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Dive into the research topics where Laura J. Perry is active.

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Featured researches published by Laura J. Perry.


Digestion | 1994

Hepatic Arterial Chemoembolization for Metastatic Neuroendocrine Tumors

Melvin E. Clouse; Laura J. Perry; Keith Stuart; Kenneth R. Stokes

PURPOSE OF THE STUDY To evaluate the effectiveness of chemoembolization of the liver with doxorubicin and iopamidol emulsified in ethiodized oil for the treatment of metastatic neuroendocrine tumors. PATIENTS AND METHODS Twenty patients with hepatic islet cell or carcinoid metastases were treated with selected hepatic arterial embolization consisting of an emulsion of doxorubicin and iopamidol emulsified in ethiodol followed by Gelfoam powder embolization. Fifteen patients had failed intravenous chemotherapy. Two of the patients with carcinoid tumors had three embolizations over 4 and one 6 years earlier with gelatin sponge only. RESULTS In 14 patients with hormonally active tumors, hormones secretion decreased 90% (range 69-98%) in 10 days with relief of symptoms in all patients. Average tumor size decrease was 84%. Average hospital stay was 8 days. Six patients are alive and asymptomatic at 14-33 months postembolization. Fourteen patients have died 2-16 months postembolization. Ten patients died 2-37 months postembolization from progressive liver disease. One of these patients was 103 months post-Gelfoam embolization and 13 months postchemoembolization. In 8 patients, the pancreas was the primary site: 5 were nonfunctioning islet cell carcinomas, 1 glucagonoma, 1 gastrinoma and 1 carcinoid. The primary site in 1 patient with carcinoid was the bronchus, and the primary site was unknown in 1 patient with gastrinoma. The remaining 4 patients died with liver disease under control from renal failure, peritonitis, carcinoid heart failure and generalized bone metastases. The response rate was 95% with median duration of response 8.5 months. The median survival was 24 months. CONCLUSION Chemoembolization with doxorubicin and iopamidol emulsified in ethiodized oil is less morbid than embolization with particulate matter alone, is more convenient and less costly, and it is less morbid than the effects of systemic chemotherapy. The median survival, duration and response compare favorably with other reported therapies.


Archive | 1997

Selective chemoembolization in the management of hepatic metastases in refractory colorectal carcinoma

Pedro M. Sanz-Altamira; Liam D. Spence; Mark S. Huberman; Marshall R. Posner; Glenn SteeleJr.; Laura J. Perry; Keith Stuart

PURPOSE: Metastatic involvement of the liver frequently determines the evolution of the clinical picture in colorectal cancer patients. We examined the efficacy and toxicity of chemoembolization in this setting, identifying prognostic factors to define patients most likely to benefit from the procedure. METHODS: Forty patients underwent chemoembolization of metastatic liver lesions from colorectal carcinoma. Selective angiography of the hepatic artery was performed to identify the feeding vessels of the metastatic lesions. The injected chemoemulsion consisted of 1,000 mg of 5-fluorouracil, 10 mg of mitomycin C, and 10 ml of ethiodized oil in a total volume of 30 ml. Gelfoam embolization then followed, until stagnation of blood flow was achieved. Patients were evaluated for response, overall survival, and toxicities. RESULTS: Overall median survival from date of first chemoembolization was ten months. Factors that predicted a longer median survival included favorable performance status (24 months), serum alkaline phosphatase and lactate dehydrogenase levels less than three times normal (24 and 12 months, respectively), and metastatic disease confined to the liver (14 months). Most patients tolerated the procedure well. The most common side effects were transient fevers, abdominal pain, and fatigue. Three patients died within one month from the procedure. CONCLUSION: This study suggests that chemoembolization of hepatic metastases in colorectal cancer should be further evaluated; it may be beneficial in patients who have failed systemic chemotherapy, have a good performance status, and have metastatic disease confined to the liver.


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 1994

Percutaneous Intraarterial Thrombolysis: Analysis of Factors Affecting Outcome

Melvin E. Clouse; Kenneth R. Stokes; Laura J. Perry; Hugh G. Wheeler

PURPOSE The authors report results of high-dose thrombolytic therapy in native arteries and vein grafts and discuss the various factors affecting outcome. PATIENTS AND METHODS In a retrospective study, the outcome of 82 high-dose urokinase infusions in 76 patients was examined. Comorbid risk factors as they relate to outcome were studied extensively with log-linear analysis. Positive thrombolytic outcome (PTO) is defined as complete thrombolysis of a previously occluded segment with restoration of antegrade flow augmented by angioplasty or operative intervention to clear symptoms for 30 days. RESULTS The procedure resulted in a PTO in 63 of 82 instances (77%). The treatment was with urokinase alone in 39 cases (47%) and urokinase followed by surgery in 34 (41%), by angioplasty in four (5%), and by angioplasty in the proximal artery and peripheral vein grafting in five (6%). All stenoses associated with grafts were treated surgically. None of the following affected thrombolytic outcome: age of occlusion, heparin dose, catheter type, length or location of graft, or artery versus graft occlusion. The 30-day mortality was 6.1%, with a procedure-related mortality rate of 2.4%. Overall amputation rate was 18% (74% for patients in whom lysis failed by 30 days). CONCLUSION The presence of at least one runoff vessel was the most important factor affecting outcome (PTO, 95%; P = .00001, chi 2). The most important comorbid risk factor for failed thrombolysis was coronary artery disease (P = .03, chi 2).


