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Dive into the research topics where Nicholas S. Burris is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicholas S. Burris.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2008

Optical Coherence Tomography Imaging as a Quality Assurance Tool for Evaluating Endoscopic Harvest of the Radial Artery

Nicholas S. Burris; Emile N. Brown; Michael P. Grant; Zachary N. Kon; Marc Gibber; Junyen Gu; Kimberly Schwartz; Seeta Kallam; Ashish Joshi; Richard Vitali; Robert S. Poston

BACKGROUND Concerns about intimal disruption and spasm have limited enthusiasm for endoscopic radial artery harvest (ERAH), although the risk of these problems after this procedure remains uncertain. Radial artery conduits were screened intraoperatively before and after ERAH vs open harvest using catheter-based high-resolution optical coherence tomography (OCT) imaging. METHODS Twenty-four cadavers and 60 coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) patients scheduled to receive a RA graft underwent OCT imaging before (in situ) and after (ex vivo) open harvest or ERAH. Spasm was quantified by the percentage change in luminal volume between images. Intimal disruption was classified as minor or severe depending on whether the defect was confined to branch ostia or involved the luminal surface. Histology was used to confirm OCT findings. RESULTS Luminal volume significantly declined after harvest in all RAs from CABG patients, but there was no difference between groups: -43% +/- 29% vs -35% +/- 38% change after ERAH (n = 21) vs open harvest (n = 39; p = 0.342). Significantly more intimal injury was noted after ERAH vs open harvest (34/41 vs 9/43, intimal tears/total evaluated RAs, p < 0.0001). Most intimal injury was minor: only 2 tears involved the luminal surface of the RA (both after ERAH). Serial imaging in cadavers revealed that 86% of ostial tears occur in ERAH during the initial blunt dissection step using the endoscope. CONCLUSIONS Although branch injury is a pitfall of ERAH, OCT imaging documented that the quality of RA procured is acceptable and comparable with open harvest. Catheter-based OCT provides an important quality assurance tool for RA harvest.


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2007

Thinking inside the graft: applications of optical coherence tomography in coronary artery bypass grafting

Emile N. Brown; Nicholas S. Burris; Junyan Gu; Zachary N. Kon; Patrick Laird; Seeta Kallam; Cha Min Tang; Joseph M. Schmitt; Robert S. Poston

Recent advances in catheter-based optical coherence tomography (OCT) have provided the necessary resolution and acquisition speed for high-quality intravascular imaging. Complications associated with clearing blood from the vessel of a living patient have prevented its wider acceptance. We identify a surgical application that takes advantage of the vascular imaging powers of OCT but that circumvents the difficulties. Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) is the most commonly performed major surgery in America. A critical determinant of its outcome has been postulated to be injury to the conduit vessel incurred during the harvesting procedure or pathology preexistent in the harvested vessel. As a test of feasibility, intravascular OCT imaging is obtained from the radial arteries (RAs) and/or saphenous veins (SVs) of 35 patients scheduled for CABG. Pathologies detected by OCT are compared to registered histological sections obtained from discarded segments of each graft. OCT reliably detects atherosclerotic lesions in the RAs and discerns plaque morphology as fibrous, fibrocalcific, or fibroatheromatous. OCT is also used to assess intimal trauma and residual thrombi related to endoscopic harvest and the quality of the distal anastomosis. We demonstrate the feasibility of OCT imaging as an intraoperative tool to select conduit vessels for CABG.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2008

Harmonic scalpel versus electrocautery for harvest of radial artery conduits: Reduced risk of spasm and intimal injury on optical coherence tomography

Philip S. Brazio; Patrick Laird; Chenyang Xu; Junyan Gu; Nicholas S. Burris; Emile N. Brown; Zachary N. Kon; Robert S. Poston

