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Carotid stenting and bivalirudin with and without vascular closure: 3-year analysis of procedural outcomes

Schneider, Laurence M; Polena, Sotir; Roubin, Gary; Iyer, Sriram; Vitek, Jiri; Panagopoulos, Georgia; Mussap, Christian J; Vitellas, Michael; Mahdavi, Ramyar; Brennan, Christina
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to examine the outcome of carotid stenting using bivalirudin and the influence of vascular closure devices (VCD) on the incidence and severity of peri-procedural hypotension. BACKGROUND: Bivalirudin, a short-acting direct thrombin inhibitor, has been shown to be an effective anticoagulant in coronary interventions, with less risk of bleeding compared with heparin. Routine use of VCD has become the standard of care, facilitating patient ambulation after percutaneous carotid and coronary interventions. The combined use of these two therapies (bivalirudin and VCD) may improve outcomes in carotid interventions where prolonged patient immobilization may exacerbate hypotension following stenting. METHODS: A total of 514 patients underwent 536 carotid stenting procedures in the 3-year period from September 2004 to September 2007. All patients received adjunctive bivalirudin, with and without VCD. This cohort was analyzed for peri-procedural and 30-day clinical outcomes and length of hospitalization. RESULTS: Thirty-day stroke and death rate was 1.7%. A total of 83 patients (15.4%) experienced intra- or post-procedural hypotension (systolic BP < 80 mm Hg). There were four (0.7%) major bleeding complications requiring transfusion, and length of stay was delayed more than 24 hr in five patients (0.93%), all of whom were in the manual compression group. CONCLUSIONS: This was a negative study, with no significant difference on prolonged hypotensive events in patients with vascular closure device and bivalirudin, compared with those with manual compression and bivalirudin. Vascular closure devices were safe and effective with a low incidence of complications. In carotid artery stenting, bivalirudin is safe with low incidence of major bleeding and acceptable 30-day adverse event rates (stroke and death)
PMID: 20091813
ISSN: 1522-726x
CID: 114482

Neuron overload and the juggling physician

Ofri, Danielle
PMID: 21128338
ISSN: 1474-547x
CID: 119143

Medicine in translation : journeys with my patients

Ofri, Danielle
Boston MA : Beacon Press, 2010
Extent: 251 p. ; 23cm
ISBN: 0807073202
CID: 2063

MEDICINE; THE UNREAL WORLD; Diagnosis rings true, but not the care [Newspaper Article]

Siegel, Marc
Mercy [Television Program] -- The reality Dr. William L. Risser, director of adolescent medicine at the University of Texas Medical School at Houston, says he would consider hepatitis, pancreatitis or pelvic inflammatory disease as the most likely causes of such pain and vomiting in an 11-year-old
PROQUEST:1989174361
ISSN: 0458-3035
CID: 108875

Well [New York Times Blog], July 29, 2010

When Unemployed Means Unhealthy Too

Ofri, Danielle
(Website)
CID: 150943

Carney's complex [Case Report]

Pursnani, Amit K; Levy, Natalie K; Benito, Maryellen; Hong, Susie N; Srichai, Monvadi B; Yee, Herman; Kronzon, Itzhak
PMID: 20338502
ISSN: 1558-3597
CID: 114156

Molecular characterization and antibiotic susceptibility of Staphylococcus aureus from a multidisciplinary hospital in Romania

