SOUTHERN THORACIC SURGICAL ASSOCIATION
Fifty-First Annual Meeting November 4 – 6, 2004 Fiesta Americana Grand Coral Beach Hotel Cancun, Mexico he Southern Thoracic Surgical Association (STSA) will host its 51st Annual Meeting November 4 – 6, 2004, at the Fiesta Americana Grand Coral Beach Hotel in Cancun, Mexico. An outstanding educational program has been developed for this beautiful location. The program features not only superb educational opportunities, but some outstanding social event and the camaraderie for which the STSA is so well known. The postgraduate program will be held Thursday, November 4th, from 8:00 am–12:00 pm. The Scientific Sessions begin Thursday, November 4th in the afternoon and will continue until Saturday morning, November 6th. A video session will be held Thursday, November 4th, from 8:00 pm–10:15 pm. The program continues with moderated poster presentations on Friday from 12:30 pm–1:30 pm, and the new basic science forum on Saturday morning. Don’t miss this opportunity to learn about cutting-edge technology and the latest techniques available to cardiothoracic surgeons. The meeting is open to all duly qualified physicians. Both members and nonmembers are urged to register in advance.
Registration and Fees Advance registration forms, hotel reservation cards, and details regarding the transportation arrangements will be mailed to STSA members. Nonmembers should contact STSA by visiting the website at www.stsa.org, calling 800-685-7872, or faxing 312-202-5801 for more information. Members may register for the scientific program for $325. This fee includes the Thursday postgraduate program, Thursday night video session, the Saturday morning coding workshop or ethics session, and the scientific sessions (forum and poster sessions are also included). Residents and fellows may register without payment of a registration fee upon presentation of a letter from their chief of service. The fee for other physicians is $525, except speakers, who are exempt. Nurses and paramedical personnel may register upon payment of a $275 fee and presentation of a letter of introduction from a member. The deadline for registration is October 22, 2004.
Presentation and Publication Please also note that authors of oral presentations are required to submit a manuscript for consideration for publication in The Annals of Thoracic Surgery before noon on Saturday, November 6, 2004. You must submit the manuscript through The Annals online manuscript submission system at www.atseditorialoffice.org. A paper copy of your manuscript will not be accepted for consideration. Primary authors and coauthors that are delin-
© 2004 by The Society of Thoracic Surgeons Published by Elsevier Inc
quent in submitting their manuscript to The Annals on time will not have their presentations considered for publication in The Annals. In addition, these authors will not have abstracts considered by the program committee of the STSA for two subsequent meetings.
Accreditation The Southern Thoracic Surgical Association is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) to provide continuing medical education for physicians. The STSA designates this activity for a maximum of 19.75 category 1 credits toward the AMA Physician’s Recognition Award. Each physician should claim only those credits that he/she actually devoted to the activity.
Disclosure Policy The STSA is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education to provide continuing medical education for physicians. The STSA requires that any individual who makes a presentation at a program, or presents a paper for publication, in any forum supported or sponsored in any way by STSA must disclose any material financial or other relationships that may pose conflicts of interest.* This requirement is intended neither to imply any impropriety of such relationships nor to prejudice any individual presenter or author. It is merely to identify such relationships through full disclosure, and to allow the audience to form its own judgments regarding the presentation or paper. Additionally, disclosure must be made if the presentation or paper describes (a) the use of a device, product, or drug that is not FDA-approved or (b) an off-label use of an approved device, product, or drug. This requirement has been adopted in response to FDA policy and recent case law involving medical societies, and is not intended to prohibit or inhibit independent presentation or discussion regarding the uses of devices, products, and drugs as described at (a) and (b) above. *Required disclosures include any relationship between the individual presenter or author (including known relationships of his or her immediate family, department, and partners) and any healthcare-related business or other entity whose products or services may be discussed in, or directly affected in the marketplace by, the presentation or paper that involves (1) a financial interest of $10,000 or more (eg, through ownership of stock, stock options, or bonds), (2) the receipt of $10,000 or more in cash, goods or services within the current 12-month period (eg, through research grants, employment, consulting fees, royalties, travel or gifts), or (3) a nonremunerative position of influence (eg, as officer, director, trustee or public spokesperson). Excluded are blind trusts or other passive investments such as mutual funds.
