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Dive into the research topics where Rolando H. Rolandelli is active.

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Featured researches published by Rolando H. Rolandelli.


Journal of Surgical Research | 1990

Experimental studies on the healing of colonic anastomoses

Mark J. Koruda; Rolando H. Rolandelli

The leakage of colonic anastomoses is a potentially devastating surgical complication. Several factors, such as bowel preparation prior to surgery, surgical technique, nutritional status, and intervening pathological conditions, have been identified as significantly influencing the healing of colonic anastomoses. Due to the multifactorial nature, it is difficult to investigate the mechanisms of occurrence and prevention of colonic dehiscence in the clinical setting. For this reason, many experimental models have been used to study colonic healing and the pathogenesis of anastomotic failure. This report reviews the use of animal models for the study of colonic anastomotic healing. Special emphasis is devoted to the rationale for selecting animal models, parameters of healing, factors influencing anastomotic healing as well as the clinical potential of dietary and pharmacologic manipulations proposed to improve colonic healing.


Gastroenterology | 1988

Effect of parenteral nutrition supplemented with short-chain fatty acids on adaptation to massive small bowel resection

Mark J. Koruda; Rolando H. Rolandelli; R. Gregg Settle; Donna M. Zimmaro; John L. Rombeau

After massive small bowel resection, total parenteral nutrition (TPN) is prescribed to maintain nutritional status. However, TPN reduces the mass of the remaining intestinal mucosa, whereas adaptation to small bowel resection is associated with increased mucosal mass. Short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) have been shown to stimulate mucosal cell mitotic activity. This study determined whether the addition of SCFAs to TPN following small bowel resection would prevent intestinal mucosal atrophy produced by TPN. Adult rats underwent an 80% small bowel resection and then received either standard TPN or TPN supplemented with SCFAs (sodium acetate, propionate, and butyrate). After 1 wk, jejunal and ileal mucosal weights, deoxyribonucleic acid, ribonucleic acid, and protein contents were measured and compared with the parameters obtained at the time of resection. Animals receiving TPN showed significant loss of jejunal mucosal weight, deoxyribonucleic acid, ribonucleic acid, and protein and ileal mucosal weight and deoxyribonucleic acid after small bowel resection, whereas animals receiving SCFA-supplemented TPN showed no significant change in the jejunal mucosal parameters and a significant increase in ileal mucosal protein. These data demonstrate that SCFA-supplemented TPN reduces the mucosal atrophy associated with TPN after massive bowel resection and thys may facilitate adaptation to small bowel resection.


Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition | 1991

Tube Feeding-Related Diarrhea in Acutely III Patients

Peggi Guenter; R. Gregg Settle; Shelley Perlmutter; Paul L. Marino; Gary A. Desimone; Rolando H. Rolandelli

Acutely ill patients received tube feeding for an average of 15.8 days and, on average, 35% of those days were spent in the intensive care unit (ICU). Patients were prospectively assigned either a fiber-free formula (FFF-OSMOLITE HN, Ross; n = 50) or a fiber-supplemented (soy polysaccharide 14.4 g/L) formula (FSF = JEVITY, Ross; n = 50). Diarrhea was defined as three or more loose or watery stools per day and occurred in 30% of all patients. Diarrhea developed in 29 (41%) of the 71 patients who received antibiotics during, or within 2 weeks prior to, the feeding period, whereas only 1 (3%) of the 29 patients not receiving antibiotics developed diarrhea (p less than 0.005); and this patient developed diarrhea on the day of death. Among the 30 patients with diarrhea, stool Clostridium difficile (CD) toxin was positive in 15 (50%), negative in 11 (37%), and was not measured in four. The mean serum albumin was significantly lower in patients with diarrhea (2.43) than in those without diarrhea (2.75) (p = 0.043). There were no significant differences in age, sex, diagnoses, number of feeding days, and percent ICU days between patients with and without diarrhea. While not statistically significant, patients who received FSF were observed to have a lower incidence of diarrhea, a lower percentage of diarrhea days per total feeding days, and a lower frequency of positive CD toxin assays than patients who received FFF. In this patient population, antibiotic usage was the factor most strongly associated with diarrhea during tube feedings.


Surgical Clinics of North America | 1987

Enteral and parenteral nutrition in patients with enteric fistulas and short bowel syndrome.

John L. Rambeau; Rolando H. Rolandelli

Significant advances in the use of enteral and parenteral nutrition in patients with either enteric fistulas or short bowel syndrome include increased usage of enteral nutrition because of its trophic effects on the gut and increased usage of both enteral and parenteral nutrition in the home setting. Current investigations are directed toward identifying gut-specific fuels and dietary and pharmacologic enhancement of nutrient utilization.


