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Dive into the research topics where Graham W. Long is active.

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Featured researches published by Graham W. Long.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2009

Clostridium septicum aortitis: Report of two cases and review of the literature.

Christopher W. Seder; Michael Kramer; Graham W. Long; Maciej Uzieblo; Charles J. Shanley; Paul Bove

Clostridium septicum aortitis is a rare infection that has a strong association with occult colonic malignancy. To our knowledge, we report the 25th and 26th cases of C septicum aortitis in the English literature and make recommendations for its management. The first patient was a 75-year-old man who presented with abdominal pain. Computed tomography showed the presence of periaortic gas. He underwent aortic débridement and extra-anatomic bypass after blood cultures revealed C septicum. Four months after the initial presentation, he was readmitted with lethargy, found to have recurrent periaortic gas, and died. The second patient was a 76-year-old woman who presented with a 5-cm abdominal aortic aneurysm with surrounding retroperitoneal gas. She underwent emergency aortic ligation and retroperitoneal débridement. Her blood and intraoperative tissue cultures also grew C septicum. She had a prolonged postoperative course and ultimately died on hospital day 94. Both patients were found to have concurrent colon adenocarcinomas. C septicum aortitis is a lethal disease that necessitates prompt surgical intervention and appropriate antibiotic therapy. The strong association of C septicum with occult malignancy should prompt the astute clinician to undertake an exhaustive search for a neoplastic process.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2009

Open vs. endovascular repair of isolated iliac artery aneurysms: A 12-year experience

Niyant V. Patel; Graham W. Long; Zulfiqar F. Cheema; Kalen Rimar; O. William Brown; Charles J. Shanley

OBJECTIVE To examine contemporary operative techniques and outcomes for repair of isolated iliac artery aneurysms. METHODS We retrospectively reviewed the charts of all patients who underwent repair of an isolated iliac artery aneurysm from February 1995 to June 2007. Mycotic aneurysms and patients with concurrent infrarenal abdominal aortic aneurysms greater than 3.5 cm in diameter were excluded from analysis. Patients with prior abdominal aortic aneurysm repair were not excluded. RESULTS Fifty-six patients (96% male; mean age, 72 +/- 10 years) had either open (n = 24) or endovascular (n = 32) repair with median follow-up of 36 months. Seven patients were treated for rupture, six with open repair, and one with an endograft. Average aneurysm size for patients in the open and endovascular repair cohorts was 4.5 +/- 2.4 cm and 4.0 +/- 1.1 cm, respectively (P = .35). One episode of endograft limb thrombosis at five months was treated with catheter-directed thrombolytic therapy and stent placement. Thirty-day mortality for patients undergoing elective and emergent open repair was 1/18 (6%) and 1/6 (17%), respectively. There was no 30-day mortality for the endovascular group. Median length of stay was 10.5 days in the open group and one day in the endovascular elective group (P < .01). There was no mid-term aneurysm-related mortality in either group. Primary patency rates were similar between the open and endovascular groups at five years (100% vs. 96%, P = .07). Aneurysm sac diameter decreased in 67% (21/28) of patients that underwent endovascular repair. One patient with a Type III endoleak required relining of the endograft with a second endograft at 72 months. CONCLUSION These data demonstrate that in appropriately selected patients, endovascular repair of isolated iliac artery aneurysms is a safe, effective alternative to open repair with mid-term follow-up. Endovascular repair is associated with a significantly reduced hospital length of stay and may be associated with decreased need for transfusion and mortality when compared with open repair.


American Journal of Surgery | 1993

Cell washing versus immediate reinfusion of intraoperatively shed blood during abdominal aortic aneurysm repair

Graham W. Long; John L. Glover; Phillip J. Bendick; O. William Brown; John W. Kitzmiller; Patricia Lombness; Danette Hanson

