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Dive into the research topics where Hisham Nassar is active.

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Featured researches published by Hisham Nassar.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1995

Transradial approach for coronary angiography and angioplasty.

Chaim Lotan; Yonathan Hasin; Morris Mosseri; Yoseph Rozenman; Dan Admon; Hisham Nassar; Mervyn S. Gotsman

The transradial approach has currently been advocated as an alternative catheterization method for coronary angiography and angioplasty, due to the recent miniaturization of angioplasty equipment. The purpose of this study was to assess the practical clinical applicability of this method. From June to November 1994, 100 patients underwent coronary angiography and angioplasty with the transradial approach. Their mean age was 66.6 +/- 11.2 years, and 79 were men. In 4, radial puncture was not successful, and in 3, femoral access was necessary to complete the procedure. Coronary angioplasty was performed in 63 patients (76 lesions) with angiographic success (per lesion) of 96%. In 5 patients, a stent was successfully implanted. All patients were ambulatory on the day after the angioplasty procedure. In 98% of the patients, the introducer was taken out 1 to 4 hours after the procedure by local compression using a special custom-made device. No patient required blood transfusion. Major complications occurred in 2 patients; both had a cerebrovascular accident (1 probably not procedure-related), and both recovered. A radial pulse was palpated in 91 of the patients before discharge, and in 6 others, adequate flow could be heard with Doppler. In 2 patients, radial flow was restored within several weeks. None of the patients suffered from ischemia of the hand. Two patients had a small pseudoaneurysm successfully treated by local compression. Thus, coronary angioplasty can be performed safely using the transradial approach with relatively few vascular complications and with better patient comfort. However, the procedure is more time-consuming initially compared with the transfemoral approach due to a learning curve regarding equipment selection and catheter manipulation.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1992

Angiographic findings in the coronary arteries after thrombolysis in acute myocardial infarction.

Mervyn S. Gotsman; Shimon Rosenheck; Hisham Nassar; Sima Welber; Dan Sapoznikov; Morris Mosseri; Avraham T. Weiss; Chaim Lotan; Yoseph Rozenman

The angiographic appearance of the coronary arteries was examined in 308 patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) who received high-dose intravenous thrombolytic therapy. Coronary angiography was performed on day 7 after admission to the hospital. Patients had an average of 2.4 discrete arterial narrowings or obstructions. The narrowings were proximal and related to bifurcations. Four fifths of the culprit arteries were patient; 104 (34%) had a ruptured plaque, 22 (7%) had an ulcerated plaque, and in 190 (62%) the lesions were eccentric. Patients differed from a comparable, previously studied, control series of 302 patients with chronic stable angina pectoris who had more extensive disease. They had 5.7 narrowings/patient, also located proximally and at bifurcations, but more widely distributed in the coronary tree. Patients with AMI who are suitable for thrombolysis have a unique coronary angiographic picture. The data confirm that AMI is caused by sudden rupture of a localized atheromatous plaque that initiates an obstructive thrombotic cascade.


Physical Review Letters | 2005

Stellar (n, gamma) Cross Section of ^6^2Ni

Hisham Nassar; M. Paul; I. Ahmad; D Berkovits; M Bettan; P Collon; S Dababneh; S. Ghelberg; J. P. Greene; Alexander Heger; M Heil; D. Henderson; C. L. Jiang; F Kappeler; H. Koivisto; S O'Brien; R. C. Pardo; N. Patronis; T. Pennington; R Plag; K. E. Rehm; R. Reifarth; R. Scott; S. Sinha; X. D. Tang; Richard C. Vondrasek

The 62Ni(n,gamma)63Ni(t(1/2)=100+/-2 yr) reaction plays an important role in the control of the flow path of the slow neutron-capture (s) nucleosynthesis process. We have measured for the first time the total cross section of this reaction for a quasi-Maxwellian (kT=25 keV) neutron flux. The measurement was performed by fast-neutron activation, combined with accelerator mass spectrometry to detect directly the 63Ni product nuclei. The experimental value of 28.4+/-2.8 mb, fairly consistent with a recent calculation, affects the calculated net yield of 62Ni itself and the whole distribution of nuclei with 62


Clinical Epigenetics | 2015

Premature aging of leukocyte DNA methylation is associated with type 2 diabetes prevalence.

