Publications by authors named "Ashish S Shah"

Objectives: This study was designed to test whether a negative affect phenotype reflecting depression, anxiety, anger, and pain catastrophizing predicts inpatient and outpatient opioid use outcomes following cardiac surgery.

Design: In a single-center prospective observational pilot study, the authors obtained validated measures of negative affect and opioid-related phenotype preoperatively and collected opioid use and opioid misuse-related outcomes at 30-day postoperative follow-up.

Setting: Quaternary medical center.

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Donation after circulatory death (DCD) livers face increased risks of critical complications when preserved with static cold storage (SCS). Although machine perfusion (MP) may mitigate these risks, its cost and logistical complexity limit widespread application. We developed the Dynamic Organ Storage System (DOSS), which delivers oxygenated perfusate at 10°C with minimal electrical power requirement and allows real-time effluent sampling in a portable cooler.

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Objective: Static cold storage with ice has been the mainstay of cardiac donor preservation. Early preclinical data suggest that allograft preservation at 10 °C may be beneficial. We tested this hypothesis by using a static 10 °C storage device to preserve and transport cardiac allografts.

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Objective: This study was designed to explore key safety outcomes after operating room (OR) extubation in minimally invasive cardiac valve surgery.

Design: Single-center retrospective chart review.

Setting: Academic medical center in the United States.

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Article Synopsis
  • Recovery methods for hearts from donation after circulatory death include direct procurement and perfusion (DPP) using the TransMedics Organ Care System and normothermic regional perfusion (NRP) followed by cold storage, but it's unclear which offers better post-transplant results.
  • A study of heart transplant recipients at Vanderbilt University Medical Center compared outcomes of NRP and DPP, focusing on severe primary graft dysfunction within 24 hours post-surgery.
  • Both methods showed similar rates of severe dysfunction at 24 hours, but NRP resulted in a higher ejection fraction after 7 days; more research is needed to further evaluate these recovery strategies.
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Background: Utilization of temporary mechanical circulatory support, including veno-arterial extra-corporeal membrane oxygenation as a bridge to heart transplantation (HT) has increased significantly under the revised United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) donor heart allocation system. The revised heart allocation system aimed to lower waitlist times and mortality for the most critically ill patients requiring biventricular, nondischargeable, mechanical circulatory support. While previous reports have shown improved 1-year post-HT survival in the current era, 3-year survival and factors associated with mortality among bridge-to-transplant (BTT) extra-corporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) patients are not well described.

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Importance: Liberal oxygen (hyperoxia) is commonly administered to patients during surgery, and oxygenation is known to impact mechanisms of perioperative organ injury.

Objective: To evaluate the effect of intraoperative hyperoxia compared to maintaining normoxia on oxidative stress, kidney injury, and other organ dysfunctions after cardiac surgery.

Design, Setting, And Participants: This was a participant- and assessor-blinded, randomized clinical trial conducted from April 2016 to October 2020 with 1 year of follow-up at a single tertiary care medical center.

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Background: Thoracoabdominal normothermic regional perfusion (TA-NRP) has emerged as a powerful technique for optimizing organ procurement from donation after circulatory death donors. Despite its rapid adoption, standardized guidelines for TA-NRP implementation are lacking, prompting the need for consensus recommendations to ensure safe and effective utilization of this technique.

Methods: A working group composed of members from The American Society of Transplant Surgeons, The International Society of Heart and Lung Transplantation, The Society of Thoracic Surgeons, and The American Association for Thoracic Surgery was convened to develop technical guidelines for TA-NRP.

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Background: Thoracoabdominal normothermic regional perfusion (TA-NRP) has emerged as a powerful technique for optimizing organ procurement from donation after circulatory death donors. Despite its rapid adoption, standardized guidelines for TA-NRP implementation are lacking, prompting the need for consensus recommendations to ensure safe and effective utilization of this technique.

Methods: A working group composed of members from The American Society of Transplant Surgeons, The International Society of Heart and Lung Transplantation, The Society of Thoracic Surgeons, and The American Association for Thoracic Surgery was convened to develop technical guidelines for TA-NRP.

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Background: Blunt cardiac injuries rarely result in aortic valve cusp rupture, leading to acute aortic insufficiency and cardiogenic shock. This rare clinical entity carries a high mortality rate if left undiagnosed and not managed surgically, with few patients surviving beyond 24 h. It presents a diagnostic challenge in the polytrauma patient in shock, with multiple possible and complementary etiologies.

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Purpose Of Review: To provide an update regarding the state of thoracoabdominal normothermic regional perfusion (taNRP) when used for thoracic organ recovery.

Recent Findings: taNRP is growing in its utilization for thoracic organ recovery from donation after circulatory death donors, partly because of its cost effectiveness. taNRP has been shown to yield cardiac allograft recipient outcomes similar to those of brain-dead donors.

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Article Synopsis
  • Extended criteria donor (ECD) hearts from donation after brain death (DBD) are often underused for transplants due to cold storage issues; this study explored the impact of an extracorporeal perfusion system on their utilization and outcomes.
  • In a multicenter study with adult recipients, 173 ECD DBD hearts were perfused, achieving an 87% transplantation success rate, with 30-day survival at 97% and only 6.7% experiencing severe primary graft dysfunction (PGD).
  • The outcomes demonstrated that using this perfusion system not only reduced severe PGD but also supported good patient survival rates through two years, suggesting a way to significantly increase heart transplant availability for patients in need.
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Background: Intraoperative packed red blood cell (PRBC) transfusion during cardiac surgery is associated with increased postoperative morbidity and mortality; however, data on the association between PRBC transfusion and postoperative pulmonary complications (PPCs) are somewhat conflicting. Using The Society of Thoracic Surgeons Adult Cardiac Surgery Database, we sought to determine whether intraoperative PRBC transfusion was associated with PPCs as well as with longer intensive care unit (ICU) stay after isolated coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) surgery.

Methods: A registry-based cohort study was performed on 751,893 patients with isolated CABG between January 1, 2015, to December 31, 2019.

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Objectives: Combined heart-liver transplantation (CHLT) is becoming increasingly frequent as a maturing population of patients with Fontan-palliated congenital heart disease develop advanced liver fibrosis or cirrhosis. The authors present their experience with CHLT for congenital and noncongenital indications, and identify characteristics associated with poor outcomes that may guide intervention in high-risk patients.

Design: This was a single-center retrospective cohort study.

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Escape rooms in medical education are a novel, game-based learning approach for teaching medical topics. In these escape rooms, learners complete a sequential series of medical-themed puzzles leading them to "escape" a specific story. Designing puzzles can be anxiety-provoking and may be the gatekeeper for educators in medicine to create their own escape rooms.

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Background: Transplantation of hearts from hepatitis C virus (HCV)-positive donors has increased substantially in recent years following development of highly effective direct-acting antiviral therapies for treatment and cure of HCV. Although historical data from the pre-direct-acting antiviral era demonstrated an association between HCV-positive donors and accelerated cardiac allograft vasculopathy (CAV) in recipients, the relationship between the use of HCV nucleic acid test-positive (NAT+) donors and the development of CAV in the direct-acting antiviral era remains unclear.

Methods And Results: We performed a retrospective, single-center observational study comparing coronary angiographic CAV outcomes during the first year after transplant in 84 heart transplant recipients of HCV NAT+ donors and 231 recipients of HCV NAT- donors.

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Background: Early identification of shock is vital in decreasing morbidity and mortality in the pediatric population. Although residents are taught the perfusion portion of the rapid cardiopulmonary assessment at our institution, they perform it at the bedside with 8.4% completing 1 part of the assessment and 9.

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