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Dive into the research topics where Maurice S. Albin is active.

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Featured researches published by Maurice S. Albin.


Stroke | 1986

Autoregulation of spinal cord blood flow: is the cord a microcosm of the brain?

Rosemary Hickey; Maurice S. Albin; Leonid Bunegin; Jerry Gelineau

The autoregulatory capability of regional areas of the brain and spinal cord was demonstrated in 18 rats anesthetized with a continuous infusion of intravenous pentothal. Blood flow was measured by the injection of radioactive microspheres (Co57, Sn113, Ru103, Sc46). Blood flow measurements were made at varying levels of mean arterial pressure (MAP) which was altered by neosynephrine to raise MAP or trimethaphan to lower MAP. Autoregulation of the spinal cord mirrored that of the brain, with an autoregulatory range of 60 to 120 mm Hg for both tissues. Within this range, cerebral blood flow (CBF) was 59.2 +/- 3.2 ml/100 g/min (SEM) and spinal cord blood flow (SCBF) was 61.1 +/- 3.6. There was no significant difference in CBF and SCBF in the autoregulatory range. Autoregulation was also demonstrated regionally in the left cortex, right cortex, brainstem, thalamus, cerebellum, hippocampus and cervical, thoracic and lumbar cord. This data provides a coherent reference point in establishing autoregulatory curves under barbiturate anesthesia. Further investigation of the effects of other anesthetic agents on autoregulation of the spinal cord is needed. It is possible that intraspinal cord compliance, like intracranial compliance, might be adversely affected by the effects of anesthetics on autoregulation.


Anesthesiology | 1981

Positioning the right atrial catheter: a model for reappraisal.

Leonid Bunegin; Maurice S. Albin; P. Helsel; Allen Hoffman; Tin-Kan Hung

A flexible Silastic± casting of the human right atrium was developed to correspond to some in vivo human right atrium hemodynamic characteristics including chamber pressures, pulsatility, fluid output, and flow velocity. Using an infusion pump, air was introduced (10 ml in 30 s) into the superior vena cava of the model and aspirated via a catheter from different positions within the model atrial chamber. The tests were carried out at atrial inclinations of 60°, 80°, and 90° from the horizontal and compared the aspiration efficiency of a single-orificed 16-gauge catheter to a 16-gauge multiorified (5 aperatures) catheter. Optimal air aspiration occurred with the multiorificed catheter tip positioned within the area 2.0 cm below the junction of the superior vena cava (SVC) and the atrial chamber at an inclination of 80°. As much as 80 per cent of the incoming air could be aspirated under these conditions. At its optimal position the single-orificed catheter gave a maximal yield of 45 to 50 per cent aspiration when the tip was positioned 3.0 cm above the SVC and atrial chamber junction. Aspiration of air from mid right atrium (4.5 cm below the SVC-atrial junction) was poor regardless of the type of catheter used or atrial inclination. These data suggest a need for reappraisal of catheter design and placement.


Critical Care Medicine | 1992

Anatomy of a defective barrier: Sequential glove leak detection in a surgical and dental environment

Maurice S. Albin; Leonid Bunegin; Edward S. Duke; Richard R. Ritter; Carey P. Page

