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Dive into the research topics where Evan W.J. Cameron is active.

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Featured researches published by Evan W.J. Cameron.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 1991

Influence of obesity on the early and long term results of surgery for coronary artery disease.

U. S. Prasad; William S. Walker; C. T. M. Sang; C. Campanella; Evan W.J. Cameron

In order to determine the effect of obesity on the results of coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery, we compared 250 obese patients undergoing CABG procedures between 1984 and 1987 with 250 age- and sex-matched controls of normal body mass index (BMI) undergoing CABG in the same period. The obese group had a greater incidence of diabetes mellitus (p less than 0.02), hypertension (p less than 0.05), hyperlipidaemia (p less than 0.05), and left main stem coronary artery disease (p less than 0.001). No differences were identified in the surgery performed, but obesity was associated with prolonged total bypass time (p less than 0.05). Operative mortality was 0.8% in both groups. Multivariate analysis demonstrated obesity to be an independent risk factor for perioperative morbidity (p less than 0.05). Univariate: respiratory (p less than 0.01); leg wound (p less than 0.001); myocardial infarction (p less than 0.02); arrhythmias (p less than 0.02); sternal dehiscence (p less than 0.02). At a mean follow-up time of 36.9 months obese patients exhibited a greater incidence of significant recurrent angina (p less than 0.01), which was associated with further weight gain (mean 12.2 kg; linear correlation: p less than 0.001, r = 0.891). Although in CABG surgery operative mortality is not increased in obese patients, aggressive pre- and postoperative weight control is indicated to reduce both perioperative morbidity and the incidence of recurrent angina.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2003

Immediate and long-term results of mitral prosthetic replacement using a right thoracotomy beating heart technique

M.J. Thompson; A. Behranwala; C. Campanella; William S. Walker; Evan W.J. Cameron

OBJECTIVE Repeat median sternotomy is a potentially dangerous technique providing variable but mainly poor access to the mitral valve. Right thoracotomy is an alternative route previously used to access the mitral valve in the early years of cardiac surgery that offers the advantage of a fresh surgical field in the context of redo surgery. We have reviewed our experience with mitral prosthetic replacement undertaken via a right thoracotomy in order to determine the immediate and long-term results obtained with this approach. METHODS The operation was carried out on a beating heart using normothermic bypass without cross-clamping the aorta. Arterial inflow was achieved via the femoral artery or ascending aorta and venous drainage with bi-caval cannulae. Pre-, intra- and postoperative data were documented from case note review. Long-term follow-up was established from the UK Heart Valve Registry, referring Cardiologist, direct patient contact and the Scottish Registry for births and deaths. Statistical analysis was undertaken using a desktop computer package. RESULTS One hundred and twenty-five patients (mean age 63 years) underwent mitral prosthetic replacement by this technique. One hundred and eleven patients (86%) were in NYHA grades III or IV preoperatively. Twenty-two patients (16.6%) had also undergone previous CABG. Thirty-five patients (28%) had undergone two or more sternotomies. Mean bypass time was 83.6 min (SD 43.1). Postoperatively, mean duration of ventilation was 44 h; mean ITU stay was 4 days (SD 5.3) and mean inpatient total stay was 12 days. Thirty-six patients (28.8%) required inotropic support postoperatively. Complication rates were low: pleuro-pulmonary, 30 patients (24%), re-operation for bleeding, four patients (3.2%) and CVA, two patients (1.6%). Eight patients (6.4%) died within 30 days. Ten-year survival figures (Kaplan-Meier) were: 47% for all causes of mortality and 82.9% when only valve related causes of death were considered. Most of the patients (97.5%) had not required re-operation at 10 years. CONCLUSION Mitral prosthetic replacement via a right thoracotomy on beating heart under normothermic bypass offers a safe alternative to redo median sternotomy in this high-risk group. Operative access is facilitated and procedural time reduced. Complication rates are low and perioperative mortality is lower than that generally reported with conventional surgery.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1996

Esophagectomy for carcinoma in the octogenarian

Donald J. Adam; Stewart R. Craig; Christopher T. M. Sang; Evan W.J. Cameron; William S. Walker

BACKGROUND Esophageal carcinoma is predominantly a disease of the elderly, a group often only considered for palliative therapies. METHODS A case note review identified 31 octogenarians undergoing resection for carcinoma of the esophagus or gastric cardia over a 12-year period ending December 1994. RESULTS Nineteen patients made either an uncomplicated postoperative recovery (n = 12) or suffered minor complications (n = 7). Of the 12 patients who suffered moderate or severe complications, 5 died (in-hospital mortality, 16%). The deaths included 2 of 3 patients who underwent emergency operation for esophageal perforation and 3 of 28 patients who underwent elective esophagectomy (elective mortality rate, 10.7%). Nineteen of the 26 survivors (73%) experienced no further dysphagia. The 5-year survival rate was 17%. CONCLUSIONS Elective esophageal resection can be performed safety in selected octogenarians who have no or few coexisting medical problems and present with a localized carcinoma that is technically easy to resect. Patients undergoing emergency operations or in whom moderate or severe postoperative complications develop often have poor physiologic reserve and are therefore at risk of early postoperative death.


