Roger B. Rehr
VCU Medical Center
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Featured researches published by Roger B. Rehr.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1989
Roger B. Rehr; Germano DiSciascio; George Vetrovec; Michael J. Cowley
Previous clinical and angiographic/histopathologic correlative studies have demonstrated that angiographic findings of occlusive thrombus, intraluminal filling defects and complex lesion morphology indicate the presence of intracoronary thrombosis. The purpose of this study was to determine whether the presence of these descriptors of intracoronary thrombosis is associated with the syndrome of prolonged rest angina. The coronary angiograms of 50 patients with prolonged rest angina without myocardial infarction (group I) and 42 concurrent patients with stable angina (group II) were reviewed without knowledge of the clinical syndrome. Patients with prior myocardial infarction, coronary angioplasty or coronary artery bypass graft surgery were excluded, as were patients with important aortic stenosis. Each coronary artery stenosis in a major epicardial vessel was evaluated for the presence or absence of intracoronary thrombus (defined using standard criteria), complex lesion morphology (defined as the presence of haziness, a smudged appearance or irregular lesion margins) and eccentricity, and the frequency of each of these findings in groups I and II was compared. Intracoronary thrombus was present significantly more often in group I patients (42%) than in group II patients (17%) (chi 2 5.77; p less than 0.02). Complex lesion morphology was also present significantly more often in group I (44%) than in group II (14%) patients (chi 2 8.17; p less than 0.01). Either standard criterion for intracoronary thrombus or complex morphology was present in 70% of group I but only 21% of group II patients (chi 2 19.7; p less than 0.001). These results support a strong association of the angiographic descriptors of intraluminal thrombosis with the clinical syndrome of prolonged rest angina.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
American Journal of Cardiology | 1989
Michael J. Cowley; Germano DiSciascio; Roger B. Rehr; George W. Vetrovec
To assess the mechanisms of unstable angina, the coronary angiographic studies in 69 patients with severe unstable angina (prolonged pain or pain at rest) and in 20 patients with stable angina were blindly reviewed to assess the coronary morphologic changes in these syndromes. Coronary angiography was performed an average of 1.7 days from admission and an average of 24 hours from last symptoms of chest pain in patients with unstable angina. Angiographic studies were analyzed for evidence of coronary thrombus (intraluminal filling defects) at significant stenoses in patent vessels or thrombus at sites of total occlusion) and for coronary lesion morphology suggesting a complex or acute lesion (irregular or ill-defined margins, inhomogeneity, haziness or ulceration). Angiographic evidence of coronary thrombus was present in 40 of 69 patients (58%) with unstable angina: 31 (45%) had intraluminal filling defects and 9 (13%) had thrombotic total occlusion with well-developed collaterals present. Only 1 of 20 patients (5%) with stable angina had evidence of thrombus (p less than 0.001). Complex lesions were present in 18 other unstable patients (26%) and in 2 other patients (10%) with stable angina who did not have angiographic evidence of thrombus. Overall, 58 of 69 patients (84%) with unstable angina had morphologic findings suggesting an acute process (thrombus or complex lesion) compared with 3 of 20 patients (15%) with stable angina, p less than 0.0001. Thus, unstable angina is associated with a high prevalence of angiographic coronary thrombus and complex lesions suggesting an acute process, in contrast to stable angina.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Cancer | 1991
Richard A. Szucs; Roger B. Rehr; Saul Yanovich; James L. Tatum
This report illustrates the use of cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to quantify the initial extent of a cardiac rhabdomyosarcoma and, more importantly, its response to chemotherapy. Image slices spanning the heart and adjacent structures were analyzed using Simpsons rule applied to the image slices to estimate the tumor volume initially, then after 5 weeks, and again after 4 months of chemotherapy. A substantial, progressive reduction in tumor volume during chemotherapy was shown. After chemotherapy was discontinued, an increase in tumor volume was shown. It is suggested that, in addition to being useful in patient care, the technique may be useful in clinical investigations by providing an objective, quantitative measure of tumor response to therapy.
