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Dive into the research topics where James P. Boland is active.

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Featured researches published by James P. Boland.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1998

Prospective randomized trial of carotid endarterectomy with primary closure and patch angioplasty with saphenous vein, jugular vein, and polytetrafluoroethylene: Long-term follow-up

Ali F. AbuRahma; Patrick A. Robinson; Samer Saiedy; Jamal H. Khan; James P. Boland

PURPOSE This study examines the long-term clinical outcome and the incidence of recurrent stenosis (> or = 50%) after carotid endarterectomy (CEA) with primary closure (PC) versus vein patch closure (VPC), saphenous (SVP), and jugular vein (JVP) and polytetrafluoroethylene patch closure (PTFE-P). METHODS A total of 399 CEAs were randomized into the following groups: 135 PC, 134 PTFE-P, and 130 VPC (SVP alternating with JVP). Postoperative duplex ultrasound scans were performed at 1, 6, and 12 months and every year thereafter. The mean follow-up was 30 months with a range of 1 to 62 months, and demographic characteristics were similar in all groups. Kaplan-Meier analysis was used to estimate the risk of restenosis and the stroke-free survival. RESULTS The incidence of ipsilateral stroke was 5% (seven of 135) for PC, 1% (one of 134) for PTFE-P, and 0% for VPC (PC vs VPC, p = 0.008; PC vs PTFE-P, p = 0.034). Seven strokes occurred in the perioperative period. All three groups had similar mortality rates. The cumulative stroke-free survival rate at 48 months was 82% for PC, 84% for PTFE-P, and 88% for VPC (p < 0.01 for PC vs PTFE-P or VPC). PC had a higher incidence of recurrent stenosis and occlusion (34%) than PTFE-P (2%) and VPC (9%) (SVP 9%, JVP 8%) (p < 0.001). PTFE-P had a lower recurrent stenosis rate than VPC (p < 0.045). Restenoses necessitating a redo CEA were also higher for PC (11%) than for PTFE-P (1%) and VPC (2%) (p < 0.001). Women with PC had a higher recurrent stenosis rate than men (46% vs 23%, p = 0.008). Kaplan-Meier analysis showed that freedom from recurrent stenosis at 48 months was 47% for PC, 84% for VPC, and 96% for PTFE-P (p < 0.001). The SVP and JVP results were comparable. The mean operative diameter of the internal carotid artery was similar in patients with or without restenosis. Significantly more late internal carotid artery dilatations occurred in the VPC group compared with the PC group. CONCLUSIONS Patch closure (VPC or PTFE-P) is less likely than PC to cause perioperative stroke. Patching was also superior in lowering the incidence of late recurrent stenoses, especially in women.


American Journal of Surgery | 1991

Diagnostic and therapeutic strategies of white clot syndrome.

Ali F. AbuRahma; James P. Boland; Todd Witsberger

This study describes our experience with 12 patients with white clot syndrome encountered during a recent 36-month period. The diagnosis was based on the following criteria: (1) development of thrombocytopenia of less than 100,000/mm3 during administration of heparin therapy, (2) normalization of the platelet count after an interruption in heparin therapy, (3) exclusion of other causes of thrombocytopenia, (4) a positive heparin-induced platelet aggregation test, (5) detection of white clots on pathologic examination, and (6) the presence of thrombotic complications. Of 2,500 patients who received heparin therapy, 12 (0.48%) developed white clot syndrome. Various indications, routes of administration, and types of heparin were implicated. The mean platelet nadir was 26,900/mm3, and the mean time to onset of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia was 5 days. Thrombotic complications included arterial occlusions of the legs in 11 patients, deep vein thrombosis of the legs in 9 patients (4 had pulmonary embolism), and combined arterial and venous thrombosis in 8 patients. Treatment strategies included discontinuation of heparin in all patients and intravenous infusion of dextran, followed by arterial thrombectomy in four patients, urokinase therapy in two patients for arterial complications, and insertion of Greenfield filters in six patients. All patients were given warfarin. The mortality rate was 25% and the morbidity rate was 50%. An initial platelet count should be obtained on all patients prior to receiving heparin, followed by repeat platelet counts every 2 to 3 days. Once thrombocytopenia or thrombosis is diagnosed, heparin should be discontinued and other methods of therapy considered.


