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Dive into the research topics where Ernest K. Manders is active.

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Featured researches published by Ernest K. Manders.


Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 1984

Soft-tissue Expansion: Concepts and Complications

Ernest K. Manders; Michael J. Schenden; John A. Furrey; Peter T. Hetzler; Thomas S. Davis; William P. Graham

Soft-tissue expansion complements existing reconstructive techniques and provides new vistas for the plastic surgeon. The technique finds use for overcoming a shortage of tissue, for obtaining skin with special desirable qualities, for creation of flaps otherwise not possible because of the resultant donor site or limited vascularity, for creation of flaps with functioning muscle and overlying soft tissue, and for minimizing flap donor-site problems. Careful planning should include patient counseling, optimum incision placement, and time for a leisurely, complete expansion. The surgery can often be performed under local anesthesia and expansion is tolerated well. Patients should be counseled that the incidence of major complications in an unselected series is 1 in 4 patients. Major complications, however, typically result in a delay in reconstruction and not tissue loss.


Annals of Plastic Surgery | 1984

Skin expansion to eliminate large scalp defects.

Ernest K. Manders; William P. Graham; Michael J. Schenden; Thomas S. Davis

In three children aged 3 to 8 years with large scalp defects temporary expanders of silicone elastomer were inserted under the scalp above the pericranium and under the galea through an incision at the junction of the defect and the normal scalp. Over the following six to eight weeks, the expanders were inflated weekly or semiweekly with injections of saline. During expansion, hair growth continued. When the scalp flap expansion was completed, the scalp margin was advanced. Two of the 3 patients required additional expansion, so a deflated expander was left under the scalp. The entire defect was covered in each case. This technique has wide application for a variety of reconstructive problems.


Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 1988

Soft-tissue Expansion in the Lower Extremities

Ernest K. Manders; Timothy E. Oaks; Victor K. Au; Randolph K. M. Wong; John A. Furrey; Thomas S. Davis; William P. Graham

Soft-tissue expansion enjoys ever-wider use, but to date an experience using this technique in the lower extremity has never been presented. We reviewed our first 16 patients to describe the indications and contraindications for the use of tissue expansion in the lower extremity. Guidelines evolved from study of the data. Soft-tissue expansion merits consideration for coverage of problem wounds, in preparation for removal of large benign lesions, and for the repair of contour defects. The operator should know that an open wound below the knee predicts a complication if soft-tissue expansion is attempted in that location. In the thigh, incisions can be confidently placed at the edge of the defect. In every location, large expanders should be chosen so that they are as long as or longer than the adjacent defect. The increase in circumference of the limb should be followed. Simple designs for advancement flaps usually work well. As our experience has grown, reconstruction using soft-tissue expansion in the lower extremity has become safer and the results more predictable through better patient selection and diligent monitoring of intraluminal pressures, even if only by ensuring that the patient is always comfortable. Soft-tissue expansion has a role in reconstruction of the lower extremity.


Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 1990

Stretching skin : undermining is more important than intraoperative expansion

Donald R. Mackay; Gregory C. Saggers; Neville Kotwal; Ernest K. Manders

The efficacy of intraoperative expansion in reducing the tension of wound closure was tested in young pigs. The young piglet as a model for studying human skin was characterized by finding a close similarity between the modulus of elastiticy of young piglet skin and human abdominoplasty and mammaplasty skin (range 12.8 to 23.7 N/mm2 for piglet skin, 14.3 to 19 N/mm2 for human skin). The tension required to close a standardized wound was determined before undermining, after undermining, and finally after intraoperative expansion. These measurements were performed in 10 young pigs with an average weight of 11.5 kg. Undermining the wound edges resulted in a significant decrease in the force required to close the wounds (p < 0.0001). Intraoperative expansion did not significantly decrease the tension. Previous work showing the importance of site and direction of pull on the tension for wound closure was confirmed in this study. Analysis of variance demonstrated that the tension required to close a standard wound is greater high on the pigs back than near the belly and near the shoulder as opposed to the hip for midflank wounds (p < 0.0001). Increasing the extent of undermining from 62 to 136 cm2 significantly decreased the tension for wound closure (p < 0.05). Further undermining did not result in a significant decrease in wound closure tension. In this model, intraoperative expansion offers no advantage over simple undermining. We suggest that the benefit reported by clinicians using intraoperative expansion may derive from an increase in the extent of undermining required to place expanders under the wound margins.


