49 results on '"Dineen, Robert A."'
Search Results
2. Feasibility of whole‐body MRI for cancer screening in children and young people with ataxia telangiectasia: A mixed methods cross‐sectional study.
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Neves, Renata, Panek, Rafal, Clarkson, Katie, Panagioti, Ouliana, Fernandez, Natasha Schneider, Wilne, Sophie, Suri, Mohnish, Whitehouse, William P., Jagani, Sumit, Dandapani, Madhumita, Glazebrook, Cris, and Dineen, Robert A.
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YOUNG adults ,ATAXIA telangiectasia ,EARLY detection of cancer ,MIXED methods research ,DIAGNOSTIC imaging - Abstract
Background/Objectives: Ataxia telangiectasia (A‐T) is an inherited multisystem disorder with increased sensitivity to ionising radiation and elevated cancer risk. Although other cancer predisposition syndromes have established cancer screening protocols, evidence‐based guidelines for cancer screening in A‐T are lacking. This study sought to assess feasibility of a cancer screening protocol based on whole‐body MRI (WB‐MRI) in children and young people with A‐T. Design/Methods: Children and young people with A‐T were invited to undergo a one‐off non‐sedated 3‐Tesla WB‐MRI. Completion rate of WB‐MRI was recorded and diagnostic image quality assessed by two experienced radiologists, with pre‐specified success thresholds for scan completion of >50% participants and image quality between acceptable to excellent in 65% participants. Positive imaging findings were classified according to the ONCO‐RADS system. Post‐participation interviews were performed with recruited families to assess the experience of participating and feelings about waiting for, and communication of, the findings of the scan. Results: Forty‐six children and young people with A‐T were identified, of which 36 were eligible to participate, 18 were recruited and 16 underwent WB‐MRI. Nineteen parents participated in interviews. Fifteen participants (83%) completed the full WB‐MRI scan protocol. The pre‐specified image quality criterion was achieved with diagnostic images obtained in at least 93% of each MRI sequence. Non‐malignant scan findings were present in 4 (25%) participants. Six themes were identified from the interviews: (1) anxiety is a familiar feeling, (2) the process of MRI scanning is challenging for some children and families, (3) preparation is essential to reduce stress, (4) WB‐MRI provides the reassurance about the physical health that families need, (5) WB‐MRI experience turned out to be a positive experience and (6) WB‐MRI allows families to be proactive. Conclusion: This study shows that WB‐MRI for cancer screening is feasible and well‐accepted by children and young people with A‐T and their families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Diffusion-based structural connectivity patterns of multiple sclerosis phenotypes.
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Martinez-Heras, Eloy, Solana, Elisabeth, Vivó, Francesc, Lopez-Soley, Elisabet, Calvi, Alberto, Alba-Arbalat, Salut, Schoonheim, Menno M., Strijbis, Eva M., Vrenken, Hugo, Barkhof, Frederik, Rocca, Maria A., Filippi, Massimo, Pagani, Elisabetta, Groppa, Sergiu, Fleischer, Vinzenz, Dineen, Robert A., Bellenberg, Barbara, Lukas, Carsten, Pareto, Deborah, and Rovira, Alex
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MULTIPLE sclerosis ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,LEUKODYSTROPHY ,MACHINE learning ,PHENOTYPES - Published
- 2023
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4. Automated detection of cerebral microbleeds on MR images using knowledge distillation framework.
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Sundaresan, Vaanathi, Arthofer, Christoph, Zamboni, Giovanna, Murchison, Andrew G., Dineen, Robert A., Rothwell, Peter M., Auer, Dorothee P., Chaoyue Wang, Miller, Karla L., Tendler, Benjamin C., Alfaro-Almagro, Fidel, Sotiropoulos, Stamatios N., Sprigg, Nikola, Griffanti, Ludovica, and Jenkinson, Mark
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MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,CEREBROVASCULAR disease ,WHITE matter (Nerve tissue) ,DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics - Abstract
Introduction: Cerebral microbleeds (CMBs) are associated with white matter damage, and various neurodegenerative and cerebrovascular diseases. CMBs occur as small, circular hypointense lesions on T2*-weighted gradient recalled echo (GRE) and susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI) images, and hyperintense on quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM) images due to their paramagnetic nature. Accurate automated detection of CMBs would help to determine quantitative imaging biomarkers (e.g., CMB count) on large datasets. In this work, we propose a fully automated, deep learning-based, 3-step algorithm, using structural and anatomical properties of CMBs from any single input image modality (e.g., GRE/SWI/QSM) for their accurate detections. Methods: In our method, the first step consists of an initial candidate detection step that detects CMBs with high sensitivity. In the second step, candidate discrimination step is performed using a knowledge distillation framework, with a multi-tasking teacher network that guides the student network to classify CMB and non-CMB instances in an offline manner. Finally, a morphological clean-up step further reduces false positives using anatomical constraints. We used four datasets consisting of different modalities specified above, acquired using various protocols and with a variety of pathological and demographic characteristics. Results: On cross-validation within datasets, our method achieved a cluster-wise true positive rate (TPR) of over 90% with an average of <2 false positives per subject. The knowledge distillation framework improves the cluster-wise TPR of the student model by 15%. Our method is flexible in terms of the input modality and provides comparable cluster-wise TPR and better cluster-wise precision compared to existing state-of-the-art methods. When evaluating across different datasets, our method showed good generalizability with a cluster-wise TPR >80 % with different modalities. The python implementation of the proposed method is openly available. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. Clinical features and imaging characteristics in achiasmia.
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Pilat, Anastasia, McLean, Rebecca J., Vanina, Anna, Dineen, Robert A., and Gottlob, Irene
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- 2023
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6. Whole‐body MRI for cancer surveillance in ataxia–telangiectasia: A qualitative study of the perspectives of people affected by A‐T and their families.
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Neves, Renata, Perez, Blanca de Dios, Tindall, Tierney, Fernandez, Natasha Schneider, Panek, Rafal, Wilne, Sophie, Suri, Mohnish, Whitehouse, William, Jagani, Sumit, Dandapani, Madhumita, Dineen, Robert A., and Glazebrook, Cris
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PUBLIC health surveillance ,ATAXIA telangiectasia ,RESEARCH methodology ,EARLY detection of cancer ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,INTERVIEWING ,FEAR ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,QUALITATIVE research ,RESEARCH funding ,TUMORS ,THEMATIC analysis ,ANXIETY ,DATA analysis software ,EARLY diagnosis - Abstract
Background/Objectives: Ataxia–telangiectasia (A‐T) is a complex inherited disease associated with an increased risk of malignancy. Surveillance guidelines have demonstrated significant health benefits in other cancer predisposition syndromes. However, evidence‐based guidelines for cancer screening are not currently used in the United Kingdom for people affected by A‐T. This study aims to understand how people with A‐T and their parents feel about cancer surveillance using whole‐body magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to inform the future development of cancer surveillance guidelines. Design/Methods: We conducted semistructured interviews with people affected by A‐T. Data were analysed inductively using thematic analysis. Results: Nine parents of children with A‐T and four adults with A‐T were interviewed. Five main themes emerged from the data, including (1) cancer screening was considered invaluable with the perceived value of early detection highlighted; (2) the cancer fear can increase anxiety; (3) the perceived limitations around current practice, with the responsibility for monitoring falling too strongly on parents and patients; (4) the need for effective preparation for cancer screening, including clear communication and (5) the challenges associated with MRI screening, where specific recommendations were made for improving the child's experience. Conclusion: This study suggests that stakeholders are positive about the perceived advantages of a cancer screening programme. Ongoing support and preparation techniques should be adopted to maximise adherence and minimise adverse psychosocial outcomes. Patient or Public Contribution: People with A‐T and parents of people with A‐T were actively involved in this study by giving their consent to be interviewed. An independent parent representative contributed to the study, supporting the research team in interpreting and commenting on the appropriateness of the language used in this report. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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7. Effect of proximal blood flow arrest during endovascular thrombectomy (ProFATE): Study protocol for a multicentre randomised controlled trial.
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Dhillon, Permesh Singh, Butt, Waleed, Podlasek, Anna, Bhogal, Pervinder, McConachie, Norman, Lenthall, Robert, Nair, Sujit, Malik, Luqman, Lynch, Jeremy, Goddard, Tony, Barrett, Emma, Krishnan, Kailash, Dineen, Robert A, and England, Timothy J
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- 2023
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8. Association between anesthesia modality and clinical outcomes following endovascular stroke treatment in the extended time window.
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Dhillon, Permesh Singh, Butt, Waleed, Podlasek, Anna, McConachie, Norman, Lenthall, Robert, Nair, Sujit, Malik, Luqman, Hewson, David W., Bhogal, Pervinder, Dilrukshan Makalanda, Hegoda Levansri, James, Martin A., Dineen, Robert A., and England, Timothy J.
