Richard E. Fry
University of Michigan
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American Journal of Surgery | 1987
John A. Weigelt; Erwin R. Thal; William H. Snyder; Richard E. Fry; Donald E. Meier; William J. Kilman
Arterial injuries pose the greatest early threat to the patient with penetrating neck trauma and esophageal injuries, the greatest late threat. Clinical evaluation reliably identifies 80 percent of esophageal injuries, which, in our opinion, is not adequate. In 118 minimally symptomatic or asymptomatic patients with penetrating neck trauma, the combination of esophagography with esophagoscopy identified all 10 esophageal injuries in 118 patients with penetrating neck trauma. These data suggest that patients with penetrating neck trauma and minimal clinical findings should be initially evaluated with arteriography and esophagography. If the results of arteriography or esophagography are positive, then neck exploration should be performed. If the results of esophagography are equivocal, then rigid esophagoscopy should be performed. If all test results are negative, then observation is justified.
Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1984
Daniel F. Fisher; G. Patrick Clagett; Jenny I. Parker; Richard E. Fry; Miles R. Poor; Richard Finn; Bruce E. Brink; William J. Fry
Twenty-four patients with internal carotid artery lesions extending above the second cervical vertebra underwent mandibular subluxation for additional exposure. The original technique of bilateral arch bar wiring requiring 90 minutes for application has evolved into a circummandibular/transnasal wiring technique requiring approximately 10 minutes. Subluxation of the mandibular condyle 10 to 15 mm anteriorly results in displacement of the mandibular ramus 20 to 30 mm anteriorly. This technique provides a marked increase in exposure of the internal carotid artery up to the base of the skull by transforming a triangular operating field into a rectangular field. The technique is quick, easy to perform, and not associated with objective or subjective temporomandibular joint dysfunction.
American Journal of Surgery | 1984
Daniel F. Fisher; G. Patrick Clagett; Robert A. Brigham; Paul M. Orecchla; Jerry R. Youkey; Ronald J. Aronoff; Richard E. Fry; William J. Fry
Six patients with unilateral blue toe syndrome presented a diagnostic dilemma with regard to the source of embolization: central aortic versus peripheral. Two patients had moderately severe aortoiliac atherosclerosis associated with focal stenoses in the superficial femoral arteries, and four patients had mild aortoiliac disease associated with localized plaques confined to either the superficial femoral or popliteal arteries. In all patients, it was elected to explore the peripheral lesions first. At operation, ulcerated plaques or focal stenoses were found, and all lesions had adherent white thrombi on their surfaces. All patients were treated either by localized thromboendarterectomy or short reversed saphenous vein grafting. There was no morbidity or mortality. Recurrent embolization did not occur during a follow-up of 8 to 24 months. Distal atherosclerotic lesions should be sought to explain distal embolization before more complex aortoiliac disease is incriminated. In the presence of concomitant aortoiliac disease, it is mandatory to directly explore the peripheral lesion, open the artery, and carefully examine the lesion in situ. Thrombus adherent to the surface of an ulcerated plaque is evidence of an embolizing source. This approach is associated with minimal morbidity and may be curative. If these findings are not present, it would be appropriate to proceed with staged correction of aortoiliac disease.
Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1986
Richard E. Fry; William J. Fry
From 1976 to 1983, 682 patients have undergone aortic reconstruction at Parkland Memorial Hospital and the Veterans Administration Hospital in Dallas, Texas. Thirty-five patients (5.1%) had a biliary tract operation performed before, during, or after their aortic procedure. Fourteen percent of patients had bacteria in the bile and 11.4% needed common bile duct exploration. Twelve patients had their aortic reconstruction first. Biliary pancreatitis developed postoperatively in one patient. Two patients who had infected prostheses removed had acalculous cholecystitis after operation and one had jaundice and fever 3 years after operation, but no biliary disease was found. Twenty-one patients had the biliary procedure first. Four patients were operated on for suspected aneurysm rupture an average of 18 months after operation. There was one true rupture; this patient had no gallstones. One patient had acute aortic thrombosis 10 days after emergency operation for acute cholecystitis. Only two patients underwent combined operative procedures; both were patients with acute aortic problems in whom chronic and subacute biliary disease was found. Eight operative deaths occurred, all in the patients undergoing aortic procedures. There were no ruptured aneurysms or acute biliary problems needing emergency operation in any patient with cholelithiasis. On the basis of our experience, we believe that concomitant cholecystectomy and aortic reconstructions rarely need to be performed and then only in those patients in whom the risk of not treating both biliary and aortic conditions is greater than the operative risks. In these circumstances, cholecystostomy should be considered to decrease operative time and the risk of graft contamination.
