Philip J. Osmundson
Mayo Clinic
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Featured researches published by Philip J. Osmundson.
Circulation | 1962
Donald R. Holsinger; Philip J. Osmundson; Jesse E. Edwards
The records of 66 necropsied cases of periarteritis nodosa in which there was no associated collagen disease were reviewed with reference specifically to the heart. Clinically, congestive heart failure and its manifestations were the most important cardiac findings. Congestive heart failure developed some time during the illness in 57 per cent of the patients, and 44 per cent died as a direct result of this cardiac condition. Myocardial infarction was diagnosed clinically in only three cases. The electrocardiogram was abnormal in 35 of 41 cases but was diagnostic of left ventricular hypertrophy in only six cases and of acute myocardial infarction in only three cases; in the other cases the changes were of a nonspecific nature. Pathologically, 41 of the 66 hearts had evidence of necrotizing arteritis of the coronary arteries; in 39 of these the arteritis had been acute, and in two it had healed. Forty-one of the 66 hearts exhibited myocardial infarcts. Evidence of acute pericarditis was found in 22 hearts; nine of these cases were attributed to uremia, one was due to transmural myocardial infarction, three could not be classified, and the remaining nine were attributed directly to the periarteritis nodosa. Forty-one of the 64 hearts that had been weighed were hypertrophied.
Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1992
J.Michael Bacharach; Thom W. Rooke; Philip J. Osmundson; Peter Gloviczki
The purpose of this study was to determine if transcutaneous oxygen pressure (tcPO2) measurements can be used to predict amputation site healing in lower limbs with arterial occlusive disease. We measured tcPO2 (supine and with limb elevation) in 90 limbs before amputation and reviewed their subsequent clinical course. Of these, 52 (57%) successfully healed, 21 (23%) failed, and 17 (18%) exhibited delayed healing. Limbs with delayed healing or failure had significantly lower tcPO2 values than values of those that healed. A tcPO2 greater than or equal to 40 torr was associated with primary or delayed healing in 51 of 52 limbs (98%), and a tcPO2 value of less than 20 torr was universally associated with failure. For patients with a tcPO2 between 20 and 40 torr, tcPO2 measurements obtained during limb elevation improved the predictability of outcome. We conclude that supine tcPO2 measurements can help predict amputation site healing, and that tcPO2 measurement during limb elevation improves predictability in limbs with borderline supine tcPO2 values.
Circulation | 1961
Philip J. Osmundson; John A. Callahan; Jesse E. Edwards
The present study presents pertinent clinical and pathologic findings in 20 cases of ruptured mitral chordae tendineae encountered at the Mayo Clinic between 1934 and 1958 inclusive. Mitral insufficiency results from the rupture of chordae tendineae, the severity being related to the number of chordae ruptured. The resulting heart disease may be severe and may progress to cardiac decompensation and death. Bacterial endocarditis was the major etiologic factor in rupture of the chordae tendineae in this study.
Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1985
Philip J. Osmundson; W. Michael O'Fallon; Ian P. Clements; Francis J. Kazmier; Bruce R. Zimmerman; Pasquale J. Palumbo
We studied the reproducibility of four tests of peripheral occlusive arterial disease in 54 subjects, 32 of whom had this disease. We found that the reproducibility of systolic blood pressures obtained at rest from the thighs, calves, and ankles approximated that of arm systolic and diastolic blood pressures, as did the ankle-to-arm systolic blood pressure ratios. The average of the tenth and ninetieth percentile ranges of the resting systolic blood pressure ankle-to-arm ratios was +/- 0.10. Systolic blood pressures from the fingers were somewhat less reproducible, and those from the toes were even more variable. Systolic blood pressure ankle-to-arm ratios measured after the patient had exercised were less reproducible than resting ratios. The average of the tenth and ninetieth percentile ranges of the 1-, 3-, 5-, and 10-minute ratios after exercise was -0.13 to +0.16. Skin temperatures from the fingers and toes were approximately as reproducible as systolic blood pressures from the arms and legs and as the resting ankle-to-arm blood pressure ratios. Pulse-volume recordings from the thighs, calves, ankles, feet, toes, and fingers were very poorly reproducible. We conclude that information on the reproducibility of these measurements is essential in the evaluation of noninvasive arterial tests that are used to determine the course of peripheral occlusive arterial disease.