Surgical Clinics of North America | 1996

SURGICAL MANAGEMENT AND TREATMENT OF SEPSIS ASSOCIATED WITH GASTROINTESTINAL FISTULAS

Rolando H. Rolandelli; Joel J. Roslyn

The development of sepsis associated with a GI fistula can be a catastrophic complication of any surgical procedure in the vicinity of the abdominal cavity. The predominant sites of infection directly associated with GI fistulas are in the surgical wound and within the abdominal cavity. Some patients present with florid signs of sepsis, whereas others may have minimal signs of infection. CT scanning is the main diagnostic method for intra-abdominal collections. Often, it also provides a means of treatment by percutaneous placement of catheters. Patients who develop extensive cellulitis or necrotizing fasciitis, intra-abdominal collections incompletely drained by percutaneously placed catheters, multiple intra-abdominal collections not amenable to percutaneous drainage, dissociation of the ends of an anastomosis with flow of enteric contents into the peritoneal cavity, large intra-abdominal hematoma, or a septic course without identifiable source should be taken to the operating room on an urgent basis. The operative approach varies with the particular situation and extends from incision and drainage of the wound, extraperitoneal drainage of an abscess, and formal exploratory laparotomies, to the placement of tube enterostomies for decompression and drainage. The overall mortality of fistulas has decreased owing to better fluid and electrolyte replacement and the proper use of parenteral nutrition. However, patients continue to die from fistulas, and the cause of death is nearly always infection. The burden is on the surgeon to expeditiously diagnose and treat sepsis associated with GI fistulas.


Journal of Surgical Research | 1986

Assessing burn wound depth using in vitro nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR)

Mark J. Koruda; Andrea Zimbler; R. Gregg Settle; Danny O. Jacobs; Rolando H. Rolandelli; Gerald L. Wolf; John L. Rombeau

There is no accurate noninvasive method for differentiating between partial-thickness and full-thickness cutaneous burn wounds. Full-thickness burns (FTB) result in slower resorption of wound edema than partial thickness burns (PTB). Since proton NMR parameters, particularly the T1 relaxation time, correlate with tissue water content (TWC), the present study determined whether proton NMR could distinguish PTB from FTB. An area of upper dorsum (approximately 15% BSA) of 35 adult rats was immersed in boiling water for either 3 sec (PTB) or 10 sec (FTB). In 10 control rats, the same area was immersed in room temperature water. Rats were sacrificed at either 3 or 48 hr after burn, and skin samples were analyzed to determine spin-lattice (T1) and spin-spin (T2) relaxation times. TWC was then measured gravimetrically by desiccation. Both T1 and T2 times significantly correlated with TWC (T1: r = 0.74, P less than 0.0001; T2: r = 0.75; P less than 0.0001). Both PTB and FTB resulted in significant elevations of T1, T2, and TWC 3 hr after injury (P less than 0.001). At 48 hr postburn the T1, T2, and TWC of the PTB group had decreased to control values (P less than 0.05), while all FTB parameters remained significantly elevated as compared to both the control and the 48-hr PTB parameters (P less than 0.001). In vitro NMR measurements distinguish PTB from FTB in this rat model within 48 hr. These data provide a basis for investigating in vitro NMR techniques for the noninvasive assessment of burn wound depth.


Journal of Surgical Research | 1985

In vitro detection of fatty liver infiltration in protein-depleted rats using proton nuclear magnetic resonance

Danny O. Jacobs; Scott O. Trerotola; R. Gregg Settle; Rolando H. Rolandelli; Gerald L. Wolf; John L. Rombeau

To determine if NMR techniques might be used to detect hepatic steatosis secondary to protein malnutrition, the T1 and T2 relaxation times of liver tissue from rats subjected to long-term protein malnutrition were measured in vitro. The liver tissue from rats fed a protein-deficient rat chow (PD) for 37 days (N = 9) was characterized by increased proportion of fat (P less than 0.001) but decreased water and nitrogen contents (P less than 0.001) relative to controls (N = 9). Mean T1 times were significantly shorter and T2 times significantly longer in liver tissue from protein-depleted animals (P less than 0.001). There was no overlap of T2 times between the protein-depleted and control animals. The consistent changes in T2 that occur with fatty infiltration of the liver should be detectable by current NMR imagers.


Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry | 1998

The Effect of Glutamine- and Alanine-Enriched Total Parenteral Nutrition on Postburn Proteolysis in the Rat

Rolando H. Rolandelli; Mark J. Koruda; Steven G. Fukuchi; John L. Rombeau; T. Peter Stein

Abstract This study compared the effects of total parenteral nutrition (TPN) supplemented with either glutamine (GLN) or alanine (ALA) on postburn proteolysis in the rat. Thirty adult Sprague-Dawley rats underwent catheterization of the superior vena cava and placement of a swivel apparatus. One group (CONTROL, N = 18) was then returned to their cages while the remaining animals (BURN, N = 12) received a full-thickness scald burn (approximately 20% BSA). CONTROL and BURN rats were then randomly assigned to receive TPN supplemented with either GLN or ALA. TPN consisted of dextrose (250 Kcal/Kg BW/day) and crystalline amino acids (0.9 gN/kg BW/day) composed of all essential amino acids, histidine, arginine, glycine, and either ALA or GLN (1.2 g/100 mg). TPN was administered for 3 days after the burn. Urinary 3-methyl histidine (3MH) and nitrogen excretions were determined, and blood amino acids were measured. Both BURN groups had significantly higher 3MH excretion and blood levels of branched chain amino acids (BCAA) and alanine than both CONTROL groups. In both BURN and CONTROL groups, GLN-TPN did not significantly affect 3MH excretion or the blood levels of BCAA or alanine compared with ALA-TPN. In BURN animals, GLN-TPN resulted in significantly higher urinary nitrogen excretion than ALA-TPN resulting in lower nitrogen retention. Compared with ALA-TPN, GLN-TPN produced greater urinary nitrogen losses and did not reduce protein catabolism.


Gastroenterology | 1998

Influence of 5-fluorouracil on colonic healing and expression of transforming growth factor-β1

S.G. Fukuchi; J.L. Seeburger; G. Parquet; Rolando H. Rolandelli

BACKGROUND Administration of chemotherapeutic agents in the immediate postoperative period may have beneficial effects by decreasing local cancer recurrence rates, but this must be weighed against possible impairment of wound healing. Since local expression of transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) is normally upreglated following creation of experimental colonic anastomoses, this study examines the effects of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) on colonic healing and on the local expression of TGF-beta1. MATERIALS AND METHODS Forty-eight male Sprague-Dawley rats underwent transection of the descending colon with primary anastomosis and were then randomly assigned to receive either intraperitoneal 5-FU (20 mg/kg/day) or saline (SAL). On Postoperative Days (PODs) 3, 5, and 7, bursting pressure (BP, mm Hg) and bursting energy (BE, mm Hg xs) were determined in situ. Anastomotic and nonoperated segments of colon were harvested and analyzed using the semiquantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction to determine the relative expression of TGF-beta1 normalized to that of a constitutive gene. RESULTS Progressive increases in BP and BE were observed in both the 5-FU and the SAL groups, across the time course examined. Overall, these measures were decreased in the 5-FU groups compared to SAL, significantly so on PODs 5 and 7; BP, 127.8 +/- 7.6 vs 161.1 +/- 7.2 and 139.9 +/- 10.9 vs 186.0 +/- 8.6; BE, 1093.6 +/- 190.0 vs 2207.9 +/- 308.2, and 1518.5 +/- 326.5 vs 3279.3 +/- 225.7, respectively. Anastomotic TGF-beta1 expression also increased progressively in both groups over the postoperative time course. Expression in the 5-FU group, however, was significantly decreased compared to that in the SAL group on POD 3; 0.42 +/- 0.05 vs 0.84 +/- 0.04. Interestingly, this preceded the reduction in BP and BE in the 5-FU group on PODs 5 and 7. TGF-beta1 expression in nonoperated colonic segments did not change during the time points studied or in response to 5-FU administration. CONCLUSIONS Wound healing following a colonic anastomosis is associated with local increases in TGF-beta1 expression, which in turn is diminished by the administration of 5-FU. If this deleterious effect on wound healing could be counteracted, then chemotherapy administration in the immediate postoperative period may become safer.


The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition | 1990

Parenteral nutrition supplemented with short-chain fatty acids: effect on the small-bowel mucosa in normal rats.

Mark J. Koruda; Rolando H. Rolandelli; D Z Bliss; J Hastings; John L. Rombeau; R.G. Settle

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Mark J. Koruda

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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R. Gregg Settle

University of Pennsylvania

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Danny O. Jacobs

University of Pennsylvania

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Gerald L. Wolf

University of Pennsylvania

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R.G. Settle

University of Pennsylvania

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Settle Rg

University of Pennsylvania

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T. Peter Stein

University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey

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