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Dive into the research topics where G.Melville Williams is active.

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Featured researches published by G.Melville Williams.


American Journal of Pathology | 2001

Vascular Smooth Muscle Cells of Recipient Origin Mediate Intimal Expansion after Aortic Allotransplantation in Mice

Jing Li; Xiaozhou Han; Jifu Jiang; Robert Zhong; G.Melville Williams; J. Geoffrey Pickering; Lawrence H. Chow

Intimal expansion by vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs) is a characteristic feature of graft vascular disease. Whether graft intimal SMCs arise from donor or recipient tissue is not well established but has important pathogenetic implications. We examined for the presence of male cells in the expanded intima of sex-mismatched mouse aortic allografts (C57BL/6-to-BALB/c) at 30 or 60 days after transplant by in situ hybridization using a Y-chromosome probe. Study groups included male-to-female allografts, female-to-male allografts, and female-to-female allografts in recipients previously engrafted with male bone marrow. Although intimal expansion developed in all allografts, male-to-female allografts lacked Y-chromosome-positive intimal cells. In contrast, such cells were abundant in female-to-male allografts and most of these cells co-labeled for smooth muscle alpha-actin by immunostain. Female-to-female allografts in recipients with male bone marrow showed a limited number of intimal Y-chromosome-positive cells. However, none of these clearly co-labeled for smooth muscle alpha-actin and their numbers declined throughout time, consistent with graft-infiltrating inflammatory cells. We conclude that intimal expansion of mouse aortic allografts is mediated by SMCs that originated from the recipient. There was little evidence of their derivation from the bone marrow, suggesting instead the adjacent host aorta as the primary source of intimal SMCs.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1992

Does contralateral internal carotid artery occlusion increase the risk of carotid endarterectomy

Bruce A. Perler; James F. Burdick; G.Melville Williams

The results of every carotid endarterectomy performed contralateral to an internal carotid artery occlusion (n = 36) (group I) were compared with those performed contralateral to a patent internal carotid artery (n = 169) (group II) over the last 10 years. The patients in each group were evenly matched with respect to male gender (66% vs 69%); mean age (66.7 vs 65.9 years); and incidence of hypertension (55.6% vs 53.2%), diabetes (16.7% vs 20.1%), and hyperlipidemia (8.3% vs 11.8%). Patients in group I had a higher incidence of previous myocardial infarction (25% vs 11.8%, p less than 0.05) and exertional angina (55.6% vs 29.6%, p less than 0.01). Indications for carotid endarterectomy were equivalent, including stroke (19.4% vs 21.9%), transient ischemic attacks (36.1% vs 35.5%), amaurosis fugax (16.7% vs 11.8%), nonhemispheric symptoms (5.6% vs 8.3%), and asymptomatic stenoses (22.2% vs 22.5%), respectively. Perioperative strokes occurred in one (2.8%) patient in group I and seven (4.1%) patients in group II (NS). Among the patients in group II the incidence of perioperative stroke did not correlate directly with the degree of contralateral ICA stenosis: greater than 90% (4%); 70% to 90% (6.7%); 50% to 70% (8.7%); and less than 50% (2.8%). The operative mortality rate was 0% among patients in group I and 1.2% among patients in group II (NS). Cardiac complications occurred in two (5.6%) patients in group I and nine (5.3%) patients in group II (NS).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1993

Rotational muscle flaps to treat localized prosthetic graft infection: Long-term follow-up

Bruce A. Perler; Craig A. Vender Kolk; Paul M. Manson; G.Melville Williams

PURPOSEnThe conventional management of prosthetic graft infection (PGI), including graft excision and extraanatomic revascularization, continues to be associated with substantial morbidity. Rotational muscle flap (RMF) closure of the infected wound, with preservation of the graft, is an alternative, albeit controversial, approach.nnnMETHODSnOver the last 7 years, 22 RMF procedures have been performed to close 19 wounds in 18 patients, ranging in age from 39 to 79 (mean 63.7) years, with PGI. Twenty-one grafts constructed of Dacron (13) or polytetrafluoroethylene (8) were covered in the groin (16), neck (2), or chest (1). The clinical presentations included abscess or purulent drainage in 14 grafts, hemorrhage in three, and infected false aneurysm in two wounds; positive bacterial culture results were obtained in each case.nnnRESULTSnThere was one (5.6%) operative death. Healing was achieved in the 18 wounds of the 17 operative survivors. No patients have been lost to follow-up. Three (17.6%) of these 17 patients had recurrent infection, including one patient who underwent a secondary RMF procedure with graft salvage, one who underwent excision of an occluded graft, and one who underwent excision and extraanatomic bypass and died. Four other patients died 1 to 6 (mean 3) months after RMF closure with healed wounds. Eleven (92%) of the 12 survivors have healed wounds and intact grafts with follow-up ranging from 8 to 83 (mean 39) months. For the entire series 15 (88%) of these 17 patients had healed wounds and intact grafts, with a mean follow-up of 30 months.nnnCONCLUSIONSnThese results suggest that RMF procedures are well tolerated and can achieve acceptable long-term graft salvage in selected patients with PGI.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2008

