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Department/Unit:Plastic Surgery

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5854


NEW FINDINGS IN CARNIOFACIAL SYNOSTOSIS SYNDROMES [Meeting Abstract]

Grayson, B; Kolber, A; Mccarthy, JG; Coccaro, PJ
ISI:A1980KM70800061
ISSN: 0009-8701
CID: 27956

DOMINANTLY INHERITED OROFACIAL DEFECTS IN SEVERAL FAMILY MEMBERS - A NEW SYNDROME [Meeting Abstract]

Reich, EW; Cox, RP; Becker, MH; Genieser, NB; Mccarthy, JG; Converse, JM
ISI:A1980KM70800076
ISSN: 0009-8701
CID: 27957

REPLANTATION OF ABOVE-ELBOW AMPUTEES - TOTAL REHABILITATION PROGRAM [Meeting Abstract]

Chu, DS; Shaw, WW; Ma, DM; Petrillo, CR
ISI:A1980KM73100167
ISSN: 0003-9993
CID: 27960

A study of the treatment time necessary for the vasodilator drug isoxsuprine to prevent necrosis in a skin flap

Zide B; Buncke HJ; Finseth F
These results show that administration of isoxsuprine at least 13 days prior to flap elevation and continuance at least 7 days postoperatively does lead to completre survival of the abdominal neurovascular island skin flap in the rat
PMID: 7426818
ISSN: 0007-1226
CID: 50606

The microvascular technique of vein grafting in rats as a training and experimental model

Razaboni RM; Ballantyne DL; Harper AD; Shaw WW
Techniques for obtaining and implanting vein grafts in the femoral arteries of rats are described. Grafts 5 mm in length can be removed from the femoral vein without ligating any side branches; a 15-mm segment is the maximum graft that can be obtained from the femoral vein in a rat. This requires ligation and division of all the branches between the inguinal ligament and the great saphenous vein. The superficial epigastric vein also can be used as a source of grafts to be used in the femoral artery. In this study, neither the femoral nor the superficial epigastric vein appeared to have functioning valves. Therefore, reversing the vein graft before implantation was not necessary
PMID: 7217884
ISSN: 0191-3239
CID: 64686

The numbers game ... the key to our future

Beasley RW
PMID: 7419873
ISSN: 0363-5023
CID: 66530

Trapezius osteomyocutaneous island flap for reconstruction of the anterior floor of the mouth and the mandible

Panje, W; Cutting, C
The anterior mandible defect following cancer excision presents a formidable reconstructive challenge. A trapezius osteomyocutaneous island flap based on the transverse cervical vessels is described which allows immediate reconstruction of the entire defect. The various classes of bone flaps retaining an intact vascular pedicle are discussed. The osseous extension of the trapezius island flap appears to be adequate perfused. The anatomy involved and the orthopedic sequelae of using flap are discussed
PMID: 6997238
ISSN: 0148-6403
CID: 135024

The current status of the major histocompatibility complex (HLA) in family studies of craniofacial developmental anomalies

Rapaport, F T; Converse, J M; McCarthy, J G; Bachvaroff, R J; Raisbeck, A P; Bach, F H
PMID: 6455667
ISSN: 0361-7742
CID: 99077

Craniofacial synostosis in association with vitamin D--resistant rickets [Case Report]

McCarthy, J G; Reid, C A
A patient with craniofacial synostosis and vitamin D--resistant rickets who underwent successful Le Fort II advancement is presented. The association of premature cranial synostosis with a variety of metabolic and hematological disorders is discussed
PMID: 6245614
ISSN: 0148-7043
CID: 99076

Early and late surgery in craniofacial dysostosis: a longitudinal cephalometric study

Coccaro, P J; McCarthy, J G; Epstein, F J; Wood-Smith, D; Converse, J M
Longitudinal clinical and cephalometric case studies are presented for two groups of patients with craniofacial dysostosis. The first sample includes two infants who underwent an extensive stripping procedure that was extended inferiorly to involve not only the coronal, but also the sphenozygomatic suture. The second sample includes two adolescents with midfacial hypoplasia who underwent a fronto-orbital-maxillary advancement. The extensive cranial stripping procedure had a favourable impact upon growth and development of the craniofacial structures, and longitudinal studies suggest the importance of promoting the growth potential of the bones contiguous to the affected sutures. Craniofacial surgery performed on adolescents results in a dramatic translocation of the skeletal and soft-tissue structures of the face. In contrast to early surgical intervention in infants in whom growth of the effected areas essential to the development of face and cranium was crucial, late surgery appeared to have little, if any, impact upon the development of the craniofacial skeletal structures that had been operated on
PMID: 6928743
ISSN: 0002-9416
CID: 99075