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Dive into the research topics where Juan M. Pulido-Duque is active.

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Featured researches published by Juan M. Pulido-Duque.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1990

Use of gianturco self-expandable stents in the tracheobronchial tree

Andres Varela; Manuel Maynar; Duncan Irving; Robert Dick; R. Reyes; Hervé Rousseau; Luis Lopez; Juan M. Pulido-Duque; Janis Gissel Letourneau; Wilfrido R. Castaneda-Zuniga

Gianturco self-expandable stents were used successfully in the management of 5 patients with tracheobronchial pathology. Placement was performed under endoscopic and fluoroscopic guidance. None of the patients has experienced complications secondary to the stent placement, and in all of them the clinical problems resolved satisfactorily. Longer follow-up is required to determine the place of tracheobronchial stenting in patients with respiratory compromise.


Catheterization and Cardiovascular Diagnosis | 1998

Comparison of thrombolytic therapy of lower-extremity acute, subacute, and chronic arterial occlusions

Michael H. Wholey; Manuel Maynar; Mark H. Wholey; Juan M. Pulido-Duque; R. Reyes; Chester R. Jarmolowski; Wilfrido R. Castaneda

Our purpose was to study the effectiveness of thrombolytic therapy in treating acute, subacute, and chronic arterial occlusions in a multicenter retrospective study. Intraarterial urokinase infusion was performed in 235 patients for occluded native arteries. There were 70 (30%) with acute and 26 (5%) with subacute occlusions, and 141 (59%) with chronic symptoms for longer than 3 mo. Complete thrombolysis was achieved in 60 (86%) of the acute, 20 (77%) of the subacute, and 106 (75%) of the chronic occlusions. Adjunctive interventional procedures were performed as needed. Long-term follow-up revealed a primary patency of 87%, 85%, and 76% for the acute, subacute, and chronic occlusion groups, respectively. We conclude that the rate of complete thrombolysis of chronic occlusions proved slightly more efficient for acute and virtually the same for subacute occlusions. Long-term follow-up demonstrated a higher failure rate with chronic than with acute occlusions, probably due to worsened peripheral vascular runoff.


The Journal of Urology | 1994

Intraureteral Metallic Self-Expanding Endoprosthesis (Wallstent) in the Treatment of Difficult Ureteral Strictures

Yuri Reinberg; Hector Ferral; Ricardo Gonzalez; J. Carlos Manivel; John C. Hulbert; Manuel Maynar; Juan M. Pulido-Duque; David Hunter; Wilfrido R. Castaneda-Zuniga

Intractable and recurrent ureteral stricture presents a continuous challenge to the urologist. We report on 5 patients with severe ureteral stricture who were successfully treated with self-expanding metallic stents. Ureteral stricture occurred at ureteroileal anastomotic sites after neoplasm resection in 2 cases, multiple upper ureteral strictures were related to multiple surgical procedures for correction of bladder exstrophy in 1 and a ureteral kink developed in 1. Treatment with transluminal balloon dilation provided poor results but self-expanding metallic stents were used successfully with no major complications. In the last patient the stent and the overlying ureter were removed due to recurrent reflux; the gross and histological ureteral changes are discussed in detail. The technical approach is described, alternative therapeutic options are considered and pertinent literature is reviewed.


CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology | 1996

Transjugular liver biopsy : A review of 77 biopsies using a spring-propelled cutting needle (biopsy gun)

Elías Górriz; R. Reyes; Mary Beth Lobrano; Juan M. Pulido-Duque; Jose L. San Roman; Elena Lonjedo; Hector Ferral; Manuel Maynar

Seventy-seven transjugular liver biopsies were performed with a coaxial, spring-loaded, 18-gauge cutting needle, the Biopty gun (Bard Biopsy System, Covington, GA, USA) on consecutive patients between July 1993 and February 1995. Fifty men and 27 women were included in the study; the mean age was 45 years (range 15–69 years). The average number of punctures per patient was 5.2, with a range of 2–9, yielding an average of 4.8 samples per patient (range 1–7). The length of the samples varied from 10 to 22 mm with a constant diameter of 1 mm. The mean time required to complete the procedure was 48 min (43–52 min). Histological diagnoses were obtained in 74 of 77 patients (96%), with non-diagnostic specimens attributed to excessive fragmentation (3 cases). Complications occurred in 10 patients (puncture site hematoma, carotid artery puncture, abdominal pain, vasovagal reaction, hepatic capsule perforation, and hemobilia). The latter two complications were self-limited. In our experience this transjugular hepatic biopsy method is promising for performing biopsies in patients with chronic liver disease, due to its high success rate and low morbidity rate.


CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology | 1998

Treatment of Complete and Partial Obstruction of the Nasolacrimal System with Polyurethane Stents: Initial Experience

Juan M. Pulido-Duque; R. Reyes; José M. Carreira; Francisco Vega; Elías Górriz; M.a Dolores Pardo; Francisco Pérez; Manuel Maynar

AbstractPurpose: To present our experience in the treatment of nasolacrimal occlusion by means of polyurethane stents. Methods: Forty polyurethane stents were placed under fluoroscopic guidance in 35 consecutive patients with epiphora due to total or partial obstruction of the nasolacrimal system. The set designed by Song was used in all patients. The procedure was performed by introducing a guidewire through the superior punctum into the canaliculus and advancing it across the obstruction into the inferior meatus of the nasal cavity. After pulling out the guidewire, the stent was advanced in retrograde fashion and released into the sac and the nasolacrimal duct. Results: The technical success rate was 100%. The average time for the procedure was 25 min (range 10–60 min). Immediate complications were: mild pain (n= 5), severe pain (n= 1), minimal epistaxis (n= 7), and moderate epistaxis (n= 1). No major complications occurred. The last clinical control revealed complete resolution of epiphora in 35 eyes and partial resolution in four; one patient did not improve. Conclusion: This technique for treatment of obstruction of the nasolacrimal system is simple and safe, and may obviate the use of more invasive procedures.


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 1994

Treatment of Renovascular Hypertension with Percutaneous Transluminal Angioplasty: Experience in Spain

José C. Rodríguez-Pérez; Celia Plaza; R. Reyes; Juan M. Pulido-Duque; Leocadia Palop; Hector Ferral; Manuel Maynar; Wilfrido R. Castaneda-Zuniga

PURPOSE The clinical results of percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) were evaluated in patients with renovascular hypertension, and the effect of PTA on blood pressure and renal function was determined. PATIENTS AND METHODS Between February 1982 and December 1990, 93 hypertensive patients underwent 123 renal artery PTA procedures. Mean patient age was 43.4 years (range, 12-78 years). Average baseline blood pressure was 162/111 mm Hg (range, 140-230/95-150 mm Hg). The cause of renovascular hypertension, as determined with angiography, was atherosclerosis in 37 patients, fibromuscular dysplasia in 27, and mixed disease in one; 28 patients had renal transplant arterial stenosis. RESULTS In patients with atherosclerotic renal vascular disease or fibromuscular renal artery stenosis, systolic and diastolic blood pressure decreased significantly (P < .001) at 96 months after PTA. In patients with renal transplant arterial stenosis, blood pressure also decreased significantly (P < .001) at 12 months after PTA. Technical success was achieved in 78% of patients with atherosclerosis, 92% of patients with fibromuscular dysplasia, and 76% of patients with renal transplants. Complications were seen in 4.8% and were related to renal failure and vessel dissection. CONCLUSION PTA is the therapy of choice in patients with renovascular hypertension due to fibromuscular dysplasia. Patients with atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis or stenosis of a renal artery in a transplanted kidney should be selected according to the anatomy of the lesion and clinical patient characteristics.


Diabetic Foot & Ankle | 2012

From the diabetic foot ulcer and beyond: how do foot infections spread in patients with diabetes?

Javier Aragón-Sánchez; José Luis Lázaro-Martínez; Juan M. Pulido-Duque; Manuel Maynar

A diabetic foot infection is usually the result of a pre-existing foot ulceration and is the leading cause of lower extremity amputation in patients with diabetes. It is widely accepted that diabetic foot infections may be challenging to treat for several reasons. The devastating effects of hyperglycemia on host defense, ischemia, multi-drug resistant bacteria and spreading of infection through the foot may complicate the course of diabetic foot infections. Understanding the ways in which infections spread through the diabetic foot is a pivotal factor in order to decide the best approach for the patients treatment. The ways in which infections spread can be explained by the anatomical division of the foot into compartments, the tendons included in the compartments, the initial location of the point of entry of the infection and the type of infection that the patient has. The aim of this paper is to further comment on the existed and proposed anatomical principles of the spread of infection through the foot in patients with diabetes.


The International Journal of Lower Extremity Wounds | 2012

Endovascular Treatment Is a Hope for Patient With Buerger’s Disease and Foot Ulcer Case Report

Javier Aragón-Sánchez; Martin Rabellino; Juan M. Pulido-Duque; Tobias Zander; Gabriela Gonzalez; Manuel Maynar

Scarce information exists regarding the usefulness of the endovascular approach in patients with thromboangiitis obliterans and critical ischemia. A 41-old-man diagnosed with Buerger’s disease had rest pain and a severe ulceration on the big toe. He had been scheduled for a big toe amputation. Typical findings of Buerger’s disease were found in the angiogram including below-the-knee involvement and corkscrew collateral arteries. Stenoses of the posterior tibial artery were angioplastied and the plantar artery was recanalized and angioplastied. Healing was achieved and the patient remains asymptomatic 21 months after the procedure. The outcome achieved in this case and recent series should encourage doctors dealing with this problem to attempt limb salvage by means of the endovascular approach.


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 1993

Massive brachiocephalic artery bleeding due to a Gianturco tracheal stent.

Manuel Maynar; Luis Lopez; Elías Górriz; R. Reyes; Juan M. Pulido-Duque; Wilfrido R. Castaneda-Zuniga


American Journal of Roentgenology | 1992

Transcatheter placement of a metallic stent for treatment of an occluded H-graft portacaval shunt.

Juan M. Pulido-Duque; Elías Górriz; R. Reyes; Hector Ferral; Manuel Maynar

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R. Reyes

University of La Laguna

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Hector Ferral

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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José M. Carreira

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Javier Aragón-Sánchez

Complutense University of Madrid

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Luis Lopez

Hospital Universitario Insular de Gran Canaria

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