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GENERAL anesthesia ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,FUNCTIONAL status ,CONSCIOUS sedation ,ISCHEMIC stroke ,TIME ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,LOCAL anesthesia ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HOSPITAL mortality ,AGE factors in disease ,RESEARCH funding ,ENDOVASCULAR surgery ,ODDS ratio ,PATIENT safety ,LONGITUDINAL method ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Background There is a paucity of data on anesthesia-related outcomes for endovascular treatment (EVT) in the extended window (>6 hours from ischemic stroke onset). We compared functional and safety outcomes between local anesthesia (LA) without sedation, conscious sedation (CS) and general anesthesia (GA). Methods Patients who underwent EVT in the early (<6 hours) and extended time windows using LA, CS, or GA between October 2015 and March 2020 were included from a UK national stroke registry. Multivariable analyses were performed, adjusted for age, sex, baseline stroke severity, pre-stroke disability, EVT technique, center, procedural time and IV thrombolysis. Results A total of 4337 patients were included, 3193 in the early window (1135 LA, 446 CS, 1612 GA) and 1144 in the extended window (357 LA, 134 CS, 653 GA). Compared with GA, patients treated under LA alone had increased odds of an improved modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score at discharge (early: adjusted common (ac) 0R=1.50, 95% CI 1.29 to 1.74, p=0.001; extended: acOR=1.29, 95% CI 1.01 to 1.66, p=0.043). Similar mRS scores at discharge were found in the LA and CS cohorts in the early and extended windows (p=0.21). Compared with CS, use of GA was associated with a worse mRS score at discharge in the early window (acOR=0.73, 95% CI 0.45 to 0.96, p=0.017) but not in the extended window (p=0.55). There were no significant differences in the rates of symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage or in-hospital mortality across the anesthesia modalities in the extended window. Conclusion LA without sedation during EVT was associated with improved functional outcomes compared with GA, but not CS, within and beyond 6 hours from stroke onset. Prospective studies assessing anesthesia-related outcomes in the extended time window are warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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9. Association between time to treatment and clinical outcomes in endovascular thrombectomy beyond 6 hours without advanced imaging selection.
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Singh Dhillon, Permesh, Butt, Waleed, Podlasek, Anna, McConachie, Norman, Lenthall, Robert, Nair, Sujit, Malik, Luqman, Bhogal, Pervinder, Makalanda, Hegoda Levansri Dilrukshan, Spooner, Oliver, Krishnan, Kailash, Sprigg, Nikola, Mortimer, Alex, Booth, Thomas Calvert, Lobotesis, Kyriakos, White, Philip, James, Martin A., Bath, Philip, Dineen, Robert A., and England, Timothy J.
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BLOOD vessels ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,TIME ,ISCHEMIC stroke ,INTRACRANIAL hemorrhage ,SURGERY ,PATIENTS ,SURGICAL complications ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,TREATMENT delay (Medicine) ,FUNCTIONAL assessment ,HOSPITAL mortality ,THROMBECTOMY ,RESEARCH funding ,STROKE patients ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ENDOVASCULAR surgery ,COMPUTED tomography ,ODDS ratio ,EARLY medical intervention ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Background The effectiveness and safety of endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) in the late window (6--24 hours) for acute ischemic stroke (AIS) patients selected without advanced imaging is undetermined. We aimed to assess clinical outcomes and the relationship with time-to-EVT treatment beyond 6 hours of stroke onset without advanced neuroimaging. Methods Patients who underwent EVT selected with non-contrast CT/CT angiography (without CT perfusion or MR imaging), between October 2015 and March 2020, were included from a national stroke registry. Functional and safety outcomes were assessed in both early (<6 hours) and late windows with time analyzed as a continuous variable. Results Among 3278 patients, 2610 (79.6%) and 668 (20.4%) patients were included in the early and late windows, respectively. In the late window, for every hour delay, there was no significant association with shift towards poorer functional outcome (modified Rankin Scale (mRS)) at discharge (adjusted common OR 0.98, 95% CI 0.94 to 1.01, p=0.27) or change in predicted functional independence (mRS ≤2) (24.5% to 23.3% from 6 to 24 hours; aOR 0.99, 95% CI0.94 to 1.04, p=0.85). In contrast, predicted functional independence was time sensitive in the early window: 5.2% reduction per-hour delay (49.4% to 23.5% from 1 to 6 hours, p=0.0001). There were similar rates of symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (sICH) (3.4% vs 4.6%, p=0.54) and in-hospital mortality (12.9% vs 14.6%, p=0.33) in the early and late windows, respectively, without a significant association with time. Conclusion In this real-world study, there was minimal change in functional disability, sICH and in-hospital mortality within and across the late window. While confirmatory randomized trials are needed, these findings suggest that EVT remains feasible and safe when performed in AIS patients selected without advanced neuroimaging between 6--24 hours from stroke onset. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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10. Endovascular thrombectomy beyond 24 hours from ischemic stroke onset: a propensity score matched cohort study.
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Dhillon, Permesh Singh, Butt, Waleed, Podlasek, Anna, Barrett, Emma, McConachie, Norman, Lenthall, Robert, Nair, Sujit, Malik, Luqman, James, Martin A., Dineen, Robert A., and England, Timothy J.
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CONFIDENCE intervals ,ANALYSIS of variance ,ISCHEMIC stroke ,FUNCTIONAL status ,FISHER exact test ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,THROMBECTOMY ,RESEARCH funding ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,ENDOVASCULAR surgery ,DATA analysis software ,ODDS ratio ,ACUTE diseases ,PATIENT safety ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Background The safety and functional outcome of endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) in the very late (VL; >24 hours) time window from ischemic stroke onset remains undetermined. Methods Using data from a national stroke registry, we used propensity score matched (PSM) individual level data of patients who underwent EVT, selected with CT perfusion or non-contrast CT/CT angiography, between October 2015 and March 2020. Functional and safety outcomes were assessed in both late (6-24 hours) and VL time windows. Subgroup analysis was performed of imaging selection modality in the VL time window. Results We included 1150 patients (late window: 1046 (208 after PSM); VL window: 104 (104 after PSM)). Compared with EVT treatment initiation between 6 and 24 hours, patients treated in the VL window had similar modified Rankin Scale (mRS) scores at discharge (ordinal shift; common 0R=1.08, 95% CI 0.69 to 1.47, p=0.70). No significant differences in achieving good functional outcome (mRS ≤2 at discharge; 28.8% (VL) vs 29.3% (late), 0R=0.97, 95% CI 0.58 to 1.64, p=0.93), successful reperfusion (modified Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction score of 2b-3) (p=0.77), or safety outcomes of symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (p=0.43) and inhospital mortality (p=0.23) were demonstrated. In the VL window, there was no significant difference in functional outcome among patients selected with perfusion versus those selected without perfusion imaging (common 0R=1.38, 95% CI 0.81 to 1.76, p=0.18). Conclusion In this real world study, EVT beyond 24 hours from stroke onset or last known well appeared to be feasible, with comparable safety and functional outcomes to EVT initiation between 6 and 24 hours. Randomized trials assessing the efficacy of EVT in the VL window are warranted, but may only be feasible with a large international collaborative approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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11. Multimodal-neuroimaging machine-learning analysis of motor disability in multiple sclerosis.
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Rehák Bučková, Barbora, Mareš, Jan, Škoch, Antonín, Kopal, Jakub, Tintěra, Jaroslav, Dineen, Robert, Řasová, Kamila, and Hlinka, Jaroslav
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Motor disability is a dominant and restricting symptom in multiple sclerosis, yet its neuroimaging correlates are not fully understood. We apply statistical and machine learning techniques on multimodal neuroimaging data to discriminate between multiple sclerosis patients and healthy controls and to predict motor disability scores in the patients. We examine the data of sixty-four multiple sclerosis patients and sixty-five controls, who underwent the MRI examination and the evaluation of motor disability scales. The modalities used comprised regional fractional anisotropy, regional grey matter volumes, and functional connectivity. For analysis, we employ two approaches: high-dimensional support vector machines run on features selected by Fisher Score (aiming for maximal classification accuracy), and low-dimensional logistic regression on the principal components of data (aiming for increased interpretability). We apply analogous regression methods to predict symptom severity. While fractional anisotropy provides the classification accuracy of 96.1% and 89.9% with both approaches respectively, including other modalities did not bring further improvement. Concerning the prediction of motor impairment, the low-dimensional approach performed more reliably. The first grey matter volume component was significantly correlated (R = 0.28-0.46, p < 0.05) with most clinical scales. In summary, we identified the relationship between both white and grey matter changes and motor impairment in multiple sclerosis. Furthermore, we were able to achieve the highest classification accuracy based on quantitative MRI measures of tissue integrity between patients and controls yet reported, while also providing a low-dimensional classification approach with comparable results, paving the way to interpretable machine learning models of brain changes in multiple sclerosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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12. Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy and the Risk of Hematoma Expansion.
