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Dive into the research topics where James F. Silverman is active.

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Featured researches published by James F. Silverman.


Radiology | 1979

Isolated Single Coronary Artery: Diagnosis, Angiographic Classification, and Clinical Significance

Martin J. Lipton; William H. Barry; Ivo Obrez; James F. Silverman; Lewis Wexler

Isolated single coronary artery is a rare congenital anomaly occuring in approximately 0.024% of the population. This entity can be diagnosed during life only by coronary angiography. Ten patients with isolated single coronary artery are reported. Based on angiographic analysis, a new classification is proposed, according to the site of origin and anatomical distribution of the branches. Typical angina did not occur with single coronary artery in the absence of coexisting coronary artery disease or aortic stenosis. No correlation was apparent between the type of anomalous patterns and the symptoms of angina.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1978

Unstable angina pectoris: National cooperative study group to compare surgical and medical therapy: II. In-Hospital experience and initial follow-up results in patients with one, two and three vessel disease

Richard O. Russell; Roger E. Moraski; Nicholas T. Kouchoukos; Robert B. Karp; John A. Mantle; William J. Rogers; Charles E. Rackley; Leon Resnekov; Raul E. Falicov; Jafar Al-Sadir; Harold L. Brooks; Constantine E. Anagnostopoulos; John J. Lamberti; Michael J. Wolk; Thomas Killip; Robert A. Rosati; H.N. Oldham; Galen S. Wagner; Robert H. Peter; C.R. Conti; R.C. Curry; George R. Daicoff; Lewis C. Becker; G. Plotnick; Vincent L. Gott; Robert K. Brawley; James S. Donahoo; Richard S. Ross; Adolph M. Hutter; Roman W. DeSanctis

Abstract A prospective randomized study comparing intensive medical therapy with urgent coronary bypass surgery for the acute management of patients with unstable angina pectoris was carried out by nine cooperating medical centers under the auspices of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. Between 1972 and 1976, a total of 288 patients were entered into the study. All patients had transient S-T or T wave changes, or both, in the electrocardiogram during pain; 90 percent had pain at rest in the hospital, and 76 percent had multivessel coronary disease. The medically and surgically treated patients were comparable with respect to clinical, electrocardiographic and angiographic characteristics and left ventricular function. During the total study period, the hospital mortality rate was 5 percent in the surgical group and 3 percent in the medical group (difference not significant). The rate of in-hospital myocardial infarction was 17 and 8 percent in the respective groups (P In the 1st year after hospital discharge class III or IV angina (New York Heart Association criteria) was more common in medically than in surgically treated patients with one vessel disease (22 percent versus 3 percent, P The results indicate that patients with unstable angina pectoris can be managed acutely with intensive medical therapy, including the administration of propranolol and long-acting nitrates in pharmacologic doses, with adequate control of pain in most patients and no increase in early mortality or myocardial infarction rates. Later, elective surgery can be performed with a low risk and good clinical results if the patients angina fails to respond to intensive medical therapy.


Circulation | 1974

Echocardiographic Abnormalities in the Mitral Valve Prolapse Syndrome

Richard L. Popp; Owen R. Brown; James F. Silverman; Donald C. Harrison

Two echocardiographic patterns of the mitral valve have been found to correlate with anatomic and/or angiocardiographic appearance of redundancy of the mitral valve. The echocardiographic abnormality may be found in the presence or absence of auscultatory findings, while the apparent separation of the anterior and posterior mitral leaflets on echocardiogram does not seem to represent anatomic separation leading to mitral regurgitation. Since the echocardiographic abnormality is found in the absence of various parts of the syndrome, it may be used as a tool to diagnose the mitral valve prolapse syndrome, discover its incidence and follow its natural history.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1984

Case mix, costs, and outcomes — differences between faculty and community services in a university hospital

