23 results on '"David M. Corda"'
Search Results
2. The CAR-HEMATOTOX score as a prognostic model of toxicity and response in patients receiving BCMA-directed CAR-T for relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma
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Kai Rejeski, Doris K. Hansen, Radhika Bansal, Pierre Sesques, Sikander Ailawadhi, Jennifer M. Logue, Eva Bräunlein, David M. Cordas dos Santos, Ciara L. Freeman, Melissa Alsina, Sebastian Theurich, Yucai Wang, Angela M. Krackhardt, Frederick L. Locke, Emmanuel Bachy, Michael D. Jain, Yi Lin, and Marion Subklewe
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Chimeric antigen receptor ,BCMA CAR-T ,Hematological toxicity ,Cytopenias ,Multiple myeloma ,Infections ,Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background BCMA-directed CAR T-cell therapy (CAR-T) has altered the treatment landscape of relapsed/refractory (r/r) multiple myeloma, but is hampered by unique side effects that can lengthen hospital stays and increase morbidity. Hematological toxicity (e.g. profound and prolonged cytopenias) represents the most common grade ≥ 3 toxicity and can predispose for severe infectious complications. Here, we examined the utility of the CAR-HEMATOTOX (HT) score to predict toxicity and survival outcomes in patients receiving standard-of-care idecabtagene vicleucel and ciltacabtagene autoleucel. Methods Data were retrospectively collected from 113 r/r multiple myeloma patients treated between April 2021 and July 2022 across six international CAR-T centers. The HT score—composed of factors related to hematopoietic reserve and baseline inflammatory state—was determined prior to lymphodepleting chemotherapy. Results At lymphodepletion, 63 patients were HTlow (score 0–1) and 50 patients were HThigh (score ≥ 2). Compared to their HTlow counterparts, HThigh patients displayed prolonged severe neutropenia (median 9 vs. 3 days, p
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Anesthesia in a patient with dyskeratosis congenita presenting for urgent subtotal gastrectomy
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David M. Corda, Flavius Dunca, Calin Mitre, and Cornel Iancu
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Adenocarcinoma ,Asepsis ,Dyskeratosis Congenita ,Perioperative Care ,Gastrectomy ,Stomach Neoplasms ,Humans ,Medicine ,Anesthesia ,Antibiotic prophylaxis ,Intensive care medicine ,business.industry ,Perioperative ,medicine.disease ,Pancytopenia ,Surgery ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Anesthetic ,Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage ,business ,Dyskeratosis congenita ,medicine.drug ,Rare disease - Abstract
Dyskeratosis congenita is a rare and complex congenital disease that may complicate surgical treatment and impact anesthetic care. We present the perioperative management of a patient with severe pancytopenia, respiratory dysfunction, and oral leukoplakia who presented for urgent surgery for removal of a gastric hemorrhagic malignant tumor. Important issues in the management of this patient include choice of anesthetic technique, correction of pancytopenia (thrombocytopenia in particular), judicious perioperative fluid management to avoid dilutional coagulopathy, antibiotic prophylaxis, and strict aseptic technique. Careful management of a potentially difficult airway and a higher likelihood of respiratory insufficiency further complicate patient care. Knowledge of this rare disease process and its potential impact on anesthetic management is paramount for safe perioperative patient care.
- Published
- 2015
4. Protruding coronary stent detected by transesophageal echocardiography changes surgical procedure
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David M. Corda, Gregory M. Janelle, Gary S. Allen, and Carl A. Dragstedt
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Stent ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Transesophageal echocardiogram ,Surgery ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030202 anesthesiology ,Coronary stent ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,cardiovascular diseases ,Radiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,human activities ,Sinus (anatomy) ,Artery - Abstract
This case describes an unusual intraoperative transesophageal echocardiogram (TEE) finding of an unknown sinus of Valsalva mass in a patient undergoing an off-pump coronary artery bypass procedure. The intraoperative TEE finding not only revealed a protruding right coronary ostial stent but also changed the surgical procedure to include an aortotomy that allowed successful removal of the stent. As interventional cardiologists begin exploring more techniques to manage difficult ostial lesions, this finding may be seen more commonly in the future. This case highlights how the use of routine TEE even in off-pump coronary artery bypass procedures may be very beneficial.
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- 2017
5. Clinical application of limiting laryngeal mask airway cuff pressures utilizing inflating syringe intrinsic recoil
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Terrie Vasilopoulos, Timothy E. Morey, Sorin J. Brull, Mark J. Rice, Christopher B. Robards, David M. Corda, and Nikolaus Gravenstein
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medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,musculoskeletal system ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Pressure sensor ,Dysphagia ,Palpation ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Ceiling balloon ,Laryngeal mask airway ,Anesthesia ,Cuff ,Emergency Medicine ,Sore throat ,Medicine ,Original Article ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Syringe - Abstract
Background Overinflation of the laryngeal mask airway (LMA) cuff may cause many of the complications associated with the use of the LMA. There is no clinically acceptable (cost effective and practical) method to ensure cuff pressure is maintained below the manufacturer's recommended maximum value of 60 cm H2O (44 mmHg). We studied the use of the intrinsic recoil of the LMA inflating syringe as an effective and practical way to limit cuff pressures at or below the manufacturer's recommended values. Methods We enrolled 332 patients into three separate groups: LMAs inserted and inflated per standard practice at the institution with only manual palpation of the pilot balloon; LMA cuff pressures measured by a pressure transducer and reduced to < 60 cm H2O (44 mmHg); and LMA intra-cuff pressure managed by the intrinsic recoil of the syringe. Results There were no statistically significant differences between the pressure transducer group and the syringe recoil group for initial cuff pressure or cuff pressure 1 hour after surgery. Both the syringe recoil group and pressure transducer group were less likely than the standard practice group to have sore throat and dysphagia 1 hour after surgery. These differences remained 24 hours after surgery. Conclusions Syringe recoil provides an efficient and reproducible method similar to manometry in preventing overinflation of the LMA cuff and decreasing the incidence of postoperative laryngopharyngeal complications.
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- 2018
6. Deceptive jugular manometry, blood colour and Po2 in the presence of an ipsilateral upper extremity arteriovenous fistula: a report of two cases
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Stephen Aniskevich and David M. Corda
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Ultrasound ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Arteriovenous fistula ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Venous access ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Inadvertent arterial puncture ,030202 anesthesiology ,medicine ,business ,Central venous catheter ,Blood gas analysis - Abstract
Manometry, blood gas analysis and colour of blood are often used as adjuncts to verify central venous access and rule out inadvertent arterial puncture. Several clinical scenarios may make these te...
