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Dive into the research topics where Gerald Barber is active.

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Featured researches published by Gerald Barber.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2004

Enalapril to Prevent Cardiac Function Decline in Long-Term Survivors of Pediatric Cancer Exposed to Anthracyclines

Jeffrey H. Silber; Avital Cnaan; Bernard J. Clark; Stephen M. Paridon; Alvin J. Chin; Jack Rychik; Alexa N. Hogarty; Mitchell I. Cohen; Gerald Barber; Monika Rutkowski; Thomas R. Kimball; Cynthia DeLaat; Laurel J. Steinherz; Huaqing Zhao

PURPOSE To determine whether an angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor, enalapril, prevents cardiac function deterioration (defined using maximal cardiac index [MCI] on exercise testing or increase in left ventricular end-systolic wall stress [LVESWS]) in long-term survivors of pediatric cancer. PATIENTS AND METHODS This was a randomized, double-blind, controlled clinical trial comparing enalapril to placebo in 135 long-term survivors of pediatric cancer who had at least one cardiac abnormality identified at any time after anthracycline exposure. RESULTS There was no difference in the rate of change in MCI per year between enalapril and placebo groups (0.30 v 0.18 L/min/m(2); P =.55). However, during the first year of treatment, the rate of change in LVESWS was greater in the enalapril group than in the placebo group (-8.59 v 1.85 g/cm(2); P =.033) and this difference was maintained over the study period, resulting in a 9% reduction in estimated LVESWS by year 5 in the enalapril group. Six of seven patients removed from random assignment to treatment because of cardiac deterioration were initially treated with placebo (P =.11), and one has died as a result of heart failure. Side effects from enalapril included dizziness or hypotension (22% v 3% in the placebo group; P =.0003) and fatigue (10% v 0%; P =.013). CONCLUSION Enalapril treatment did not influence exercise performance, but did reduce LVESWS in the first year; this reduction was maintained over the study period. Any theoretical benefits of LVESWS reduction in this anthracycline-exposed population must be weighed against potential side effects from ACE inhibitors when making treatment decisions.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1992

Electrocardiographic changes and arrhythmias after cancer therapy in children and young adults

Ranae L. Larsen; Regina I. Jakacki; Victoria L. Vetter; Anna T. Meadows; Jeffrey H. Silber; Gerald Barber

Transient electrocardiographic changes and arrhythmias are known to be acute manifestations of cardiotoxicity secondary to cancer therapy with anthracyclines or cardiac irradiation. However, despite the known risk of late cardiac dysfunction in survivors of childhood cancer therapy, the risk of clinically important electrocardiographic abnormalities and arrhythmias after treatment is unknown. Standard 12-lead and 24-hour ambulatory electrocardiograms were recorded in 73 patients who received anthracyclines alone, 24 who received cardiac irradiation alone, and 27 who received both anthracyclines and cardiac irradiation. The mean age of the patients was 15 years. Mean cumulative anthracycline dose was 282 mg/m2 in patients who received anthracyclines alone and 244 mg/m2 in patients who received both anthracyclines and cardiac irradiation. Analysis of the 12-lead and 24-hour electrocardiograms demonstrated increased frequency of QTc prolongation, supraventricular premature complexes, supraventricular tachycardia, ventricular premature complexes, couplets and ventricular tachycardia (all p less than 0.001) when compared with an age-matched healthy population. Most patients had abnormalities limited to single supraventricular or ventricular premature complexes; however, potentially serious ventricular ectopy, including ventricular pairs and ventricular tachycardia, were noted in patients with cumulative doses greater than 200 mg/m2. Electrocardiographic abnormalities and arrhythmias are not limited to the acute phase of treatment with anthracyclines and cardiac irradiation. Survivors of childhood malignancy who received anthracyclines or cardiac irradiation, or both, probably should undergo ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring as part of their follow-up to detect potentially life-threatening arrhythmias.