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Seiffge, David J., Polymeris, Alexandros A., Law, Zhe Kang, Krishnan, Kailash, Zietz, Annaelle, Thilemann, Sebastian, Werring, David, Al‐Shahi Salman, Rustam, Dineen, Robert A., Engelter, Stefan T., Bath, Philip M., Sprigg, Nikola, Lyrer, Philippe, and Peters, Nils
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CEREBRAL amyloid angiopathy ,HEMATOMA ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,CEREBRAL hemorrhage ,TRANEXAMIC acid - Abstract
Objective: We assessed whether hematoma expansion (HE) and favorable outcome differ according to type of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH). Methods: Among participants with ICH enrolled in the TICH‐2 (Tranexamic Acid for Hyperacute Primary Intracerebral Haemorrhage) trial, we assessed baseline scans for hematoma location and presence of cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) using computed tomography (CT, simplified Edinburgh criteria) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI; Boston criteria) and categorized ICH as lobar CAA, lobar non‐CAA, and nonlobar. The main outcomes were HE and favorable functional outcome. We constructed multivariate regression models and assessed treatment effects using interaction terms. Results: A total of 2,298 out of 2,325 participants were included with available CT (98.8%; median age = 71 years, interquartile range = 60‐80 years; 1,014 female). Additional MRI was available in 219 patients (9.5%). Overall, 1,637 participants (71.2%) had nonlobar ICH; the remaining 661 participants (28.8%) had lobar ICH, of whom 202 patients had lobar CAA‐ICH (8.8%, 173 participants according to Edinburgh and 29 participants according to Boston criteria) and 459 did not (lobar non‐CAA, 20.0%). For HE, we found a significant interaction of lobar CAA ICH with time from onset to randomization (increasing risk with time, pinteraction < 0.001) and baseline ICH volume (constant risk regardless of volume, pinteraction < 0.001) but no association between type of ICH and risk of HE or favorable outcome. Tranexamic acid significantly reduced the risk of HE (adjusted odds ratio = 0.7, 95% confidence interval = 0.6–1.0, p = 0.020) without statistically significant interaction with type of ICH (pinteraction = 0.058). Tranexamic acid was not associated with favorable outcome. Interpretation: Risk of HE in patients with lobar CAA‐ICH was not independently increased but seems to have different dynamics compared to other types of ICH. The time window for treatment of CAA‐ICH to prevent HE may be longer. ANN NEUROL 2022;92:921–930 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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13. Meta‐Analysis of Apparent Diffusion Coefficient in Pediatric Medulloblastoma, Ependymoma, and Pilocytic Astrocytoma.
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Dury, Richard J., Lourdusamy, Anbarasu, Macarthur, Donald C., Peet, Andrew C., Auer, Dorothee P., Grundy, Richard G., and Dineen, Robert A.
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Background: Medulloblastoma, ependymoma, and pilocytic astrocytoma are common pediatric posterior fossa tumors. These tumors show overlapping characteristics on conventional MRI scans, making diagnosis difficult. Purpose: To investigate whether apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) values differ between tumor types and to identify optimum cut‐off values to accurately classify the tumors using different performance metrics. Study type: Systematic review and meta‐analysis. Subjects: Seven studies reporting ADC in pediatric posterior fossa tumors (115 medulloblastoma, 68 ependymoma, and 86 pilocytic astrocytoma) were included following PubMed and ScienceDirect searches. Sequence and Field Strength: Diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) was performed on 1.5 and 3 T across multiple institution and vendors. Assessment: The combined mean and standard deviation of ADC were calculated for each tumor type using a random‐effects model, and the effect size was calculated using Hedge's g. Statistical Tests: Sensitivity/specificity, weighted classification accuracy, balanced classification accuracy. A P value < 0.05 was considered statistically significant, and a Hedge's g value of >1.2 was considered to represent a large difference. Results: The mean (± standard deviation) ADCs of medulloblastoma, ependymoma, and pilocytic astrocytoma were 0.76 ± 0.16, 1.10 ± 0.10, and 1.49 ± 0.16 mm2/sec × 10−3. To maximize sensitivity and specificity using the mean ADC, the cut‐off was found to be 0.96 mm2/sec × 10−3 for medulloblastoma and ependymoma and 1.26 mm2/sec × 10−3 for ependymoma and pilocytic astrocytoma. The meta‐analysis showed significantly different ADC distributions for the three posterior fossa tumors. The cut‐off values changed markedly (up to 7%) based on the performance metric used and the prevalence of the tumor types. Data Conclusion: There were significant differences in ADC between tumor types. However, it should be noted that only summary statistics from each study were analyzed and there were differences in how regions of interest were defined between studies. Evidence Level: 1 Technical Efficacy: Stage 3 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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14. SIOP Ependymoma I: Final results, long-term follow-up, and molecular analysis of the trial cohort—A BIOMECA Consortium Study.
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Ritzmann, Timothy A, Chapman, Rebecca J, Kilday, John-Paul, Thorp, Nicola, Modena, Piergiorgio, Dineen, Robert A, Macarthur, Donald, Mallucci, Conor, Jaspan, Timothy, Pajtler, Kristian W, Giagnacovo, Marzia, Jacques, Thomas S, Paine, Simon M L, Ellison, David W, Bouffet, Eric, and Grundy, Richard G
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- 2022
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15. Rate and severity of radiological features of physical abuse in children during the first UK-wide COVID-19 enforced national lockdown.
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Stivaros, Stavros, Paddock, Michael, Rajai, Azita, Cliffe, Helen, Connolly, Daniel J. A., Dineen, Robert A., Dixon, Rachel, Edwards, Harriet, Evans, Emily, Halliday, Katherine, Jackson, Kandise, Landes, Caren, Oates, Adam J., Stoodley, Neil, and Offiah, Amaka C.
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PHYSICAL abuse ,CHILD abuse ,SKULL fractures ,STAY-at-home orders ,CHARITIES ,PEDIATRIC emergency services ,COVID-19 pandemic ,COVID-19 - Published
- 2022
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16. Effect of Tranexamic Acid Administration on Remote Cerebral Ischemic Lesions in Acute Spontaneous Intracerebral Hemorrhage: A Substudy of a Randomized Clinical Trial.
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Pszczolkowski, Stefan, Sprigg, Nikola, Woodhouse, Lisa J., Gallagher, Rebecca, Swienton, David, Law, Zhe Kang, Casado, Ana M., Roberts, Ian, Werring, David J., Al-Shahi Salman, Rustam, England, Timothy J., Morgan, Paul S., Bath, Philip M., and Dineen, Robert A.
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- 2022
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17. Brief Consent Methods Enable Rapid Enrollment in Acute Stroke Trial: Results From the TICH-2 Randomized Controlled Trial.
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Law, Zhe Kang, Appleton, Jason P., Scutt, Polly, Roberts, Ian FRCP, Al-Shahi Salman, Rustam, England, Timothy J., Werring, David J., Robinson, Thompson, Krishnan, Kailash, Dineen, Robert A., Laska, Ann Charlotte, Lyrer, Philippe A., Egea-Guerrero, Juan Jose, Karlinski, Michal, Christensen, Hanne Di, Roffe, Christine, Bereczki, Daniel DSc, Ozturk, Serefnur, Thanabalan, Jegan MS, and Collins, Ronan
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- 2022
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18. Automated Detection of Candidate Subjects With Cerebral Microbleeds Using Machine Learning.
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Sundaresan, Vaanathi, Arthofer, Christoph, Zamboni, Giovanna, Dineen, Robert A., Rothwell, Peter M., Sotiropoulos, Stamatios N., Auer, Dorothee P., Tozer, Daniel J., Markus, Hugh S., Miller, Karla L., Dragonu, Iulius, Sprigg, Nikola, Alfaro-Almagro, Fidel, Jenkinson, Mark, and Griffanti, Ludovica
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MACHINE learning ,BLOOD vessels ,SCANNING systems - Abstract
Cerebral microbleeds (CMBs) appear as small, circular, well defined hypointense lesions of a few mm in size on T2
* -weighted gradient recalled echo (T2* -GRE) images and appear enhanced on susceptibility weighted images (SWI). Due to their small size, contrast variations and other mimics (e.g., blood vessels), CMBs are highly challenging to detect automatically. In large datasets (e.g., the UK Biobank dataset), exhaustively labelling CMBs manually is difficult and time consuming. Hence it would be useful to preselect candidate CMB subjects in order to focus on those for manual labelling, which is essential for training and testing automated CMB detection tools on these datasets. In this work, we aim to detect CMB candidate subjects from a larger dataset, UK Biobank, using a machine learning-based, computationally light pipeline. For our evaluation, we used 3 different datasets, with different intensity characteristics, acquired with different scanners. They include the UK Biobank dataset and two clinical datasets with different pathological conditions. We developed and evaluated our pipelines on different types of images, consisting of SWI or GRE images. We also used the UK Biobank dataset to compare our approach with alternative CMB preselection methods using non-imaging factors and/or imaging data. Finally, we evaluated the pipeline's generalisability across datasets. Our method provided subject-level detection accuracy > 80% on all the datasets (within-dataset results), and showed good generalisability across datasets, providing a consistent accuracy of over 80%, even when evaluated across different modalities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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19. Neonatal stroke surveillance study protocol in the United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland.
