac surgical patients were graded as I = normal, II = intimal thickening or plaques < 5 mm thick or with a mobile component (severe disease). The aortic knob seen on CXR in 209 of these patients was graded as normal, < 1/2 or > or = > 1/2 ring of calcification. Calcification in the aortic root (graded as 0, 1+, 2+) and irregularities in the aortic lumen seen at CATH in 33 patients were also examined. Data were analyzed with respect to age, gender, type of surgery, and stroke. Increasing age correlated strongly with increasing severity of aortic arch and descending thoracic aortic disease seen by TEE. Severe disease was not present in patients under age 50 but was present in about 20% of those over age 70. Atheromatous disease was found by TEE in 55% of patients with a normal CXR and 91% of those with heavily calcified aortic knobs. Ischemic strokes occurred in seven patients. Severe arch disease correlated significantly with stroke (P < .01). Other variables did not correlate with stroke.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
PMID: 8167285
ISSN: 1053-0770
CID: 56561