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Dive into the research topics where Ajay Chavan is active.

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Featured researches published by Ajay Chavan.


Circulation | 1997

Intravascular Ultrasound–Guided Percutaneous Fenestration of the Intimal Flap in the Dissected Aorta

Ajay Chavan; Dirk Hausmann; Christoph Dresler; H. Rosenthal; K. Jaeger; Axel Haverich; H. G. Borst; M. Galanski

BACKGROUND Aortic dissection with branch obstruction is associated with high morbidity and mortality. Fenestration of the dissection flap to relieve distal vessel ischemia is at present largely performed surgically. The surgical mortality and morbidity are high, because most patients are poor candidates for anesthesia or surgery. METHODS AND RESULTS Nine percutaneous fenestrations (one with additional stenting of the infrarenal true aortic lumen) were performed under local anesthesia in seven patients with aortic dissection. The presenting symptoms were abdominal angina or claudication. By the transfemoral approach, the intimal flap was initially punctured with a needle-catheter combination through which a guidewire was placed across the dissection flap. The fenestration was carried out with a balloon catheter introduced over the guidewire. The procedure was performed under on-line guidance with intravascular ultrasound imaging. The procedure was performed successfully and without complications in all patients. After intervention, symptoms resolved in all seven patients. CONCLUSIONS Intravascular ultrasound-guided percutaneous fenestration of the intimal flap in symptomatic aortic dissections with distal vessel involvement is a technically feasible and safe procedure that can effectively relieve the patients symptoms.


Surgery | 1998

First experience and technical aspects of isolated liver perfusion for extensive liver metastasis

Karl J. Oldhafer; Hauke Lang; Markus Frerker; Laura Moreno; Ajay Chavan; Peer Flemming; Silvio Nadalin; Ekkehard Schmoll; R. Pichlmayr

BACKGROUND New drugs and modalities for locoregional tumor treatment in recent years may offer new potential for isolated liver perfusion in patients with nonresectable liver tumors. The purpose of this study was to prove the feasibility of arterial isolated liver perfusion and to assess the tolerance of perfusion with high-dose tumor necrosis factor (TNF). METHODS Twelve patients with extensive liver metastases previously treated unsuccessfully with systemic chemotherapy underwent isolated hyperthermic liver perfusion using a heart-lung machine. High doses of mitomycin were administered in the first six and a combination of TNF and melphalan in the last six patients. RESULTS No operative death occurred and no direct postoperative liver failure was observed in any patient. In cases of variations of the arterial hepatic blood supply, the perfusion was done through the splenic artery or an angiography catheter. Histologic analysis of tumor biopsy specimens obtained on the first postoperative day revealed major tumor necrosis in 8 of 12 patients. CONCLUSIONS Isolated arterial perfusion of the liver is a complex surgical procedure that is feasible in patients with anatomic variations of the hepatic artery. The remarkable histologic response to perfusion in several pretreated patients, especially after application of high-dose TNF and melphalan, suggests that this modality is very effective in tumor killing.


European Radiology | 2003

Diagnostic management of patients with SAPHO syndrome: use of MR imaging to guide bone biopsy at CT for microbiological and histological work-up

Timm Kirchhoff; Sonja Merkesdal; Herbert Rosenthal; M. Prokop; Ajay Chavan; Annette D. Wagner; Uwe Mai; Michael Hammer; Henning Zeidler; Michael Galanski

Propionibacterium acnes (P. acnes) is suspected to be involved in the pathophysiology of SAPHO syndrome, since it has been isolated repeatedly through open surgical bone biopsy. This study demonstrates the role of MRI in identifying inflamed bone areas in patients with SAPHO syndrome and the role of CT-guided bone biopsies in obtaining samples from these areas for microbiological and histopathological investigations, thus obviating open surgery. Fourteen consecutive patients with SAPHO syndrome were investigated by MRI to identify acute inflammatory changes in hyperostotic periarticular bone. The CT-guided biopsies for microbiological investigations were taken from the areas identified. Patients positive for P. acnes were started on long-term antibiotic therapy according to antibiotic susceptibility. On MRI the inflammatory changes appeared as hyperintense areas on fat-saturated T2 fast-spin-echo (FSE) images and showed signal increase on fat-saturated T1 SE images after Gd-DTPA. With MR localization CT-guided bone biopsies yielded P. acnes in 8 patients. No bacteria could be isolated from the remaining 6 patients. Acute inflammatory bone changes in SAPHO syndrome are well localized by MRI. With MR localization, CT-guided bone biopsies offer a minimally invasive alternative to open surgery in the detection of. P. acnes leading to the institution of a specific antibiotic therapy.


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2005

Hybrid Endograft for One-Step Treatment of Multisegment Disease of the Thoracic Aorta

Ajay Chavan; Matthias Karck; Christian Hagl; Michael Winterhalter; Stefan Baus; Michael Galanski; Axel Haverich

PURPOSE At present, a two-step surgical approach is necessary to treat patients with coexistent pathologic conditions involving the proximal and descending thoracic aorta. A hybrid endograft is described here that enables such treatment during a single operation. MATERIALS AND METHODS The Chavan-Haverich endograft consists of a Dacron vascular prosthesis with stainless-steel stents affixed at its distal end. After approval by the institutional review board, the endograft was prospectively implanted in 22 patients with multisegment thoracic aortic disease (13 men, nine women; median age, 64 years). Eleven patients had type A dissections (one acute, 10 chronic), four had a chronic type B dissection, and seven had atherosclerotic aneurysms of the ascending aorta or aortic arch as well as of the descending aorta. Of these patients, 11 additionally required aortic valve replacement or coronary artery bypass grafting. Via median sternotomy, the aortic arch was opened in circulatory arrest. After antegrade deployment of the stent-containing portion in the descending aorta, the proximal non-stent-containing endograft was used to reconstruct the aortic arch. Median follow-up was 14 months. RESULTS Endograft implantation was successful in all but one patient. Complications included neurologic deficits that were transient in one case and lasting in two, two cases of vocal cord paralysis, and one death. In all patients with atherosclerotic aneurysms who received the endograft (six of seven), aneurysm thrombosis was noted at follow-up. In aortic dissections, partial or complete false-lumen thrombosis to the level of the stents occurred in all patients. None of the patients showed a progressive widening of the descending aorta. CONCLUSION The Chavan-Haverich endograft enables one-step treatment of multisegment pathologic conditions affecting the thoracic aorta that otherwise would require two or more operations.


Journal of Endovascular Therapy | 2000

Matched-pair analysis of conventional versus endoluminal AAA treatment outcomes during the initial phase of an aortic endografting program.

Tina U. Cohnert; Frank Oelert; Thorsten Wahlers; Bernhard Gohrbandt; Ajay Chavan; Alexander Farber; Michael Galanski; Axel Haverich

Purpose: To investigate whether endovascular stent-grafts implanted during the early phase of an aortic endografting program have advantages over conventional surgical procedures for treatment of infrarenal aortic aneurysm (AAA). Methods: In the first months of an endografting program, 37 patients (36 men; mean age 67.9 ± 7.1 years, range 55 to 86) underwent AAA repair with endovascular implantation of a Vanguard (n = 17) or Talent (n = 20) bifurcated stent-graft. Data collected during the perioperative period and in follow-up were compared retrospectively to a matched group of 37 elective surgical patients. Results: All endograft implantations were completed. Two type I and 6 type II endoleaks (21.6%) were seen postoperatively. Five type II sealed without intervention; 1 type I endoleak was corrected with an additional stent, but 1 type I and 1 type II endoleaks persisted despite attempts with coil embolization. Two (5.4%) endograft patients died during the perioperative period; however, this was not significantly different (p = 0.15) from the control group. In the mean follow-up of 12 ± 6 months for both groups, 1 (2.7%) late conversion was necessary at 2 years for aneurysm expansion in an endograft patient with an unsealed type I endoleak. Conclusions: In our learning curve experience with aortic endografting, postoperative morbidity and mortality were higher in endograft patients compared to conventionally treated controls. Only in the endograft group was reoperation required during follow-up. Careful monitoring with periodic imaging studies is mandatory after endoluminal AAA treatment.


