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Dive into the research topics where F.Gregory Baumann is active.

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Featured researches published by F.Gregory Baumann.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1985

A survey of 77 major infectious complications of median sternotomy: a review of 7,949 consecutive operative procedures.

Eugene A. Grossi; Alfred T. Culliford; Karl H. Krieger; David Kloth; Robert Press; F.Gregory Baumann; Frank C. Spencer

Sternal wound infections developed following 77 (0.97%) of 7,949 operative procedures involving median sternotomy at New York University Medical Center from 1976 to 1984. Risk factors associated with the development of a sternal wound infection included combined revascularization and valve replacement, early reexploration for bleeding, prolonged low cardiac output syndrome, and prolonged ventilatory support (greater than 24 hours). Concomitant infection at other sites with the same organism as cultured from the sternum was present in 42% of the patients. Thirty-seven patients (48%) were treated with radical debridement followed by closed antibiotic irrigation. In 31 other patients (40%), the wounds were debrided and left to heal by open granulation. Both initial treatments had equally high success rates (78.4% and 74.2%, respectively). However, the open granulation method resulted in a hospital stay that was an average of 10 days longer than the closed antibiotic irrigation method. Muscle flaps were used to expedite healing of open granulation in 9 patients. Analysis of the results of different treatment strategies revealed that if debridement was accomplished within 20 days of the initial cardiac procedure, 76% of the patients could be successfully treated with closed antibiotic irrigation. Conversely, if treatment was delayed for longer than 20 days, 81% of the patients were treated with open granulation (p less than 0.001). Also noted was an inverse relationship between the serum blood urea nitrogen (BUN) level and the success rate of initial treatment with closed antibiotic irrigation. Patients with a serum BUN level of less than 40 mg/dl at the time of debridement had a 90% success rate as opposed to a success rate of 38% when the BUN level was 40 mg/dl or greater. The data presented suggest the following conclusions. Early diagnosis is crucial to successful treatment of sternal wound infection. When diagnosis can be established within 20 days, 80% of infections can be eradicated by the simple approach of debridement and closed antibiotic irrigation. When diagnosis is delayed, however, prompt debridement followed by muscle flaps is the procedure of choice. Open granulation alone, while successful, unnecessarily prolongs the hospital course.


Annals of Surgery | 1983

The importance of hemorrhage in the relationship between gross morphologic characteristics and cerebral symptoms in 376 carotid artery plaques.

Anthony M. Imparato; Thomas S. Riles; Ronnie Mintzer; F.Gregory Baumann

In a prospective study 376 carotid artery plaques (275 symptomatic, 101 asymptomatic) were obtained from endarterectomies (184 unilateral and 96 bilateral) in 280 patients. The gross morphologic features of each plaque were noted at surgery and, together with the patients clinical history, stored in computer memory. These data were analyzed in order to investigate the relationship of gross morphologic plaque characteristics with both the presence of cerebral symptoms and the degree of stenosis associated with the plaque. Ulceration was the most frequently observed of the five major gross plaque morphologic characteristics (46.0% of all plaques), but only intramural hemorrhage (30.6% of all plaques) was significantly more common in all symptomatic compared with all asymptomatic plaques (p < 0.02). Hemorrhage was also the only gross characteristic significantly more common in focal symptomatic plaques when compared with either asymptomatic plaques (p < 0.05) or nonfocal symptomatic plaques (p < 0.01). When all the plaques were divided into three broad degrees of stenosis groups (0–39%, 40–69%, 70–99%) on the basis of angiographic data, only hemorrhage showed a significant correlation in incidence with increased degree of plaque stenosis, both when all plaques were considered (p < 0.001) and when only symptomatic plaques were examined (p < 0.001). The results indicate that intramural hemorrhage is the only carotid plaque gross morphologic characteristic significantly more frequent in symptomatic compared with asymptomatic plaques and the only characteristic significantly correlated with increased plaque size. These findings indicate that factors other than plaque ulceration and intraluminal thrombus play an important role in carotid plaque related cerebral symptoms. The data also raise questions concerning the unequivocal value of anticoagulant therapy in carotid artery disease, especially in highly stenotic lesions.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2002

Minimally invasive mitral valve surgery: a 6-year experience with 714 patients.

