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Dive into the research topics where Safuh Attar is active.

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Featured researches published by Safuh Attar.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1990

Esophageal perforation: A therapeutic challenge☆

Safuh Attar; John R. Hankins; Charles M. Suter; Thomas R. Coughlin; Alex Sequeira; Joseph S. McLaughlin

The records of 64 patients with esophageal perforation treated since 1958 were reviewed. There were 19 cervical perforations, 44 thoracic perforations, and one abdominal perforation. Thirty-one perforations (48%) were due to injury from intraluminal causes. Twenty (31%) resulted from extraluminal causes: penetrating wounds, 11; blunt trauma, 3; and paraesophageal operations, 6. Eleven (17%) were spontaneous perforations, and two (3%) were caused by perforation of an esophageal malignancy. Ten (91%) of 11 patients with cervical perforations treated less than 24 hours after injury survived compared with 6 (75%) of 8 patients treated more than 24 hours after injury; hence 16 (84%) of the 19 patients in the cervical group survived. In the thoracic group, 19 patients were treated within 24 hours with 16 survivors (84%) compared with 25 patients treated beyond 24 hours with 12 survivors (48%); hence 28 (64%) of the 44 patients in the thoracic group survived. The patient with an abdominal perforation survived. Thirty patients underwent primary suture closure of the perforation, and 25 (83%) lived. Seventeen patients had drainage, and 10 (59%) lived. Total esophagectomy was performed in 9 patients, 7 (78%) of whom survived. Exclusion-diversion procedures were performed in 5 patients, and 1 (20%) survived.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1976

Pulmonary Aspergillosis: An Analysis of 41 Patients

Avraam Karas; John R. Hankins; Safuh Attar; John Miller; Joseph S. McLaughlin

During the period 1969 to 1974, 41 patients having cultures positive for aspergillus were seen on the thoracic surgical services of the University of Maryland and Mt. Wilson State Hospitals. Intracavitary mycetoma was present in 36 patients. In 32 the underlying disease was chronic cavitary tuberculosis, 5 had decreased immunity due to other diseases, and in 3 no underlying disease was noted. One final patient developed a mycetoma following repair of tetralogy of Fallot. Hemoptysis, the predominant symptom, occurred in 23 patients, all of whom were from the group with intracavitary mycetoma. Hemoptysis was life-threatening in 8 patients, severe but not life-threatening in 12, and minimal in 3. Fifteen patients underwent pulmonary resection with 2 deaths. Both patients who died had undergone emergency resection for life-threatening hemoptysis; the fungus ball had developed following a previous resection for tuberculosis, and both had poor pulmonary reserve. Of 10 patients with hemoptysis who were not treated surgically, chiefly because they were poor operative risks, 4 died. This study suggests that pulmonary aspergillosis, particularly of the intracavitary type, is a potentially life-threatening disease. Because of the suddenness with which massive hemoptysis may occur, pulmonary resection is recommended for all patients with intracavitary mycetoma who do not constitute prohibitive operative risks.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 1996

