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Dive into the research topics where William J. Casarella is active.

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Featured researches published by William J. Casarella.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1980

Percutaneous intraaortic balloon insertion

David Bregman; Allen B. Nichols; Melvin B. Weiss; Eric R. Powers; Eric C. Martin; William J. Casarella

A new single chambered percutaneous intraaortic balloon has been constructed around a central guidewire. The balloon can be wrapped around the guidewire, enabling its insertion into the femoral artery through a 12F sheath inserted with the conventional Seldinger technique. Percutaneous intraaortic balloon insertion has been performed in 27 patients (mean age 58 years) for a variety of medical and surgical indications. Percutaneous balloons could not be advanced into the aorta in two patients (7.4 percent) with severe bilateral aortoiliac occlusive disease. In all 25 patients undergoing intraaortic balloon pumping satisfactory circulatory support was achieved, and 21 (84 percent) of the patients survived to be discharged from the hospital. The mean duration of intraaortic balloon pumping was 3.5 days. Percutaneous intraaortic balloon insertion requires less than 5 minutes and has been successfully performed in the cardiac catheterization laboratory, coronary care unit, operating room and recovery room. After direct balloon removal, external pressure was applied for 30 minutes. No patient experienced hematoma of the groin, aortic dissection, compromised distal pulses or late wound complications. Percutaneous balloon insertion permits the rapid institution of circulatory support and broadens the medical and surgical applications of intraaortic balloon pumping.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1980

Percutaneous Intraaortic Balloon Pumping: Initial Clinical Experience

David Bregman; William J. Casarella

A new intraaortic balloon is described that can be inserted percutaneously through a 12F sheath by the standard Seldinger technique. Insertion and removal are rapid, and the hemodynamics of balloon pumping are similar to our previous clinical experience with standard single- and dual-chambered intraaortic balloons. The initial clinical experience is detailed.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1975

Measurement of regional myocardial blood flow in man: Description and critique of the method using xenon-133 and a scintillation camera

Paul J. Cannon; Robert R. Sciacca; Deborah L. Fowler; Melvin B. Weiss; Donald H. Schmidt; William J. Casarella

A method has been devised to measure regional myocardial blood flow in man. The approach consists of selective injection of xenon-133 into a coronary artery and the external monitoring of radioisotope washout curves from multiple areas of the myocardium with a multiple crystal scintillation camera. Rate constants of isotope washout are calculated using a monoexponential model, and the capillary blood flow rates in multiple regions of the heart are calculated by the Kety formula. The pattern of perfusion rates is related to the coronary arteriogram obtained in the same study. Myocardial perfusion patterns obtained in patients with and without coronary artery disease and during atrial pacing are given, as well as examples of results obtained in myocardial aneurysms, in regions of ischemic myocardium supplied by collateral vessels and after tracer injection into an aortocoronary bypass graft. Advantages of the method are discussed along with limitations related to the tracer, the scintillation camera, the form of mathematical analysis and the three dimensional nature of the heart.


Surgical Clinics of North America | 1981

Percutaneous Drainage in the Management of Hepatic Abscesses

Eric C. Martin; Karen B. Karlson; Elliott I. Fankuchen; Avram Cooperman; William J. Casarella

Once a hepatic abscess has been defined radiologically, percutaneous drainage is the treatment method of first choice. Surgery is reserved for failure of percutaneous therapy. Percutaneous drainage for hepatic abscess has been safe, uncomplicated, and successful in seven patients treated by the authors between 1978 and 1980.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1975

The relationship between regional myocardial perfusion at rest and arteriographic lesions in patients with coronary atherosclerosis.

Paul J. Cannon; Donald H. Schmidt; Melvin B. Weiss; Deborah L. Fowler; Robert R. Sciacca; Kent Ellis; William J. Casarella

Measurements of mean left ventricular (LV) and regional myocardial blood flow rates were made at rest in 161 patients with 133Xe and a multiplecrystal scintillation camera. Myocardial perfusion rates were correlated with assessments of the degree of coronary artery disease made from the arteriograms obtained during the same studies. In patients with normal coronary arteries without heart failure, the presence of hypertension, aortic stenosis, or aortic insufficiency was not associated with changes in mean LV perfusion from the control value of 61+/-7 ml/100 g-min. However, mean LV perfusion was significantly reduced in patients with normal coronary arteries who had cariomyopathy and impaired ventricular performance. Mean LV perfusion was not significantly different from control values in patients with mild coronary artery disease (less than 50% obstruction) or in patients with significant isolated disease (greater than 50% obstruction) of the left anterior descending (lad) artery. Significant reductions in mean LV perfusion were found in patients with greater than 50% obstruction of two coronary arteries (LAD + right or LAD + circumflex) and in patients with triple-vessel disease. The average perfusion rate for regions distal to LAD obstructions in patients with isolated LAD disease was not lower than the LAD perfusion in control patients, but was significantly reduced in patients with LAD + right coronary artery disease (43+/-14 ml/100 g-min). In the latter group average perfusion distal to the LAD lesion was significantly lower than the average regional perfusion rate for the remainder of the LV. However, the mean blood flow rate for the remainder of the LV was also significantly lower than control values despite the lack of significant circumflex disease. The data demonstrate that the presence of radiographically mild or significant isolated LAD coronary disease is not associated with reductions in mean LV perfusion at rest, but that mean LV perfusion is reduced in the presence of significant disease of two or three coronary artieries. None of the patients experienced angina during the resting studies and most had clinical evidence of ventricular failure. The observation of depressed LV perfusion in this group, as in the patients with cardiomyopathy, raises the possibility that a lowered resting blood supply may be adequate for a reduced level of performance of a diseased ventricle. The lack of selective reductions of regional perfusion at rest in the majority of the patients with LAD lesions suggests that regional myocardial blood flow must be measured during an intervention which increases myocardial oxygen consumption in order to assess the physiological significance of lesions which are observed at coronary arteriography.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1983

Validation of the angiographic accuracy of digital left ventriculography.

