Vincent G. Pons
University of California, San Francisco
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Featured researches published by Vincent G. Pons.
Ophthalmology | 1985
Walter H. Stern; Eddy Tamura; Richard A. Jacobs; Vincent G. Pons; Robert D. Stone; Denis M. O'Day; Alexander R. Irvine
Fifteen cases of postoperative Candida parapsilosis endophthalmitis occurring secondary to a contaminated lot of an irrigating solution were studied. All patients underwent a vitreous tap or diagnostic and therapeutic vitrectomy. Eleven of the 15 specimens were positive for the organism. Fourteen patients were treated with pars plana vitrectomy surgery. All patients were treated with intravitreal amphotericin B and systemic amphotericin B and 5-fluorocytosine. Two clinical recurrences were successfully treated with intravitreal amphotericin B, removal of the pseudophakos, and oral ketoconazole. The intraocular lens was retained in 11 of the 14 pseudophakic patients. Final visual acuities ranged from 20/25 to no light perception with eight of 15 patients having 20/60 or better visual acuities. Measurable levels of intraocular amphotericin B were found after systemic amphotericin B administration. Two patients with totals of 20 and 30 micrograms of intravitreal amphotericin B over 48 and 96 hours, respectively, had near normal ERGs one year later. Posterior capsulotomy and vitrectomy appear to decrease amphotericin B toxicity and allow sequential intraocular injection of this drug within a short time period.
Neurosurgery | 1986
Robert M. Levy; Philip H. Gutin; David S. Baskin; Vincent G. Pons
A 56-year-old man developed an abscess within a right parietal cystic anaplastic astrocytoma 3 days after removal of iodine-125 sources placed 9 days earlier for interstitial radiation therapy. After treatment with cephalosporin antibiotics proved unsuccessful, the patient was treated with intravenous vancomycin and intermittent percutaneous drainage of the abscess. Vancomycin levels obtained from the brain abscess fluid, both before and during later operative removal of the abscess, were 15 and 18 micrograms/ml, respectively; the serum vancomycin level was 21 micrograms/ml. This is the first report of the excellent penetration of vancomycin into brain abscess fluid.
Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 1991
Todd J. Cohen; Vincent G. Pons; Janice B. Schwartz; Jerry C. Griffin
A 69‐year‐old man with a history of diabetes and episodic lymphocytopenia underwent pacemaker implantation for complete heart block. Despite prophylactic antibiotics, pocket irrigation, and strict sterile technique, a fungal (Candida albi‐cans) pacemaker site infection developed that required pacemaker explantation and systemic ampho‐tericin B therapy. After 3 days of temporary pacing, a second pulse generator was implanted on the opposite side. At 2‐year follow‐up, he has had no recurrence of pacemaker infection. This report underscores the predilection of diabetics for infections, and in particular, their susceptibility to Candida albicans.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1983
Robert M. Levy; Vincent G. Pons; Mark L. Rosenblum
Journal of Neurosurgery | 1984
Robert M. Levy; Vincent G. Pons; Mark L. Rosenblum
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 1988
Sharon Safrin; J. Glenn Morris; Melanie Adams; Vincent G. Pons; Richard Jacobs; John E. Conte
Journal of Neurosurgery | 1988
Donald A. Ross; Harold Rosegay; Vincent G. Pons
Clinical neurosurgery | 1986
Mark L. Rosenblum; Thomas J. Mampalam; Vincent G. Pons
Ophthalmology | 1985
Walter H. Stern; Eddy Tamura; Richard A. Jacobs; Vincent G. Pons; Robert D. Stone; Denis M. O'Day; Alexander R. Irvine
Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1991
Vincent G. Pons; Rebecca Wurtz