American Heart Journal | 1988

The significance of tricuspid regurgitation in hypoplastic left-heart syndrome.

Gerald Barber; J.Gregg Helton; Beth Ann Aglira; Alvin J. Chin; John D. Murphy; John D. Pigott; William I. Norwood

Palliation of hypoplastic left-heart syndrome involves use of the morphologic right ventricle as the systemic ventricle and the tricuspid valve (in cases of mitral atresia/stenosis) or the common atrioventricular valve (in cases of malaligned atrioventricular canal) as the systemic atrioventricular valve. To determine the relationship between tricuspid or common atrioventricular valve function and the ultimate outcome of palliative surgery, 100 patients with hypoplastic left-heart syndrome were evaluated preoperatively by Doppler echocardiography to determine the degree of tricuspid regurgitation. These patients were then followed serially to assess changes with time in the functional status of the tricuspid or common atrioventricular valve and to determine the correlation of tricuspid or common atrioventricular valve regurgitation with survival. We discovered that tricuspid or common atrioventricular valve regurgitation is common in hypoplastic left-heart syndrome. Thirty-seven percent of the patients had mild, 13% had moderate, and 3% had severe tricuspid or common atrioventricular valve regurgitation on their preoperative Doppler echocardiograms. Throughout the first 2 postoperative years most patients had no significant change in the degree of tricuspid or common atrioventricular valve regurgitation when findings were compared to those of the preoperative echocardiogram. Patients with moderate or severe tricuspid or common atrioventricular valve regurgitation preoperatively had a significant reduction in their survival when contrasted with patients with no or mild atrioventricular valve regurgitation. We therefore conclude that tricuspid or common atrioventricular valve competence is a significant factor in long-term survival after palliative surgery for hypoplastic left-heart syndrome. This function, however, appears to be unaffected by palliation and remains relatively constant over the first 2 postoperative years.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1991

Usefulness of corticosteroid therapy for protein-losing enteropathy after the Fontan procedure

Jack Rychik; David A. Piccoli; Gerald Barber

Chronic pleural and pericardial effusions are a significant cause of morbidity and mortality after the Fontan procedure. Frequently, these patients manifest a protein-losing enteropathy (PLE), defined as severe loss of serum proteins into the gut, with clinical sequelae of edema, anasarca and immunodeficiency.1 Despite standard therapy which includes nutritional alterations, diuretics and serial albumin infusions, mortality remains high.2 We report 2 cases of severe PLE after the Fontan procedure successfully managed with corticosteroid therapy.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1993

Cardiac dysfunction following spinal irradiation during childhood.

R I Jakacki; Joel W. Goldwein; R L Larsen; Gerald Barber; Jeffrey H. Silber

PURPOSE Although spinal irradiation used in the treatment of CNS malignancies includes a portion of the heart in the radiation field, cardiac effects have not been previously reported. PATIENTS AND METHODS We compared patients treated for malignancy in childhood with spinal irradiation (n = 26) with patients treated with mediastinal/flank irradiation (n = 47) that included the heart in the radiation field. All patients were more than 1 year from completion of radiation therapy. Patients underwent at least two of the following cardiac evaluations: (1) ECG; (2) 24-hour ambulatory ECG; (3) echocardiogram; and (4) exercise-testing using cycle ergometry. RESULTS Twelve of 16 patients (75%) in the spinal irradiation group with an assessable exercise test achieved a maximal cardiac index (MCI) below the fifth percentile as compared with 13 of 40 patients (32%) who had received mediastinal/flank irradiation (P = .007). Furthermore, after adjusting for normal heart growth, radiation and anthracycline doses, and follow-up time, the group of patients who received spinal irradiation had significantly higher estimated posterior wall stress (P = .002), expressed as the natural logarithm of the ratio of end-diastolic left ventricular internal diameter (LVID) to left ventricular posterior wall thickness (LVPWT), than the group who had received mediastinal/flank irradiation. Finally, eight of 26 patients (31%) in the spinal group had pathologic Q-waves in the inferior leads versus three of 47 (6.4%) in the mediastinal/flank group (P = .001). CONCLUSION Patients who have received spinal irradiation for pediatric malignancies appear to be at risk for significant cardiac dysfunction. The asymmetric distribution of radiation to a growing heart, as given with spinal irradiation, may be the cause of these findings.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1991

Hypoplastic left heart syndrome: hemodynamic and angiographic assessment after initial reconstructive surgery and relevance to modified Fontan procedure.