Allen B. Nichols; Eric C. Martin; Thomas P. Fles; Karen M. Stugensky; Lawrence Balancio; William J. Casarella; Melvin B. Weiss

Digital subtraction angiography enhances the contrast to background signal, enabling the performance of angiography with reduced doses of contrast medium. The objectives of the present study were (1) to validate the accuracy of digital left ventriculography for measurement of left ventricular volumes and segmental contraction; and (2) to compare the hemodynamic effects resulting from low-and high-dose intraventricular contrast injections. Twenty-eight patients underwent digital left ventriculography, performed by intraventricular injection of 7 ml of contrast medium diluted in saline solution, followed by conventional cineangiography of the left ventricle performed with 45 ml of undiluted contrast medium. Left ventricular volumes calculated from digital ventriculograms correlated well with volumes calculated from conventional ventriculograms: end-diastolic volume (r = 0.97, standard error of estimate [SEE] 23.4 ml; end-systolic volume (r = 0.97, SEE 15.4 ml); stroke volume (r = 0.95, SEE 14.7 ml); and ejection fraction (r = 0.97, SEE 3.8%). Segmental left ventricular contraction, measured as percent chordal shortening of hemiaxes, correlated moderately well (r = 0.81, SEE 11.5%). After injection of undiluted contrast medium, left ventricular systolic pressure decreased (133 +/- 31 to 123.5 +/- 27 mm Hg; p less than 0.01) and left ventricular end-diastolic pressure increased (12.0 +/- 7 to 16.9 +/- 10 mm Hg; p less than 0.001). Left ventricular systolic and end-diastolic pressures did not change significantly after injection of diluted contrast medium, and patients had no discomfort. Thus, digital subtraction angiography permits the performance of left ventriculography with markedly reduced doses of contrast medium, obviating the hemodynamic effects resulting from injection of conventional doses of contrast medium. This new approach to left ventriculography provides high resolution ventriculograms for accurate measurement of left ventricular volumes, stroke volume, and ejection fraction.


Urologic Radiology | 1982

Percutaneous dilatation of ureteroenteric strictures or occlusions in ileal conduits

Eric C. Martin; Elliott I. Fankuchen; William J. Casarella

Three patients with ureteroenteric strictures are described. In each patient successful balloon dilatation was performed using an angioplasty technique. Balloon dilatation appears to offer an acceptable alternative to major conduit reconstruction in some patients. The follow-up is so far only 8 months.


Seminars in Nuclear Medicine | 1976

Studies of regional myocardial blood flow: Results in patients with left anterior descending coronary artery disease

Paul J. Cannon; Melvin B. Weiss; William J. Casarella

Measurements of regional myocardial blood flow have been performed rapidly and safely in man at the time of coronary arteriography. Xenon-133 was injected into the coronary artery and estimates of myocardial capillary perfusion were made by computer analysis of the multiple precordial tracer washout curves recorded with a scintillation camera. Blood flow rates/100 g/min in different areas of the heart were calculated by the Schmidt-Kety formula, using an assumed partition coefficient, and were related to the coronary vascular lesions by landmarks provided by the arteriograms. The flow significance of lesions was assessed by making measurements at rest and during interventions that increase coronary blood flow. Perfusion was also estimated in areas supplied by collateral vessels, and regions of scar were detected from the initial distribution of peak tracer activity. In patients with less than 50% obstructions apparent on coronary arteriograms and in those with greater than 50% isolated left anterior descending lesions average mean left ventricular (LV) myocardial perfusion values were not reduced below values found in patients with normal coronary arteries and normal cardiac function. However, in patients with significant two-vessel disease (LAD + right, LAD + circ) mean LV perfusion was significantly reduced. Average regional myocardial perfusion distal to significant lesions was not selectively reduced below the remainder of the ventricle unless the lesions were 100% obstructions. However, both total and distal regional myocardial perfusion increased less in 12 patients with greater than 50% lesions than in 12 others with normal arteriograms or less than 50% lesions. Subnormal flow responses in all of the former group were associated with angina pectoris compared with no angina in the latter. The studies indicate the potential utility of the measurements of regional myocardial blood flow in the evaluation of patients with ischemic heart disease who are potential candidates for myocardial revascularization procedures.


Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 1977

Regional myocardial perfusion: studies with 133xenon and a multiple-crystal scintillation camera.

Paul J. Cannon; Melvin B. Weiss; Kent Ellis; William J. Casarella

Because it is impossible to measure the balance between coronary blood flow and the metabolic needs of the myocardium for oxygen by exclusively radiographic means, investigators in this laboratory developed a technique to make quantitative estimates of capillary blood flow in multiple areas of the human myocardium using 133xenon and a multiple-crystal scintillation camera (1–3). The purpose of this report is to present preliminary results of studies of 175 patients who were studied at Columbia University. The regional myocardial perfusion rates obtained with the method were correlated with radiographic assessments of the degree and the extent of the coronary disease in each patient.


Medicine | 1974

The relationship of hypertension and renal failure in scleroderma (progressive systemic sclerosis) to structural and functional abnormalities of the renal cortical circulation.

Paul J. Cannon; Mohammed Hassar; David B. Case; William J. Casarella; E. Carwile LeRoy

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Donald H. Schmidt

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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