Gil N. Bachar
Rabin Medical Center
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Featured researches published by Gil N. Bachar.
Andrologia | 2007
U. Levinger; M. Gornish; Y. Gat; Gil N. Bachar
Varicocele is a bilateral vascular disease which occurs when the one‐way valves in the internal spermatic veins, the testicular venous drainage system, malfunction. Based on new findings and fluid‐mechanics analysis we showed that this process results in vertical blood columns, which cause pathological hydrostatic pressure in the testicular venous microcirculatory system. Ultimately, these pressures exceed the pressure in the arteriolar system. This unique phenomenon of reversal of pressures gradient between the arteriolar and venular systems leads to persistent hypoxia in the testosterone production site, namely, the Leydig cells. The result of bilateral varicocele is decreased testosterone production. Adequate treatment of bilateral varicocele significantly elevates the testosterone production. We found that the prevalence of varicocele increases with age with a rise of about 10% for each decade of life with the incidence reaching 75% in the eight decade of life. Based on our findings the following statements can be made: (1) varicocele prevalence is increased over time. (2) The rise of the incidence is about 10% for each decade of life. (3) 75% of men in the eight decade of their life have varicocele. As varicocele decreases testosterone production and it is reversible by appropriate treatment, it raises two interesting and important issues to be studied: (i) it is possible that varicocele accelerates the process of the ageing male. (ii) It is possible to retard, at least partially, the process of ageing in men by adequate treatment of bilateral varicocele.
Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine | 2003
Gil N. Bachar; Maya Cohen; Alexander Belenky; Eli Atar; Shafir Gideon
Objective. To determine whether the size of the extrahepatic bile duct increases with age in adults. Methods. We prospectively collected data on 251 patients aged 20 years or older who underwent abdominal sonography. None of the patients had a history of liver, gallbladder, biliary, or pancreatic disease or surgery. The extrahepatic bile duct was measured at 3 locations: in the porta hepatis, in the most distal aspect of the head of the pancreas, and midway between these points. Least squares linear regression was used to correlate patient age and the size of the extrahepatic bile duct. Results. There were 126 men and 125 women aged 20 to 94 years (mean ± SD, 52.5 ± 17.63 years). Twelve percent of the study population were younger than 30 years, and 12% were older than 80 years. The mean diameters of the common bile duct in the 3 locations were as follows: proximal, 3.39 ± 1.14 mm; middle, 3.72 ± 1.28 mm; and distal, 4.28 ± 1.18 mm. The overall mean for all measures was 3.66 ± 1.15 mm. The width of the common bile duct ranged from 1.0 to 8.6 mm. There was a significant correlation between common bile duct size and age (r = 0.535; P < .001). Mean common bile duct sizes were 3.128 ± 0.862 mm in the patients younger than 50 years and 4.19 ± 1.15 mm in the patients older than 50 years (P < .001 by independent t test for equality of means). We have found that the duct gradually dilated 0.04 mm/y. Conclusions. This study revealed an age‐dependent change in the diameter of the extrahepatic bile duct. We suggest that the upper normal limit of the duct in elderly persons be set at 8.5 mm.
CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology | 2004
Gil N. Bachar; Eytan Mor; Gabriel Bartal; Eli Atar; N. Goldberg; Alexander Belenky
We report our experience with percutaneous balloon dilatation (PBD) for the treatment of ureteral strictures in patients with renal allografts. Of the 422 consecutive patients after renal transplantation in our center 10 patients had ureteral strictures. An additional 11 patients were referred from other centers. The 21 patients included 15 men and 6 women aged 16 to 67 years. Strictures were confirmed by sonography and scintigraphy in all cases. Patients underwent 2 to 4 PBDs at 7–10-day intervals. Clinical success was defined as resolution of the stenosis and hydronephrosis on sequential ultrasound and normalization of creatinine levels. Patients were divided into two groups: those who underwent transplantation more than 3 months previously and those who underwent transplantation less than 3 months previously. PBD was successful in 13 of the 21 patients (62%). There was no statistically significant difference in success rate between the patients with early (n = 12) and those with late (n = 9) obstruction: 58.4% and 66%, respectively. No major complications were documented. PBD is a safe and simple tool for treating ureteral strictures and procedure-related morbidity is low. It can serve as an initial treatment in patients with early or late ureteral strictures after renal transplantation.
Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2005
Eli Atar; Gil N. Bachar; Gabriel Bartal; Eitan Mor; Haim Neyman; Franklyn Graif; Alexander Belenky
PURPOSE To report the initial and midterm results of percutaneous cutting balloon incision and dilation (PCBID) for the treatment of benign ureteral and biliary strictures in patients after failed high-pressure balloon dilation. MATERIALS AND METHODS The study sample consisted of 11 patients: three with ureteric strictures after renal transplantation, three with biliary anastomotic strictures after liver transplantation, three with pelvic metastatic disease compressing the ureter, one after a failed endoscopic papilla of Vater sphincterotomy, and one with tight stenosis at the choledochojejunal anastomosis. All strictures were resistant to high-pressure balloon dilation. Four patients underwent PCBID immediately after failed high-pressure balloon dilation in the same session, and seven underwent the procedure in a separate session within the subsequent week. The width of the peripheral cutting balloons did not exceed the diameter of the normal lumen (7-8 mm). RESULTS PCBID was successful in nine patients (82%). One failure occurred in a transplanted ureter and one occurred in a transplanted liver with a choledochocholedochal anastomosis. In both cases, PBCID was performed in the same session as failed high-pressure balloon dilation. There were no periprocedural complications. Patency was confirmed at the 3- and 6-month clinical and ultrasonographic follow-up. CONCLUSION PCBID is a simple minimally invasive method for the treatment of benign ureteric and biliary strictures. The success rate is high and no complications occurred.