Anthony C. Chang; Paul E. Farrell; Kenneth A. Murdison; Jeanne M. Baffa; Gerald Barber; William I. Norwood; John D. Murphy

After undergoing initial reconstructive surgery for hypoplastic left heart syndrome performed between August 1985 and March 1989, 59 patients (age range 3 to 27 months, mean 13.8 +/- 4.5) underwent elective cardiac catheterization in anticipation of a modified Fontan procedure. Five important hemodynamic and anatomic features considered to be components of successful reconstructive surgery were specifically addressed. 1) Interatrial communication: Only two patients had a measured pressure difference of greater than 4 mm Hg across the atrial septum. 2) Tricuspid valve function: Angiography demonstrated significant tricuspid valve regurgitation in only five patients (moderate in two and severe in three). 3) Aortic arch: Pressure tracings from the right ventricle to the descending aorta revealed a gradient greater than 25 mm Hg in only two patients. 4) Pulmonary vasculature: Ten patients had a calculated pulmonary vascular resistance greater than 4 U.m2; 51 (86%) of the 59 patients had no evidence of distortion (stenosis or hypoplasia) of either the left or the right pulmonary artery. 5) Right ventricular function: Five patients had an end-diastolic pressure in the right ventricle greater than 12 mm Hg and two patients had qualitative assessment of decreased ventricular function. Comparison of catheterization data between survivors and nonsurvivors of the subsequent modified Fontan procedure showed that only significant tricuspid regurgitation is a possible predictor of poor outcome. After first stage reconstructive surgery for hypoplastic left heart syndrome, most survivors have favorable anatomy and hemodynamics at follow-up cardiac catheterization for a subsequent Fontan procedure.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1993

Cardiac rehabilitation after cancer therapy in children and young adults

Angela M. Sharkey; Andrea B. Carey; Charles T. Heise; Gerald Barber

Abstract Approximately two thirds of 6,000 children diagnosed with cancer in the United States each year are treated successfully. 1 With increasing cure rates and longer disease-free survival, the long-term outcome of cancer therapy has become important. Both anthracyclines and cardiac irradiation have acute and chronic cardiotoxicity. Previous studies showed that surviving patients of childhood cancer who were treated with these modalities have abnormal exercise tests, echocardiograms and Holter recordings. 2–4 The effects of deconditioning on these findings is unknown. To separate the effects of deconditioning secondary to chronic illness from long-term cardiotoxic effects secondary to anthracyclines, we used exercise testing to study surviving patients of childhood cancer before and after a 12-week aerobic conditioning program.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1990

Subcostal two-dimensional echocardiographic identification of anomalous attachment of septum primum in patients with left atrioventricular valve underdevelopment☆

Alvin J. Chin; Paul M. Weinberg; Gerald Barber

Five variations of atrial septal morphology occur in hypoplastic left heart syndrome. One variety, termed anomalous attachment of septum primum, has been described only in necropsy series. Two-dimensional echocardiography was utilized to determine the incidence of this anomaly in patients with left atrioventricular (AV) valve underdevelopment, including those with other ventriculoarterial alignments, such as transposition of the great arteries. Forty-eight (37%) of 129 patients with normally aligned great arteries (and two ventricles) had anomalous attachment of septum primum. Ten (34%) of 29 patients with double outlet right ventricle and left AV valve underdevelopment had this anomaly. Four (50%) of eight patients with single ventricle exhibited this atrial septal variant. The most reliable view to identify anomalous attachment was the subcostal left oblique-equivalent cut. Recognition of atrial septal morphology has implications for preoperative and intraoperative management of patients with left AV valve underdevelopment. The similar prevalence of this atrial septal variant in patients with normally aligned great arteries, double outlet right ventricle and transposed great arteries suggests that there may be a common mechanism for left AV valve underdevelopment that is independent of the development of the arterial portion of the heart.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1988