Side-to-side arteriovenous fistula at the elbow with perforating vein ligation

Majid Moini; G.Melville Williams; Mohammad Sadegh Pourabbasi; Mohammad Reza Rasouli; Payam Tarighi; Armita Mardanloo; Hussein Rayatzadeh

OBJECTIVEnWe postulated that ligation of a consistent perforating venous branch at the elbow would improve distention and flow in the superficial veins about the elbow. This would also lesson the likelihood of arterial steal enabling a favorable outcome following a brachial artery medial antecubital or cephalic vein arterio-venous fistula (AVF).nnnMETHODSnPressure measurements were made from the radial artery after side-to-side brachial artery antecubital or cephalic vein AVF in 20 patients. Clamping of the perforating vein increased radial artery pressure significantly indicating that a considerable amount of flow from the side-to-side AVF was diverted into the deep system and away from the accessible superficial veins. Encouraged by this finding, we studied the outcome of brachial cephalic or brachial antecubital AVF with ligation of the deep branch in 134 patients who were not candidates for radio-cephalic AVF. The end point of the study was successful hemodialysis using the fistula.nnnRESULTSnOf the 134 patients treated, 24 died, and 11 were lost to follow-up and were censored from analysis of fistula performance at that time point. The primary fistula success rate was 89.7% +/- 2.66% and 83.7% +/- 3.5% at 1 and 2 years by life table analysis. No patient developed significant arterial steal or venous hypertension.nnnCONCLUSIONnWe recommend this simple one-stage procedure for patients requiring hemodialysis whose cephalic vein at the wrist is unsuitable.


Surgical Clinics of North America | 1993

Complications of vascular surgery

G.Melville Williams

Hemorrhage, early thrombosis of a graft or vessel nerve injury, graft infection, and renal failure are frustrating problems for vascular surgeons. All frequently arise from technical complications. Methods of avoiding these problems are discussed.


The Journal of Urology | 1975

Late Perirenal Lymphocele Causing Ureteral and Arterial Obstruction in Renal Transplant Patients

Martin G. McLoughlin; G.Melville Williams

The 3 cases reported herein reveal the problem of chronic lymphoceles in the transplant patient. Surgical correction of the obstruction to the renal artery or ureter is greatly facilitated by the recognition of this clinical entity and the use of intraoperative radiographic studies to distinguish these pseudoencapsulated cysts from the true renal pelvis. The use of sterile milk aids in the demonstration of the anastomotic patency of the watertight closure.


Surgical Clinics of North America | 1978

Status of Renal Transplantation Today

G.Melville Williams

The clinician, while failing to find a cure for all patients with end-stage kidney disease, has nonetheless acquired a great deal of useful information on renal transplantation which is presented herein.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1990

Carotid-subclavian bypass—A decade of experience

Bruce A. Perler; G.Melville Williams


American Journal of Pathology | 2006

The Mitochondrial K-ATP Channel Opener, Diazoxide, Prevents Ischemia-Reperfusion Injury in the Rabbit Spinal Cord

Glen Roseborough; Daqing Gao; Lei Chen; Michael A. Trush; Shaoyu Zhou; G.Melville Williams; Chiming Wei


Journal of Surgical Research | 1970

Successful human kidney transplantation after six hours of cadaver organ preservation by mechanical ventricular assistance

David B. Skinner; Mark B. Orringer; G.Melville Williams

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Bruce A. Perler

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Chiming Wei

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Daqing Gao

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Glen Roseborough

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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James F. Burdick

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Lei Chen

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Amy McHale

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Craig A. Vender Kolk

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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David B. Skinner

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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John V. Conte

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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