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Featured researches published by Wayne W. LaMorte.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1995

Risk factors for chronic venous insufficiency: A dual case-control study

Thayer E. Scott; Wayne W. LaMorte; Daniel R. Gorin; James O. Menzoian

PURPOSE Most epidemiologic studies on chronic venous insufficiency (CVI) are cross-sectional surveys that suggest potential risk factors by describing their population. However, these relationships could be due to the CVI populations older age. We performed a dual case-control study with multivariate analysis to address this issue. METHODS Ninety-three patients with venous ulcers, 129 patients with varicose veins (VV), and 113 general population control patients from two hospitals were interviewed by use of a standardized questionnaire covering medical history, patient demographics, medications, and lifestyle questions. Univariate and multivariate analyses were used to compare the groups. RESULTS Univariate analyses showed CVI to be characterized by several factors, many of which were found to be age related after multivariate analysis. Age-adjusted relationships for CVI include male sex and obesity. Histories of serious leg injury or phlebitis were important associations resulting in a 2.4-fold and 25.7-fold increase in risk for CVI, respectively. After adjusting for age, subjects with VV tend to be younger and female, to more frequently have a history of phlebitis, and to report a family history of VV more frequently than control subjects. CONCLUSIONS Many of the previously suggested associations found with CVI are in reality due to this populations greater age. Patients with CVI are older, male, obese, have a history of phlebitis, and have a history of serious leg injury. These results suggest that a prior deep vein thrombosis, either clinical or subclinical, may be a predisposing factor for CVI.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1991

Distribution of valvular incompetence in patients with venous stasis ulceration

Lawrence M. Hanrahan; Clifford T. Araki; Agustin A. Rodriguez; Gregory J. Kechejian; Wayne W. LaMorte; James O. Menzoian

Valvular incompetence associated with venous ulceration can occur in the superficial, deep, or perforating systems. Duplex imaging was used to evaluate 95 extremities (78 patients) with current venous ulceration to determine the location of incompetence in each extremity. In addition, in 91 of the 95 extremities the area of the venous ulcer was evaluated for the presence of perforating veins or any other superficial veins or both conditions. Sixty-three (66.3%) of the 95 extremities had multisystem incompetence (superficial and perforating plus superficial and deep plus perforating and deep plus superficial and perforating and deep), whereas single system incompetence (superficial plus perforating plus deep) was seen in only 26 (27.3%). Isolated deep incompetence was identified in only two extremities (2.1%). Furthermore, 45% (41/91) of the ulcers had no duplex evidence of any venous abnormality in the ulcer bed. These data show that the site of valvular incompetence occurred in multiple locations, that isolated valvular incompetence of the deep venous system was uncommon, and that perforating veins were not always in the ulcer bed itself. Because standard venous surgery has traditionally been directed toward only one system, this may provide one explanation for ulcer recurrence. Therefore complete venous evaluation with duplex imaging allowing for surgical intervention directed specifically to the sites of involvement in each system is recommended.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2003

Incision and abdominal wall hernias in patients with aneurysm or occlusive aortic disease

Joseph D. Raffetto; Yeukki Cheung; Jay B. Fisher; Nancy L. Cantelmo; Michael T. Watkins; Wayne W. LaMorte; James O. Menzoian

INTRODUCTION Patients undergoing midline incision for abdominal aortic reconstruction appear to be at greater risk for postoperative incision hernia compared with patients undergoing celiotomy for general surgical procedures. Controversy exists as to whether incidence of abdominal wall hernia and increased risk for incision hernia is higher in patients with abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) than in patients operated on because of aortoiliac occlusive disease (AOD). We conducted a prospective multi-institutional study to assess frequency of incision hernia after aortic surgery through a midline laparotomy and of previous abdominal wall hernia. METHODS Patients with AAA (n = 177) or AOD (n = 82) from three major institutions were prospectively enrolled in the study and examined. Data collected included demographic data, cardiopulmonary risk factors, smoking status, history of previous or current abdominal wall hernia (incision, inguinal, umbilical, femoral), previous midline incision, suture type, and postoperative complications. At a minimum of 6 months after laparotomy, patients were evaluated clinically for a new incision hernia. Differences were tested with the unpaired t test, X(2) test, or Fisher exact test, and multiple logistic regression was used to control for confounding variables. RESULTS Mean follow-up of the cohort was 32.8 +/- 2.3 months. Rate of abdominal wall hernia and inguinal hernia in patients with AAA versus AOD was 38.4% versus 11% (P =.001) and 23.7% versus 6.1% (P =.003), respectively. Rate of postoperative incision hernia in patients with AAA was 28.2%, and in patients with AOD was 11.0% (P =.002). Adjusting for age, smoking, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, body mass index, diabetes, bowel obstruction, and suture type, patients with AAA had almost a ninefold risk for postoperative incision hernia formation (odds ratio [OR], 8.8; P =.0049). CONCLUSION Compared with patients with AOD, patients with AAA have a higher frequency of abdominal wall hernia and inguinal hernia, and are at significant increased risk for development of incision hernia postoperatively. The higher frequency of hernia formation in patients with AAA suggests the presence of a structural defect within the fascia. Further studies are needed to delineate the molecular changes of the aorta and its relation to the abdominal wall fascia.