European Radiology | 2003

Endoluminal treatment of aortic dissection

Ajay Chavan; Joachim Lotz; Frank Oelert; Michael Galanski; Axel Haverich; Matthias Karck

Aortic dissection is most often a catastrophic medical emergency which, if untreated, can be potentially fatal. The intention of therapy in patients with aortic dissection is to prevent aortic rupture or aneurysm formation as well as to relieve branch vessel ischaemia. Patients with aortic dissection are often poor candidates for anaesthesia and surgery and the surgical procedure itself is challenging requiring thoracotomy, aortic cross clamping, blood transfusion as well as prolonged hospital stay in some cases. Operative mortality is especially high in patients with critical mesenteric or renal ischaemia. The past decade has experienced the emergence of a number of interventional radiological or minimally invasive techniques which have significantly improved the management of patients with aortic dissection. These include stent grafting for entry site closure to prevent aneurysmatic widening of the false lumen as well as percutaneous techniques such as balloon fenestration of the intimal flap and aortic true lumen stenting to alleviate branch vessel ischaemia. False lumen thrombosis following entry closure with stent grafts has been observed in 86–100% of patients, whereas percutaneous interventions are able to effectively relieve organ ischaemia in approximately 90% of the cases. In the years to come, it is to be expected that these endoluminal techniques will become the method of choice for treating most type-B dissections and will assist in significantly reducing the number of open surgical procedures required for type-A dissections. The intention of this article is to provide an overview of the current status of these endoluminal techniques based on our own experience as well as on a review of the relevant literature.


European Radiology | 2000

Role of the intra-arterial calcium stimulation test in the preoperative localization of insulinomas.

Ajay Chavan; Timm Kirchhoff; Georg Brabant; G. F. W. Scheumann; S. Wagner; Michael Galanski

Abstract. The aim of this study was determination of the significance of the arterial stimulation test with venous sampling (ASVS) in the preoperative localization of insulinoma. Eleven patients with endogenous hyperinsulinism underwent preoperative transabdominal US, spiral computer tomography (spiral CT), MRI, endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) as well as angiography (DSA) combined with ASVS. The results were compared with intraoperative findings, intraoperative ultrasound (IOUS) and histopathology. There were no complications related to the ASVS test. In 11 patients the tumor could be localized with the various modalities as follows: US 1 of 11 (9 %), MRI 3 of 10 (30 %), spiral CT 4 of 11 (36 %), EUS 5 of 10 (50 %), DSA 8 of 11 (73 %), and ASVS 10 of 11 (91 %). In 2 patients the tumors were intraoperatively neither palpable nor detectable by IOUS, and consequently the intraoperative management was governed by information provided by DSA combined with the ASVS test. Ten patients had solitary benign insulinomas and 1 patient with multiple endocrine neoplasia I had two tumors adjacent to each other in the pancreatic tail. Arterial stimulation test with venous sampling was the most sensitive preoperative test for regionalizing the insulinoma in our set of patients. It can be performed safely in the course of a regular DSA examination and may affect intra-operative management in patients in whom the tumors are not detectable by palpation or IOUS.


European Radiology | 2000

Endoluminal grafting of abdominal aortic aneurysms: experience with the Talent endoluminal stent graft

Ajay Chavan; T. U. Cohnert; J. Heine; C. Dresler; Martin Leuwer; W. Harringer; M. Jörgensen; Axel Haverich; Michael Galanski