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- 2018
7. Sugammadex and Oral Contraceptives
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Christopher B. Robards and David M. Corda
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Informed Consent ,Time Factors ,business.industry ,General surgery ,MEDLINE ,Sugammadex ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,030202 anesthesiology ,Informed consent ,Neuromuscular Blockade ,medicine ,Humans ,Anesthesia ,Drug Interactions ,Female ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Contraceptives, Oral ,medicine.drug - Published
- 2018
8. In Response
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David M, Corda and Christopher B, Robards
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Informed Consent ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Anesthesiology ,Anesthesia, Dental ,Humans ,Female ,Sugammadex ,Contraceptives, Oral - Published
- 2018
9. Identifying Early Infections in the Setting of CRS With Routine and Exploratory Serum Proteomics and the HT10 Score Following CD19 CAR-T for Relapsed/Refractory B-NHL
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Kai Rejeski, Viktoria Blumenberg, Gloria Iacoboni, Lucia Lopez-Corral, Soraya Kharboutli, Rafael Hernani, Agnese Petrera, Niklas Müller, Friederike Hildebrand, Lisa Frölich, Philipp Karschnia, Christian Schmidt, David M. Cordas dos Santos, José Luis Piñana, Fabian Müller, Ana Africa Martin, Martin Dreyling, Michael von Bergwelt-Baildon, Pere Barba, Marion Subklewe, and Veit L. Bücklein
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Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
Early fever after chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR-T) therapy can reflect both an infection or cytokine release syndrome (CRS). Identifying early infections in the setting of CRS and neutropenia represents an unresolved clinical challenge. In this retrospective observational analysis, early fever events (day 0–30) were characterized as infection versus CRS in 62 patients treated with standard-of-care CD19.CAR-T for relapsed/refractory B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Routine serum inflammatory markers (C-reactive protein [CRP], interleukin-6 [IL-6], procalcitonin [PCT]) were recorded daily. Exploratory plasma proteomics were performed longitudinally in 52 patients using a multiplex proximity extension assay (Olink proteomics). Compared with the CRSonly cohort, we noted increased event-day IL-6 (median 2243 versus 64 pg/mL, P = 0.03) and particularly high PCT levels (median 1.6 versus 0.3 µg/L, P < 0.0001) in the patients that developed severe infections. For PCT, an optimal discriminatory threshold of 1.5 µg/L was established (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve [AUCROC] = 0.78). Next, we incorporated day-of-fever PCT levels with the patient-individual CAR-HEMATOTOX score. In a multicenter validation cohort (n = 125), we confirmed the discriminatory capacity of this so-called HT10 score for early infections at first fever (AUCROC = 0.87, P < 0.0001, sens. 86%, spec. 86%). Additionally, Olink proteomics revealed pronounced immune dysregulation and endothelial dysfunction in patients with severe infections as evidenced by an increased ANGPT2/1 ratio and an altered CD40/CD40L-axis. In conclusion, the high discriminatory capacity of the HT10 score for infections highlights the advantage of dynamic risk assessment and supports the incorporation of PCT into routine inflammatory panels. Candidate markers from Olink proteomics may further refine risk-stratification. If validated prospectively, the score will enable risk-adapted decisions on antibiotic use.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Myocardial ischemia detected by transesophageal echocardiography in a patient undergoing peripheral vascular surgery
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Dennis Mangano, David M. Corda, and Lawrence J. Caruso
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Bundle-Branch Block ,Myocardial Infarction ,Ischemia ,Electrocardiography ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Myocardial infarction ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Peripheral Vascular Diseases ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Vascular disease ,business.industry ,Perioperative ,Vascular surgery ,medicine.disease ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Anesthesia ,Cardiology ,Female ,Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular ,Myocardial infarction diagnosis ,Complication ,business ,Echocardiography, Transesophageal - Abstract
Prevention and early treatment of myocardial ischemia remain among the primary goals of the anesthesiologist taking care of high-risk patients, such as those undergoing vascular surgery. Guidelines have been published to assist in directing preoperative evaluation and optimization of cardiovascular status. Although perioperative monitoring allows early detection of ischemic events, all monitors have limitations that must be understood before they can be used effectively. We present a case of severe intraoperative myocardial dysfunction detected only by transesophageal echocardiography in a patient undergoing a peripheral vascular procedure. Preoperative and intraoperative management is also discussed.