Objectivesa) To determine the frequency of perforations in latex surgical gloves before, during, and after surgical and dental procedures; b) to evaluate the topographical distribution of perforations in latex surgical gloves after surgical and dental procedures; and c) to validate methods of testing for latex surgical glove patency. DesignMultitrial tests under in vitro conditions and a prospective sequential patient study using consecutive testing. SettingAn outpatient dental clinic at a university dental school, the operating suite in a medical school affiliated with the Veterans Hospital, and a biomechanics laboratory. PersonnelSurgeons, scrub nurses, and dental technicians participating in 50 surgical and 50 dental procedures. MethodsWe collected 679 latex surgical gloves after surgical procedures and tested them for patency by using a water pressure test. We also employed an electronic glove leak detector before donning, after sequential time intervals, and upon termination of 47 surgical (sequential surgical), 50 dental (sequential dental), and in three orthopedic cases where double gloving was used. The electronic glove leak detector was validated by using electronic point-by-point surface probing, fluorescein dye diffusion, as well as detecting glove punctures made with a 27-gauge needle. ResultsThe random study indicated a leak rate of 33.0% (224 out of 679) in latex surgical gloves; the sequential surgical study demonstrated patency in 203 out of 347 gloves (58.5%); the sequential dental study showed 34 leaks in the 106 gloves used (32.1%); and with double gloving, the leak rate decreased to 25.0% (13 of 52 gloves tested). While the allowable FDA defect rate for unused latex surgical gloves is 1.5%, we noted defect rates in unused gloves of 5.5% in the sequential surgical, 1.9% in the sequential dental, and 4.0% in our electronic glove leak detector validating study. In the sequential surgical study, 52% of the leaks had occurred by 75 mins, and in the sequential dental study, 75% of the leaks developed by 30 mins. In terms of the anatomical localization, the thumb and forefinger accounted for more than 60% of the defects. There were no differences in the frequency of glove leaks between the left and right hand. Leak rates were highest for the surgeon (52%), followed by the first assistant (29%) and the scrub nurse (25%). No false negatives were noted using the electronic glove leak detector; one false positive was seen out of 225 gloves tested (0.44%), as noted in our validation studies. ConclusionsSignificantly high glove leak rates were noted after surgical and dental procedures, indicating that the present day latex surgical gloves can become an incompetent barrier once they are used. Unused latex surgical gloves demonstrated a higher rate of defects than allowed by the Food and Drug Administration standards, indicating substantial noncompliance of quality control standards by manufacturers as well as inadequate governmental oversight. Double gloving, or the use of thicker latex surgical gloves, would probably reduce the frequency of glove leaks. Latex surgical gloves should be tested for patency before use and during surgical and dental procedures.


Critical Care Medicine | 1986

An experimental study of craniocerebral trauma during ethanol intoxication

Maurice S. Albin; Leonid Bunegin

This study evaluates the effects of ethanol (blood levels of 200 mg/dl for one hour) and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) on cerebral lesion volumes after pressureinduced focal ischemia during normotension and induced hypotension in the canine. This experimental design simulates the situation where an individual imbibes two to four alcoholic drinks over a one-hour period, then drives a motor vehicle, and suffers a head injury either without significant blood loss or where the cerebral perfusion pressure is reduced to the lower limits of autoregulation (mean arterial pressure of 50 mm Hg). Ethanol was shown to increase brain lesion volumes in both the normotensive (4.5 ± 0.7 cm3) and hypotensive (14.9 ± 2.2 cm3) groups when compared to controls (0.8 ± 0.3 and 2.9 ± 0.4 cm3, respectively). DMSO markedly attenuated this response in the normotensive and hypotensive ethanol groups. It is thought that the intermediate metabolites of ethanol provide a large source of hydroxyl-free radicals in the presence of neuronal tissue damage and that these free radicals are effectively scavenged by DMSO.


Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica | 1985

Spinal Cord and Cerebral Blood Flow Responses to Subarachnoid Injection of Local Anesthetics with and without Epinephrine

S. S. Porter; Maurice S. Albin; W. A. Watson; Leonid Bunegin; G. Pantoja

Subarachnoid anesthesia with lidocaine, mepivacaine, or tetracaine with and without added epinephrine (1:100000) produced no demonstrable changes in average cerebral (CBF) or segmental spinal cord blood flow (SCBF) in 38 cats anesthetized with pentobarbital. Blood flow was measured by the injection of radioactive microspheres. Seven groups of cats received either lidocaine 15 mg, lidocaine 15 mg with epinephrine, mepivacaine 10 mg, mepivacaine 10 mg with epinephrine, tetracaine 5 mg, tetracaine 5 mg with epinephrine, or saline with epinephrine 1:100000. Mean arterial pressure (MAP) decreased significantly (P<0.05) in Groups I‐VI. Added epinephrine had no effect on the decrease in MAP. Amplitude of the somatosensory cortical evoked response decreased significantly in Groups I‐VI, but did not change from control in Group VII. No significant change in CBF or SCBF was demonstrated in any group at any time. Plasma lidocaine and mepivacaine levels were significantly less at 5 min after subarachnoid injection in the groups receiving epinephrine compared to those not receiving epinephrine (P<0.05). The data appear to support the hypothesis of a vasoconstrictive reduction in systemic absorption of intrathecal local anesthetics, but suggest that significant segmental spinal cord ischemia does not occur. Maintenance of total flow in the face of a decrease in MAP suggests that autoregulation in brain and spinal cord may be maintained. Changes in regional SCBF or CBF may have been present but were not examined in this study. Further studies of brain and spinal cord blood flow dynamics, regional flow changes, and regulation of flow after intrathecal agents are necessary.