Fate of the pulmonic valve after proximal pulmonary artery-to-ascending aorta anastomosis for aortic outflow obstruction

Alvin J. Chin; Gerald Barber; J.Gregg Helton; Ernerio T. Alboliras; Beth Ann Aglira; John D. Pigott; William I. Norwood

Transection of the main pulmonary artery and end-to-side anastomosis of the proximal pulmonary artery to the ascending aorta has been increasingly used in palliative surgery for cardiac malformations such as single ventricle with small outlet foramen (bulboventricular foramen) and hypoplastic left-heart syndrome. To evaluate pulmonary valve competence after this operation, we used color Doppler flow mapping to examine 45 survivors of pulmonary artery-to-ascending aorta anastomosis a median of 202 days postoperatively. Of 37 patients with hypoplastic left heart syndrome, mild regurgitation was detected in 9 (24%) and moderate regurgitation in 1 (3%). Of 8 with other lesions, mild regurgitation was observed in 2 and moderate regurgitation in 1. Seven of 11 patients imaged greater than or equal to 12 months postoperatively had regurgitation. In summary, one-fourth of survivors developed mild pulmonary regurgitation. Its presence should not be considered a contraindication to eventual application of Fontans principle, although further follow-up appears warranted because the long-term fate of pulmonary valve function is not yet known.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1989

Two-dimensional and doppler echocardiographic assessment of neonatal arterial repair for transposition of the great arteries

Marie M. Gleason; Alvin J. Chin; Beth Ann A. Andrews; Gerald Barber; J.Gregg Helton; John D. Murphy; William I. Norwood

The arterial switch procedure has become an accepted reparative technique for transposition of the great arteries with or without ventricular septal defect. In this study the accuracy of prospective noninvasive imaging in detecting arterial tract obstruction and the prevalence and severity of arterial valvular regurgitation (as assessed by Doppler ultrasound) were evaluated in survivors of arterial repair. All 53 study patients underwent two-dimensional echocardiographic examination 2 days to 20 months (median 7 months) postoperatively; 43 patients also had pulsed and continuous wave Doppler studies. The accuracy of the noninvasive evaluation of arterial tract obstruction was determined by comparison of Doppler maximal instantaneous gradients with peak to peak gradients at nonsimultaneous catheterization in 26 patients. Twenty-one (81%) of the 26 patients underwent catheterization and successful pulsed and continuous wave Doppler examination of the right heart; 17 (81%) of these 21 had a maximal pressure gradient within 20 mm Hg of the peak to peak gradient obtained at catheterization. Echocardiographic identification of the stenotic site was correct in all eight of the patients in this group requiring reoperation. Twenty-three (88%) of the 26 patients who underwent catheterization had successful Doppler interrogation of the aortic tract; 22 (96%) of these 23 had a maximal instantaneous gradient within 20 mm Hg of the peak to peak catheterization gradient. Fourteen (32%) of 43 patients had mild or moderate pulmonary regurgitation by Doppler study. Three (7%) of the 43 had mild aortic regurgitation.

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Alvin J. Chin

University of Pennsylvania

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Jeffrey H. Silber

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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J.Gregg Helton

University of Pennsylvania

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John D. Murphy

University of Pennsylvania

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Jack Rychik

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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John D. Pigott

University of Pennsylvania

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Alexa N. Hogarty

University of Pennsylvania

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Avital Cnaan

Children's National Medical Center

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Bernard J. Clark

University of Pennsylvania

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