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ASSOCIATION FOR ACADEMIC SURGERY AND SOCIETY OF UNIVERSITY SURGEONS—ABSTRACTS
10.8. Patients With Caroli’s Disease After Orthotopic Liver Transplantation Have Improved Long-Term Survival. T. R. Harring,1 N. T. Nguyen,1 H. Liu,3 J. A. Goss,1,2 C. A. O’Mahony1,2; 1Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX; 2The Liver Center, Houston, TX; 3Dan L. Duncan Cancer Center, Houston, TX
10.9. Incidental Hepatocellular Carcinoma in Liver Transplant Recipients is Associated With Fatty Liver Disease and Conveys a Low Risk of Recurrent Malignancy After Transplant. M. H. Levine, K. Enestvedt, P. Porrett, R. Cui, M. Hoteit, Y. Mu, E. Siegelman, S. Sonnad, P. L. Abt, A. Shaked, K. Olthoff; University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA
10.10. Early Post-Transplant Alanine Aminotransferase (ALT) Level Predicts the Outcome of Donation After Cardiac Death (DCD) Livers. E. Wang, V. Lyuksemburg, Y. Moklyak, A. Schieler, Y. Moges, M. Abecassis, A. I. Skaro; Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL
10.11. Surgical Complications in 275 Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Infected Liver and/or Kidney Transplant Recipients. J. Harbell,1 N. Nissen,2 K. Olthoff,3 S. S. Florman,4 D. W. Hanto,5 J. Light,6 S. T. Bartlett,7 A. G. Tzakis,7 T. C. Pearson,7 B. Barin,7 J. Fung,8 P. G. Stock1; 1University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA; 2Cedars Sinai, Los Angeles, CA; 3University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA; 4Mt. Sinai Medical Center, New York, NY; 5Beth Israel Deaconess, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; 6Washington Hospital Center, Washington, DC; 7For the Solid Organ Transplantation in HIV: Multi-Site Study, Bethesda, MD; 8Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH
10.12. National Outcomes for Simultaneous Thoracic and Abdominal Transplantation. J. H. Wolf, J. R. Cassuto, Y. Mu, M. Levine, A. Naji, K. Olthoff, A. Shaked, P. Abt; Department of Surgery, Philadelphia, PA
10.13. Video-assisted Living Donor Lateral Segmentectomy and Left Hepatectomy Through a Reduced Upper Midline Incision for Liver Transplantation. M. Shinoda,1 M. Tanabe,1 S. Kawachi,1 O. Itano,1 H. Obara,1 M. Kitago,1 K. Matsubara,1 N. Shimojima,2 Y. Fuchimoto,2 K. Hoshino,2 T. Kuroda,2 Y. Kitagawa1; 1Department of Surgery, Keio University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Tokyo; 2Department of Pediatric Surgery, Keio University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Tokyo 10.14. Increasing Organ Donation Outcomes Among High School Students. A. Salim, C. Berry, E. J. Ley, D. Schulman, S. Navarro, L. Zheng, L. S. Chan; Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA
10.15. Cumulative Incidence of Cancer in Solid Organ Transplant Recipients. E. C. Hall,1,2 R. M. Pfeiffer,2 E. A. Engels,2 D. L. Segev1; 1Department of Surgery, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD; 2Division of
Cancer Epidemiology and Institute, Rockville, MD
Genetics,
National
Cancer
TRAUMA AND CRITICAL CARE 1: BASIC SCIENCE & TRANSLATIONAL RESEARCH 11.1. In the Resuscitation of Hemorrhagic Shock, Transient Hemodynamic Responders Have a Higher Acute Mortality and an Altered Inflammatory Response Compared to Definitive Responders. J. S. Radowsky,1,2 E. H. Lee,1,2 A. A. Strawn,1,2 A. K. Brown,1 T. A. Davis,1 E. A. Elster,1,2,3 D. K. Tadaki,1,3 F. R. Sheppard1,2,3; 1Naval Medical Research Center, Silver Spring, MD; 2Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Bethesda, MD; 3Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD
11.2. Efficacy of Combat Gauze Dressing in the Setting of Severe Acidosis and Coagulopathy. M. W. Causey, S. Miller, D. McVay, A. Beekley, M. Martin; Madigan Army Medical Center, Tacoma, WA
11.3. Angiotensin II Expedites Scar Contracture Independent of Myofibroblasts. L. Chen,1,2 J. E. Bond,2 L. C. Ren,2,4 G. Kokosis,2 A. M. Selim,3 H. Levinson2; 1Department of Burns Surgery, First Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-Sen University, 2 Division of Plastic and Guangzhou, Guangdong; Reconstructive Surgery, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC; 3Department of Pathology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC; 4Department of Burns and Reconstructive Surgery, Xiangya Hospital, Central South University, Changsha, Hunan
11.4. The Identification of a Novel TLR4 Inhibitor With Potent Anti-inflammatory Effects in Vivo Using a Combined in Silico and in Vivo Approach. M. D. Neal,1,2 S. Kim,2 H. Jia,1 C. P. Sodhi,1 T. R. Billiar,2 J. L. Brodsky,4 P. Wipf,3 D. J. Hackam1,2; 1Division of Pediatric General & Thoracic Surgery, Pittsburgh, PA; 2University of Pittsburgh Medical Center - Department of Surgery, Pittsburgh, PA; 3University of Pittsburgh Department of Chemistry, Pittsburgh, PA; 4 University of Pittsburgh Department of Biological Sciences, Pittsburgh, PA
11.5. Phosphatidylserine is a Critical Lipid Signaling Mediator in Hemorrhagic Shock. L. Y. Yeung, E. J. Miraflor, A. Garcia, B. Curran, G. P. Victorino; UCSF-East Bay Department of Surgery, Oakland, CA
11.6. Dynamic Knowledge Representation of Surgical Wound Healing Using an Agent-based Model. V. Gopalakrishnan,1,2 M. Kim,1 J. Alverdy,1 G. An1; 1University of Chicago, Chicago, IL; 2Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD