Raphael Adar
Sheba Medical Center
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Raphael Adar.
Annals of Surgery | 1977
Raphael Adar; Alexander Kurchin; Amikam Zweig; Mark Mozes
One hundred patients with primary palmar hyperhidrosis (HH) underwent bilateral upper dorsal sympathectomy (UDS) by the supraclavicular approach. Pre-operative epidemiological and clinical data are described. The immediate and late results, as well as the complications and side-effects are detailed. Follow-up was completed on 93 patients between four and 50 months after the operation (average 18 months). Of 93 patients, 91 had drying of the hands. In 58% some moisture returned to the hands but in no case did the hyperhidrotic state recur. Subjective patient evaluation was excellent or good in 83 patients (89%) and only one patient (a technical failure) was completely dissatisfied. Reasons for some degree of dissatisfaction with operation were mainly compensatory HH in non denervated areas, and Horners syndrome. Compensatory HH usually decreased with passage of time and, permanent Horners syndrome occurred in 8% of patients (4% of procedures). Technical failure can be avoided by use of frozen section examination intraoperatively. For severe cases of palmar HH that cause social, professional and emotional embarassment, bilateral simultaneous UDS by the supraclavicular approach is the procedure of choice: Morbidity is small, and almost all patients enjoy improved quality of life after the operation.
Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1986
Raphael Walden; Yoram Siegel; Zalman Rubinstein; Binyamina Morag; Arieh Bass; Raphael Adar
Sixty-nine percutaneous transluminal angioplasties (PTAs) were performed in the iliac and the femoral arteries of 54 patients. The main factors that might affect the results were reviewed: associated diseases, severity of ischemic symptoms, location and type of lesions (stenosis or occlusion and their length), and presence of disease distal to the site dilated. The vascular status of the patients in our series was more severe than in most others. Improvement at follow-up (average 15 months) was maintained in 74% of 66 radiographically successful PTAs. Poor runoff was the only factor found to affect the outcome deleteriously. Intra-arterial pressure measurements performed during the procedure and vascular laboratory studies were most valuable in assessing immediate and long-term results. Wide variations in results of PTA published in the literature are due to differences in methods of selection, evaluation, and reporting. A plea is made for future presentations of PTA series in an analyzable and comparable way, including and correlating all relevant variables as in the model suggested by the present study.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1983
Raphael Adar; Moshe Z. Papa; Zamir Halpern; Mark Mozes; Shmuel Shoshan; Batya Sofer; Heidy Zinger; Molly Dayan; Edna Mozes
We studied 39 patients with thromboangiitis obliterans to determine their cellular and humoral immune responses to native human collagen Type I and Type III, which are constituents of blood vessels. Cell-mediated sensitivity to these collagens was measured by an antigen-sensitive thymidine-incorporation assay. The mean stimulation index--the ratio of thymidine incorporation in the presence of antigen to that in its absence--with both Type I and Type III collagens used as antigens was significantly higher in patients with thromboangiitis obliterans than in patients with arteriosclerosis obliterans or in healthy male controls. Lymphocytes from 77 per cent of the patients with thromboangiitis obliterans exhibited cellular sensitivity to human Type I or Type III collagens (or both). Furthermore, in 17 of 39 serum samples from the patients with thromboangiitis obliterans a low but significant level of anticollagen antibody activity was detected, whereas there was no antibody activity in serum samples from controls. These results suggest that there is a distinct etiologic factor in this disease and also raise the possibility of differentiating between thromboangiitis obliterans and arteriosclerosis obliterans by immunologic means.
Annals of Surgery | 1986
Papa Mz; Aryeh Bass; Schneiderman J; Drori Y; Tucker E; Raphael Adar
The effect of bilateral upper dorsal sympathectomy (UDS) on cardiac function was investigated in two groups of young healthy patients who underwent bilateral excision of T2 and T3 ganglia for palmar hyperhidrosis. In ten patients echocardiography of left ventricular function (LVF) was performed before operation and 2 weeks after operation. Electrocardiograms (ECG) were done before operation, during operation immediately after sectioning each sympathetic chain, and at 2 weeks after operation. The mean pulse rate decreased significantly in patients after they underwent bilateral UDS. There were no clinical arrhythmias or changes in LVF in any patient. Submaximal exercise testing and ECG tracings done at rest and after effort were obtained for 29 patients before undergoing bilateral UDS, 30 days after operation, and 1-3 more times within a 2-year postoperative period. Pulse rates taken at rest and after effort were significantly lower than those taken after operation, and the blood pressure response to exercise was blunted. ECG tracings showed a significant change in the electrical frontal plane axis and shortening of the QTc interval. These changes were evident 30 days after operation and persisted for 2 years. In conclusion, bilateral UDS has no overt arrhythmogenic effect in the young, healthy heart and its beta-blocker-like effect persists for at least 2 years.
Diabetes | 1978
Aryeh Herman; Raphael Adar; Zalman Rubinstein
Translumbar aortographies performed in 91 patients for limiting leg ischemia were reviewed, and stenosis was graded by points from one (normal vessel) to five (complete occlusion) for each vessel. Of 62 nondiabetic patients, 18 (29 per cent) were impotent, while of 29 diabetics, 17 (58.6 per cent) were impotent (p < 0.01). Significantly greater stenosis (p < 0.005) was found in the internal pudendal arteries of impotent patients when compared statistically with potent patients. This was true for the group as a whole, for diabetics and nondiabetics, and for patients over 50 years old both with and without diabetes. There was no significant difference in the extent of stenosis of the iliac arteries (common and internal) between potent and impotent patients. There was also no significant difference in the pattern of stenosis between diabetic and nondiabetic patients in the group as a whole and also in the potent and impotent subgroups analyzed separately. Neither diminished femoral pulses nor aortographic evidence of external iliac and common femoral arterial stenosis correlated significantly with impotence. These observations indicate that vascular lesions are as important in diabetics as in nondiabetics in the genesis of impotence. Clinical implications regarding diagnostic investigations and treatment are discussed.