Eugene A. Grossi; Aubrey C. Galloway; Angelo LaPietra; Greg H. Ribakove; Patricia Ursomanno; Julie Delianides; Alfred T. Culliford; Costas S. Bizekis; Rick Esposito; F.Gregory Baumann; Marc S. Kanchuger; Stephen B. Colvin

BACKGROUND This study analyzes a single institutional experience with minimally invasive mitral valve operations of 6 years, reviewing short-term morbidity and mortality and long-term echocardiographic follow-up data. METHODS Seven hundred fourteen consecutive patients had minimally invasive mitral valve procedures between November 1995 and November 2001; concomitant procedures included 91 multiple valves and 18 coronary artery bypass grafts. Of these 714 patients, 561 patients had isolated mitral valve operations (375 repairs, 186 replacements). Mean age was 58.3 years (range, 14 to 96 years; 30.1% > 70 years), and 15.4% of patients had previous cardiac operations. Arterial cannulation was femoral in 79.0% and central in 21%, with the port access balloon endo-occlusion used in 82.3%. Cardioplegia was transjugular retrograde (54.1%) or antegrade (29.4%). Right anterior minithoracotomy was used in 96.6% and left posterior minithoracotomy in 2.2%. RESULTS Hospital mortality for primary isolated mitral valve repair was 1.1% and 5.8% for isolated mitral valve replacement. Overall hospital mortality was 4.2% (30 of 714). Mean cross-clamp time was 92 minutes and mean cardiopulmonary bypass time was 127 minutes. Postoperatively, median ventilation time was 11 hours, intensive care unit time was 19 hours, and total hospital stay was 6 days. Complications for all patients included permanent neurologic deficit (2.9%), aortic dissection (0.3%); there was no mediastinal infection (0.0%). Follow-up echocardiography demonstrated 89.1% of the repair patients had only trace or no residual mitral insufficiency. CONCLUSIONS This study demonstrates that the minimally invasive port access approach to mitral valve operations is reproducible with low perioperative morbidity and mortality and with late outcomes that are equivalent to conventional operations.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1992

Surgical implications of transesophageal echocardiography to grade the atheromatous aortic arch

Greg H. Ribakove; Edward S. Katz; Aubrey C. Galloway; Eugene A. Grossi; Rick Esposito; F.Gregory Baumann; Itzhak Kronzon; Frank C. Spencer

Stroke is an especially serious complication of cardiopulmonary bypass with an incidence of 2% to 5%. This prospective study used transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) in 97 patients more than 65 years of age (mean age, 73 years) to identify those at high risk for aortic atheroemboli. The atheromatous disease of the aorta was graded by TEE: grade I = minimal intimal thickening (n = 29); II = extensive intimal thickening (n = 33); III = sessile atheroma (n = 15); IV = protruding atheroma (n = 10); V = mobile atheroma (n = 10). Clinical evaluation was also performed by intraoperative aortic palpation. Four patients who were graded as having normal aortas by palpation had intraoperative strokes. In contrast, 3 of these 4 patients were in grade V on TEE. The relationship of TEE to incidence of stroke was statistically significant (p less than 0.006), whereas there was no significant correlation between clinical grade and stroke incidence. Four of 10 TEE grade V patients were treated with hypothermic circulatory arrest and aortic arch debridement, and none suffered strokes. The other 6 patients were treated with standard techniques, and 3 had strokes. These results suggest that patients with mobile atheromatous disease are at high risk for embolic strokes that are not predicted by routine clinical evaluation. Selective use of circulatory arrest in the presence of TEE-detected mobile arch atheromas may reduce the risk of intraoperative stroke.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1991

AORTIC VALVE REPLACEMENT FOR AORTIC STENOSIS IN PERSONS AGED 80 YEARS AND OVER

Alfred T. Culliford; Aubrey C. Galloway; Stephen B. Colvin; Eugene A. Grossi; F.Gregory Baumann; Rick Esposito; Greg H. Ribakove; Frank C. Spencer

