Publications by authors named "Pirolo J"

Purpose: To evaluate the effect of thermal treatment on neural tissue in the triangular fibrocartilage complex (TFCC), scapholunate interosseous ligament (SLIL), and lunotriquetral interosseous ligament (LTIL).

Methods: The intact TFCC, SLIL, and LTIL were harvested from cadaveric specimens and treated with a radiofrequency probe as would be performed intraoperatively. Slides were stained using a triple-stain technique for neurotrophin receptor p75, pan-neuronal marker protein gene product 9.

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Treatment of athletes with ligamentous injuries of the tibiofibular syndesmosis can be problematic. The paucity of historic data on this topic has resulted in a lack of clear guidelines to aid in imaging and diagnosing the injury, assessing injury severity, and making management decisions. In recent years, research on this topic has included an abundance of epidemiologic, clinical, and basic science investigations of syndesmotic injuries that are purely ligamentous or associated with ankle fracture.

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Both medial and anterolateral plate applications have been described for the treatment of distal tibia fractures, each with distinct advantages and disadvantages. The objective of this study was to compare the biomechanical properties of medial and anterolateral plating constructs used to stabilize simulated varus and valgus fracture patterns of the distal tibia. In 16 synthetic tibia models, a 45° oblique cut was made to model an Orthopedic Trauma Association type 43-A1.

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Medial epicondylar tendinopathy, also known as golfer's elbow, is less common than lateral elbow tendinopathy. Overhead throwing athletes and those participating in sports that require repeated forearm pronation and wrist flexion are most commonly affected by this disorder. This problem predominates in amateur as opposed to professional athletes and is also seen more commonly in patients over 40 years of age.

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Ulnar-sided wrist pain is a common cause of pain and disability, which has long been a diagnostic and therapeutic dilemma for hand surgeons. A thorough understanding of the anatomy, clinical examination, and radiographic evaluation is essential to establish a focused differential diagnosis, with the cause of disability often being multifactorial. Arthroscopy is particularly well suited to both directly visualize and treat multiple causes of ulnar-sided wrist pain, including pathology of the TFCC, UIS, LTIL tears, and hamate arthrosis.

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Background: There have been many clinical reports of patch graft surgery for irreparable rotator cuff tears. However, the retear rate of the patch graft is relatively high because of the lack of superior stability, causing subacromial abrasions.

Purpose: To compare superior stability among 3 types of patch grafting for simulated irreparable rotator cuff tears.

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Background: An abduction pillow and abduction and rotation exercises are commonly used after rotator cuff repair. The effect of glenohumeral abduction and rotation on footprint contact has not been elucidated.

Hypothesis: Abduction will decrease tendon-to-bone contact for all repairs.

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Objective: To assess the importance of diabetes, diabetes control, hyperglycemia, and previously undiagnosed diabetes in the development of surgical-site infections (SSIs) among cardiothoracic surgery patients.

Setting: A 540-bed tertiary-care university-affiliated hospital.

Design: Prospective cohort and case-control studies.

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One of the contraindications for a stentless aortic valve is dilation of the aorta such that the sinotubular ridge is more than 2 mm larger than the annulus. Since May of 1994, 134 patients have had their aortic valve replaced with St Jude Toronto SPV valves; of these, 38 patients have required sinotubular ridge reduction. This was done by using one or more pleats in the aorta between the commisural posts.

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Whipple's disease is a systemic illness that can affect the heart, causing pericarditis, myocarditis, and valvular endocarditis. We describe a 43-year-old man without gastrointestinal symptoms who underwent mitral and aortic valve replacement for endocarditis, in whom a diagnosis of Whipple's disease was made at operation.

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Background: Coronary angiography is used to determine the severity of coronary artery disease; however, in a small group of patients, clinically significant angina and physiologic tests indicative of myocardial ischemia do not correlate with angiographically demonstrable critical coronary artery disease. In these patients intracoronary ultrasound may demonstrate the true severity of lesions.

Methods: Eight patients with angina and positive stress testing but without angiographically critical left main or left anterior descending artery stenoses were retrospectively identified.

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Background: In humans, chronic ventricular tachycardia (VT) is usually associated with myocardial infarcts that involve the interventricular septum. In an effort to more closely mimic the anatomic substrate that gives rise to chronic VT in humans, we developed a canine model of VT in which the anterior septal coronary artery was ligated. The site of earliest activation, the subsequent activation sequence, and the mechanism of VT associated with the resultant ventricular septal infarct was then evaluated to determine if this model accurately reflected the characteristics of human VT.

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A new experimental method for the evaluation of myocardial constitutive models combines magnetic resonance (MR) radiofrequency (RF) tissue-tagging techniques with iterative two-dimensional (2-D) nonlinear finite element (FE) analysis. For demonstration, a nonlinear isotropic constitutive model for passive diastolic expansion in the in vivo canine heart is evaluated. A 2-D early diastolic FE mesh was constructed with loading parameters for the ventricular chambers taken from mean early diastolic-to-late diastolic pressure changes measured during MR imaging.