Thrombosis Research | 1991
Jacob Schneiderman; Raphael Adar; Naphtali Savion
Severe lower limb ischemia in patients with acute arterial occlusion was associated with a significant increase in systemic fibrinolytic activity. Plasmatic level of t-PA activity was twice the normal value at the peak of ischemia. This level declined gradually within no less than 40 hours after reperfusion procedure or limb amputation had reverted the ischemic state. In spite of major tissue damage and surgical trauma, plasmatic PAI activity stayed within normal range, and did not increase within the first 24 hours postoperatively. These findings strongly suggest that acute ischemia initiates systemic induction of excessive and continuous release of t-PA, which outweighs any anticipated increase in PAI activity.
Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 1975
Nira Reichert; Shlomo Shibolet; Raphael Adar; Joseph Gafni
Seven patients (5 with arteriosclerosis obliterans and 2 with Buergers disease) completed a two‐phase double‐blind crossover trial of propranolol in intermittent claudication. Performance was measured on a moving treadmill. In the initial phase, the patients were hospitalized in order to determine an “effective” dose of propranolol. Improvement was noted in all: after 1,600 mg in 5 and after 240 mg and 600 mg in the others. The controlled phase was carried out on an outpatient basis over 8 weeks, the patients receiving propranolol and placebo in a random manner, each for two 2‐week periods. Comparison of matched periods of drug and placebo revealed no advantage for propranolol. Patients’ performances deteriorated with time. None of the patients evidenced deterioration of occlusive peripheral arterial disease that could be attributed to propranolol, in spite of the high doses used.
Annals of Surgery | 1982
Raphael Adar; Aryeh Bass; Raphael Walden
Advances in medicine that have led to more sophisticated methods of diagnosing, treating and monitoring patients take an ever increasing toll in iatrogenic complications.1–3 It may be argued that the net effect is an improvement in care, but it is self-evident that minimizing iatrogenic complications will increase the benefit to the patients of the ever increasing complex methods of treatment. Iatrogenic complications tend to be sporadic and varied in nature, and are difficult to study as a group. Psychological and medicolegal problems add to this difficulty. However, if the incidence of iatrogenic complications is to be decreased, a concerted effort has to be made to study them. This report deals with such an effort.
Journal of Endovascular Therapy | 2000
Jacob Schneiderman; Benyamina Morag; Alexander Gerniak; Uri Rimon; David Varon; Uri Seligsohn; Avraham Shotan; Raphael Adar
Purpose: To report intermediate results of a pilot study in which the glycoprotein IIb/IIIa receptor antagonist abciximab was given to patients during percutaneous carotid stenting for recurrent internal carotid artery (ICA) stenosis. The objective was to prevent procedure-related cerebral embolic events and decrease the incidence of recurrent stenosis. Methods: Sixteen patients (9 women; mean age 66.5 years, range 39–78) with severe ICA recurrent stenosis (>80%) underwent balloon angioplasty and stenting. Before the procedure, abciximab was administered intravenously as a bolus (0.25 mg/kg) followed by a 12-hour continuous infusion (10 µg/min). Results: Fifteen patients received stents (14 Wallstent and 1 Strecker); 1 vessel was dilated with only 50% improvement in luminal diameter. Two stented arteries had residual stenosis (<30%) but satisfactory luminal diameter was achieved in the remaining 13 (81%) arteries. There were no neurological ischemic events during or following the procedure, nor were there any bleeding or peripheral vascular complications. Duplex surveillance studies up to 12 months revealed no significant recurrent stenosis in the treated vessels. Conclusions: The administration of abciximab in conjunction with percutaneous revascularization procedures for postsurgical carotid artery stenosis may reduce cerebral ischemic episodes. It may also attenuate restenosis in the treated artery.
Annals of Surgery | 1979
Raphael Adar; Eugene Meyer; Amikam Zweig
Although relatively frequent in our experience saphenous neuralgia (SN) is not usually reported as a complication of vascular operations below the inguinal ligament. In 55 patients undergoing extended deep femoral angioplasty (EDFA, n = 28) and femoropopliteal bypass graft (FPBG, n = 27) special attention was paid to incidence and severity of postoperative SN. Severe early postoperative SN was seen in 8/28 patients with EDFA and in 6/27 with FPBG. Milder SN was seen in 10 more patients with EDFA, and 3 other developed SN many months after surgery. The milder forms of SN and late SN were not encountered after FPBG. SN usually improved with the passage of time, and at last follow-up averaging 18 months for EDFA and 33 months for FPBG there remained only 23 patients with mild SN (15 after EDFA and 8 after FPBG). The etiology of SN appears to be trauma to the nerve sustained during operation. Age, sex, diabetes, or the addition of lumbar sympathectomy to the vascular operation did not affect the risk of sustaining early postoperative SN. Increased awareness of this complication may help to understand its pathophysiology better, and possibly to decrease its incidence.