Annals of Plastic Surgery | 1999

Aeromonas species isolated from medicinal leeches.

Donald R. Mackay; Ernest K. Manders; Gregory C. Saggers; Dennis R. Banducci; Jan Prinsloo; Keith Klugman

Aeromonas hydrophila infections are a recognized complication of the use of medicinal leeches. The authors performed an experiment designed to find a safe and practical way to sterilize the leech gut of pathogenic organisms. Leeches were incubated for a 12-hour period in solutions of antibiotic effective against A. hydrophila. The incubations in the antibiotic solutions failed to eradicate pathogenic bacteria from the gut of the leeches. The authors examined cultures of bacteria isolated from the guts of the commonly used Hirudo medicinalis (European leech) and found a wide variety of pathogenic organisms. A. hydrophila is widely believed to be the most common enteric pathogen, but the authors found A. sobria more frequently in their experiment. They also cultured the guts of the leech H. michaelseni recently used clinically in South Africa. A. caviae was the most common pathogen encountered in these leeches. A. caviae and A. sobria cause a spectra of disease similar to A. hydrophila. The authors endorse the current recommendation that all patients who have leech therapy for congested flaps or replants receive broad-spectrum prophylactic antibiotics. This appears to be the safest and simplest way to prevent leech-related infections.


Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 2001

The natural history of the growth of the hand: I. Hand area as a percentage of body surface area.

Hamid reza Amirsheybani; Gia M. Crecelius; Nigel H. Timothy; Margarit Pfeiffer; Gregory C. Saggers; Ernest K. Manders

The use of a patients own hand as a tool to estimate the area of burn injury is well documented. The area of the palmar surface of one hand has been estimated to be 1 percent of the body surface area. The area of the palmar surface of the hand was measured to test the accuracy of this estimate and then compared with the body surface area as calculated by formulas in common use. This study also sought to determine the natural history of the growth of the hand to permit development of a readily available, bedside means of estimating hand area and body surface area. Bilateral hand tracings were obtained from 800 volunteers ranging in age from 2 to 89 years. The area of each tracing was determined using an integrating planimeter. The height and weight of each individual were measured, and his/her body surface area was calculated. The palmar hands percentage of body surface area was determined by calculating the quotient for hand area divided by body surface area. Additionally, the width of the hand was measured from the ulnar aspect at the palmar digital crease of the small finger to the point where the thumb rested against the base of the index finger. The length of the hand was measured from the middle of the interstylon to the tip of the middle finger. These two figures were multiplied together to obtain a product which approximated the area of the hand. Based on the most commonly used DuBois formula for calculating body surface area, the area of palmar surface of the hand corresponds to 0.78 ± 0.08 percent of the body surface area in adults. The percentage varies somewhat with age and reaches a maximum of 0.87 ± 0.06 percent in young children. Multiplying the length of the hand by its width overestimates the area of the hand as determined by planimetry by only 2 percent. A patients own hand may be used as a complementary, readily available template for estimation of burn area or other areas of disease or injury. In adults, the area of tracing of the outline of the hand is 0.78 percent of the body surface area, whereas in children, this number tends to be slightly higher. In the emergency room or on the wards, a simple product of length multiplied by width of the hand will closely approximate the area as determined by planimetry. This method allows a more accurate determination of the area of the palmar surface of the hand than the 1 percent estimate, which may lead to an overestimation of the size of a burn wound in adults. (Plast. Reconstr. Surg. 107: 726, 2001.)


Annals of Plastic Surgery | 1992

Abdominoplasty combined with other intraabdominal procedures.