Ann Thorac Surg 2004;78:1119 –1129 • 0003-4975/04/$30.00 doi:10.1016/j.athoracsur.2004.06.066
MISCELLANEOUS
T
1120
SOUTHERN THORACIC SURGICAL ASSOCIATION
PROGRAM FIFTY-FIRST ANNUAL MEETING SOUTHERN THORACIC SURGICAL ASSOCIATION
Thursday, November 4, 2004
8:00
AM–12:00 PM
8:00
AM– 8:40 AM
Off-Pump Coronary Artery Bypass (OPCAB) Surgery: Pro/Con
8:00
AM– 8:15 AM
The Case for Off-Pump Coronary Artery Surgery John D. Puskas, Atlanta, Georgia
8:15
AM– 8:30 AM
The Case Against Off-Pump Coronary Artery Surgery Hendrick B. Barner,* St. Louis, Missouri
8:30
AM– 8:40 AM
Discussion
MISCELLANEOUS
AM– 8:55 AM
AM–9:45 AM
9:45
AM–10:15 AM
Discussion
Reintervention After Coarctation Repair Kirk R. Kanter,* Atlanta, Georgia
8:55
AM–9:00 AM
Discussion
9:00
AM–9:15 AM
Thoracoscopic Approach to Mediastinal Tumors Michael J. Mack,* Dallas, Texas
9:15
AM–9:20 AM
Discussion
9:20
AM–9:40 AM
Techniques and Methods for Minimizing the Inflammatory Effect of Cardiopulmonary Bypass in Pediatric Heart Surgery Ross M. Ungerleider,* Portland, Oregon
*Denotes STSA Membership.
Break
10:15
AM–10:30 AM
Management of Ischemic Heart Failure: Repair, Replace, or Refer O. H. Frazier,* Houston, Texas
10:30
AM–10:35 AM
Discussion
10:35
AM–10:50 AM
Management of Unsuspected N2 Disease at Thoracotomy for Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer: What to Do? David R. Jones,* Charlottesville, Virginia
10:50
AM–10:55 AM
Discussion
10:55
AM–11:10 AM
Surgery of Congenital Coronary Artery Anomalies Constantine Mavroudis,* Chicago, Illinois
11:10
AM–11:15 AM
Discussion
11:15
AM–11:30 AM
Surgical Approaches to Esophageal Carcinoma Joe B. Putman,* Nashville, Tennessee
11:30
AM–11:35 AM
Discussion
11:35
AM–11:55 AM
Current Status of Robotic Mitral Valve Repair: Hope Versus Hype W. Randolph Chitwood,* Greenville, North Carolina
11:55
AM–12:00 PM
Discussion
12:00
PM
POSTGRADUATE PROGRAM
Educational Objective: To provide new or important information from recognized authorities about the current practice of thoracic surgery. CME Credits Available: 3.5
8:40
9:40
Program Adjourns
1:00
PM–2:30 PM
FIRST SCIENTIFIC SESSION: SESSION A
1121
1:45
PM–2:00 PM
Aprotinin, Ace Inhibitors, and Renal Failure After Cardiac Surgery Edward H. Kincaid, David A. Ashburn, John R. Hoyle, Marc G. Reichert, John W. Hammon,* and Neal D. Kon,* Winston Salem, North Carolina
2:00
PM–2:15 PM
Off-Pump Coronary Artery Bypass: A Means Not an End for Best Outcome James M. Brown, Robert S. Poston, James S. Gammie,* Kimberly Schwartz, Jo Ann H. Sikora, Susan Yi, Richard N. Pierson III,* and Bartley P. Griffith,* Baltimore, Maryland
2:15
PM–2:30 PM
Stage Ib Non–Small Cell Lung Cancers: Are They All the Same? David R. Jones,* Thomas M. Daniel,* Chadrick E. Denlinger, Brian K. Rundall, and Mark E. Smolkin, Charlottesville, Virginia
2:30
PM–3:00 PM
Break–Visit Exhibit Hall
Educational Objective: To provide new and clinically important information from well-conceived and conducted investigations in the practice of thoracic surgery. Speakers are limited to 7 minutes for their presentation followed by 7 minutes of discussion. CME Credits Available: 1.50