Seventy-one patients aged greater than or equal to 80 years (mean +/- standard deviation 82 +/- 2) with aortic stenosis or mixed stenosis and regurgitation underwent aortic valve replacement alone (n = 35, group 1) or in combination with a coronary artery bypass procedure without any other valve procedure (n = 36, group 2). Preoperatively, 91% had severe cardiac limitations (New York Heart Association class III or IV). Hospital mortality was 12.7% overall (9 of 71), 5.7% (2 of 35) for group 1 and 19.4% (7 of 36) for group 2. Perioperatively, 1 patient (1.4%) had a stroke. Survival from late cardiac death at 1 and 3 years was 98.2 and 95.5%, respectively, for all patients, 100% for patients who underwent isolated aortic valve replacement, and 96.3 and 91.2%, respectively, for patients who underwent aortic valve replacement plus coronary artery bypass. Eighty-three percent of surviving patients had marked symptomatic improvement. Freedom from all valve-related complications (thromboembolism, anticoagulant, endocarditis, reoperation or prosthetic failure) was 93.3 and 80.4% at 1 and 3 years, respectively. Thus, short- and long-term morbidity and mortality after aortic valve replacement for aortic stenosis in patients aged greater than or equal to 80 years are encouragingly low, although the addition of coronary artery bypass grafting increases short- and long-term mortality.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 1996

Minimally invasive cardiopulmonary bypass with cardioplegic arrest: A closed chest technique with equivalent myocardial protection☆☆☆★★★♢

Daniel S. Schwartz; Greg H. Ribakove; Eugene A. Grossi; John H. Stevens; Lawrence C. Siegel; Frederick G. St. Goar; William S. Peters; David E. McLoughlin; F.Gregory Baumann; Stephen B. Colvin; Aubrey C. Galloway

Thoracoscopic cardiac surgery is presently under intense investigation. This study examined the feasibility and efficacy of closed chest cardiopulmonary bypass and cardioplegic arrest in comparison with standard open chest methods in a dog model. The minimally invasive closed chest group (n = 6) underwent percutaneous cardiopulmonary bypass and cardiac venting, as well as antegrade cardioplegic arrest through use of a specially designed percutaneous endovascular aortic occluder and cardioplegic solution delivery system. The control group (n = 6) underwent standard sternotomy and conventional open chest cardiopulmonary bypass, aortic crossclamping, and antegrade cardioplegia. Ischemic arrest time was 1 hour in each group. Ventricular pressures and sonomicrometer segment lengths were recorded before bypass and at 30 and 60 minutes after bypass. Left ventricular function did not differ significantly between the two groups, as demonstrated by measurements of elastance and end-diastolic stroke work. Also, the preload recruitable work area was 69% and 60% of baseline at 30 and 60 minutes after bypass in the minimally invasive group versus 65% and 62% in the conventional control group (p = not significant); the stroke work end-diastolic length relationship was 78% and 71% of baseline in the minimally invasive group at these intervals versus 77% and 74% in the conventional control group (p = not significant). Myocardial temperatures were similar throughout bypass in the two groups, and ultrastructural examination of prebypass and postbypass biopsy specimens showed no differences between groups. These results demonstrate that minimally invasive cardiopulmonary bypass with cardioplegic arrest is as feasible, safe, and effective as conventional open chest cardiopulmonary bypass. Thus current technology may allow wider clinical application of closed chest cardiac surgery.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1989

The value of silent myocardial ischemia monitoring in the prediction of perioperative myocardial infarction in patients undergoing peripheral vascular surgery

Peter F. Pasternack; Eugene A. Grossi; F.Gregory Baumann; Thomas S. Riles; Patrick J. Lamparello; Gary Giangola; Lawrence K. Primis; Ronnie Mintzer; Anthony M. Imparato

Real-time electrocardiographic monitoring for silent myocardial ischemia was performed on 200 patients undergoing peripheral vascular surgery to try to better define those at high risk of perioperative myocardial infarction. The patients were divided into those undergoing abdominal aortic aneurysm or lower extremity revascularization procedures (group I, n = 120) and those undergoing carotid artery endarterectomy (group II, n = 80). Silent ischemia was detected during the preoperative, intraoperative, or post-operative periods in 60.8% of group I and 67.5% of group II patients. Six group I and three group II patients suffered an acute perioperative myocardial infarction with two cardiac deaths. In both groups I and II a variety of parameters based on monitoring of silent myocardial ischemia were compared between the subgroups of patients who had myocardial infarction and those who did not. The results show that in both groups there was a significantly (p less than or equal to 0.05) greater total duration of perioperative ischemic time, total number of perioperative ischemic episodes, and total duration of perioperative ischemic time as a percent of total monitoring time in patients who suffered a perioperative myocardial infarction compared to those who did not. Multivariate logistic regression analysis of preoperative characteristics in all 200 patients showed the occurrence of preoperative silent myocardial ischemia and angina at rest to be the only significant predictors of perioperative myocardial infarction. Thus perioperative monitoring for silent myocardial ischemia might noninvasively identify those patients undergoing peripheral vascular surgery who are at increased risk for perioperative myocardial infarction, permitting implementation of timely preventive measures in selected patients.