Significant hematologic changes are known to occur following intraoperative autotransfusion of shed blood, but the clinical importance of cell washing prior to reinfusion has not been substantiated. To evaluate these changes and their relationship to the use of blood bank products and postoperative morbidity, 26 patients undergoing elective abdominal aortic aneurysm repair were prospectively randomized to reinfusion with washed shed blood or to the use of a collection system in which filtered, but unwashed, whole blood was reinfused intraoperatively. Each patient was evaluated with respect to standard metabolic and hematologic laboratory parameters preoperatively, immediately postoperatively, and 12 to 18 hours postoperatively. Patient demographic data were similar for both groups. Perioperative survival was 100% for both groups. Total blood loss and blood volume autotransfused were significantly greater in the unwashed cell group compared with the washed cell group (p = 0.00014 and p = 0.00011, respectively). Hemoglobin, fibrinogen, prothrombin time, and partial thromboplastin time levels were not significantly different between the two groups at any time perioperatively; fibrin split product and d-dimer levels were significantly higher in the unwashed cell group postoperatively (p = 0.016 and p < 0.001, respectively). Serum free hemoglobin levels were significantly higher in the immediate postoperative period in the unwashed cell group compared with the washed cell group (p = 0.0013); by 12 to 18 hours postoperatively, this difference was not significant. Haptoglobin levels were significantly lower in the unwashed cell group at both postoperative times (123 +/- 86 mg/dL versus 41 +/- 50 mg/dL, p = 0.0086; 102 +/- 66 mg/dL versus 24 +/- 36 mg/dL, p = 0.0001); however, there was no perioperative renal failure in either group. Furthermore, homologous blood product use was not significantly different between the two groups, with an average of 1.5 +/- 2.5 units of packed red blood cells given to patients in the unwashed cell group versus 0.8 +/- 1.7 units in the washed cell group (p = 0.419). Overall complications were higher and critical care and total hospital stays were longer in the unwashed cell group but did not result from autotransfusion of unwashed blood. We conclude that the intraoperative reinfusion of unwashed shed blood is safe and effective, causing transient hematologic abnormalities that normalize in the early postoperative period, and is not associated with increased mortality, or hematologic, cardiopulmonary, or renal complications.


Vascular and Endovascular Surgery | 2005

Diagnosis of total internal carotid occlusions with duplex ultrasound and ultrasound contrast

Christina Ohm; Phillip J. Bendick; Jeffrey Monash; Paul G. Bove; O. William Brown; Graham W. Long; Gerald B. Zelenock; Charles J. Shanley

It remains a significant technical challenge for duplex ultrasound to accurately differentiate between total and near total internal carotid artery (ICA) occlusions. We have evaluated the efficacy of an ultrasound contrast agent combined with improved imaging techniques in patients with suspected carotid artery occlusions. Patients identified by conventional duplex ultrasound between January and August 2003 as having a possible ICA occlusion were eligible for study. A 1 mL bolus of ultrasound contrast agent was injected into a 50 mL bag of normal saline and given intravenously at a rate of approximately 4–5 mL/minute. Ultrasound imaging and spectral Doppler analysis were done using tissue harmonic imaging for optimum contrast agent to soft tissue discrimination, or with the direct B-mode imaging of blood flow to maximize the brightness of the circulating contrast agent. Ten patients were identified, 6 men and four women with a mean age of 68.3 years. Nine suspected total ICA occlusions were unilateral and 1 was bilateral. Imaging with contrast agent confirmed occlusion of the ICA in 7 of 10 patients; 3 patients had near-total occlusion with flow detected in the distal ICA by spectral and color Doppler. All 3 of these near-total occlusions were ultimately confirmed by either conventional or magnetic resonance carotid angiography. The contrast agent was most beneficial in improving the detection of minimal flow beyond a severe stenosis and in evaluating flow dynamics in the presence of severely calcified plaque. We conclude that the use of an ultrasound contrast agent with newer duplex ultrasound imaging techniques can reliably distinguish total from near-total internal carotid artery occlusions. Future prospective studies should be able to define the efficacy of ultrasound contrast agents in improving the overall diagnostic accuracy of duplex ultrasound in technically difficult cases and in patients with complex peripheral vascular disease.


Surgery | 2013

Barriers to adoption of the surgical resident skills curriculum of the American College of Surgeons/Association of Program Directors in Surgery

Patricia A. Pentiak; Diane Schuch-Miller; Ronald T. Streetman; Kimberly Marik; Rose E. Callahan; Graham W. Long; James Robbins

BACKGROUND The American College of Surgeons (ACS) and the Association of Program Directors in Surgery (APDS) jointly developed a standardized skills curriculum for surgical residents. This program was intended to be affordable, reproducible, reliable, and proficiency-based. Some experts have proposed mandating that all residency programs implement the curriculum. Although general surgery program directors have supported uniformly the use of simulation in training, one third of general surgery residencies have no simulation curricula. Our goal was to identify barriers to the implementation of the ACS/APDS curriculum. METHODS The ACS/APDS skills curriculum was analyzed on the basis of the ACS website. All materials listed in each module in all 3 phases were tabulated. Supply costs per resident were calculated along with the time requirements for each. RESULTS The approximate cost per resident for supplies to complete the entire ACS/APDS skills curriculum exceeds