Thorax | 1993

Synchronous primary lung cancers: prevalence in surgical material and clinical implications.

F A Carey; Seamas C. Donnelly; William S. Walker; Evan W.J. Cameron; D. Lamb

BACKGROUND--The prevalence of synchronous primary lung neoplasms in surgical resection specimens was assessed. The associated clinical features and prognostic implications were investigated. METHODS--All surgical resections for lung cancer performed during seven years were reviewed. Synchronous tumours were defined by the presence of more than one tumour mass in the lung, by differences in histological subtype, by the presence of separate bronchial origins, or by differences in DNA stemlines. Clinical data were abstracted from case notes and information from the tumour registry. RESULTS--Just under 2% of all surgical specimens in the study period contained more than one primary carcinoma. The patients did not differ clinically from the general population of patients having surgery for lung cancer. The overall prognosis was poor (mean survival 27 months) but was significantly better for patients with synchronous squamous carcinomas (mean survival 49 months). CONCLUSION--Synchronous primary lung carcinomas are associated with a poor prognosis except in patients having tumours only of squamous histological type.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1998

Effect of blood transfusion on survival after esophagogastrectomy for carcinoma.

Stewart R. Craig; Donald J. Adam; P.L. Yap; H. Anne Leaver; Robert A. Elton; Evan W.J. Cameron; Christopher T. M. Sang; William S. Walker

BACKGROUND There is growing evidence that blood transfusion is associated with clinical factors that can lead to transfusion-induced immunosuppression. This effect can be beneficial or deleterious. METHODS The effect of perioperative allogeneic blood transfusion on survival was studied retrospectively in 524 patients who were discharged from the hospital after esophagogastrectomy for carcinoma performed in a single unit over a 10-year period. RESULTS The median operative blood loss for the series was 500 mL (range, 50 to 3,750 mL). Three hundred thirty-five patients (64%) received a perioperative allogeneic blood transfusion related to esophagogastrectomy, and 189 (36%) did not. The median perioperative blood transfusion administered was 900 mL (range, 300 to 12,950 mL). Perioperative allogeneic blood transfusion was associated with reduced survival for patients in stage III (p < 0.05) at 1 year, but no significant difference was found in this stage at 3 or 5 years after resection. Stage III disease accounted for 250 (48%) of the 524 patients discharged. CONCLUSIONS Although perioperative allogeneic blood transfusion does not affect long-term survival after esophagogastrectomy for carcinoma, it does have a significant association with short-term survival in a group whose overall survival is often limited after resection. Attention should be directed toward minimizing operative blood loss and transfusing only for factors known to be clinically important, such as oxygen delivery and hemodynamics, not arbitrary hemoglobin levels.


Thorax | 1989

Long term survival after pulmonary resection for small cell carcinoma of the lung.

U. S. Prasad; A. R. Naylor; William S. Walker; D. Lamb; Evan W.J. Cameron; P. R. Walbaum

A retrospective review was undertaken of the long term survival of 97 patients with histologically proved small cell carcinoma of the lung resected during the 10 years January 1977-December 1986. Twenty seven patients (28%) had stage I disease, 29 (30%) stage II, and 41 (42%) stage III. Patients with stage I and II tumours were managed by resection alone. Patients with stage III disease received adjuvant chemotherapy (cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, and vincristine). Pneumonectomy was undertaken in 75 patients, lobectomy in 21, and wedge resection in one patient. Three patients died within 30 days of operation. The cumulative five year survival of all patients, irrespective of tumour stage, was 17%. The cumulative five year survival was 35% for patients with stage I disease, 23% for stage II, and zero for stage III. The median survival for patients with stage III tumours was 17 months. There was no significant difference in cumulative survival between patients with stage I and II disease. Cumulative survival, however, was significantly better for patients with stage I and II disease than for those with stage III disease. The data suggest that for patients with stage I and stage II disease surgery offers the prospect of long term survival.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1989

Comparison of Ventricular Septal Surgery and Mitral Valve Replacement for Hypertrophic Obstructive Cardiomyopathy

