Searched for: Department/Unit:Plastic Surgery
VASOACTIVE PROSTAGLANDIN (PG) LEVELS DIFFER IN THE NO-REFLOW AND REFLOW ISCHEMIC LIMB [Meeting Abstract]
LYSZ, TW; FENG, IJ; BERGER, B; SHAW, W
ISI:A1987G323400343
ISSN: 0014-9446
CID: 51292
Efficacy of surgical treatment for paralytic ectropion
Lisman, R D; Smith, B; Baker, D; Arthurs, B
Paralytic ectropion can be corrected with numerous procedures. Advocates of particular procedures have previously been unable to quote statistical rates of success for each procedure over significant lengths of time. This study reviews over 200 cases of paralytic ectropion, representing the spectrum of seventh nerve disease seen at an eye and ear specialty hospital and a general medical facility. Of all eyelid implantation devices 93 to 95% failed to work or needed reoperation by 3 years postoperatively. Soft tissue surgery without prosthetic implants or exoplants provided 60% success after a 3-year follow-up. Eyelid elevation or tightening coupled with surgery for facial reanimation produced a higher rate of success at 3 years (83%). An overwhelming number of patients (62%) complained of some degree of epiphora after any or all procedures. Based on these findings, soft tissue surgery without prosthetic implants or exoplants has a higher rate of success
PMID: 3627716
ISSN: 0161-6420
CID: 138852
A long polypyrimidine/polypurine tract induces an altered DNA conformation on the 3' coding region of the adjacent myosin heavy chain gene
McCarthy, J G; Heywood, S M
A long (147 base pairs), natural A.T rich polypyrimidine/polypurine tract has been found 55 base pairs downstream of a chicken embryonic myosin heavy chain (MHC) gene. Analysis at the nucleotide level of nicks induced by S1 and Neurospora crassa nucleases indicate that this long interrupted polypyrimidine/polypurine tract exists in an alternate DNA structure in vitro at pH 4.5 and pH 7.5 in both supercoiled and linear plasmid DNA. The polypyrimidine/polypurine tract induces this alternate structure upon at least 200 base pairs of its 5' flanking DNA, and thus extends into the 3' coding and non-coding regions of the neighboring MHC gene. The different nicking patterns induced by the nucleases S1 and N. crassa on each strand of this alternate structure suggests that the polypyrimidine/polypurine tract may form heteronomous DNA. When this long polypyrimidine/polypurine tract is present in a supercoiled plasmid at low pH, a new and as yet undefined S1 hypersensitive DNA alteration was detected near the center of this tract
PMCID:306327
PMID: 3671071
ISSN: 0305-1048
CID: 99054
Outbreak of severe hepatitis due to delta and hepatitis B viruses in parenteral drug abusers and their contacts
Lettau, L A; McCarthy, J G; Smith, M H; Hadler, S C; Morse, L J; Ukena, T; Bessette, R; Gurwitz, A; Irvine, W G; Fields, H A
We investigated an unusually large and severe outbreak of hepatitis B, primarily involving parenteral drug abusers and their sexual contacts, in Worcester, Massachusetts, over a 21-month period from 1983 to 1985. Of 135 patients with drug-related acute hepatitis B, 81 percent were parenteral drug abusers and 19 percent had sexual contact with drug abusers; 13 fulminant cases resulted in 11 deaths. Among the patients with hepatitis B, evidence of delta virus infection was found in 54 percent of drug abusers, 33 percent of their sexual contacts, and 9 percent of other patients with acute hepatitis B (P less than 0.001). Most of the delta infections (86 percent) were coinfections with hepatitis B virus; the balance were superinfections. Delta infection was strongly associated with fulminant hepatitis: 91 percent of patients with a fulminant outcome had delta infection, as compared with 45 percent of less severely ill drug abusers and their contacts (P = 0.0037). Alcohol, other drugs, and other hepatitis viruses could not be implicated as hepatotoxic cofactors for fulminant disease. This outbreak appeared to result from the concurrent spread of hepatitis B and delta viruses among new drug users. Control measures included the distribution to physicians of guidelines on prophylaxis in contacts of patients with hepatitis B, health education for drug abusers, and a hepatitis B vaccination program. Despite these efforts, the outbreak continued unabated until the number of new cases began to decline slowly in late 1986
PMID: 3670348
ISSN: 0028-4793
CID: 99053
Breast sensibility: a neurophysiological appraisal in the normal breast
Terzis, J K; Vincent, M P; Wilkins, L M; Rutledge, K; Deane, L M