OBJECTIVE Vasospasm is the primary obstacle to widespread adoption of the radial artery as a conduit in coronary artery bypass grafting. We used optical coherence tomography, a catheter-based intravascular imaging modality, to measure the degree of radial artery spasm induced by means of harvest with electrocautery or a harmonic scalpel in patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting. METHODS Radial arteries were harvested from 44 consecutive patients with a harmonic scalpel (n = 15) or electrocautery (n = 29). Vessels were imaged before harvesting and after removal from the arm, with saphenous vein tracts serving as internal controls. Optical coherence tomographic findings for the degree of harvesting-induced injury were validated against histologic measures. RESULTS Optical coherence tomographic measures of endovascular dimensions and injury correlated strongly with histologic findings. Mean luminal volume, a measure of vasospasm, decreased significantly less after harvesting with a harmonic scalpel (9% +/- 7%) than with electrocautery (35% +/- 6%, P = .015). Completely intact intima was present in 11 (73%) of 15 radial arteries harvested with a harmonic scalpel (73%) compared with 9 of 29 arteries harvested by means of electrocautery (31%, P = .011). Intraoperative flow measurements and patency rates at 5 days postoperatively were not significantly different among groups. CONCLUSIONS Optical coherence tomography provides a level of speed and accuracy for quantifying endothelial injury and vasospasm that has not been described for any other modality, suggesting potential as an intraoperative quality assurance tool. Our optical coherence tomographic findings suggest that the harmonic scalpel induces less spasm and intimal injury compared with electrocautery.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2007

Strategies to reduce intraluminal clot formation in endoscopically harvested saphenous veins

Emile N. Brown; Zachary N. Kon; Richard Tran; Nicholas S. Burris; Junyen Gu; Patrick Laird; Philip S. Brazio; Seeta Kallam; Kimberly Schwartz; Lisa Bechtel; Ashish Joshi; Shaosong Zhang; Robert S. Poston


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2007

Catheter-based infrared light scanner as a tool to assess conduit quality in coronary artery bypass surgery

Nicholas S. Burris; Kimberly Schwartz; Cha Min Tang; M. Samir Jafri; Joseph M. Schmitt; Michael H. Kwon; Ozeki Toshinaga; Junyan Gu; Jamie Brown; Emile N. Brown; Richard N. Pierson; Robert S. Poston


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2008

Warm ischemia provokes inflammation and regional hypercoagulability within the heart during off-pump coronary artery bypass: a possible target for serine protease inhibition

Zachary N. Kon; Emile N. Brown; Michael C. Grant; Toshinaga Ozeki; Nicholas S. Burris; Michael J. Collins; Michael H. Kwon; Robert S. Poston


Innovations: Technology and Techniques in Cardiothoracic and Vascular Surgery | 2006

Incidence of residual clot strands in saphenous vein grafts after endoscopic harvest.

Nicholas S. Burris; Kimberly Schwartz; Jamie M. Brown; Michael Kwon; Richard N. Pierson; Bartley P. Griffith; Robert S. Poston


Atherosclerosis | 2009

Intraoperative detection of intimal lipid in the radial artery predicts degree of postoperative spasm

Emile N. Brown; Nicholas S. Burris; Zachary N. Kon; Michael C. Grant; Philip S. Brazio; Chenyang Xu; Patrick Laird; Junyen Gu; Seeta Kallam; Pranjal Desai; Robert S. Poston


Journal of Surgical Research | 2007

The role of preexisting pathology in the development of neointimal hyperplasia in coronary artery bypass grafts.

Zachary N. Kon; Charles S. White; Michael H. Kwon; Jean Judy; Emile N. Brown; Junyan Gu; Nicholas S. Burris; Patrick Laird; Talitha Brown; Phillip S. Brazio; James S. Gammie; James M. Brown; Bartley P. Griffith; Robert S. Poston


Journal of Surgical Research | 2007

8: The timing of anticoagulation influences the degree of retained clot in endoscopically harvested saphenous veins

Emile N. Brown; Nicholas S. Burris; Zachary N. Kon; T. Brown; James M. Brown; Robert S. Poston

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Junyan Gu

University of Maryland

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Junyen Gu

University of Maryland

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