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T’ng Chang Kwok, Dineen, Robert A., Whitehouse, William, Lynn, Richard M., McSweeney, Niamh, and Sharkey, Don
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Neonatal stroke is a devastating condition that causes brain injury in babies and often leads to lifelong neurological impairment. Recent prospective population studies of neonatal stroke are lacking. Neonatal strokes are different from those in older children and adults. A better understanding of its aetiology, current management, and outcomes could reduce the burden of this rare condition. The study aims to explore the incidence and 2 year outcomes of neonatal stroke across an entire population in the UK and Republic of Ireland. This is an active national surveillance study using a purpose-built integrated case notification-data collection online platform. Over a 13 month period, with a potential 6 month extension, clinicians will notify neonatal stroke cases presenting in the first 90 days of life electronically via the online platform monthly. Clinicians will complete a primary questionnaire via the platform detailing clinical information, including neuroimaging, for analysis and classification. An outcome questionnaire will be sent at 2 years of age via the platform. Appropriate ethics and regulatory approvals have been received. The neonatal stroke study represents the first multinational population surveillance study delivered via a purpose-built integrated case notification-data collection online platform and data safe haven, overcoming the challenges of setting up the study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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20. Parametric Assessment of the Effect of Cochlear Implant Positioning on Brain MRI Artefacts at 3 T.
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Dewey, Rebecca Susan, Dineen, Robert A., Clemence, Matthew, Dick, Olivier, Bowtell, Richard, and Kitterick, Padraig T.
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- 2021
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21. Outcomes in Antiplatelet-Associated Intracerebral Hemorrhage in the TICH-2 Randomized Controlled Trial.
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Zhe Kang Law, Desborough, Michael, Roberts, Ian, Al-Shahi, Rustam, England, Timothy J., Werring, David J., Robinson, Thompson, Krishnan, Kailash, Dineen, Robert, Laska, Ann Charlotte, Peters, Nils, Egea-Guerrero, Juan Jose, Karlinski, Michal, Christensen, Hanne, Roffe, Christine, Bereczki, Daniel, Ozturk, Serefnur, Thanabalan, Jegan, Collins, Rónán, and Beridze, Maia
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- 2021
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22. Neurological Disorders Associated With COVID-19 Hospital Admissions: Experience of a Single Tertiary Healthcare Center.
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Dhillon, Permesh Singh, Dineen, Robert A., Morris, Haley, Tanasescu, Radu, Nikfekr, Esmaeil, Evans, Jonathan, Constantinescu, Cris S., and Hosseini, Akram A.
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NEUROLOGICAL disorders ,COVID-19 ,TERTIARY care ,HOSPITAL admission & discharge ,PERIPHERAL nervous system - Abstract
Background: Early reports have detailed a range of neurological symptoms in patients with the SARS-CoV-2 infection. However, there is a lack of detailed description and incidence of the neurological disorders amongst hospitalized COVID-19 patients. We describe a range of neurological disorders (other than non-specific neurological symptoms), including their clinical, radiological, and laboratory findings, encountered in our cohort of COVID-19 patients admitted to a large tertiary institution. Methods: We reviewed our prospectively collated database of all adult Neurology referrals, Neurology and Stroke admissions and Neurological multi-disciplinary team meetings for all hospitalized patients with suspected or proven COVID-19 from 17 March 2020 to 31 August 2020. Results: Twenty-nine of 1,243 COVID-19 inpatients (2.3%) presented with COVID-19-related neurological disorders. The mean age was 68.9 ± 13.5(SD) years, age range of 34–97 years, and there were 16 males. Twenty two patients had confirmed, five were probable and two had suspected COVID-19 infection according to the WHO case classification. Eight patients (27%) required critical care admission. Neurological symptoms at presentation included acute confusion and delirium, seizures, and new focal neurological deficits. Based on the pre-defined neurological phenotype, COVID-19 patients were grouped into four main categories. Sixteen patients had cerebrovascular events (13 with acute ischemic stroke and three had hemorrhagic features), seven patients were found to have inflammatory, non-inflammatory and autoimmune encephalopathy (including two with known Multiple Sclerosis), whilst disorders of movement and peripheral nervous system were diagnosed in three patients each. Conclusion: Although the exact prevalence and etiology remain unclear, new onset of neurological disorders, in addition to anosmia, is non-sporadic during the acute COVID-19-infection. Longitudinal follow-up of these patients is required to determine the clinical and functional outcome, treatment response and long-term effects of the SARS-CoV-2 infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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23. Single Test to ARrive at Multiple Sclerosis (STAR-MS) diagnosis: A prospective pilot study assessing the accuracy of the central vein sign in predicting multiple sclerosis in cases of diagnostic uncertainty.
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Clarke, Margareta A, Samaraweera, Amal PR, Falah, Yasser, Pitiot, Alain, Allen, Christopher M, Dineen, Robert A, Tench, Chris R, Morgan, Paul S, and Evangelou, Nikos
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MULTIPLE sclerosis ,VEINS ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,PILOT projects - Abstract
Background: Misdiagnosis is common in multiple sclerosis (MS) as a proportion of patients present with atypical clinical/magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings. The central vein sign has the potential to be a non-invasive, MS-specific biomarker. Objective: To test the accuracy of the central vein sign in predicting a diagnosis of MS in patients with diagnostic uncertainty at disease presentation using T2*-weighted, 3 T MRI. Methods: In this prospective pilot study, we recruited individuals with symptoms unusual for MS but with brain MRI consistent with the disease, and those with a typical clinical presentation of MS whose MRI did not suggest MS. We calculated the proportion of lesions with central veins for each patient and compared the results to the eventual clinical diagnoses. The optimal central vein threshold for diagnosis was established. Results: Thirty-eight patients were scanned, 35 of whom have received a clinical diagnosis. Median percentage of lesions with central veins was 51% in MS and 28% in non-MS. A threshold of 40.7% lesions with central veins resulted in 100% sensitivity and 73.9% specificity. Conclusion: The central vein sign assessed with a clinically available T2* scan can successfully diagnose MS in cases of diagnostic uncertainty. The central vein sign should be considered as a diagnostic biomarker in MS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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24. Neuropsychological outcomes of children with Optic Pathway Glioma.
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Papini, Chiara, Dineen, Robert A., Walker, David A., Thomas, Shery, and Pitchford, Nicola J.
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GLIOMAS ,VISUAL perception ,GENERAL factor (Psychology) ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,COGNITIVE ability - Abstract
Optic Pathway Glioma (OPG) is a relatively common brain tumour in childhood; however, there is scarce understanding of neuropsychological sequelae in these survivors. In this study, 12 children with diagnosis of OPG before 6 years of age received a comprehensive standardised assessment of visual perception, general intelligence and academic achievement, using adjustments to visual materials of the tests, to examine the extent of concurrent impairment in these functional domains. Information about vision, clinical and socio-demographic factors were extracted from medical records to assess the associations of neuropsychological outcomes with clinical and socio-demographic factors. Children with OPG exhibited high within-patient variability and moderate group-level impairment compared to test norms. Visual perception was the most impaired domain, while scholastic progression was age-appropriate overall. For cognition, core verbal and visuo-spatial reasoning skills were intact, whereas deficits were found in working memory and processing speed. Visual function was associated with tasks that rely on visual input. Children with OPG are at moderate risk of neuropsychological impairment, especially for visual perception and cognitive proficiency. Future research should elucidate further the relative contribution of vision loss and neurofibromatosis type 1 co-diagnosis within a large sample. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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25. Imaging markers of small vessel disease and brain frailty, and outcomes in acute stroke.
