Residency and Education
Vascular Surgical Fellowship
4 minute video about the
program
The Vascular Surgical
Fellowship at Loyola University Medical Center was created in 1978, with the
primary objective of providing comprehensive training for the management of
arterial and venous disease. In addition to the clinical strength we offer at
Loyola, combined with the Hines VA, we have an established tradition in graduate
and undergraduate education and research. Clinical research is encouraged during
the fellowship, and basic science research is available to those interested. Our
program is a two-year fellowship that provides exposure to the entire spectrum
of arterial and venous disease, and includes non-operative care, as well as open
surgical and endovascular management. The fellowship also includes exposure to
clinical research and non-invasive vascular laboratory training, the latter
being particularly essential for the armamentarium of future vascular surgeons.
Clinical Fellows divide
their time and rotate between the Foster G. McGaw Hospital at the university
campus and the Hines Veterans Affairs Hospital. These institutions are located
within one block of each other in Maywood, Illinois, west of downtown Chicago.
Foster G. McGaw Hospital (Loyola University Medical Center) is a 500-bed
University Hospital that generates at least 250 major vascular cases per year.
The Hines Veterans Affairs Hospital has approximately 520 beds and performs 200
major vascular cases per year. The Loyola University service is headed by Dr.
Peter Kalman, and the VA service by Dr. Fred Littooy.
The Loyola Medical
Complex is an academic center that strongly emphasizes patient care, in addition
to research and education. This tertiary care center offers the spectrum of open
vascular and endovascular procedures, with cerebrovascular, aortoiliac and
infrainguinal occlusive disease, abdominal aneurysms, visceral arterial disease
and venous surgery. The vascular service at Loyola supports the facility’s busy
Level I trauma Center. The vascular case volume of both open and endovascular
cases easily fulfills the requirements of the Vascular Surgery Fellowship
requirements of the American Board of Surgery, and all fellows to date have far
exceeded this goal. In addition to the operating room experience, the fellow
will be expected to supervise the vascular house staff for inpatient care and
actively participate in the ambulatory clinic as well.
The vascular surgical
fellowship at the Loyola University Medical Center is geared to but not
exclusive to, the surgeon who is interested in an academic career. The first
year of the fellowship emphasizes acquiring endovascular techniques, vascular
laboratory background and skills as well as initiation of clinical research
projects. It is expected that the projects developed will be completed over the
2-year fellowship. In the second year, the vascular fellow will be exposed to a
broad spectrum of clinical experiences that should enable the candidate to
become an excellent vascular surgeon with both open and endovascular skills.
FACULTY
Dr.
Peter G. Kalman
Dr. Peter G. Kalman
was appointed Chief of the Division of
Vascular Surgery in October 2002. His surgical training and vascular fellowship
was obtained at the University of Toronto, and he began his academic appointment
when he joined the faculty at Toronto General Hospital. Dr. Kalman created and
became the first Director of the Toronto General Hospital Vascular Center, a
multidisciplinary center focusing on comprehensive vascular care, the first of
its kind in Canada. This experience led to his appointment as Program Director
of the newly created Multidisciplinary Endovascular Program at Loyola. His
academic career in Toronto encompassed both basic and clinical research. He has
a strong background both undergraduate and graduate surgical education, and is
best known for his organization of CME programs, and served a term as the
Chairman of the Canadian Vascular Boards. Dr. Kalman is past president of the
Canadian Society for Vascular Surgery and the Peripheral Vascular Surgery
Society, and is the current Vice President of the North American Chapter of the
International Union of Angiology. Dr. Kalman is a reviewer and/or on the
editorial boards of multiple national and international vascular journals.
Dr. Howard P. Greisler
Dr. Howard Greisler
began his surgical education at Columbia University in New York. After
completing his vascular fellowship, he began his academic appointment as a
member of the faculty at Columbia. Two years later, in 1983, he joined the
faculty at Loyola. Dr. Greisler commits fifty percent of his time pursuing his
basic science interests, in addition to his clinical activity. He has
demonstrated sustained excellence as a clinician-scientist, and has continuous
NIH Funding for the past 23 years. He currently has an RO1 award and two F32
awards, plus a VA Merit Review award as well as industry grants. Dr. Greisler is
a past President of the Midwestern Vascular Surgical Society and the
International Society for Applied Cardiovascular Biology. Noted among his
extramural appointments, he is Chairman, NIH/NHLBI, Special Emphasis Panel
(Innovative Concepts and Approaches to Developing Functional Tissues and Organs
for Heart, Vascular, Lung and Blood Applications: Exploratory/Development), and
is Chairman, Lifeline Foundation Research & Education Committee. Dr. Greisler
has mentored numerous surgical and medical fellows, graduate students and
postdoctoral fellows. He serves on the editorial board of seven journals.
Dr. Bernadette Aulivola
Dr. Aulivola is the most recent addition to the
vascular faculty at Loyola. She is a native of New York and a graduate of
Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, MO. She obtained her
general surgery training at the Rush University Medical Center/ Cook County
Hospital program in Chicago, and completed a vascular fellowship at the Beth
Israel Deaconess/ Harvard Hospitals program in Boston. Dr. Aulivola was awarded
the Marco Polo Traveling Scholarship which is an
international award sponsored by the Society for Vascular Surgery and the
European Society for Vascular Surgery to support the exchange of vascular
surgical trainees between North America and Europe. With this award, Dr.
Aulivola trained in advanced endovascular techniques at the University of
Bologna and several other medical centers in Italy. Her areas of specific
interest include carotid artery stenting, endovascular AAA repair and complex
distal lower extremity revascularization.
