Robert B. Patterson
Brown University
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Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1997
Robert B. Patterson; Bernadine M. Pinto; Bess H. Marcus; Andrea Colucci; Tina Braun; Mary B. Roberts
PURPOSE This study was performed to test the effectiveness of a formal supervised exercise program against a home-based exercise program for both walking ability and quality of life endpoints. METHODS Patients with arterial claudication were randomized to either a 12-week supervised exercise program (SUPEX) with weekly lectures relating to peripheral vascular disease or to a home exercise group (HOMEX) who attended an identical lecture program and received weekly exercise instruction. The study population included 29 men and 26 women, with a mean age of 69.1 +/- 8.1 years. Forty-seven patients completed the 12-week program, 46 were available for testing at completion, and 38 for 6-month testing. Claudication pain time (CPT) and maximum walking time (MWT) on a progressive treadmill exercise test were assessed at baseline, program completion, and 6 months. The Medical Outcomes Study Short Form-36 (SF-36) was administered at these intervals to assess effects on quality of life. RESULTS Each group improved (p < 0.001) in both CPT and MWT at the completion of the 12-week program, which was sustained at the 6-month follow-up. Increase in HOMEX CPT from baseline (3.6 +/- 2.73 minutes) to 6-month follow-up (6.6 +/- 3.17 minutes) was less than for the SUPEX group (3.8 +/- 2.74 to 11.2 +/- 4.02 minutes, respectively); similar results were obtained for MWT. At both completion and 6 months, there was a significant intergroup difference for CPT and MWT (p < 0.004) favoring SUPEX. For both groups, measures of health perception based on the SF-36 demonstrated improvement (p < 0.002) in Physical Function Subscale, Bodily Pain Subscale, and Physical Composite Score. There were no between-group differences on the subsets of the SF-36 at the three assessment intervals. CONCLUSIONS Supervised exercise programs provide superior increased walking ability in the noninterventional therapy of arterial claudication, and both supervised and home based exercise therapy result in improved SF-36 functional measures. The lack of intergroup differences in these measures may be a result of the high degree of interaction with healthcare providers in the HOMEX group. Although a supervised program results in optimal walking benefits, a highly structured home-based program provides similar functional improvement and may be a satisfactory alternative for patients with lesser walking requirements.
Journal of Surgical Research | 1990
Richard J. Fowl; Robert B. Patterson; Robert J. Gewirtz; Douglas K. Anderson
Ischemic spinal cord injury following repair of the thoracoabdominal aorta is an unpredictable and devastating complication. Recently, a new class of agents has been developed, the 21-aminosteroids, which have been demonstrated to reduce ischemic neurologic injury in several animal models. We performed this study to determine if the 21-aminosteroid U-74006F exerted a protective effect in a rabbit model of spinal cord ischemia. Nineteen New Zealand rabbits were anesthetized and then subjected to 25 min of temporary infrarenal aortic occlusion. Nine rabbits were given 3.0 mg/kg U-74006F iv 10 min prior to clamping the aorta, followed by 0.75 mg/kg every hour for 6 hr beginning 1 hr after the clamp was removed. Ten rabbits received equivalent doses of an aqueous buffered vehicle. The rabbits were neurologically graded upon awakening and then daily using the following scale: grade 0 = complete paralysis, grade 1 = partial deficit, grade 2 = normal. In the U-74006F-treated group, five animals were normal, one had a partial deficit, and three were paraplegic. In the vehicle group, only one animal was normal and nine were paraplegic. The difference between the mean neurologic grading scores of the two groups was statistically significant (P = 0.013). It is believed that U-74006F acts at the cell membrane level during reperfusion by inhibiting lipid peroxidation and lipid hydrolysis. Our data suggest that this agent may significantly reduce the incidence of postischemic spinal cord injury following temporary aortic occlusion.
Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1989
Robert B. Patterson; Richard J. Fowl; James D. Keller; William Schomaker; Richard F. Kempczinski
We reviewed our experience with impedance plethysmography (IPG) and duplex scanning in the diagnosis of acute deep venous thrombosis (DVT) to determine their respective accuracy and current role in our noninvasive vascular laboratory. During a recent 22-month period 1776 patients were evaluated in our laboratory for DVT. Sixty patients (64 limbs) underwent ascending venography within 48 hours of testing (49 limbs were evaluated by all three modalities). With the venograms used as the reference standard, B-mode scanning correctly identified the presence of acute thrombus in 24 of 27 limbs (88.8%) and the absence of thrombus in 31 of 34 limbs (91.2%), for an overall accuracy of 90.6%. IPG alone was less sensitive (75%) and less specific (44.8%), with an overall accuracy of only 57.1%. Twenty-eight IPGs were performed on patients with negative venous scans. Two positive IPGs were the result of chronic venous occlusion and two others detected clinically significant isolated iliac vein thrombi, but 13 patients had false positive IPGs. One false negative IPG occurred. The difference in the sensitivity of scan alone vs scan plus IPG was not significant (chi 2 = 0.045; difference not significant), but the decrease in specificity was chi 2 = 17.3; p less than 0.001). The rarity of isolated iliac vein thrombosis and the high false positive rate for IPG do not justify its continued use if B-mode venous scanning is available. Although positive scan results may be used confidently to institute therapy without the need for venography, in high-risk patients with a strong clinical suspicion of proximal DVT despite a negative scan venography should be obtained before withholding anticoagulation.
Annals of Vascular Surgery | 1990
Robert B. Patterson; Richard J. Fowl; Richard F. Kempczinski; Robert J. Gewirtz; Rakesh Shukla
We have used polytetrafluoroethylene preferentially for bypasses to the above-knee popliteal artery since 1979. Since this approach has recently been challenged, we reviewed our experience with 138 grafts in 128 patients. The majority (74%) of patients were male with a mean age of 63.2 years. Risk factors included: smoking (85%), hypertension (55%), diabetes mellitus (45%), and coronary artery disease (41%). The indications for operation were disabling claudication (18%), rest pain (42%), gangrene/tissue loss (33%), and miscellaneous (7%). Perioperative (30 day) mortality was 3% and morbidity (excluding amputation or graft failure) was 5%. Patients were followed for up to eight years with a mean follow-up of 22.1 months. Grafts which remained patent, but did not prevent major amputation, were classified as “failed”. Primary patency was 75% at one year and 54% at five years. Limb salvage was 88% at one year and 70% at five years. Risk factors, indication for operation and arteriographic runoff had no statistically significant impact on short- or long-term patency. However, bypass grafts to isolated popliteal segments had a significantly (p=0.025) increased perioperative failure rate compared to all other grafts. Our data support the continued use of polytetrafluoroethylene for above-knee femoropopliteal bypass except perhaps in patients who require grafting to an isolated popliteal segment where higher early failure rates were seen.
Vascular Medicine | 2001
Deborah Riebe; Robert B. Patterson; Christina M Braun
In a vascular rehabilitation program, 28% of our frail elderly patients are unable to be tested with traditional progressive exercise protocols at program entry due to the high (2.0 miles/h or 3.2 km/h) initial treadmill speeds. The purpose of this investigation was to compare a new progressive treadmill protocol which has a reduced initial speed (1.0 mile/h or 1.6 km/h) to an established protocol performed at 2.0 miles/h (3.2 km/h) to determine the comparability and reproducibility of the new protocol. Eleven patients with arterial claudication performed three symptom-limited exercise tests in random order. Two tests used the new protocol while the remaining trial used the established protocol. Claudication pain was measured using a 5-point scale. Oxygen consumption, heart rate, minute ventilation, respiratory exchange ratio and blood pressure at peak exercise were similar among the three trials. There were strong intra-class correlations for peak oxygen consumption (r = 0.97), onset of claudication (r = 0.96) and maximum walking time (r = 0.98) between the two trials using the new protocol. There was also a significant correlation between the new protocol and the established protocol for peak oxygen consumption (r = 0.90) and maximum walking time (r = 0.89). The new progressive treadmill protocol represents a valid, reliable protocol for patients with arterial claudication. This protocol may be useful for testing patients with a low functional capacity so that clinically appropriate exercise prescriptions can be established and the efficacy of treatments can be determined.
