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Featured researches published by James W. May.


Journal of Endovascular Surgery | 1998

Type III and Type IV Endoleak: Toward a Complete Definition of Blood Flow in the Sac after Endoluminal AAA Repair

Geoffrey H. White; James W. May; Richard Waugh; Xavier Chaufour; Weiyun Yu

In this document the authors continue to refine their seminal categorization of endoleak, a major complication of endovascular aneurysm repair. In addition to type I (related to the graft device itself) and type II (retrograde flow from collateral branches) endoleak, they propose two new categories: endoleak due to fabric tears, graft disconnection, or disintegration would be classified type III, and flow through the graft presumed to be associated with graft wall “porosity” would be categorized as type IV endoleak.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 1995

Human Atherosclerotic Plaque Contains Both Oxidized Lipids and Relatively Large Amounts of α-Tocopherol and Ascorbate

Cacang Suarna; Roger T. Dean; James W. May; Roland Stocker

We assessed the antioxidant status and contents of unoxidized and oxidized lipids in freshly obtained, homogenized samples of both normal human iliac arteries and carotid and femoral atherosclerotic plaque. Optimal sample preparation involved homogenization of human atherosclerotic plaque for 5 minutes, which resulted in recovery of most of the unoxidized and oxidized lipids without substantial destruction of endogenous vitamins C and E and 87% and 43% recoveries of added standards of alpha-tocotrienol and isoascorbate, respectively. The total protein, lipid, and antioxidant levels obtained from human plaque varied among donors, although the reproducibility of replicates from a single sample was within 3%, except for ubiquinone-10 and ascorbate, which varied by 20% and 25%, respectively. Plaque samples contained significantly more ascorbate and urate than control arteries, with no discernible difference in the vitamin C redox status between plaque and control materials. The concentrations of alpha-tocopherol and ubiquinone-10 were comparable in plaque samples and control arteries. However, approximately 9 mol percent of plaque alpha-tocopherol was present as alpha-tocopherylquinone, whereas this oxidation product of vitamin E was not detectable in control arteries. Coenzyme Q10 in plaque and control arteries was only detected in the oxidized form ubiquinone-10, although coenzyme Q10 oxidation may have occurred during processing. The most abundant of all studied lipids in plaque samples was free cholesterol, followed by cholesteryl oleate and cholesteryl linoleate (Ch18:2). Approximately 30% of plaque Ch18:2 was oxidized, with 17%, 12%, and 1% present as fatty acyl hydroxides, ketones, and hydroperoxides, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1998

Concurrent comparison of endoluminal versus open repair in the treatment of abdominal aortic aneurysms: Analysis of 303 patients by life table method

James W. May; Geoffrey H. White; Weiyun Yu; Cameron N. Ly; Richard Waugh; Michael S. Stephen; Manjula Arulchelvam; John P. Harris

PURPOSE The aim of this study was to compare the outcome of consecutive patients with abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) treated concurrently by open operation and endoluminal intervention by the same surgeons during a defined interval. METHODS Between May 1992 and May 1996, 362 consecutive patients with AAA underwent repair. Fifty-three patients who underwent open operations for ruptured AAA plus two patients who underwent endoluminal repair of false AAA and four patients who underwent secondary endoluminal repair of AAA were excluded, leaving 303 patients who underwent elective repair of true AAA in the study. The elective operations were conventional open repair (OR) in 195 patients (151 men, 44 women; mean age, 69 years) and endoluminal repair (ER) in 108 patients (100 men, 8 women; mean age, 70 years). The decision to perform ERwas based on comorbidities that precluded open repair (n = 48) and patient choice (n = 60). Graft configuration in the open repair group was tubular (n = 180) and bifurcated (n = 15), and in the ER group tubular (n = 48), aortoiliac/femoral (n = 25), and bifurcated (n = 35). All procedures were performed in the operating department, and radiographic guidance was used in the ER group. Follow-up was by interview, examination, and telephone. In addition, contrast-enhanced computed tomography was performed within the first 10 days after operation, 6 months and 12 months after operation, and then annually thereafter in the ER group. Outcome measures were successful exclusion of the aneurysm sac from the general circulation and survival. Data were analyzed by the life table method. Other outcome measures were length of hospital stay, length of intensive care unit stay, and operative blood loss. RESULTS No significant difference was found between the perioperative mortality rate for OR (11 deaths [5.6%] in 195 patients) and ER (six deaths [5.6%] in 108 patients). Three of the six deaths in the latter group occurred in patients with successful ER, and three occurred in 18 patients with failed ER who were converted to OR. Similarly, no significant difference was seen in the survival rate between the endoluminal and open repair groups when analyzed by the log-rank test (p = 0.14). The rate of graft failure, however, was significantly higher in the ER group than in the OR group (Fishers exact test, p < 0.001). Success in the ER group was defined as continuing graft function without endoleak or conversion to open repair. Kaplan-Meier curve for graft failure times for the endoluminal group revealed a 3-year graft success probability of 70%. CONCLUSIONS This study suggests that ER is safe, sharing the same perioperative mortality risk as OR despite 44% of the ER group being rejected as unfit for OR. Conventional open repair is the most reliable method of successfully managing AAA. The endoluminal method, however, results in shorter length of hospital stay, shorter length of intensive care unit stay, and less blood loss than the open method. Patients who opt for the endoluminal method of repair should be made aware that the minimally invasive technique carries the disadvantage of a higher failure rate.