American Journal of Surgery | 1998

An association between periodontal disease and peripheral vascular disease

Manuel V. Mendez; Thayer E. Scott; Wayne W. LaMorte; Pantel S. Vokonas; James O. Menzoian; Raul I. Garcia

BACKGROUND Periodontal disease has been shown to be associated with increased risk of coronary heart disease. Because coronary heart disease and peripheral vascular disease (PVD) have similar pathophysiologies, we hypothesized that periodontal disease might be a risk factor for PVD. METHODS Using the combined data from the Normative Aging Study and Dental Longitudinal Study of the US Department of Veterans Affairs, we examined the relationship between PVD and periodontal disease. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was used. RESULTS Over the 25 to 30 years of follow-up, 80 of these initially healthy subjects developed PVD. Compared with controls (n = 1,030), subjects with clinically significant periodontal disease at baseline had a 2.27 increment in the risk of developing PVD (95% confidence interval 1.32 to 3.9, P value = 0.003). CONCLUSIONS Periodontal disease emerged as a significant independent risk factor for PVD in a multivariate analysis that adjusted for other established risk factors.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1992

A prospective, randomized trial of Unna's boot versus Duoderm CGF hydroactive dressing plus compression in the management of venous leg ulcers

Paul R. Cordts; Lawrence M. Hanrahan; Agustin A. Rodriguez; Jonathan Woodson; Wayne W. LaMorte; James O. Menzoian

Leg ulcers caused by chronic venous insufficiency plague an estimated 500,000 Americans, but there have been few improvements in conservative treatment in this century, and Unnas boot continues to be a mainstay of therapy. A recent report suggests that Duoderm CGF dressing provides greater patient comfort and enhanced compliance, but Duoderm alone (without compression) resulted in slower healing compared with Unnas boot. We enrolled 30 patients (30 ulcers) in a clinical trial to compare Duoderm CGF plus compression (Coban wrap) to Unnas boot. No significant difference was observed between the two groups with respect to age, sex, initial ulcer area, ulcer duration, or extent of venous insufficiency by duplex scan. Eight of 16 ulcers (50%) in the Duoderm group healed completely versus 6 of 14 ulcers (43%) in the Unnas boot group (p = 0.18). Healing rates (square centimeters per week) correlated significantly with initial ulcer area and initial ulcer perimeter for both groups but best correlated with initial ulcer perimeter (r = 0.88 with Duoderm, p less than 0.0001; r = 0.80 with Unnas boot, p less than 0.002). After adjusting for differences in initial ulcer perimeter, healing rates were significantly faster for patients on Duoderm than patients on Unnas boot during the first 4 weeks of therapy (0.384 +/- 0.059 cm2/wk/cm perimeter for Duoderm versus 0.135 +/- 0.043 cm2/wk/cm perimeter for Unnas boot; p = 0.002). At 12 weeks patients on Duoderm again appeared to heal faster than those on Unnas boot, although the result did not reach statistical significance (0.049 +/- 0.007 cm2/wk/cm perimeter for Duoderm versus 0.020 +/- 0.017 for Unnas boot, p = 0.11).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1996

The influence of wound geometry on the measurement of wound healing rates in clinical trials