Mayo Clinic Proceedings | 1985
Victoria L. Beckett; James V. Donadio; Leonard A. Brennan; Doyt L. Conn; Philip J. Osmundson; Edmund Y. S. Chao; Keith E. Holley
We conducted a prospective study of captopril therapy in patients with scleroderma and combined hypertension and renal insufficiency. In all seven patients studied during a 1-year period, control of blood pressure was achieved, and in six of the seven, renal function stabilized or improved. The total daily dosage of captopril ranged from 32 to 100 mg, divided into doses taken every 6 to 8 hours. Although one patient had a suspected captopril-induced rash for a short time, none of the other patients had any adverse side effects. Renal biopsies were performed in six patients; in three of them, specimens were obtained both at the beginning and at the end of the study. The initial biopsy specimens showed changes that were similar to those described in other reports. Findings on repeat biopsies were unchanged except for evidence of chronicity. In the six patients with controlled blood pressure and improved or stabilized renal function, the improvement was maintained for 1 1/2 to nearly 3 years on this drug therapy. Using specific measurements of skin compliance and vascular blood flow in the upper extremities, we could detect no evidence, however, of concomitant improvement in these other features of the disease. Although the blood pressure was controlled with captopril, one patient had progressive skin induration, one had progressive pulmonary insufficiency, and another had progressive renal failure.
Mayo Clinic Proceedings | 1987
Thom W. Rooke; Anthony W. Stanson; C. Michael Johnson; Patrick F. Sheedy; W. Eugene Miller; Larry H. Hollier; Philip J. Osmundson
From January 1979 to March 1984, percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) was used to treat 148 limbs of 135 Mayo Clinic patients with occlusive arterial disease of the lower extremities. The procedure was technically successful in more than 95% of the attempts. The outcome was clinical improvement in 89 limbs and no improvement in 40 limbs; in 19 limbs, PTA was technically successful but the patient was dismissed from the hospital and lost to follow-up before the extent of improvement could be determined. Mean ankle/brachial pressure indices increased after PTA in those with clinical improvement but not in those without improvement. Clinical improvement was less likely to follow PTA in patients with advanced age, diabetes, severe initial symptoms, low ankle/brachial indices, or distal occlusive disease. In patients with improvement after PTA, the mean follow-up period was 33 months; during that time, failure (defined as recurrence of the original symptoms or the need for repeat PTA or operation) occurred at a rate of 6.4% per year. Serious complications occurred after three procedures (2.0%). We conclude that PTA is technically feasible and generally safe for many patients with occlusive arterial disease of the lower limbs.
Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 1965
Sheldon G. Sheps; Philip J. Osmundson; James C. Hunt; Alexander Schirger; John F. Fairbairn
Medical treatment of hypertension was undertaken in 54 selected patients with arteriographically proved stenosis of the renal artery (32 with atheromatous and 22 with fibromuscular lesions). At follow‐up study (average, 20.3 months), 65 per cent of 49 surviving patients were normotensive on a regimen of common antihypertensive drugs in usual doses. There also was improvement in the hypertensive changes noted in the optic fundus. In 13 patients, additional cardiovascular episodes complicated the hypertensive disease and 5 of these patients had died. The frequent long duration of hypertension and frequent bilateral involvement of the renal arteries necessitate caution in recommending surgical treatment when: (1) the situation technically demands nephrectomy; (2) there are renovascular lesions in the absence of significant hypertension; (3) arteriographic and renal function data are discordant; and (4) there is associated severe symptomatic cardiovascular disease, old age, or other infirmities.
