Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Edward Y. Sako is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Edward Y. Sako.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1998

Management of major tracheobronchial injuries : a 28-year experience

Mario M Rossbach; Scott B. Johnson; Miguel A Gomez; Edward Y. Sako; O. LaWayne Miller; John H. Calhoon

Abstract Background . Tracheobronchial injuries are rare but potentially life threatening. Their successful diagnosis and treatment often require a high level of suspicion and surgical repairs unique to the given injury. Methods . We reviewed our experience with 32 patients with tracheobronchial injuries treated over the past 28 years. Results . Forty-one percent (13/32) of the injuries were due to blunt trauma and 59% (19/32), to penetrating trauma. Most penetrating injuries were located in the cervical trachea (74%), whereas blunt injuries were more commonly located close to the carina (62%). Fifty-nine percent of the patients required urgent measures to secure the airway. Penetrating injuries were usually diagnosed by clinical findings or at surgical exploration. The diagnosis of blunt injuries was more difficult and required a high index of suspicion and the liberal use of bronchoscopy. The majority of the injuries were repaired primarily using techniques specific to the injury, and most patients returned to their normal activity soon after discharge. Conclusions . A high level of suspicion and the liberal use of bronchoscopy are important in the diagnosis of tracheobronchial injury. A tailored surgical approach is often necessary for definitive repair.


Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2001

Pulmonary artery systolic pressures estimated by echocardiogram vs cardiac catheterization in patients awaiting lung transplantation

Arturo Homma; Antonio Anzueto; Jay I. Peters; Irawan Susanto; Edward Y. Sako; Miguel Zabalgoitia; Charles L. Bryan; Stephanie M. Levine

BACKGROUND At many lung transplant centers, right heart catheterization and transthoracic echocardiogram are part of the routine pre-transplant evaluation to measure pulmonary pressures. Because decisions regarding single vs bilateral lung transplant procedures and the need for cardiopulmonary bypass are often made based on pulmonary artery systolic pressures, we sought to examine the relationship between estimated and measured pulmonary artery systolic pressures using echocardiogram and catheterization, respectively. METHODS We retrospectively reviewed all patients in our program who had measured pulmonary hypertension (n = 57). Patients with both echocardiogram-estimated and catheterization-measured pulmonary artery systolic pressures performed within 2 weeks of each other were included (n = 19). We analyzed results for correlation and linear regression in the entire group and in the patients with primary pulmonary hypertension (n = 8) and pulmonary fibrosis (n = 8). RESULTS In patients with primary pulmonary hypertension, pulmonary artery systolic pressure was 94 +/- 27 and 95 +/- 15 mm Hg by echocardiogram and catheterization, respectively, with r(2) = 0.11; in patients with pulmonary fibrosis, 57 +/- 23 and 58 +/- 12 mm Hg with r(2) = 0.22; and in the whole group, 76 +/- 29 and 75 +/- 23 mm Hg with r(2) = 0.50. Thirty-two additional patients had mean pulmonary artery systolic pressure = 48 +/- 16 mm Hg by catheterization but either had no evidence of tricuspid regurgitation by echocardiogram (n = 22) or the pulmonary artery systolic pressure could not be measured (n = 10). CONCLUSIONS In patients with pulmonary hypertension awaiting transplant, pulmonary artery systolic pressures estimated by echocardiogram correspond but do not serve as an accurate predictive model of pulmonary artery systolic pressures measured by catheterization. Technical limitations of the echocardiogram in this patient population often preclude estimating pulmonary artery systolic pressure.


Transplant Infectious Disease | 2000

Investigation and control of aspergillosis and other filamentous fungal infections in solid organ transplant recipients.