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Appleton, Jason P., Woodhouse, Lisa J., Adami, Alessandro, Becker, Jennifer L., Berge, Eivind, Cala, Lesley A., Casado, Ana M., Caso, Valeria, Christensen, Hanne K., Dineen, Robert A., Gommans, John, Koumellis, Panos, Szatmari, Szabolcs, Sprigg, Nikola, Bath, Philip M., Wardlaw, Joanna M., and ENOS Investigators
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- 2020
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26. Noncontrast Computed Tomography Signs as Predictors of Hematoma Expansion, Clinical Outcome, and Response to Tranexamic Acid in Acute Intracerebral Hemorrhage.
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Law, Zhe Kang, Ali, Azlinawati, Krishnan, Kailash, Bischoff, Adam, Appleton, Jason P., Scutt, Polly, Woodhouse, Lisa, Pszczolkowski, Stefan, Cala, Lesley A., Dineen, Robert A., England, Timothy J., Ozturk, Serefnur, Roffe, Christine, Bereczki, Daniel, Ciccone, Alfonso, Christensen, Hanne, Ovesen, Christian, Bath, Philip M., Sprigg, Nikola, and TICH-2 Investigators
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- 2020
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27. Switching from linear to macrocyclic gadolinium-based contrast agents halts the relative T1 -Weighted signal increase in deep gray matter of children with brain tumors: A retrospective study.
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Rowe, Selene K., Rodriguez, Daniel, Cohen, Ellie, Grundy, Richard, Morgan, Paul S., Jaspan, Tim, and Dineen, Robert A.
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BRAIN tumors ,TUMORS in children ,GLOBUS pallidus ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,DENTATE nucleus ,GRAY matter (Nerve tissue) ,CONTRAST media ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,CHEMICAL elements ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Background: Studies have shown signal intensity (SI) changes in the brains of children exposed to repeated doses of a gadolinium-based contrast agent (GBCA).Hypothesis: The trajectory of changes in relative dentate nucleus (DN) and globus pallidus (GP) SI in children receiving multiple doses of GBCA will alter when switched from linear to macrocyclic agents.Study Type: Retrospective longitudinal.Population: Thirty-five children, age range 0.5-17.0 years, undergoing brain tumor follow-up between 2006 and 2017.Field Strength/sequence: Unenhanced T1 WI, serial scans at both 1.5T and 3T.Assessment: Regions of interest were drawn on DN, GP, and SIs normalized to middle cerebellar peduncle (DN/MCP) and cerebral white matter (GP/CWM), respectively. A change in SI ratios as a function of dose (slope gradient) calculated according to the type of contrast agent received: linear only, macrocyclic only, or switchover from linear to macrocyclic. For the latter, gradients were compared before and after switchover. The effect of anticancer treatment on slope gradient was tested.Statistical Tests: One-sample t-test or Mann-Whitney U-test for slope gradients differing from zero. Independent samples t-tests to compare slope gradient groups. Paired sample t-tests to compare slope gradients before and after switchover.Results: A significant (P < 0.05) increase in SI ratio was observed following multiple doses of linear but not macrocyclic agents: mean percentage increase per dose in SI was 0.063% vs. -0.034% for DN/MCP, and 0.078% vs. 0.004% for GP/CWM ratios. A significant (P < 0.05) change of SI trajectory in the DN/MCP ratio was demonstrated when switching from a linear to macrocyclic agent. There was no difference in SI trajectory between patients who had anticancer therapies and those who did not, DN/MCP P = 0.740; GP/BWM P = 0.694.Data Conclusion: Switching from linear to macrocyclic gadolinium-based contrast agents seems to halt the relative T1 signal increase in deep gray matter in children. Anticancer treatments appeared to have no impact on the trajectory of T1 SI.Level Of Evidence: 4 Technical Efficacy: Stage 3 J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2020;51:288-295. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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28. Animated educational video to prepare children for MRI without sedation: evaluation of the appeal and value.
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Szeszak, Szofia, Man, Rachel, Love, Andrew, Langmack, Gill, Wharrad, Heather, Dineen, Robert, and Dineen, Robert A
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EDUCATIONAL films ,ANIMATED films ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,CONSCIOUS sedation ,CHILD psychology - Abstract
Background: MRI scans can be distressing for children and often require sedation. Educating children about what to expect reduces anxiety and increases likelihood of successful non-sedated MRI scans. Multimedia tools are a popular means of education. Animated video could provide a free, accessible method of preparing children for MRI scans.Objective: To evaluate a new animation video for preparing children for MRI, specifically for decreasing in-scanner motion and examination failure.Materials and Methods: We recruited 24 healthy children ages 5-11 years. Participants underwent pre- and post-viewing questionnaires and structured interviews. We then compared median Likert scale score changes between pre- and post-animation questions and analyzed the interview framework. Participants were filmed viewing the animation to calculate time spent looking at the screen to assess how well the video retained children's attention.Results: There were significant improvements in median scores regarding what to expect, checking for metal and keeping still. There were no significant changes in other knowledge-based topics. There were significant improvements in median scores for anxiety-based topics. On average, children watched the screen for 98.9% of the 174-s animation.Conclusion: The animation improved knowledge, reduced anxiety, retained attention and was enjoyed by participants. It can be accessed freely via the Internet to help prepare children ages 5-11 for having an MRI scan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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29. Relationship between race and outcome in Asian, Black, and Caucasian patients with spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage: Data from the Virtual International Stroke Trials Archive and Efficacy of Nitric Oxide in Stroke trial.
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Krishnan, Kailash, Beishon, Lucy, Berge, Eivind, Christensen, Hanne, Dineen, Robert A., Ozturk, Serefnur, Sprigg, Nikola, Wardlaw, Joanna M., and Bath, Philip M.
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CEREBRAL hemorrhage ,CEREBROVASCULAR disease diagnosis ,STROKE treatment ,THERAPEUTIC use of nitric oxide ,STROKE patients ,PROGNOSIS - Abstract
Background and purpose: Although poor prognosis after intracerebral hemorrhage relates to risk factors and hematoma characteristics, there is limited evidence for the effect of race-ethnicity. Methods: Data from 1011 patients with intracerebral hemorrhage enrolled into hyperacute trials and randomized to control were obtained from the Virtual International Stroke Trials Archive and Efficacy of Nitric Oxide in Stroke Trial. Clinical characteristics and functional outcome were compared among three racial groups - Asians, Blacks, and Caucasians. Results: The majority of patients were Caucasian (78.1%) followed by Asians (14.5%) and Blacks (5.5%). At baseline, Caucasians were older and had larger hematoma volumes; Blacks had lower Glasgow Coma Scale and higher systolic blood pressure (all p<0.05). Although the primary outcome of modified Rankin Scale did not differ at 90 days (p=0.14), there were significant differences in mortality (p<0.0001) and quality of life (EQ-5D p<0.0001; EQ-VAS p 0.015). In test of multiple comparisons, Caucasians were more likely to die (p=0.0003) and had worse quality of life (EQ-5D p=0.003; EQ-VAS p<0.0001) as compared to Asians. Conclusion: Race-ethnicity appears to explain some of the variation in clinical characteristics and outcomes after acute intracerebral hemorrhage. Factors that explain this variation need to be identified. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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30. Development of a pre-operative scoring system for predicting risk of post-operative paediatric cerebellar mutism syndrome.
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Liu, Jo-Fen, Dineen, Robert A., Avula, Shivaram, Chambers, Tom, Dutta, Manali, Jaspan, Tim, MacArthur, Donald C., Howarth, Simon, Soria, Daniele, Quinlan, Philip, Harave, Srikrishna, Ong, Chan Chang, Mallucci, Conor L., Kumar, Ram, Pizer, Barry, and Walker, David A.
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SURGICAL complications ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,POSTERIOR fossa syndrome ,RADIOTHERAPY ,PROGNOSIS ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background: Despite previous identification of pre-operative clinical and radiological predictors of post-operative paediatric cerebellar mutism syndrome (CMS), a unifying pre-operative risk stratification model for use during surgical consent is currently lacking. The aim of the project is to develop a simple imaging-based pre-operative risk scoring scheme to stratify patients in terms of post-operative CMS risk. Methods: Pre-operative radiological features were recorded for a retrospectively assembled cohort of 89 posterior fossa tumour patients from two major UK treatment centers (age 2-23yrs; gender 28 M, 61 F; diagnosis: 38 pilocytic astrocytoma, 32 medulloblastoma, 12 ependymoma, 1 high grade glioma, 1 pilomyxoid astrocytoma, 1 atypical teratoid rhabdoid tumour, 1 hemangioma, 1 neurilemmoma, 2 oligodendroglioma). Twenty-six (29%) developed post-operative CMS. Based upon results from univariate analysis and C4.5 decision tree, stepwise logistic regression was used to develop the optimal model and generate risk scores. Results: Univariate analysis identified five significant risk factors and C4.5 decision tree analysis identified six predictors. Variables included in the final model are MRI primary location, bilateral middle cerebellar peduncle involvement (invasion and/or compression), dentate nucleus invasion and age at imaging >12.4 years. This model has an accuracy of 88.8% (79/89). Using risk score cut-off of 203 and 238, respectively, allowed discrimination into low (38/89, predicted CMS probability <3%), intermediate (17/89, predicted CMS probability 3-52%) and high-risk (34/89, predicted CMS probability ≥52%). Conclusions: A risk stratification model for post-operative paediatric CMS could flag patients at increased or reduced risk pre-operatively which may influence strategies for surgical treatment of cerebellar tumours. Following future testing and prospective validation, this risk scoring scheme will be proposed for use during the surgical consenting process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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31. Baseline characteristics of the 3096 patients recruited into the 'Triple Antiplatelets for Reducing Dependency after Ischemic Stroke' trial.
