Edmund P. Chute
University of Minnesota
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Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1997
Frank A. Lederle; Gary R. Johnson; Samuel E. Wilson; Ian L. Gordon; Edmund P. Chute; Fred N. Littooy; William C. Krupski; Dennis F. Bandyk; Gary W. Barone; Linda M. Graham; Robert J. Hye; Donovan B. Reinke; Louis M. Messina; Charles W. Acher; David J. Ballard; Howard J. Ansel; A. W. Averbook; Michel S. Makaroun; Gregory L. Moneta; Julie A. Freischlag; Raymond G. Makhoul; M. Tabbara; G. B. Zelenock; Joseph H. Rapp
PURPOSE To assess the effects of age, gender, race, and body size on infrarenal aortic diameter (IAD) and to determine expected values for IAD on the basis of these factors. METHODS Veterans aged 50 to 79 years at 15 Department of Veterans Affairs medical centers were invited to undergo ultrasound measurement of IAD and complete a pre-screening questionnaire. We report here on 69,905 subjects who had no previous history of abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) and no ultrasound evidence of AAA (defined as IAD > or = 3.0 cm). RESULTS Although age, gender, black race, height, weight, body mass index, and body surface area were associated with IAD by multivariate linear regression (all p < 0.001), the effects were small. Female sex was associated with a 0.14 cm reduction in IAD and black race with a 0.01 cm increase in IAD. A 0.1 cm change in IAD was associated with large changes in the independent variables: 29 years in age, 19 cm or 40 cm in height, 35 kg in weight, 11 kg/m2 in body mass index, and 0.35 m2 in body surface area. Nearly all height-weight groups were within 0.1 cm of the gender means, and the unadjusted gender means differed by only 0.23 cm. The variation among medical centers had more influence on IAD than did the combination of age, gender, race, and body size. CONCLUSIONS Age, gender, race, and body size have statistically significant but small effects on IAD. Use of these parameters to define AAA may not offer sufficient advantage over simpler definitions (such as an IAD > or = 3.0 cm) to be warranted.
Annals of Surgery | 1984
Frank B. Cerra; John E. Mazuski; Edmund P. Chute; Nancy Nuwer; Kathy Teasley; Jolynn Lysne; Eva P. Shronts; Frank N. Konstantinides
A prospective, randomized, double-blind trial of the nutritional effects of branched chain modified amino acid solutions was undertaken in 23 surgical patients within 24 hours of the onset of major general surgery, polytrauma, or sepsis. The effects were evaluated in the absence of abnormalities of oxygen transport and perfusion in an isocaloric/isonitrogenous setting where the major difference between the groups was the amount of branched chain amino acids received. Both groups received balanced parenteral nutrition with 1.5 gm/kg/day of amino acids, 30 calories/kg/day of glucose, and 7 calories/kg/day of fat. At the end of the 7-day study interval, the group receiving the branched chain enriched therapy at 0.7 gm/kg/day of branched chain amino acids had improved nitrogen retention; an elevation of their absolute lymphocyte count from 800 to 1800/mm3, a reversal of anergy to recall skin test antigens in 60% of the patients, and improved plasma transferrin levels (p < 0.03). Nutritional support using the modified amino acid metabolic support solutions has beneficial effects during the stress interval that do not seem as achievable with current commercially available nutritional support regimens.
The American Journal of Medicine | 1994
Frank A. Lederle; Connie M. Parenti; Edmund P. Chute
PURPOSE To define the clinical features and assess the frequency and causes of missed diagnoses of ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) in patients initially presenting to internists. PATIENTS All identified patients with ruptured AAA presenting to internists during a 7 1/2-year period at a large academic medical center. METHOD Chart review. RESULTS We identified 23 patients with a ruptured AAA presenting to internists. Most had abdominal pain and tenderness, back or flank pain, and leukocytosis, whereas anemia and profound hypotension (systolic blood pressure below 90 mm Hg) were uncommon at presentation. In 14 cases (61%), the diagnosis of ruptured AAA was initially missed. Nine patients had an interval of 24 hours or more between presentation to the internist and surgery or death. The diagnosis was not made until after shock developed in nine patients who were hemodynamically stable at presentation. Of 17 patients who underwent surgery, 7 of 8 with preoperative shock died, compared with 2 deaths in 9 patients (p < .02) without shock. All six patients who did not have surgery died, yielding an overall mortality of 65% for the series. Ruptured AAAs were most frequently misdiagnosed as urinary tract obstruction or infection, spinal disease, and diverticulitis. Chart review revealed a general lack of physician awareness of the syndromes of contained rupture of AAA and symptomatic unruptured AAA. CONCLUSIONS In patients with ruptured AAA who present to internists, the diagnosis is often delayed or missed and this appears to adversely effect survival. Internists should familiarize themselves with the presentation and management of ruptured AAA.
Annals of Surgery | 1985
Henry Buchwald; Edmund P. Chute; Fay J. Goldenberg; Claudia R. Hitchcock; Byron J. Hoogwerf; Jose Barbosa; William M. Rupp; Thomas D. Rohde
Diabetes mellitus with resistance to insulin administered subcutaneously or intramuscularly (DRIASM) is a rare and brittle form of Type I diabetes, found predominantly in young females and characterized by inadequate glycemic response to subcutaneous or intramuscular insulin administration. DRIASM leads to frequent ketoacidosis and obligatory hospitalization for administration of intravenous insulin. The use of a totally implantable infusion pump effected dramatic improvement in the treatment of five patients with this difficult form of diabetes. Frequency of clinical ketoacidosis was reduced from 37 episodes per year to 0.4 episodes per year (99%), and average in-hospital days per month were reduced from 20.8 days to 2.2 days (89%) with a mean follow-up period of 14.4 months. Cost savings were approximately +10,000 per patient month. Quality of life was greatly improved for these individuals.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2002
Frank A. Lederle; Samuel E. Wilson; Gary R. Johnson; Donovan B. Reinke; Fred N. Littooy; Charles W. Acher; David J. Ballard; Louis M. Messina; Ian L. Gordon; Edmund P. Chute; William C. Krupski; Steven J. Busuttil; Gary W. Barone; Steven Sparks; Linda M. Graham; Joseph H. Rapp; Michel S. Makaroun; Gregory L. Moneta; Robert A. Cambria; Raymond G. Makhoul; Darwin Eton; Howard J. Ansel; Julie A. Freischlag; Dennis F. Bandyk
Annals of Internal Medicine | 1997
Frank A. Lederle; Gary R. Johnson; Samuel E. Wilson; Edmund P. Chute; Fred N. Littooy; Dennis F. Bandyk; William C. Krupski; Gary W. Barone; Charles W. Acher; David J. Ballard
JAMA Internal Medicine | 2000
Frank A. Lederle; Gary R. Johnson; Samuel E. Wilson; Edmund P. Chute; Robert J. Hye; Michel S. Makaroun; Gary W. Barone; Dennis F. Bandyk; Gregory L. Moneta; Raymond G. Makhoul
JAMA Internal Medicine | 2000
Frank A. Lederle; Gary R. Johnson; Samuel E. Wilson; Fred N. Littooy; William C. Krupski; Dennis F. Bandyk; Charles W. Acher; Edmund P. Chute; Robert J. Hye; Ian L. Gordon; Julie A. Freischlag; Allen W. Averbook; Michel S. Makaroun
Surgery | 1984
Richard D. Rucker; Eve K. Chan; Joseph P. Horstmann; Edmund P. Chute; Richard L. Varco; Henry Buchwald
Bulletin of the American College of Surgeons | 1985
Henry Buchwald; Edmund P. Chute