Jan E. Patterson; Jay I. Peters; John H. Calhoon; Stephanie M. Levine; Antonio Anzueto; H. Al-Abdely; R. Sanchez; Thomas F. Patterson; M. Rech; James H. Jorgensen; Michael G. Rinaldi; Edward Y. Sako; Scott B. Johnson; V. Speeg; Glenn A. Halff; J. K. Trinkle

Filamentous fungal infections are associated with high morbidity and mortality in solid organ transplant patients, and prevention is warranted whenever possible. An increase in invasive aspergillosis was detected among solid organ transplant recipients in our institution during 1991–92. Rates of Aspergillus infection (18.2%) and infection or colonization (42%) were particularly high among lung transplant recipients. Epidemiologic investigation revealed cases to be both nosocomial and community‐acquired, and preventative efforts were directed at both sources. Environmental controls were implemented in the hospital, and itraconazole prophylaxis was given in the early period after lung transplantation. The rate of Aspergillus infection in solid organ transplant recipients decreased from 9.4% to 1.5%, and mortality associated with this disease decreased from 8.2% to 1.8%. The rate of Aspergillus infection or colonization among lung transplant recipients decreased from 42% to 22.5%; nosocomial Aspergillus infection decreased from 9% to 3.2%. Cases of aspergillosis in lung transplant recipients were more likely to be early infections in the pre‐intervention period. Early mortality in lung transplant recipients decreased from 15% to 3.2%. Two cases of dematiaceous fungal infection were detected, and no further cases occurred after environmental controls. The use of environmental measures that resulted in a decrease in airborne fungal spores, as well as antifungal prophylaxis, was associated with a decrease in aspergillosis and associated mortality in these patients. Ongoing surveillance and continuing intervention is needed for prevention of infection in high‐risk solid organ transplant patients.


Circulation-cardiovascular Interventions | 2012

Impact of Completeness of Revascularization on Long-Term Cardiovascular Outcomes in Patients With Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Results from the Bypass Angioplasty Revascularization Investigation 2 Diabetes (BARI 2D)

Leonard Schwartz; Marnie Bertolet; Frederick Feit; Francisco Fuentes; Edward Y. Sako; Mehrdad Toosi; Charles J. Davidson; Fumiaki Ikeno; Spencer B. King

Background— Patients with diabetes have more extensive coronary disease than those without diabetes, resulting in more challenging percutaneous coronary intervention or surgical (coronary artery bypass graft) revascularization and more residual jeopardized myocardium. The Bypass Angioplasty Revascularization Investigation 2 Diabetes (BARI 2D) trial provided an opportunity to examine the long-term clinical impact of completeness of revascularization in patients with diabetes. Methods and Results— This is a post hoc, nonrandomized analysis of the completeness of revascularization in 751 patients who were randomly assigned to early revascularization, of whom 264 underwent coronary artery bypass graft surgery and 487 underwent percutaneous coronary intervention. The completeness of revascularization was determined by the residual postprocedure myocardial jeopardy index (RMJI). RMJI is a ratio of the number of myocardial territories supplied by a significantly diseased epicardial coronary artery or branch that was not successfully revascularized, divided by the total number of myocardial territories. Mean follow-up for mortality was 5.3 years. Complete revascularization (RMJI=0) was achieved in 37.9% of patients, mildly incomplete revascularization (RMJI >0⩽33) in 46.6%, and moderately to severely incomplete revascularization (RMJI >33) in 15.4%. Adjusted event-free survival was higher in patients with more complete revascularization (hazard ratio, 1.14; P=0.0018). Conclusions— Patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus and less complete revascularization had more long-term cardiovascular events. Clinical Trial Registration— URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT00006305.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1996

Twelve-hour canine heart preservation with a simple, portable hypothermic organ perfusion device

John H. Calhoon; Leonid Bunegin; Jerry Gelineau; Mark C. Felger; Joseph J. Naples; O. LaWayne Miller; Edward Y. Sako

