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Dive into the research topics where Anthony J. Tortolani is active.

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Featured researches published by Anthony J. Tortolani.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 1993

Detection of alkoxyl and carbon-centered free radicals in coronary sinus blood from patients undergoing elective cardioplegia☆

Anthony J. Tortolani; Saul R. Powell; Vladimír Mišík; William B. Weglicki; Gustave Pogo; Jay H. Kramer

Confirmation of the involvement of free radicals in postischemic injury in human heart has been elusive. The present study was performed to determine the presence of free radicals in coronary sinus blood from patients undergoing elective open heart surgery and cardioplegia. Six patients who were scheduled for nonurgent elective open heart surgery were used in this study. Coronary sinus blood samples were withdrawn at 1, 3, 5, 10, 15, 20, and 25 min in post-cross-clamp and immediately mixed with isosmotic alpha-phenyl-tert-butylnitrone (PBN) and then centrifuged to obtain plasma. Plasma samples were extracted with toluene and analyzed using electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy. We observed ESR spectra consistent with the formation of alkoxyl and carbon-centered radical adducts of PBN (aN = 13.6 G, a beta H = 1.9 G, and aN = 14.1 G, a beta H = 4.2 G) in six of six patients. We obtained complete free radical production time courses during reperfusion from five patients, and all demonstrated a biphasic profile with an initial burst from 5 to 10 min followed by a second maxima at 25 min. Total PBN-adduct production during reperfusion increased in patients subjected to longer aortic cross-clamp times (global ischemia). These data demonstrate that postcardioplegia free radical production is detectable in coronary sinus blood using an ex vivo spin-trapping technique and that the extent of formation may be related to the severity of ischemia.


Resuscitation | 1990

In-hospital cardiopulmonary resuscitation: patient, arrest and resuscitation factors associated with survival

Anthony J. Tortolani; Donald A. Risucci; Robert J. Rosati; Roberta Dixon

Data on 470 adults with single in-hospital cardiac arrest resuscitations were analyzed to determine 24-h and discharge survival rates and to identify significant correlates of survival. One hundred fifty-three (33%) patients were alive 24 h after initiation of cardiopulmonary resuscitation; 69 (45% of 24-h survivors, 15% of all patients) were discharged alive. Logit analysis identified the following independently significant correlates of 24-h survival: arrest locations other than emergency room or cardiac care unit, CPR duration less than 15 min, non-cardiac primary diagnosis, non-asystolic dysrhythmia, less than one intravenous and one drip-administered inotrope and absence of pacemaker insertion and defibrillation. Fifty-one (94%) of 54 patients with all of these characteristics were alive 24 h after initiation of CPR. The same variables, as well as age less than 68 years and absence of intubation were statistically associated with discharge survival. Nine (64%) of 14 patients with all of these characteristics were discharged alive. Increased intervention was generally associated with increased mortality. Overall survival rates replicate previous reports and may reflect the effects of diagnosis-related groups policies on the average illness severity of the in-patient population, rather than failure of current CPR methods to improve the probability of survival. Use of the data as baseline for future studies and as a source of hypotheses for research on decision making are discussed.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1985

Relation of angina pectoris to coronary artery disease in aortic valve stenosis

Stephen J. Green; Roy A. Pizzarello; Vellore T. Padmanabhan; Lawrence Y. Ong; Michael H. Hall; Anthony J. Tortolani

One hundred three patients with isolated, severe aortic stenosis (AS) were retrospectively analyzed to determine the relation of angina pectoris to angiographically significant coronary artery disease (CAD). All patients underwent coronary angiography regardless of the presence or absence of angina. Angina was significantly associated with CAD (p less than 0.002), with a sensitivity of 78% and a specificity of 53%. However, 25% of the patients without angina had angiographically significant CAD, and in these patients there was a 70% prevalence of 1-vessel disease. Patients with isolated, severe AS should undergo coronary angiography to identify coexistent CAD accurately. The absence of angina does not reliably exclude angiographically significant CAD.


Circulation | 2005

Surgical treatment of atrial fibrillation using argon-based cryoablation during concomitant cardiac procedures.

Charles A. Mack; Federico Milla; Wilson Ko; Leonard N. Girardi; Leonard Y. Lee; Anthony J. Tortolani; Justin Mascitelli; Karl H. Krieger; O. Wayne Isom

Background—The development of ablative energy sources has simplified the surgical treatment of atrial fibrillation (AF) during concomitant cardiac procedures. We report our results using argon-based endocardial cryoablation for the treatment of AF in patients undergoing concomitant cardiac procedures. Methods and Results—Sixty-three patients with AF who were undergoing concomitant cardiac procedures had the same left atrial endocardial lesion set using a flexible argon-based cryoablative device. Mean age was 65.1±1.3 years. Sixty-two percent had permanent AF, whereas 38% had paroxysmal AF. Mean duration of AF was 30.5±4.8 months. Mean left atrial diameter was 5.5±0.1 cm. Mean ejection fraction was 45±1.4%. All endocardial lesions were performed for 1 minute once tissue temperature reached −40°C. Follow-up echocardiograms were obtained to determine freedom from AF. Kaplan-Meier analysis demonstrated an 88.5% freedom from AF rate at 12 months. Ablation time was 16.8±0.6 minutes. There were no in-hospital deaths and no strokes. Twelve patients (19%) required postoperative permanent pacemaker placement. Conclusions—Cryoablation using this flexible argon-based device for the treatment of AF during concomitant cardiac procedures was safe and effective, with 88.5% of patients free from AF at 12 months.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1986

Frequency of angiographically significant coronary arterial narrowing in mitral stenosis

Charles J. Mattina; Stephen J. Green; Anthony J. Tortolani; Vellore T. Padmanabhan; Lawrence Y. Ong; Michael H. Hall; Roy A. Pizzarello

Ninety-six consecutive patients older than 40 years with severe mitral stenosis were retrospectively analyzed to determine the relation of angina pectoris (AP) and coexistent coronary artery disease (CAD). Of the 96 patients, 27 (28%) had angiographically significant CAD, 10 (37%) with AP and 17 (63%) without AP. Of the 96 patients, 21 had AP, 10 (48%) with angiographically significant CAD and 11 (52%) without (CAD). Of 75 patients without AP, 17 (23%) had angiographically significant CAD AP had a specificity of 84% and a sensitivity of 37% in its ability to detect significant CAD. The pulmonary artery systolic, diastolic and mean pressures and the pulmonary vascular resistance did not differ between patients with and those without AP (p greater than 0.05). It is concluded that coexistent CAD is commonly found in patients older than age 40 with severe MS, and is usually clinically silent.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1992

Effects of morbid obesity and diabetes mellitus on risk of coronary artery bypass grafting

Dominick Gadaleta; Donald A. Risucci; Roy L. Nelson; Anthony J. Tortolani; Michael H. Hall; Vincent Parnell; Christopher P. Chiodo; Stephen Green

Abstract Obesity has been identified as an independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease 1–4 and the occurrence of complications of coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). 5,6 A study was designed to determine if the risks associated with morbid obesity should alter the indications for CABG, the operative strategy or the postoperative care.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2008

Cardiac Surgery in Select Nonagenarians: Should We or Shouldn’t We?

Brant W. Ullery; Janey C. Peterson; Federico Milla; Martin T. Wells; William M. Briggs; Leonard N. Girardi; Wilson Ko; Anthony J. Tortolani; O. Wayne Isom; Karl H. Krieger

BACKGROUND Patients aged 90 years and older represent a rapidly growing subset of the population, many of whom are functionally limited by cardiovascular disease. Clinical decision making about cardiac surgical intervention in nonagenarians is hindered by a paucity of data examining survival outcomes in this population. METHODS A consecutive series of nonagenarians who underwent cardiac operations between 1995 and 2004 were retrospectively reviewed. Data collection included baseline preoperative clinical status, intraoperative characteristics, and perioperative course. Area under the Kaplan-Meier survival estimate method was used to calculate mean survival. RESULTS Cardiac surgical procedures were done in 49 patients (51% male); their mean age was 91.9 years (range, 90 to 97 years). Operative mortality was 8% (n = 4). Multivariate Cox proportional hazards models found preoperative chronic renal insufficiency (hazard ratio [HR], 4.88; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.53 to 15.55; p = 0.007) and ejection fraction (HR, 0.96; 95% CI, 0.93 to 1.00; p = 0.033) were independently associated with death. Overall mean survival was 5.1 +/- 0.5 years (median, 5.2 years). Quality of life outcomes were similar to that of two related norm-based populations based on age and disease process. CONCLUSIONS Cardiac surgical procedures can be performed safely and with therapeutic benefit in carefully selected nonagenarians. We consider physiologic indicators, social factors, and patient preferences to be the main determinants in the patient selection process. Our results support the need for more proactive intervention in symptomatic nonagenarian patients as it relates to earlier consideration of elective, rather than emergency cardiac operations.


American Journal of Surgery | 1995

Reduced length of stay following carotid endarterectomy under general anesthesia

Steven G. Friedman; Anthony J. Tortolani

BACKGROUND The widespread use of diagnosis-related groups has led to a significant reduction in the length of hospital stay following many surgical procedures. In light of this, an examination of early discharge following carotid endarterectomy under general anesthesia was undertaken. PATIENTS AND METHODS A prospective study of 72 patients was conducted, in which the workup was done on an outpatient basis, admission took place on the same day as surgery, and patients were discharged home on the day after carotid endarterectomy. RESULTS There were no strokes or deaths following carotid endarterectomy, and only two transient ischemic attacks occurred. In 88% of the cases, discharge was possible on the first postoperative day. CONCLUSIONS Early discharge following carotid endarterectomy under general anesthesia is safe and cost effective.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1995

Aortic dissection: Rupture into right ventricle and right pulmonary artery

Laurence N. Spier; Michael H. Hall; Roy L. Nelson; Vincent Parnell; Gustave Pogo; Anthony J. Tortolani

Rupture of an acute ascending aortic dissection into a surrounding cardiac chamber or pulmonary artery is an uncommon occurrence, and is often only diagnoses post mortem. Although fistulization (aortopulmonary and aorta-right atrial) after acute aortic dissection has been well documented in the literature, acute aortic dissection fistulizing into both the right ventricle and pulmonary artery has not. We report on a 75-year-old woman who presented with an acute ascending aortic dissection with both aortopulmonary and aorta-right ventricular fistulas who underwent repair and had long-term survival.


Evaluation & the Health Professions | 1992

Reliability and accuracy of resident evaluations of surgical faculty.

Donald A. Risucci; Larry Lutsky; Robert J. Rosati; Anthony J. Tortolani

This study examines the reliability and accuracy of ratings by general surgery residents of surgical faculty. Twenty-three of 33 residents anonymously and voluntarily evaluated 62 surgeons in June, 1988; 24 of 28 residents evaluated 64 surgeons in June, 1989. Each resident rated each surgeon on a 5-point scale for each of 10 areas ofperformance: technical ability, basic science knowledge, clinical knowledge, judgment, peer relations, patient relations, reliability, industry, personal appearance, and reaction to pressure. Reliability analyses evaluated internal consistency and interrater correlation. Accuracy analyses evaluated halo error, leniency/severity, central tendency, and range restriction. Ratings had high internal consistency (coefficient alpha = 0. 97). Interrater correlations were moderately high (average Pearson correlation = 0.63 among raters). Ratings were generally accurate, with halo error most prevalent and some evidence of leniency. Ratings by chief residents had the least halo. Results were generally replicable across the two academic years. We conclude that anonymous ratings of surgical faculty by groups of residents can provide a reliable and accurate evaluation method, ratings by chief residents are most accurate, and halo error may pose the greatest threat to accuracy, pointing to the needfor greater definition of evaluation items and scale points.

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Donald A. Risucci

North Shore University Hospital

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Roy L. Nelson

North Shore University Hospital

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Michael H. Hall

North Shore University Hospital

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Saul R. Powell

North Shore University Hospital

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Vincent Parnell

North Shore University Hospital

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Wilson Ko

SUNY Downstate Medical Center

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