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Bath, Philip M. W., Appleton, Jason P., Beridze, Maia, Christensen, Hanne, Dineen, Robert A., Duley, Lelia, England, Timothy J., Heptinstall, Stan, James, Marilyn, Krishnan, Kailash, Markus, Hugh S., Pocock, Stuart, Ranta, Annemarei, Robinson, Thompson G., Flaherty, Katie, Scutt, Polly, Venables, Graham S., Woodhouse, Lisa J., and Sprigg, Nikola
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MEDICAL care ,BLOOD pressure ,CARDIOVASCULAR system ,HYPERPERFUSION ,STANDARD deviations - Abstract
Background: The risk of recurrence following ischemic stroke or transient ischemic attack is highest immediately after the event. Antiplatelet agents are effective in reducing the risk of recurrence and two agents are superior to one in the early phase after ictus. Design: The triple antiplatelets for reducing dependency after ischemic stroke trial was an international multicenter prospective randomized open-label blinded-endpoint trial that assessed the safety and efficacy of short-term intensive antiplatelet therapy with three agents (combined aspirin, clopidogrel and dipyridamole) as compared with guideline treatment in acute ischemic stroke or transient ischemic attack. The primary outcome was stroke recurrence and its severity, measured using the modified Rankin Scale at 90 days. Secondary outcomes included recurrent vascular events, functional measures (cognition, disability, mood, quality of life), and safety (bleeding, death, serious adverse events). Data are number (%) or mean (standard deviation, SD). Results: Recruitment ran from April 2009 to March 2016; 3096 patients were recruited from 106 sites in four countries (Denmark 1.6%, Georgia 2.7%, New Zealand 0.2%, UK 95.4%). Randomization characteristics included: age 69.0 (10.1) years; male 1945 (62.8%); time onset to randomization 29.4 (11.9) h; stroke severity (National Institutes for Health Stroke Scale) 2.8 (3.6); blood pressure 143.5 (18.2)/79.5 (11.4) mmHg; IS 2143 (69.2%), transient ischemic attack 953 (30.8%). Conclusion: Triple antiplatelets for reducing dependency after ischemic stroke was a large trial of intensive/triple antiplatelet therapy in acute ischemic stroke and transient ischemic attack, and included participants from four predominantly Caucasian countries who were representative of patients in many western stroke services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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32. Altered whole-brain connectivity in albinism.
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Welton, Thomas, Ather, Sarim, Proudlock, Frank A., Gottlob, Irene, and Dineen, Robert A.
- Abstract
Albinism is a group of congenital disorders of the melanin synthesis pathway. Multiple ocular, white matter and cortical abnormalities occur in albinism, including a greater decussation of nerve fibres at the optic chiasm, foveal hypoplasia and nystagmus. Despite this, visual perception is largely preserved. It was proposed that this may be attributable to reorganisation among cerebral networks, including an increased interhemispheric connectivity of the primary visual areas. A graph-theoretic model was applied to explore brain connectivity networks derived from resting-state functional and diffusion-tensor magnetic resonance imaging data in 23 people with albinism and 20 controls. They tested for group differences in connectivity between primary visual areas and in summary network organisation descriptors. Main findings were supplemented with analyses of control regions, brain volumes and white matter microstructure. Significant functional interhemispheric hyperconnectivity of the primary visual areas in the albinism group were found ( P = 0.012). Tests of interhemispheric connectivity based on the diffusion-tensor data showed no significant group difference ( P = 0.713). Second, it was found that a range of functional whole-brain network metrics were abnormal in people with albinism, including the clustering coefficient ( P = 0.005), although this may have been driven partly by overall differences in connectivity, rather than reorganisation. Based on the results, it was suggested that changes occur in albinism at the whole-brain level, and not just within the visual processing pathways. It was proposed that their findings may reflect compensatory adaptations to increased chiasmic decussation, foveal hypoplasia and nystagmus. Hum Brain Mapp 38:740-752, 2017. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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33. The Central Vein Sign in Multiple Sclerosis Lesions Is Present Irrespective of the T2* Sequence at 3 T.
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Samaraweera, Amal P. R., Clarke, Margareta A., Whitehead, Amy, Falah, Yasser, Driver, Ian D., Dineen, Robert A., Morgan, Paul S., and Evangelou, Nikos
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MULTIPLE sclerosis ,ANGIOGRAPHY ,DISEASE susceptibility ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,BRAIN ,CEREBRAL ischemia ,RESEARCH evaluation ,RESEARCH funding ,VEINS ,CEREBRAL small vessel diseases - Abstract
Background and Purpose: Previous T2*-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies have used white matter lesion (WML) central veins to distinguish multiple sclerosis (MS) from its mimics. To be clinically applicable, the "central vein sign" needs to be detectable across different T2* sequences. Our objective was to determine if the central vein sign is reliably present in MS and absent in patients with ischemic small vessel disease (SVD) across different T2* sequences at 3T MRI.Methods: Ten patients with MS and 10 with SVD were each scanned on a 3 T Philips and GE scanner. The MRI protocol included 3-dimensional (3D) T2* GRE, T2* with high echo planar imaging (EPI) factor and susceptibility-weighted angiography (SWAN). Total WML numbers, central vein numbers, and proportion of WMLs with central veins were calculated using each sequence. Three blinded raters identified a subset of six WMLs with central veins to diagnose MS or SVD.Results: Irrespective of the sequence, MS patients were identified based on a higher proportion of WMLs with central veins. This proportion was dependent on the T2* sequence used. T2* with high EPI allowed the highest median proportion (69.6%) in MS patients; 6.1% in SVD patients (P < .0004). Rater reproducibility varied depending on the T2* sequence used. T2* with high EPI produced good agreement with the clinical diagnosis (Cohen's kappa range; .78-.89), as did SWAN imaging with some raters; ĸ = .69.Conclusions: The central vein sign can diagnose MS in the clinical setting of modern 3T scanners. However, variations in the T2* sequences need to be considered when defining a threshold for diagnosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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34. Imaging gray matter with concomitant null point imaging from the phase sensitive inversion recovery sequence.
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Mougin, Olivier, Abdel‐Fahim, Rasha, Dineen, Robert, Pitiot, Alain, Evangelou, Nikos, and Gowland, Penny
- Abstract
Purpose To present an improved three-dimensional (3D) interleaved phase sensitive inversion recovery (PSIR) sequence including a concomitantly acquired new contrast, null point imaging (NPI), to help detect and classify abnormalities in cortical gray matter. Methods The 3D gradient echo PSIR images were acquired at 0.6 mm isotropic resolution on 11 multiple sclerosis (MS) patients and 9 controls subjects using a 7 Tesla (T) MRI scanner, and 2 MS patients at 3T. Cortical abnormalities were delineated on the NPI/PSIR data and later classified according to position in the cortex. Results The NPI helped detect cortical lesions within the cortical ribbon with increased, positive contrast compared with the PSIR. It also provided improved intrinsic delineation of the ribbon, increasing confidence in classifying the lesions' locations. Conclusion The proposed PSIR facilitates the classification of cortical lesions by providing two T
1 -weighted 3D datasets with isotropic resolution, including the NPI showing cortical lesions with clear delineation of the gray/white matter boundary and minimal partial volume effects. Magn Reson Med 76:1512-1516, 2016. © 2015 The Authors. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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35. Cerebral Cortical Thickness in Chronic Pain Due to Knee Osteoarthritis: The Effect of Pain Duration and Pain Sensitization.
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Alshuft, Hamza M., Condon, Laura A., Dineen, Robert A., and Auer, Dorothee P.
