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Dive into the research topics where W.Morris Brown is active.

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Featured researches published by W.Morris Brown.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2001

Clinical outcomes, angiographic patency, and resource utilization in 200 consecutive off-pump coronary bypass patients

John D. Puskas; Vinod H. Thourani; J. Jeffrey Marshall; Steven J Dempsey; Mark A. Steiner; Bonnie H Sammons; W.Morris Brown; John Parker Gott; William S. Weintraub; Robert A. Guyton

BACKGROUND This retrospective study compared clinical outcomes and resource utilization in patients having off-pump coronary artery bypass grafting (OPCAB) versus conventional coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). Angiographic patency was documented in the OPCAB group. METHODS From April 1997 through November 1999, OPCAB was performed in 200 consecutive patients, and the results were compared with those in a contemporaneous matched control group of 1,000 patients undergoing CABG. Patients were matched according to age, sex, preexisting disease (renal failure, diabetes, pulmonary disease, stroke, hypertension, peripheral vascular disease, previous myocardial infarction, and primary or redo status. Follow-up in the OPCAB patients was 93% and averaged 13.4 months. RESULTS Hospital death (1.0%), postoperative stroke (1.5%), myocardial infarction (1.0%), and re-entry for bleeding (1.5%) occurred infrequently in the OPCAB group. There were reductions in the rates of transfusion (33.0% versus 70.0%; p < 0.001) and deep sternal wound infection (0% versus 2.2%; p = 0.067) in the OPCAB group compared with the CABG group. Angiographic assessment of 421 grafted arteries was performed in 167 OPCAB patients (83.5%) prior to hospital discharge. All but five were patent (98.8%) (93.3% FitzGibbon A, 5.5% FitzGibbon B, 1.2% FitzGibbon O). All 163 internal mammary artery grafts were patent. Off-pump coronary artery bypass grafting reduced postoperative hospital stay from 5.7 +/- 5.3 days in the CABG group to 3.9 +/- 2.6 days (p < 0.001), with a decrease in hospital cost of 15.0% (p < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS Off-pump coronary artery bypass grafting reduces hospital cost, postoperative length of stay, and morbidity compared with CABG on cardiopulmonary bypass. Off-pump coronary bypass grafting is safe, cost effective, and associated with excellent graft patency and clinical outcomes.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1998

Modifying risk for extracorporeal circulation: trial of four antiinflammatory strategies

John Parker Gott; William A. Cooper; Frank E. Schmidt; W.Morris Brown; Carolyn E Wright; James D. Fortenberry; W. Scott Clark; Robert A. Guyton

BACKGROUND Despite recent rediscovery of beating heart cardiac surgical techniques, extracorporeal circulation remains appropriate for most heart operations. To minimize deleterious effects of cardiopulmonary bypass, antiinflammatory strategies have evolved. METHODS Four state-of-the-art strategies were studied in a prospective, randomized, preoperatively risk stratified, 400-patient study comprising primary (n = 358), reoperative (n = 42), coronary (n = 307), valve (n = 27), ascending aortic (n = 9), and combined operations (n = 23). Groups were as follows: standard, roller pump, membrane oxygenator, methylprednisolone (n = 112); aprotinin, standard plus aprotinin (n = 109); leukocyte depletion, standard plus a leukocyte filtration strategy (n = 112); and heparin-bonded circuitry, centrifugal pumping with surface modification (n = 67). RESULTS Analysis of variance, linear and logistic regression, and Pearson correlation were applied. Actual mortality (2.3%) was less than half the risk stratification predicted mortality (5.7%). The treatment strategies effectively attenuated markers of the inflammatory response to extracorporeal circulation. Compared with the other groups the heparin-bonded circuit had highly significantly decreased complement activation (p = 0.00001), leukocyte filtration blunted postpump leukocytosis (p = 0.043), and the aprotinin group had less fibrinolysis (p = 0.011). Primary end points, length of stay, and hospital charges, were positively correlated with operation type, age, pump time, body surface area, stroke, pulmonary sequelae, predicted risk for stroke, predicted risk for mortality, and risk strata/treatment group interaction (p = 0.0001). In low-risk patients, leukocyte filtration reduced length of stay by 1 day (p = 0.02) and mean charges by


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1998

Off-pump multivessel coronary bypass via sternotomy is safe and effective

John D. Puskas; Carolyn E Wright; Russell S. Ronson; W.Morris Brown; John Parker Gott; Robert A. Guyton

2,000 to


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2000

Hypothermic circulatory arrest causes multisystem vascular endothelial dysfunction and apoptosis

William A. Cooper; Ignacio G. Duarte; Vinod H. Thourani; Masanori Nakamura; Ning-Ping Wang; W.Morris Brown; John Parker Gott; Jakob Vinten-Johansen; Robert A. Guyton

6,000 (p = 0.05). For high-risk patients, aprotinin reduced mean length of stay up to 10 fewer days (p = 0.02) and mean charges by


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2000

Stroke after coronary artery operation: incidence, correlates, outcome, and cost.