Rolf Gemperli; Rogerio I. Neves; Paulo Tuma; Giselda Tardin Bonamichi; Marcus Castro Ferreira; Ernest K. Manders

One hundred three patients underwent abdominoplasty combined with other intraabdominal procedures including 67 tubal ligations, 34 total abdominal hysterectomies and 2 cholecystectomies, from January 1983 to July 1991. The patients were divided into two groups, those undergoing the standard or total abdominoplasty and those undergoing limited abdominoplasty with or without liposuction in delimited areas. In this series of 103 patients, we found only two minor complications and only three patients were transfused with autologous units of blood. When performed by well-schooled surgical teams, abdominoplasty may be combined with intraabdominal procedures with gratifying results.Gemperli R, Neves Rl, Tuma P Jr, Bonamichi GT, Ferreira MC, Manders EK: Abdominoplasty combined with other intraabdominal procedures. Ann Plast Surg 1992;29:18–22


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1997

Ultrasound-Guided Retrieval of Small Foreign Objects in Subcutaneous Tissue

Jen Turner; Christoph Wilde; Kent C. Hughes; Jon W Meilstrup; Ernest K. Manders

STUDY OBJECTIVE To identify the physical properties of the materials most easily located in subcutaneous tissue through the use of conventional ultrasound. METHODS High-resolution real-time sonography was performed by a credentialed sonographer on a chicken breast impregnated with five objects-a metal paper clip, a wooden toothpick, a plastic coffee stirrer, a shard of glass, and an 18-gauge needle. Transducer frequencies ranging from 3.5 to 7.5 MHz with linear, curvilinear, and sector-scanning formats were used. All images were interpreted by a staff attending radiologist with other study authors present. The chicken breast was then subjected to radiography for comparison. RESULTS Wood yielded the strongest acoustic shadow; plastic had the next-best acoustic shadowing. The 7.5-MHz probe yielded its best resolution at shallow depths, whereas the 5-MHz probe was best at greater depths. CONCLUSION We conclude that ultrasonography is an excellent technique for the localization and retrieval of nonradiopaque foreign objects in the superficial subcutaneous tissue. It should be given consideration for use in the removal of nonradiopaque superficial foreign objects when conventional radiographic techniques are not effective.


Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 1993

Pre-Reconstruction Tattooing Eliminates the Need for Skin Grafting in Nipple Areolar Reconstruction

Randolph K. M. Wong; Dennis R. Banducci; Stefanie Feldman; Stephen H. Kahler; Ernest K. Manders

Tattooing the skin of the reconstructed breast as a prelude to reconstruction of the nipple provides a nipple areolar reconstruction that has a uniform color. There is no requirement for a skin graft donor site. Tedious tattooing of the nipple papule is avoided. It is much easier to tattoo a flat surface than a projecting papule, and this technique gives a more uniform color. We believe that this approach to nipple areolar reconstruction provides a simpler, dependable technique.


Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 2006

One-stage reanimation of the paralyzed face using the rectus abdominis neurovascular free flap

Ali Sajjadian; Angela Y. Song; Christopher A. Khorsandi; Frederic W.-B. Deleyiannis; Jessie M. VanSwearingen; Todd C. Henkelmann; Kenneth Hui; Ernest K. Manders

Background: Functional free muscle transfer for the surgical correction of long-standing facial paralysis has gained validity over the past three decades. These traditionally multistep reconstructions often achieve clinical success, but at the cost of significant morbidity and lengthy recovery periods. To address this dilemma, the authors propose reconstruction using the rectus abdominis and accompanying intercostal nerve in a one-stage neurovascular free flap reanimation procedure. Methods: Between 1998 and 2001, five patients with long-standing unilateral facial paralysis at the University of Pittsburgh Facial Nerve Center underwent reanimation using the authors’ protocol. Preoperative and postoperative assessments included clinical evaluation using the Facial Grading System and electromyography. The patients were followed for a mean of 16 months. Results: At the final postoperative visit, all five patients demonstrated improved levator electromyographic potential, with a median 67 percent improvement. All five patients further demonstrated an increase in zygomaticus electromyographic potential, with a median 225 percent improvement. All five patients demonstrated increased Facial Grading System score at most recent follow-up. Conclusions: The one-step reanimation using free rectus abdominis neurovascular free flap demonstrated a consistent positive outcome in electromyographic and clinical assessments. The additional benefits of reduced recovery time and anatomical reliability of the flap render the authors’ method preferable to other traditional methods of surgical reanimation of the paralyzed face.

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Gregory C. Saggers

Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center

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Rogerio I. Neves

Pennsylvania State University

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Donald R. Mackay

Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center

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Dennis R. Banducci

Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center

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William P. Graham

Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center

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Thomas S. Davis

Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center

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Rolf Gemperli

University of São Paulo

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Isaac J. Peled

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Anthony Kales

Pennsylvania State University

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