Lawrence J. DeLorenzo
New York Medical College
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Lawrence J. DeLorenzo.
The American Journal of Medicine | 1986
Donald P. Tashkin; Kumar Ashutosh; Eugene R. Bleecker; E. James Britt; David W. Cugell; Joseph M. Cummiskey; Lawrence J. DeLorenzo; Murray J. Gilman; Gary N. Gross; Nicholas J. Gross; Arthur Kotch; S. Lakshminarayan; George P. Maguire; Matthew Miller; Alan Plummer; Attilio D. Renzetti; Marvin A. Sackner; Morton S. Skoroqin; Adam Wanner; Suetaro Watanabe
The short- and long-term efficacy and safety of an inhaled quaternary ammonium anticholinergic agent, ipratropium bromide, and a beta agonist aerosol, metaproterenol, were compared in 261 nonatopic patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The study was a randomized, double-blind, 90-day, parallel-group trial. On three test days-one, 45, and 90-mean peak responses for forced expiratory volume in one second and forced vital capacity and mean area under the time-response curve were higher for ipratropium than for metaproterenol. Clinical improvement was noted in both treatment groups, especially during the first treatment month, with persistence of improvement throughout the remainder of the study. Side effects were relatively infrequent and generally mild; tremor, a complication of beta agonists, was not reported by any subject receiving ipratropium. These results support the effectiveness and safety of long-term treatment with inhaled ipratropium in COPD.
Archives of Medical Science | 2011
Vishal Sekhri; Shireen Sanal; Lawrence J. DeLorenzo; Wilbert S. Aronow; George P. Maguire
Sarcoidosis is a multisystem granulomatous disease of unknown etiology characterized by noncaseating granulomas in involved organs. Organs involved with sarcoidosis include lymph nodes, skin, lung, central nervous system, and eye. Only 40-50% of patients with cardiac sarcoidosis diagnosed at autopsy have the diagnosis made during their lifetime. Cardiac sarcoidosis can manifest itself as complete heart block, ventricular arrhythmias, congestive heart failure, pericardial effusion, pulmonary hypertension, and ventricular aneurysms. Diagnostic tests such as the electrocardiogram, two-dimensional echocardiography, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, positron emission tomography scan, radionuclide scan, and endomyocardial biopsy can be helpful in the early detection of cardiac sarcoidosis. Considering the increased risk of sudden death, cardiac sarcoidosis is an indication for early treatment with corticosteroids or other immunosuppressive agents. Other treatments include placement of a pacemaker or implantable defibrillator to prevent sudden death. In refractory cases, cardiac transplantation should be considered.
Critical care nursing quarterly | 1994
George P. Maguire; Lawrence J. DeLorenzo; Richard A. Moggio
A 1-month prospective quality improvement audit was performed to determine the incidence of self-extubation in the intensive care units (ICUs) at the Westchester County Medical Center (WCMC), a 625-bed tertiary care hospital with 92 intensive care beds in 11 ICUs. During the 1-month study period, there were seven unplanned extubations in six of 121 intubated patients, or one unplanned extubation for every 136 patient-ventilator days. Based on the initial review, a corrective action plan was initiated that consisted of education of nurses and house staff about the problem of unplanned extubation, daily assessment on rounds of patient risk of unplanned extubation, and careful documentation of any episodes of unplanned extubation. A S-month follow-up review identified 12 unplanned extubations in 11 patients, which resulted in a reduced rate of one unplanned extubation per 455 patient-ventilator days. Risk factors for unplanned extubation included documented anxiety, routine care intervention, and a history of previous unplanned extubation. Unplanned extubation can be a serious complication associated with mortality and therefore is a quality-of-care concern. However, the majority of patients with this complication did well and were discharged from the hospital. The incidence of unplanned extubation can be reduced but not eliminated by a program of education and attention to risk factors for unplanned extubation.