Anesthesia & Analgesia | 1993

Canine tracheal blood flow after endotracheal tube cuff inflation during normotension and hypotension

Leonid Bunegin; Maurice S. Albin; R. B. Smith

Tracheal tissue damage associated with endotracheal intubation may be a direct result of high mucosal contact pressure (MCP) generated by the endotracheal tube cuff. Tracheal blood flow (TBF) was measured at MCPs in the normotensive and hypotensive (mean arterial blood pressure, 50 mm Hg) canine model. Control TBFs through the individual rings in contact with the endotracheal tube cuff ranged between 26.6 ± 2.7 and 44.5 ± 5.0 with a mean of 35.0 ± 2.5 mL·min−1·100g−1 during normotension, and 15.0 ± 4.9 and 22.5 ± 5.0 with a mean of 18.9 ± 0.9 mL·min−1·100 g−1 during hypotension. TBF was reduced significantly at all elevated MCPs in both groups. TBF also was measured during normotension and hypotension after cuff inflation to 15 mm Hg MCP at 1-h intervals for 3 h. TBF was reduced significantly from control to 14.9 ± 1.5 mL·min−1·100 g−1 after 1 h during normotension, and continued to decline to 6.1 ± 0.9mL·min−1·100g−1 after 3 h. During hypotension, TBF decreased significantly from control to 6.1 ± 0.6 mL·min−1·100 g−1 at 1 h and remained unchanged at 3 h. These findings suggest that even at 20 mm Hg MCP, significant reductions in TBF may occur. For prolonged endotracheal intubation, especially during hypotension, significant reductions in TBF may occur at even lower MCP.


Stroke | 1994

Detection and volume estimation of embolic air in the middle cerebral artery using transcranial Doppler sonography.

Leonid Bunegin; Denise Wahl; Maurice S. Albin

Background and Purpose Cerebral embolism has been implicated in the development of cognitive and neurological deficits following bypass surgery. This study proposes methodology for estimating cerebral air embolus volume using transcranial Doppler sonography. Methods Transcranial Doppler audio signals of air bubbles in the middle cerebral artery obtained from in vivo experiments were subjected to a fast-Fourier transform analysis. Audio segments when no air was present as well as artifact resulting from electrocautery and sensor movement were also subjected to fast-Fourier transform analysis. Spectra were compared, and frequency and power differences were noted and used for development of audio band-pass filters for isolation of frequencies associated with air emboli. In a bench model of the middle cerebral artery circulation, repetitive injections of various air volumes between 0.5 and 500 μL were made. Transcranial Doppler audio output was band-pass filtered, acquired digitally, then subjected to a fast-Fourier transform power spectrum analysis and power spectrum integration. A linear least-squares correlation was performed on the data. Results Fast-Fourier transform analysis of audio segments indicated that frequencies between 250 and 500 Hz are consistently dominant in the spectrum when air emboli are present. Background frequencies appear to be below 240 Hz, and artifact resulting from sensor movement and electrocautery appears to be below 300 Hz. Data from the middle cerebral artery model filtered through a 307- to 450-Hz band-pass filter yielded a linear relation between emboli volume and the integrated value of the power spectrum near 40 jiL. Detection of emboli less than 0.5 μL was inconsistent, and embolus volumes greater than 40 μL were indistinguishable from one another. Conclusions The preliminary technique described in this study may represent a starting point from which automated detection and volume estimation of cerebral emboli might be approached.