John D. Puskas; A.Daniel Winston; Carolyn E Wright; John Parker Gott; W.Morris Brown; Joseph M. Craver; Ellis L. Jones; Robert A. Guyton; William S. Weintraub

6,000 to


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1999

A randomized trial of endoscopic versus open saphenous vein harvest in coronary bypass surgery

John D. Puskas; Carolyn E Wright; Philip K Miller; Thomas Anderson; John Parker Gott; W.Morris Brown; Robert A. Guyton

48,000 (p = 0.0007). CONCLUSIONS These pharmacologic and mechanical strategies significantly attenuated the inflammatory response to extracorporeal circulation. This translated variably into improved patient outcomes. The increased cost of treatment was offset for selected strategies through the added value of significantly reduced risk.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1993

Warm blood cardioplegia: Superior protection after acute myocardial ischemia

W.Morris Brown; John L. Jay; John Parker Gott; Alice H. Huang; Pan-Chih; W.Stewart Horsley; Lynne M.A. Dorsey; Sara L Katzmark; Robert J. Siegel; Robert A. Guyton

BACKGROUND In an attempt to avoid the deleterious effects of cardiopulmonary bypass, off-pump coronary artery bypass grafting has been rediscovered and refined. The purpose of this study was to compare clinical outcomes, length of stay, and hospital costs with coronary artery bypass grafting on cardiopulmonary bypass. METHODS Coronary artery bypass was performed on 51 patients without cardiopulmonary bypass. Patients were selected on the basis of coronary anatomy, with significant stenoses in the left anterior descending, ramus intermedius, diagonal, right coronary, acute marginal, or posterior descending territories. Outcomes were compared with those of a computer-generated matched control group having coronary artery bypass grafting on cardiopulmonary bypass (n = 248) during the same time period. RESULTS No preoperative differences were noted between groups. There were no deaths in the off-pump group and a mortality rate of 1.6% (4/248) in the control group. There was no incidence of stroke, myocardial infarction, or reentry for bleeding among patients in the off-pump group. There was a reduction in length of stay by 3 days (p = 0.01), blood transfusions by 50% (p = 0.0001), and hospital charges by one third (p = 0.05) in the off-pump group. Twenty-six patients had repeat coronary angiography before discharge; 41/43 grafts were widely patent, 1/43 was totally occluded, and 1/43 was narrowed by more than 50%. All internal mammary artery grafts were widely patent. CONCLUSIONS Off-pump multivessel cardiopulmonary bypass grafting is a safe and effective means of revascularization for patients with coronary stenoses in the anterior or inferior regions, with excellent short-term patency rates and minimal morbidity.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1996

Leukocyte Depletion of Blood Cardioplegia Attenuates Reperfusion Injury

Frank E. Schmidt; Malcolm J. MacDonald; Charles O. Murphy; W.Morris Brown; John Parker Gott; Robert A. Guyton

BACKGROUND Multiple organ failure after deep hypothermic circulatory arrest (DHCA) may occur secondary to endothelial dysfunction and apoptosis. We sought to determine if DHCA causes endothelial dysfunction and apoptosis in brain, kidney, lungs, and other tissues. METHODS Anesthetized pigs on cardiopulmonary bypass were: (1) cooled to 18 degrees C, and had their circulation arrested (60 minutes) and reperfused at 37 degrees C for 90 minutes (DHCA, n = 8); or (2) time-matched normothermic controls on bypass (CPB, n = 6). Endothelial function in cerebral, pulmonary, and renal vessels was assessed by vasorelaxation responses to endothelial-specific bradykinin (BK) or acetylcholine (ACh), and smooth muscle-specific nitroprusside. RESULTS In vivo transcranial vasorelaxation responses to ACh were similar between the two groups. In small-caliber cerebral arteries, endothelial relaxation (BK) was impaired in CPB vs DHCA (maximal 55% +/- 2% [p < 0.05] vs 100% +/- 6%). Pulmonary artery ACh responses were comparable between CPB (110% +/- 10%) and DHCA (83% +/- 6%), but responses in pulmonary vein were impaired in DHCA (109% +/- 3%, p < 0.05) relative to CPB (137% +/- 6%). In renal arteries, endothelial (ACh) responses were impaired in DHCA (71% +/- 13%) relative to CPB (129% +/- 14%). Apoptosis (DNA laddering) occurred primarily in duodenal tissue, with a greater frequency in DHCA (56%, p < 0.05) compared with normothermic CPB (17%) and nonbypass controls (0%). CONCLUSIONS DHCA is associated with endothelial dysfunction in cerebral microvessels but not in the in vivo transcranial vasculature; in addition, endothelial dysfunction was noted in large-caliber renal arteries and pulmonary veins. DHCA is also associated with duodenal apoptosis. Vascular endothelial dysfunction and apoptosis may be involved in the pathophysiology of multisystem organ failure after DHCA.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2001

