7 results on '"Albert J. Mamary"'
Search Results
2. Case series: Failure of imaging & biochemical markers to capture disease progression in COVID-19
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Zachariah L. Dorey-Stein, Catherine N. Myers, Maruti Kumaran, Albert J. Mamary, and Gerard J. Criner
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COVID-19 ,Cytokine storm ,Hypoxic respiratory failure ,Imaging ,Readmission ,Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
We report four individuals admitted for acute respiratory failure due to COVID-19 who demonstrated significant clinical improvement prior to discharge and subsequently were readmitted with worsening respiratory failure, elevated inflammatory markers and worsening chest imaging. We propose a multi-disciplinary discharge criterion to establish a safer discharge process including trending inflammatory markers, daily imaging and pursuing follow up CT chest, particularly in individuals with significant morbidities and health disparities.
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- 2020
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3. Asthma: Diagnosis and Treatment
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Jennifer Y. So, Albert J. Mamary, and Kartik Shenoy
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asthma ,asthma diagnosis ,asthma pathophysiology ,asthma treatment ,biologics ,Medicine - Abstract
Asthma is an obstructive lung disease affecting >230 million people worldwide and a significant cause of morbidity in patients of all ages. It is a heterogeneous disease with a complex pathophysiology and phenotype. Diagnosis is made with thorough history-taking and physical examination, and the condition is characterised by variable airflow obstruction and airway hyper-responsiveness. Understanding the severity of the disease is important, and treatment is aimed at symptom control and the prevention of future exacerbations. Pharmacologic treatment with beta-agonists for intermittent asthma and inhaled corticosteroids and a combination of inhaled corticosteroids and long-acting beta-2 agonists for persistent asthma are recommended. Additional and alternative treatments with leukotriene modifiers, anticholinergics, biologics, and bronchial thermoplasty are also available. However, understanding an individual’s disease phenotype, endotype, and comorbidities is necessary for asthma treatment, with appropriate consultation with asthma specialists required for those with severe asthma.
- Published
- 2018
4. Lung Transplantation for COVID-19 Pulmonary Sequelae
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Hiromu, Kehara, Chirantan, Mangukia, Gengo, Sunagawa, Sebastian A, Iturra, Roh, Yanagida, Mohammed, Kashem, Yuri, Persidsky, Kartik, Shenoy, Albert J, Mamary, Nathaniel, Marchetti, Francis, Cordova, Gerard J, Criner, Yoshiya, Toyoda, and Norihisa, Shigemura
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Transplantation - Abstract
The role of lung transplantation for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)-related lung failure is evolving as the pandemic persists.From January 2021 to April 2022, 20 patients (median age 62 y; range 31-77) underwent lung transplantation for COVID-related lung failure at our institution. We reviewed their clinical and intraoperative characteristics and early outcomes including postoperative complications.Eleven patients (55%) had chronic lung disease when they contracted COVID-19. All 20 patients required hospitalization for antivirus treatment. Median lung allocation score was 74.7 (33.1-94.0). Thirteen patients (65%) underwent single-lung transplants, and 7 patients (35%) underwent double-lung transplants. Concomitant coronary artery bypass graft surgery was performed in 2 (10%) patients because of severe coronary artery disease. Postoperatively, venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation was needed in 3 patients (15%) because of severe primary graft dysfunction; all were eventually weaned. Ten patients (50%) experienced deep venous thrombosis, and 1 eventually developed a major pulmonary embolus. The median intensive care unit stay and hospital stays were 6.5 d (3-44) and 18 d (7-77), respectively. During a median follow-up of 201 d (47-418), we experienced 1 late mortality due to COVID-19-related myocarditis. Among the 13 patients with single-lung transplant, 5 demonstrated improvement in their native lungs.Lung transplantation yielded favorable early outcomes in a heterogeneous patient cohort that included older patients, obese patients, and patients with coronary artery disease or preexisting chronic lung disease. Our data also shed light on the transforming role of lung transplantation for the pulmonary sequelae of a complex multisystem COVID-19 disorder.
