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Department/Unit:Plastic Surgery

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Lymphatic and Angiogenic Candidate Genes Predict the Development of Secondary Lymphedema following Breast Cancer Surgery

Miaskowski, Christine; Dodd, Marylin; Paul, Steven M; West, Claudia; Hamolsky, Deborah; Abrams, Gary; Cooper, Bruce A; Elboim, Charles; Neuhaus, John; Schmidt, Brian L; Smoot, Betty; Aouizerat, Bradley E
The purposes of this study were to evaluate for differences in phenotypic and genotypic characteristics in women who did and did not develop lymphedema (LE) following breast cancer treatment. Breast cancer patients completed a number of self-report questionnaires. LE was evaluated using bioimpedance spectroscopy. Genotyping was done using a custom genotyping array. No differences were found between patients with (n = 155) and without LE (n = 387) for the majority of the demographic and clinical characteristics. Patients with LE had a significantly higher body mass index, more advanced disease and a higher number of lymph nodes removed. Genetic associations were identified for four genes (i.e., lymphocyte cytosolic protein 2 (rs315721), neuropilin-2 (rs849530), protein tyrosine kinase (rs158689), vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (rs3176861)) and three haplotypes (i.e., Forkhead box protein C2 (haplotype A03), neuropilin-2 (haplotype F03), vascular endothelial growth factor-C (haplotype B03)) involved in lymphangiogensis and angiogenesis. These genetic associations suggest a role for a number of lymphatic and angiogenic genes in the development of LE following breast cancer treatment.
PMCID:3629060
PMID: 23613720
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 316182

Informationist Support for a Study of the Role of Proteases and Peptides in Cancer Pain

Surkis, Alisa; McCrillis, Aileen; McGowan, Richard; Williams, Jeffrey; Schmidt, Brian L; Hardt, Markus; Rambo, Neil
Two supplements were awarded to the New York University Health Sciences Libraries from the National Library of Medicine's informationist grant program. These supplements funded research support in a number of areas, including data management and bioinformatics, two fields that the library had recently begun to explore. As such, the supplements were of particular value to the library as a testing ground for these newer services. This paper will discuss a supplement received in support of a grant from the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (PI: Brian Schmidt) on the role of proteases and peptides in cancer pain. A number of barriers were preventing the research team from maximizing the efficiency and effectiveness of their work. A critical component of the research was to identify which proteins, from among hundreds identified in collected samples, to include in preclinical testing. This selection involved laborious and prohibitively time-consuming manual searching of the literature on protein function. Additionally, the research team encompassed ten investigators working in two different cities, which led to issues around the sharing and tracking of both data and citations. The supplement outlined three areas in which the informationists would assist the researchers in overcoming these barriers: 1) creating an automated literature searching system for protein function discovery, 2) introducing tools and associated workflows for sharing citations, and 3) introducing tools and workflows for sharing data and specimens
ORIGINAL:0008127
ISSN: 2161-3974
CID: 306492

Bone apposition to laminin-1 coated implants: histologic and 3D evaluation

Bougas, K; Jimbo, R; Vandeweghe, S; Hayashi, M; Bryington, M; Kozai, Y; Schwartz-Filho, H O; Tovar, N; Adolfsson, E; Ono, D; Coelho, P G; Wennerberg, A
Laminin-1 has been reported as one of the factors responsible for the nucleation of calcium phosphates and, in vitro, has been reported to selectively recruit osteoprogenitors. This article focused on its in vivo effects, and evaluated the effect of laminin-1 local application on osseointegration. Polished cylindrical hydroxyapatite implants were coated with laminin-1 (test) and the bone responses in the rabbit tibiae after 2 and 4 weeks were evaluated and compared to the non-coated implants (control). Before the samples were processed for histological sectioning, they were three-dimensionally analysed with micro computed tomography (muCT). Both evaluation methods were analysed with regards to bone area around the implant and bone to implant contact. From the histologic observation, new bone formation around the laminin-1 coated implant at 2 weeks seemed to have increased the amount of supporting bone around the implant, however, at 4 weeks, the two groups presented no notable differences. The two-dimensional and three-dimensional morphometric evaluation revealed that both histologic and three-dimensional analysis showed some tendency in favour of the test group implants, however there was no statistical significance between the test and control group results.
PMID: 23228694
ISSN: 0901-5027
CID: 305042

