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Draft:Mario Lachat

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  • Comment: Lots of sentences in life are not sourced. And where does the strange [1], [3] come from?
    Did this article come from another site? If yes, this shall be noticed as a possible copyvio for further reviewers. -Lemonaka 05:06, 11 November 2024 (UTC)This article came from the German Wiki site that I made. The original site had the numbers of references that originally were there.The sources for the study at University of Lausanne doesnt exist anymore, since this is long time ago, but in Switzerland as in many other countries you cant work as physician (University hospital of Zurich, Hirslanden Hospital,...) without having studied and graduated. Lots of the citations can also be found under the citation 3 here on this article.

Mario Louis Lachat (born 1959 in Lausanne) is a Swiss cardiovascular surgeon.

Life

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Mario Lachat studied medicine at the University of Lausanne from 1981 to 1986. During his studies, Lachat assisted the vascular surgeons Ninoslav Radovanovic and Slobodan Vecerina at the Clinique Cecil in Lausanne, who inspired him to become a vascular surgeon. After Lachat started working as an assistant doctor at the University Hospital Zurich in 1987, he was particularly encouraged and influenced by his boss, Marko Turina, and his deputy, Ludwig Karl von Segesser, and began his surgical training at the University Hospital Zurich in 1987 under the direction of Marko Turina, obtaining the title of FMH specialist in general surgery in 1994[1]. This was followed in 1998 by recognition as a specialist in cardiothoracic and vascular surgery (FMH), in 1999 by recognition by the European Board of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery (FETCS), in 2001 by recognition by the European Board of Vascular Surgeons (FEBVS) and finally in 2003 (following the establishment of the specialty of vascular surgery in Switzerland) as a vascular surgeon (FMH). In 2002, Lachat was awarded a venia legendi in cardiovascular surgery (aortic aneurysm: open or endoluminal therapy?). From 2002 to 2019, he was Professor of Vascular Surgery at the University Hospital of Zurich[2][3]. He then set up as an independent surgeon at the Hirslanden Clinic in Zurich[4]. He is currently (as of 2024) Co-Chief Physician and Director of the Research Department at the Aortic and Vascular Center Zurich and Medical Co-Director at Endospan, Herzlyia, Israel[5]. Lachat has also given lectures at national and international congresses[6]. He is the author or co-author of over 400 publications and has been cited over 10,000 times underlining his relevance in this topic.[7] Mario Lachat is married and has two grown-up daughters.

Research areas

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Although Lachat was particularly interested in cardiac surgery, the aorta increasingly became the focus of his research. Lachat became convinced that the aorta should be considered as a single unit and treated holistically by specialized surgeons, including interdisciplinary ones. In 2002, he became the first surgeon in Switzerland to specialize in aortic surgery, performing conventional, hybrid (partly open surgery, partly endovascular) or completely endovascular aortic procedures. The in-depth examination of the respective pathologies and the biological condition or life expectancy of the patient, as well as a sophisticated choice of treatment options, were able to significantly reduce the complication rates of more complex interventions. Lachat gained international recognition for this approach. Particularly in the treatment of acute patients or more complex aortic pathologies, his results shaped the international community and helped to bring about a breakthrough in newer and better treatment methods. Lachat established himself internationally as a pioneer in aortic surgery. During his years as head of vascular surgery at Zurich University Hospital, he established this visionary specialization in Switzerland. As early as 2003, his unit was divided into different areas (aortic surgery, venous surgery, tumor surgery, cerebrovascular surgery, peripheral vascular surgery) with respective heads. In 2018, Lachat initiated Switzerland's first aortic center at the Hirslanden Clinic in Zurich. In collaboration with interventional radiologist Thomas Pfammatter, he carried out pioneering work in the field of endovascular aortic surgery in Switzerland:

  • First endovascular treatment of a ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm (1998) in Switzerland[8][9]
  • First endovascular treatment of a ruptured thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm (2008) in Switzerland[10]
  • First fenestrated aortic prosthesis implantation in 2004[11]
  • First branched aortic prosthesis implantation 3.12.2008[12]
  • First complete endovascular treatment of the thoracoabdominal aorta (2002) and the aortic arch (2010)[13]
  • Consultant and co-developer of various endovascular products[14][15]
  • Off-pump wrap isolated ascending aneurysm[16]
  • Inventor of the STAT (sutureless telescoping anastomosis technique) / VORTEC[17] (Viabahn Open Revascularization Technique) anastomosis technique, the first sutureless connection method to become clinically established in cardiovascular surgery, both for the aorta and peripheral vessels[18]. The method shortens the ischemia time, prevents clamping lesions on the vessels and reduces the tissue trauma required to prepare the vessels for a suture anastomosis.
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References

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  1. ^ Lachat, Mario. "FMH".
  2. ^ Departement Chirurgie, Herz und Gefässchirurgie. "USZ". Jahresbericht 2003. USZ. Archived from the original on 31 January 2003.
  3. ^ Lachat, Mario. "Ernennungen". Retrieved 24 October 2024.
  4. ^ Lachat, Mario. "Hirslanden". Hirslanden. Hirslanden Spital. Retrieved 17 October 2024.
  5. ^ Lachat, Mario. "Endospan".
  6. ^ "ReseachGate". Reseachgate.
  7. ^ Lachat, Mario. "Researchgate". researchgate. Retrieved 24 October 2024.
  8. ^ Willmann, J.-K.; Lachat, Mario L.; v. Smekal, A.; Turina, M. I.; Pfammatter, T. (11 January 2001). "Spiral-CT Angiographie vor endovaskulärer Versorgung bei Patienten mit rupturiertem aortoiliakalem Aneurysma". Vasa. 30 (4): 271–276. doi:10.1024/0301-1526.30.4.271. PMID 11771211.
  9. ^ Hechelhammer, L.; Lachat, M.L.; Wildermuth, S. (10 January 2016). "Midterm Outcome of Endovascular Repair of Ruptured Abdominal Aortic Aneurysms". ACC Current Journal. 14 (9): 54. doi:10.1016/j.accreview.2005.08.256.
  10. ^ Pecoraro, Felice (1 September 2011). "Acute aortic dissection: A case report showing penetrating thoracic ulcer and a infrarenal artic perforation". Journal of Cardiovascular Medicine. 12 (9): 655–656. doi:10.2459/JCM.0b013e328348e560. PMID 21738051.
  11. ^ Melnitchouk, Serguei (2004). "Emergency stent-graft placement for hemorrhage control in acute thoracic aortic rupture". Ejcts. 25 (6): 1032–1038. doi:10.1016/j.ejcts.2004.03.005. PMID 15145006.
  12. ^ Rancic, Zoran (1 December 2008). "Pull-Down Technique to Allow Complete Endovascular Relining of Failed AAA Vanguard Endografts with Excluder Bifurcated Endografts". Ejves. 38 (1): 54–60. doi:10.1016/j.ejvs.2008.12.027. PMID 19362866.
  13. ^ Lachat, Mario (1 April 2010). "Complete Endovascular Renal and Visceral Artery Revascularization and Exclusion of a Ruptured Type IV Thoracoabdominal Aortic Aneurysm" (PDF). ISEVS. 17 (2): 216–220. doi:10.1583/09-2925.1. PMID 20426641.
  14. ^ D'Onofrio, Augusto (2023). "Three-year Follow Up of Aortic Arch Endovascular Stent-Grafting with the Nexus device. Results from a Prospective Multi-Centre Study". European Journal of Thorcic Surgery. 63 (1). doi:10.1093/ejcts/ezac561. PMID 36484696.
  15. ^ Palmer, David (2023). "NEXUS Arch: A Multicenter Study Evaluating the Initial Experience With a Novel Aortic Arch Stent Graft System". Annals of Surgery. 277 (2): e460–e466. doi:10.1097/SLA.0000000000004843. PMID 33714965.
  16. ^ Pecoraro, Felice (2016). "Treatment of isolated ascending aortic aneurysm by off-pump epiaortic wrapping is safe and durable". Interdiciplinary Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery. 23 (2): 286–291. doi:10.1093/icvts/ivw103. PMID 27083869.
  17. ^ Lachat, Mario. "New technique to fasciliate renal revscularization with use of telescoping self-expanding stent grafts: VORTEC". Vascular. 2 (2).
  18. ^ Abbe (1894). "The surgery of the hand". NY Med (59).