Alan M. Garber; Victor R. Fuchs; James F. Silverman

To gain insight into the possible consequences of prospective payment for university hospitals, we studied 2025 admissions to the faculty and community services of a university hospital, measuring differences in case mix, costs, and mortality in the hospital. The faculty service had more of the patients with costly diagnoses, but even after adjustment for diagnosis-related groups (DRGs), costs were 11 per cent higher on the faculty service (95 per cent confidence limits, 4 to 18 per cent). The percentage differential was greatest for diagnostic costs. The differential was particularly large--70 per cent (95 per cent confidence limits, 33 to 107 per cent)--for patients with a predicted probability of death of 0.25 or greater. The in-hospital mortality rate was significantly lower on the faculty service after adjustment for case mix and patient characteristics (P less than 0.05); the difference was particularly large for patients in the high-death-risk category. Comparison of a matched sample of 51 pairs of admissions from the high-death-risk category confirmed the above results with respect to costs and in-hospital mortality, but follow-up revealed that the survival rates were equal for the two services at nine months after discharge. The effect of prospective payment on the cost of care will be closely watched; we conclude that is will also be important to monitor the effect on outcomes, including hospital mortality rates.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1977

Coronary arterial narrowing in Takayasu's aortitis

Paul R. Cipriano; James F. Silverman; Mark G. Perlroth; Griepp Rb; Lewis Wexler

A patient with Takayasus aortitis and angina pectoris due to severe narrowing of the right and left coronary arterial ostia is described. Takayasus arteritis produces a panaortitis, with thickening of the adventitia predominating, and an inflammatory cell infiltrate involving the adventitia, outer media and vasa vasorum. Narrowing of the coronary arteries in this disease is due to extension into these arteries of the processes of proliferation of the intima and contraction of the fibrotic media and adventitia that occur in the aorta. The distal coronary arteries usually do not manifest arteritis and are normal in caliber. Angina pectoris may be the first symptom of the disease if the coronary arteries are the initial site of severe arterial narrowing. The coronary arterial bypass graft operation is effective therapy for treating coronary arterial narrowing due to Takayasus arteritis.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1976

Unstable angina pectoris: National cooperative study group to compare medical and surgical therapy

Richard O. Russell; Roger E. Moraski; Nicholas T. Kouchoukos; Robert B. Karp; John A. Mantle; William J. Rogers; Charles E. Rackley; Leon Resnekov; Raul E. Falicov; Jafar Al-Sadir; Harold L. Brooks; Constantine E. Anagnostopoulos; John J. Lamberti; Michael J. Wolk; Thomas Killip; Robert A. Rosati; H.N. Oldham; Galen S. Wagner; Robert H. Peter; C.R. Conti; R.C. Curry; George R. Daicoff; Lewis C. Becker; G. Plotnick; Vincent L. Gott; Robert K. Brawley; James S. Donahoo; Richard S. Ross; Adolph M. Hutter; Roman W. DeSanctis