Integrating Oral and General Health Screening at Senior Centers for Minority Elders

Marshall, Stephen E; Cheng, Bin; Northridge, Mary E; Kunzel, Carol; Huang, Catherine; Lamster, Ira B
Racial/ethnic and socioeconomic disparities regarding untreated oral disease exist for older adults, and poor oral health diminishes quality of life. The ElderSmile program integrated screening for diabetes and hypertension into its community-based oral health activities at senior centers in northern Manhattan. The program found a willingness among minority seniors (aged >/= 50 years) to be screened for primary care sensitive conditions by dental professionals and a high level of unrecognized disease (7.8% and 24.6% of ElderSmile participants had positive screening results for previously undiagnosed diabetes and hypertension, respectively). Dental professionals may screen for primary care-sensitive conditions and refer patients to health care providers for definitive diagnosis and treatment. The ElderSmile program is a replicable model for community-based oral and general health screening. (Am J Public Health. Published online ahead of print April 18, 2013: e1-e4. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2013.301259).
PMCID:3670655
PMID: 23597378
ISSN: 0090-0036
CID: 300992

The influence of environmental factors on bone tissue engineering

Szpalski, Caroline; Sagebin, Fabio; Barbaro, Marissa; Warren, Stephen M
Bone repair and regeneration are dynamic processes that involve a complex interplay between the substrate, local and systemic cells, and the milieu. Although each constituent plays an integral role in faithfully recreating the skeleton, investigators have long focused their efforts on scaffold materials and design, cytokine and hormone administration, and cell-based therapies. Only recently have the intangible aspects of the milieu received their due attention. In this review, we highlight the important influence of environmental factors on bone tissue engineering. (c) 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res Part B: Appl Biomater, 2013.
PMID: 23165885
ISSN: 1552-4973
CID: 287132

Exogenous calreticulin improves diabetic wound healing (vol 20, pg 715, 2012) [Correction]

Greives, Matthew R.; Samra, Fares; Pavlides, Savvas C.; Blechman, Keith M.; Naylor, Sara-Megumi; Woodrell, Christopher D.; Cadacio, Caprice; Levine, Jamie P.; Asoulin, Tara A.; Michalak, Marek; Warren, Stephen M.; Gold, Leslie I.
ISI:000315914400163
ISSN: 1067-1927
CID: 288862

Biomechanical testing of microblasted, acid-etched/microblasted, anodized, and discrete crystalline deposition surfaces: an experimental study in beagle dogs

Bonfante, Estevam A; Granato, Rodrigo; Marin, Charles; Jimbo, Ryo; Giro, Gabriela; Suzuki, Marcelo; Coelho, Paulo G
PURPOSE: Modifications in implant surface topography and chemistry may alter the early bone response at different levels. This study characterized four implant surfaces and evaluated the biomechanical fixation and histologic response at early implantation times in a canine radius model. MATERIALS AND METHODS: External-hexagon Branemark-type implants were used with four experimental surfaces: microblasted (MI), acid-etched and microblasted (AAM), anodized (A), and discrete crystalline deposition (DCD). Surface topography was assessed by scanning electron microscopy, interferometry, and x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The implants were placed in the central region of the radii of eight beagle dogs and remained in vivo for 10 or 30 days. The implants were torqued to interface failure, and a general linear statistical model with torque as the dependent variable and implant surface and time in vivo as independent variables was used. RESULTS: All surfaces presented were textured, and different surface chemistries were observed. No significant differences between implant surfaces were observed for torque at 10 days. However, at 30 days, the AAM surface presented significantly higher torque values compared to the DCD and A surfaces. Significantly higher torque values were observed at 30 days compared to 10 days (P < .001). CONCLUSIONS: Significantly different biomechanical fixation dependent on surface preparation was observed after 30 days, and all surfaces were biocompatible and osteoconductive.
PMID: 23377058
ISSN: 0882-2786
CID: 271772