Daniel R. Gorin; Paul R. Cordts; Wayne W. LaMorte; James O. Menzoian

PURPOSE The comparison of wound healing rates in clinical trials presents a challenging problem. Wound healing typically has been expressed as a change in area over time or a percent change in area over time. These methods are inaccurate, however, when applied to wounds of varying size and shape. A relatively small amount of healing in a large wound will produce a greater change in area than in a smaller wound. Conversely, measurement of the percent change in area of a wound will tend to exaggerate the healing rates of smaller wounds. A method of calculating average linear healing of the wound edge toward the center of the wound has been proposed that should not be influenced by wound size: D = delatA divided by P, where D = linear healing, deltaA = change in area, and P = mean perimeter. The purpose of this study was to examine linear healing of the wound edge as a method of measuring wound healing in clinical trials. METHODS We observed 39 patients with venous stasis ulcers. The area, perimeter, length, and width of each wound were calculated with computerized planimetry. Change in area per day and linear healing rate of the wound edge per day were calculated. Multiple linear regression analysis was used to explore factors that influence wound healing as measured by these methods. RESULTS The change in area per day was significantly and independently influenced by initial area (p < .0001), perimeter (p < .0001), length (p < .00055), and width (p < .0175). Linear healing per day was not influenced by any geometric variable, including area, perimeter, length, width, and ratio of width to length. CONCLUSION Linear healing per day is a valid means of comparing wound healing rates in wounds of different dimensions. Linear healing per unit of time should be preferred to measurements of change in wound area to quantify wound healing rates in clinical trials.


Annals of Vascular Surgery | 1989

Symptomatology and Anatomic Patterns of Peripheral Vascular Disease: Differing Impact of Smoking and Diabetes

James O. Menzoian; Wayne W. LaMorte; Charles C. Paniszyn; Kevin McBride; Anton N. Sidawy; Frank W. LoGerfo; Mary E. Connors; Jeanne E. Doyle

We retrospectively examined the impact of smoking and diabetes on the clinical presentation and arteriographic pattern of occlusion in 227 patients evaluated for symptomatic infrainguinal arterial disease. The age at which significant symptomatology developed did not differ for diabetics and nondiabetics. Diabetics had significantly more occlusion in the large arteries of the calf, however, particularly in the peroneal and posterior tibial arteries. Despite this, the extent of occlusive disease in the pedal arch was not influenced by diabetes. Diabetics also tended to present more frequently with gangrene or ulcer (greater than 70%) when compared to nondiabetic smokers (41%, p less than .01). Smokers presented with symptomatic disease earlier than nonsmokers (p less than .0005). Intermittent claudication was strongly associated with smoking; among 33 patients with claudication, 32 were smokers. In contrast to the effect of diabetes, smokers appeared to have less extensive occlusive disease in the large arteries of the calf than nonsmokers. Nondiabetic nonsmokers constituted less than 10% of our study population and presented at a significantly older age. Nevertheless, despite the absence of either risk factor, this group also tended to present with gangrene or ulcer relatively frequently (71%). Although diabetes and smoking are both risk factors for atherosclerotic disease, we conclude that their impact on the angiographic pattern of occlusion and clinical presentation differs substantially.


American Journal of Surgery | 1988

A new quantitative spectrophotometric assay of ischemia-reperfusion injury in skeletal muscle***

Michael Belkin; Richard D. Brown; J. Gordon Wright; Wayne W. LaMorte; Robert W. Hobson

Characterization of ischemia-reperfusion injury of skeletal muscle remains poorly defined. A new quantitative assay to measure ischemic skeletal muscle injury is described and validated in a rat hindlimb model. This biochemical spectrophotometric technique measures triphenyltetrazolium chloride reduction in ischemic muscle. The reduction assay demonstrated significant injury after 3 hours of ischemia (25.4 +/- 9.7 percent of control activity; p less than 0.05). More severe injury occurred after 4 or more hours (less than 3 percent of control activity; p less than 0.05). This assay is an objective and quantitative method for characterizing ischemia-reperfusion injury.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1995

Racial differences in the incidence of femoral bypass and abdominal aortic aneurysmectomy in Massachusetts: Relationship to cardiovascular risk factors