American Journal of Surgery | 2012

Outcomes analysis of intraoperative adjuncts during minimally invasive parathyroidectomy for primary hyperparathyroidism

Sapna Nagar; Daryl Reid; Peter Czako; Graham W. Long; Charles J. Shanley

30,000. The initial cost for the development of our surgery learning center was


Journal of Endovascular Therapy | 2002

Simultaneous stent-graft repair of thoracic and infrarenal abdominal aortic aneurysms.

Ahmed Meguid; Paul G. Bove; Graham W. Long; Matthias J. Kirsch; Phillip J. Bendick; Gerald B. Zelenock

4.5 million. Capital equipment and instruments were an additional cost. Time to complete the program was 90 h for each resident, with additional time commitments by surgery faculty, simulation center staff, educational development staff, and veterinary staff. Simulation staffing costs were


Journal of Surgical Research | 1991

Comparison of immediate seeding of endothelial cells with culture lining of small diameter ePTFE carotid interposition grafts.

Sajjad Hussain; Graham W. Long; Randall S. Juleff; Margaret McKain; John L. Glover; Phillip J. Bendick; Laurace E. Townsend

22,107. CONCLUSION The ACS/APDS skills curriculum has a substantial resource commitment associated with its implementation. These capital, instrument, and personnel costs present a major challenge to residency programs that want to adopt this program. Faculty participation in the program poses an additional logistic challenge. Last, resident involvement must be scheduled within the 80-h work-week limit, impacting resident availability for their obligations of patient care. Re-examination of the scope and complexity appears warranted, along with development of low-fidelity substitutions for the proposed modules as well as opportunities for resource-sharing.


Vascular and Endovascular Surgery | 2004

Gastrointestinal Complications Following Infrarenal Endovascular Aneurysm Repair

Lauren E. Malinzak; Graham W. Long; Paul G. Bove; O. William Brown; William Romano; Charles J. Shanley; Gerald B. Zelenock; Phillip J. Bendick

BACKGROUND The aim of this study was to determine whether minimally invasive radioguided parathyroidectomy (MIRP) and intraoperative parathyroid hormone-guided parathyroidectomy (ioPTH) have equivalent intermediate-term outcomes in primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT). METHODS A retrospective study of 244 patients who underwent parathyroidectomy for PHPT in a 25-month time period was conducted. Patients who either underwent MIRP- or ioPTH-guided parathyroidectomies were included. The primary outcome was persistent disease. Conversion to bilateral exploration, complications, and multigland disease (MGD) were secondary outcomes. RESULTS There was 1 MIRP patient and no ioPTH patients who had persistent disease. The ioPTH group had more conversions to a bilateral exploration (bilateral neck exploration [BNE]) (3.7% vs 13%, P = .024). In the MIRP group, no patients were found to have MGD. In the ioPTH group, 7 patients with double adenomas and 6 patients with MGD were found (0 vs 13, P = .0028). CONCLUSIONS ioPTH facilitates successful minimally invasive parathyroidectomy (MIP) when compared with MIRP and provides cure rates similar to BNE.


Journal of Endovascular Therapy | 2006

Intentional coverage of a main renal artery during endovascular juxtarenal aortic aneurysm repair in symptomatic high-risk patients.

Jeffrey B. Weinberger; Graham W. Long; Paul G. Bove; Maciej Uzieblo; Matthias J. Kirsch; Kenneth Richey; O. William Brown; Gerald B. Zelenock; Charles J. Shanley

Purpose: To describe a technique for concomitant endovascular stent-graft repair of thoracic and infrarenal abdominal aortic aneurysms. Case Report: A 68-year-old man was found to have concomitant thoracic and abdominal aortic aneurysms. Both of the aneurysms were excluded successfully in one procedure using Talent stent-grafts. The patient tolerated the procedure well and was discharged on postoperative day 4. Aside from an infected groin wound, the patient did not have any complications. Computed tomographic scans at 6, 12, and 18 months showed proper position of both stents without evidence of endoleak. Conclusions: Simultaneous endovascular treatment of thoracic and infrarenal abdominal aortic aneurysms may represent a viable alternative for therapy in some patients.

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