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Department/Unit:Plastic Surgery

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5854


Litigation, legislation, and ethics. Record keeping to avoid or defend lawsuits: a defense attorney's perspective

Speidel, T Michael; Jerrold, Laurance
PMID: 15179402
ISSN: 0889-5406
CID: 1992922

Litigation, legislation and ethics. Releases and minors

Jerrold, Laurance
PMID: 15127036
ISSN: 0889-5406
CID: 1992932

Litigation, legislation, and ethics. Speaking for others: vicarious liability regarding informed consent

Jerrold, Laurance
PMID: 15067270
ISSN: 0889-5406
CID: 1992942

Litigation, legislation, and ethics: defending claims for lack of informed consent

Jerrold, Laurance
PMID: 15014421
ISSN: 0889-5406
CID: 1992952

Litigation, legislation, and ethics. Determining a national standard of care

Jerrold, Laurance
PMID: 14765063
ISSN: 0889-5406
CID: 1992962

Litigation, legislation, and ethics. The scope of employment

Jerrold, Laurance
PMID: 14718890
ISSN: 0889-5406
CID: 1992972

New York University Medical Center's pilot "Epo-Depot" program: a win-win for patients and health care

Smith, Donald; Delmore, Barbara
Therapy associated with treatment-related anemia continues to be of great concern for health care providers. Patient satisfaction, patient adherence, and growing insurance reimbursement concerns related to Epoetin alpha therapy for anemia initiated the development of a nursing-led process improvement team at New York University (NYU) Medical Center. Multiple patient groups were identified and treated for anemia with Epoetin alpha through the guide of a standardized pathway providing a convenient and effective treatment plan. The treatment delivery had to be consistent with institutional reimbursement requirements while avoiding significant cost to the patient. Patient populations diagnosed with HIV anemia, HIV oncology, presurgical anemia, and medically complex anemia can now receive appropriate ambulatory treatment. This article describes the formation of the "Epo-Depot" and the logistics involved to service these patients with anemia.
PMID: 15538014
ISSN: 1055-3290
CID: 1788072

Surgical treatment of recurrent orbital hemangiopericytoma [Case Report]

Valentini, Valentino; Nicolai, Gianluca; Fabiani, Francesco; Torroni, Andrea; Pagnoni, Mario; Battisti, Andrea
Hemangiopericytoma is a rare vascular tumor featuring the uncontrolled proliferation of pericytes. This tumor tends to develop in subcutaneous tissue and skeletal muscle. The localization of hemangiopericytoma in the orbit is particularly rare. Clinical signs and symptoms are, in order of frequency, proptosis, perception of an intraorbital mass, pain, diplopia, reduction of visus, tumescence, and ecchymoses of the eyelids. Hemangiopericytomas have higher potential of relapse, local invasiveness, and the possibility of producing distant metastases. Surgery must be as radical as possible to avoid incomplete tumor resection and high frequency of relapse together with increased duration of the disease and a higher risk of malignant development. The current report is a study of two cases of hemangiopericytoma in the orbital cavity treated at the Unit of Maxillo-Facial Surgery of the University of "La Sapienza" in Rome. The present data demonstrate that complete en bloc excision of the mass with its capsule is important to avoid the risk of relapse. To this end, an appropriate first surgical treatment should be chosen so as to obtain a wide "surgical light" and complete view of the mass. In the reported cases, the use of a combined anterolateral approach was preferred to attack the tumor from different sides. Indeed, such an approach allows one to obtain optimal exposition of the orbital region and temporal and infratemporal fossae contemporaneously.
PMID: 14704575
ISSN: 1049-2275
CID: 1770152

Ultrasonic-enhanced gentamicin transport through colony biofilms of Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Escherichia coli

Carmen, John C; Nelson, Jared L; Beckstead, Benjamin L; Runyan, Christopher M; Robison, Rachel A; Schaalje, G Bruce; Pitt, William G
The hypothesis that ultrasound increases antibiotic transport through biofilms of Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa was investigated using colony biofilms. Biofilms grown on membrane filters were transferred to nutrient agar containing 50 microg/ml gentamicin. A smaller filter was placed on top of the biofilm and a blank concentration disk was situated atop the filter. Diffusion of antibiotic through the biofilms was allowed for 15, 30, or 45 min at 37 degrees C. Some of these biofilms were exposed to 70-kHz ultrasound and others were not. Each concentration disk was then placed on a nutrient agar plate spread with a lawn of E. coli. The resulting zone of inhibition was used to calculate the amount of gentamicin that was transported through the biofilm into the disk. The E. coli and P. aeruginosa biofilms grown for 13 and 24 h were exposed to two different ultrasonic power densities. Ultrasonication significantly increased the transport of gentamicin through the biofilm. Insonation of biofilms of E. coli for 45 min more than doubled the amount of gentamicin compared to their noninsonated counterparts. For P. aeruginosa biofilms, no detectable gentamicin penetrated the biofilm within 45 min without ultrasound; however, when insonated (1.5 W/cm2) for 45 min, the disks collected more than 0.45 microg antibiotic. Ultrasonication significantly increased transport of gentamicin across biofilms that normally blocked or slowed gentamicin transport when not exposed to ultrasound. This enhanced transport may be partially responsible for the increased killing of biofilm bacteria exposed to combinations of antibiotic and ultrasound.
PMCID:1409753
PMID: 15365858
ISSN: 1341-321x
CID: 1683402

Developmental origin of wiring specificity in the olfactory system of Drosophila

Jefferis, Gregory S X E; Vyas, Raj M; Berdnik, Daniela; Ramaekers, Ariane; Stocker, Reinhard F; Tanaka, Nobuaki K; Ito, Kei; Luo, Liqun
In both insects and mammals, olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs) expressing specific olfactory receptors converge their axons onto specific glomeruli, creating a spatial map in the brain. We have previously shown that second order projection neurons (PNs) in Drosophila are prespecified by lineage and birth order to send their dendrites to one of approximately 50 glomeruli in the antennal lobe. How can a given class of ORN axons match up with a given class of PN dendrites? Here, we examine the cellular and developmental events that lead to this wiring specificity. We find that, before ORN axon arrival, PN dendrites have already created a prototypic map that resembles the adult glomerular map, by virtue of their selective dendritic localization. Positional cues that create this prototypic dendritic map do not appear to be either from the residual larval olfactory system or from glial processes within the antennal lobe. We propose instead that this prototypic map might originate from both patterning information external to the developing antennal lobe and interactions among PN dendrites.
PMID: 14645123
ISSN: 0950-1991
CID: 951002