The American Journal of Medicine | 2012
Marisa A. Montecalvo; Donna McKenna; Robert Yarrish; Lynda Mack; George P. Maguire; Janet P. Haas; Lawrence J. DeLorenzo; Norine Dellarocco; Barbara Savatteri; Addie Rosenthal; Anita Watson; Debra Spicehandler; Qiuhu Shi; Paul Visintainer; Gary P. Wormser
BACKGROUND Chlorhexidine bathing has been associated with reductions in healthcare-associated bloodstream infection. To determine the impact and sustainability of the effect of chlorhexidine bathing on central venous catheter-associated bloodstream infection, we performed a prospective, 3-phase, multiple-hospital study. METHODS In the medical intensive care unit and the respiratory care unit of a tertiary care hospital and the medical-surgical intensive care units of 4 community hospitals, rates of central venous catheter-associated bloodstream infection were collected prospectively for each period. Pre-intervention (phase 1) patients were bathed with soap and water or nonmedicated bathing cloths; active intervention (phase 2) patients were bathed with 2% chlorhexidine gluconate cloths with the number of baths administered and skin tolerability assessed; post-intervention (phase 3) chlorhexidine bathing was continued but without oversight by research personnel. Central venous catheter-associated bloodstream infection rates were compared over study periods using Poisson regression. RESULTS Compared with pre-intervention, during active intervention there were significantly fewer central venous catheter-associated bloodstream infections (6.4/1000 central venous catheter days vs 2.6/1000 central venous catheter days, relative risk, 0.42; 95% confidence interval, 0.25-0.68; P<.001), and this reduction was sustained during post-intervention (2.9/1000 central venous catheter days; relative risk, 0.46; 95% confidence interval, 0.30-0.70; P<.001). During the active intervention period, compliance with chlorhexidine bathing was 82%. Few adverse events were observed. CONCLUSION In this multiple-hospital study, chlorhexidine bathing was associated with significant reductions in central venous catheter-associated bloodstream infection, and these reductions were sustained post-intervention when chlorhexidine bathing was unmonitored. Chlorhexidine bathing was well tolerated and is a useful adjunct to reduce central venous catheter-associated bloodstream infection.
The American Journal of the Medical Sciences | 1987
George P. Maguire; Lawrence J. DeLorenzo; Robert B. Brown; Marianna M. Davidian
A patient with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) had tuberculosis present as an endobronchial mass simulating bronchogenic carcinoma. Endobronchial tuberculosis may be another unusual manifestation of tuberculosis in patients with AIDS. This manifestation of tuberculosis may be missed unless there is a high degree of suspicion. Proper cultures and biopsy specimens should be taken from sites where endobronchial abnormalities are noted in patients at risk for AIDS.
American Journal of Case Reports | 2014
Tanush Gupta; Kaushal Parikh; Sonam Puri; Sahil Agrawal; Nikhil Agrawal; Divakar Sharma; Lawrence J. DeLorenzo
Patient: Male, 25 Final Diagnosis: Lemierre’s disease Symptoms: Back pain • fever • headache • tachycardia • tachypnoe Medication: — Clinical Procedure: — Specialty: Infectious Diseases Objective: Rare disease Background: Lemierre’s disease, also known as the forgotten disease, postanginal sepsis, or necrobacillosis, was first reported in 1890 by Courmont and Cade, but it was Dr. Andre Lemierre, a professor of microbiology, who described this disease in 1936. The typical causative agent is Fusobacterium necrophorum, although other organisms may be involved. The pathogenesis of Lemierre’s disease is not well understood. It is characterized by a primary oropharyngeal infection associated with septicemia, internal jugular vein thrombosis, and metastatic septic emboli. Case Report: We report a case of Lemierre’s disease with bilateral internal jugular vein (IJV) thrombosis and metastatic septic emboli to the lungs and brain, associated with epidural abscess and mycotic aneurysm of the vertebral artery, which is quite rare in Lemierre’s disease. This is the first report of a case of Lemierre’s disease associated with mycotic aneurysm of the vertebral artery. Conclusions: Lemierre’s disease is a rare and perplexing medical entity. Clinical suspicion should be high in previously healthy young adults presenting with fever and neck pain following oropharyngeal infection. Dr. Lemierre stated that ‘symptoms and signs of Lemierre’s disease are so characteristic that it permits diagnosis before bacteriological examination’. The prognosis of patients with Lemierre’s disease is generally good, provided prompt recognition and appropriate treatment.