Angiology | 1992
Thom W. Rooke; J.L. Heser; Philip J. Osmundson
Plethysmography can be used to detect and assess venous incompetence in the lower extremities. The authors recently evaluated a new device designed for this purpose that uses strain gauges to determine changes in lower extremity cir cumference occurring with (and immediately after) exercise. The device plots a curve of volume against time for each limb and automatically calculates key values such as the volume of blood expelled from the lower limb veins during exercise and the time required for the veins to refill following exercise. The ap paratus was incorporated into their noninvasive vascular laboratory and used (along with other standard tests) to study patients referred for suspected venous incompetence. They observed the following: (1) A shortened postexercise refilling time ac curately identified limbs with venous incompetence. (2) The clinical severity of venous incompetence was inversely related to the refilling time. (3) Exercise- induced changes in lower extremity volume correlated well with simultaneously determined changes in venous pressure. (4) Valvular incompetence could be local ized to the deep or superficial veins based upon the improvement in refilling times seen following placement of elastic tourniquets around the lower limb. (5) The type of exercise performed (knee bends while the patient was standing versus ankle reflexes while sitting) had little effect on results. The authors conclude that exercise venous plethysmography is a useful noninvasive tool for assessing low er limb venous incompetence.
JAMA Internal Medicine | 1990
Thom W. Rooke; Philip J. Osmundson
A retrospective study involving 129 patients (256 limbs) with unilateral or bilateral arterial occlusive disease was performed to assess the effects of age, sex, smoking, and diabetes on lower limb transcutaneous oxygen tension (TcPo2) measurements of were made according to a standard protocol, and the severity of lower limb arterial occlusive disease was estimated using the clinical signs and symptoms of disease or the ankle/brachial blood pressure index. The results demonstrated that age, sex, and smoking had no major effects on limb TcPo2 or disease severity; however, both limb TcPo2 and clinical disease severity were adversely affected by diabetes. When limbs with similar occlusive disease severity were compared, TcPo2 remained consistently lower in diabetic than in nondiabetic patients. We conclude that diabetes causes a reduction in limb TcPo2 beyond that which can be accounted for by large-vessel arterial occlusive disease alone.
Angiology | 1987
Thom W. Rooke; Larry H. Hollier; Philip J. Osmundson
The authors evaluated the relationship between sympathetic nerve activity and transcutaneous oxygen tension (TcpO2) in normal and ischemic lower extremities. Dorsal foot TcpO2 was measured by using oxygen-sensing electrodes with surface temperatures of 42 ° C and 45°C; in theory, changes in sympathetic activity should affect vasomotor tone and TcpO2 in skin beneath an electrode at 42 °C (submaximal vasodilation), but not at 45°C (maximal vasodilation). The vasodilation index (TcpO2 at 42°C/TcpO 2 at 45°C) was created as an index of vasomotor tone (vasodilation index increases as tone decreases). In normal limbs (n=24) averages for TcpO 2 at 42°C, TcpO2 at 45°C, and vasodilation index were 30.3 mmHg, 62.1 mmHg, and 0.47, respectively. In subjects (n=5) with quadriplegia and reduced sympathetic tone secondary to cervical cord trauma, TcpO 2 at 42 ° C and vasodilation index were increased (45.0 mmHg and 0.61); TcpO2 at 45 ° C did not change. When normal subjects (n=7) were chilled for twenty minutes with a cooling blanket at 5 ° C (to increase sympathetic tone) average vasodilation index dropped from 0.50 to 0.29. Among ischemic limbs (n = 34) vasodilation index was highly variable (range: 0-0.77); in general, vasodilation index fell as the ischemia worsened. In a subset of patients with ischemic limbs, the vasodilation index increased after the limb was wrapped in a warm dressing (average vasodilation index=0.25without dressing, 0.37 with dressing). The authors conclude: (1) TcpO2 can be used to assess the degree of vasomotor tone (and sympathetic activity) in skin; (2) tone generally increases as ischemia worsens; and (3) local warmth can improve cutaneous circulation in ischemic limbs.