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 1993

Chemoembolization for Hepatocellular Carcinoma: Epinephrine Followed by a Doxorubicin–Ethiodized Oil Emulsion and Gelatin Sponge Powder☆

Melvin E. Clouse; Kenneth R. Stokes; Jonathan B. Kruskal; Laura J. Perry; Keith Stuart; Imad Nasser

PURPOSE This study evaluates chemoembolization (CE) of the liver with minimal vasoconstriction followed by selective intraarterial delivery of an emulsion of iopamidol, doxorubicin, and ethiodized oil and temporary occlusion of hepatic artery with gelatin sponge powder in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma. PATIENTS AND METHODS Since 1988, 30 patients with nonresectable hepatocellular carcinoma underwent CE with the above protocol. Intraarterial epinephrine (0.5-1 microgram diluted in 10 mL of saline) was rapidly injected directly into the proper hepatic artery or selectively into the right or left hepatic arteries and was followed by 40-60 mg of doxorubicin dissolved in 10 mL of iopamidol and emulsified in 20 mL of ethiodized oil. The chemoembolic mixture was injected at the rate of arterial flow. Liver function and clotting parameters were monitored three times a day until there was a downward trend toward preembolic levels. Computed tomography (CT) was performed immediately after embolization and at 1-3-month intervals. Embolization was repeated when CT demonstrated recurrent or progressive disease. RESULTS Disease recurred or progressed in 11 patients at 2-17 months after embolization. CE was repeated in four patients; one individual underwent three embolizations. Re-embolization was performed up to 14 months after initial embolization (median, 10 months). Five patients (16.7%) died within 1 month of embolization. Ten patients died at 3-33 months after CE. Two of these patients died of cirrhosis at 6 and 14 months, without evidence of recurrent tumor. Fifteen patients remain alive 5-28 months after CE. Kaplan-Meier estimation of probability of survival curves demonstrates a median survival of 14 months. Sixty-one percent of patients were alive at 1 year and 36% at 2 years after the procedure. CONCLUSION CE with use of the above technique is effective for palliating inoperable hepatocellular carcinoma. It causes a significant prolongation of survival over the expected 18-24 weeks in untreated patients; this may occur because high doses of chemotherapeutic agents are delivered and come in contact with the tumor for a longer period, followed by ischemia brought about by temporary arterial occlusion.


CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology | 1994

Pseudoaneurysm of the common femoral vein as a late complication of right heart catheterization

Moises Roizental; George G. Hartnell; Laura J. Perry; Robert A. Kane

Complications following venous punctures are unusual. We describe a case of a false common femoral vein aneurysm following right heart catheterization in a patient with systemic venous hypertension due to tricuspid regurgitation. The initial interpretation of the Doppler ultrasound study lead to a digital subtraction femoral arteriogram which was normal. Magnetic resonance venography demonstrated a femoral venous pseudoaneurysm.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2007

Femoral-to-Port Through-and-Through Wire Access to Reestablish Subcutaneous Port Function

Sergei Sobolevsky; Robert G. Sheiman; Salomao Faintuch; Laura J. Perry

OBJECTIVE Central venous catheter malfunction often results from fibrin sheath formation and is routinely addressed with thrombolytic therapy or mechanical stripping. Mechanical stripping from a distant access site such as a femoral vein is the only option for a subcutaneous port that has failed thrombolytic therapy. When a fibrin sheath has rendered the catheter tip inaccessible to snaring, catheter salvage cannot be achieved, requiring port exchange. We report two cases in which an inaccessible catheter tip was mobilized via advancing a wire through the port and through the catheter, allowing for successful snaring, mechanical stripping, and return of normal port function. CONCLUSION Passage of a hydrophilic wire through a subcutaneous port and beyond the catheter tip is technically possible. The wire can be snared from a femoral access to achieve successful catheter stripping when direct catheter snaring is not possible.


Surgery | 1994

Hepatic arterial chemoembolization for metastatic neuroendocrine tumors.

Laura J. Perry; Keith Stuart; Kenneth R. Stokes; Melvin E. Clouse


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1997

Selective chemoembolization in the management of hepatic metastases in refractory colorectal carcinoma: a phase II trial.

Pedro M. Sanz-Altamira; Liam D. Spence; Mark S. Huberman; Marshall R. Posner; Glenn Steele; Laura J. Perry; Keith Stuart


Radiology | 1996

Severe ascites: efficacy of the transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt in treatment.

W Crenshaw; Gordon Fd; Niall McEniff; Laura J. Perry; George G. Hartnell; Harry T. Anastopoulos; Roger L. Jenkins; Lewis Wd; Hugh G. Wheeler; Melvin E. Clouse


American Journal of Roentgenology | 1999

Thrombin injection for the repair of brachial artery pseudoaneurysms

Robert G. Sheiman; David P. Brophy; Laura J. Perry; Cameron M. Akbari

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David P. Brophy

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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George G. Hartnell

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Robert G. Sheiman

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Hugh G. Wheeler

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Jonathan B. Kruskal

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Liam D. Spence

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Mark S. Huberman

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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