1:00
1:15
1:30
PM–1:15 PM
PM–1:30 PM
PM–1:45 PM
Descending Thoracic Aortic Aneurysm Repair: 12-Year Experience Using Distal Aortic Perfusion And Cerebrospinal Fluid Drainage Anthony L. Estrera,* Charles C. Miller III, Edward P. Chen, Ricardo H. Torres, Eyal E. Porat,* Tam T. Huynh, and Hazim J. Safi,* Houston, Texas
The Impact of Atrioventricular Valve Repair Following Fontan Conversion and Arrhythmia Surgery Constantine Mavroudis,* Barbara J. Deal, Carl Lewis Backer, and Wayne H. Franklin, Chicago, Illinois
Patient and Surgical Factors Influencing Air Leak After Lung Volume Reduction Surgery: Lessons Learned From the National Emphysema Treatment Trial Malcolm M. DeCamp, Eugene H. Blackstone, Keith S. Naunheim,* Mark J. Krasna,* Douglas E. Wood, Yvonne M. Meli, and Robert J. McKenna, Jr, Cleveland, Ohio; Los Angeles, California; Seattle, Washington; Baltimore, Maryland; St. Louis, Missouri
*Denotes STSA Membership.
3:00
PM–5:00 PM
FIRST SCIENTIFIC SESSION: SESSION B
Educational Objective: To provide new and clinically important information from well-conceived and conducted investigations in the practice of thoracic surgery. Speakers are limited to 7 minutes for their presentation followed by 7 minutes of discussion. CME Credits Available: 2.0
3:00
PM–3:15 PM
Medium-Term Follow-Up of VATS Lobectomy for Early Stage Lung Cancer Matthew Facktor, Marc Margolis,* Barbara Tempesta, Nevin Katz, David Salter, Vicky Cole, and Farid Gharagozloo,* Washington, DC
MISCELLANEOUS
SOUTHERN THORACIC SURGICAL ASSOCIATION
1122
SOUTHERN THORACIC SURGICAL ASSOCIATION
3:15
PM–3:30 PM
Marfan Syndrome: Spectrum of Aortic Operations, Complications and Survival at a Large Academic Center Joseph S. Coselli,* Irina V. Volguina, Scott A. LeMaire,* and Roderick G. MacArthur, Houston, Texas
3:30
PM–3:45 PM
Aortic Valve Repair and Root Preservation by Remodeling, Reimplantation, and Resuspension for Marfan Syndrome, Bicuspid Valves, Dissection, or Degenerative Aneurysms Lars G. Svensson, Indu Deglurkar, Jin Ung, Gosta Pettersson, A. Marc Gillinov, Bruce W. Lytle, and Delos M. Cosgrove, Cleveland, Ohio
3:45
PM– 4:00 PM
Functional and Physiologic Results of Video-Assisted Thoracoscopic Diaphragm Plication in Adult Patients With Unilateral Diaphragm Paralysis Richard K. Freeman,* Thomas Wozniak,* and Edward B. Fitzgerald, Indianapolis, Indiana
MISCELLANEOUS
4:00
PM– 4:15 PM
Redo Mitral Valve Replacement in Children Kirk R. Kanter,* Joseph M. Forbess,* and Paul M. Kirshbom,* Atlanta, Georgia
4:15
PM– 4:30 PM
Mitral Valve Replacement With Ross II Technique: Initial Experience John W. Brown,* Mark Ruzmetov, Mark D. Rodefeld, and Mark W. Turrentine, Indianapolis, Indiana
4:30
PM– 4:45 PM
Prevention of Systolic Anterior Motion After Repair of the Severely Myxomatous Mitral Valve With an Anterior Leaflet Valvuloplasty Robert L. Quigley, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
*Denotes STSA Membership.