A preliminary report is presented of a prospective randomized trial conducted by eight cooperative institutions under the auspices of the National Heart and Lung Institute to compare the effectiveness of medical and surgical therapy in the management of the acute stages of unstable angina pectoris. To date 150 patients have been included in the randomized trial, 80 assigned to medical and 70 to surgical therapy; the clinical presentation, coronary arterial anatomy and left ventricular function in the two groups are similar. Some physicians have been reluctant to prescribe medical or surgical therapy by a random process, and the eithical basis of the trial has been questioned. Since there are no hard data regarding the natural history and outcome of therapy for unstable angina pectoris, randomization appears to provide a rational way of selecting therapy. Furthermore, subsets of patients at high risk may emerge during the process of randomization. The design of this randomized trial is compared with that of another reported trial. Thus far, the study has shown that it is possible to conduct a randomized trial in patients with unstable angina pectoris, and that the medical and surgical groups have been similar in relation to the variables examined. The group as a whole presented with severe angina pectoris, either as a crescendo pattern or as new onset of angina at rest, and 84 percent had recurrence of pain while in the coronary care unit and receiving vigorous medical therapy. It is anticipated that sufficient patients will have been entered into the trial within the next 12 months to determine whether medical or surgical therapy is superior in the acute stages of unstable angina pectoris.Abstract A preliminary report is presented of a prospective randomized trial conducted by eight cooperative institutions under the auspices of the National Heart and Lung Institute to compare the effectiveness of medical and surgical therapy in the management of the acute stages of unstable angina pectoris. To date 150 patients have been included in the randomized trial, 80 assigned to medical and 70 to surgical therapy; the clinical presentation, coronary arterial anatomy and left ventricular function in the two groups are similar. Some physicians have been reluctant to prescribe medical or surgical therapy by a random process, and the ethical basis of the trial has been questioned. Since there are no hard data regarding the natural history and outcome of therapy for unstable angina pectoris, randomization appears to provide a rational way of selecting therapy. Furthermore, subsets of patients at high risk may emerge during the process of randomization. The design of this randomized trial is compared with that of another reported trial. Thus far, the study has shown that it is possible to conduct a randomized trial in patients with unstable angina pectoris, and that the medical and surgical groups have been similar in relation to the variables examined. The group as a whole presented with severe angina pectoris, either as a crescendo pattern or as new onset of angina at rest, and 84 percent had recurrence of pain while in the coronary care unit and receiving vigorous medical therapy. It is anticipated that sufficient patients will have been entered into the trial within the next 12 months to determine whether medical or surgical therapy is superior in the acute stages of unstable angina pectoris.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1976

Clinical and arteriographic features of Prinzmetal's variant angina: Documentation of etiologic factors

Charles B. Higgins; Lewis Wexler; James F. Silverman; John S. Schroeder

Coronary arteriography performed in 17 patients with Prinzmetals variant angina demonstrated high grade fixed obstructions in 9 patients (Group I) and insignificant or no fixed lesions in 8 patients (Group II). Group I consisted mostly of middle-aged or elderly men with S-T segment elevations in various sites; Group II included five younger women with S-T segment elevations in inferior electrocardiographic leads. In Group I patients, arteriography revealed a discrete high grade lesion located proximally in a major coronary artery in four patients and multivessel involvement in five patients. In Group II patients, spontaneous spasm was documented in three patients and spasm was pharmacologically provoked in two others during arteriography. The current study indicates that spasm is the responsible pathogenetic mechanism of myocardial ischemia in some patients with Prinzmetal angina and that this mechanism may be suspected from the clinical characteristics of these patients.


Circulation | 1979

The effects of ergonovine maleate on coronary arterial size.

P R Cipriano; Diana F. Guthaner; A E Orlick; D R Ricci; Lewis Wexler; James F. Silverman

Changes in coronary arterial size due to ergonovine maleate are described and quantitated in 90 patients - 18 with typical angina pectoris, 56 with atypical chest pain, nine with variant angina pectoris, and seven heart transplant (allograft) recipients. We observed two angiographic changes in the diameter of coronary arteries: 1) spasm, which was characterized by occlusion or marked (>85%) focal or diffuse vessel narrowing, or 2) relatively mild and diffuse vessel narrowing, which was interpreted as the normal pharmacologic response to the drug. Serial bolus injections of 0.05 mg, 0.10 mg and 0.25 mg of ergonovine maleate produced diffuse narrowing of the diameter of coronary arteries of 10 ± 1.5%, 16 ± 1.4% and 20 ± 1.3% (mean ± SEM), respectively, in the 72 patients with anginal syndromes who did not develop coronary spasm. The degree of coronary arterial narrowing was the same in heart transplant recipients and in patients with normally innervated hearts who did not develop coronary spasm. We believe the normal pharmacologic response to ergonovine maleate was due to a direct vasoconstrictor action of the drug; this action was independent of neural control extrinsic to the heart.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1976

Unstable angina pectoris: National cooperative study group to compare medical and surgical therapy. I. Report of protocol and patient population

Richard O. Russell; Roger E. Moraski; Nicholas T. Kouchoukos; Robert B. Karp; John A. Mantle; Charles E. Rackley; Leon Resnekov; Raul E. Falicov; Jafar Al-Sadir; Harold L. Brooks; Constantine E. Anagnostopoulos; John J. Lamberti; Michael J. Wolk; Thomas Killip; Paul A. Ebert; Robert A. Rosati; N. Oldham; B. Mittler; Robert H. Peter; C. R. Conti; Richard S. Ross; Robert K. Brawley; G. Plotnick; Vincent L. Gott; James S. Donahoo; Lewis C. Becker; Adolph M. Hutter; Roman W. DeSanctis; Herman K. Gold; Robert C. Leinbach

A preliminary report is presented of a prospective randomized trial conducted by eight cooperative institutions under the auspices of the National Heart and Lung Institute to compare the effectiveness of medical and surgical therapy in the management of the acute stages of unstable angina pectoris. To date 150 patients have been included in the randomized trial, 80 assigned to medical and 70 to surgical therapy; the clinical presentation, coronary arterial anatomy and left ventricular function in the two groups are similar. Some physicians have been reluctant to prescribe medical or surgical therapy by a random process, and the eithical basis of the trial has been questioned. Since there are no hard data regarding the natural history and outcome of therapy for unstable angina pectoris, randomization appears to provide a rational way of selecting therapy. Furthermore, subsets of patients at high risk may emerge during the process of randomization. The design of this randomized trial is compared with that of another reported trial. Thus far, the study has shown that it is possible to conduct a randomized trial in patients with unstable angina pectoris, and that the medical and surgical groups have been similar in relation to the variables examined. The group as a whole presented with severe angina pectoris, either as a crescendo pattern or as new onset of angina at rest, and 84 percent had recurrence of pain while in the coronary care unit and receiving vigorous medical therapy. It is anticipated that sufficient patients will have been entered into the trial within the next 12 months to determine whether medical or surgical therapy is superior in the acute stages of unstable angina pectoris.Abstract A preliminary report is presented of a prospective randomized trial conducted by eight cooperative institutions under the auspices of the National Heart and Lung Institute to compare the effectiveness of medical and surgical therapy in the management of the acute stages of unstable angina pectoris. To date 150 patients have been included in the randomized trial, 80 assigned to medical and 70 to surgical therapy; the clinical presentation, coronary arterial anatomy and left ventricular function in the two groups are similar. Some physicians have been reluctant to prescribe medical or surgical therapy by a random process, and the ethical basis of the trial has been questioned. Since there are no hard data regarding the natural history and outcome of therapy for unstable angina pectoris, randomization appears to provide a rational way of selecting therapy. Furthermore, subsets of patients at high risk may emerge during the process of randomization. The design of this randomized trial is compared with that of another reported trial. Thus far, the study has shown that it is possible to conduct a randomized trial in patients with unstable angina pectoris, and that the medical and surgical groups have been similar in relation to the variables examined. The group as a whole presented with severe angina pectoris, either as a crescendo pattern or as new onset of angina at rest, and 84 percent had recurrence of pain while in the coronary care unit and receiving vigorous medical therapy. It is anticipated that sufficient patients will have been entered into the trial within the next 12 months to determine whether medical or surgical therapy is superior in the acute stages of unstable angina pectoris.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1968

Vascular occlusion of the colon and oral contraceptives. Possible relation.

Zachary M. Kilpatrick; James F. Silverman; Edgardo Betancourt; Jack Farman; J. P. Lawson

THE most frequently described complications of oral contraceptive therapy have been occlusive disease of the vessels supplying the brain and thrombophlebitis with pulmonary embolism. Vascular occlu...

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Charles E. Rackley

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Harold L. Brooks

Medical College of Wisconsin

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John A. Mantle

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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