Dr. Marc
Borge
Dr. Borge is Associate Professor,
Departments of Radiology and Surgery, and is the Director of the Vascular and
Interventional Radiology Section of the Department of Radiology. Dr. Borge and
the Division of Vascular Surgery have developed a collaboration that has
enriched the experience of the vascular fellows by exposing them to endovascular
techniques by another discipline with a different background. This relationship
is expected to continue and grow in the future.
2-YEAR
FELLOWSHIP CURRICULUM
Vascular
surgery is a mature program at Loyola, and has been complemented by the
development of our endovascular program. We offer the complete spectrum of
endovascular training that includes diagnostic arteriography, balloon
angioplasty of peripheral and visceral arteries (renal, mesenteric), carotid
angioplasty and stenting, endograft repair of abdominal and iliac aneurysms.
The endovascular program that has been developed complements our open vascular
surgery experience, which includes both routine and complex procedures (aortic
aneurysm and occlusive disease, lower extremity bypass, carotid endarterectomy,
mesenteric and renal artery bypass, venous surgery, vascular access for
hemodialysis).
Two-Year
Vascular Surgery Fellowship Program
A)
Objectives
a)
Inpatient and outpatient care of the patient
with arterial and venous disease
b)
Identification and management of
co-morbidities prior to planning intervention
c)
Performance, interpretation and application
of non-invasive vascular
laboratory diagnosis
d)
The ability to provide the best treatment
options (conservative and open vs.
endovascular)
e)
Open vascular surgery - routine and complex
procedures (aortic aneurysm
and occlusive disease, lower extremity bypass, carotid endarterectomy,
mesenteric and renal artery bypass, venous surgery, vascular access for
hemodialysis).
f) Endovascular
intervention - diagnostic arteriography, balloon angioplasty of
peripheral and visceral arteries (renal, mesenteric), carotid angioplasty and
stenting, endograft repair of abdominal and iliac aneurysms)
g) Designing
and conducting clinical vascular outcomes studies
B) Curriculum
Principles of Two-Year Curriculum
1)
Two sites for vascular and endovascular
surgery (LUMC & Hines VA)
2)
Responsible for 2 vascular fellows & 1
general surgery chief resident
3)
Senior fellow & chief residents to switch
between LUMC & Hines VA
every 2 months
4)
Junior fellow will perform endovascular
interventions at both institutions where
the Chief resident is stationed (i.e. senior fellow will perform the
endovascular
cases where he/she is stationed)
1)
First Year Curriculum (Junior Fellow)
Clinical Research
(dedicated) 12 months
Non-invasive vascular laboratory
Endovascular
NOTE:
1)
Flexibility to add electives as requested by
individual (e.g. atherosclerotic
risk factor modification, high risk cardiac assessment)
2)
Open vascular surgery (when 2 rooms
are open, when senior fellow or chief
resident are on holiday)
3)
Clinical
research projects that are initiated will continue throughout the
fellowship
4)
Share responsibility for conferences
5)
Share in call schedule
2) Second Year
Curriculum (Senior Fellow)
Open and Endovascular
interventions 12 months
(Senior Fellow has priority for case selection)
Administrative
Responsibilities Call schedule (house-staff)
Clinic schedule
(house-staff)
Operating Room
(house-staff)
Conferences
Documentation of M&M
C) Curriculum Description
1) First Year
Curriculum (Junior Fellow)
i) Clinical
Research
The skills for
performing clinical research and the initiation of the projects will be a focus
of the junior fellow. The projects initiated are expected to continue over the
two-year fellowship.
Specific skills:
a)
Study design and administration
b)
Database management, including liaison with
medical records and other
databases (Dr. L. Reed)
c)
Practical statistics for clinical research
d)
IRB submission ii) Non-invasive
vascular laboratory
a)
Theory - vascular ultrasound physics (as
defined by ARDMS)
b)
Hands-on experience performing the entire
spectrum of non-invasive
vascular testing
c)
Interpretation of studies
d)
RVT certification (ARDMS) - the fellow will
be expected to apply for
and obtain RVT certification
iii) Endovascular
a)
Radiation Safety - understanding of the
principles and practical guidelines
b)
Training – within Division of Vascular
Surgery, with selected training with
Interventional Radiology (e.g. Carotid arteriography)
c)
Diagnostic Arteriography - demonstrate skill
in the use of various
endovascular tools & techniques
1) Needles, guide wires and various catheters
2) Various arterial access picture sites
(femoral, axillary, brachial)
3) Arterial sheaths – indications, placement
4) Closure devices
5) Contrast agents and their differences (ionic
contrast, non-ionic
contrast, hyper/hypo osmolar)
6) Injector machines
7) Selective catheterization of primary,
secondary and tertiary arterial
beds (innominate, carotid, subclavian, aorta,
internal iliac, renal,
visceral, femoral, popliteal, tibial)
8) Angioplasty and stenting (indications and
techniques)
9) Arterial and venous thrombolysis
(principles, indications,
contraindications, techniques)
10) Venous interventions (cannulation,
venography, angioplasty, stenting,
IVC filter placement
11) Aortic endografts (principles, indications,
techniques, various devices
available)
2) Second Year
Curriculum (Senior Fellow)
i) Open and
Endovascular interventions 12 months
ii) Administrative
Responsibilities
a)
Call schedule (house-staff)
b)
Clinic schedule (house-staff)
c)
Operating Room (house-staff)
d)
Conferences (Tuesday – case presentations;
Friday – topic presentations,
morbidity and mortality, journal club)
e)
Documentation of M&M
For additional information, please contact:
Peter G. Kalman, M.D.
Program Director
(708)327-2686 Office
(708)327-3492 Fax
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