J
John E. Campbell
Researcher at West Virginia University
Publications - 46
Citations - 1344
John E. Campbell is an academic researcher from West Virginia University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Angioplasty & Renal artery. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 46 publications receiving 1181 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Clinical outcomes for hostile versus favorable aortic neck anatomy in endovascular aortic aneurysm repair using modular devices
Ali F. AbuRahma,John E. Campbell,Albeir Y. Mousa,Stephen M. Hass,Patrick A. Stone,Akhilesh Jain,Aravinda Nanjundappa,L. Scott Dean,Tammi Keiffer,Joseph H. Habib +9 more
TL;DR: Patients with HNA can be treated with EVAR, but with higher rates of early (intraoperative) type I endoleak and intervention, and the midterm outcomes are similar to FNA.
Journal ArticleDOI
The correlation of aortic neck length to early and late outcomes in endovascular aneurysm repair patients
Ali F. AbuRahma,John E. Campbell,Patrick A. Stone,Aravinda Nanjundappa,Akhilesh Jain,L. Scott Dean,Joseph H. Habib,Tammi Keiffer,Mary Emmett +8 more
TL;DR: EVAR can be used for patients with a short aortic neck; however, it was associated with a significantly higher rate of early and late type I endoleaks, resulting in an increased use of proximal aortIC cuffs for sealing the endoleak.
Journal ArticleDOI
Femoral pseudoaneurysms after percutaneous access
TL;DR: The clinical implications and current issues relevant to understanding the ideal treatment strategy for groin complications are outlined, with groin hematomas and pseudoaneurysms being the most common complications.
Journal ArticleDOI
Meckel diverticulum: ten-year experience in adults.
Patrick A. Stone,Matthew J. Hofeldt,John E. Campbell,Geetha Vedula,John A. DeLuca,Sarah K. Flaherty +5 more
TL;DR: Complications directly attributable to diverticulum removal are uncommon; however, those that do occur are often life threatening and therefore, incidental removal of asymptomatic diverticula, particularly in women, is not recommended.
Journal ArticleDOI
Predictors of percutaneous access failure requiring open femoral surgical conversion during endovascular aortic aneurysm repair.
Albeir Y. Mousa,John E. Campbell,Mike Broce,Shadi Abu-Halimah,Patrick A. Stone,Stephen M. Hass,Ali F. AbuRahma,Mark C. Bates +7 more
TL;DR: PEVAR was found to be safe, reliable, and feasible and several factors, including learning curve, vessel calcification, age, and female gender predicted conversion of PEVAR to OEVAR, and vessel size, sheath size, and BMI were found to been nonsignificant predictors of conversion.