BACKGROUND Cardiac transplantation is limited to an ischemic time of around 6 hours by available preservation solution and technique. Complex organ preservation devices have been developed that extend this time to 24 hours or more, but are clinically impractical. This study evaluates a portable oxygen-driven organ perfusion device weighing approximately 13.5 kg. METHODS Organs are perfused with the University of Wisconsin solution at low perfusion pressure using less than 400 L of oxygen per 12 hours. Left ventricular parameters were measured in anesthetized adult beagles to establish control values (n = 5). Hearts were procured after cardioplegia with 4 degrees C University of Wisconsin solution, weighed, then stored for 12 hours in University of Wisconsin solution at 4 degrees C. Hearts were perfused (n = 3) or nonperfused (n = 2) during storage. Organ temperature, partial pressure of oxygen in the aorta and right atrium, perfusion pressure, and aortic flow were recorded hourly in perfused hearts. After 12 hours, hearts were transplanted into littermates and left ventricular parameters measured after stabilization off bypass. RESULTS Organ weight for both groups was unchanged. Nonperfused hearts required both pump and pharmacologic support with significantly depressed left ventricular function. Perfused hearts needed minimal pharmacologic support, with left ventricular end-diastolic pressure, cardiac output, and rate of change of left ventricular pressure showing no statistical difference from control. CONCLUSIONS These findings confirm the potential for extended metabolic support for ischemia-intolerant organs in a small, lightweight, easily portable preservation system.


Circulation | 2012

Clinical and angiographic risk stratification and differential impact on treatment outcomes in the bypass angioplasty revascularization investigation 2 diabetes (BARI 2D) trial

Maria Mori Brooks; Bernard R. Chaitman; Richard W. Nesto; Regina M. Hardison; Frederick Feit; Bernard J. Gersh; Ronald J. Krone; Edward Y. Sako; William J. Rogers; Alan J. Garber; Spencer B. King; Charles J. Davidson; Fumiaki Ikeno; Robert L. Frye

Background —The BARI 2D trial assigned patients with type 2 diabetes to prompt coronary revascularization (REV) plus intensive medical therapy versus intensive medical therapy (MED) alone and reported no significant difference in mortality. Among patients selected for CABG, REV was associated with a significant reduction in death/MI/stroke compared with MED. We hypothesized that clinical and angiographic risk stratification would impact the effectiveness of the treatments overall and within revascularization strata. Methods and Results —An angiographic risk score was developed from variables assessed at randomization; independent prognostic factors were myocardial jeopardy index, total number of coronary lesions, prior coronary revascularization, and left ventricular ejection fraction. The Framingham risk score for patients with coronary disease was used to summarize clinical risk. Cardiovascular event rates were compared by assigned treatment within high-risk and low-risk subgroups. No overall MED versus REV outcome differences were seen in any risk stratum. The five-year risk of death/MI/stroke was 36.8% for MED compared with 24.8% for REV among the 381 CABG-selected patients in the highest angiographic risk tertile (p=0.005); this treatment effect was amplified in patients with both high angiographic and high Framingham risk (47.3% MED versus 27.1% REV, p=0.010; Hazard Ratio=2.10, p=0.009). Treatment group differences were not significant in other clinical-angiographic risk groups within the CABG stratum nor any subgroups within the PCI stratum. Conclusions —Among patients with diabetes and stable ischemic heart disease, a strategy of prompt CABG significantly reduces the rate of death/MI/stroke in those with extensive coronary artery disease or impaired left ventricular function. Clinical Trial Registration Information —ClinicalTrials.gov; Identifier: [NCT00006305][1]. [1]: /lookup/external-ref?link_type=CLINTRIALGOV&access_num=NCT00006305&atom=%2Fcirculationaha%2Fearly%2F2012%2F09%2F24%2FCIRCULATIONAHA.112.092973.atomBackground— The Bypass Angioplasty Revascularization Investigation 2 Diabetes (BARI 2D) trial assigned patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus to prompt coronary revascularization plus intensive medical therapy versus intensive medical therapy alone and reported no significant difference in mortality. Among patients selected for coronary artery bypass graft surgery, prompt coronary revascularization was associated with a significant reduction in death/myocardial infarction/stroke compared with intensive medical therapy. We hypothesized that clinical and angiographic risk stratification would affect the effectiveness of the treatments overall and within revascularization strata. Methods and Results— An angiographic risk score was developed from variables assessed at randomization; independent prognostic factors were myocardial jeopardy index, total number of coronary lesions, prior coronary revascularization, and left ventricular ejection fraction. The Framingham Risk Score for patients with coronary disease was used to summarize clinical risk. Cardiovascular event rates were compared by assigned treatment within high-risk and low-risk subgroups. Overall, no outcome differences between the intensive medical therapy and prompt coronary revascularization groups were seen in any risk stratum. The 5-year risk of death/myocardial infarction/stroke was 36.8% for intensive medical therapy compared with 24.8% for prompt coronary revascularization among the 381 coronary artery bypass graft surgery–selected patients in the highest angiographic risk tertile (P=0.005); this treatment effect was amplified in patients with both high angiographic and high Framingham risk (47.3% intensive medical therapy versus 27.1% prompt coronary revascularization; P=0.010; hazard ratio=2.10; P=0.009). Treatment group differences were not significant in other clinical-angiographic risk groups within the coronary artery bypass graft surgery stratum, or in any subgroups within the percutaneous coronary intervention stratum. Conclusion— Among patients with diabetes mellitus and stable ischemic heart disease, a strategy of prompt coronary artery bypass graft surgery significantly reduces the rate of death/myocardial infarction MI/stroke in those with extensive coronary artery disease or impaired left ventricular function. Clinical Trial Registration— URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT00006305.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1995