Gidon Toperoff; Jeremy D. Kark; Dvir Aran; Hisham Nassar; Wiessam Abu Ahmad; Ronit Sinnreich; Dima Azaiza; Benjamin Glaser; Asaf Hellman

BackgroundType 2 diabetes mellitus (T2D) is highly prevalent in Middle-Eastern and North African Arab populations, but the molecular basis for this susceptibility is unknown. Altered DNA methylation levels were reported in insulin-secreting and responding tissues, but whether methylation in accessible tissues such as peripheral blood is associated with T2D risk remains an open question. Age-related alteration of DNA methylation level was reported in certain methylation sites, but no association with T2D has been shown. Here we report on a population-based study of 929 men and women representing the East Jerusalem Palestinian (EJP) Arab population and compare with the findings among Israeli Ashkenazi Jews. This is the first reported epigenetic study of an Arab population with a characteristic high prevalence of T2D.ResultsWe found that DNA methylation of a prespecified regulatory site in peripheral blood leukocytes (PBLs) is associated with impaired glucose metabolism and T2D independent of sex, body mass index, and white blood cell composition. This CpG site (Chr16: 53,809,231-2; hg19) is located in a region within an intron of the FTO gene, suspected to serve as a tissue-specific enhancer. The association between PBL hypomethylation and T2D varied by age, revealing differential patterns of methylation aging in healthy and diabetic individuals and between ethnic groups: T2D patients displayed prematurely low methylation levels, and this hypomethylation was greater and occurred earlier in life among Palestinian Arabs than Ashkenazi Jews.ConclusionsOur study suggests that premature DNA methylation aging is associated with increased risk of T2D. These findings should stimulate the search for more such sites and may pave the way to improved T2D risk prediction within and between human populations.


Physical Review Letters | 2006

{sup 40}Ca({alpha},{gamma}){sup 44}Ti Reaction in the Energy Regime of Supernova Nucleosynthesis

Hisham Nassar; M. Paul; Irshad Ahmad; Yair Ben-Dov; Jac Caggiano; S. Ghelberg; Stéphane Goriely; J. P. Greene; M. Hass; Alexander Heger; A. Heinz; D. Henderson; Robert V. F. Janssens; C. L. Jiang; Yoav Kashiv; Bondili S. Nara Singh; Avishai Ofan; R. C. Pardo; T. Pennington; K. E. Rehm; G. Savard; Roger Scott; Richard C. Vondrasek

The 44Ti(t1/2=59 yr) nuclide, an important signature of supernova nucleosynthesis, has recently been observed as live radioactivity by gamma-ray astronomy from the Cas A remnant. We investigate in the laboratory the major 44Ti production reaction 40Ca(alpha, gamma)44Ti (Ec.m. approximately 0.6-1.2 MeV/u by direct off-line counting of 44Ti nuclei. The yield, significantly higher than inferred from previous experiments, is analyzed in terms of a statistical model using microscopic nuclear inputs. The associated stellar rate has important astrophysical consequences, increasing the calculated supernova 44Ti yield by a factor approximately 2 over previous estimates and bringing it closer to Cas A observations.


Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 1997

Atherosclerosis Studies by Intracoronary Ultrasound

Mervyn S. Gotsman; Morris Mosseri; Yoseph Rozenman; Dan Admon; Chaim Lotan; Hisham Nassar

Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) is a new technique of tomographic visualization of the coronary arteries: its lumen, wall and pathology. Three dimensional (3D) reconstruction shows the tubular structure of the arterial wall and its pathology. IVUS has many advantages over coronary angiography: it has better resolution and shows many hidden lesions. IVUS has helped uncover the underlying mechanisms of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA), restenosis, the use and value of other interventional techniques such as directional coronary atherectomy (DCA), rotational atherectomy and stent implantation, and has great value in planning complex interventional procedures. The new American Heart Association (AHA) classification of coronary atherosclerosis pathology can be demonstrated by IVUS. IVUS is sensitive for studies of atheroma regression and progression and shows the coronary artery lesions after cardiac transplantation.


American Heart Journal | 1999

Long-term outcome of patients with very long stents for treatment of diffuse coronary disease.

Yoseph Rozenman; Adrian Mereuta; David Schechter; Morris Mosseri; Chaim Lotan; Hisham Nassar; A. Teddy Weiss; Yonathan Hasin; Roland Chisin; Mervyn S. Gotsman

OBJECTIVES The study sought to determine the 6-month clinical outcome of patients who underwent implantation of very long coronary stents to treat diffuse disease and/or long dissections and to compare the findings with those reported in the literature for patients who underwent implantation of multiple short coronary stents. BACKGROUND New designs of flexible stents enable the implantation of long stents rather than multiple short, older design stents. The initial experience is very promising but the long-term outcome has not been described yet. METHODS Fifty-seven consecutive patients in whom 67 long stents (>/=30 mm) were successfully deployed were included in this study. Six-month clinical and angiographic follow-up was prospectively collected. Patients with recurrent angina underwent coronary angiography without further testing. Patients who remained asymptomatic at the 6-month follow-up visit underwent positron emission tomographic imaging, and those with results suggestive of ischemia underwent coronary angiography. A combined study end point was defined as death, myocardial infarction, and the need for target vessel revascularization. RESULTS Only 1 patient (2%) reached a study end point at hospital discharge. An additional 20 patients (total 21 patients [37%]) reached an end point by 6 months. The outcome was not influenced by the clinical presentation (stable or unstable angina) or by the indication for stenting (elective or emergency). Predictors for adverse outcome were multiple stents per narrowing (63% vs 29%, P <. 04), and stents smaller than 3.5 mm (49% vs 22%). Narrowing and stent length were not predictive of a study end point in narrowings that were successfully treated by a single long stent. CONCLUSIONS Elective stenting provides an effective solution for patients with diffuse coronary disease provided that a single long stent (usually <40 mm) can cover the full length of the narrowing. The results are better when vessels larger than 3 mm are treated. Compared with multiple short stents, implantation of a single long stent is probably at least as effective, and the procedure is quicker and cheaper and thus should be the preferred approach.


