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provided by Elsevier - Publisher Connector JOURNAL OF VASCULAR SURGERY Volume 51, Number 1 Letters to the Editor 287

2. Ubags LH, Kalkman CJ, Been HD. Influence of isoflurane on myogenic most likely explanation of the phenomenon is that the axial sec- motor evoked potentials to single and multiple transcranial stimuli dur- tions of the CT scan very often represent an oblique cut of the ing nitrous oxide/opioid . 1998;43:90-5. aneurysm if it is angulated, and most AAAs present a degree of 3. Jacobs MJ, Mess W, Mochtar B, Nijenhuis RJ, van Eps RGS, Schurink angulation. Sprouse et al3 showed that when aortic angulation is GWH. The value of motor evoked potentials in reducing paraplegia more than 25o, a CT scan became unreliable, while duplex mea- during thoracoabdominal aneurysm repair. J Vasc Surg 2006;43:239-46. surements were not affected by angulation. The authors1 did perform a regression analysis model, but doi:10.1016/j.jvs.2009.08.098 there is no mention of the variable “angulation”. It would be of great interest to know if angulation was considered as a variable, if they noticed a greater trend of overestimation in more angulated Reply anatomies, and if the CT scan constantly overestimated the maxi- mal aortic diameter even in aneurysms with no angulation at all. The letter writers raise an interesting series of questions. From a screening test performance standpoint, our statistician is pretty Ilias Dalainas, MD, PhD much in agreement with their “fictive” scenario—this is not a Efthimios D. Avgerinos, MD, PhD useful screening test in the general sense of the term. Part of the reason for this is that the test results influence intraoperative Department of Vascular Surgery behavior on the part of the , and so these results are not University of Athens treatment independent. This is a violation of the standard assump- Athens, Greece tions for screening tests. Having said that, these tests do provide physiologic (as op- posed to simply anatomic) feedback during surgery, and we con- REFERENCES sider this to be valuable information intraoperatively. We often see 1. Manning BJ, Kristmundsson T, Sonesson B, Resch T. Abdominal aortic declines in the signals during a case. We respond to the declines aneurysm diameter: a comparison of ultrasound measurements with with technical maneuvers, and the signals recover. Clearly some- those from standard and three-dimensional computed tomography re- thing has happened, we have responded appropriately, and the construction. J Vasc Surg 2009;50:263-8. normal state has returned. This is vigilant surgical practice, but it 2. Dalainas I, Nano G, Bianchi P, Casana R, Lupattelli T, Stegher S, et al. causes havoc with the value of the methods as screening tests, Axial computed tomography and duplex scanning for the determination because left untreated, these intraoperative changes likely would of the maximal abdominal aortic diameter in patients with abdominal have resulted in postoperative events. We are much more willing to aortic aneurysms. Eur Surg 2006;38:312-4. sacrifice the predictive value of the screening test than to leave a 3. Sprouse LR 2nd, Meier GH 3rd, Parent FN, DeMasi RJ, Glickman MH, physiologic abnormality uncorrected. Barber GA. Is ultrasound more accurate than axial computed tomogra- We agree that it is not good that the somatosensory evoked phy for determination of maximal abdominal aortic aneurysm diameter? potential (SSEP) was negative in five of eight cases of neurologic Eur J Vasc Endovasc Surg 2004;28:28-35. deficit. This indicates that the sensitivity is terrible, as we have reported. We are not suggesting at all that negative SSEPs allow us to stop paying attention to patients’ neurologic function postop- doi:10.1016/j.jvs.2009.08.100 eratively. What we are saying is that neither test is of much use outside the operating room. Therefore, we use the tests as a Reply technical guide during the case, but we do not consider their results to mean much of anything thereafter. We do not base We thank Dr Dalainas for his interesting comments. In their postoperative therapy or vigilance of observation on the results of previous study to which he refers, Dalainas et al compared maximal these weakly predictive tests. ultrasound (US) scan diameter with maximal axial diameter on computed tomography (CT) (diameter of the maximal ellipse) Charles C. Miller III, PhD only.1 Differences between diameter measurement in different planes for the same aneurysm are of course related to angulation of Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center—El Paso the aneurysm, as the authors points out (though we prefer the term Paul L. Foster School of Medicine tortuosity), and also to noncylindrical cross-sectional diameter. In El Paso, Tex fact, the diameter of the maximal ellipse is the most sensitive to tortuosity, and so it is probably the least reliable measurement to Anthony L. Estrera, MD take. It is for this reason that the diameter perpendicular to the Hazim J. Safi, MD centerline of flow (PCLF) has been advocated as the preferred modality by the Society for Vascular Surgery,2 as at least theoreti- University of Texas Medical School Houston cally, this should minimize the effect of tortuosity on accurate Houston, Tex diameter measurement. In our analysis, we did not use maximal US scan diameter in doi:10.1016/j.jvs.2009.09.011 any axial direction, as used in the series of Dalainas et al, but rather maximal anterior-posterior (AP) diameter (as was used in the UK 3 Regarding “Abdominal aortic aneurysm diameter: A Small Aneurysm Trial). Maximum US scan diameter in any axial direction will always be at least the same as the maximum AP comparison of ultrasound measurements with those diameter and usually bigger. We found the mean difference be- from standard and three-dimensional computed tween US-AP and CT scan measured at the maximal ellipse was 9.6 Ϯ tomography reconstruction” 8 mm. While the difference was smaller for CT PCLF (7.3 Ϯ 7 mm), it remains significant, suggesting that tortuosity is either not We read with great interest the study by Manning et al1 fully corrected by CLF models, or other factors such as US scan comparing computed tomography (CT) scan and duplex ultra- technique are of relevance, as we discuss. We fully accept that a sound scan for the determination of the maximal aortic diameter in more tortuous aorta will decrease the reliability of axial CT scan patients with abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAAs). In a similar measurements (as has been previously reported).4 While analysis of study that we published in 20062 including 322 patients with how more or less tortuosity might relate to inaccuracy of measure- AAA, a CT was found to overestimate the maximal aortic diameter ments made on axial CT scan might be of interest, it was never the compared with duplex scanning with a mean of 2.73 mm. The aim of our study. Therefore, we did not attempt to quantify aortic JOURNAL OF VASCULAR SURGERY 288 Letters to the Editor January 2010