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- 2000
11. Abstracts
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C. A. Botero, C. E. Smith, C. Holbrook, A. C. Pinchak, David Johnson, Dorothy Thomson, Taras Mycyk, M. Burbridge, Irvin Mayers, nR. W. M. Wahba, F. Belque, S. J. Kleiman, Steven Parker, Peter Cox, Helen Holtby, Lawrence Roy, Marc A. St-Amand, John M. Murkin, Donna Baird, Donal B. Downey, Alan H. Menkis, Fan Yang, Éric Troncy, Martin Francœur, Marc Charbonneau, Patrick Vinay, Gilbert Blaise, William M. Splinter, David J. Roberts, Elliot J. Rhine, Helen B. MacNeill, Craig W. Reid, William PS McKay, Miklavs Erjavec, Benjamin W. S. McKay, Peter H. Gregson, Travis Blanchet, Guy Kember, Josée Lavoie, Daniel Vischoff, Louise Cyrenne, Edith Villeneuve, Pierre Williot, A. K. Raghupathy, R. Haug, B. Punjabi, F. Ditzig, Howard Melnik, Michael J. Tessler, L. Jill Krasner, David M. Corda, Kal Solanki, A. Joseph Layon, T. James Gallagher, Daniel P. Stoltzfus, Shannon L. Rabuka, Carol A. Moote, Robert J. B. Chen, Doreen A. Yee, Ellen Harrington, Beverley A. Orser, D. Mitch Giffin, Kenneth W. Gow, P. Terry Phang, Keith R. Walley, C. Brian Warriner, Matthew H. Cohen, Andrew J. Klahsen, Deirdre O’Reilly, John McBride, Margaret Ballantyne, Blair D. Goranson, Scott Lang, William N. Dust, Jeff McKerrell, Guy Martin, René Martin, Daniel Martin, Philippe Valet, Jean-Pierre Tétrault, Caroline Dagenais, Martine Pirlet, Dominique Dansereau, Pedro D’Orléans-Justes, Agnès Jankowska, Yves Veillette, Angela L. Mathieson, Howard Intrater, Lionel Cruickshank, P. C. Duke, B. Y. Ong, Vincent Woo, Donna Schimnowski, Sharon Trosky, Linda Dalton, Ibrahim Zabani, Colin R. Chilvers, Himat Vaghadia, Pamela M. Merrick, Ibrahim Kashkari, Hossam Al-Oufi, D. Jolly, B. T. Finucane, Wolfgang Weyland, Ulrich Fritz, Heike Landmann, Ingrid Schumacher, Michael English, Dietrich Kettler, Catherine M. Duffy, Pirjo H. Manninen, Frances Chung, Shanthini Sundar, Emilio B. Lobato, Orlando Florete, Glenn B. Paige, Thierry Daloze, Daniel A. Chartrand, Denis St-Laurent, Gordon S. Fox, Murray L. Rice, D. John Doyle, George A. Volgyesi, Joseph A. Fisher, Arthur Slutsky, Igor Salazkin, Karen A. Brown, Pradeep Kulkarni, Bibiana Cujec, Randy McCuaig, Tom Hurst, David Antecol, François Bellemare, Jacques Couture, Manon Marchand, Peter McNeil, Orlando Hung, Lily M. Ho-Tai, J. Hugh Devitt, Alva G. Noel, Michael P. O’Donnell, Robert J. Greenhow, Frank W. Cervenko, Brian Milne, Mark D. Peterson, Ian R. Thomson, Robert J. Hudson, Morley Rosenbloom, Michael Moon, Jitender Sareen, H. Locke Bingham, Steven B. Backman, Reuben D. Stein, C. Polosa, Michael Tessler, Salvatore M. Spadafora, John G. Fuller, Lisa Kim, Keyvan Karkouti, D. Keith Rose, Lorraine E. Ferris, DK Rose, MM Cohen, F. E. Ralley, B. DeVarennes, M. Robitaille, Norman Searle, Raymond Martineau, Peter Conzen, A. Al-Hasani, Tom Ebert, Michael Muzi, Jean-François Hardy, Sylvain Bélisle, André Couturier, Danielle Robitaille, Micheline Roy, Lyne Gagnon, Elisabeth J. Avraamides, P. J. Dryden, J. P. O’Connor, W. R. E. Jamieson, I. Reid, D. Ansley, H. Sadeghi, L. H. Burr, A. I. Munro, P. M. Merrick, Mark Benaroia, Andrew Baker, C. David Mazer, Lee Errett, Luc Frenette, Jerry Cox, Donna Kerns, Steve Pearce, David Mark, Paul McDonagh, Lulz DeLlma, Howard Nathan, Jean-Yves Dupuls, J.Earl Wynands, G. C. Moudgil, J. G. Johnson, G. M. Moudgil, Richard I. Hall, Connie MacLaren, M. J. Ali, M. Ballantyne, D. Norris, Stephen D. Beed, Eugene A. Menard, Leon P. Noel, Gary G. Bonn, William Clarke, H. Marion Gould, Leslie E. Hall, Philippe Bernard, Juan Bass, Ramona A. Kearney, Cheryl A. Mack, Lucy M. Entwistle, Joan C. Bevan, Andrew J. Macnab, Guy Veall, Colin Marsland, Craig R. Ries, Shahnaz K. Hamid, Ian R. Selby, Nancy Sikich, Elizabeth Hsu, Patricia McCarthy, Ching-Yue Yang, Wun-Chin Wu, Jiunn-Jye Huang, Shyu-Yin Chen, Hsiang-Ning Luk, Chok-Yung Chai, Gina K. Lafreniere, Donald G. Brunet, Joel L. Parlow, Hossam El-Beheiry, Aviv Ouanounou, Mary Morris, Peter Carlen, Pamela J. Morgan, Roger Chapados, Marlene Gauthier, John W. D. Knox, Jacques LeLorier, Roddy Lin, Keith Rose, Bernadette Garvey, Robert McBrobm, L. C. McAdam, J. F. MacDonald, B. A. Orser, Georgios koutsoukos, Susan Belo, Christopher A. Chin, Brendan O’Hare, Jerrold Lerman, Junko Endo, Arthur E. Schwartz, Oktavijan Minanov, J. Gilbert Stone, David C. Adams, Aqeel A. Sandhu, Mark E. Pearson, William L. Young, Robert E. Michler, Ernest Cutz, Matt M. Kurrek, Marsha M. Cohen, Kevin Fish, Pamela Fish, Patricia Murphy, Donald Fung, Alva Noel, John-Paul Szalai, Ari Robicsek, Joshua Rucker, Joshua Kruger, Mark Slutsky, Leeor Sommer, Jeff Silverman, Jodi Dickstein, Viren Naik, Douglas J. Hemphill, Regina Kurian, Khursheed N. Jeejeebhoy, Osama A. Alahdal, N. H. Badner, W. E. Komar, R. Bhandari, R. Craen, D. Cuillerier, W. B. Dobkowski, M. H. Smith, A. N. Vannelli, R. B. Bourne, C. H. Rorabeck, J. A. Doyle, Antoinette Corvo, Richard M. Wahba, Nathalie Scheffer, John Y. C. Tsang, Brad A. Brush, N. Q. N’Guyen, C. Orain, S. Tougui, G. Lavenac, D. Milon, Ewan D. Ritchie, Doris Tong, Andrew Norris, Anthony Miniaci, Santhira D. Vairavanathan, Timothy FitzPatrick, Mark Stafford-Smith, Ken Kardash, Toula Trihas, Simcha J. Kleiman, Michel Rossignol, Dominique Bérard, Brent Martel, J. P. Tétrault, Peter G. Lunt, Dennis W. Coombs, Stephen Halpern, Elizabeth A. Peter, Patricia Janssen, Jill Mahy, M. Joanne Douglas, Caroline S. Grange, Timothy J. Adams, Louis Wadsworth, Holly Muir, Romesh Shukla, Desmond Writer, Richard McLaren, Robert Liston, Don Paetkau, Bill Y. Ong, Ron Segstro, Judy Littleford, Cristina Hurtado, Ananthan Krishnathas, Marcelo Lannes, Joanne Fortier, Jun Su, Rubini Jeganathan, and Suzanne Vaillancourt