This study has provided baseline data of a quantitative neurophysiological appraisal of normal breast sensibility using our current understanding of cutaneous mechanoreceptive function. Test variables, including pressure, low- and high-frequency vibration, static and moving two-point discrimination, temperature, nipple erectibility, and pain, were evaluated in 11 normal volunteers using different coordinates over the nipple, areola, and body of the breast. Definite patterns were established so that the breast could be subdivided into distinct cutaneous areas with differing mechanoreceptive characteristics. The future aim is to broaden the scope of this study with preoperative evaluations in our clinical patients so that appropriate recommendations for future reconstructive breast procedures can be made
PMID: 3688778
ISSN: 0148-7043
CID: 115210
Some novel techniques of clinical electrophysiology applied to the management of brachial plexus palsy
Liberson, W T; Terzis, J K
PMID: 3501366
ISSN: 0301-150x
CID: 115211
Repair of severed peripheral nerves: comparison of the "de Medinaceli" and standard microsuture methods
Terzis, J K; Smith, K J
The return of function following transection of the rat sciatic nerve has been assessed after repair by either standard microsurgical techniques (i.e., the use of microsutures to coapt the severed ends) or the new repair technique introduced by de Medinaceli and coworkers. The regeneration after transection was compared with that following sciatic nerve crush, i.e., a lesion in which the return of function is near optimal. Return of function was monitored serially using walking track analysis (i.e., the sciatic functional index, which indicates overall functional performance), the ability to spread the toes (which indicates intrinsic function in the foot), and the determination of muscle twitch tension of the middle digit. Function in the nerve crush group returned to within the normal range by 53 days, but function in the transection and repair groups did not return to normal before the rats were perfused at 85 postoperative days. However, the function regained when nerves were repaired with the de Medinaceli technique was significantly superior to that regained after repair with microsutures. Histological examination of the repair site (at 85 days) revealed that the regenerated nerve fibers in the de Medinaceli group crossed the site of anastomosis in a relatively orderly fashion, whereas they were more randomly arranged when microsutures were used. However, there was no statistical difference between the two groups in the number of regenerated fibers present in the distal stump. The increase in function in the de Medinaceli group may therefore arise primarily from an increase in the proportion of regenerating fibers which reach appropriate targets.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
PMID: 3556204
ISSN: 0014-4886
CID: 115212
Medial arm flap revisited [Case Report]
Breidenbach, W C; Adamson, W; Terzis, J K
Twenty fresh cadaver dissections examining the medial arm flap were completed. Blood supply to the medial arm skin was from the branches off the superior ulnar collateral artery (65%), direct cutaneous branches from the brachial artery (20%), or both (15%). Injection studies were completed demonstrating the extent of the medial arm flap. Four clinical cases were completed. The results in this article are different from some previous studies because they show that the superior ulnar collateral system is always present, the superior ulnar collateral vessels never directly supply the medial arm skin, and the medial arm skin may have a direct cutaneous supply from the brachial artery
PMID: 3566103
ISSN: 0148-7043
CID: 115213
Vascularized nerve grafts: an experimental and clinical review [Case Report]
Breidenbach, W C; Terzis, J K
PMID: 3566101
ISSN: 0148-7043
CID: 115214
New concepts in phallic reconstruction [Case Report]
Gilbert, D A; Horton, C E; Terzis, J K; Devine, C J Jr; Winslow, B H; Devine, P C
Over the past four years we have performed total phallic reconstructions in 12 patients. Six patients underwent reconstruction following trauma, 3 were female-to-male transsexuals, and 3 had micropenis deformities. These reconstructions were one-stage microsurgical tissue transfers that included urethral reconstruction and coaptation of erogenous nerves. The surgical indications, techniques, and results are discussed
PMID: 3566100
ISSN: 0148-7043
CID: 115215