Wayne W. LaMorte; Thayer E. Scott; James O. Menzoian

PURPOSE Atherosclerotic disease appears to be more severe in black patients than in white patients, but abdominal aortic aneurysms, which have traditionally been believed to have an atherosclerotic cause, are reported to be less common in black patients than in white patients. Our goals were to compare and contrast factors associated with the development of abdominal aortic aneurysms and clinically significant atherosclerotic occlusive disease (1) to determine whether these diseases share a common cause and (2) to explore their association with race. METHODS Dual case-control studies were conducted with multivariate analysis to compare cases (patients undergoing aneurysmectomy or patients undergoing femoral bypass) with a comparison group consisting of patients who had undergone appendectomy. Two data sources were used: (1) hospital discharge data for Massachusetts from 1984 through 1988 and (2) medical records at University Hospital of Boston and Boston City Hospital. For both the Massachusetts database and the hospital chart review, records were obtained for all patients discharged between January 1984 and December 1988 with an International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) procedure code for abdominal aortic aneurysm resection (38.44) or aneurysmorrhaphy (38.34) or with a procedure code for femoral artery bypass/reconstruction (39.29). To conduct a nested case-control study, records were also obtained for a control group consisting of patients between the ages of 50 and 84 years who had undergone appendectomy during the same 5-year period. RESULTS Black patients had higher rates of femoral bypass than did white patients after adjustment for age and sex (odds ratio = 1.97; 95% confidence interval: 1.49, 2.61; p < 0.0001). However, femoral bypass was also associated with hypertension, diabetes, and low household income. After adjusting for these additional factors in the statewide data set, the black/white odds ratio for femoral bypass was only 1.44 (95% confidence interval: 1.08, 1.92). The parallel case-control study at University Hospital and Boston City Hospital, which provided information about smoking status and more accurate ascertainment of coexisting hypertension and diabetes, indicated that there was no racial difference in rates of femoral bypass after correcting for these additional risk factors (odds ratio = 0.94; 95% confidence interval: 0.40, 2.22; p = 0.90). In contrast, abdominal aortic aneurysmectomy occurred predominantly in white men. Aneurysmectomy was also associated with smoking and hypertension, but aneurysmectomy was not significantly associated with diabetes mellitus or family income. The black/white odds ratio for aneurysm was 0.29; (95% confidence interval: 0.07, 1.23; p = 0.09 after adjustment for other variables). CONCLUSIONS Hypertension, smoking, and male sex are risk factors for the development of femoral atherosclerosis and abdominal aortic aneurysm formation. However, abdominal aortic aneurysms occur predominantly in white men and do not appear to be associated with diabetes mellitus or income. In contrast, the higher rate of femoral artery bypass in black patients is probably the result of greater prevalence among black patients of hypertension, diabetes, smoking, and perhaps by other ill-defined factors associated with socioeconomic status.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2002

Fracture locations influence the likelihood of rectal and lower urinary tract injuries in patients sustaining pelvic fractures.

Rie Aihara; Joseph Blansfield; Frederick H. Millham; Wayne W. LaMorte; Erwin F. Hirsch

BACKGROUND Rectal and lower urinary tract injuries in pelvic fractures can lead to significant complications. We sought to determine whether fracture locations could serve as markers for injury. METHODS In our retrospective review of patients with blunt pelvic fractures, the association of fracture locations with injury to the rectum, bladder, and urethra was explored with Fishers exact test and subsequently analyzed with multiple logistic regression. RESULTS Of the 362 patients reviewed, 8 had rectal injury and 24 had lower urinary tract injury. The following locations were found to be significant. Rectum: symphysis pubis (relative risk [RR] = 3.3, p < 0.001) and sacroiliac (SI) joint (RR = 2.1, p = 0.014). Bladder: symphysis pubis (RR = 2.1, p < 0.001), SI joint (RR = 2.0, p < 0.001), and sacrum (RR = 1.6, p = 0.002). Urethra: symphysis pubis (RR = 2.9, p = 0.003), SI joint (RR = 1.8, p = 0.04), and inferior ramus (RR = 4.6, p = 0.008). After multivariate analysis, the primary and independent predictors for each of the injuries were as follows: rectal injury, widened symphysis; bladder injury, widened symphysis and SI joint; and urethral injury, widened symphysis and fracture of the inferior pubic ramus. Although these associations were significant, the overall prevalence of associated rectal and urologic injuries was low. Consequently, the predictive values of these radiologic findings were also low, ranging from 5% to 9% for urethral and rectal injuries to 20% for bladder injuries. CONCLUSION Certain fracture locations are associated with increased risk for rectal, bladder, or urethral injury. Fractures involving these locations should prompt further work-up for assessment.

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