Publications by authors named "Sequeira J"

In this study we evaluated the effects of lysophosphatidylcholine, a possible mediator of ischemic damage, on cultured neonatal rat heart cells. The rate and duration of lysophosphatidylcholine accumulation was correlated with Ca++ uptake and cell injury. The rate of carbon 14-labeled lysophosphatidylcholine accumulation during superfusion of the cells by 10 to 100 mumol/L 14C-labeled lysophosphatidylcholine was proportional to the concentration of lysophosphatidylcholine in the perfusate.

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1. Changes in basal metabolic rates (BMR), following alterations in the preceding day's dietary protein (8.6, 11.

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A three and a half-year-old boy developed stridor after insertion of grommets for bilateral secretory otitis media. Despite treatment with steroids systemically and locally, antibiotics and an antihistamine, the stridor worsened. Microlaryngotracheobronchoscopy (MLB) demonstrated laryngeal granulations, in which, by auramine and Ziehl-Neelsen staining, acid-fast bacilli were seen, and from which subsequently Mycobacterium tuberculosis grew in culture.

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The segmental ventricular function of 76 patients with total occlusion of the left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) was analyzed to establish the relationship between ventricular function and the presence and angiographic appearance of the collateral circulation. The relationship between function and collateral supply was found to be significant (P less than .01).

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We have reviewed our experience with the treatment of 250 patients with deep vein thrombosis diagnosed by contrast venography. The level of thrombosis was recorded according to the anatomic level to which it extended. A third of the patients had cancer, and the most common clinical findings were swelling and pain.

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Our experience with 69 vascular injuries in 56 patients led us to modify the management of vascular injuries to the leg. We believe that prompt and complete angiography whenever the general condition of the patient allows it, early fasciotomy when indicated before vascular repair, thrombectomy of the injured artery and vein and local instillation of heparinized saline solution, vascular repair before orthopedic stabilization of fractures in selected cases, external fixation of the fracture when there is significant soft tissue injury, and early skin grafting resulted in an improved level of care with a low morbidity and no mortality in our series.

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A guide wire snare was used to facilitate passage of a Mobin-Uddin vena cava filter through a tortuous left innominate vein, and a Kimray-Greenfield vena cave filter from the suprarenal into the infrarenal position of the inferior vena cava.

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Placement of 151 Mobin-Uddin vena caval umbrella filters and 17 Kimray-Greenfield vena caval filters since 1972 led us to make a number of technical modifications. The operative procedure is performed with local anesthesia in the vascular radiology suite. If the right internal jugular vein is narrowed and cannot be dilated, an approach through the left internal jugular vein is possible.

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Radionuclide angiography is a valuable screening test for arteriovenous (AV) fistulas. A case is presented of a young man with a post-traumatic AV fistula involving the renal artery and vein initially diagnosed by radionuclide imaging and subsequently confirmed by angiography. In the patient described dynamic flow studies showed concentration at the site of an AV fistula which was successfully treated operatively.

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The management of patients with lower gastrointestinal bleeding requires a systematic approach based on defined diagnostic and therapeutic methods. Although in 80 percent of patients bleeding will stop spontaneously, 25 percent will have rebleeding and 50 percent of those with rebleeding will bleed again. Angiography documents specific bleeding sites but raises questions related to the incidence, site and frequency of bleeding, as well as the necessity of demonstrating extravasation.

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The Kimray-Greenfield inferior vena cava filter, which is used to prevent pulmonary embolization from the pelvis and lower extremities, has a high patency rate and a low complication rate. In one patient, however, thrombus formation at the apex of the filter during introduction resulted in the filter's failure to open completely so that the entire width of the cava in the transverse diameter was not occluded. This potential complication may be avoided by keeping the introduction time to a minimum and by constantly infusing a heparin solution through the side port of the insertion device while it is in the vena cava.

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In the era of selective and superselective arteriography, vessel tortuosity, even in the presence of good pulses, can impede catheterization of the aorta and its branches. We assessed 101 patients who had femoral arteriography to determine whether there was a significant difference in tortuosity between the right and left sides and to define the degree to which significant tortuosity was bilateral. Fourteen and 21 patients had tortuosity greater than 1 standard deviation above the mean of the population on the right and left sides, respectively.

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The Mobin-Uddin vena cava filter has been used at Boston University Medical Center since 1971. The umbrella filter has been placed in 128 high-risk patients with a mean age of 60 years, 42% of whom had malignancies. The operative morbidity consists of five wound hematomas, one misplaced umbrella, one retroperitoneal hematoma, and one acute vena cava occlusion, with a total operative morbidity of 6.

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A modification in the introduction of the Kimray-Greenfield filter is described. Rather than advancing the stylet toward the Luer-lok assembly and thereby discharging the filter, the authors propose positioning the carrier containing the closed filter farther into the inferior vena cava, then withdrawing the catheter and carriage while holding the stylet in place. This method reduces the chance for damaging the caval wall.

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Proximal propagation of an occlusive distal aortic thrombus to the suprarenal level is rare, probably resulting from diminished renal blood flow, and is invariably accompanied by renal failure. Three similar cases of total suprarenal aortic occlusion with renal failure are presented. In each, one kidney was significantly smaller than the other, probably caused by long-standing disease.

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While there have been a few references to portal vein aneurysm in the world literature, this is the first report in United States radiologic literature. During a routine evaluation for fever in one patient, an ultrasound examination suggested this unusual entity at the junction of the splenic and superior mesenteric vein. It was later confirmed by angiography.

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The effect of the amount of emulsified corn oil ingested on the gastrointestinal absorption of griseofulvin in man was assessed after oral administration of 5, 10, 15, or 30 gm doses of a corn oil (40% w/w)-in-water emulsion dosage form, each containing 250 mg of microsize griseofulvin. For comparison, griseofulvin absorption from two-125 mg commercial tablets of ultramicrosize drug dispersed in polyethylene glycol 6;000 was also determined. Griseofulvin was almost completely absorbed from the microsize drug emulsions and ultramicrosize drug tablets, whereas 50% of an oral dose is absorbed from commercial microsize griseofulvin tablets.

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