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CEREBRAL cortex ,CHRONIC pain ,OSTEOARTHRITIS ,KNEE diseases ,PAIN perception - Abstract
Objective: This study investigates associations between cortical thickness and pain duration, and central sensitization as markers of pain progression in painful knee osteoarthritis. Methods: Whole brain cortical thickness and pressure pain thresholds were assessed in 70 participants; 40 patients with chronic painful knee osteoarthritis (age = 66.1± 8.5 years, 21 females, mean duration of pain = 8.5 years), and 30 healthy controls (age = 62.7± 7.4, 17 females). Results: Cortical thickness negatively correlated with pain duration mainly in fronto-temporal areas outside of classical pain processing areas (p<0.05, age-controlled, FDR corrected). Pain sensitivity was unrelated to cortical thickness. Patients showed lower cortical thickness in the right anterior insula (p<0.001, uncorrected) with no changes surviving multiple test correction. Conclusion: With increasing number of years of suffering from chronic arthritis pain we found increasing cortical thinning in extended cerebral cortical regions beyond recognised pain-processing areas. While the mechanisms of cortical thinning remain to be elucidated, we show that pain progression indexed by central sensitization does not play a major role. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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36. Intravenous tranexamic acid for hyperacute primary intracerebral hemorrhage: Protocol for a randomized, placebo-controlled trial.
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Sprigg, Nikola, Robson, Katie, Bath, Philip, Dineen, Robert, Roberts, Ian, Robinson, Tom, Roffe, Christine, Werring, David, Salman, Rustam Al-Shahi, Pocock, Stuart, Duley, Lelia, England, Tim, Whynes, David, Ciccone, Alfonso, Laska, Ann Charlotte, Christensen, Hanne, Ozturk, Serefnur, Collins, Ronan, Bereczki, Daniel, and Egea-Guerrero, Juan Jose
- Subjects
TRANEXAMIC acid ,INTRACEREBRAL hematoma ,BOLUS drug administration ,HEMOSTATICS ,POST-traumatic stress disorder ,INTRAVENOUS therapy - Abstract
Rationale: Outcome after intracerebral hemorrhage remains poor. Tranexamic acid is easy to administer, readily available, inexpensive, and effective in other hemorrhagic conditions. Aim: This randomized trial aims to test the hypothesis that intravenous tranexamic acid given within 8 h of spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage reduces death or dependency. Design: Phase III prospective double-blind randomized placebo-controlled trial. Participants within 8 h of spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage are randomized to receive either intravenous tranexamic acid 1 g 10 min bolus followed by 1 g 8 h infusion, or placebo. Sample size estimates: A trial of 2000 participants (300 from start-up phase and 1700 from main phase) will have 90% power to detect an ordinal shift of the modified Rankin Scale with odds ratio 0.79. Study outcomes: The primary outcome is death or dependency measured by ordinal shift analysis of the 7 level mRS at day 90. Secondary outcomes are neurological impairment at day 7 and disability, quality of life, cognition, and mood at day 90. Safety outcomes are death, serious adverse events, thromboembolic events, and seizures. Cost outcomes are length of stay in hospital, readmission, and institutionalization. Discussion: This pragmatic trial is assessing efficacy of tranexamic acid after spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage. Recruitment started in 2013; as of 15th January 2016 1355 participants have been enrolled, from 95 centers in seven countries. Recruitment is due to end in 2017. TICH-2 Trial is registered as ISRCTN93732214. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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37. Glyceryl Trinitrate for Acute Intracerebral Hemorrhage: Results From the Efficacy of Nitric Oxide in Stroke (ENOS) Trial, a Subgroup Analysis.
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Krishnan, Kailash, Scutt, Polly, Woodhouse, Lisa, Adami, Alessandro, Becker, Jennifer L., Berge, Eivind, Cala, Lesley A., Casado, Ana M., Caso, Valeria, Chen, Christopher, Christensen, Hanna, Collins, Ronan, Czlonkowska, Anna, Dineen, Robert A., Gommans, John, Koumellis, Panos, Lees, Kennedy R., Ntaios, George, Ozturk, Serefnur, and Phillips, Stephen J.
- Published
- 2016
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38. Performance characteristics of methods for quantifying spontaneous intracerebral haemorrhage: data from the Efficacy of Nitric Oxide in Stroke (ENOS) trial.
- Author
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Krishnan, Kailash, Mukhtar, Siti F., Lingard, James, Houlton, Aimee, Walker, Elizabeth, Jones, Tanya, Sprigg, Nikola, Cala, Lesley A., Becker, Jennifer L., Dineen, Robert A., Koumellis, Panos, Adami, Alessandro, Casado, Ana M., Bath, Philip M. W., and Wardlaw, Joanna M.
- Subjects
CEREBRAL hemorrhage ,THERAPEUTIC use of nitric oxide ,STROKE ,PROGNOSIS ,INTER-observer reliability ,COMPUTED tomography ,STATISTICAL correlation ,REGRESSION analysis ,VASODILATORS ,STROKE diagnosis ,BLOOD pressure ,HYPERTENSION ,LONGITUDINAL method ,NEURORADIOLOGY ,RESEARCH bias ,DIAGNOSIS ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Background: Poor prognosis after intracerebral haemorrhage (ICH) is related to haemorrhage characteristics. Along with developing therapeutic interventions, we sought to understand the performance of haemorrhage descriptors in large clinical trials.Methods: Clinical and neuroimaging data were obtained for 548 participants with ICH from the Efficacy of Nitric Oxide in Stroke (ENOS) trial. Independent observers performed visual categorisation of the largest diameter, measured volume using ABC/2, modified ABC/2, semiautomated segmentation (SAS), fully automatic measurement methods; shape, density and intraventricular haemorrhage were also assessed. Intraobserver and interobserver reliability were determined for these measures.Results: ICH volume was significantly different among standard ABC/2, modified ABC/2 and SAS: (mean) 12.8 (SD 16.3), 8.9 (9.2), 12.8 (13.1) cm(3), respectively (p<0.0001). There was excellent agreement for haemorrhage volume (n=193): ABC/2 intraobserver intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) 0.96-0.97, interobserver ICC 0.88; modified ABC/2 intraobserver ICC 0.95-0.97, interobserver ICC 0.91; SAS intraobserver ICC 0.95-0.99, interobserver ICC 0.93; largest diameter: (visual) interadjudicator ICC 0.82, (visual vs measured) adjudicator vs observer ICC 0.71; shape intraobserver ICC 0.88 interobserver ICC 0.75; density intraobserver ICC 0.86, interobserver ICC 0.73. Graeb score (mean 3.53) and modified Graeb (5.22) scores were highly correlated. Using modified ABC/2, ICH volume was underestimated in regular (by 2.2-2.5 cm(3), p<0.0001) and irregular-shaped haemorrhages (by 4.8-4.9 cm(3), p<0.0001). Fully automated measurement of haemorrhage volume was possible in only 5% of cases.Conclusions: Formal measurement of haemorrhage characteristics and visual estimates are reproducible. The standard ABC/2 method is superior to the modified ABC/2 method for quantifying ICH volume.Clinical Trial Registration: ISRCTN9941422. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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39. Statistical analysis plan for the 'Tranexamic acid for hyperacute primary IntraCerebral Haemorrhage' (TICH-2) trial.
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Flaherty, Katie, Bath, Philip M., Dineen, Robert, Law, Zhe, Scutt, Polly, Pocock, Stuart, Sprigg, Nikola, and TICH-2 investigators
- Subjects
ASPIRIN ,PRIMARY care ,SYNCOPE ,STATISTICAL models ,TRANEXAMIC acid - Abstract
Rationale: Aside from blood pressure lowering, treatment options for intracerebral haemorrhage remain limited and a proportion of patients will undergo early haematoma expansion with resultant significant morbidity and mortality. Tranexamic acid (TXA), an anti-fibrinolytic drug, has been shown to significantly reduce mortality in patients, who are bleeding following trauma, when given rapidly. TICH-2 is testing whether TXA is effective at improving outcome in spontaneous intracerebral haemorrhage (SICH).Methods and Design: TICH-2 is a pragmatic, phase III, prospective, double-blind, randomised placebo-controlled trial. Two thousand adult (aged ≥ 18 years) patients with an acute SICH, within 8 h of stroke onset, will be randomised to receive TXA or the placebo control. The primary outcome is ordinal shift of modified Rankin Scale score at day 90. Analyses will be performed using intention-to-treat.Results: This paper and its attached appendices describe the statistical analysis plan (SAP) for the trial and were developed and published prior to database lock and unblinding to treatment allocation. The SAP includes details of analyses to be undertaken and unpopulated tables which will be reported in the primary and key secondary publications. The database will be locked in early 2018, ready for publication of the results later in the same year.Discussion: The SAP details the analyses that will be done to avoid bias arising from prior knowledge of the study findings. The trial will determine whether TXA can improve outcome after SICH, which currently has no definitive therapy.Trial Registration: ISRCTN registry, ID: ISRCTN93732214 . Registered on 17 January 2013. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Serial MR diffusion to predict treatment response in high-grade pediatric brain tumors: a comparison of regional and voxel-based diffusion change metrics.