Abstract. The aim of this study was to evaluate the Talent endoluminal stent graft (TESG) in treating abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAA). The TESG is a polyester-covered nitinol endograft (proximal diameters 20–38 mm and iliac limb diameters 8–22 mm). Twenty-two men were treated with the TESG via bilateral femoral arteriotomies. Pre-implantation, coil embolization of various vessels arising from the aneurysm was performed in 6 patients. Plain radiographs and spiral CT angiograms (CTA) were carried out at 7 days, 3, 6, and 12 months following TESG implantation or re-intervention. Median aortic and iliac diameters were 27 mm (range 20–34 mm) and 14 mm (range 10–19 mm). The corresponding graft diameters were 30 mm (range 24–38 mm) and 14 mm (range 12–20 mm). No patient was rejected purely on the basis of too large aortic or iliac diameters. Eight patients required custom-made grafts. Graft implantation was successful in all patients. There were no blood transfusions, distal embolic episodes, or conversions to open surgery. Re-intervention was necessary in 1 patient. Complications included one fatal myocardial infarction, one inguinal hematoma, and two superficial wound infections. The aneurysm thrombosed completely following implantation in 14 patients and at 3 or 6 months in 4 other patients. One patient with endoleak is awaiting his 3-month control and 2 patients show tiny endoleaks but reduction of aneurysm size. The mean aneurysm size decreased significantly from 58 ± 10 to 53 ± 13 mm (p < 0.0005). Due to the large sizes available and the option of custom-made grafts, the TESG helps widen the spectrum of patients who can be treated with endoluminal grafting. The treatment is associated with a significant reduction in aneurysm size.


European Radiology | 2001

Precise determination of aortic length in patients with aortic stent grafts: in vivo evaluation of a thinning algorithm applied to CT angiography data

Hoen-oh Shin; Ajay Chavan; F. Witthus; Dirk Selle; Georg Stamm; Heinz-Otto Peitgen; Michael Galanski

Abstract The aim of this study was to develop a technique for precise determination of the aortic length using volumetric CT data for potential use prior to endovascular stent-graft placement. The study population consisted of 20 patients (38 measurements) with already performed endoluminal grafting. This allowed for in vivo evaluation of our technique. Its length according to the graft specifications served as a gold standard for our own measurements. The implemented graft length varied between 120 and 195 mm. Computed tomography angiography was performed with 3-mm slice collimation, 5-mm table feed and a reconstruction interval of 2 mm. Following semi-automatic segmentation of the aorta and its large side branches, the median centerline (skeleton) of the vessels was determined employing a modified three-dimensional thinning algorithm. The algorithm was validated by comparing the calculated length of the resulting skeleton with the specifications of the grafts. The calculated length was sufficiently precise despite the limiting reconstruction interval of 2 mm of our CT data which only permitted an assessment of stent length in 2-mm steps. The differences in the measured length and graft length were in the range between 0 and 8 mm ( < 5 %) with a mean fractional error of 2.46 ± 2.37 mm. The use of an intelligent region growing algorithm capable of coping with variable arterial enhancement significantly reduced operator post-processing time. The average time necessary for segmentation was 7 min (range 3–10 min). Our algorithm provides a non-invasive method for objective and precise measurement of aortic length apparently even in tortuous vessels. It has the potential to replace angiography for aortic and iliac length measurements with calibrated catheters prior to endovascular intervention.


Journal of Endovascular Therapy | 2007

Transfemoral Stent-Graft Placement to Treat a Complication of the Frozen Elephant Trunk Procedure

Jerry Easo; Otto Dapunt; Ehsan Natour; Philipp Hoelzl; Gerd Dangel; Ajay Chavan

Purpose: To report a novel complication of a hybrid “frozen elephant trunk” endograft used in the treatment of a multisegmentally diseased aorta. Case Report: A 53-year-old man with chronic type A aortic dissection and previous replacement of the supracoronary ascending aorta underwent a “frozen elephant trunk” procedure using a hybrid endograft. The stent-graft was placed deep in the descending aorta to cover the multiple distal re-entries. Due to ineffective covering of the re-entries, a patent false lumen led to rapid repressurization of the false lumen immediately distal to the circumferential elephant trunk anastomosis. Compression of the non-stented portion of the hybrid endograft caused a functional aortic stenosis, with severe hemodynamic consequences. Endovascular treatment of the compression by retrograde transfemoral placement of a stent-graft in the non-stented portion of the hybrid endograft achieved free flow in the distal aorta. Conclusion: This case documents a new complication of the frozen elephant trunk procedure; a pseudocoarctation from a repressurized proximal false lumen was successfully managed with a stent-graft to support the non-stented segment of the hybrid endograft.

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Frank Oelert

Hannover Medical School

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Joachim Lotz

Hannover Medical School

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M. Prokop

Hannover Medical School

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