tortuosity, nor did not perform any regression analysis, as is stated who made his many valuable contributions to surgery in general at in the above letter. Rather we have analyzed the US scan and the .1 multiple CT scan measurements for the same aneurysm, in an Because we hosted the 83rd Annual Meeting of the Halsted attempt to quantify the differences that exist and to provide Society in Bethesda, /Uniformed Services University of guidance on how to measure aneurysm diameter in the context of the Health Sciences, September 23-26, 2009, I am sensitive to the currently recommended reporting standards, and of previous trials correct spelling of the last name of William Stewart Halsted. All too on which decisions to intervene are based. often, members of our support staff choose the spelling of “Hal- stead,” much to my frustration. Even more ironically, the misspell- Brian J. Manning, MD ing of Halsted’s last name has been made in recent years at the Thorarinn Kristmundsson, MD Annual Meeting of the Halsted Society itself, with one of the gifts Björn Sonesson, MD, PhD given to attending members as a memento with Halsted last name Timothy Resch, MD, PhD spelled “Halstead.” I have noted over the years that the misspelling of Halsted’s last name can be identified in a number of other Vascular Centre publications. Malmö University Hospital We in medicine strive for accuracy and the truth. Appreciating Malmo, Sweden that Halsted is widely known as the “Father of American Surgical Education,” we should do all that we can to ensure that his name REFERENCES is spelled correctly. I have had a 45-year struggle trying to convince 1. Dalainas I, Nano G, Bianchi P, Casana R, Lupattelli T, Stegher S, et al. my colleagues that the term “shrapnel” is one of the most misused 2 Axial computed tomography and duplex scanning for the determination terms in the English language. The answer given to me, fre- of maximal abdominal aortic diameter in patients with abdominal aortic quently, is that usage can make change. I doubt that anyone would aneurysm. European Surgery 2006;38:312-4. want to change the spelling of the last name of Halsted. 2. Chaikof EL, Blankensteijn JD, Harris PL, White GH, Zarins CK, Bern- My first hero was Otto E. Utzinger, an Arizona mining town hard VM, et al. Reporting standards for endovascular aortic aneurysm physician who actually delivered me, who was a 1914 Johns repair. J Vasc Surg 2002;35:1048-60. Hopkins graduate. He taught me about Halsted and Holman 3. Brown LC, Epstein D, Manca A, Beard JD, Powell JT, Greenhalgh RM. when I was still in high school. However, I still made a typograph- The UK Endovascular Aneurysm Repair (EVAR) trials: design, method- ical error about 35 years ago. I received a letter from Dr C. Rollins ology and progress. Eur J Vasc Endovasc Surg 2004;27:372-81. Hanlon as the Director of our American College of Surgeons at the 4. Sprouse LR 2nd, Meier GH 3rd, Parent FN, DeMasi RJ, Glickman MH, time, pointing out to me that, yes, there was a Dr Halstead; Barber GA. Is ultrasound more accurate than axial computed tomogra- however, he had practiced in the Midwest many years ago. Dr phy for determination of maximal abdominal aortic aneurysm diameter? Hanlon encouraged me, as I now encourage the readership of the Eur J Vasc Endovasc Surg 2004;28:28-35. JVS, to support the correct spelling of William Stewart Halsted’s last name. doi:10.1016/j.jvs.2009.10.038 Norman M. Rich, MD, FACS, DMCC

Why is the last name of William Stewart Halsted Leonard Heaton and David Packard Professor misspelled as “Halstead”? Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences Bethesda, Md To keep the following in proper perspective, one might ask why the mistake in spelling the last name of William Stewart REFERENCES Halsted continues to be made as frequently as can be documented. The title of the informative and interesting Surgical Ethics Chal- 1. MacCallum WG. William Stewart Halsted: . : The lenges by Dr Lois A. Killewich is, “The Impaired Surgeon: Revis- Johns Hopkins Press; 1930. p. 58. iting Halstead” in the Journal of Vascular Surgery (2009;50:440-1). 2. Rich NM, Burris DG. Letter to the editor: the improper use of the term It is unfortunate that the last name is misspelled three more times “shrapnel.” J Trauma 2006;61:1024. as “Halstead” in the text as it is in the title, continuing to perpet- uate the misspelling of the last name of William Stewart Halsted, doi:10.1016/j.jvs.2009.10.037