Mechanical testing of implant-supported anterior crowns with different implant/abutment connections

Almeida, Erika O; Freitas, Amilcar C Jr; Bonfante, Estevam A; Marotta, Leonard; Silva, Nelson R F A; Coelho, Paulo G
PURPOSE: This study evaluated the reliability and failure modes of anterior implants with internal-hexagon (IH), external-hexagon (EH), or Morse taper (MT) implant-abutment interface designs. The postulated hypothesis was that the different implant-abutment connections would result in different reliability and failure modes when subjected to step-stress accelerated life testing (SSALT) in water. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Sixty-three dental implants (4 x 10 mm) were divided into three groups (n = 21 each) according to connection type: EH, IH, or MT. Commercially pure titanium abutments were screwed to the implants, and standardized maxillary central incisor metallic crowns were cemented and subjected to SSALT in water. The probability of failure versus number of cycles (95% two-sided confidence intervals) was calculated and plotted using a power-law relationship for damage accumulation. Reliability for a mission of 50,000 cycles at 150 N (90% two-sided confidence intervals) was calculated. Polarized-light and scanning electron microscopes were used for failure analyses. RESULTS: The beta values (confidence intervals) derived from use-level probability Weibull calculation were 3.34 (2.22 to 5.00), 1.72 (1.14 to 2.58), and 1.05 (0.60 to 1.83) for groups EH, IH, and MT, respectively, indicating that fatigue was an accelerating factor for all groups. Reliability was significantly different between groups: 99% for MT, 96% for IH, and 31% for EH. Failure modes differed; EH presented abutment screw fracture, IH showed abutment screw and implant fractures, and MT displayed abutment and abutment screw bending or fracture. CONCLUSIONS: The postulated hypothesis that different implant-abutment connections to support anterior single-unit replacements would result in different reliability and failure modes when subjected to SSALT was accepted.
PMID: 23377054
ISSN: 0882-2786
CID: 272032

Reply: combined use of acellular dermal matrix and supraclavicular artery island flap for oropharyngeal reconstruction

Chiu, Ernest S; Friedlander, Paul L
PMID: 23542286
ISSN: 1529-4242
CID: 271412

Low temperature degradation and reliability of one-piece ceramic oral implants with a porous surface

Sanon, Clarisse; Chevalier, Jerome; Douillard, Thierry; Kohal, Ralf J; Coelho, Paulo G; Hjerppe, Jenni; Silva, Nelson R F A
Low temperature degradation of zirconia (3Y-TZP) oral implants and its effect on fatigue reliability is poorly documented. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this investigation was to follow the aging process occurring at the surface of implants exhibiting a porous coating and to assess its influence on their mechanical (fatigue) properties. METHODS: Tetragonal to monoclinic transformation (t-m) was evaluated during accelerated aging tests up to 100h in autoclave (134 degrees C, 2 bars) by X-ray diffraction (XRD) and focused ion beam (FIB). A series of implants were steam-aged for 20h before fatigue testing. Such temperature-time conditions would correspond roughly to 40 years in vivo. The aged specimens and a non-aged control group were step-stress fatigued until failure or survival. RESULTS: The evolution of XRD surface monoclinic content was slow, i.e. 16% and 35% for 20 and 100h respectively. However, FIB revealed a significant transformation, initiated at the interface between the porous layer and the bulk, preferentially growing towards the bulk. FIB is therefore better indicated than XRD to follow aging in such implants. Higher average fatigue strength (aged 1235N versus non-aged 826N) and reliability levels were observed for the 20h aged group. SIGNIFICANCE: After aging for durations compatible with clinical use, 3Y-TZP with porous surface presented higher fatigue performance. This is in contrast to previous studies where loss of strength due to aging was often reported. Generalizations must therefore be avoided when considering aging of zirconia dental products and every new material/process combination should be tested before drawing conclusions.
PMID: 23419633
ISSN: 0109-5641
CID: 263682