Ahmad Fawad Jebran
University of Göttingen
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Featured researches published by Ahmad Fawad Jebran.
Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery | 2011
Aron Frederik Popov; Jan D. Schmitto; Ahmad Fawad Jebran; Christian Bireta; Martin Friedrich; Direndra Rajaruthnam; Kasim Oguz Coskun; Anselm Braeuer; José Hinz; Theodor Tirilomis; Friedrich A. Schoendube
The reported incidence of deep sternal wound infection (DSWI) after cardiac surgery is 0.4-5% with Staphylococcus aureus being the most common pathogen isolated from infected wound sternotomies and bacteraemic blood cultures. This infection is associated with a higher morbidity and mortality than other known aetiologies. Little is reported about the optimal antibiotic management. The aim of the study is to quantify the application of daptomycin treatment of DSWI due to gram-positive organisms post cardiac surgery.We performed an observational analysis in 23 cases of post sternotomy DSWI with gram-positive organisms February 2009 and September 2010. When the wound appeared viable and the microbiological cultures were negative, the technique of chest closure was individualised to the patient.The incidence of DSWI was 1.46%. The mean dose of daptomycin application was 4.4 ± 0.9 mg/kg/d and the average duration of the daptomycin application was 14.47 ± 7.33 days. In 89% of the patients VAC therapy was used. The duration from daptomycin application to sternal closure was 18 ± 13.9 days. The parameters of infection including, fibrinogen (p = 0.03), white blood cell count (p = 0.001) and C-reactive protein (p = 0.0001) were significantly reduced after daptomycin application. We had no mortality and wound healing was successfully achieved in all patients.Treatment of DSWI due to gram-positive organisms with a daptomycin-containing antibiotic regimen is safe, effective and promotes immediate improvement of local wound conditions.Based on these observations, daptomycin may offer a new treatment option for expediting surgical management of DSWI after cardiac surgery.
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2014
Alexander Emmert; Ahmad Fawad Jebran; Karsten Schmidt; Marc Hinterthaner; Hanibal Bohnenberger; Mathias Bähr; Friedrich A. Schöndube; Bernhard C. Danner
This clinical report deals with a giant true pulmonary venous aneurysm, which was partially thrombosed. The overall incidence of pulmonary venous aneurysms is unknown, and they are reported only occasionally. We present the case of a previously healthy man with acute onset of ischemic cerebral stroke. The cause was a thrombus in a huge aneurysm of the left superior pulmonary vein. The patient subsequently underwent uncomplicated therapy for stroke, including thrombolysis followed by excision of the giant pulmonary venous aneurysm. As curative therapy we recommend complete resection of this rare entity.
Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery | 2017
Ioannis Bougioukas; Ahmad Fawad Jebran; Marius Grossmann; Martin Friedrich; Theodor Tirilomis; Friedrich Schoendube; Bernhard C. Danner
BackgroundRe-exploration for bleeding accounts for increased morbidity and mortality after major cardiac operations. The use of temporary epicardial pacemaker wires is a common procedure at many departments. The removal of these wires postoperatively can potentially lead to a serious bleeding necessitating intervention.MethodsFrom Jan 2011 till Dec 2015 a total of 4244 major cardiac procedures were carried out at our department. We used temporary epicardial pacemaker wires in all cases. We collected all re-explorations for bleeding and pericardial tamponade from our surgical database and then we focused on the late re-explorations, meaning on the 4th postoperative day and thereafter, trying to identify the removal of the temporary pacemaker wires as the definite cause of bleeding. Patients’ records and medication were examined.ResultsThirty-nine late re-explorations for bleeding, consisting of repeat sternotomies, thoracotomies and subxiphoid pericardial drainages, were gathered. Eight patients had an acute bleeding incidence after removal of the temporary wires (0.18%). In four of these patients, a pericardial drainage was inserted, whereas the remaining patients were re-explorated through a repeat sternotomy. Two patients died of the acute pericardial tamponade, three had a blood transfusion and one had a wound infection. Seven out of eight patients were either on dual antiplatelet therapy or on combination of aspirin and vitamin K antagonist.ConclusionsA need for re-exploration due to removal of the temporary pacemaker wires is a very rare complication, which however increases morbidity and mortality. Adjustment of the postoperative anticoagulation therapy at the time of removal of the wires could further minimize or even prevent this serious complication.