American Journal of Therapeutics | 2007
Dipak Chandy; Rachna Sahityani; Wilbert S. Aronow; Safdar Khan; Lawrence J. DeLorenzo
We investigated the impact of kinetic beds on the incidence of atelectasis in mechanically ventilated patients in an intensive care unit (ICU). All bronchoscopies performed for atelectasis on mechanically ventilated patients between July 2000 and June 2001 and between July 2002 and June 2003 were reviewed. On July 26, 2001, 50 kinetic beds, 20 continuous lateral rotation therapy modules, and 20 percussion and vibration modules were introduced to our institution. Of the 3399 ICU admissions between July 2000 and June 2001, 71 patients developed atelectasis while being mechanically ventilated. Of the 3065 ICU admissions between July 2002 and June 2003, 83 patients developed atelectasis while being mechanically ventilated. Of these, 48 (58%) patients had left-sided atelectasis, 30 (36%) had right-sided atelectasis, and 5 (6%) had bilateral atelectasis. There was no decrease in the incidence of atelectasis in mechanically ventilated patients at our institution after the introduction of kinetic beds and vibration, percussion, and rotation modules despite their widespread availability.
Archives of Medical Science | 2017
Christopher Nabors; Leanne Forman; Stephen J. Peterson; Melissa Gennarelli; Wilbert S. Aronow; Lawrence J. DeLorenzo; Dipak Chandy; Chul Ahn; Sachin Sule; Gary Stallings; Sahil Khera; Chandrasekar Palaniswamy; William H. Frishman
Introduction Educational milestones are now used to assess the developmental progress of all U.S. graduate medical residents during training. Twice annually, each program’s Clinical Competency Committee (CCC) makes these determinations and reports its findings to the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME). The ideal way to conduct the CCC is not known. After finding that deliberations reliant upon the new milestones were time intensive, our internal medicine residency program tested an approach designed to produce rapid but accurate assessments. Material and methods For this study, we modified our usual CCC process to include pre-meeting faculty ratings of resident milestones progress with in-meeting reconciliation of their ratings. Data were considered largely via standard report and presented in a pre-arranged pattern. Participants were surveyed regarding their perceptions of data management strategies and use of milestones. Reliability of competence assessments was estimated by comparing pre-/post-intervention class rank lists produced by individual committee members with a master class rank list produced by the collective CCC after full deliberation. Results Use of the study CCC approach reduced committee deliberation time from 25 min to 9 min per resident (p < 0.001). Committee members believed milestones improved their ability to identify and assess expected elements of competency development (p = 0.026). Individual committee member assessments of trainee progress agreed well with collective CCC assessments. Conclusions Modification of the clinical competency process to include pre-meeting competence ratings with in-meeting reconciliation of these ratings led to shorter deliberation times, improved evaluator satisfaction and resulted in reliable milestone assessments.
Journal of Thoracic Disease | 2018
Alberto E. Revelo; Sevak Keshishyan; Oleg Epelbaum; Saman Yaghoubian; Lawrence J. DeLorenzo; Dipak Chandy; Francis Carroll; Lisa Paul; Kassem Harris
Persistent air leak (PAL) is a common and challenging condition associated with increased morbidity and mortality, intensive care unit admission, and prolonged hospital stay. Multiple medical and surgical approaches have been developed to manage PAL. Depending on the etiology of PAL, surgical management may be effective and usually performed using video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS). Medical management is less invasive and consists of pleural or bronchoscopic methods. The non-surgical techniques for the management of PAL have not been investigated in large prospective studies, and so their use is mostly guided by observational data. Specifically, the role of intrabronchial valve (IBV) placement for PAL has been the subject of an ever-increasing number of case reports and series documenting successful deployment of IBVs for both surgical and medical PAL. In this case-based discussion, we describe three patients with non-surgical PAL who were managed using multiple modalities, including both surgical and medical approaches. These cases illustrate the challenges in identifying the location of the air leak and in the application of various therapeutic options.
Thorax | 2017
Aparna Kadambi; Parimal Kumar Chaudhari; Lawrence J. DeLorenzo; Oleg Epelbaum
A 66-year-old man with hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection complicated by liver cirrhosis presented with about 6 months of severe right shoulder pain as well as more recent progressive dyspnoea on exertion and lower extremity oedema. On outpatient evaluation at the onset of shoulder symptoms, they had been ascribed to an orthopaedic aetiology. He had recently completed treatment for HCV with ledipasvir/sofosbuvir after failure to respond to a regimen of interferon/ribavirin. Approximately 2 years earlier, he had been diagnosed with unresectable multifocal stage III hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and treated with transarterial chemoembolisation (TACE), radiofrequency ablation and ethanol ablation as a bridge to possible liver transplantation. On presentation, he was hemodynamically stable with no reported pulsus paradoxus. Physical examination revealed an elevated jugular venous pulse, anasarca and decreased breath sounds over the right lower chest. There was no clinically overt ascites. His plain chest radiograph showed a right pleural effusion and a thickened right …