- Author
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Rodriguez Gutierrez, Daniel, Manita, Muftah, Jaspan, Tim, Dineen, Robert A., Grundy, Richard G., and Auer, Dorothee P.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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41. Extra-Hippocampal Subcortical Limbic Involvement Predicts Episodic Recall Performance in Multiple Sclerosis.
- Author
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Dineen, Robert A., Bradshaw, Christopher M., Constantinescu, Cris S., and Auer, Dorothee P.
- Subjects
MULTIPLE sclerosis research ,PATIENTS ,BRAIN imaging ,ANISOTROPY ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,HIPPOCAMPUS (Brain) - Abstract
Background: Episodic memory impairment is a common but poorly-understood phenomenon in multiple sclerosis (MS). We aim to establish the relative contributions of reduced integrity of components of the extended hippocampal-diencephalic system to memory performance in MS patients using quantitative neuroimaging. Methodology/Principal Findings: 34 patients with relapsing-remitting MS and 24 healthy age-matched controls underwent 3 T MRI including diffusion tensor imaging and 3-D T1-weighted volume acquisition. Manual fornix regions-of-interest were used to derive fornix fractional anisotropy (FA). Normalized hippocampal, mammillary body and thalamic volumes were derived by manual segmentation. MS subjects underwent visual recall, verbal recall, verbal recognition and verbal fluency assessment. Significant differences between MS patients and controls were found for fornix FA (0.38 vs. 0.46, means adjusted for age and fornix volume, P,.0005) and mammillary body volumes (age-adjusted means 0.114 ml vs. 0.126 ml, 2 P,.023). Multivariate regression analysis identified fornix FA and mammillary bodies as predictor of visual recall (R = .31, 2 P = .003, P = .006), and thalamic volume as predictive of verbal recall (R = .37, P,.0005). No limbic measures predicted verbal recognition or verbal fluency. Conclusions/Significance: These findings indicate that structural and ultrastructural alterations in subcortical limbic components beyond the hippocampus predict performance of episodic recall in MS patients with mild memory dysfunction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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42. The DRESS trial: a feasibility randomized controlled trial of a neuropsychological approach to dressing therapy for stroke inpatients.
- Author
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Walker, Marion F, Sunderland, Alan, Fletcher-Smith, Joanna, Drummond, Avril, Logan, Pip, Edmans, Judi A, Garvey, Katherine, Dineen, Robert A, Ince, Paul, Horne, Jane, Fisher, Rebecca J, and Taylor, Jenny L
- Subjects
COGNITION disorders treatment ,CLOTHING & dress ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,STROKE ,PILOT projects ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
The article discusses a dress trial to determine the effectiveness of using two neuropsychological approaches for treating stroke patients suffering from dressing problems and cognitive difficulties. The study measures including The Nottingham Stroke Dressing Assessment (NSDA) test, 10-hole peg transfer test and line cancellation is discussed. The study shows benefits of a systematic neuropsychological approach to dressing therapy and indicates the need for a phase III trial with this approach.
- Published
- 2012
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43. Stroke-like migraine attack after cranial radiation therapy: the SMART syndrome.
- Author
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Sue Yin Lim, Brooke, Jonathan, Dineen, Robert, and O'Donoghue, Michael
- Abstract
We describe a patient who experienced a prolonged episode of headache, drowsiness, seizure, unilateral weakness, delusion and hallucination due to a stroke-like migraine attack after cranial radiation therapy. Stroke-like migraine attack after radiation therapy (SMART) syndrome is a rare complication of therapeutic brain irradiation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
44. Sonographic Features of Cystic Papillary Carcinoma of the Thyroid.
- Author
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Dineen, Robert, Robinson, Ivan, and Cozens, Neil
- Subjects
THYROID cancer ,CANCER diagnosis ,ULTRASONIC imaging of cancer ,MEDICAL screening ,ULTRASONIC imaging ,ACOUSTIC imaging - Abstract
Cystic changes are a well-recognized finding in papillary carcinoma of the thyroid, being described in 10–30% of cases. Much less commonly, cystic changes predominate and the diagnosis of malignancy can be difficult. Differentiation between extremely common benign cystically degenerate hyperplastic nodules and the rare entity of cystic papillary carcinoma can be difficult. In this pictorial review we consider five cases of cystic papillary carcinoma and highlight the ultrasound features, which should alert the sonographer to the possibility of this diagnosis. The role of fine needle aspiration cytology in these difficult cases is discussed, as is the potential for recommending surgery based on the ultrasound features. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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45. Statistical analysis plan for the 'Triple Antiplatelets for Reducing Dependency after Ischaemic Stroke' ( TARDIS) trial.
- Author
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Bath, Philip M. W., Robson, Katie, Woodhouse, Lisa J., Sprigg, Nikola, Dineen, Robert, and Pocock, Stuart
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STROKE ,DRUG addiction ,QUALITATIVE research ,CLOPIDOGREL ,DIPYRIDAMOLE ,TRANSIENT ischemic attack - Abstract
Rationale Antiplatelet agents such as aspirin, clopidogrel and dipyridamole are effective in reducing the risk of recurrence after a stroke. Importantly, the risk of recurrence is highest immediately after the index event while antiplatelets cause bleeding. Aims and/or hypothesis The 'Triple Antiplatelets for Reducing Dependency after Ischaemic Stroke' (TARDIS) trial is testing whether short-term intensive antiplatelet therapy is safe and effective in reducing the early risk of recurrence as compared with standard guideline-based therapy. Design TARDIS is an international multi-center prospective randomized open-label blinded-end-point trial, with funding from the UK Health Technology Assessment program. Patients with acute ischemic stroke or transient ischemic attack are randomized within 48 h to intensive/triple antiplatelet therapy or guideline antiplatelets taken for one-month. Patients or relatives give written informed (proxy) consent and all sites have research ethics approval. Analyses will be done by intention-to-treat. Study Outcome The primary outcome is shift in stroke recurrent events and their severity, assessed using the modified Rankin Scale, at three-months. Discussion This paper and attachment describe the trial's statistical analysis plan, as developed from the protocol during recruitment and prior to unblinding of data. The statistical analysis plan contains design and methods for analyses, and unpopulated tables and figures for the primary and baseline publications. The data from the trial will provide the first large-scale randomized evidence for the use of intensive antiplatelet therapy for preventing recurrence after acute stroke and transient ischemic attack. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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- View/download PDF
46. Multidetector Computed Tomographic Angiography in Horner Syndrome.
- Author
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Stead, Richard E., Dineen, Robert A., Dua, Harminder S., and Mathew, Manu R. K.
- Subjects
ANGIOGRAPHY ,ARTERIOGRAPHY ,CAROTID artery ,INFLAMMATION ,MEDICAL radiography - Abstract
A 62-year-old man presented with Horner syndrome secondary to an internal carotid artery dissecting aneurysm detected by multi-detector computed tomographic angiography (MDCTA). Follow-up imaging failed to demonstrate any significant reduction in the size of the aneurysm despite resolution of clinical signs, suggesting that localized inflammation may play an important aetiological role. The size of aneurysm required to cause Horner syndrome has not been fully elucidated, but is important as it determines the likelihood of detection. We report a case in which MDCTA successfully visualized a small, clinically significant dissecting aneurysm causing Horner syndrome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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47. The MRI central vein marker; differentiating PPMS from RRMS and ischemic SVD.
- Author
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Samaraweera, Amal P.R., Falah, Yasser, Pitiot, Alain, Dineen, Robert A., Morgan, Paul S., and Evangelou, Nikos
- Published
- 2018
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48. Abstract WP76: Baseline Characteristics of the 3,096 Patients Recruited Into the 'Triple Antiplatelets for Reducing Dependency After Ischaemic Stroke' (TARDIS) Trial.
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Bath, Philip M, Appleton, Jason P, Beridze, Maia, Christensen, Hanne, Dineen, Robert A, Duley, Lelia, England, Timothy J, Heptinstall, Stan, James, Marilyn, Krishnan, Kailash, Markus, Hugh S, Pocock, Stuart, Ranta, Annemarei, Robinson, Thompson, Flaherty, Katie, Scutt, Polly, Venables, Graham S, Woodhouse, Lisa, and Sprigg, Nikola
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Pial vasodilation and moderate hyperaemia following carotid endarterectomy: new MRI diagnostic signs in hyperperfusion/reperfusion syndrome?
- Author
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Thurley, Peter D., Altaf, Nish, Dineen, Robert, MacSweeney, Shane, and Auer, Dorothee P.
- Subjects
LETTERS to the editor ,ENDARTERECTOMY - Abstract
A letter to the editor is presented which discusses the case of a 73-year-old-female patient who went through right-sided carotid endarterectomy (CEA) and had developed hyperperfusion/reperfusion syndrome.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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