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Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,General Medicine - Published
- 1996
12. Effect of jaw thrust and cricoid pressure maneuvers on glottic visualization during GlideScope videolaryngoscopy
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Mueez K. Qureshi, Sorin J. Brull, Kevin T. Riutort, Michael G. Heckman, David M. Corda, and Alex J. Leone
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Glottis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Laryngoscopy ,Video Recording ,Jaw-thrust maneuver ,Laryngoscopes ,medicine ,Intubation, Intratracheal ,Pressure ,Intubation ,Humans ,Cricoid pressure ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Tracheal intubation ,Middle Aged ,Surgery ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Jaw Relation Record ,Anesthesia ,Thyroid Cartilage ,Airway management ,Female ,Airway ,business - Abstract
During performance of direct laryngoscopy in the difficult-to-visualize airway, several maneuvers have the potential to impact glottic visualization, including jaw thrust and cricoid pressure. The effect of these maneuvers on glottic visualization during videolaryngoscopy has not been studied. We evaluated the effect of jaw thrust and cricoid pressure maneuvers on both visualization of the glottis and the area of glottic opening visible during GlideScope-aided videolaryngoscopy.One hundred patients were enrolled in this study. After induction of general anesthesia, videolaryngoscopy was followed by jaw thrust and cricoid pressure maneuvers performed in random order. Laryngeal anatomy was recorded continuously and was saved as digital images following the initial laryngoscopy and after each maneuver. Glottis grade [modified Cormack and Lehane (CL)] was recorded, as was the total glottic area.There was improvement in glottis grade when utilizing jaw thrust maneuver in comparison to GlideScope videolaryngoscopy alone (31% improved, 4% worsened; P0.001). There was no difference in glottis grade when using the cricoid pressure maneuver in comparison with videolaryngoscopy alone (39% improved, 20% worsened; P = 0.19). Glottic opening area, however, was greater when utilizing the jaw thrust maneuver in comparison with videolaryngoscopy alone (P0.001), but smaller when utilizing the cricoid pressure maneuver in comparison with videolaryngoscopy alone (P0.001).The jaw thrust maneuver was superior to videolaryngoscopy alone in improving the modified CL grade and the visualized glottic area; however, no significant improvement was noted with cricoid pressure. We therefore recommend the use of jaw thrust as a first-line maneuver to aid in glottic visualization and tracheal intubation during GlideScope videolaryngoscopy.
- Published
- 2011
13. Patients' perspective on full disclosure and informed consent regarding postoperative visual loss associated with spinal surgery in the prone position
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Jeffrey J. Pasternak, Franklin Dexter, Eric W. Nottmeier, Terrence L. Trentman, Sorin J. Brull, and David M. Corda
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,Vision Disorders ,Pilot Projects ,Disclosure ,Patient satisfaction ,Postoperative Complications ,Informed consent ,Prone Position ,Medicine ,Humans ,Full disclosure ,Postoperative Period ,Informed Consent ,business.industry ,Perspective (graphical) ,General Medicine ,Guideline ,Professional-Patient Relations ,Original Articles ,Confidence interval ,Spinal surgery ,United States ,Prone position ,Spinal Cord ,Patient Satisfaction ,Physical therapy ,Female ,Perception ,business - Abstract
OBJECTIVE To determine patients' opinions regarding the person, method, and timing for disclosure of postoperative visual loss (POVL) associated with high-risk surgery. PATIENTS AND METHODS On the basis of findings of a pilot study involving 219 patients at Mayo Clinic in Florida, we hypothesized that at least 80% of patients would prefer disclosure of POVL by the surgeon, during a face-to-face discussion, before the day of scheduled surgery. To test the hypothesis, we sent a questionnaire to 437 patients who underwent prolonged prone spinal surgical procedures at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN, or Mayo Clinic in Arizona from December 1, 2008, to December 31, 2009. RESULTS Among the 184 respondents, 158 patients gave responses supporting the hypothesis vs 26 with at least 1 response not supporting it, for an observed incidence of 86%. The 2-sided 95% confidence interval is 80% to 91%. CONCLUSION At least 80% of patients prefer full disclosure of the risk of POVL, by the surgeon, during a face-to-face discussion before the day of scheduled surgery. This finding supports development of a national patient-driven guideline for disclosing the risk of POVL before prone spinal surgery.
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- 2011