Combined thoracoscopic/laparoscopic staging of esophageal cancer

Mark J. Krasna; John L. Flowers; Safuh Attar; Joseph S. McLaughlin

Unlike mediastinoscopy in lung cancer, there exists no standard minimally invasive test to stage esophageal cancer. If it were possible to obtain exact preoperative staging in esophageal cancer, patients could be separated prospectively to receive neoadjuvant therapy appropriately. We studied the feasibility and efficacy of thoracoscopic and laparoscopic lymph node staging in esophageal cancer. Thoracoscopic staging was performed in 45 patients with biopsy-proven carcinoma of the esophagus. Laparoscopic staging was done in the last 19 patients. Thoracoscopic staging was aborted in three patients because of adhesions. Thoracic lymph node stage was N0 in 39 patients and N1 in three; celiac lymph nodes were normal in 13 and diseased in six. Esophageal resection was performed in 30 patients after thoracoscopic staging; 17 of these underwent laparoscopic staging. Thoracoscopic staging showed N0 lymph node status in 28 patients and N1 in two patients. Two of the 28 patients (7%) with N0 disease were found at resection to have paraesophageal lymph node involvement (N1); thus the disease was understaged by thoracoscopic staging. Thoracoscopic staging was accurate in detecting the presence of diseased thoracic lymph nodes in 28 of 30 cases (93%). Laparoscopic staging detected normal celiac nodes in 12 patients and diseased lymph nodes in five patients. After esophagectomy, the final pathology report in the 12 patients with N0 disease was N0 in 11 and diseased lymph nodes in one patient. Thus laparoscopic staging was accurate in detecting lymph node metastases in 16 of 17 patients (94%). Thoracoscopic and laparoscopic staging are more accurate than existing staging methods. Six of 19 patients in whom laparoscopic staging was used had unsuspected celiac axis lymph node involvement that had been missed by standard noninvasive techniques. One of three patients with thoracic lymph nodes and three of six with celiac lymph nodes were downstaged after preoperative chemotherapy/radiotherapy. The role of thoracoscopy and laparoscopy in staging esophageal cancer should be further evaluated in a multiinstitutional trial.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1991

Penetrating cardiac injuries

Safuh Attar; Charles M. Suter; John R. Hankins; Alejandro J. Sequeira; Joseph S. McLaughlin

One hundred nine penetrating cardiac injuries were reviewed: 49 gunshot wounds and 60 stab wounds. They were classified into four groups: group 1 (lifeless), 38; group 2 (agonal), 16; group 3 (shock), 33; and group 4 (stable), 22. Thirty-six patients in group 1 (94%) and 8 of 16 patients in group 2 (50%) underwent emergency room thoracotomy; 24 of 33 in group 3 (73%) and 20 of 22 (90%) underwent thoracotomy in the operating room. Twenty-one (38%) of 55 patients undergoing emergency room thoracotomy survived, whereas 47 (87%) of 54 patients undergoing operating room thoracotomy survived. Survival was 12 of 38 (31%) in group 1, 11 of 16 (69%) in group 2, 26 of 33 (79%) in group 3, and 18 of 22 (82%) in group 4 with an overall survival of 67 of 109 (61%). Gunshot wounds of the heart portend a worse prognosis than stab wounds. Survival of gunshot wounds was 20 of 49 (40%) compared with 47 survivors of 60 stab wounds (78%). Aggressive treatment, including emergency room thoracotomy, is justified for lifeless and deteriorating cardiac injury victims.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1979

Pancoast's Tumor: Irradiation or Surgery?

Safuh Attar; John Miller; John R. Satterfield; Chi Kim Ho; Robert G. Slawson; John R. Hankins; Joseph S. McLaughlin

Seventy-three patients with Pancoasts tumor treated at the University of Maryland Hospital between 1955 and 1978 were reviewed. Three were 34 squamous cell carcinomas, 13 undifferentiated, 10 adenocarcinomas, 4 mixed adenosquamous, 1 alveolar cell, and 11 undetermined. Twenty-nine patients received irradiation, with 7% survival at 3 years; 19 patients underwent preoperative irradiation followed by en bloc resection of chest wall, with 23% survival at 3 years; 5 patients underwent extended resection, with 60% survival at 3 years; and 18 patients underwent operation followed by irradiation, with 7% survival at 3 years. Retrospective staging of 42 patients undergoing operation indicated that 22 (52%) were inoperable. Prognosis was related to staging of the disease, the extent of local invasion, nodal involvement, cell type, and adequacy of operation.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1989

Carcinoma of the esophagus: A comparison of the results of transhiatal versus transthoracic resection

John R. Hankins; Safuh Attar; Thomas R. Coughlin; John Miller; John R. Hebel; Charles M. Suter; Joseph S. McLaughlin