American Journal of Surgery | 1991

Conventional versus thrombolytic therapy in spontaneous (effort) axillary-subclavian vein thrombosis

Ali F. AbuRahma; Daniel Sadler; Patrick Stuart; M.Z. Khan; James P. Boland

Effort axillary-subclavian vein thrombosis in young patients has produced long-term disability because of the failure of the thrombosed vein to recanalize. Ten consecutive patients treated in our institution were analyzed. All patients were diagnosed by venography. Four patients received thrombolytic therapy. Three of these had complete resolution and one had partial resolution of the symptoms and thrombus, that was confirmed by venography and duplex imaging. The remaining six patients were treated with conventional anticoagulant therapy. Three of these patients had no resolution, one had complete resolution of both symptoms and thrombus, and two had only partial resolution of symptoms but no resolution of thrombus. Thrombolytic therapy appears to be superior to anticoagulation in the dissolution of symptoms in effort vein thrombosis and should be considered in its management if the diagnosis is made early.


Minimally Invasive Therapy & Allied Technologies | 1994

Laparoscopic radical nephrectomy with intra-abdominal manipulation

J. P. Tierney; S. R. Oliver; Roberto E. Kusminsky; E. H. Tiley; James P. Boland

SummaryA technique of performing a laparoscopically guided radical nephrectomy using a Pfannenstiel incision is described. We believe that this minimally invasive approach can ease the transition between the standard open method and pure laparoscopic trocar surgery and is applicable to a variety of intra-abdominal problems. Results in this series were comparable to those of a standard radical nephrectomy with the advantages of an improvement in access morbidity (post-operative comfort and respiratory compromise) and consequently decreased hospitalization time.


American Journal of Surgery | 1992

Safety of arteriography by direct puncture of avascular prosthesis

Ali F. AbuRahma; Patrick A. Robinson; James P. Boland

A total of 122 catheterizations were performed in 105 patients with femoral grafts. Ninety-five femoral grafts were punctured. The mean follow-up time was 21 months. Sixty-one patients had follow-up duplex ultrasounds of the graft puncture site at 6 months. The complication rates for patients with direct graft puncture were comparable to those of patients without grafts undergoing femoral catheter arteriography. Twenty-seven cases with femoral grafts had arteriography using the transaxillary technique. The overall complication rate for the 95 cases with graft puncture was 12% (8% were minor complications) in contrast to 30% (22% were major complications) for the 27 cases with the transaxillary approach. The local, nervous system, and major complication rates were all significantly less in patients with graft puncture than in patients with the transaxillary approach. There was no evidence of early or late pseudoaneurysm formation, disruption of the suture line, or late graft infection in patients with graft puncture. Direct graft puncture arteriography is safe and preferable to the transaxillary approach.


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1982

Blunt pelviperineal injuries

Roberto E. Kusminsky; Imad Shbeeb; George Makos; James P. Boland

The combination of blunt pelvic and perineal injuries is relatively uncommon but carries with it a high morbidity and mortality. A colostomy with distal wash-out plays a significant role in the prophylaxis of septic complications, even in the absence of recognizable colorectal trauma. Among 14 patients with this type of injury, there were six deaths (42 per cent). Three patients died initially because of hemorrhage, and three late deaths were due to sepsis. Two of these patients had no colostomy, and one had a diversion without wash-out. The indications for proximal diversion should be broadened to include an expanded view of the perincum, herein presented.


Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey | 1999

Management of Deep Vein Thrombosis of the Lower Extremity in Pregnancy: A Challenging Dilemma

Ali F. AbuRahma; James P. Boland

This study reviews our experience in the management of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) of the lower extremity during pregnancy and analyzes the outcome of various treatment alternatives, including conventional full-dose heparin therapy and Greenfield filter insertion. Twenty-four patients treated over an 8-year period were reviewed. Fifteen patients were treated with conventional full-dose intravenous heparin therapy for 5 to 10 days, followed by subcutaneous low-dose heparin until labor, and continued for 6 weeks postpartum (Group A); Eleven patients had Greenfield filters inserted, followed by the same low-dose subcutaneous heparin regimen (Group B). There were 18 femoral or iliofemoral, 5 femoropopliteal, and 1 popliteal and below-knee DVT. The indications for Greenfield filter insertion included two patients in Group A (one with pulmonary embolism, despite adequate heparin therapy, and one with significant bleeding). Nine other patients had prophylactic indications: two for free-floating iliofemoral DVT, three with iliofemoral DVT (occurring just 1-2 weeks before labor), and four with femoropopliteal DVT. There were three immediate major complications (pulmonary embolism, bleeding, or death) in Group A; two with pulmonary embolism, one of which was fatal, and one with significant bleeding (3 of 15 patients; 20%). No major complications occurred in Group B. On long-term follow-up (mean, 61 months), 4 of 12 patients (33%) in Group A had significant leg swelling, with partial resolution of DVT in 2 patients and venous occlusion in 2 patients by duplex ultrasound. This is in contrast to 3 of 11 patients (27%) in Group B with significant leg swelling. There was no fetal morbidity or mortality in either group. Conventional full-dose heparin therapy for DVT of the lower extremity in pregnancy can carry significant morbidity and mortality. Greenfield filters may be used safely in some of these patients.