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2013
Christian Bireta; Aron Frederik Popov; Dieter Zenker; Ahmad Fawad Jebran; Friedrich A. Schoendube; Tomislav Stojanovic
An 18-year-old man presented in our emergency department with major blunt trauma in a critical hemodynamic condition. The initial contrast computed tomographic scan showed a traumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage, rib fractures with lung contusion on both sides, a liver contusion with lacerations, covered perforation of the vena cava inferior with a huge hematoma, a splenic rupture, partial kidney rupture on the right side, and a humeral shaft fracture right sided (Fig 1). After cardiopulmonary stabilization, we took the patient immediately to the operating room for emergent surgical intervention. We performed a reconstruction of the extrapericardial rupture of the inferior vena cava (IVC) without cardiopulmonary bypass using a 20-mm Gore-Tex prosthesis as interposition graft followed by a reimplantation of the liver veins. Adequate exposure was achieved through complete exposition of the liver freeing it from all ligaments before exposing the subphrenic hematoma. Furthermore, the peri-
Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery | 2012
José Hinz; Philipp Gehoff; Hanna Schotola; Morteza Tavakkoli Hosseini; Vassilios Didilis; Ahmad Fawad Jebran; Anastasia Gehoff; C.H.R. Wiese; Egbert Godehard Schulz; Friedrich A. Schoendube; Aron Frederik Popov
BackgroundPeri-operative statin therapy in cardiac surgery cases is reported to reduce the rate of mortality, stroke, postoperative atrial fibrillation, and systemic inflammation. Systemic inflammation could affect the hemodynamic parameters and stability. We set out to study the effect of statin therapy on perioperative hemodynamic parameters and its clinical outcome.MethodsIn a single center study from 2006 to 2007, peri-operative hemodynamic parameters of 478 patients, who underwent cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass, were measured. Patients were divided into those who received perioperative statin therapy (n = 276; statin group) and those who did not receive statin therapy (n = 202; no-statin group). The two groups were compared together using Kolmogorov-Smirnov-Test, Fisher’s-Exact-Test, and Student’s-T-test. A p value < 0.05 was considered as significant.ResultsThere was no significant difference in the preoperative risk factors. Onset of postoperative atrial fibrillation was not affected by statin therapy. Extended hemodynamic measurements revealed no significant difference between the two groups, apart from Systemic Vascular Resistance Index (SVRI) . The no-statin group had a significantly higher SVRI (882 ± 206 vs. 1050 ± 501 dyn s/cm5/m2, p = 0.022). Inotropic support was the same in both groups and no significant difference in the mortality rate was noticed. Also, hemodynamic parameters were not affected by different types and doses of statins.ConclusionsPerioperative statin therapy for patients undergoing on-pump coronary bypass grafting or valvular surgery, does not affect the hemodynamic parameters and its clinical outcome.
Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgeon | 2018
Shekhar Saha; Sam Varghese; Ammar Al Ahmad; Ahmad Fawad Jebran; Narges Waezi; Heidi Niehaus; Hassina Baraki; Ingo Kutschka
OBJECTIVES The increasing proportion of elderly patients in cardiac surgery poses additional challenges for the clinical management and leads to a higher operative risk due to multiple comorbidities of these patients. We reviewed the outcome of patients who were 75 years and older and underwent complex multiple valve surgery at our institution. METHODS A retrospective review was performed to identify patients who were 75 years and older and underwent multiple valve surgery between January 2011 and May 2016 at our institution. Patients were assigned to one out of four subgroups: combined aortic and mitral valve surgery (group AM), aortic and tricuspid valve surgery (group AT), mitral and tricuspid valve surgery (group MT), and aortic, mitral, and tricuspid valve surgery (group AMT). RESULTS A total of 311 patients underwent multiple valve surgery, of whom 119 (38.3%) were 75 years and older (median: 78 [25th-75th quartile: 76-80]). The estimated operative mortality (EuroSCORE II) in the overall cohort was 10.7%. The observed 30-day mortality was 4.2% (7% in group AM, 0% in group AT, 2.2% in group MT, 3.8% in group AMT; p = 0.685). Main complications were reexplorative surgery in 16%, adverse cerebrovascular events in 6.7%, prolonged mechanical ventilation in 10.1%, renal replacement therapy in 15.1%, nosocomial pneumonia in 15.1%, and pacemaker implantation in 18.5%. CONCLUSIONS This study demonstrates the feasibility of complex multiple valve surgery in elderly patients. The observed perioperative mortality was lower than predicted. However, we observed a substantial rate of adverse events; therefore, careful patient selection is required in this high-risk patient population.
Journal of Investigative Surgery | 2018
Ioannis Bougioukas; Vassilios Didilis; Alexander Emmert; Ahmad Fawad Jebran; Regina Waldmann-Beushausen; Tomislav Stojanovic; Friedrich A. Schoendube; Bernhard C. Danner
ABSTRACT Purpose: Lung ischemia–reperfusion injury (LIRI) can complicate lung transplantation or cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass, increasing morbidity and mortality. In LIRI, pro-inflammatory cytokines are activated, reactive oxygen species are generated and nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) is up-regulated, altering lung mechanics. We tested the effect of the flavonoid apigenin on a rodent model of LIRI. Methods: Thirty-seven Wistar rats were subjected to LIRI with or without a single or double dose of apigenin. Induction of LIRI involved sternotomy and clamping of either the left lung hilum or the pulmonary artery alone for 30 min, followed by 60 min of reperfusion. Control groups consisted of LIRI plus NaCl, a sham group and a baseline group. At the end of the experiments, both lungs were analyzed by RT-PCR, Western blot, and light microscopy. Results: In placebos, the expression levels of pro-inflammatory markers were increased in both lungs significantly, whereas NF-κB was markedly up-regulated. Administration of apigenin reduced the activation of NF-κB and the expression of TNFα, iNOS, and IL-6. These effects were observed in total lung ischemia. Histology showed greater hemorrhage and exudation in the pulmonary periphery of all groups, whereby damage was practically absent in the central lung regions of the apigenin animals. A second dose of apigenin did not outclass a single one. Conclusions: We conclude that apigenin given intraperitoneally can reduce activation of NF-κB and also attenuate the expression of TNFα, IL-6, and iNOS in a surgical model of LIRI. The surgical procedure itself can induce significant damage to the lungs.
Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery | 2015
Christian Bireta; Theodor Tirilomis; Marius Grossmann; Bernhard Unsöld; Rolf Wachter; Thorsten Perl; Ahmad Fawad Jebran; Friedrich A. Schoendube; Aron Frederik Popov
Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgeon | 2014
I. Bougioukas; Ahmad Fawad Jebran; Tomislav Stojanovic; V.N. Didilis; Christian Bireta; Regina Waldmann-Beushausen; Friedrich A. Schöndube; Bernhard C. Danner
Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgeon | 2018
Ahmad Fawad Jebran; Narges Waezi; Regina Waldmann-Beushausen; Bernhard C. Danner; Ingo Kutschka; Friedrich A. Schöndube; Tomislav Stojanovic