14. Hemodynamic Changes Induced by Pneumoperitoneum and Measured With ECOM
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Timothy S. J. Shine, David M. Corda, Sorin J. Brull, Bruce J. Leone, Neil G. Feinglass, Booyeon J. Han, and Stephen Aniskevich
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Laparoscopic surgery ,Cardiac output ,Remote patient monitoring ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Biomedical Engineering ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Anesthetic management ,Hemodynamics ,Stroke volume ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Pneumoperitoneum ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,Vascular resistance ,business - Abstract
Laparoscopic surgery presents unique hemodynamic challenges for the anesthetic management of patients. Hemodynamic changes induced by pneumoperitoneum were measured using a new noninvasive device, the Endotracheal Cardiac Output Monitor (ECOM) (ConMed Corp, Utica, NY). This monitor provides measurements—including cardiac output (CO), systemic vascular resistance (SVR), and stroke volume variation (SVV)—that were previously unavailable noninvasively. A better understanding of the applicability and reliability of this new technology in the clinical setting is important for patient safety. CONCLUSIONS
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- 2011
15. Cholecystectomy, Open
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David M. Corda and Sorin J. Brull
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- 2011
16. Contributors
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Sanjib Adhikary, Jorge Aguilar, Charles Ahere, Moustafa Ahmed, Jane C. Ahn, Shamsuddin Akhtar, David B. Albert, Nasrin N. Aldawoodi, John T. Algren, Gracie Almeida-Chen, David Amar, Zirka H. Anastasian, Stephen Aniskevich, Solomon Aronson, Harendra Arora, Amit Asopa, Joshua H. Atkins, John G. Augoustides, Mohammad Fareed Azam, Catherine R. Bachman, Douglas R. Bacon, Andrew D. Badley, Emily Baird, Alethia Baldwin, Ryan Ball, Amir Baluch, David Bandola, Shawn Banks, Paul G. Barash, Kathleen E. Barrett, Shawn T. Beaman, Jonathan C. Beathe, Christopher D. Beatie, W. Scott Beattie, Perry S. Bechtle, G. Richard Benzinger, Lauren Berkow, Jeffrey M. Berman, Wendy K. Bernstein, Arnold J. Berry, Frederic Berry, Ulrike Berth, Walter Bethune, Sumita Bhambhani, Shobana Bharadwaj, Neil Bhatt, Frederic T. Billings, Wendy B. Binstock, David J. Birnbach, Michael Bishop, Stephanie Black, Mary A. Blanchette, James M. Blum, Krishna Boddu, Lara Bonasera, Richard L. Boortz-Marx, Cecil O. Borel, Gregory H. Botz, Charles D. Boucek, William Bradford, Jason C. Brainard, Michelle Braunfeld, Ferne R. Braveman, Caridad Bravo-Fernandez, Peter H. Breen, Marjorie Brennan, Tricia Brentjens, Megan A. Brockel, Jay B. Brodsky, Todd A. Bromberg, Adam J. Broussard, Chris Broussard, Carmen Labrie-Brown, Robert H. Brown, Charles S. Brudney, Sorin J. Brull, Claude Brunson, Trent Bryson, Jacob M. Buchowski, Stefan Budac, Zachary D. Bush, John Butterworth, Lisbeysi Calo, Christopher Canlas, Ayana Cannon, Shawn M. Cantie, Lisa Caplan, Marco Caruso, Davide Cattano, Charles B. Cauldwell, Laura Cavallone, Maurizio Cereda, Thomas M. Chalifoux, Susan Chan, Theodore G. Cheek, Alexander Chen, Samuel A. Cherry, Albert T. Cheung, Grace L. Chien, Peter T. Choi, Christopher Ciarallo, Franklyn Cladis, Anthony J. Clapcich, Richard B. Clark, Mindy Cohen, Neal H. Cohen, Robert I. Cohen, Stephan J. Cohn, Aisling Conran, Richard I. Cook, Randall F. Coombs, David M. Corda, Daniel Cormican, Darren Cousin, Vincent S. Cowell, Lyndsey Cox, Paula A. Craigo, Richard C. Cross, Roy F. Cucchiara, William H. Daily, Gaurang Dalal, Priti Dalal, Michael Danekas, Ahmed M. Darwish, Ribal Darwish, Suanne M. Daves, Kathleen Davis, Peter J. Davis, Bracken J. De Witt, Ellise Delphin, Seema Deshpande, Dawn P. Desiderio, Tricia Desvarieux, Laura K. Diaz, Christian Diez, Sanjay Dixit, Meenakshi Dogra, Karen B. Domino, Kathryn Dorhauer, Todd Dorman, Don D. Doussan, James Duke, Ann C. Duncan, Frank W. Dupont, Andrew Dziewit, L. Jane Easdown, R. Blaine Easley, Thomas J. Ebert, David M. Eckmann, Talmage D. Egan, Seth Eisdorfer, Nabil M. Elkassabany, Ryan P. Ellender, Logan S. Emory, Monique Espinosa, Lucinda L. Everett, Nauder Faraday, James J. Fehr, James M. Feld, Lynn A. Fenton, Laura H. Ferguson, Matthew Fiegel, Aaron M. Fields, Gordon N. Finlayson, Alan Finley, Gregory W. Fischer, Gary Fiskum, Molly Fitzpatrick, Russell Flatto, Lee A. Fleisher, Ronda Flower, Annette G. Folgueras, Patrick J. Forte, Joseph F. Foss, Charles J. Fox, William R. Furman, Robert Gaiser, David R. Gambling, Scott Gardiner, Matthew L. Garvey, Abraham C. Gaupp, Steven Gayer, Jeremy M. Geiduschek, Frank Gencorelli, Eric Gewirtz, Ghaleb A. Ghani, Charles P. Gibbs, Jeremy L. Gibson, Lori Gilbert, Kevin J. Gingrich, Gregory Ginsburg, Christopher Giordano, Christine E. Goepfert, Hernando Gomez, Santiago Gomez, Alanna E. Goodman, Stephanie R. Goodman, Alexandru Gottlieb, Ori Gottlieb, Allan Gottschalk, Basavana Gouda Goudra, Harry J. Gould, Nikolaus Gravenstein, Megan Graybill, William J. Greeley, Patrick Guffey, Ala Sami Haddadin, John G. Hagen, Karim Abdel Hakim, Michael Hall, N. James Halliday, Raafat S. Hannallah, Jeremy Hansen, C. William Hanson, Charles B. Hantler, Andrew P. Harris, Jonathan Hastie, Henry A. Hawney, Stephen