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Dive into the research topics where George B. Bartley is active.

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Featured researches published by George B. Bartley.


American Journal of Ophthalmology | 1992

Tissue breakdown and exposure associated with orbital hydroxyapatite implants.

Helmut Buettner; George B. Bartley

Tissue breakdown and exposure of a hydroxyapatite implant were observed in eight patients: in four of six patients after evisceration and in four of 31 after enucleation. The reasons for evisceration were a blind, painful eye and endophthalmitis in two patients each. The reasons for enucleation were a choroidal melanoma in two patients and endophthalmitis and irreparable traumatic damage in one patient each. The patients with endophthalmitis received the implant in a second surgical procedure after intensive antibiotic treatment. Small tissue defects healed spontaneously, whereas large defects showed little tendency to heal by secondary intention. Tissue breakdown over a hydroxyapatite implant may be related to delayed ingrowth of fibrovascular tissue, and possibly related to an inflammatory reaction incited by the hydroxyapatite. Careful case selection, facilitation of tissue penetration by drilling holes into the hydroxyapatite sphere, delayed fitting of the prosthesis, and vaulting of the posterior surface of the initial prosthesis to reduce pressure on the tissues covering the anterior pole of the implant may alleviate the problems of tissue breakdown and exposure.


Ophthalmic Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 1992

Acquired Lacrimal Drainage Obstruction: An Etiologic Classification System, Case Reports, and a Review of the Literature. Part 1

George B. Bartley

The cause of acquired lacrimal drainage obstruction may be primary or secondary. Primary acquired nasolacrimal duct obstruction results from inflammation of unknown cause that eventually leads to occlusive fibrosis. Secondary acquired lacrimal drainage obstruction, the theme of this report, may result from a wide variety of infectious, inflammatory, neoplastic, traumatic, or mechanical causes. An etiologic classification system for acquired lacrimal drainage obstruction is proposed, and it is illustrated by representative patients from the authors practice and discussed with reference to published reports.


American Journal of Ophthalmology | 2000

Necrobiotic xanthogranuloma: long-term outcome of ocular and systemic involvement ☆

Seyda Ugurlu; George B. Bartley; Lawrence E. Gibson

PURPOSE To report long-term outcomes of patients with necrobiotic xanthogranuloma, to investigate the propriety of therapeutic surgical excision or debulking, and to study tissue specimens by immunoperoxidase staining and in situ hybridization. METHODS Medical records of all patients at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, with necrobiotic xanthogranuloma between 1980 and 1997 were reviewed. A follow-up letter was sent to each patient inquiring about the current status of the lesions, the treatment regimen, and associated systemic diseases. RESULTS The average age (+/- standard deviation) of the 15 men and 11 women was 56.8 +/- 14.8 years. Of the 26 patients, 21 (81%) had lesions of the ocular adnexa. Ulceration of the lesions occurred in 11 patients (42%). The lesions recurred after surgical removal in 11 patients (42%) and on prior incision sites from unrelated operations in three patients (12%). The average duration of follow-up from the appearance of characteristic skin lesions was 10 +/- 6.1 years. Four patients had multiple myeloma, five had a plasma cell dyscrasia, and one had a lymphoproliferative disorder during this period. Time to development of associated malignancy ranged from 8 years before the skin lesions to 11 years after the skin lesions. Overall survival was 100% at 10 years and 90% at 15 years (95% confidence limit, 0.73 to 1.00). Immunoperoxidase stains demonstrated that most histiocytes are not of Langerhans cell lineage. Monoclonal immune globulins were not identified in tissue specimens. CONCLUSION Care of patients with necrobiotic xanthogranuloma should include avoidance of surgical removal, if possible, and lifelong follow-up to detect the development of associated malignancy.


American Journal of Ophthalmology | 1989

Posterior Lamellar Eyelid Reconstruction with a Hard Palate Mucosal Graft

George B. Bartley; Peter P. Kay

A graft of hard palate mucosa is a satisfactory substitute for the posterior lamella of tarsus and conjunctiva in eyelid reconstruction. The graft may be harvested after administration of local anesthesia in adults, provides structural support as well as a mucosal surface, and contracts minimally. The palatal donor site heals with a minimum of postoperative care. Results in four eyelids with severe cicatricial entropion were satisfactory. The only observed complication was apparent partial keratinization of one graft in a patient with Stevens-Johnson syndrome.