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Accessory atrioventricular (AV) pathways responsible for the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome have been treated successfully by surgical and radiofrequency catheter ablation techniques. In this study, we explored the feasibility of permanent chemical ablation of accessory pathways by direct injection of 100% ethanol into the canine AV groove. Right coronary artery blood flow and AV compartment pressure were measured in 5 adult mongrel dogs (part I) during injection of saline solution (10 to 15 mL) into the right AV groove.

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The characterization of regional myocardial stress distribution has been limited by the use of idealized mathematical representations of biventricular geometry. State-of-the-art computer-aided design and engineering (CAD/CAE) techniques can be used to create complete, unambiguous mathematical representations (solid models) of complex object geometry that are suitable for a variety of applications, including stress-strain analyses. We have used advanced CAD/CAE software to create a 3-D solid model of the biventricular unit using planar geometric data extracted from an ex vivo canine heart.

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Noninvasive telemetric monitoring of canine heterotopic cardiac allograft unipolar peak-to-peak amplitude (UPPA) has permitted prospective surveillance for rejection; moreover, this technique is able to reliably detect rejection before the development of histologic evidence of myocyte necrosis. This study was performed to determine whether early cardiac allograft rejection and the accompanying decline in allograft UPPA were associated with alterations in regional myocardial blood flow (RMBF). Seven heterotopic, intrathoracic canine cardiac transplantations were performed using triple-drug immunosuppression.

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A method for cardiac allograft surveillance that is less invasive than endomyocardial biopsy is needed. A fall in the unipolar peak-to-peak amplitude recorded from cardiac allografts has been shown to detect rejection when retrospectively compared with endomyocardial biopsy. This study was performed to assess the sensitivity and specificity of prospective telemetric unipolar peak-to-peak amplitude surveillance in detecting rejection of heterotopic canine cardiac allografts occurring through triple drug immunosuppression.

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Electrocardiographically gated magnetic resonance (MR) image acquisition is not optimal for the quantification of in vivo cardiac deformation, because of the cycle-length dependence of cardiac mechanical events. The authors developed a method for acquisition of cardiac MR images gated to the first derivative of left-ventricular-developed pressure and used the method in a canine model. Application of this method may improve myocardial stress-strain analyses.

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A hybrid three-dimensional solid mathematical model of cardiac ventricular geometry developed using magnetic resonance (MR) images of an in vivo canine heart is discussed. The modeling techniques were validated using MR images of an ex vivo heart and direct measurements of cardiac geometry and mass properties. A spin-echo MR sequence with in-plane resolution of 1.

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An improved method of cardiac allograft surveillance, less invasive than endomyocardial biopsy (EMB), is required as the scope of cardiac transplantation increases. The correlation between changes in telemetrically recorded intramyocardial electrograms and the degree of rejection was examined. The electrophysiological parameter assessed was the unipolar peak-to-peak amplitude (UPPA), defined as the magnitude of the first, fast negative deflection of the QRS complex in unipolar electrograms.

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The instantaneous regional stress distribution within the myocardium, which cannot be directly measured, has been estimated using improved numerical methods and nonaxisymmetric biventricular geometry. To do this, we have employed computer-aided solid mathematical modeling to generate a three-dimensional representation for an ex vivo canine biventricular unit using magnetic resonance imaging. A two-dimensional transverse section was isolated from the solid mathematical model for regional stress analysis using p-version finite element analysis.

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Studies of myocardial function during ischaemic or anoxia would be assisted if it were possible to inhibit glycolysis completely and reversibly. Three methods of preventing glycolysis in isolated perfused ferret hearts were studied: (a) the removal of glucose from the perfusate followed by manoeuvres designed to deplete glycogen stores, (b) the use of 2-deoxyglucose, and (c) the use of iodoacetate. The rate of glycolysis before and after applying the three methods was assessed by measuring lactate production during short periods of anoxia.

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31P nuclear magnetic resonance was used to measure the relative concentrations of phosphorus-containing metabolites in Langendorff-perfused ferret hearts. Intracellular concentrations of inorganic phosphate ([Pi]i), phosphocreatine [( PCr]i), ATP ([ATP]i) and [H+] (pHi) were determined. Exposure of the heart to strophanthidin (10-40 microM) produced an increase in developed pressure over 5-10 min.

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The pathologic correlate of the clinical terms subendocardial and transmural applied to myocardial infarcts is uncertain. To examine this question, we reviewed the morphology of 204 hearts with single myocardial infarcts studied at autopsy after coronary arteriography and fixation in distention. The thickness of surviving myocardium with the infarct (S) and the thickness of the adjacent noninfarcted myocardium (A) were measured microscopically and expressed as a ratio.

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The reasons for the marked variability in expansion of myocardial infarcts are unknown. To examine this question, the hearts in 204 patients with a single myocardial infarct, autopsied at The Johns Hopkins Hospital and studied after coronary arteriography and fixation in distension, were reviewed. There were 58 (28%) hearts with marked infarct expansion, 34 (17%) with moderate expansion and 112 (55%) with no or minimal expansion.

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