O. Heard, James E. Heavner, James G. Hecker, Elizabeth A. Hein, Eugenie Heitmiller, Mark Helfaer, Lori B. Heller, Andrew Hemphill, Adrian Hendrickse, Frederick A. Hensley, Ian A. Herrick, Douglas Hester, Eric J. Heyer, Michael S. Higgins, Roberta Hines, Charles W. Hogue, Kenneth J. Holroyd, Natalie F. Holt, Simon J. Howell, Faisal Huda, Keith E. Hude, Hayden R. Hughes, James M. Hunter, Brad J. Hymel, James W. Ibinson, Karen E. Iles, Robert M. Insoft, Shiroh Isono, Yulia Ivashkov, Bozena R. Jachna, Anna Jankowska, Norah Janosy, Arun L. Jayaraman, Nathalia Jimenez, Judy G. Johnson, Lyndia Jones, Edmund H. Jooste, Zeev N. Kain, Maudy Kalangie, Philip L. Kalarickal, Ihab Kamel, Mia Kang, Ivan Kangrga, Ravish Kapoor, Helen W. Karl, Christopher Karsanac, Swaminathan Karthik, Jeffrey A. Katz, Alan Kaye, Adam M. Kaye, A. Murat Kaynar, Nancy B. Kenepp, Miklos D. Kertai, Mary A. Keyes, Sarah Khan, Swapnil Khoche, David Y. Kim, Jerry H. Kim, Kimberly M. King, Jeffrey Kirsch, Matthew A. Klopman, Paul R. Knight, Donald D. Koblin, W. Andrew Kofke, Vincent J. Kopp, Joseph R. Koveleskie, Courtney Kowalczyk, Valeriy V. Kozmenko, Kaylyn Krummen, Sapna R. Kudchadkar, Nathan Kudrick, Adrienne Kung, C. Dean Kurth, Robert Kyle, J. Lance LaFleur, Jason G. Lai, Kirk Lalwani, William L. Lanier, Dawn M. Larson, Richard M. Layman, Chris C. Lee, Mark J. Lema, W. Casey Lenox, Jacqueline M. Leung, Roy C. Levitt, Jerrold H. Levy, J. Lance Lichtor, Charles Lin, Sharon L. Lin, Karen S. Lindeman, Lesley Lirette, Ronald S. Litman, Qianjin Liu, Renyu Liu, Wen-Shin Liu, Justin Lockman, Stanley L. Loftness, Martin J. London, Philip D. Lumb, M. Concetta Lupa, Anne Marie Lynn, Devi Mahendran, Jeffrey Mako, Anuj Malhotra, Vinod Malhotra, Andrew M. Malinow, Mark G. Mandabach, Dennis T. Mangano, Sobia Mansoor, Inna Maranets, Jonathan B. Mark, Sinisa Markovic, H. Michael Marsh, Choendal Martin, Nicole D. Martin, Douglas Martz, Veronica A. Matei, Letha Mathews, Lynne G. Maxwell, Philip McArdle, John P. McCarren, Brenda C. McClain, Brian McClure, William A. McDade, Kathryn E. McGoldrick, Brian J. McGrath, Gregory L. McHugh, David McIlroy, Jason McKeown, Thomas M. McLoughlin, R. Yan McRae, William L. Meadow, Sameer Menda, William T. Merritt, David G. Metro, Berend Mets, Hosni Mikhaeil, David W. Miller, Jessica Miller, Mohammed Minhaj, Marek A. Mirski, Nanhi Mitter, Alexander J.C. Mittnacht, Raj K. Modak, Pierre Moine, Constance L. Monitto, Richard C. Month, Richard E. Moon, Laurel E. Moore, Roger A. Moore, Thomas A. Moore, Debra E. Morrison, Jonathan Moss, John R. Moyers, Jesse J. Muir, Adam J. Munson-Young, Stanley Muravchick, John M. Murkin, Peter Nagele, Peter A. Nagi, Daniel A. Nahrwold, Michael L. Nahrwold, Madhavi Naik, Manchula Navaratnam, Stephan P. Nebbia, Priscilla Nelson, Thai T. Nguyen, Viet Nguyen, Stavroula Nikolaidis, Zoulfira Nisnevitch, Dolores B. Njoku, Mary J. Njoku, Edward J. Norris, Omonele O. Nwokolo, Daniel Nyhan, William T. O'Byrne, Edward A. Ochroch, Andrew Oken, Nathan Orgain, Nancy E. Oriol, Pedro Orozco, Andreas M. Ostermeier, Andranik Ovassapian, Mehmet S. Ozcan, Ira Padnos, Sheela S. Pai, Nirvik Pal, Dhamodaran Palaniappan, Susan K. Palmer, Howard D. Palte, Wei Pan, Oliver Panzer, Sibi Pappachan, Anthony Passannante, Dennis A. Patel, Dilipkumar K. Patel, Kirit M. Patel, Samir Patel, Shalin Patel, Sanup Pathak, Minda L. Patt, Ronald W. Pauldine, Olga Pawelek, Tim Pawelek, Kiarash Paydar, Ronald G. Pearl, Christine Peeters-Asdourian, Padmavathi R. Perela, Charise T. Petrovitch, Patricia H. Petrozza, Dennis Phillips, Mark C. Phillips, Christine Piefer, Edgar J. Pierre, S. William Pinson, Evan G. Pivalizza, Raymond M. Planinsic, Don Poldermans, Joel M. Pomerantz, Jason E. Pope, Wanda M. Popescu, Vivian H. Porche, Jahan Porhomayon, Dmitry Portnoy, Corinne K. Postle, Paul J. Primeaux, Donald S. Prough, Ferenc Puskas, Carlos A. Puyo, Forrest Quiggle, Mary Rabb, Bronwyn R. Rae, Muhammad B. Rafique, Jesse M. Raiten, Arvind Rajagopal, Srinivasan Rajagopal, Gaurav Rajpal, Chandra Ramamoorthy, Ira J. Rampil, James G. Ramsay, James A. Ramsey, Vidya N. Rao, Joana Ratsiu, Selina Read, Ronjeet Reddy, Leila L. Reduque, David L. Reich, Karene Ricketts, Cameron Ricks, Bernhard Riedel, Jyotsna Rimal, Joseph Rinehart, James M. Riopelle, Stacey A. Rizza, Amy C. Robertson, Stephen Robinson, Peter Rock, Yillam F. Rodriguez-Blanco, Michael F. Roizen, Daniel M. Roke, Ryan Romeo, Joseph Rosa, David A. Rosen, Kathleen Rosen, Stanley H. Rosenbaum, Andrew D. Rosenberg, Andrew L. Rosenberg, Henry Rosenberg, Meg A. Rosenblatt, Steven Roth, Brian Rothman, Justin L. Rountree, Matthew J. Rowan, Marc Rozner, Ryan Rubin, Stephen M. Rupp, W. John Russell, Thomas A. Russo, Alecia L. Sabartinelli, Tetsuro Sakai, Orlando J. Salinas, Paul L. Samm, Jibin Samuel, Tor Sandven, Ted J. Sanford, Joshua W. Sappenfield, Ponnusamy Saravanan, Subramanian Sathishkumar, R. Alexander Schlichter, Eric Schnell, David L. Schreibman, Armin Schubert, Peter Schulman, Todd A. Schultz, Alan Jay Schwartz, Jamie McElrath Schwartz, Jeffrey J. Schwartz, Benjamin K. Scott, Joseph L. Seltzer, Tamas Seres, Daniel I. Sessler, Navil F. Sethna, Amar Setty, Paul W. Shabaz, Pranav Shah, Saroj Mukesh Shah, Milad Sharifpour, Joanne Shay, Jay Shepherd, Jeffrey S. Shiffrin, Marina Shindell, Daniel Siker, Richard Silverman, Brett A. Simon, Nina Singh, Ashish C. Sinha, Robert N. Sladen, Kieran A. Slevin, Tod B. Sloan, Kathleen Smith, Timothy E. Smith, Victoria Smoot, Denis Snegovskikh, Betsy Ellen Soifer, Molly Solorzano, James M. Sonner, Aris Sophocles, James A. Sparrow, Joan Spiegel, Bruce D. Spiess, Ramprasad Sripada, Stanley W. Stead, Joshua D. Stearns, Kelly Stees, Clinton Steffey, Christopher Stemland, John Stene, Christopher T. Stephens, Tracey L. Stierer, O. Jameson Stokes, Bryant W. Stolp, David F. Stowe, Ted Strickland, Suzanne Strom, Erin A. Sullivan, Michele Sumler, Dajin Sun, Lena Sun, Esther Sung, Veronica C. Swanson, Judit Szolnoki, Joe Talarico, Gee Mei Tan, Darryl T. Tang, Paul Tarasi, René Tempelhoff, John E. Tetzlaff, Alisa C. Thorne, Arlyne Thung, Vasanti Tilak, Kate Tobin, Joseph R. Tobin, Michael J. Tobin, R. David Todd, Matthew Tomlinson, Thomas J. Toung, Lien B. Tran, Minh Chau Joe Tran, Kevin K. Tremper, Sanyo Tsai, George S. Tseng, Kenneth J. Tuman, Avery Tung, Cynthia Tung, Rebecca Twersky, Mark Twite, John A. Ulatowski, Michael Urban, Manuel C. Vallejo, Andrea Vannucci, Albert J. Varon, Anasuya Vasudevan, Susheela Viswanathan, Alexander A. Vitin, Wolfgang Voelckel, Ann Walia, Russell T. Wall, Terrence Wallace, Shu-Ming Wang, David C. Warltier, Lucy Waskell, Scott Watkins, Denise Wedel, Stuart J. Weiss, Charles Weissman, Nathaen Weitzel, Gregory Weller, Gina Whitney, Robert A. Whittington, Danny Wilkerson, Nancy C. Wilkes, Michael Williams, Jimmy Windsor, Bernard Wittels, Gregory A. Wolff, Andrew K. Wong, Stacie N. Woods, A.J. Wright, Zheng Xie, Christopher C. Young, Ian Yuan, Francine S. Yudkowitz, James R. Zaidan, Paul Zanaboni, Warren M. Zapol, Angela Zimmerman, and Maurice S. Zwass
- Published
- 2011
17. Increased visceral fat distribution and body composition impact cytokine release syndrome onset and severity after CD19 chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy in advanced B-cell malignancies
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David M. Cordas dos Santos, Kai Rejeski, Michael Winkelmann, Lian Liu, Paul Trinkner, Sophie Günther, Veit L. Bücklein, Viktoria Blumenberg, Christian Schmidt, Wolfgang G. Kunz, Michael von Bergwelt-Baildon, Sebastian Theurich, and Marion Subklewe
- Subjects
Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
Chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR-T) therapy is associated with a distinct toxicity profile that includes cytokine release syndrome (CRS) and immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome (ICANS). CRS is characterized by the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as interleukin 6 (IL-6) and is closely linked to CAR-T expansion and bystander cells like monocytes/macrophages. In other hyperinflammatory states, obesity contributes to inflammatory cascades and acts as a risk factor for disease severity. We aimed to study the influence of anthropometric and body composition (BC) measurements on CAR-T-related immunotoxicity in 64 patients receiving CD19-directed CAR-T for relapsed/refractory Bcell malignancies. Patients with grade ≥2 CRS presented with a significantly higher median body mass index (BMI), waist circumference, waist-to-height ratio (WtHR) and visceral adipose tissue (VAT). These parameters were also found to be associated with an earlier CRS onset. Other adipose deposits and muscle mass did not differ between patients with grade 0-1 CRS versus grade ≥2 CRS. Moreover, BC parameters did not influence ICANS severity or onset. In a multivariate binary logistic regression incorporating known risk factors of immunotoxicity, the factors BMI, waist circumference, WtHR and VAT increased the probability of grade ≥2 CRS. Receiver operating characteristic analyses were utilized to determine optimal discriminatory thresholds for these parameters. Patients above these thresholds displayed markedly increased peak IL-6 levels. Our data imply that increased body composition and VAT in particular represent an additional risk factor for severe and early CRS. These findings carry implications for risk-stratification prior to CD19 CAR-T and may be integrated into established risk models.
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- 2022
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18. A unique approach to postoperative analgesia for ambulatory surgery
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David M. Corda and F. Kayser Enneking
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hospitalized patients ,education ,Patient satisfaction ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedic Procedures ,Ropivacaine ,Anesthetics, Local ,Infusion Pumps ,Brachial plexus block ,Aged ,Pain, Postoperative ,business.industry ,Analgesia, Patient-Controlled ,Nerve Block ,Middle Aged ,Amides ,Surgery ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Ambulatory Surgical Procedures ,Anesthesia ,Analgesia postoperative ,Orthopedic surgery ,Ambulatory ,Arm ,Female ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Comment by Jerry D. Vloka, MD, PhD‡ and Admir Hadzic, MD, PhD‡ Postoperative analgesia for the ambulatory surgery patient is frequently inadequate. Continuous regional analgesia improves outcome and patient satisfaction in hospitalized patients. This paper describes the successful use of continuous regional analgesia following orthopedic surgery in the ambulatory setting.