4:45
PM–5:00 PM
8:00
Low Morbidity and Mortality for Bronchoplastic Procedures With and Without Induction Therapy William R. Burfeind, Thomas A. D’Amico,* Eric A. Toloza, Walter G. Wolfe,* and David H. Harpole, Jr,* Durham, North Carolina
PM–10:20 PM
VIDEO SESSIONS
Educational Objective: To provide a visual instruction from recognized authorities on how to perform new or important procedures in the field of thoracic surgery. Authors are present at the meeting and discussion time is allocated for questions from the audience. Video presentations are limited to 10 minutes followed by 5 minutes of discussion. CME Credits Available: 2.25 8:00
PM– 8:15 PM
Left Carinal Pneumonectomy With Partial Resection of Left Atrium on Cardiopulmonary Bypass Hon Chi Suen and Bill B. Daily, Belleville, Illinois
8:15
PM– 8:30 PM
Retro-Cardiac Ascending Aorta to Descending Aorta Bypass: A Safe Alternative for Repair of Coarctation of the Aorta in HighRisk Patients Clifton C. Reade, Theodore C. Koutlas,* Curtis E. Bower, Jon F. Moran, John D. Rose, Charlie J. Sang, Jr, and W. Randolph Chitwood, Jr,* Greenville, North Carolina
8:30
PM– 8:45 PM
Modified Konno Procedure to Spare Aortic Valve in Severe Sub-Aortic Stenosis Irving Shen and Ross Michael Ungerleider,* Portland, Oregon
8:45
PM–9:00 PM
Robotic Atrial Septal Defect Closure James Anthony Quintessenza and Jeffrey Phillip Jacobs,* St. Petersburg, Florida
SOUTHERN THORACIC SURGICAL ASSOCIATION
9:15
9:30
9:45
PM–9:15 PM
PM–9:30 PM
PM–9:45 PM
PM–10:00 PM
10:00
Video Aortoscopy for Immediate Assessment of Aortic Valve and Root Anatomy After Repair/Replacement Michael J. Mack,* James R. Edgerton,* William Ryan, Todd M. Dewey, and Mitchell J. Magee, Dallas, Texas
Membranous Tracheoplasty for Resection of Benign Tracheal Tumors Daniel L. Miller,* Seth D. Force, Daniel L. Serna, and Kamal A. Mansour,* Atlanta, Georgia
Norwood Operation Using Right Ventricular to Pulmonary Artery Shunt, Without Circulatory Arrest Vincent K. H. Tam* and Eldad Erez, Ft. Worth, Texas
Operative Cryoablation of Atrial Fibrillation by Epicardial Approach Sidney Chocron, Pierre Falcoz, Florent Briand, Lucian Stoica, Frederic Laluc, Djamel Kaili, and Joseph-Philippe Etievent, Besanc¸ on, France
PM–10:15 PM
Replacement of the Descending Thoracic Aorta in an Animal: A Totally Robotic Procedure Eyal E. Porat,* Peter D. Herrera, Roy Sheinbaum, Anthony L. Estrera,* Anders N. Vinnerkvist, Tam T. T. Huynh, Bradley S. Allen, and Hazim J. Safi,* Houston, Texas
*Denotes STSA Membership.
Friday, November 5, 2004
7:45
AM–9:15 AM
SECOND SCIENTIFIC SESSION: SESSION A
Educational Objective: To provide new and clinically important information from well-conceived and conducted investigations in the practice of thoracic surgery. Speakers are limited to 7 minutes for their presentation followed by 7 minutes of discussion. CME Credits Available: 1.50 7:45
AM– 8:00 AM
Isolated Mitral Valve Repair in Patients With Impaired Left Ventricular Function: An Expanding Role for a Minimally Invasive Approach Ashish Suresh Shah, Carmelo Alesio Milano,* and Donald Duane Glower,* Durham, North Carolina
8:00
AM– 8:15 AM
Prevalence of Benign Disease in Patients Resected for Suspected Lung Cancer Michael A. Smith, Richard J. Battafarano,* Bryan F. Meyers,* Jennifer Bell, Joel D. Cooper,* and G. Alexander Patterson,* St. Louis, Missouri
8:15
AM– 8:30 AM
Ten Years Experience on Left Ventricular Aneurysm Repair: Endoaneurysmorraphy Versus Linear Suture Andrea Colli, Tiziano Gherli, Flavio Cocconcelli, and Roberto Parravicini, Parma, Italy; Modena, Italy
