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Dive into the research topics where John Bostwick is active.

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Featured researches published by John Bostwick.


Annals of Surgery | 1997

Skin-sparing mastectomy. Oncologic and reconstructive considerations.

Grant W. Carlson; John Bostwick; Toncred M. Styblo; Bridgett Moore; Jean Trimble Bried; Douglas R. Murray; William C. Wood

OBJECTIVE The authors compared skin-sparing mastectomy and traditional mastectomy both followed by immediate reconstruction in the treatment of breast cancer. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA Skin-sparing mastectomy is used increasingly in the treatment of breast cancer to improve the aesthetic results of immediate reconstruction. The oncologic and reconstructive outcomes of this procedure have never been analyzed closely. METHODS Institutional experience with 435 consecutive patients who underwent total mastectomy and immediate reconstruction from January 1989 through December 1994 was examined. Mastectomies were stratified into skin-sparing (SSM) and non-skin-sparing (non-SSM) types. RESULTS Three hundred twenty-seven SSMs and 188 non-SSMs were performed. The mean follow-up was 41.3 months (SSM, 37.5 months, non-SSM, 48.2 months). Local recurrences from invasive cancer occurred after 4.8% of SSMs versus 9.5% of non-SSMs. Sixty-five percent of patients who underwent SSMs had nothing performed on the opposite breast versus 45% in the group of patients who underwent non-SSM (p = 0.0002). Native skin flap necrosis occurred in 10.7% of patients who underwent SSMs versus 11.2% of patients who underwent non-SSMs. CONCLUSIONS Skin-sparing mastectomy facilitates immediate breast reconstruction by reducing remedial surgery on the opposite breast. Native skin flap necrosis is not increased over that seen with non-SSM. Skin-sparing mastectomies can be used in the treatment of invasive cancer without compromising local control.


Annals of Surgery | 1980

Infected median sternotomy wound. Successful treatment by muscle flaps.

M. J. Jurkiewicz; John Bostwick; T. Roderick Hester; J.Barry Bishop; Joseph M. Craver

The purpose of this paper is to present the experience at Emory University Hospital with the infected median sternotomy wound and to offer a treatment plan for those patients recalcitrant to the usual therapy of debridement and closed catheter irrigation with antimicrobial agents. When standard treatment fails, we proceed not only with the necessary thorough debridement to convert the wound to a relatively clean one but also concomitant closure by pectoralis major muscle flaps to completely obliterate dead space. Transposition flaps of rectus abdominus muscle or omentum are used when necessary to complete the closure. In the initial phase of this study, there were 3,239 patients who underwent open heart procedures through a median sternotomy approach in the years 1975 through 1978. In the 50 patients who had wound infections (1.54%), there were nine deaths. Three were thought to be unrelated to the sternal wound infection, four patients ruptured the ventricle or aortz, two patients died of generalized sepsis. Of these 50 patients, 22 responded to simple drainage; 28 had involvement of the mediastinum (0.86%). Of the 28 patients, 25 had debridement and closed mediastinal irrigation by catheter. Fourteen of these 25 did not respond. In these failing patients, 12 were treated by further debridement and closure by muscle flaps. Nine of these 12 were rescued. In the past nine months, an additional 1,052 patients had an open heart procedure. Of these, 11 had a median sternotomy infection. There have been no deaths in this latter group of patients, most of whom were treated by the muscle flap procedure. In addition to the improvement in mortality, morbidity has-been reduced substantially. This procedure provides for a rational approach that we have found to permit salvage of a high percentage of patients who failed conventional closed irrigation techniques.


Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 1995

TRAM flap anatomy correlated with a 10-year clinical experience with 556 patients

P. A. Watterson; John Bostwick; T. R. Hester; J. Trimble Bried; G. I. Taylor

This study examines the vascular anatomy of the TRAM flap and evaluates risk factors associated with complications among 556 women who had TRAM flap breast reconstruction. Fifty-nine patients (10.6 percent) developed fat necrosis involving 10 percent or more of their breast. Risk factors associated with fat necrosis were a history of chest-wall irradiation (p = 0.001), significant abdominal scar (p < 0.01), and obesity (p < 0.02). Among unipedicle reconstructions, patients with multiple risk factors had three times the incidence of fat necrosis (24.7 versus 8.3 percent) compared with patients with one or no risk factors (p < 0.002). Patients with multiple risk factors who had bipedicled TRAM flap reconstruction had no associated increased incidence of fat necrosis (p > 0.18). Forty-nine patients (8.8 percent) developed abdominal hernias. Risk factors associated with hernia formation included smoking at the time of surgery (p = 0.00001) and abdominal-wall repair with interposed mesh (p < 0.00001). The overall complication rate for this series was 23.7 percent (132 of 556). Risk factors associated with any complication included smoking (p < 0.002), history of chest-wall irradiation (p < 0.002), significant abdominal scar (p < 0.005), and obesity (p < 0.02). Patient selection is a fundamental determinant of successful TRAM flap breast reconstruction. Among patients with multiple risk factors, the risk of tissue loss in the reconstructed breast may be diminished by use of a bipedicled TRAM flap.


Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 1997

The effects of radiation treatment after TRAM flap breast reconstruction.

J. K. Williams; Grant W. Carlson; John Bostwick; Jean Trimble Bried; Gregory J. Mackay

&NA; A subgroup of mastectomy patients receives adjuvant radiation therapy after autogenous breast reconstruction for locoregional control of cancer. The effects of radiation therapy on pedlicled transverse rectus abdominis musculocutaneous (TRAM) flaps were determined to evaluate complication rates and aesthetic results. Nineteen patients from 1981 to 1994 receiving radiation therapy after a pedicled TRAM flap reconstruction were compared with 108 patients who received radiation prior to reconstruction and 572 patients who underwent breast reconstruction without radiation. Retrospective reviews of patient charts were completed. Adjuvant radiation therapy was given for chest‐wall recurrence in 13 of 19 patients. With a mean follow‐up of 47.6 months from the time of reconstruction, 10 patients (52.6 percent) demonstrated postradiation changes in the TRAM flap reconstruction, and 6 required surgical intervention (31.6 percent). Overall complication rates were increased but were not found to be statistically significant between the radiated TRAM flap group and patients with preoperative radiation followed by TRAM flap reconstruction (31 versus 25 percent). Fibrosis was not found in patients with pre‐TRAM flap radiation or in patients without radiation but was seen in 31.6 percent of patients who received radiation after the reconstruction. Fat necrosis was not significantly increased between the two groups of radiated patients. The complication rate does not change whether a patient receives radiation before or after her reconstruction; only the nature of the complication changes (fat necrosis to fibrosis). (Plast. Reconstr. Surg. 100: 1153, 1997.)


Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 1989

Primary treatment of the infected sternotomy wound with muscle flaps: a review of 211 consecutive cases

Foad Nahai; Richard P. Rand; T. Roderick Hester; John Bostwick; M. J. Jurkiewicz

Between 1978 and 1987, 15,595 median sternotomies were performed at Emory University Hospitals. Sternal wound infections developed in 246 patients (1.6 percent). Mediastinitis was present in 211 patients, while superficial infections were detected in the remaining 35 patients. Debridement and muscle or omental flap closure were performed in all instances of mediastinitis, with an overall mortality rate of 5.3 percent. The results of this treatment are reviewed, and the evolution of current therapeutic guidelines is described. When compared with closed-catheter irrigation and open granulation techniques, flap closure is shown to result in a fourfold decrease in mortality, an increased success of primary therapy, and a diminished length of hospitalization following treatment. This evidence supports the conclusion that debridement and flap closure should be considered the primary therapy for patients with poststernotomy mediastinitis.


British Journal of Plastic Surgery | 1977

A RECTUS ABDOMINIS MYOCUTANEOUS FLAP TO RECONSTRUCT ABDOMINAL WALL DEFECTS

Stephen J. Mathes; John Bostwick

Abstract Primary reconstruction of acute traumatic losses of the abdominal wall usually require immediate replacement of the fascial defect with one of the available plastic meshes followed by split skin grafting or flap transfer. A long-term follow-up of such patients (Mathes and Stone, 1975) disclosed marked tenderness and instability of the skin grafts in pressure areas overlying the synthetic mesh; approximately one-quarter of these patients require a secondary reconstruction. The rectus abdominis myocutaneous flap to be described was successfully used in one such case.


Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 2001

Nipple reconstruction using the C-V flap technique: a long-term evaluation.