- Published
- 2001
19. A Potential Hazard Involving the Gas Sampling Line and the Adjustable Pressure Limiting Valve on the Drager Apollo® Anesthesia Workstation
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David M. Corda and Christopher B. Robards
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Hazard (logic) ,Ventilators, Mechanical ,Workstation ,Adjustable pressure limiting valve ,business.industry ,Sampling (statistics) ,Equipment Design ,Product Labeling ,law.invention ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Capnography ,law ,Anesthesia, Closed-Circuit ,Intubation, Intratracheal ,Pressure ,Humans ,Medicine ,Equipment Failure ,Line (text file) ,business ,Simulation - Published
- 2010
20. Risk Stratification Based on a Pattern of Immunometabolic Host Factors Is Superior to Body Mass Index—Based Prediction of COVID-19-Associated Respiratory Failure
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David M. Cordas dos Santos, Lian Liu, Melvin Gerisch, Johannes C. Hellmuth, Michael von Bergwelt-Baildon, Wolfgang G. Kunz, and Sebastian Theurich
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COVID-19 ,obesity ,metaflammation ,invasive mechanical ventilation ,body composition ,immunonutritional scores ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 - Abstract
Overweight and obesity are associated with chronic low-grade inflammation and represent risk factors for various diseases, including COVID-19. However, most published studies on COVID-19 defined obesity by the body mass index (BMI), which does not encounter adipose tissue distribution, thus neglecting immunometabolic high-risk patterns. Therefore, we comprehensively analyzed baseline anthropometry (BMI, waist-to-height-ratio (WtHR), visceral (VAT), epicardial (EAT), subcutaneous (SAT) adipose tissue masses and liver fat, inflammation markers (CRP, ferritin, interleukin-6), and immunonutritional scores (CRP-to-albumin ratio (CAR), modified Glasgow prognostic score, neutrophile-to-lymphocyte ratio, prognostic nutritional index)) in 58 consecutive COVID-19 patients of the early pandemic phase with regard to the necessity of invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV). Here, metabolically high-risk adipose tissues represented by increased VAT, liver fat, and WtHR strongly correlated with higher levels of inflammation, pathologic immunonutritional scores, and the need for IMV. In contrast, the prognostic value of BMI was inferior and absent with regard to SAT. Multivariable logistic regression analysis identified an optimized IMV risk prediction model employing liver fat, WtHR, and CAR. In summary, we suggest an immunometabolically risk-adjusted model to predict COVID-19-induced respiratory failure better than BMI-based stratification, which warrants prospective validation.
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- 2022
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21. How fish power swimming
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David M. Corda, Douglas M. Swank, and Lawrence C. Rome
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Multidisciplinary ,Electromyography ,Muscles ,Posterior region ,Physical Exertion ,Fishes ,Stimulation ,Anatomy ,Negative work ,Biology ,Work loop ,%22">Fish ,Animals ,Locomotion ,Swimming ,Muscle Contraction - Abstract
It is thought that fish generate the power needed for steady swimming with their anterior musculature, whereas the posterior musculature only transmits forces to the tail and does negative work. Isolated red muscle bundles driven through the length changes and stimulation pattern that muscles normally undergo during steady swimming showed the opposite pattern. Most of the power for swimming came from muscle in the posterior region of the fish, and relatively little came from the anterior musculature. In addition, the contractile properties of the muscle along the length of the fish are significantly adapted to enhance power generation.
- Published
- 1993
22. MAP3K7 is recurrently deleted in pediatric T-lymphoblastic leukemia and affects cell proliferation independently of NF-κB
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David M. Cordas dos Santos, Juliane Eilers, Alfonso Sosa Vizcaino, Elena Orlova, Martin Zimmermann, Martin Stanulla, Martin Schrappe, Kathleen Börner, Dirk Grimm, Martina U. Muckenthaler, Andreas E. Kulozik, and Joachim B. Kunz
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T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia ,T-ALL ,TGF-beta activated kinase 1 ,MAP3K7 ,chr6q15 deletion ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background Deletions of 6q15–16.1 are recurrently found in pediatric T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL). This chromosomal region includes the mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase 7 (MAP3K7) gene which has a crucial role in innate immune signaling and was observed to be functionally and prognostically relevant in different cancer entities. Therefore, we correlated the presence of MAP3K7 deletions with clinical parameters in a cohort of 327 pediatric T-ALL patients and investigated the function of MAP3K7 in the T-ALL cell lines CCRF-CEM, Jurkat and MOLT-4. Methods MAP3K7 deletions were detected by multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA). T-ALL cell lines were transduced with adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors expressing anti-MAP3K7 shRNA or a non-silencing shRNA together with a GFP reporter. Transduction efficiency was measured by flow cytometry and depletion efficiency by RT-PCR and Western blots. Induction of apoptosis was measured by flow cytometry after staining with PE-conjugated Annexin V. In order to assess the contribution of NF-κB signaling to the effects of MAP3K7 depletion, cells were treated with TNF-α and cell lysates analyzed for components of the NF-κB pathway by Western blotting and for expression of the NF-κB target genes BCL2, CMYC, FAS, PTEN and TNF-α by RT-PCR. Results MAP3K7 is deleted in approximately 10% and point-mutated in approximately 1% of children with T-ALL. In 32 of 33 leukemias the deletion of MAP3K7 also included the adjacent CASP8AP2 gene. MAP3K7 deletions were associated with the occurrence of SIL-TAL1 fusions and a mature immunophenotype, but not with response to treatment and outcome. Depletion of MAP3K7 expression in T-ALL cell lines by shRNAs slowed down proliferation and induced apoptosis, but neither changed protein levels of components of NF-κB signaling nor NF-κB target gene expression after stimulation with TNF-α. Conclusions This study revealed that the recurrent deletion of MAP3K7/CASP8AP2 is associated with SIL-TAL1 fusions and a mature immunophenotype, but not with response to treatment and risk of relapse. Homozygous deletions of MAP3K7 were not observed, and efficient depletion of MAP3K7 interfered with viability of T-ALL cells, indicating that a residual expression of MAP3K7 is indispensable for T-lymphoblasts.
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- 2018
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23. Patients' Perspective on Full Disclosure and Informed Consent Regarding Postoperative Visual Loss Associated With Spinal Surgery in the Prone Position.
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David M. Corda, Franklin Dexter, Jeffrey J. Pasternak, Terrence L. Trentman, Eric W. Nottmeier, and Sorin J. Brull
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- *
DISEASE susceptibility , *SPINAL cord surgery , *SURGICAL complications - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine patients' opinions regarding the person, method, and timing for disclosure of postoperative visual loss (POVL) associated with high-risk surgery. PATIENTS AND METHODS: On the basis of findings of a pilot study involving 219 patients at Mayo Clinic in Florida, we hypothesized that at least 80% of patients would prefer disclosure of POVL by the surgeon, during a face-to-face discussion, before the day of scheduled surgery. To test the hypothesis, we sent a questionnaire to 437 patients who underwent prolonged prone spinal surgical procedures at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN, or Mayo Clinic in Arizona from December 1, 2008, to December 31, 2009. RESULTS: Among the 184 respondents, 158 patients gave responses supporting the hypothesis vs 26 with at least 1 response not supporting it, for an observed incidence of 86%. The 2-sided 95% confidence interval is 80% to 91%. CONCLUSION: At least 80% of patients prefer full disclosure of the risk of POVL, by the surgeon, during a face-to-face discussion before the day of scheduled surgery. This finding supports development of a national patient-driven guideline for disclosing the risk of POVL before prone spinal surgery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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