Survey of Ophthalmology | 1994

Complications of blepharoplasty

Jonathan C. Lowry; George B. Bartley

Although blepharoplasty is a technically straightforward procedure, many postoperative complications may occur. Some of the untoward effects may be only a transient nuisance for the patient, such as mild ocular dryness, whereas other sequelae can lead to severe visual loss. An extensive review of the prevention, diagnosis, and management of complications associated with blepharoplasty is presented.


Ophthalmology | 1989

Orbital Exenteration at the Mayo Clinic: 1967–1986

George B. Bartley; James A. Garrity; Robert R. Waller; John W. Henderson; Duane M. Ilstrup

Orbital exenteration was performed in 102 patients at the Mayo Clinic during the 20-year period from 1967 through 1986. The surgical procedure was performed for mucormycosis in one patient and for pain and deformity after a severe facial burn in another; in the remaining 100 patients, exenteration was used to treat a neoplastic disorder. Although 19 different neoplasms were encountered, squamous cell carcinoma, basal cell carcinoma, and melanoma constituted 70% of the total. In 82 patients with no known residual tumor or metastases at operation, the 1-year survival rate was 88.6%, the 5-year rate was 56.8%, and the 5-year rate free of recurrence or metastases was 48.3%. In 18 patients with known residual tumor or metastases at exenteration, 55.0% were alive 1 year postoperatively, and the 5-year survival rate was 25.8%. Unusual findings in this series included two patients with metastatic basal cell carcinoma and one patient with a metastatic thyroid Hürthle cell carcinoma.


Mayo Clinic Proceedings | 2004

Initiation of Glucocorticoid Therapy: Before or After Temporal Artery Biopsy?

Brian R. Younge; Briggs E. Cook; George B. Bartley; David O. Hodge; Gene G. Hunder

OBJECTIVE To identify clinical findings in patients with suspected giant cell arteritis (GCA) that may help clinicians decide when to initiate glucocorticoid therapy. PATIENTS AND METHODS Medical diagnostic codes and surgical indexing were used to identify all patients who had temporal artery biopsy at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn, between January 1, 1988, and December 31, 1997. Patient medical records were abstracted for pertinent clinical data, glucocorticoid use, and final diagnoses. Sensitivities, specificities, predictive values, and likelihood ratios were calculated for the association of the various clinical findings and the presence of a positive biopsy result. Graphic and arithmetic models were constructed to predict positive temporal artery biopsy results. RESULTS During the 10-year interval, 1113 patients had temporal artery biopsy. The results were positive for GCA in 373 patients (33.5%) and negative in 740 (665%). Twenty percent of all patients were taking glucocorticoids at the time of biopsy. The presence of jaw claudication had a positive predictive value of 78. Combinations of jaw claudication with new headache, scalp tenderness, and decreased vision had still higher values. Positive likelihood ratios in patients with these combinations and in those with diplopia were greater than 3. A normal erythrocyte sedi-mentation rate in patients not taking corticosteroids provided a high negative likelihood ratio of 40. An arithmetic equation provided the probability of a positive biopsy result on a continuous scale using 6 variables identified by logistic regression. Patients with a greater than 80% chance of a positive biopsy result and those with less than a 10% chance were identified. CONCLUSION Positive predictive values, likelihood ratios, and an arithmetic formula identify patients who have an increased or decreased chance of a positive temporal artery biopsy result. Use of these methods to determine early initiation of glucocorticoid therapy before temporal artery biopsy or deferral until after biopsy may help reduce both vascular complications of GCA and adverse effects of corticosteroids.