8:30
AM– 8:45 AM
Right Ventricular Dysfunction After Complete Repair of Conotruncal Defects in Early Infancy: Fact or Fiction? Antonio Laudito,* Varsha Bandisode, Andrew M. Atz, Fred A. Crawford, Jr,* and Scott M. Bradley,* Charleston, South Carolina
MISCELLANEOUS
9:00
1123
1124 8:45
9:00
9:15
SOUTHERN THORACIC SURGICAL ASSOCIATION
AM–9:00 AM
AM–9:15 AM
AM–9:45 AM
9:45
AM–10:30 AM
Bicaval or Biatrial Technique for Orthotopic Heart Transplantation: Dispelling the Myth Satish K. Kesavaramanujam, New York, New York
Acute Sleep Deprivation in the Thoracic Surgical Resident Does Not Affect Operative Outcomes Peter I. Ellman, T. Brett Reece, Benjamin B. Peeler,* John A. Kern,* Curtis G. Tribble,* and Irving L. Kron,* Charlottesville, Virginia
12:30
PM–1:30 PM
Educational Objective: To provide new and clinically important information from well-conceived and conducted investigations in the practice of thoracic surgery. Poster presentations are limited to 6 minutes for their presentation. CME Credits Available: 1.0
12:30
PM–12:36 PM
Concomitant Great Vessel and Coronary Artery Disease: Outcome and Decision Analysis Thomas J. Takach, George J. Reul,* J. Michael Duncan,* James J. Livesay,* Igor D. Gregoric, Roberto J. Cervera, and Denton A. Cooley, Houston, Texas
12:36
PM–12:42 PM
Cold Agglutinines in On-Pump Cardiac Procedures: A Rare But Lethal Problem Ulrich F. W. Franke, Heike Jütte, Navid Madershahian, Thorsten Wittwer, Jens Wippermann, Dagmar Barz, and Thorsten Wahlers, Jena, Germany
12:42
PM–12:48 PM
Surgery May Prolong Survival in Combined Treatment of Small-Cell Lung Cancer Dariusz Sagan, Kazimierz Gozdziuk, Malgorzata Zdunek, and Alicja Sawa, Lublin, Poland
12:48
PM–12:54 PM
The Use of MRI for Diagnosis of Anomalous Right Coronary Artery From the Pulmonary Artery and Aneurysmal Coronary Dilation Dawn E. Jaroszewski,* Dan J. DiBardino, David S. Morales, Jason T. Su, Jeffrey S. Heinle,* and Charles D. Fraser, Houston, Texas
Break–Visit Exhibit Hall
PRESIDENT’S INVITED LECTURE
Donald Palmisano, AMA Past President CME Credits Available: 0.75
MISCELLANEOUS
10:30
AM–10:45 AM
KENT TRINKLE EDUCATION LECTURESHIP
Joseph Coselli CME Credits Available: 0.25
10:45
AM–11:30 AM
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS
D. Glenn Pennington CME Credits Available: 0.75 11:30
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
AM–12:30 PM
Lunch
*Denotes STSA Membership.
SOUTHERN THORACIC SURGICAL ASSOCIATION
1:00
1:06
1:12
PM–1:00 PM
PM–1:06 PM
PM–1:12 PM
PM–1:18 PM
A Novel Approach to Tricuspid Valve Replacement: The Upside Down Stentless Aortic Bioprosthesis Marcelo Cardarelli, James Brown, James Gammie,* Robert Poston, Richard Pierson III,* and Bartley P. Griffith,* Baltimore, Maryland
A Prospective, Randomized, Controlled and Blinded Comparison Between Flexible Fluted Silastic and Conventional Polyvinylchloride Chest Drains Following Cardiac Surgery Karen M. Brown, David J. Chambers, Joshua Vecht, Ata Kasis, Abi Noah, Michael S. Sabetai, David John McCormack, G. E. Venn, and Christopher I. Blauth,* London, United Kingdom
Long-Term Results of Apical Aortic Valved Conduits in Children With Complex Left Ventricular Outflow Tract Obstruction John W. Brown,* Mark Ruzmetov, Andrew C. Fiore,* Mark D. Rodefeld, Donald Girod, and Mark W. Turrentine, Indianapolis, Indiana; St. Louis, Missouri
Sternal Nourishment in Different Conditions of Vascularization Alexander A. Fokin, Francis Robicsek, Alex Fokin, Jr,* and Thomas N. Masters, Charlotte, North Carolina
*Denotes STSA Membership.