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- 2022
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5. Predictors of lung transplant waitlist mortality for sarcoidosis
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Rohit Gupta, Matthew Zheng, Andrew J. Gangemi, Huaqing Zhao, Francis C. Cordova, Gerard J. Criner, Albert J. Mamary, and Sameep Sehgal
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine - Abstract
Unlike in other chronic lung diseases, criteria for lung transplant referral in sarcoidosis is not well-established. Waitlist mortality may offer clues in identifying clinical factors that warrant early referral. We aim to identify predictors for transplant waitlist mortality to improve referral criteria for patients with sarcoidosis.We conducted a retrospective analysis of 1034 sarcoidosis patients listed for lung transplantation from May 2005 to May 2019 in the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients (SRTR) database. All patients were listed after the establishment of the Lung Allocation Score (LAS). We compared patients who died on the transplant waitlist to those who survived to transplantation. Potential predictors of waitlist mortality were assessed utilizing univariate and multivariate analysis performed via logistic regression modeling.Of 1034 candidates listed after LAS implementation, 704 were transplanted and 110 died on the waitlist. Significant predictors of waitlist mortality on multivariate analysis include female gender (OR 2.445; 95% CI 1.513-3.951; p = 0.0003) and severe pulmonary hypertension (OR 1.619; 95% CI 1.067-2.457; p = 0.0236). Taller minimum donor height (OR 0.606; 95% CI 0.379-0.969; p = 0.0365) and blood type B (OR 0.524; 95% CI 0.281-0.975 p = 0.0415) were associated with decreased likelihood of death on the waitlist.Among patients with sarcoidosis on the lung transplant waitlist, taller minimum donor height and blood type B were found to be protective factors against death on the waitlist. Female gender and severe pulmonary hypertension have a higher likelihood of death and earlier referral for transplantation in patients with these characteristics should be considered.
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- 2022
6. Incidence of venous thromboembolism in coronavirus disease 2019: An experience from a single large academic center
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Parth Rali, Oisin O'Corragain, Lawrence Oresanya, Daohai Yu, Omar Sheriff, Robert Weiss, Catherine Myers, Parag Desai, Nadia Ali, Anthony Stack, Michael Bromberg, Andrea L. Lubitz, Joseph Panaro, Riyaz Bashir, Vladimir Lakhter, Roberto Caricchio, Rohit Gupta, Chandra Dass, Kumaran Maruti, Xiaoning Lu, A. Koneti Rao, Gary Cohen, Gerard J. Criner, Eric T. Choi, Aaron Mishkin, Abbas Abba, Abhijit S. Pathak, Abhinav Rastogi, Adam Diamond, Aditi Satti, Adria Simon, Ahmed Soliman, Alan Braveman, Albert J. Mamary, Aloknath Pandya, Amy Goldberg, Amy Kambo, Andrew Gangemi, Anjali Vaidya, Ann Davison, Anuj Basil, Beata Kosmider, Charles T. Bakhos, Bill Cornwell, Brianna Sanguily, Brittany Corso, Carla Grabianowski, Carly Sedlock, Charles Bakhos, Chenna Kesava Reddy Mandapati, Cherie Erkmen, Chethan Gangireddy, Chih-ru Lin, Christopher T. Burks, Claire Raab, Deborah Crabbe, Crystal Chen, Daniel Edmundowicz, Daniel Sacher, Daniel Salerno, Daniele Simon, David Ambrose, David Ciccolella, Debra Gillman, Dolores Fehrle, Dominic Morano, Donnalynn Bassler, Edmund Cronin, Eduardo Dominguez, Ekam Randhawa, Ekamjeet Randhawa, Eman Hamad, Eneida Male, Erin Narewski, Francis Cordova, Frederic Jaffe, Frederich Kueppers, Fusun Dikengil, Jonathan Galli, Jamie Garfield, Gayle Jones, Gennaro Calendo, Gerard Criner, Gilbert D'Alonzo, Ginny Marmolejos, Matthew Gordon, Gregory Millio, Fernandez Gustavo, Hannah Simborio, Harwood Scott, Heidi Shore-Brown, Hernan Alvarado, Ho-Man Yeung, Ibraheem Yousef, Ifeoma Oriaku, Iris Jung-won Lee, Isaac Whitman, James Brown, Jamie L. Garfield, Janpreet Mokha, Jason Gallagher, Jeffrey Stewart, Jenna Murray, Jessica Tang, Jeyssa Gonzalez, Jichuan Wu, Jiji Thomas, Jim Murrett, Joanna Beros, John M. Travaline, Jolly Varghese, Jordan Senchak, Joseph Lambert, Joseph Ramzy, Joshua Cooper, Jun Song, Junad Chowdhury, Kaitlin Kennedy, Karim Bahmed, Karim Loukmane, Karthik Shenoy, Kathleen Brennan, Keith Johnson, Kevin Carney, Kraftin Schreyer, Kristin Criner, Maruti Kumaran, Lauren Miller, Laurie Jameson, Laurie Johnson, Laurie Kilpatrick, Lii-Yoong Criner, Lily Zhang, Lindsay K. McGann, Llera A. Samuels, Marc Diamon, Margaret Kerper, Maria Vega Sanchez, Mariola Marcinkienwicz, Maritza Pedlar, Mark Aksoy, Mark Weir, Marla R. Wolfson, Marla Wolfson, Robert Marron, Martin Keane, Massa Zantah, Mathew Zheng, Matthew Delfiner, Maulin Patel, Megan Healy, Melinda Darnell, Melissa Navaro, Meredith A. Brisco-Bacik, Michael Gannon, Michael Jacobs, Mira Mandal, Nanzhou Gou, Nathaniel