Urology | 2003
Yigal Gat; Zvi Zukerman; Gil N. Bachar; Dov Feldberg; Michael Gornish
OBJECTIVES To evaluate the incidence of left and right varicocele in adolescents. METHODS The study group consisted of 28 adolescents who underwent evaluation for varicocele at our clinic. In 19 patients, varicocele was detected on routine physical examination, and 9 patients presented with scrotal pain or discomfort. All patients were evaluated by three methods. Physical examination was followed in all cases by contact thermography and venography studies of both testes. RESULTS The rate of left and right retrograde flow in the spermatic veins by the three methods used was as follows: physical examination 92.8% and 10.7%; contact thermography 100% and 89%; and venography 100% and 85.7%, respectively. Varicocele was not detected by physical examination in 2 (7.2%) of the 28 patients on the left side and in 21 (87.5%) of 24 on the right side. CONCLUSIONS The main finding of this study was that varicocele is a bilateral disease in 85.7% of adolescents. The high percentage of bilateral varicocele in our sample may explain the pathophysiologic mechanism whereby what has traditionally been considered a unilateral disease can produce bilateral testicular dysfunction. The high incidence of subclinical bilateral varicocele may indicate that we should consider varicocele a bilateral disease. The second finding was that only 10% of patients with right varicocele were diagnosed by physical examination and more than 85% were diagnosed by thermography, with confirmation by venography. Therefore, we suggest that thermography and venography should play a major role in the diagnosis of varicocele.
Coronary Artery Disease | 2007
Gil N. Bachar; Eli Atar; Shmuell Fuchs; Dicker Dror; Ran Kornowski
ObjectiveWe examined the prevalence and clinical predictors of atherosclerotic coronary artery disease in asymptomatic patients undergoing multidetector computed tomography BackgroundIn recent years multidetector computed tomography imaging has taken a leading role in the detection of subclinical atherosclerosis, even before its clinical manifestation. We examined the prevalence and clinical predictors of atherosclerotic coronary artery disease in asymptomatic patients undergoing multidetector computed tomography of the coronary arteries. MethodsA total of 244 consecutive asymptomatic patients (190 men and 54 women aged 53.8±7.9 years) with at least one atherogenic risk factor underwent multidetector computed tomography angiography of the coronary arteries. The severity and extent of coronary atherosclerosis were graded and evaluated against clinical and laboratory parameters. ResultsMultidetector computed tomography identified significant obstructive coronary artery disease (>50% luminal stenosis) in 13 patients (4.9%), mild or moderate nonobstructive disease (<50% stenosis) in 124 patients (50.8%), and no atherosclerosis in 108 patients (44.3%). On multivariate logistic regression analysis, significant independent clinical predictors of coronary artery disease were male sex (odds ratio, 1.6, P<0.0047), family history of coronary artery disease (odds ratio, 1.4, P<0.0099), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol >130 mg/dl (OR 1.3, P<0.027), hypertension (odds ratio, 1.27, P<0.05), and noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (odds ratio, 1.6, P<0.006). On the basis of the multidetector computed tomography results, pharmacological treatment was initiated or intensified in 40% of patients (statins in 31% and aspirin in 9%). Twenty-two patients (9%) were referred for complementary exercise testing and five (2%) for catheterization. Conclusions(i) Occult atherosclerosis is not uncommon in asymptomatic patients with a risk profile for coronary artery disease. (ii) Conventional risk factors independently correlate with imaging findings of coronary atherosclerosis. (iii) Risk management could be intensified in a significant proportion (∼40%) of patients based on the multidetector computed tomography findings. (iv) In ∼5% of patients at clinical risk, multidetector computed tomography might detect obstructive atherosclerosis that mandates further investigation.
