Publications
Department of Medicine faculty members published more than 3,000 peer-reviewed articles in 2022.
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BACKGROUND
Spinal cord injury remains a devastating complication after procedures on the descending thoracic aorta. A new model for retrograde perfusion of the spinal cord during aortic cross-clamping was evaluated for its potential role in preventing spinal cord injury after thoraco-abdominal aortic surgery.
METHODS
Retrograde perfusion of the spinal cord was established in juvenile pigs using partial bypass from the left atrium to the isolated inferior vena cava. Flow was maintained for a 60-min period of aortic occlusion. Morphologic studies of spinal cord blood flow were obtained using injection of a dilute barium-gelatin-chromatin dye solution. Physiologic cooling of the spinal cord was achieved using varying degrees of hypothermic retroperfusion.
RESULTS
Five animals underwent a 30-min period of retroperfusion followed by dye injection. Dye was identified in spinal cord venules and capillaries, most heavily concentrated in the lumbar and lower thoracic cord. Thirteen animals underwent a 60-min period of normothermic (37 degrees C), mild hypothermic (27 degrees C), moderate hypothermic (17 degrees C), or deep hypothermic (7 degrees C) retroperfusion; mean spinal cord temperatures were 35.2, 32.2, 28.0, and 24.4 degrees C, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS
Retrograde perfusion of the porcine spinal cord using a left atrial to inferior vena cava partial bypass circuit can be accomplished and can be used with hypothermic perfusate to produce cooling of the spinal cord. This new technique warrants further investigation into spinal cord protection and potential application for operations on the descending thoracic aorta.
View on PubMed2002
Bans and regulation in many countries have reduced the environmental levels of many persistent organic pollutants (POPs). Despite these declines, there is still evidence of exposures in a range associated with adverse health effects. This seeming paradox is a result of the realisation that levels once presumed safe can cause subtle but important health effects. For example, levels of PCBs now shown to affect human brain development are nearly one million-fold lower than levels previously believed safe. These findings add urgency to efforts to globally eliminate these chemicals, and carry lessons for persistent pollutants that are still in widespread use today, such as the polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) and synthetic musks.
View on PubMed2002