Journal of Physics G | 2008

Ultra-sensitive detection of p-process nuclide 146Sm produced by (γ, n), (p, 2nε) and (n, 2n) reactions

Norikazu Kinoshita; T. Hashimoto; Takeo Nakanishi; Akihiko Yokoyama; H. Amakawa; Toshiaki Mitsugashira; T. Ohtsuki; N. Takahashi; I. Ahmad; J. P. Greene; D. Henderson; C. L. Jiang; M. Notani; R. C. Pardo; Nilesh Patel; K. E. Rehm; Robert G. Scott; R. Vondrasek; L. Jisonna; Philippe Collon; D. Robertson; C. Schmitt; X. D. Tang; Y. Kashiv; Hisham Nassar; M. Paul

We are developing a technique of ultra-sensitive detection of the p-process 146Sm nuclide by accelerator mass spectrometry. 146Sm was produced via the reactions (γ,n), (p,2ne) and (n,2n) on 147Sm. Preliminary results demonstrate for the first time the capability of identifying unambiguously 146Sm through separation and discrimination of its stable 146Nd isobar and other background ions. We consider applying the detection method to an independent determination of 146Sm half-life and to the measurements of cross sections of low-energy nuclear reactions producing long-lived nuclides in the vicinity of 146Sm.


Clinical Cardiology | 2009

Cutting Balloon Angioplasty and Stent Implantation for Aorto-ostial Lesions: Clinical Outcome and 1-year Follow-up

Hisham Nassar; Israel Gotsman; Penko Gerganski; Morris Moseri; Chaim Lotan; Mervyn S. Gotsman

Percutaneous interventions for aorto‐ostial narrowing of native coronary arteries are challenging because of early elastic recoil after the procedure and the high restenosis rate. Cutting balloon angioplasty may reduce this complication.


Cardiovascular Revascularization Medicine | 2009

Computerized gradual balloon inflation: a novel strategy of coronary angioplasty superior to a standard manual approach.

David Leibowitz; Mahmoud Abu-Gazala; Iony Katz; Haim D. Danenberg; Hisham Nassar; Larissa Boguslavsky; Morris Mosseri; Boris Varshitzsky; Chaim Lotan; A. Teddy Weiss

BACKGROUND Mechanical trauma caused by PCI is a primary reason for restenosis and subsequent target lesion revascularization (TLR). To minimize this trauma, we developed a computerized angioplasty pressure sensor and inflator device (CAPSID) for gradual inflation. The objective of this prospective randomized study was to examine whether use of CAPSID reduces early and late cardiac events in patients undergoing PCI. METHODS Patients undergoing PCI were eligible and randomized to CAPSID or standard balloon inflation (plain old balloon angioplasty). In the CAPSID group, a slow, gradual balloon inflation was performed by a personal computer. Stenting was used in both groups only for suboptimal results. Patients with total occlusions and vein grafts were excluded. Clinical follow-up for major adverse cardiac events (MACE) was performed at 6 and 12 months, with repeat coronary angiography performed for clinical symptoms or positive stress testing. RESULTS A total of 234 patients completed the study. At 1-year follow-up, the CAPSID group had a significantly lower rate of MACE (21% vs. 37%, P<.005). In patients who underwent angiography, there was a significantly lower rate of restenosis in the CAPSID group (20.2% vs. 35.5%). The reduction in TLR was even more pronounced in the subgroup undergoing stenting (8% vs. 24%; P<.001). CONCLUSIONS We conclude that gradual computerized balloon inflation is more effective than standard manual balloon inflation in reducing adverse coronary events. The combination of CAPSID and subsequent stent deployment was especially effective in reducing TLR.

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Chaim Lotan

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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M. Paul

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Morris Mosseri

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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R. C. Pardo

Argonne National Laboratory

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K. E. Rehm

Argonne National Laboratory

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C. L. Jiang

Argonne National Laboratory

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D. Henderson

Argonne National Laboratory

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J. P. Greene

Argonne National Laboratory

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