The cases of 78 patients with primary esophageal carcinoma treated from 1977 to mid-1987 were retrospectively analyzed. Fifty-two of the patients underwent transthoracic esophagogastrectomy (TTE) and 26, transhiatal esophagectomy (THE). The two groups were statistically similar in preoperative characteristics except that more of the THE group had received chemotherapy; this group had relatively more tumors of the upper esophagus; and 20 (77%) of the THE group, compared with 50 (96%) of the TTE group, had tumors in stages III and IV. The incidence of major postoperative complications did not differ significantly between the two groups. There were five (19%) anastomotic leaks in the THE group, but only one led to a prolongation of hospital stay by more than 14 days, whereas all three (6%) of the leaks in the TTE group caused hospital stay to be prolonged several weeks. Overall morbidity was high: 75% (39/52) for the TTE patients and 85% (22/26) for the THE patients (p greater than 0.10). Hospital mortality was 6% (3/52) in the TTE group and 8% (2/26) in the THE patients (p greater than 0.10). There was no significant difference in actuarial survival either between the two groups as a whole or between those patients in each group who had stage III or IV tumors. We conclude that THE, among the types of patients for whom we used the procedure, provides long-term survival comparable with that provided by TTE without causing a significant increase in hospital mortality or morbidity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1999

Traumatic aortic rupture: recent outcome with regard to neurologic deficit

Safuh Attar; Marcelo G. Cardarelli; Stephen W. Downing; Aurelio Rodriguez; Douglas C. Wallace; Robert West; Joseph S. McLaughlin

BACKGROUND Traumatic aortic rupture is highly lethal, and its surgical treatment is complicated by a high rate of paraplegia. METHODS The charts of 263 patients with traumatic aortic rupture from vehicular accidents treated between 1971 and 1998 were reviewed. Patients were grouped according to four periods: group 1, 1971 to 1975, (n = 31); group 2, 1976 to 1985, (n = 83); group 3, 1986 to 1994, (n = 82); and group 4, 1994 to 1998 (n = 67). Seventy-one patients died of exsanguination before definitive care. One hundred-ninety two patients had surgical repair with the following techniques: clamp and sew, 6 in group 1, 22 in group 2, 54 in group 3, none in group 4; shunt, 23 in group 1, 39 in group 2, 2 in group 3; cardiopulmonary bypass, 2 in group 1, 1 in group 3. Forty-three patients had partial bypass with the centrifugal pump and heparin-coated circuits in group 4. RESULTS Operative mortality was 6 of 31 (19%) in group 1, 22 of 61 (36%) in group 2, 15 of 57 (26%) in group 3, and 7 of 43 (16%) in group 4. There was one case of paraplegia in group 1 (4%), ten in group 2 (18%), 11 in group 3 (26%), and none in group 4. This difference of paraplegia between the groups was significant (p<0.002). Significant factors for paraplegia were intraoperative hypotension (p<0.000002), cross-clamp time longer than 30 minutes (p<0.008), pump versus no pump (p<0.008), and younger age group (28+/-11 versus 39+/-17 years) (p<0.03). CONCLUSIONS There were no statistically significant improvements in mortality rate over the four periods, although, the mortality rate was lowest in the last period when partial bypass with the centrifugal pump was used exclusively. Further, the use of the centrifugal pump with heparin-coated circuits, with femoral vein cannulation into the right atrium and distal aortic perfusion, reduced paraplegia significantly.


Annals of Surgery | 2002

Management of traumatic aortic rupture: a 30-year experience.

Marcelo G. Cardarelli; Joseph S. McLaughlin; Stephen W. Downing; James M. Brown; Safuh Attar; Bartley P. Griffith

