Eddie L. Hoover
University at Buffalo
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Featured researches published by Eddie L. Hoover.
JAMA | 2008
Robert B. Baker; Harriet A. Washington; Ololade Olakanmi; Todd L. Savitt; Elizabeth A. Jacobs; Eddie L. Hoover; Matthew K. Wynia
Like the nation as a whole, organized medicine in the United States carries a legacy of racial bias and segregation that should be understood and acknowledged. For more than 100 years, many state and local medical societies openly discriminated against black physicians, barring them from membership and from professional support and advancement. The American Medical Association was early and persistent in countenancing this racial segregation. Several key historical episodes demonstrate that many of the decisions and practices that established and maintained medical professional segregation were challenged by black and white physicians, both within and outside organized medicine. The effects of this history have been far reaching for the medical profession and, in particular, the legacy of segregation, bias, and exclusion continues to adversely affect African American physicians and the patients they serve.
Surgical Endoscopy and Other Interventional Techniques | 1995
D. W. D. Collure; Harvey L. Bumpers; F. A. Luchette; W. L. Weaver; Eddie L. Hoover
Increased intracranial pressure is often relieved by a ventriculoperitoneal shunt. The shunt has a one-way valve which can withstand pressures of 300 mmHg and prevent reflux of intraabdominal fluid. We have utilized laparoscopy for cholecystectomy in four patients with VP shunts. In all patients the peritoneal cavity was free of adhesions. When CO2 insufflation pressure was as high as 10–15 mmHg cerebrospinal fluid was still noted to flow from the end of the shunts. In three patients the entire procedure was performed laparoscopically. In the fourth patient the procedure was converted to an open cholecystectomy because of extensive inflammation surrounding a gangrenous gallbladder. Postoperatively the shunts remained intact and functional. There were no central nervous system sequelae. None of the shunts became infected. Elective laparoscopic cholecystectomy in patients with VP shunts can be done safely without a need for clamping or other manipulation of the shunt.
Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1992
Syde A. Taheri; Mahmoud N. Kulaylat; Eric Johnson; Eddie L. Hoover
This is a case report of a 41-year-old woman who required surgical removal of a Greenfield filter 7 months after placement. The filter developed several complications. Two struts were noted to be completely separated from the filter and lodged in the infrarenal vena cava. The filter had migrated to a resting position in the right renal, vein with two struts perforating the renal vein and inferior vena caval junction. The perforating struts were intraperitoneal and were found to impinge on the right ureter with seromuscular involvement of the second portion of the duodenum. No free perforation was noted at the time of exploration.
Journal of The National Medical Association | 2009
Robert B. Baker; Harriet A. Washington; Ololade Olakanmi; Todd L. Savitt; Elizabeth A. Jacobs; Eddie L. Hoover; Matthew K. Wynia
An independent panel of experts, convened by the American Medical Association (AMA) Institute for Ethics, analyzed the roots of the racial divide within American medical organizations. In this, the first of a 2-part report, we describe 2 watershed moments that helped institutionalize the racial divide. The first occurred in the 1870s, when 2 medical societies from Washington, DC, sent rival delegations to the AMAs national meetings: an all-white delegation from a medical society that the US courts and Congress had formally censured for discriminating against black physicians; and an integrated delegation from a medical society led by physicians from Howard University. Through parliamentary maneuvers and variable enforcement of credentialing standards, the integrated delegation was twice excluded from the AMAs meetings, while the all-white societys delegations were admitted. AMA leaders then voted to devolve the power to select delegates to state societies, thereby accepting segregation in constituent societies and forcing African American physicians to create their own, separate organizations. A second watershed involved AMA-promoted educational reforms, including the 1910 Flexner report. Straightforwardly applied, the reports population-based criterion for determining the need for phySicians would have recommended increased training of African American physicians to serve the approximately 9 million African Americans in the segregated south. Instead, the report recommended closing all but 2 African American medical schools, helping to cement in place an African American educational system that was separate, unequal, and destined to be insufficient to the needs of African Americans nationwide.