Marchetti, Nathaniel Xander, Navjot Kaur, Neil Nadpara, Nicole Desai, Nicole Mills, Norihisa Shigemura, Ohoud Rehbini, Oneida Arosarena, Osheen Abramian, Paige Stanley, Patrick Mulhall, Pravin Patil, Priju Varghe, Puja Dubal, Puja Patel, Rachael Blair, Rajagopalan Rengan, Rami Alashram, Randol Hooper, Rebecca A. Armbruster, Regina Sheriden, Rogers Thomas, Rohit Soans, Roman Petrov, Roman Prosniak, Romulo Fajardo, Ruchi Bhutani, Ryan Townsend, Sabrina Islam, Samantha Pettigrew, Samantha Wallace, Sameep Sehgal, Samuel Krachman, Santosh Dhungana, Sarah Hoang, Sean Duffy, Seema Rani, Shapiro William, Sheila Weaver, Shelu Benny, Sheril George, Shuang Sun, Shubhra Srivastava-Malhotra, Stephanie Brictson, Stephanie Spivack, Stephanie Tittaferrante, Stephanie Yerkes, Stephen Priest, Steve Codella, Steven G. Kelsen, Steven Houser, Steven Verga, Sudhir Bolla, Sudhir Kotnala, Sunil Karhadkar, Sylvia Johnson, Tahseen Shariff, Tammy Jacobs, Thomas Hooper, Tom Rogers, Tony S. Reed, Tse-Shuen Ku, Uma Sajjan, Victor Kim, Whitney Cabey, Wissam Chatila, Wuyan Li, Zach Dorey-Stein, Zachariah Dorey-Stein, and Zachary D. Repanshek
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Deep vein ,Hypercoagulable state in COVID-19 ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,COVID-19 VTE ,Article ,Fibrin Fibrinogen Degradation Products ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,COVID-19 coagulopathy ,medicine ,Humans ,Thrombophilia ,030212 general & internal medicine ,cardiovascular diseases ,Prospective cohort study ,Retrospective Studies ,Philadelphia ,Venous Thrombosis ,Ultrasonography, Doppler, Duplex ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Incidence ,COVID-19 ,Retrospective cohort study ,Odds ratio ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Prognosis ,equipment and supplies ,Respiration, Artificial ,Confidence interval ,Pulmonary embolism ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cohort ,Surgery ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Pulmonary Embolism - Abstract
Background Infection with the novel severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 has been associated with a hypercoagulable state. Emerging data from China and Europe have consistently shown an increased incidence of venous thromboembolism (VTE). We aimed to identify the VTE incidence and early predictors of VTE at our high-volume tertiary care center. Methods We performed a retrospective cohort study of 147 patients who had been admitted to Temple University Hospital with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) from April 1, 2020 to April 27, 2020. We first identified the VTE (pulmonary embolism [PE] and deep vein thrombosis [DVT]) incidence in our cohort. The VTE and no-VTE groups were compared by univariable analysis for demographics, comorbidities, laboratory data, and treatment outcomes. Subsequently, multivariable logistic regression analysis was performed to identify the early predictors of VTE. Results The 147 patients (20.9% of all admissions) admitted to a designated COVID-19 unit at Temple University Hospital with a high clinical suspicion of acute VTE had undergone testing for VTE using computed tomography pulmonary angiography and/or extremity venous duplex ultrasonography. The overall incidence of VTE was 17% (25 of 147). Of the 25 patients, 16 had had acute PE, 14 had had acute DVT, and 5 had had both PE and DVT. The need for invasive mechanical ventilation (adjusted odds ratio, 3.19; 95% confidence interval, 1.07-9.55) and the admission D-dimer level ≥1500 ng/mL (adjusted odds ratio, 3.55; 95% confidence interval, 1.29-9.78) were independent markers associated with VTE. The all-cause mortality in the VTE group was greater than that in the non-VTE group (48% vs 22%; P = .007). Conclusions Our study represents one of the earliest reported from the United States on the incidence rate of VTE in patients with COVID-19. Patients with a high clinical suspicion and the identified risk factors (invasive mechanical ventilation, admission D-dimer level ≥1500 ng/mL) should be considered for early VTE testing. We did not screen all patients admitted for VTE; therefore, the true incidence of VTE could have been underestimated. Our findings require confirmation in future prospective studies.
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- 2020
7. Disparities In COPD Diagnosis And Treatment Are Determined By Region, Race, Gender And Education
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Albert J. Mamary, John P. Gaughan, James Murphy, Gwendolyn B. Vance, Gerard J. Criner, and the COPDGene Investigators
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COPD ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Race (biology) ,Gender and Education ,business.industry ,Family medicine ,medicine ,medicine.disease ,business - Published
- 2010
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