American Journal of Surgery | 1989

Beta blockade to decrease silent myocardial ischemia during peripheral vascular surgery

Peter F. Pasternack; Eugene A. Grossi; F.Gregory Baumann; Thomas S. Riles; Patrick J. Lamparello; Gary Giangola; Lawrence K. Primis; Ronnie Mintzer; Anthony M. Imparato

Abstract The incidence and duration of intraoperative silent myocardial ischemia have been shown to be significantly correlated with the incidence of perioperative myocardial infarction in patients undergoing peripheral vascular surgery. To assess the effectiveness of intraoperative beta blockade in limiting such silent myocardial ischemia, a group of 48 patients was treated with oral metoprolol immediately prior to peripheral vascular surgery. The total duration of intraoperative silent myocardial ischemia, the percentage of intraoperative time silent myocardial ischemia was present, the number of intraoperative episodes of silent myocardial ischemia, and the intraoperative heart rate in the treated patients were compared with those in 152 similar but untreated peripheral vascular surgery patients. The patients treated with oral metoprolol had significantly less intraoperative silent ischemia with respect to relative duration and frequency of episodes, a significantly lower intraoperative heart rate, and less intraoperative silent myocardial ischemia in terms of total absolute duration. These results suggest that beta-adrenergic activation may play a major role in the pathogenesis of silent myocardial ischemia during peripheral vascular surgery.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1984

The value of radionuclide angiography as a predictor of perioperative myocardial infarction in patients undergoing abdominal aortic aneurysm resection

Peter F. Pasternack; Anthony M. Imparato; George Bear; Thomas S. Riles; F.Gregory Baumann; Daniel D. Benjamin; Joseph J. Sanger; Elissa L. Kramer; R.Patrick Wood

To define the group of patients at high risk for myocardial infarction (MI) and death associated with abdominal aortic aneurysm repair, resting gated blood pool studies were obtained on 50 such aneurysm patients preoperatively. The results indicated that three groups could be distinguished among these patients by cardiac ejection fraction. Group I (n = 25) had preoperative ejection fractions ranging from 56% to 85%. None of the patients in group I suffered an acute perioperative MI. Group II (n = 20) comprised patients with ejection fractions ranging from 36% to 55%. There was a 20% incidence of MI in group II but no cardiac deaths. Group III included five patients with ejection fractions ranging from 27% to 35%. There was an 80% incidence of perioperative MI in these patients, with one cardiac death and one cardiac arrest. All perioperative MIs occurred within the first 48 hours after surgery. In addition there was a 50% incidence of perioperative MI among all those patients who were 80 years of age or older. These results indicate guidelines for the management of patients undergoing abdominal aortic aneurysm repair based on their preoperative ejection fraction. The data further suggest that the noninvasive gated blood pool method of determining ejection fraction may serve a more broadly useful function in helping to determine which of those patients about to undergo major surgical procedures are at high risk for perioperative MI.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1985

Cocaine-induced angina pectoris and acute myocardial infarction in patients younger than 40 years

Peter F. Pasternack; Stephen B. Colvin; F.Gregory Baumann

Cocaine has profound effects on the cardiovascular system. Although small doses may slow the heart rate by central vagal stimulation, larger doses result in an increased heart rate from stimulation of the central and peripheral sympathetic nervous system. Cocaine can also result in a significant increase in blood pressure through sympathetically mediated tachycardia and vasoconstriction. An extremely high dose can produce a direct toxic action on the heart muscle, resulting in cardiac failure and immediate death.1,2 This report describes 3 patients in their 30s who were referred for coronary angiography after having angina pectoris or acute myocardial infarction (AMI), or both, coincident with an increase in frequency of cocaine use.

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