In vivo hemodynamic, histologic, and antimineralization characteristics of the Mosaic bioprosthesis

Ignacio G. Duarte; Malcolm J. MacDonald; William A. Cooper; Susan L. Schmarkey; John Parker Gott; W.Morris Brown; Jakob Vinten-Johansen; Robert A. Guyton

BACKGROUND Stroke is a major complication of coronary operation, with reported rates of postoperative cerebral dysfunction ranging from 0.4% to 13.8%. In this report, the incidence, correlates, outcomes, and costs of stroke in coronary operation were evaluated at Emory University between 1988 and 1996. METHODS Data were entered prospectively into a dedicated computerized database at Emory University and analyzed retrospectively. Univariate and multivariate analyses were utilized where appropriate. RESULTS Data from 10,860 patients undergoing primary coronary operation between 1988 and 1996 were analyzed. There were 250 patients not entered into the database. Stroke occurred in 244 (2.2%). Univariate predictors of stroke (p<0.05) included age, female gender, hypertension, diabetes, prior stroke, prior transient ischemic attack (TIA), and carotid bruits. Multivariate correlates included age (odds ratio 1.07) previous TIA (odds ratio 2.2), and carotid bruits (odds ratio 1.9), although the area under the Receiver Operating Characteristics (ROC) curve was only 0.69, suggesting limited ability to predict stroke. One and 5 year survival rates were 64% and 44% with stroke, and 94% and 81% without stroke, respectively. Among the stroke group, 23% of the patient population died before hospital discharge. The stroke group had a significantly longer length of hospital stay, as well as higher costs. CONCLUSIONS Stroke is a devastating complication of coronary operation, significantly increasing morbidity, mortality, and cost. Three independent variables were identified for predicting stroke, including age, previous TIA, and carotid bruits. Patients should be carefully screened for cerebrovascular disease to help prevent stroke and its associated morbidity.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1996

Leukocyte Depletion of Blood Cardioplegia Attenuates Reperfusion Injury1

Frank E. Schmidt; Malcolm J. MacDonald; Charles O. Murphy; W.Morris Brown; John Parker Gott; Robert A. Guyton

BACKGROUND The purpose of this study was to determine whether or not endoscopic vein harvest is a reliable, beneficial, and cost-effective method for saphenous vein harvest in coronary bypass surgery (CABG). METHODS A total of 100 patients having primary CABG were prospectively randomized to either endoscopic (EVH; n = 47) or open saphenous vein harvest (OVH; n = 50). Three patients in the EVH group required both techniques and were excluded from analysis. RESULTS The groups did not differ in preoperative characteristics, including: age, gender, left ventricular function, height, weight, percent over ideal body weight, incidence of diabetes, peripheral vascular disease, or preoperative laboratory values (creatinine, albumin, or hematocrit). The EVH group had longer vein harvest and preparation times than the OVH group, while the incision length was significantly shorter. There was no difference between groups in mortality, perioperative myocardial infarction, intensive care unit or postoperative length of stay, blood product utilization, or discharge laboratory measures. There was more drainage noted from leg incisions at hospital discharge in the OVH (34%) versus EVH group (8%; p = 0.001), but more ecchymosis in the EVH group. Although there was a trend towards reduced leg incision pain in the EVH group, there was no statistically significant difference in pain or in the quality of life measure at any point in time. There was no difference between groups in readmission to hospital, administration of antibiotics, or incidence of leg infection. While mean hospital charges for the EVH group were approximately

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Frank E. Schmidt

LSU Health Sciences Center New Orleans

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