Journal of Surgical Research | 1975
James C. Stanley; Vikrom Sottiurai; Richard E. Fry; William J. Fry
Arterial reconstructions using autogenous veins are often compromised by late graft stenoses, diffuse constrictions, and occasional aneurysmal dilatations. Comprehensive studies of alterations within vein grafts, following transplantation to the arterial circulation, are few in number. Knowledge is even more meager regarding the immediate effects of differing procurement, preparation and placement techniques upon transplanted veins. The present investigation entails a light and electron microscopic assessment of early cellular and subcellular changes following use of three different vein graft preparation media.
American Journal of Surgery | 1988
Randall W. Buss; G. Patrick Clagett; Daniel F. Fisher; Richard E. Fry; John F. Eidt; Ted H. Humble; William J. Fry
To assess the need for routine preoperative computerized tomography scanning to discern patients with rupture among those presenting with acutely symptomatic abdominal aortic aneurysms, a retrospective review was performed. During a 5-year period, all patients presenting with symptomatic aneurysm underwent emergency operation without preoperative computerized tomography. The mortality rate was not significantly different among patients with symptomatic, intact aneurysms undergoing emergency operation (3 percent) and those without symptoms having elective operation (5 percent). The mortality rate of patients with ruptured aneurysms was 68 percent. We concluded that the addition of preoperative computerized tomography to the clinical evaluation would not have improved these results. Furthermore, since it is expensive and delays emergency operation in patients with ruptured aneurysms, computerized tomography seems rarely indicated in symptomatic patients with obvious aneurysms.
American Journal of Surgery | 1989
Edward Clifford; Richard E. Fry; G. Patrick Clagett; Daniel F. Fisher; William J. Fry
To determine the efficacy of extending vascular reconstruction to the pedal vessels, the records of 115 in-situ saphenous vein bypasses to the infragenicular vessels were examined. Ninety-four percent were performed for limb-threatening ischemia and 6 percent for claudication. Ninety-one bypasses were to tibial vessels in the calf (Group 1), whereas severe disease of the tibial vessels in the calf necessitated bypass to arteries at the ankle and beyond in 24 (Group 2). Life-table analysis was used to calculate limb salvage, graft patency, and functional status for Group 1 and Group 2 36 months postoperatively; there were no statistical differences between groups with regard to these variables (p = 0.38). Diabetes had no impact on the success of reconstruction, and preoperative noninvasive testing was not predictive of graft failure in either group. Significantly, limb salvage closely paralleled graft patency and functional status, illustrating the severe disease in all patients. Patients with severe tibial-peroneal atherosclerosis may benefit from bypass grafting to the pedal arteries with a success rate equal to those done to more proximal sites.
American Journal of Surgery | 1986
Daniel F. Fisher; R. James Valentine; Carolyn B. Patterson; G. Patrick Clagett; Richard E. Fry; Stuart I. Myers; William J. Fry
Thirteen patients with internal carotid occlusion underwent 14 primary external carotid revascularization procedures over a 31 month period. Ten patients had obliteration of their internal carotid stump combined with patch angioplasty of the external carotid artery, and 3 had vein bypasses from the common carotid artery to the external carotid artery. Eleven patients were symptomatic with either amaurosis fugax or hemispheric transient ischemic attacks. Two patients were asymptomatic. All patients had serial carotid noninvasive tests (B-mode ultrasonography, spectral analysis, and oculoplethysmography). The mean follow-up was 22 months. Recurrent amaurosis fugax secondary to recurrent stenoses developed in two patients. These were correctly predicted by B-mode imaging and altered flow characteristics on spectral analysis. Both patients were successfully treated with reoperative procedures to prevent failure of the primary reconstruction. External carotid revascularization is a safe and durable procedure, but careful periodic follow-up is necessary to detect stenoses developing at or remote from the initial operative site. Carotid noninvasive tests appear to be helpful in detecting recurrent disease. Carotid revascularization is superior to other forms of therapy in patients who have development of neurologic symptoms ipsilateral to a chronically occluded internal carotid artery.
Surgery | 1980
Richard E. Fry; William J. Fry
Archives of Surgery | 1990
Terry Unruh; Daniel F. Fisher; Terry A. Unruh; Frank Gottschalk; Richard E. Fry; G. Patrick Clagett; William J. Fry