American Heart Journal | 1991
Roger B. Rehr; Bryan E. Fuhs; C Francis Lee; James L. Tatum; Jerry I. Hirsch; Roger I. Quint
Thrombolytic therapy has increased the need for a technique to assess the viability of recently reperfused myocardium. This study examined the ability of in vivo phosphorus-31 (P-31) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy to distinguish reperfused-viable (stunned) from reperfused-infarcted myocardium at 6, 30, and 54 hours following coronary artery occlusion in a canine model. A 15-minute occlusion produced reperfused-viable myocardium in five animals and a 360-minute occlusion produced reperfused-infarcted myocardium in six animals. Postreperfusion risk zone myocardial phosphocreatine (PCr) concentration measured by P-31 NMR spectroscopy was significantly depressed throughout the 3-day study period in infarcted but not in viable myocardium (p less than 0.01 between groups, all time points). The postreperfusion ratio of inorganic phosphate (Pi) to PCr concentration, as determined by NMR spectroscopy, was elevated throughout the study period in infarcted but not in viable reperfused myocardium (p less than 0.01 between groups, all time points). Postreperfusion Pi concentration was elevated at 6 hours but not subsequently in reperfused-infarcted myocardium, and was not elevated in reperfused-viable myocardium. Logistic regression models selected PCr concentration and the Pi/PCr ratio as providing the best discrimination between reperfused-viable and reperfused-infarcted myocardium. The accuracy of P-31 NMR variables selected by logistic regression analysis for determining myocardial viability ranged from 97% to 100%.
American Heart Journal | 1991
Roger B. Rehr; Bryan E. Fuhs; Jerry I. Hirsch; Joseph J. Feher
The effect of reperfusion with and without free radical scavengers on sarcoplasmic reticulum and contractile function was examined in a canine model of 15-minute coronary artery occlusion followed by reperfusion. Dogs were reperfused with (n = 13) or without (n = 16) superoxide dismutase and catalase or were killed at 15 minutes of ischemia (n = 17). Superoxide dismutase and catalase were administered as a bolus (20,000 and 12,500 U/kg, respectively) beginning 1.25 minutes before reperfusion followed by infusion of 16,000 and 12,500 U/kg/hr, respectively. Sarcoplasmic reticulum function was evaluated from the rate of calcium uptake of unfractionated subepicardial, subendocardial, and transmural homogenates determined with and without ruthenium red to close the calcium release channel. Mechanical function was evaluated by means of sonomicrometry. Fifteen minutes of ischemia significantly (p less than 0.05) depressed the sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium uptake rate only in the subendocardium (from 25 +/- 2 to 14 +/- 1 nmol/min/mg without ruthenium red and from 60 +/- 3 to 49 +/- 3 nmol/min/mg with ruthenium red). Reperfusion with or without superoxide dismutase and catalase restored homogenate calcium uptake rates to normal, although severe contractile dysfunction persisted. This indicates that damage to the sarcoplasmic reticulum may not be the major cause of postreperfusion contractile dysfunction. Ischemia-reperfusion caused a decrease in systolic shortening from 19 +/- 2% to 1 +/- 2% with and from 18 +/- 1% to 4 +/- 1% without free radical scavengers (p = NS between groups). Thus administration of superoxide dismutase and catalase beginning shortly before reperfusion had no effect on postreperfusion contractile dysfunction or sarcoplasmic reticulum function.
European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | 1989
James L. Tatum; Harvey J. Sugerman; Nicolaos Perdikaris; Roger B. Rehr; Timothy S. Burke; Melvin J. Fratkin
Radionuclide assessment of pulmonary capillary protein leak using [99mTc] human serum albumin (99mTc-HSA) was first reported from our laboratory. In this study we investigated the impact of 1) sampling time post tracer injection, and 2) lung region assignment, on diagnostic accuracy between 2 groups (controln=20 and ARDSn=20). Each patient received 370 MBq99mTc-HSA i.v. and was imaged for 45 min. The slope index (SI) [change in lung: heart activity ratio/min] was calculated from 11 computer assigned lung regions for intervals of 5–15 (early [E]) and 15–45 (late [L]) min. The diagnostic accuracy of E vs L SI calculations for the 11 regions was evaluated by stepwise logistic regression. E SI data and L SI data from the lower 1/3 of the lung did not achieve significance for inclusion in the discriminant model (P<0.05). In the nine remaining regions L SI was significant. Optimal discrimination was achieved from L SI data obtained from a region confined to the lateral half of the mid 3rd of the lung field (sensitivity 81%, specificity 85%, accuracy 83%). The results confirm that: 1) a late (15–45 min) sampling period and 2) proper region assignment are necessary to maximize accuracy of this technique.
Clinical Cardiology | 1990
J Mukharji; Roger B. Rehr; Andrea Hastillo; James A. Thompson; Michael L. Hess; Walter Paulsen; George W. Vetrovec
American Heart Journal | 1988
Anthony J. Minisi; Jhulan Mukharji; Roger B. Rehr; Stephen A. Lewis; Davids W Richardson; Donald W. Romhilt; George W. Vetrovec
Chest | 1989
Richard A. Szucs; Roger B. Rehr; James L. Tatum
American Heart Journal | 1990
David O. Taylor; Roger B. Rehr; James A. Thompson; George Vetrovec; James L. Tatum