27 research outputs found

    Application of endograft to treat thoracic aortic pathologies: A single center experience

    Get PDF
    PurposeTo evaluate our experience of thoracic endoluminal graft (ELG) repair of various thoracic aortic pathologies using a commercially available device approved by the Food and Drug Administration. Our patient population includes patients eligible for open surgical repair and those with prohibitive surgical risk.MethodsFrom March 1998 to March 2006, endovascular stent repair of the thoracic aorta was performed on 406 patients with 324 patients (median age 72; 200 male) receiving the Gore Excluder endograft. Patient demographics, procedural characteristics, complications, including endoleak, spinal cord ischemia, and mortality, were retrospectively reviewed during follow-up. All patients were followed with chest computer tomography at 6 months and yearly. Statistical analysis was performed utilizing the SPSS Windows 11.0 program. Logistic regression (univariate) analysis used to identify risk factors for paraplegia; analysis of variance (ANOVA) for endoleak distribution; and χ2 used to analyze variables. Survival analysis was done using SAS version 9.1 (SAS Institute, Cary, NC).ResultsThree hundred twenty-four patients were treated with Gore Excluder graft between March 1998 and March 2006. One hundred fifty-seven patients (48.5%) had atherosclerotic aneurysms, 82 (25.3%) had dissections type B (DTB), 34 (10.5%) had penetrating ulcers (PU), 26 (8.0%) with pseudoaneurysms (PSA), 11 (3.4%) had transections (MVAT), 9 (2.8%) aorto-bronchial fistulas (AoBF), 4 (1.2%) embolization, and 1 (0.3%) aorto-esophageal fistula (AoEF). Preoperative aneurysm sac size in TAA ranged from 5 to 12 centimeters, average size 6.3 cm. Sac shrinkage occurred in 65% (102 of 157) of patients. Average postoperative sac size of 5.4 cm in a mean follow-up of 20.4 months. One hundred cases (31.5%) were nonelective; 49 (15.1%) were ruptures. Overall complication was 22.7%, 14.2% (46) in elective cases and 8.5% (28) in nonelective cases. Paraplegia occurred in five (1.5%) patients and paresis in three (0.9%); two of the latter improved and one resolved completely prior to discharge. Incidence of paraplegia was statistically significant (P value < .05) with retroperitoneal approach, perioperative blood loss greater than 1000 cc, and aortic coverage greater than 40 cm. Early endoleaks included 18 (5.5%) type I, four (1.2%) type II, and two (0.6%) type III. Thirty-day mortality was 5.5% (18 related deaths, including three intraoperative deaths). A log rank test did not find statistical differences in actuarial survival with 30-day related mortality between TAA and other pathologies (P = .29) or between DTB and other pathologies (P = .97). Late mortality was 9.6% with 31 unrelated deaths. Follow-up ranged between 1 month and 70 months, average 17 months.ConclusionsEndoluminal grafting is a feasible alternative to open surgical repair for thoracic aortic pathologies. After more than 300 cases, 30-day morbidity and mortality compares favorably with open repair. Paraplegia remains low as a complication and increases in incidence with retroperitoneal approach, increased perioperative blood loss, and increased aortic coverage

    Robustly Safe Compilation

    Get PDF
    Secure compilers generate compiled code that withstands many target-level attacks such as alteration of control flow, data leaks or memory corruption. Many existing secure compilers are proven to be fully abstract, meaning that they reflect and preserve observational equivalence. Fully abstract compilation is strong and useful but, in certain cases, comes at the cost of requiring expensive runtime constructs in compiled code. These constructs may have no relevance for security, but are needed to accommodate differences between the source and target languages that fully abstract compilation necessarily needs

    The Adverse Health Outcomes, Economic Burden, and Public Health Implications of Unmanaged Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD): A Call to Action Resulting from CHADD Summit, Washington, DC, October 17, 2019

    No full text
    Recent research has increasingly documented the adverse effects of ADHD on physical health in addition to its well-known effects on emotional health. Responding to this concern, CHADD organized a summit meeting of health care providers, governmental and other health-related organizations, and health care payers. A White Paper generated from the meeting reviewed the adverse health outcomes, economic burden and public health implications of unmanaged ADHD. Here we summarize the resulting Calls to Action to the various stakeholder groups including: increased awareness and education of providers; development of professional guidelines for diagnosis and treatment; insurance coverage of the relevant services; support of research targeting the role of ADHD in the etiology and treatment of physical illness; and public education campaigns

    Efficiency matters!

    No full text
    corecore