Anesthesiology | 1990

The effect of magnesium sulfate administration on cerebral and cardiac toxicity of bupivacaine in dogs

Dale Solomon; Leon Bunegin; Maurice S. Albin

The effect of acutely elevated serum magnesium on the CNS and cardiac toxicity of bupivacaine was studied. Anesthesia was induced in mongrel dogs with thiopental, 25 mg/kg, and ventilation was controlled. Sedation was maintained with fentanyl (25 micrograms/kg bolus and 5 micrograms.kg-1h-1) and pancuronium (0.15 mg/kg bolus and 0.05 mg.kg-1h-1) provided paralysis. Two hours after the thiopental bolus, all animals received an intravenous (iv) infusion of bupivacaine (1 mg.kg-1 min-1). The control group (5 animals) received bupivacaine only. The Mg++ group (5 animals) received MgSO4 140 mg/kg iv and 80 mg.kg-1 h-1 15 min prior to beginning the bupivacaine infusion. Lead II ECG, cardiac hemodynamics, and two-channel EEG were continuously monitored. Serum magnesium concentrations in the Mg++ group rose from 0.67 mM (1.3 mEq/L) to 2.42 mM (4.8 mEq/L). The bupivacaine infusion caused PR and QRS interval prolongation in both groups, but QRS widening was greater in the control group. QT interval corrected for heart rate (QTIc) lengthened only in the control group. A depression of left ventricular stroke work index (LVSWI) occurred to an equal extent in both groups. The seizure dose of bupivacaine was not different between the two groups: 12.9 +/- 2.3 (SEM) mg/kg in the control group and 13.9 +/- 2.5 mg/kg in the Mg++ group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Surgical Neurology | 1985

Brain and lungs at risk after cervical spinal cord transection: intracranial pressure, brain water, blood-brain barrier permeability, cerebral blood flow, and extravascular lung water changes.

Maurice S. Albin; Leonid Bunegin; Steven E. Wolf

The early physiopathologic responses to transection of the cervical spinal cord (C-4) were studied in the experimental animal. After transection, increases were seen in the mean arterial pressure, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, intracranial pressure, brain water, blood--brain barrier permeability, and extravascular lung water with a marked decrease occurring in cerebral blood flow. Pretreatment with an alpha-adrenergic blocker, phentolamine (Regitine Ciba-Geigy Corp.), followed by transection blocked the rise in mean arterial blood pressure and pulmonary capillary wedge pressure but did not affect the increases in intracranial pressure, brain water, blood--brain barrier permeability, and extravascular lung water and decreases in cerebral blood flow. Transection of the cervical spinal cord initiates a complex series of events involving intracranial compliance and pulmonary permeability, placing both brain and lungs at risk.


Neurosurgery | 1987

Intracranial pressure measurement from the anterior fontanelle utilizing a pneumoelectronic switch

Leonid Bunegin; Maurice S. Albin; Rosanne Rauschhuber; Arthur E. Marlin

A newly developed infant cranial model shows that accurate, reproducible, and noninvasive measurements of intracranial pressure (ICP) can be made from the anterior fontanelle when fontanelle pressure is referenced from the bony margins adjacent to the fontanelle opening. Also, this model provides insight into the elastic properties of the fontanelle membrane and the pressure/volume relationships governing ICP transmission through the fontanelle window. An anterior fontanelle pressure monitor design based on data from the infant cranial model was used to monitor anterior fontanelle pressure in three infants with elevated ICP and previously inserted ventricular catheters. Measured anterior fontanelle pressure was highly correlated to ICP (r = 0.962) with high reproducibility after blind application and reapplication. Base line adjustment and in situ recalibration were easily achieved, with the monitor showing no sensitivity to patient movement and excellent frequency response.

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Leonid Bunegin

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Rosemary Hickey

University of Texas at San Antonio

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Howard C. Mitzel

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Jerry Gelineau

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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P. Helsel

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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R. B. Smith

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Maciej Babinski

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Richard R. Ritter

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Steven E. Wolf

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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