1:18
PM–1:24 PM
Surgical Ventricular Restoration Using Endoventricular Device: Reshaping the Ventricle Tea Acuff,* Steven Boyce,* John Conte,* Marisa DiDonato, and Lorenzo Menicanti, Denton, Texas; Washington, DC; Dallas, Texas; Milan, Italy; Baltimore, Maryland
1:24
PM–1:30 PM
Transmyocardial Revascularization Improves Three-Year Outcomes in a Single Center Follow-Up Study Masoud Alzeerah, Amarillo, Texas
1:30
PM–3:00 PM
SECOND SCIENTIFIC SESSION: SESSION B
Educational Objective: To provide new and clinically important information from well-conceived and conducted investigations in the practice of thoracic surgery. Speakers are limited to 7 minutes for their presentation followed by 7 minutes of discussion. CME Credits Available: 1.50
1:30
PM–1:45 PM
The Elephant Trunk Technique for Treatment of Complex Aneurysms of the Entire Thoracic Aorta: 144 Patients Joseph S. Coselli,* Scott A. LeMaire,* and Roderick G. MacArthur, Houston, Texas
1:45
PM–2:00 PM
Venoarterial Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation for Pediatric Cardiac Support: Cannulation During Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation is Not a Risk Factor for Mortality Vinod H. Thourani, Paul M. Kirshbom,* Kirk R. Kanter,* Janet Simsic, Brian E. Kogon, Scott Wagoner, Francine Dykes, James Fortenberry, and Joseph M. Forbess,* Atlanta, Georgia
MISCELLANEOUS
12:54
1125
1126 2:00
2:15
2:30
PM–2:15 PM
PM–2:30 PM
PM–2:45 PM
MISCELLANEOUS
2:45
3:00
PM–3:00 PM
PM–3:30 PM
SOUTHERN THORACIC SURGICAL ASSOCIATION Results of the Omental Flap in the Treatment of Postoperative Mediastinitis: 27 Years Experience Kenneth D. Call, Kenneth R. Thomas, Walter W. O’Hara, Lawrence L. Creswell,* Charlie M. Hardin, and Giorgio M. Aru,* Jackson, Mississippi
The Incidence of Deep Sternal Wound Infection Following Tracheostomy in Cardiac Surgery Patients Seth Daniel Force, Daniel L. Miller,* Rebecca Petersen, Kamal A. Mansour,* Joseph Craver,* Robert A. Guyton,* Joseph I. Miller, Jr,* Atlanta, Georgia
Use of a Miniaturized Circuit and an Asanguineous Prime Reduces Organ Dysfunction Following Infant Cardiopulmonary Bypass Tara Karamlou, Jess Schultz, Chloe Sandquist, Lynn Boshkov, Chris Silliman, Irving Shen, and Ross M. Ungerleider,* Portland, Oregon; Denver, Colorado
Atrial Fibrillation is Reduced in Patients Immediately Extubated After Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting James R. Edgerton,* Morley A. Herbert, Syma L. Prince, Jeffery Horswell, Mitchell J. Magee, Todd M. Dewey, and Michael J. Mack,* Dallas, Texas Break–Visit Exhibit Hall
*Denotes STSA Membership.