American Journal of Ophthalmology | 1994

A Review of 340 Orbital Tumors in Children During a 60-Year Period

Sylvia R. Kodsi; Debra J. Shetlar; R. Jean Campbell; James A. Garrity; George B. Bartley

We reviewed cases of histopathologically verified orbital tumors in children at our institution over 60 years to determine the distribution of various pathologic processes and trends over time. We studied the medical records and pathology specimens from 340 patients aged 18 years or younger who underwent biopsy for orbital mass from 1932 through 1991. The most common tumors were cysts (79 of 340, 23.2%), vascular lesions (60 of 340, 17.6%), optic nerve and meningeal neoplasms (56 of 340, 16.5%), inflammatory masses (29 of 340, 8.5%), osseous and fibrocystic lesions (27 of 340, 7.9%), and rhabdomyosarcomas (24 of 340, 7.1%). The overall frequency of malignancies was 18.2% (62 of 340): 11.5% (39) were primary tumors and 6.8% (23) were secondary and metastatic. The frequency of orbital malignancies was 25.4% (36 of 142) in the first 30 years (1932 through 1961) and 13.1% (26 of 198) in the second 30 years (1962 through 1991). The percentage of primary orbital malignancies was almost identical during the first and second periods (11.9% [17 of 142] and 11.1% [22 of 198], respectively). However, secondary and metastatic orbital neoplasms occurred in 13.4% (19 of 142) of the patients during the first 30 years and in only 2.0% (four of 198) during the second 30 years. The frequency of primary orbital malignancies in biopsy material remained the same over 60 years. However, the overall incidence of orbital biopsy specimens containing a malignancy decreased as a result of a reduction in the number of secondary and metastatic neoplasms that underwent biopsy.


Ophthalmic Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 1997

The Role of Second-intention Healing in Periocular Reconstruction

Jonathan C. Lowry; George B. Bartley; James A. Garrity

Summary Second-intention healing is a time-honored method of wound management. Its role in periocular reconstruction, however, is currently controversial. The objectives of this thesis are threefold: to evaluate carefully the outcomes in a cohort of patients treated by this technique, to provide a comprehensive review of published reports, and to formulate recommendations and guidelines for appropriate application in selected patients. Eyelid and periorbital defects after excision of periocular tumors were allowed to heal by second intention in 59 patients. The locations of the wounds were the medial canthus (n = 32), lower eyelid (n = 20), upper eyelid, (n = 4), glabella (n = 2), and nasojugal fold (n = 1). Five excised areas involved the eyelid margin, and in three patients the defect included the canalicular system. The size of the defects ranged from 3.3 mm to 22.27 mm. The average duration of follow-up was 19 months (range, 6 months to 8 years). The functional and cosmetic results were satisfactory in 49 patients (83%). Complications occurred in 10 patients and included ectropion, medial canthal webbing, trichiasis, eyelid notching, and hypertrophic scarring. Only two patients, however, required secondary repair. Healing by second intention is a safe, effective, and inexpensive alternative to surgical reconstruction after tumor excision in selected patients.


Mayo Clinic proceedings | 1994

Orbital emphysema : case reports and review of the literature

Ingrid E. Zimmer-Galler; George B. Bartley

OBJECTIVE This study was designed to describe the usual clinical findings of orbital emphysema as well as unusual and infrequent but important causes of this condition. DESIGN We present seven detailed cases of orbital emphysema and review the pertinent English-language literature published since 1900. MATERIAL AND METHODS Characterization of the seven patients with orbital emphysema illustrates the various causes and clinical findings of the disorder. Additionally, we review 78 previously published cases of orbital emphysema to determine the treatment and prognosis of this condition. RESULTS Trauma is the most frequent cause of orbital emphysema; however, orbital emphysema also may occur spontaneously or as a complication of pulmonary barotrauma, infection, and operation. In most cases, orbital emphysema resolves spontaneously without compromising ocular function. If excessive amounts of air accumulate within the orbit, however, complications such as occlusion of the central retinal artery or compressive optic neuropathy may lead to loss of vision if not recognized promptly and treated. CONCLUSION In most cases, orbital emphysema is an incidental, benign finding that resolves with time. Careful observation is the only treatment necessary unless an orbital fracture involves an infected sinus, in which case prophylactic orally administered antibiotics may be prescribed.

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