Albert Losken; Gregory J. Mackay; John Bostwick

Numerous procedures are available for nipple reconstruction with no true universal favorite. This study presents long‐term follow‐up data for nipple reconstruction using the C‐V flap technique. Patients were identified by searching the Breast Reconstruction Database, and they were asked to return for a follow‐up visit. All those who underwent nipple reconstruction using the C‐V flap technique between January of 1992 and December of 1996 were reviewed in an attempt to conduct a long‐term follow‐up evaluation. The response was poor, and 11 patients participated in the study and returned for follow‐up. They all completed a questionnaire, which focused on patient satisfaction using a visual analogue scale. Nipple measurements were taken with a caliper and compared with the opposite breast for symmetry. Fourteen nipple reconstructions were evaluated in 11 patients with an average follow‐up of 5.3 years. All patients had undergone transverse rectus abdominis musculocutaneous (TRAM) flap reconstructions. Patient satisfaction was 42 percent with nipple projection, 62 percent with pigmentation, and 26 percent with sensation. Overall patient satisfaction with the procedure was 81 percent. Average nipple projection of the reconstructed nipple was 3.77 mm and was not statistically different when compared with the opposite nipple. Longterm subjective evaluation of the C‐V flap technique does report a loss in nipple projection; however, overall patient satisfaction at 5.3 years is good, as is the ability to restore symmetry with the opposite breast. (Plast. Reconstr. Surg. 108: 361, 2001.)


Annals of Surgical Oncology | 2003

Local Recurrence After Skin-Sparing Mastectomy: Tumor Biology or Surgical Conservatism?

Grant W. Carlson; Toncred M. Styblo; Robert H. Lyles; John Bostwick; Douglas R. Murray; Charles A. Staley; William C. Wood

Background:Long-term follow-up of the use of skin-sparing mastectomy (SSM) in the treatment of breast cancer is presented to determine the impact of local recurrence (LR) on survival.Methods:A total of 539 patients were treated for 565 cases of breast cancer by SSM and immediate breast reconstruction from January 1, 1989 to December 31, 1998. The American Joint Committee on Cancer pathological staging was stage 0 175 (31%), stage I 135 (23.9%), stage II 173 (30.6%), stage III 54 (9.6%), stage IV 8 (1.4%), and recurrent 20 (3.5%). The mean follow-up was 65.4 months (range, 23.7–86.3 months). Five patients were lost to follow-up.Results:Thirty-one patients developed a LR during the follow-up including five who received adjuvant radiation. The distribution of LR stratified by cancer stage was stage 0 1, stage I 5, stage II 17, stage III 6, and recurrent 2. The overall LR was 5.5%. Twenty-four patients (77.4%) developed a systemic relapse and 7 (22.6%) patients remained free of recurrent disease at a mean follow-up of 78.1 months. The cancer stage of those remaining disease free was stage 0 1 (100%), stage I 4 (80%), and stage II 2 (11.8%).Conclusions:LR of breast cancer after SSM is not always associated with systemic relapse.


Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 1977

Nipple-areola reconstruction with auricular tissues.

Burt Brent; John Bostwick

Various methods of reconstructing the nipple-areolar complex with auricular tissues are presented. A basic one-stage reconstructive technique is described which seems suitable for the use of various tissues. An alternative method of correcting the inverted nipple is reported.


Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 1998

A comparison of morbidity from bilateral, unipedicled and unilateral, unipedicled tram flap breast reconstructions

Keith T. Paige; John Bostwick; Jean Trimble Bried; Glyn Jones

&NA; A large series of women who had undergone bilateral, pedicled TRAM flap reconstructions were compared with women who had had unilateral, unipedicled TRAM flap procedures to determine whether a bilateral TRAM flap breast reconstruction had significant additional morbidity. The records of all women who underwent either a bilateral or unilateral pedicled TRAM flap breast reconstruction through the Emory Clinic from 1987 to 1994 (n = 257) were retrospectively analyzed with respect to general, breast (fat necrosis, flap loss, and cellulitis), and abdominal (hernia, skin loss, and cellulitis) complications. By using logistic regression, risk factors for these complications were determined. The incidence of fat necrosis and partial flap loss was not significantly different among bilateral patients compared with patients with unilateral TRAM reconstructions (10.0 percent versus 12.6 percent, p = 0.64 and 3.8 percent versus 5.5 percent, p = 0.74, respectively). The rate of hernia formation in the bilateral TRAM flap patients (5.4 percent) was similar to that of unilateral patients (3.9 percent, p = 0.80). Significant factors for any complication in both patient populations included obesity, smoking, and prior irradiation. The type of breast reconstruction was not a significant factor for any breast or donor‐site complication. A bilateral TRAM reconstruction showed a weak association with general complications. Review of the Emory Clinic experience with unilateral and bilateral pedicled TRAM flap reconstructions from 1987 to 1994 was able to detect no significant additional rate of complications for bilateral pedicled TRAM flap breast reconstructions compared with unilateral unipedicled TRAM flap procedures. (Plast. Reconstr. Surg. 101: 1819, 1998.)

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C. Scott Hultman

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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