3:30
PM–5:00 PM
SECOND SCIENTIFIC SESSION: SESSION C
Educational Objective: To provide new and clinically important information from well-conceived and conducted investigations in the practice of thoracic surgery. Speakers are limited to 7 minutes for their presentation followed by 7 minutes of discussion. CME Credits Available: 1.50
3:30
PM–3:45 PM
Use of Adjuvant Perfusion Techniques Decreases the Incidence of Paraplegia After Repair of Traumatic Thoracic Aortic Transections Juan A. Crestanello, Kenton J. Zehr, Charles J. Mullany, Thomas A. Orszulak, Joseph A. Dearani, Francisco J. Puga, Thoralf M. Sundt,* Christopher G. McGregor, Richard C. Daly, and Hartzell V. Schaff,* Rochester, Minnesota
3:45
PM– 4:00 PM
Long-Term Results of Surgical Coarctectomy in the Adolescent and Young Adult With 18-Year Follow-Up John Alfred Carr, Joseph J. Amato, and Robert S. D. Higgins,* Chicago, Illinois
4:00
PM– 4:15 PM
Neonatal Aortic Coarctation: A Comparison of Balloon Angioplasty With Surgical Correction Andrew C. Fiore,* Laurice K. Fischer, Saadeh B. Al-Jureidini, Daphne Demello, D. Glenn Pennington,* and Robert G. Johnson,* St. Louis, Missouri; Johnson City, Tennessee
SOUTHERN THORACIC SURGICAL ASSOCIATION
4:30
4:45
PM– 4:30 PM
PM– 4:45 PM
PM–5:00 PM
5:00
PM– 6:00 PM
6:30
Benefits and Risks of Tracheobronchial Stent Placement in Patient’s With Malignant Airway Disease Anthony Lemaire, William R. Burfeind, Stafford Balderson, Thomas A. D’Amico,* and David H. Harpole,* Durham, North Carolina Ventricular Epicardial Lead Placement for Resynchronization by Determination of Paced Depolarization Intervals: Technique and Rationale James R. Edgerton,* Mitchell J. Magee, Todd M. Dewey, and Michael J. Mack,* Dallas, Texas Minimally Invasive Surgical Treatment for Congestive Heart Failure Using Cellular Therapy: Early Experience Amit N. Patel, Federico Benetti, Daniel Brusich, Roberto Paganini, Robert L. Kormos, and Harold C. Urschel, Jr,* Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Dallas, Texas; Rosario, Argentina; Montevideo, Uruguay
7:00
AM– 8:00 AM
Educational Objective: To provide an ethical viewpoint in the area of case selection related to factors surgeons encounter on a daily basis. CME Credits Available: 1.0 Moderator: Robert M. Sade,* Charleston, South Carolina
7:00
AM– 8:00 AM
7:00
AM–7:12 AM
Hyperoxic Ventilation Exacerbates Lung Reperfusion Injury Peter I. Ellman, T. Brett Reece, Carlos Tache-Leon, John A. Kern,* Curtis G. Tribble,* and Irving L. Kron,* Charlottesville, Virginia
7:12
AM–7:24 AM
Hyperthermia is Superior Compared to Normothermia in an In Vivo Isolated Pig Lung Perfusion Model Ulrich F. W. Franke, Thorsten Wittwer, Mirko Kaluza, Mark Albert, Valentin Becker, Marlene Lessel, Harald Schubert, and Thorsten Wahlers, Jena, Germany
7:24
AM–7:36 AM
Disruption of Graft Endothelium Correlates With Early Failure After OPCAB Jeffrey Manchio, Junyan Gu, Deyanira Prastein, Andrew Lee, Bartley Griffith,* and Robert Poston, Baltimore, Maryland
STSA BUSINESS MEETING (STSA MEMBERS ONLY)
PM–9:00 PM
AM– 8:00 AM
BASIC SCIENCE FORUM
Educational Objective: To provide new and clinically important research information from wellconceived and conducted investigations in the practice of thoracic surgery. CME Credits Available: 1.0
PRESIDENT’S MIXER
Saturday, November 6, 2004
7:00
ETHICS SESSION
CODING AND REIMBURSEMENT WORKSHOP
Educational Objective: To help attendees understand how to deal with typical and challenging issues in coding and reimbursement of thoracic surgery procedures. Recognized experts in this area will be on hand to discuss specific cases. CME Credits Available: 1.0 Moderator: Joe B. Putman,* Nashville, Tennessee *Denotes STSA Membership.