William S. Walker; K.G. Reid; Evan W.J. Cameron; P.R. Walbaum; A.H. Kitchin

We have reviewed the results of two different forms of surgical management of hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy refractory to medical therapy. Twenty-one patients were treated with 22 procedures between 1963 and 1987. Eleven underwent a ventricular septal procedure by myotomy with or without myectomy, and 11 underwent mitral valve replacement (MVR), 1 of whom had previously undergone a ventricular septal procedure. The groups were comparable with respect to severity and duration of symptoms, age range, electrocardiographic features, and hemodynamic changes. Mitral valve replacement produced a greater and more consistent reduction in the left ventricular outflow tract pressure gradient than a ventricular septal procedure (MVR, 68.3 mm Hg preoperatively and 2.5 mm Hg postoperatively; ventricular septal procedure, 60.1 mm Hg preoperatively and 13.4 mm Hg postoperatively). This was associated with better postoperative ventricular configuration in diastole and more apparent loss of midcavity narrowing in systole. Ejection fraction did not fall after a ventricular septal procedure but decreased significantly from a mean of 79% to a mean of 61% after MVR. Similarly, left ventricular end-diastolic pressure remained unchanged after a ventricular septal procedure but fell from a mean of 26.6 mm Hg to 17 mm Hg after MVR. Although both groups experienced a generally satisfactory symptomatic result, this appeared more reliable with MVR. We suggest that MVR offers a more predictable improvement than a ventricular septal procedure and may be the procedure of choice for units with limited experience with ventricular septal procedures.


Critical Care Medicine | 2000

Pulmonary endothelial permeability and circulating neutrophil-endothelial markers in patients undergoing esophagogastrectomy.

Peter T. Reid; Seamas C. Donnelly; Ian R. Macgregor; I. S. Grant; Evan W.J. Cameron; William S. Walker; Malcolm V. Merrick; Christopher Haslett

ObjectiveEsophagogastrectomy is an established surgical treatment for esophageal malignancy. The postoperative period may be complicated by the development of acute lung injury syndromes and thus, may provide a useful model in which to study the early pathogenic mechanisms of inflammatory lung injury. DesignOpen, prospective study. SettingHigh dependency and intensive therapy units. PatientsEight healthy male volunteers and 20 patients in the early postoperative period InterventionsNone. Measurements and Main ResultsThe lung protein accumulation index (PAI) of radiolabeled transferrin was determined by using a portable, double-isotope system. The following circulating inflammatory markers–thought to reflect neutrophil-endothelial activation and injury including circulating neutrophil elastase–soluble L-, E-, and P-selectins and thrombomodulin and von Willebrand factor antigen were assayed from venous blood samples The PAI for healthy volunteers was median −0.5 (range, −1.73 to 0.27) × 10−3/min and for patients undergoing esophagogastrectomy −0.005 (range, −1.53 to 2.28) × 10−3/min. There was no statistical difference between the two groups. In the postesophagogastrectomy group, a significant elevation in circulating levels of neutrophil elastase, soluble P- and E-selectin, thrombomodulin, and von Willebrand factor antigen were observed relative to the control group but only circulating plasma elastase demonstrated a significant correlation with the PAI (r2 = .23, p =.03). ConclusionsThe data suggest patients undergoing esophagogastrectomy develop a inflammatory response but this is not a surrogate of permeability and other factors are likely to determine persistent injury to the alveolar-capillary barrier function in this patient group.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1993

Hufnagel revisited: A descending thoracic aortic valve to treat prosthetic valve insufficiency

Alexander R. Cale; Christopher T. M. Sang; Ciro Campanella; Evan W.J. Cameron

In 1953 Hufnagel and Harvey reported their successful treatment of aortic valve insufficiency by the implantation of a ball-valve prosthesis into the descending thoracic aorta. Since then, great advances in technology, surgery, and anesthesia have made aortic valve replacement a more common procedure with relatively low mortality. This remains true for the vast majority of prosthetic valve replacements. However, cases requiring reoperation can be difficult, leading to a much higher degree of morbidity and mortality. In selected patients who require repeated approaches to the aortic root we propose that Hufnagels original idea may still be of value to reduce the severity of aortic insufficiency. We report our experience in 4 cases of aortic prosthetic incompetence, all of which were improved by two New York Heart Association functional classes after a modification of Hufnagels procedure.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2002

Unusual presentation of mucoepidermoid carcinoma with recurrent pulmonary embolism

Mohan P. Devbhandari; Sasha Stamenkovic; William S. Walker; Evan W.J. Cameron

Mucoepidermoid carcinoma is a rare type of tumor of bronchial glands. We describe an unusual presentation of mucoepidermoid carcinoma in a 19-year-old man with atypical pneumonia, deep vein thromboses and recurrent pulmonary embolism, which, to the best of our knowledge has not previously been reported.

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Stewart R. Craig

Golden Jubilee National Hospital

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H. Anne Leaver

Scottish National Blood Transfusion Service

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P.L. Yap

University of Edinburgh

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A.H. Kitchin

Edinburgh Royal Infirmary

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I. S. Grant

Western General Hospital

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K.G. Reid

Edinburgh Royal Infirmary

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