Reproductive Biomedicine Online | 2006
Yigal Gat; Michael Gornish; Uri Navon; Joana Chakraborty; Gil N. Bachar; Izhar Ben-Shlomo
Varicocele is considered a predominantly unilateral left-sided disease. However, since male fertility is preserved with only one healthy testis, infertility perforce represents bilateral testicular dysfunction. It was hypothesized that: (i) right varicocele cannot be diagnosed by palpation and therefore has not been treated in the past by the traditional treatment, and (ii) right varicocele causes impaired oxygen supply in the right testicular microcirculation, leading to germ cell degeneration. This study performed venographies of both right and left internal spermatic veins during the treatment of 840 infertile men with varicocele and analysed the results using tools of fluid mechanics. Histopathology of the right testis revealed stagnation of blood flow and degenerative changes attributed to lack of adequate oxygenation in all testicular cell types. Right varicocele was found in the vast majority of the patients. We found that due to the destruction of one-way valves, pathologic hydrostatic pressure is produced in the testicular venous microcirculatory system about five times higher than normal, exceeding arteriolar pressure. The pressure gradient between the arterioles and venules in the testicular tissue is therefore reversed, leading to persistent hypoxia. Right varicocele, although undetected, is prevalent in infertile men with varicocele, hence only bilateral occlusion of the internal spermatic veins, including the associated bypasses, eliminating the pathologic hydrostatic pressure will lead to resumption of arterial blood flow in the testicular microcirculation.
CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology | 2003
Eli Atar; Alexander Belenky; Margalit Neuman-Levin; A. Yussim; Nathan Bar-Nathan; Gil N. Bachar
Purpose: Graft nephrectomy is the treatment of choice in patients with graft intolerance syndrome, but it is associated with high morbidity and mortality rates. Renal vascular embolization has been suggested as a possible alternative. The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of arterial embolization of these nonfunctioning transplanted kidneys. Methods: Twenty-six transplanted kidneys in 25 patients with irreversible renal graft rejection and graft intolerance who underwent arterial embolization at our center from August 1994 to April 2001 were analyzed for procedural success and long-term outcome. Embolization was performed with absolute alcohol or with polyvinyl alcohol (Ivalon) and coils. Results: Twenty-four of the 26 (92%) procedures were technically successful, but in one patient only partial occlusion of one of two renal arteries was achieved, and in another the renal artery was already completely occluded. There were two major complications: emphysematous pyelonephritis necessitating nephrectomy and groin abscess that was drained. Follow-up ranged from 8 to 84 months. Clinical success was achieved in 24 of the 26 procedures (92%), and only in one patient did embolization fail to relieve the symptoms, and nephrectomy was performed 3 months later. Conclusion: Renal vascular embolization is a simple, safe and effective technique for the treatment of nonfunctioning renal allografts associated with graft intolerance syndrome. We suggest that it be considered the treatment of choice.
Clinical Radiology | 2014
Eli Atar; Gil N. Bachar; S. Berlin; C. Neiman; E. Bleich-Belenky; S. Litvin; M. Knihznik; Alexander Belenky; E. Ram
AIM To evaluate the outcome of percutaneous cholecystostomy in critically ill patients with acute cholecystitis. MATERIALS AND METHODS The study group included critically ill patients who underwent percutaneous cholecystostomy for acute cholecystitis at a tertiary medical centre in 2007-2011. Data on complications, morbidities, surgical outcome, and imaging findings were collected from the medical files and radiology information system. RESULTS There were 48 women (59.3%) and 33 men (40.7%), with a median age of 82 years (range 47-99 years). Seventy-one (88%) had calculous cholecystitis and 10 (12%), acalculous cholecystitis. The drain was successfully inserted in all cases with no immediate major procedural complications. Fifteen patients (18.5%) died in-hospital within 30 days, mainly (93%) due to septic shock (14/15), another 20 patients (24.7%) died during the study period of unrelated co-morbidities. Of the remaining 46 patients, 36 (78.2%) had surgical cholecystectomies. In patients with acalculous cholecystitis, the drain was removed after cessation of symptoms. Transcystic cholangiography identified five patients with additional stones in the common bile duct. They were managed by pushing the stones into the duodenum via the cystostomy access, sparing them the need for surgical exploration. CONCLUSIONS Early percutaneous gallbladder drainage is safe and effective in critically ill patients in the acute phase of cholecystitis, with a high technical success rate. Surgical results in survivors are better than reported in patients treated surgically without drainage. Bile duct stones can be eliminated without creating an additional access.
CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology | 2007
Alexander Belenky; D. Aranovich; F. Greif; Gil N. Bachar; Gabriel Bartal; Eli Atar
PurposeTo report our experience with the Angioseal vascular closure device for hemostasis of distal brachial artery puncture.MethodsBetween September 2003 and August 2005, 64 Angioseal vascular closure devices were inserted in 64 patients (40 men, 24 women; mean age 65 years) immediately after diagnostic or therapeutic arterial angiographies performed through a 5 Fr to 7 Fr sheath via the distal brachial artery. Ultrasound examination of the brachial artery preceded the angiography in all cases and only arteries wider than 4 mm were closed by the Angioseal. In cases of a sonographically evident thin subcutaneous space of the cubital fossa, tissue tumescence, using 1% Lidocaine, was performed prior to the arterial closure.ResultsThe deployment success rate was 100%. No major complications were encountered; only 2 patients developed puncture site hematoma, and these were followed conservatively.ConclusionsClosure of low brachial artery punctures with the Angioseal is simple and safe. No additional manual compression is required. We recommend its use after brachial artery access interventions, through appropriately wide arteries, to improve early patient ambulation and potentially reduce possible puncture site complications.