American Journal of Surgery | 1992

Adjunctive intraoperative linear extrusion (Fogarty-Chin) balloon angioplasty

Ali F. AbuRahma; James P. Boland; Patrick A. Robinson

Eighty-nine patients with 94 stenotic segments (mostly iliac or femoral) underwent balloon angioplasty with the first-generation (no guidewire) linear extrusion (Fogarty-Chin) system, in an adjunctive mode, and the overall long-term patency rate (mean follow-up: 21 months) was 81%. Patients were grouped into those having iliac or superficial femoral artery (SFA) lesions and subdivided according to the length of lesions. The overall primary and late success rates for iliac lesions were 95% and 86%, respectively, and for SFA lesions 91% and 76%, respectively. The primary and late success rates for iliac lesions less than 2 cm were 100% and 96%, respectively, and for iliac lesions 2 cm to less than 5 cm 92% and 80%, respectively. The primary and late success rates for SFA lesions less than 2 cm were 100% and 100%, respectively; for lesions 2 cm to less than 5 cm 100% and 83%, respectively; and for lesions 5 to 10 cm 83% and 67%, respectively. A stratified analysis by vessel and segment length reveals that, in SFA lesions with a segment length greater than 5 cm, there is a significantly lower patency rate (67%) when compared with the combined results of the Fogarty-Chin balloon angioplasty system in iliac and femoral artery lesions less than 5 cm (92%). In comparing the composite results presented in a recent text on endovascular surgery by Moore and Ahn as the base data for the standard coaxial (Gruntzig) balloon system, our results (short and long term) are similar.


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1982

Prophylactic inferior vena cava clipping in colonic surgery

Roberto E. Kusminsky; Salvador Medina; Ali F. AbuRahma; James P. Boland

Incidental prophylactic inferior vena cava clipping (IVCC) has been used in 30 patients undergoing colonic operations. The results obtained compare quite favorably with other methods of preventing postoperative pulmonary embolism (PE). This procedure would be justified in patients with a postoperative PE risk greater than 5 to 10 per cent. Practical criteria to identify this group of patients are presented, and the value of utilizing a risk profile is emphasized. There is no mortality from the procedure itself, and the morbidity was limited to lower-extremity edema in three patients who otherwise could have been expected to develop PE. The edema lasted two months in one patient and cleared rapidly in the other two. Attesting to the procedures effectiveness, there were no cases of recurrent PE. Caval partition is an appealing mode of prophylaxis in high-risk patients because of its safety, efficacy, and permanence.


Angiology | 1980

Correlation of the Resting and Exercise Doppler Ankle/Arm Index to Angiographic Findings

Ali F. AbuRahma; James P. Boland; Edward B. Diethrich

The diagnosis of peripheral vascular occlusive disease has until recently been confirmed only through angiography. However, a noninvasive diagnostic test using Doppler-shift ultrasonography has shown great promise as a method of refining the diagnosis of peripheral vascular occlusive disease. The purpose of this study was to correlate the ankle/arm index (resting versus exercise) to the arteriographic findings and to outline a practical grading system of the se verity of the occlusive disease based on our Doppler index findings. From 500 arterial Doppler studies of 500 patients (1,000 limbs) at the Arizona Heart Insti tute, 93 limbs that had arteriograms and resting and exercising ankle/arm in dices were examined. The resting index was found to be an insensitive index of the severity of the disease. The exercise index did correlate very well with the arteriographic findings: 85% of patients with an excercise index greater than 0.9 were normal or had minimal disease. Most patients with an index of 0.8 to 0.89 had mild disease; 75% of patients with an index of 0.7 to 0.79 had moderate dis ease ; 98% of patients with index of less than 0.69 had severe disease.

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E. H. Tiley

West Virginia University

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George Makos

West Virginia University

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Imad Shbeeb

West Virginia University

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J. P. Tierney

West Virginia University

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