Publications by authors named "Dwight Kellicut"

Article Synopsis
  • * The cyanoacrylate closure (CAC) technique, particularly using the VenaSeal device, has become popular for its quicker recovery and fewer complications compared to traditional methods.
  • * A case study highlights a patient with diabetes who developed phlebitis after a CAC procedure, necessitating surgical removal of the affected vein and prolonged antibiotic treatment due to challenges with bacterial contamination in endovascular procedures.
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Elevated plasma lipoprotein(a) is a relatively common condition that contributes to many cardiovascular diseases. However, the awareness and testing for this condition remain low. Herein, we present a case of an otherwise healthy and active man who developed symptoms of peripheral arterial disease starting at age 49, and was found to have hyper-lipoprotein(a) as his only notable risk factor.

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Introduction: The attrition rate in civilian general surgery Graduate Medical Education (GME) is estimated at 20%, while estimates of attrition in military general surgery (MGS) GME programs using the same methodology are nearly twice that. We sought to identify the true attrition rate in MGS GME, identify factors influencing attrition, and examine the relationship between attrition and quality of MGS GME.

Methods: Deidentified data were collected on categorical general surgery residents matriculating from 2010 to 2013 from all 12 MGS residency programs.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the publication habits and self-citation impact among program directors in surgical fellowships across various subspecialties.
  • A total of 781 program directors were analyzed, revealing a mean of 74.6 publications, 2141 citations, and a self-citation rate of only 3.17%.
  • Colorectal surgeons showed a significantly lower self-citation rate compared to their peers, indicating that self-citation is generally infrequent in this professional group.
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Nutcracker phenomenon is the descriptor for a patient's anatomy whenever the left renal vein becomes compressed between the abdominal aorta and the superior mesenteric artery. Nutcracker syndrome is the terminology used when the nutcracker phenomenon is accompanied by symptoms including pain (abdominal, flank, pelvic), hematuria, and orthostatic proteinuria. Diagnosis can be made with Doppler ultrasound, venography, computed tomography, or magnetic resonance imaging.

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Takayasu's arteritis is a large vessel vasculitis that can be a challenging diagnosis to make and has a varied clinical presentation. Management largely depends on affected vessel disease severity and individual patient considerations. The diagnosis must be considered in a young patient with large vessel aneurysms.

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Background: Necrotizing soft tissue infection (NSTI), formerly referred to as necrotizing fasciitis, is a rare but serious postoperative complication. NSTI following arterial bypass is seen only once in the literature (for a coronary artery bypass) and is not mentioned following peripheral bypass. Although surgical site infections have been studied extensively, there are limited published data on postoperative NSTI and no data for NSTI following peripheral arterial bypass.

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Background: Simulation and team training are accepted as critical patient safety strategies to improve team performance and can help achieve better outcomes. Standardized and realistic drills conducted by skilled physicians and nurses who demonstrate consistent use of principles which enhance communication and teamwork increase the likelihood of improved clinical outcomes.

Methods: Two, 4-member surgeon/nurse teams traveled to 8 Army surgical resuscitation medical treatment facilities in Iraq during July and August 2011.

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Pseudoaneurysms of the lingual artery are extremely rare and are commonly iatrogenic in nature or less frequently a result of blunt or penetrating trauma. Traditionally, these vascular abnormalities have been repaired with open or endovascular techniques. Although ultrasound-guided percutaneous thrombin injection has become a standard treatment for superficial pseudoaneurysms, there are no reports of this being used in the treatment of lingual artery pseudoaneurysms.

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Vertebrobasilar insufficiency is characterized by impaired blood flow within the posterior circulation, producing symptoms of vertigo, nausea, vomiting, visual disturbances, and syncope. Given these nonspecific symptoms, the diagnosis of vertebrobasilar ischemia may be difficult to distinguish from more benign conditions. A healthy 37-year-old man presented to our clinic with near syncope upon turning his head to the left.

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The detection of blunt carotid artery injures has improved because of more aggressive screening protocols. Initial treatment depends on multiple factors; however, controversy exists with regard to the treatment of pseudoaneurysmal degeneration, especially in this age of endovascular treatment options. Current options include anticoagulation, open surgical repair, and endovascular repair.

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Carotidynia (unilateral neck pain reproducible with light pressure on the carotid artery) is a controversial and poorly understood vascular condition. This review provides important historical information, several representative case reports, and a comprehensive summary of the literature. The authors also propose an algorithm for the care of these patients.

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Background: Percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA), although not the traditional therapy, seems to be a safe alternative for patients with critical limb ischemia who are believed to be unsuitable candidates for open surgery. However, the efficacy of PTA in this setting has not been analyzed. The purpose of this study was to compare the outcomes of PTA for limb salvage with outcomes of major limb amputation in physiologically impaired patients believed to be unsuitable for open surgery.

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The proliferative effects of insulin on infrapopliteal vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) have been established. We examined the effect of hypoxia in the presence and absence of insulin on the proliferation and migration of human diabetic infrapopliteal VSMCs in vitro. VSMCs isolated from the infrapopliteal arteries of male diabetic patients of identical disease and clinical patterns undergoing below-knee amputation were harvested and grown to subconfluence.

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Brachial artery vasoactivity (BAVA) is a reliable, noninvasive method of assessing endothelium-dependent vasodilatation (EDV) in vivo. Acute hyperglycemia, impaired glucose tolerance (IGT), and diabetes mellitus impair EDV, a precursor to atherosclerosis. Thiamine is a coenzyme important in intracellular glucose metabolism.

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Background: Twenty-nine of 1,284 battle-injured soldiers arriving at Walter Reed Army Medical Center from Operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom have abdominal wounds requiring delayed definitive closure with Gore-Tex (WL Gore & Assoc) mesh.

Methods: Serial abdominal closure (SAC) leading to early definitive abdominal closure (EDAC) was achieved using Gore-Tex mesh. Inpatient records of Operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom soldiers with open or reopened abdomens were reviewed from March 2003 to August 2005.

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Purpose: The accurate nodal staging of colorectal cancer (CRC) is important to identify those patients who may benefit from adjuvant chemotherapy. Some have suggested that identification of sentinel lymph nodes (SLN) may improve staging in CRC. We sought to determine: the feasibility of identifying SLN in CRC utilizing isosulfan blue dye; the accuracy of the identified SLN in predicting the status of the remainder of the lymph nodes in CRC; and whether a more thorough evaluation of SLN with serial step sectioning and immunohistochemistry would more accurately stage patients with CRC.

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Surgical management of the patient who requires hemodialysis access, while continuing to demand more attention from the vascular surgeon, suffers from discrepancies of approach and strategy. With the increase in incidence of dialysis dependent renal failure among our population, many have attempted to present a uniform, logical strategy with which the vascular surgeon can most effectively treat the hemodialysis patient in the long term. Most notably, the multidisciplinary Dialysis Outcomes Quality Initiative (DOQI) guidelines present the surgeon with a rough outline of hemodialysis access insertion strategy, and it has become nationally recognized as an acceptable summary of treatment strategy and goals.

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