ObjectiveTo present the authors’ 30-year experience with traumatic aortic rupture (TAR). Summary Background DataTAR is a highly lethal injury. Most institutions manage a small number of cases, and most surgeons receive only modest exposure during training. MethodsBetween 1971 and 2001, the authors operated on 219 patients with a diagnosis of TAR. Diagnosis of TAR since 1994 has been based exclusively on the use of contrast-enhanced spiral computed tomography, with angiography reserved for equivocal cases (periaortic mediastinal hematoma without aortic wall abnormalities). Patients were divided according to surgical technique. Eighty-two patients (group A) were operated on with a clamp-and-sew technique. Sixty-four patients (group B) underwent surgery with the use of a passive shunt, and 73 patients (group C) were treated using heparin-less partial cardiopulmonary bypass. ResultsMortality was 18 patients for group A (21.9%), 23 patients for group B (35.9%), and 13 patients for group C (17.8%) (P = .03). Paraplegia occurred in 15 of 64 survivors in group A (23.4%), 7 of 41 survivors in group B (17%), and 0 of 60 survivors in group C (P = .0005). Aortic occlusion without lower body perfusion for longer than 30 minutes (P = .004) and surgical technique without lower body bypass support (P = .0005) were associated with paraplegia. ConclusionsSurgery for TAR based on spiral computed tomography screening and diagnosis is reliable. The use of heparin-less distal cardiopulmonary bypass in the authors’ hands is safe and is associated with a reduced incidence of paraplegia.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1985

Bronchial Adenoma: A Review of 51 Patients

Safuh Attar; John Miller; John R. Hankins; Bruce W. Thompson; Charles M. Suter; Peter J. Kleger; Joseph S. McLaughlin

The cases of 51 patients with bronchial adenomas were reviewed. There were 43 bronchial carcinoids, 5 adenoid cystic carcinomas, 2 mixed tumors, and 1 mucoepidermoid carcinoma. The carcinoid group was divided into typical (31, 72%) and atypical (12, 28%) subgroups. Nine carcinoids (20%) were categorized as metastasizing adenomas; in this group, 7 lesions were atypical and 2 were typical. Thirty-two lobectomies, 7 bilobectomies, 8 pneumonectomies, 2 sleeve resections, and 2 tracheal resections were performed. Ten-year survival was 88% for patients with typical carcinoids and 59% for those with atypical carcinoids. In the group with adenoid cystic carcinoma, 1 patient died postoperatively, 1 had recurrence of the tumor, 2 were alive and free from disease 16 and 23 years later, and 1 died of heart disease at 11 years. The patient with mucoepidermoid carcinoma was alive without recurrence 15 years after operation. In conclusion, bronchial adenomas of the carcinoid type are potentially malignant. Their prognosis depends on the histology of the tumor, and on the presence of metastasis to the regional lymph nodes and distant organs.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1988

Surgical Management of Lung Cancer with Solitary Cerebral Metastasis

John R. Hankins; John Miller; Michael Salcman; Frank Ferraro; David Green; Safuh Attar; Joseph S. McLaughlin

Between 1964 and 1986, 19 patients underwent resection of both a primary lung cancer and the associated brain metastasis. One patient underwent resection of 2 separate primary lung cancers and the associated metastases. The 12 men and 7 women ranged in age from 42 to 67 years (mean, 54.6 years). The cell type was adenocarcinoma in 12 tumors, squamous or adenosquamous cell in 5, large cell undifferentiated or anaplastic in 2, and malignant carcinoid in 1 tumor. The types of resection were as follows: lobectomy for 12 neoplasms, pneumonectomy for 5, bilobectomy for 2, and wedge resection for 1 neoplasm. Radiotherapy to the brain was given in connection with sixteen of the twenty craniotomies. The patient with 2 separate primary neoplasms survived 19 years before dying 5 months after the second craniotomy. The mean survival is 8.0 +/- 2.1 years (+/- the standard error), and the median survival is 1.67 years. Survival at 1 year was 65 +/- 10.7% and at 5 years, 45 +/- 11.1%. On univariate analysis, the following factors were found to correlate significantly with longer survival: a lung tumor in Stage I or II; negative mediastinal nodes; curative rather than palliative resection of the lung tumor; and age younger than 55 years. However, on multivariate analysis, only curative resection was a significant factor (p less than 0.01). We believe these results justify continued application of this combined surgical approach to patients having limited-stage lung cancer with a solitary brain metastasis.

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R. Adams Cowley

University of Maryland Medical Center

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Emil Blair

University of Maryland

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John Miller

University of Maryland

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