MISCELLANEOUS
4:15
1127
1128
SOUTHERN THORACIC SURGICAL ASSOCIATION
7:36
AM–7:48 AM
Donor Troponin-T Levels in Heart Transplantation: 7-Year Follow-Up Study Palaniswamy Vijay, Thomas G. Sharp, Aly Darraca, Yousuf Mahomed, Mark W. Turrentine, Jackie O Donnell, and John W. Brown,* Indianapolis, Indiana
7:48
AM– 8:00 AM
Cialis Causes Pulmonary Artery Vasorelaxation and Attenuates Catecholamine-Induced Pulmonary Vasoconstriction: A Novel Long-Acting Oral Alternative to Milrinone Ben M. Tsai, Mark W. Turrentine, Brett C. Sheridan,* Meijing Wang, Andrew C. Fiore,* John W. Brown,* and Daniel R. Meldrum, Indianapolis, Indiana; Chapel Hill, North Carolina; St. Louis, Missouri
8:15
AM–9:00 AM
THIRD SCIENTIFIC SESSION: SESSION A
MISCELLANEOUS
Educational Objective: To provide new and clinically important information from well-conceived and conducted investigations in the practice of thoracic surgery. Speakers are limited to 7 minutes for their presentation followed by 7 minutes of discussion. CME Credits Available: 0.75 8:15
AM– 8:30 AM
Successful Outpatient Management of Patients With Ventricular Assist Devices: A 12Year Experience Amit N. Patel, Steve Winowich, Eileen Stanford, Larry Shears, and Robert Kormos, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
8:30
AM– 8:45 AM
Seven-Year Clinical Experience With the Extracardiac Pedicled Pericardial Fontan Operation Minoo N. Kavarana, Sebastian Pagni,* Walter C. Sobczyk, Thomas Yeh, Michael Recto, and Erle H. Austin,* Louisville, Kentucky
*Denotes STSA Membership.
8:45
AM–9:00 AM
9:00
Pulmonary Resection After HighDose Chest Radiation Robert James Cerfolio* and Ayesha S. Bryant, Birmingham, Alabama
AM–9:15 AM
SPECIAL GUEST SPEAKER
Denton A. Cooley CME Credits Available: 0.25 9:15
AM–9:45 AM
9:45
Break – Visit Exhibit Hall
AM–11:00 AM
THIRD SCIENTIFIC SESSION: SESSION B
Educational Objective: To provide new and clinically important information from well-conceived and conducted investigations in the practice of thoracic surgery. Speakers are limited to 7 minutes for their presentation followed by 7 minutes of discussion. CME Credits Available: 1.25
9:45
AM–10:00 AM
10:00
Radiofrequency Ablation for Treatment of Atrial Fibrillation During Concomitant Cardiac Operations Michael E. Halkos, Joseph M. Craver,* Vinod H. Thourani, Faraz Kerendi, John D. Puskas, William A. Cooper,* and Robert A. Guyton,* Atlanta, Georgia
AM–10:15 AM
A Multi-institutional Experience With the Cryomaze Procedure: Atrial Fibrillation Cure Rates Are Equivalent to the Classic Cox-Maze Operation James S. Gammie,* John C. Laschinger,* Linda G. Romar, Kimberly A. Schwartz, and Bartley P. Griffith,* Baltimore, Maryland; Towson, Maryland
SOUTHERN THORACIC SURGICAL ASSOCIATION AM–10:30 AM
Septal Myectomy for Obstructive Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy in Pediatric Patients: Long-Term Follow-Up Kenji Minakata, Joseph A. Dearani, Patrick W. O’Leary, and Gordon K. Danielson, Rochester, Minnesota
10:30
AM–10:45 AM
Impact of Complete Revascularization on LongTerm Survival Following Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting in Octogenarians Marc R. Moon,* Hendrick B. Barner,* Marci S. Bailey, Nader Moazami, Jennifer S. Lawton,* Michael K. Pasque, and Ralph J. Damiano, Jr,* St. Louis, Missouri
*Denotes STSA Membership.
10:45
AM–11:00 AM
Aortic Arch Replacement Using a Trifurcated Graft: Simple, Versatile and Safe James C. Halstead, David Spielvogel, Matthias Meier, Isaac Kadir, Steven Lansman, and Randall B. Griepp, New York, New York
Program Adjourns
12:00
PM– 6:00 PM
7:00
SOCIAL AND SPORTING EVENTS
PM–11:00 PM
BLACK TIE BANQUET
MISCELLANEOUS
10:15
1129