Annals of Vascular Surgery | 1989
Robert B. Patterson; James D. Keller; Edward B. Silberstein; Richard F. Kempczinski
Two distinct series of experiments were performed to compare the behavior of ePTFE vascular grafts coated with basement membrane gel to that of identical grafts coated with fibronectin. Bilateral carotid interposition grafts (10 cm long) were interposed in 16 conditioned mongrel dogs. In the first series of experiments (n = 10), each graft was seeded with radiolabeled endothelial cells and initial endothelial cell adherence was determined. Following restoration of blood flow in the grafts, endothelial cell retention was measured for 24 hours. Seeding efficiency was 66.48% (+/- 13.2) for fibronectin-coated grafts and 56.58% (+/- 13.51) for gel-coated grafts. There was a slow, constant loss of activity during the first 90 minutes of imaging, and at 24 hours of observation the activity remaining on the fibronectin-coated graft was 13.2 +/- 3.98% of the initial graft activity. Although the basement membrane gel had a higher mean activity at 24 hours (18.9 +/- 7.22%), the difference was not statistically significant at any interval. In the second series of animals (n = 6), radiolabeled platelets were injected within 60 minutes following restoration of flow. Total platelet activity on the explanted grafts was 3.36 (+/- 1.35) x 10(5) counts per gram/0.2 minute for the fibronectin-coated grafts. The gel-coated grafts had 2.74 (+/- 1.33) x 10(5) counts per gram/0.2 minute, a difference that was not statistically significant. Thus, despite its theoretical appeal, basement membrane gel was no better than fibronectin in increasing endothelial cell adherence and retention, and the resulting flow surface of grafts treated with either compound appeared to attract platelets to an equal degree.
Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2008
Carl Harper; Paul A. Cardullo; Albert K. Weyman; Robert B. Patterson
OBJECTIVE Reversal of flow in the extracranial vertebral artery secondary to a proximal subclavian/innominate artery stenosis or occlusion is a frequent finding during carotid duplex ultrasonography. The characteristics of basilar artery flow are not well defined in these patients. The objective of this study is to evaluate basilar artery flow in patients with retrograde vertebral artery flow. METHODS From a transforaminal vice transforamen approach with the patient seated, pulsed Doppler scan spectral waveforms were obtained from the distal segment of each vertebral artery (depths of 66 mm and 70 mm) and throughout the basilar artery (depths of 80 mm up to 116 mm). The direction of flow and the peak flow velocity were recorded at each location. In the subset of patients with antegrade flow, we initiated a 5-minute period of arm ischemia (produced by brachial blood pressure cuff inflated to a suprasystolic pressure) and compared flow direction to baseline. RESULTS Twenty-five patients with retrograde vertebral artery flow on carotid duplex ultrasonography underwent transcranial Doppler (TCD) ultrasonography scan of the distal vertebral arteries and the basilar artery. There were 10 males (58-85-years-old; mean 70.7 years) and 15 females (47-85-years-old; mean 66.0 years). An additional 11 patients who had normal vertebral flow underwent TCD and served as a control group. Nineteen patients (76%) demonstrated antegrade basilar artery flow at rest. Six patients (24%) demonstrated abnormal basilar artery flow at rest. Five had complete reversal of flow; one had intermittent flow reversal which became retrograde throughout the cardiac cycle following a period of arm ischemia ipsilateral to the patients retrograde vertebral artery flow. No patient with retrograde vertebral artery flow and antegrade basilar artery flow at rest demonstrated a change in basilar artery peak velocity or direction of flow following arm ischemia. CONCLUSION Less than 25% of patients with retrograde vertebral artery flow on carotid duplex ultrasonography scan demonstrated a corresponding reversal of flow in the basilar artery. The vast majority of patients do not develop flow reversal in the basilar artery. Provocative maneuvers to increase collateral flow to the arm ipsilateral to retrograde vertebral artery flow did not appear to alter basilar artery flow velocity or direction of flow. Transcranial Doppler ultrasonography is indicated in patients with retrograde vertebral artery flow to document basilar artery flow, especially prior to intervention in patients with symptoms suggestive of posterior cerebral circulation insufficiency.
Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1997
Anthony F. Cutry; David Whitley; Robert B. Patterson
We report a case of successful surgical management of a potentially life-threatening complication of aortoiliac stent placement. A 59-year-old man who had Leriche syndrome underwent bilateral iliac artery and infrarenal aortic stent placement at another institution. His history was significant for retroperitoneal lymph node dissection at 19 years of age for testicular cancer. One week after stent placement, the patient was readmitted with abdominal pain, poor oral intake, and diffuse intermittent tenderness. Evaluation with computed tomographic scanning and endoscopy was unremarkable, and the patient was discharged. He was admitted to our institution 1 week later with persistent abdominal pain. A computed tomographic scan of the abdomen revealed a large pseudoaneurysm of the abdominal aorta. The patient underwent urgent exploration, and exclusion of his infrarenal aorta was achieved with aortobifemoral bypass grafting. After the operation, the patients course was complicated by a large paraduodenal hematoma, which resulted in a gastric outlet obstruction, which was managed without operation. This case illustrates a potential life-threatening complication of extensive stent placement for aortoiliac occlusive disease. Injury to the abdominal aorta must be considered in a symptomatic patient after the placement of stents in the aortoiliac region, beyond the immediate periprocedural period.
Annals of Vascular Surgery | 1993
Richard J. Fowl; John Blebea; Anthony Stallion; Jeffrey T. Marsch; Joanne G. Marsch; Mary Love; Robert B. Patterson; Richard F. Kempczinski
Abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAA) are potentially lethal arterial lesions that are best managed by elective surgical repair. However, asymptomatic AAAs may go undetected on routine physical examination or patients with such lesions may not consult a physician. To determine the prevalence of asymptomatic AAAs in a high-risk population, weretrospectively reviewed all abdominal CT scans on veterans >50 years of age that had been ordered for indications other than aneurysmal disease during a recent 10-month period. Of the 111 patients studied, 15 (13.5%) had suprarenal and/or infrarenal AAAs (one patient had both). Patients with AAAs were significantly older (p=0.0001) and were heavier tobacco users (p=0.003). For patients >60 years of age with peripheral vascular occlusive disease and a history of tobacco use, there was a 29.2% prevalence for AAA compared with 0% in those without any of these risk factors (p=0.04). There was a very definite trend suggesting that patients with peripheral vascular disease (p=0.06) were more likely to have an AAA. Because of the high prevalence of AAAs found in this population we then conducted aprospective study over a 24-month period during which patients >60 years of age with known peripheral vascular disease and a history of smoking who presented to the vascular laboratory for evaluation of problems not related to AAA were asked to undergo an abdominal CT scan. Fifty-six volunteers agreed to participate in the study. Seven patients had AAAs and one patient had an isolated iliac aneurysm, for a 14.3% overall prevalence of aneurysms. There was no difference in the incidence of risk factors in those patients with aneurysms and those without aneurysms. This represents one of the highest incidences for AAA thus far reported. If immediate repair is not performed, such patients must be followed closely for the development of symptoms or enlargement of their AAA.
Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1990
Robert B. Patterson; Richard J. Fowl; David J. Lubbers; Doan N. Vu; Richard F. Kempczinski
Dislodgement of a Greenfield filter in the right atrium is one of the most serious complications of this procedure. Retrieval of such a misplaced filter may require surgical intervention by means of cardiopulmonary bypass surgery, which is very hazardous in these often severely ill patients. We describe two cases in which the filter became partially dislodged from its carrier in the right atrium. We were able to successfully reposition the filter by using a tip deflection wire, thereby obviating the need for an open cardiac procedure.