Ionescu, Ramona; Mediavilla, Jose R; Chen, Liang; Grigorescu, Dan O; Idomir, Mihaela; Kreiswirth, Barry N; Roberts, Richard B
From 2004 to 2005, 60%-72% of invasive Staphylococcus aureus isolates from Romanian hospitals were resistant to methicillin (methicillin-resistant S. aureus [MRSA]), the highest frequency for any European nation. Few reports, however, have addressed the molecular characteristics of S. aureus in Romania. In this study, we utilized spa typing, multilocus sequence typing, staphylococcal cassette chromosome mec (SCCmec) typing, dru typing, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis, and detection of virulence factors to characterize 146 S. aureus strains isolated from 2004 to 2005 at the Clinic County Hospital in Brasov. Antibiotic susceptibility patterns for all MRSA isolates and patient demographic data were also obtained. Fifty-six strains (38.4%) were determined to be MRSA by susceptibility testing and SCCmec typing. All MRSA strains were resistant to beta-lactams and tetracycline, but susceptible to nitrofurans, vancomycin, and clindamycin, with inducible clindamycin resistance in 23/28 clindamycin-sensitive/erythromycin-resistant isolates. Molecular typing identified 15 clonal backgrounds (CC 1, 5, 8, 8/239, 9, 15, 20, 22, 25, 30, 45, 80, 97, 101, and 121), only 4 of which were associated with MRSA (CC 1, 8/239, 30, and 80). Spa types 35 (t127, CC 1) and 351 (t030, CC 8/239) accounted for 27.4% and 21.9% of all S. aureus strains, respectively, and 19.6% and 57.1% of all MRSA strains. Both hospital-associated (SCCmec type III) and community-associated (SCCmec type IV) elements were identified within MRSA strains, whereas Panton-Valentine leukocidin was detected in 10 MRSA and 12 methicillin-sensitive S. aureus strains. These results demonstrate the presence of various endemic S. aureus clones within the Clinic County Hospital in Brasov, suggestive of ongoing nosocomial and community transmission
PMID: 21034225
ISSN: 1931-8448
CID: 120727

Dr. Barton Childs, 93, Dies; Studied Inherited Diseases [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
[...] Dr. Childs helped shape the understanding of inherited diseases as scientists learned more about so-called inborn errors of metabolism, biochemistry and molecular biology. If a mother's gene for the Factor VIII blood clotting agent is mutated, that could be harmful to a son, leading to hemophilia, because the gene is on the X that she has supplied to the boy (with the father having supplied the Y)
PROQUEST:1978624521
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 108895

Clement Finch, 94, Dies; A Pioneer in Hematology [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
Dr. Clement A. Finch, a pioneering hematologist whose research on iron helped improve nutrition and led to advances in diagnosing and treating anemia, died June 28 at his home in the La Jolla neighborhood of San Diego. Dr. Finch also played a crucial role in showing that hemochromatosis, a genetic disease that causes the body to absorb too much iron from food, could be treated through periodic bleeding
PROQUEST:2073201781
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 119191

From the patient's perspective: the impact of training on resident physician's obesity counseling

Jay, Melanie; Schlair, Sheira; Caldwell, Rob; Kalet, Adina; Sherman, Scott; Gillespie, Colleen
BACKGROUND: It is uncertain whether training improves physicians' obesity counseling. OBJECTIVE: To assess the impact of an obesity counseling curriculum for residents. DESIGN: A non-randomized, wait-list/control design. PARTICIPANTS: Twenty-three primary care internal medicine residents; 12 were assigned to the curriculum group, and 11 were assigned to the no-curriculum group. Over a 7-month period (1-8 months post-intervention) 163 of the residents' obese patients were interviewed after their medical visits. INTERVENTION: A 5-hour, multi-modal obesity counseling curriculum based on the 5As (Assess, Advise, Agree, Assist, Arrange) using didactics, role-playing, and standardized patients. MAIN MEASURES: Patient-report of physicians' use of the 5As was assessed using a structured interview survey. Main outcomes were whether obese patients were counseled about diet, exercise, or weight loss (rate of counseling) and the quality of counseling provided (percentage of 5As skills performed during the visit). Univariate statistics (t-tests) were used to compare the rate and quality of counseling in the two resident groups. Logistic and linear regression was used to isolate the impact of the curriculum after controlling for patient, physician, and visit characteristics. KEY RESULTS: A large percentage of patients seen by both groups of residents received counseling about their weight, diet, and/or exercise (over 70%), but the quality of counseling was low in both the curriculum and no curriculum groups (mean 36.6% vs. 31.2% of 19 possible 5As counseling strategies, p = 0.21). This difference was not significant. However, after controlling for patient, physician and visit characteristics, residents in the curriculum group appeared to provide significantly higher quality counseling than those in the control group (std beta = 0.18; R(2) change = 2.9%, P < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Residents who received an obesity counseling curriculum were not more likely to counsel obese patients than residents who did not. Training, however, is associated with higher quality of counseling when patient, physician, and visit characteristics are taken into account
PMCID:2855014
PMID: 20217268
ISSN: 1525-1497
CID: 130962