Publications by authors named "Landi Parish"

Objective: Elective ascending aortic replacement is recommended to prevent acute type A aortic dissection when any segment of the proximal aorta is greater than 5.5 cm. However, little data exist that meticulously describe the size of the ascending aorta at multiple levels in patients who suffer acute type A dissections.

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Background: Mild hypothermia (< 4 degrees C) improves myocardial salvage after infarct reperfusion in animals and in early clinical studies. In this experiment the effect of mild hypothermia during ischemia and early reperfusion on long-term postinfarction left ventricular (LV) remodeling was assessed in an ovine infarct model.

Methods: In the initial phase of the experiment the effect of progressive degrees of hypothermia on infarct size was quantified.

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Background: Mild hypothermia confers a myocardial protective effect that may make it a useful adjunct to reperfusion therapy for myocardial infarction (MI). The effect of temperature on the extent and distribution of myocardial reperfusion injury in a collateral deficient ovine model was studied.

Methods: Topical cooling maintained left atrial temperature at 39.

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Background: Hypothermia during ischemia has been shown to reduce myocardial reperfusion injury. We sought to establish the cardioprotective effect of very mild total-body hypothermia ( View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Endocarditis involving the aortic root and intervalvular fibrous skeleton presents a reconstructive dilemma. We report a case of endocarditis involving the aortic root and tricuspid valve with extensive destruction of the atrioventricular septum. Debridement necessitated resection of the aortic root, aortic valve, tricuspid valve, and a large portion of atrioventricular septum, leaving the right atrium, right ventricle, left ventricle and aorta in open communication.

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Background: Reperfusion therapy for myocardial infarction is currently the most effective means for limiting early and late mortality. We sought to elucidate how reperfusion influences remodeling strains in the infarct, borderzone, and remote myocardial regions. Understanding the effects of reperfusion on regional remodeling will help to evaluate and optimize emerging treatments for patients who do not achieve effective reperfusion after myocardial infarction.

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Background: Ischemic mitral regurgitation results from a variable combination of annular dilatation and remodeling of the subvalvular apparatus. Current surgical techniques effectively treat annular dilatation, but methods for addressing subvalvular remodeling have not been standardized. An effective technique for determining the extent of subvalvular remodeling could improve surgical results by identifying patients who are unlikely to benefit from annuloplasty alone.

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Objective: Finite-element analysis demonstrates that the nonplanar shape of the mitral annulus diminishes mitral leaflet stress. It has therefore been postulated that repair with annuloplasty rings that maintain the nonplanar shape of the annulus could increase repair durability. Although the global nonplanarity of the mitral annulus has been adequately characterized, design of such a ring requires a quantitative description of regional annular geometry.

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Background: The mammalian mitral annulus is saddle shaped. Experimental studies have shown that loss of saddle shape occurs in ischemic mitral regurgitation. However, neither the temporal pattern of global annular remodeling nor the geometric pattern of regional annular remodeling has been described.

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Objective: Ischemic mitral regurgitation (IMR) results from a variable combination of annular dilatation and remodeling of the subvalvular apparatus. Current surgical techniques effectively treat annular dilatation, but methods for addressing subvalvular remodeling have not been standardized. An effective technique for determining the extent of subvalvular remodeling could improve surgical results by identifying patients who are unlikely to benefit from annuloplasty alone.

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Objectives: The application of repair techniques to treat mitral valve incompetence has increased progressively during the past 20 years. Unfortunately, recent reports have demonstrated the longevity of these repairs to be less than previously believed. Most repair failures are stress related.

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Acetaminophen, the active ingredient in Tylenol, is a widely used drug that is well known for its analgesic and antipyretic properties. Acetaminophen is a commonly used alternative to nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, which have recently been demonstrated to increase mortality after acute myocardial infarction (AMI). The safety and potential cardioprotective properties of acetaminophen in the setting of AMI have recently been investigated; however, the results from these studies have been inconclusive.

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Background: Early infarct expansion impairs function of normally perfused borderzone myocardium (BZM), initiates adverse remodeling, and portends a poor long-term outcome. Early ventricular restraint has been demonstrated to improve global remodeling but its effect on BZM function has not been assessed. Using an ovine model of infarct induced remodeling and MRI, we tested the hypothesis that ventricular restraint early after MI preserves BZM function and reduces remodeling.

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Background: Regional myocardial geometry, function, and perfusion status are critical variables for understanding infarction-induced left ventricle (LV) remodeling. Three-dimensional contrast echocardiography (3DCE) is uniquely suited to measure these parameters. We evaluate the ability of 3DCE to assess geometric changes in the normally perfused but hypocontractile borderzone myocardium (BZM) immediately after a myocardial infarction (MI) in an ovine model, and we compare 3DCE with two-dimensional contrast echocardiography (2DCE) in the long and short axis.

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Objectives: Surgical treatment for ischemic mitral regurgitation has become more aggressive. However, no clinical study has demonstrated that surgical correction of chronic ischemic mitral regurgitation improves survival. We used 4 well-developed ovine models of postinfarction left ventricular remodeling to test the hypothesis that ischemic mitral regurgitation does not significantly contribute to postinfarction left ventricular remodeling.

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Background: Early infarct expansion initiates adverse remodeling, leads to left ventricular dilatation and portends a poor long-term outcome. Early mechanical prevention of infarct expansion has been proposed as a method to improve remodeling, but the extent of ventricular restraint necessary to optimize the salutary effect is not known. We tested the hypothesis that left ventricular restraint (wrap) is superior to infarct stiffening (patch).

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Objective: To develop a prospective method for optimizing seizure prediction, given an array of implanted electrodes and a set of candidate quantitative features computed at each contact location.

Methods: The method employs a genetic-based selection process, and then tunes a probabilistic neural network classifier to predict seizures within a 10 min prediction horizon. Initial seizure and interictal data were used for training, and the remaining IEEG data were used for testing.

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Background: The anterior mitral annulus is considered a fixed structure. Recent data suggest otherwise. This study tested the hypothesis that the size of the anterior annulus varies with hemodynamic loading and ventricular contractility.

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Neocortical seizures are often poorly localized, explosive and widespread at onset, making them poorly amenable to epilepsy surgery in the absence of associated focal brain lesions. We describe, for the first time in an unselected group of patients with neocortical epilepsy, the finding that high-frequency (60-100 Hz) epileptiform oscillations are highly localized in the seizure onset zone, both before and temporally removed from seizure onset. These findings were observed in all six patients with neocortical epilepsy out of 23 consecutive patients implanted with intracranial electrodes for pre-surgical evaluation during the study period.

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How features of an object are bound into a unique percept is one of the puzzling problems in the cognitive and neuro-sciences. In order to investigate the spatio-temporal mechanisms of feature binding, we serially present two verniers with opposite offset directions for very short durations. Only one vernier is perceived with its offset dominated by the vernier presented second.

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