Cognitive Brain Research | 2002

An event-related functional MRI study comparing interference effects in the Simon and Stroop tasks

Bradley S. Peterson; Michael J. Kane; Gerianne M. Alexander; Cheryl Lacadie; Pawel Skudlarski; Hoi-Chung Leung; James W. May; John C. Gore

The Stroop and Simon tasks typify a class of interference effects in which the introduction of task-irrelevant stimulus characteristics robustly slows reaction times. Behavioral studies have not succeeded in determining whether the neural basis for the resolution of these interference effects during successful task performance is similar or different across tasks. Event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies were obtained in 10 healthy young adults during performance of the Stroop and Simon tasks. Activation during the Stroop task replicated findings from two earlier fMRI studies. These activations were remarkably similar to those observed during the Simon task, and included anterior cingulate, supplementary motor, visual association, inferior temporal, inferior parietal, inferior frontal, and dorsolateral prefrontal cortices, as well as the caudate nuclei. The time courses of activation were also similar across tasks. Resolution of interference effects in the Simon and Stroop tasks engage similar brain regions, and with a similar time course. Therefore, despite the widely differing stimulus characteristics employed by these tasks, the neural systems that subserve successful task performance are likely to be similar as well.


Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 1978

The no-reflow phenomenon in experimental free flaps.

James W. May; Laurence A. Chait; Bernard McC. O'Brien; John V. Hurley

The no-reflow phenomenon was studied following reconstitution of blood flow by microvascular anastomosis in an ischemic and denervated free epigastric flap in the rabbit. Microscopic, histological, angiographic, and hematological studies demonstrated the progressive nature of this obstruction to the peripheral blood flow after increasing periods of ischemia. This obstruction reached a point of irreversibility after 12 hours of ischemia, leading to ultimate death of these flaps. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that an ischemia-induced no-reflow phenomenon is caused by cellular swelling, intravascular aggregation, and the leakage of intravascular fluid into the interstitial space. Similarities between these experimental findings and human observations are made. The clinical importance of early diagnosis and treatment of ischemic tissues is emphasized.


Circulation | 1989

Differential sensitivity of erythrocyte-rich and platelet-rich arterial thrombi to lysis with recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator. A possible explanation for resistance to coronary thrombolysis.

Ik-Kyung Jang; Herman K. Gold; A A Ziskind; John T. Fallon; Robert E. Holt; Robert C. Leinbach; James W. May; Desire Collen

Acute myocardial infarction is triggered by coronary artery occlusion that may be recanalized by thrombolytic therapy with a success rate of up to 75% only. The resistance of coronary artery occlusion to thrombolysis may either be due to obstruction of the lumen by a nonthrombotic mechanism or by intrinsic resistance of thrombus to dissolution. Coronary arterial thrombi are composed of platelet-rich and erythrocyte-rich material in variable proportions. To evaluate the relative sensitivity of these thrombus components to thrombolysis, we have used two femoral arterial thrombosis models in the rabbit, consisting of erythrocyte-rich clot produced by injecting whole blood and thrombin in an isolated segment and of platelet-rich thrombus spontaneously formed on an everted (inside out) femoral arterial segment. Intravenous infusion of recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator (rt-PA) at a rate of 30 micrograms/kg/min consistently reperfused arteries occluded with erythrocyte-rich clot (six of six animals compared with zero of six placebo-treated animals, p = 0.002), whereas infusion of 30 or 100 micrograms/kg/min was significantly less efficient for reperfusion of everted segments occluded with platelet-rich material (only four of 12 animals, p = 0.01). Intra-arterial infusion proximal to the occlusion, at a rate of 20 micrograms/kg/min reperfused six of seven rabbits with erythrocyte-rich clots but only one of seven rabbits with occluded everted segments (p = 0.03). A dose of 100 micrograms/kg/min was necessary to reperfuse platelet-rich occlusions in five of six rabbits.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Journal of Endovascular Surgery | 1999

Endotension : An explanation for continued AAA growth after successful endoluminal repair