Penetrating intrapericardial wounds: Clinical experience with a surgical protocol

Scott B. Johnson; James L. Nielsen; Edward Y. Sako; John H. Calhoon; J. Kent Trinkle; O. LaWayne Miller

BACKGROUND From 1972 to 1977, a treatment protocol was developed at our institution for patients with suspected penetrating intrapericardial wounds. It consists of immediate transport to the operating room, pericardial decompression by subxiphoid pericardial window under local or light general anesthesia in patients in stable condition, and median sternotomy and operative repair with limited use of cardiopulmonary bypass. METHODS The records of 79 consecutive patients with acute penetrating intrapericardial injury who underwent operation from March 1978 to July 1991 were reviewed. There were 59 patients (75%) with stab wounds and 20 (25%) with gunshot wounds. Wound location was as follows: right ventricle, 33 (42%); left ventricle, 28 (35%); multiple sites, 8 (10%); atrium, 5 (6%); and great vessels, 5 (6%). RESULTS Subxiphoid pericardial window was performed under local or light general anesthesia in 53 patients (67%). Cardiopulmonary bypass was required in only 4 patients. Overall mortality was 6%. CONCLUSION Approach to a trauma victim must be systematic. We believe one treatment protocol for patients with suspected penetrating intrapericardial wounds is effective.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2016

On-pump versus off-pump coronary artery bypass graft surgery among patients with type 2 diabetes in the Bypass Angioplasty Revascularization Investigation 2 Diabetes trial.

Ashima Singh; Hartzell V. Schaff; Maria Mori Brooks; Mark A. Hlatky; Stephen R. Wisniewski; Robert L. Frye; Edward Y. Sako

OBJECTIVES Conclusive evidence is lacking regarding the benefits and risks of performing off-pump versus on-pump coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) for patients with diabetes. This study aims to compare clinical outcomes after off-pump and on-pump procedures for patients with diabetes. METHODS The Bypass Angioplasty Revascularization Investigation 2 Diabetes (BARI 2D) trial enrolled patients with type 2 diabetes and documented coronary artery disease, 615 of whom underwent CABG during the trial. The procedural complications, 30-day outcomes, long-term clinical and functional outcomes were compared between the off-pump and on-pump groups overall and within a subset of patients matched on propensity score. RESULTS On-pump CABG was performed in 444 (72%) patients, and off-pump CABG in 171 (28%). The unadjusted 30-day rate of death/myocardial infarction (MI)/stroke was significantly higher after off-pump CABG (7.0 vs 2.9%, P = 0.02) despite fewer complications (10.3 vs 20.7%, P = 0.003). The long-term risk of death [adjusted hazard ratio (aHR): 1.41, P = 0.2197] and major cardiovascular events (death, MI or stroke) (aHR: 1.47, P = 0.1061) did not differ statistically between the off-pump and on-pump patients. Within the propensity-matched sample (153 pairs), patients who underwent off-pump CABG had a higher risk of the composite outcome of death, MI or stroke (aHR: 1.83, P = 0.046); the rates of procedural complications and death did not differ significantly, and there were no significant differences in the functional outcomes. CONCLUSIONS Patients with diabetes had greater risk of major cardiovascular events long-term after off-pump CABG than after on-pump CABG.