Shock | 1995
William J. Flynn; David Pilati; Eddie L. Hoover
To determine the contribution of xanthine oxidase-mediated reperfusion injury to the blood flow deficits seen in the intestinal microcirculation after resuscitated hemorrhagic shock, rats were prepared for intravital microscopic study then bled to 50% of baseline blood pressure for 60 min. Treatment animals received a 50 mg/kg bolus and a 25 mg/kg/h infusion of the xanthine oxidase inhibitor allopurinol after shock but before standard resuscitation with shed blood and an equal volume of Ringers lactate. A similarly resuscitated group served as control. Blood flow and vessel diameters were measured in the neurovascularly intact terminal ileum using intravital microscopy and doppler velocimetry. Resuscitation restored cardiac output and blood pressure in both groups. Blood flow in first order arterioles 120 min postresuscitation was 41 % of baseline in the standard resuscitation group and 77% of baseline in the allopurinol-treated group. A1 arteriolar diameter was not significantly different between the two groups, being 73 and 82% of baseline, respectively. These data suggest that xanthine oxidase-mediated ischemia-reperfusion injury contributes to blood flow deficits in the small intestinal microcirculation after resuscitated hemorrhagic shock and that the improvement in blood flow seen with allopurinol is not due to vasodilation within the microvasculature.
Surgical Endoscopy and Other Interventional Techniques | 1994
Harvey L. Bumpers; F. A. Luchette; Ralph J. Doerr; Eddie L. Hoover
Percutaneous endoscopic jejunostomy provides good access for enteral nutrition in those patients at high risk for aspiration and poor tolerance of gastric feeding. Positioning the jejunostomy tube through the PEG tube and into the duodenum can be difficult and time consuming. We describe a simple method for gaining rapid control of the jejuenal tube and its duodenal insertion.
Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery | 2003
Harvey L. Bumpers; D. W. D. Collure; Irwin M. Best; Karyn L. Butler; William L. Weaver; Eddie L. Hoover
Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) has been popular since it was introduced in 1980. Gastrostomy tubes left in place for long periods often result in unusual complications. Complications may also result from simply replacing a long-term indwelling tube. Five patients who had gastrostomy tubes in place for as long as 4 years are presented and their complications reviewed. Various methods used in treating these complications are discussed, and suggestions for their prevention are given. Gastrointestinal erosion and jejunal perforation following migration of the gastrostomy tube, persistent abdominal wall sinus tracts, and separation of the flange head with small bowel obstruction were encountered. Reinsertion of a gastrostomy tube through a tract prior to adequate maturation was also noted to lead to complications. Complications may result from gastrostomy tubes left in place for extended periods of time and during replacement procedures. Awareness of such complications along with education of caregivers and timely intervention by the endoscopist may prevent such occurrences. In some cases one can only hope to minimize morbidity.
Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1993
William J. Flynn; Eddie L. Hoover
To determine the contribution of ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) to the blood flow deficit and hepatocellular dysfunction seen after resuscitation from hemorrhagic shock, the xanthine oxidase inhibitor allopurinol was given to rats as a 50 mg/kg bolus after shock but before resuscitation and continued as a 25 mg/kg/h infusion. Resuscitation with shed blood and lactated Ringers restored cardiac output and blood pressure in both groups. Control animals demonstrated a reduction in total hepatic and effective hepatic blood flow to 59% and 43% of baseline values, respectively. Allopurinol resulted in a return to baseline values of both variables. Allopurinol treatment resulted in a 350% increase in xanthine, a 630% increase in hypoxanthine, and a 70% reduction in uric acid concentrations. These data suggest that IRI contributes to the organ dysfunction and blood flow deficits seen after resuscitated hemorrhagic shock the effect of which can be attenuated by the addition of the xanthine oxidase inhibitor allopurinol to standard resuscitation.
Angiology | 2002
Victoria J. Amodeo; Harry W. Donias; Guiseppe D'Ancona; Eddie L. Hoover; Hratch L. Karamanoukian
In the past decade, new developments in cardiology and cardiac surgery have begun to offer patients a variety of new, less invasive options for the treatment of coronary artery disease. One such option is the hybrid approach to coronary artery revascularization. This combines minimally invasive direct coronary artery bypass surgery (MIDCAB) of the left anterior descending artery (LAD) with percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) of the remaining diseased coronary arteries. This approach, as an alternative to conventional coronary artery bypass surgery, retains the benefit of internal mammary artery bypass to the LAD, accom plished with a minimally invasive technique, substitutes PCI for saphenous vein grafts as treatment for low-grade lesions of other coronary arteries, and may provide a maximally bene ficial outcome for many patients. Preliminary outcomes of patients receiving the hybrid approach have been strikingly positive. This report highlights the rationale for the development of this procedure, patient selection, results, and future applications of this emerging method of treating coronary artery disease.
Surgical Endoscopy and Other Interventional Techniques | 1996
D. W. D. Collure; Harvey L. Bumpers; Eddie L. Hoover
Two patients with sinus tracts from retained T-fasteners following PEG tube placement are reported. Both patients had the PEG tubes subsequently removed and presented with purulent discharge and granulations near well-healed gastrostomy sites. The management of this complication and a possible method of prevention are discussed.