Geoffrey H. White; James W. May; Paul Petrasek; R. Waugh; Michael S. Stephen; John P. Harris

Purpose: To present and analyze several cases that illustrate persistent sac pressurization following endovascular abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) repair. Methods and Results: Four patients with successful endovascular AAA exclusion presented in follow-up with an expanding aneurysm. Two had initial sac diameter decrease, but by 18 and 24 months, respectively, the AAA had enlarged and become pulsatile. There was no endoleak evident, but the proximal attachment stents had migrated distally in both cases. One patient developed endoleak with aneurysm expansion at 6 months; contained rupture occurred at 12 months. The last case had slowly evolving aneurysm expansion over 36 months but no endoleak. All endografts were removed and successfully replaced with conventional grafts. Intrasac thrombus was implicated as the means of pressure transmission that precipitated AAA expansion in these cases. Conclusions: Excluded AAAs can increase in size owing to persistent or recurrent pressurization (endotension) of the sac even when there is no evidence of endoleak. One proposed mechanism is pressure transmission via thrombus that lines the attachment site. Endotension may also represent an indiscernible, very low flow endoleak that allows blood to clot at the source of leakage.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1993

Transluminal placement of a prosthetic graft-stent device for treatment of subclavian artery aneurysm

James W. May; Geoffrey H. White; Richard Waugh; Weiyun Yu; John P. Harris

A 78-year-old man was seen with an expanding 5 cm false aneurysm of the right subclavian artery. This was treated by an intraluminal graft-stent device introduced through the brachial artery via a 16 F sheath. The graft was constructed from two polytetrafluoroethylene patches of 0.4 mm thickness and anchored in the subclavian artery by an 8 mm stainless steel stent. The procedure was monitored by an image intensifier. Completion arteriography and postoperative duplex scanning confirmed normal flow through the subclavian artery with no communication between the lumen and the aneurysmal sac. The patient recovered without complication.


Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 1981

The Latissimus Dorsi Muscle: A Fresh Cadaver Study of the Primary Neurovascular Pedicle

Scott P. Bartlett; James W. May; Michael J. Yaremchuk

The primary neurovascular pedicle of the latissimus dorsi muscle was studied in 50 fresh cadaver dissections and pertinent dimensions and anatomic relations was recorded. Some findings applicable to clinical reconstructive surgery are: 1. Vascular pedicle of 11 cm mean length (subscapular-thoracodorsal artery and vein). 2. Consistent T-shaped relationship among subscapular artery, thoracodorsal artery, circumflex scapular artery, and serratus arterial branch(es). 3. Large serratus anterior branch(es) from the thoracodorsal artery (1.1 mm mean diameter). 4. Consistent posterior location of neurovascular hilus at muscle junction. 5. Bifurcation of neurovascular structures at the hilus into superior and lateral intramuscular bundles (86 percent of dissections), making various surgical options with the latissimus dorsi skin-muscle flap possible. 6. Lengthy thoracodorsal nerve (12.3 cm mean length). 7. Low incidence of atherosclerosis in the subscapular artery (8 percent) and no significant atherosclerosis seen in the thoracodorsal artery.


Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 1993

The fate of suctioned and surgically removed fat after reimplantation for soft-tissue augmentation:a volumetric and histologic study in the rabbit

Theodore C. Kononas; Louis P. Bucky; Christine Hurley; James W. May

The use of autologous fat transplantation has seen renewed popularity with the recent advent of liposuction as a body recontouring technique. However, clinicians are still faced with uncertainty concerning the ultimate volume maintenance of the transplanted fat graft at its recipient site. This study was initiated to examine and evaluate the changes in volume of suctioned versus surgically excised fat grafts over a 9-month period in the New Zealand White rabbit. Fat grafts of equal volume were harvested from the groin using standard suction and surgical techniques and transferred into isolated pockets in the ear. Results demonstrate that both suctioned and surgically removed fat grafts undergo significant volume reduction. However, surgically excised fat maintains its volume (42.2 percent; n = 16) better than suction-assisted fat grafts (31.6 percent; n = 16; p < 0.05). Histologic examination showed that fibrous connective tissue was more prevalent in the suctioned fat grafts than in the surgically removed fat grafts.

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Geoffrey H. White

Royal Prince Alfred Hospital

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John P. Harris

Royal Prince Alfred Hospital

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Michael S. Stephen

Royal Prince Alfred Hospital

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Weiyun Yu

Royal Prince Alfred Hospital

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Richard Waugh

Royal Prince Alfred Hospital

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Xavier Chaufour

Royal Prince Alfred Hospital

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Joseph Lopez

Johns Hopkins University

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Sheil Ag

Royal Prince Alfred Hospital

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