General Hospital Psychiatry | 2014

Mortality after cardiac or vascular operations by preexisting serious mental illness status in the Veterans Health Administration

Laurel A. Copeland; Edward Y. Sako; John E. Zeber; Mary Jo Pugh; Chen Pin Wang; Andrea A. MacCarthy; Marcos I. Restrepo; Eric M. Mortensen; Valerie A. Lawrence

OBJECTIVE To estimate 1-year mortality risk associated with preoperative serious mental illness (SMI) as defined by the Veterans Health Administration (schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder [PTSD], major depression) following nonambulatory cardiac or vascular surgical procedures compared to patients without SMI. Cardiac/vascular operations were selected because patients with SMI are known to be at elevated risk of cardiovascular disease. METHOD Retrospective analysis of system-wide data from electronic medical records of patients undergoing nonambulatory surgery (inpatient or day-of-surgery admission) October 2005-September 2009 with 1-year follow-up (N=55,864; 99% male; <30 days of postoperative hospitalization). Death was hypothesized to be more common among patients with preoperative SMI. RESULTS One in nine patients had SMI, mostly PTSD (6%). One-year mortality varied by procedure type and SMI status. Patients had vascular operations (64%; 23% died), coronary artery bypass graft (26%; 10% died) or other cardiac operations (11%; 15%-18% died). Fourteen percent of patients with PTSD died, 20% without SMI and 24% with schizophrenia, with other groups intermediate. In multivariable stratified models, SMI was associated with increased mortality only for patients with bipolar disorder following cardiac operations. Bipolar disorder and PTSD were negatively associated with death following vascular operations. CONCLUSIONS SMI is not consistently associated with postoperative mortality in covariate-adjusted analyses.


Journal of Surgical Research | 1989

A comparison of different carbohydrates as substrates for the isolated working heart

John R. Mahoney; Edward Y. Sako; Katherine Seymour; Cathleen Marquardt; John E. Foker

Ribose has been shown to greatly enhance ATP recovery in situations such as postischemia when total adenine nucleotides have been depleted by catabolism. In addition, metabolic studies have reported that both five carbon sugars and alcohols (ribose and xylitol) can support energy metabolism presumably after conversion to substrates for glycolysis. Because of the importance of these two aspects of energy metabolism to myocardial function, we compared the ability of ribose and xylitol with glucose and pyruvate as exclusive substrates for the isolated working rat heart. Our studies revealed, however, that the utilization of ribose or xylitol as substrates by the myocardium is not sufficiently rapid to rely on these as exclusive oxidizable substrates. In fact, ribose or xylitol are no more effective than substrate-free medium in this regard. Myocardial glycogen was depleted in these groups and after a lag period consumption of oxygen also decreased. In contrast to the postischemic situation the total adenine nucleotide levels were preserved during ribose, xylitol or substrate-free perfusion. Consequently, the energy charge in these hearts fell significantly. In hearts perfused with ribose, xylitol or no substrate, the rate pressure product and the stroke volume rapidly declined after an initial brief stable period corresponding to glycogen depletion. Glycogen levels were 6% of the average control value in ribose- and xylitol-perfused hearts and were undetectable in substrate-free perfused hearts. In contrast, either glucose or pyruvate supported steady levels of ATP and myocardial oxygen consumption; maintained the energy charge; and supported the stroke volume, rate pressure product, and cardiac work. In glucose-perfused hearts the glycogen was reduced to 21% of control values, while in pyruvate-perfused hearts the average glycogen levels were 76% of control. Thus, although the heart is able to metabolize ribose and xylitol through the hexose monophosphate pathway, the rate of utilization through glycolysis and presumably the TCA cycle is not sufficient for these compounds to serve as exclusive substrates for the isolated working heart.

Collaboration


Dive into the Edward Y. Sako's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John H. Calhoon

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Stephanie M. Levine

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Scott B. Johnson

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Antonio Anzueto

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Charles L. Bryan

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. I. Peters

University of Texas at San Antonio

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Luis F. Angel

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Irawan Susanto

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge