44 results on '"Kim, Louis J."'
Search Results
2. Dural Arteriovenous Fistulas With Cognitive Impairment: Angiographic Characteristics and Treatment Outcomes
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Sanchez, Sebastian, Wendt, Linder, Hayakawa, Minako, Chen, Ching-Jen, Sheehan, Jason P., Kim, Louis J., Abecassis, Isaac Josh, Levitt, Michael R., Meyer, R. Michael, Guniganti, Ridhima, Kansagra, Akash P., Lanzino, Giuseppe, Giordan, Enrico, Brinjikji, Waleed, Bulters, Diederik O., Durnford, Andrew, Fox, W. Christopher, Smith, Jessica, Polifka, Adam J., Gross, Bradley, Amin-Hanjani, Sepideh, Alaraj, Ali, Kwasnicki, Amanda, Starke, Robert M., Chen, Stephanie H., van Dijk, J. Marc C., Potgieser, Adriaan R. E., Satomi, Junichiro, Tada, Yoshiteru, Phelps, Ryan, Abla, Adib, Winkler, Ethan, Du, Rose, Rosalind Lai, Pui Man, Ortega-Gutierrez, Santiago, Zipfel, Gregory J., Derdeyn, Colin, and Samaniego, Edgar A.
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- 2024
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3. High-Flow Bypass and Clip Trapping of a Giant Fusiform Middle Cerebral Artery (M1) Aneurysm: Technical Case Instruction
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Shenoy, Varadaraya Satyanarayan, Miller, Charles, Sen, Rajeev D., McAvoy, Malia, Montoure, Andrew, Kim, Louis J., and Sekhar, Laligam N.
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- 2023
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4. The Association Between Illness Severity Scores and In-hospital Mortality After Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
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Yuwapattanawong, Kornkamon, Chanthima, Phuriphong, Thamjamrassri, Thanyalak, Keen, Jade, Qiu, Qian, Fong, Christine, Robinson, Ellen F., Dhulipala, Vasu B., Walters, Andrew M., Athiraman, Umeshkumar, Kim, Louis J., Vavilala, Monica S., Levitt, Michael R., and Lele, Abhijit V.
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- 2023
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5. Irregular pulsation of aneurysmal wall is associated with symptomatic and ruptured intracranial aneurysms
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Zhang, Jianjian, Li, Xiao, Zhao, Bing, Zhang, Jin, Sun, Beibei, Wang, Lingling, Tian, Jiaqi, Mossa-Basha, Mahmud, Kim, Louis J, Yan, Jing, Wan, Jieqing, Xu, Jianrong, Zhou, Yan, Zhao, Huilin, and Zhu, Chengcheng
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BackgroundIrregular pulsation of aneurysmal wall detected by four-dimensional CT angiography (4D-CTA) has been described as a novel imaging feature of aneurysm vulnerability. Our study aimed to investigate whether irregular pulsation is associated with symptomatic and ruptured intracranial aneurysms (IAs).MethodsThis retrospective study included consecutive patients with IAs who underwent 4D-CTA from January 2018 to July 2021. IAs were categorized as asymptomatic, symptomatic or ruptured. The presence of irregular pulsation (defined as a temporary focal protuberance ≥1 mm on more than three successive frames) was identified on 4D-CTA movies. Univariate and multivariate analyses were used to identify the parameters associated with aneurysm symptomatic or ruptured status.ResultsOverall, 305 patients with 328 aneurysms (37 ruptured, 60 symptomatic, 231 asymptomatic) were included. Ruptured and symptomatic IAs were significantly larger in size compared with asymptomatic IAs (median (IQR) 6.5 (5.1–8.3) mm, 7.0 (5.5–9.7) mm vs 4.7 (3.8–6.3) mm, p=0.001 and p<0.001, respectively) and had more irregular pulsations (70.3%, 78.3% vs 28.1%, p<0.05). Irregular pulsation (OR 5.03, 95% CI 2.83 to 8.92; p<0.001) was independently associated with aneurysm symptomatic/ruptured status in the whole population. With unruptured IAs, both irregular pulsation (OR 6.31, 95% CI 3.02 to 13.20; p<0.001) and size (OR 1.17, 95% CI 1.03 to 1.32; p=0.015) were independently associated with the symptoms. The combination of irregular pulsation and size increased the accuracy over size alone in identifying symptomatic aneurysms (AUC 0.81 vs 0.77, p=0.007) in unruptured IAs.ConclusionIn a large cohort of patients with IAs detected by 4D-CTA, the presence of irregular pulsation was independently associated with aneurysm symptomatic and ruptured status.
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- 2023
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6. Natural history, angiographic presentation and outcomes of anterior cranial fossa dural arteriovenous fistulas
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Sanchez, Sebastian, Raghuram, Ashrita, Wendt, Linder, Hayakawa, Minako, Chen, Ching-Jen, Sheehan, Jason P, Kim, Louis J, Abecassis, Isaac Josh, Levitt, Michael R, Meyer, R Michael, Guniganti, Ridhima, Kansagra, Akash P, Lanzino, Giuseppe, Giordan, Enrico, Brinjikji, Waleed, Bulters, Diederik O, Durnford, Andrew, Fox, W Christopher, Smith, Jessica, Polifka, Adam J, Gross, Bradley, Amin-Hanjani, Sepideh, Alaraj, Ali, Kwasnicki, Amanda, Starke, Robert M, Chen, Stephanie H, van Dijk, J Marc C, Potgieser, Adriaan R E, Satomi, Junichiro, Tada, Yoshiteru, Phelps, Ryan, Abla, Adib, Winkler, Ethan, Du, Rose, Lai, Pui Man Rosalind, Zipfel, Gregory J, Derdeyn, Colin, and Samaniego, Edgar A
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BackgroundAnterior cranial fossa dural arteriovenous fistulas (ACF-dAVFs) are aggressive vascular lesions. The pattern of venous drainage is the most important determinant of symptoms. Due to the absence of a venous sinus in the anterior cranial fossa, most ACF-dAVFs have some degree of drainage through small cortical veins. We describe the natural history, angiographic presentation and outcomes of the largest cohort of ACF-dAVFs.MethodsThe CONDOR consortium includes data from 12 international centers. Patients included in the study were diagnosed with an arteriovenous fistula between 1990–2017. ACF-dAVFs were selected from a cohort of 1077 arteriovenous fistulas. The presentation, angioarchitecture and treatment outcomes of ACF-dAVF were extracted and analyzed.Results60 ACF-dAVFs were included in the analysis. Most ACF-dAVFs were symptomatic (38/60, 63%). The most common symptomatic presentation was intracranial hemorrhage (22/38, 57%). Most ACF-dAVFs drained through cortical veins (85%, 51/60), which in most instances drained into the superior sagittal sinus (63%, 32/51). The presence of cortical venous drainage predicted symptomatic presentation (OR 9.4, CI 1.98 to 69.1, p=0.01). Microsurgery was the most effective modality of treatment. 56% (19/34) of symptomatic patients who were treated had complete resolution of symptoms. Improvement of symptoms was not observed in untreated symptomatic ACF-dAVFs.ConclusionMost ACF-dAVFs have a symptomatic presentation. Drainage through cortical veins is a key angiographic feature of ACF-dAVFs that accounts for their malignant course. Microsurgery is the most effective treatment. Due to the high risk of bleeding, closure of ACF-dAVFs is indicated regardless of presentation.
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- 2023
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7. Microsurgical Obliteration of Craniocervical Junction Dural Arteriovenous Fistulas: Multicenter Experience
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Salem, Mohamed M., Srinivasan, Visish M., Tonetti, Daniel A., Ravindran, Krishnan, Taussky, Philipp, Yang, Kaiyun, Karahalios, Katherine, Raygor, Kunal P., Naylor, Ryan M., Catapano, Joshua S., Tavakoli-Sabour, Samon, Abdelsalam, Ahmed, Chen, Stephanie H., Grandhi, Ramesh, Jankowitz, Brian T., Baskaya, Mustafa K., Mascitelli, Justin R., Van Gompel, Jamie J., Cherian, Jacob, Couldwell, William T., Kim, Louis J., Cohen-Gadol, Aaron A., Starke, Robert M., Kan, Peter, Dehdashti, Amir R., Abla, Adib A., Lawton, Michael T., and Burkhardt, Jan-Karl
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- 2023
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8. Safety and efficacy results of the Flow Redirection Endoluminal Device (FRED) stent system in the treatment of intracranial aneurysms: US pivotal trial
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McDougall, Cameron G, Diaz, Orlando, Boulos, Alan, Siddiqui, Adnan H, Caplan, Justin, Fifi, Johanna T, Turk, Aquilla S, Kayan, Yasha, Jabbour, Pascal, Kim, Louis J, Hetts, Steven W, Cooke, Daniel L, and Dowd, Christopher F
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ObjectiveTo evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the Flow Redirection Endoluminal Device (FRED) flow diverter in support of an application for Food and Drug Administration approval in the USA.Methods145 patients were enrolled in a prospective, single-arm multicenter trial. Patients with aneurysms of unfavorable morphology for traditional endovascular therapies (large, wide-necked, fusiform, etc) were included. The trial was designed to demonstrate non-inferiority in both safety and effectiveness, comparing trial results with performance goals (PGs) established from peer-reviewed published literature. The primary safety endpoint was death or major stroke (National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score ≥4 points) within 30 days of the procedure, or any major ipsilateral stroke or neurological death within the first year. The primary effectiveness endpoint was complete occlusion of the target aneurysm with ≤50% stenosis of the parent artery at 12 months after treatment, and in which an alternative treatment of the target intracranial aneurysm had not been performed.Results145 patients underwent attempted placement of a FRED device, and one or more devices were placed in all 145 patients. 135/145 (93%) had a single device placed. Core laboratory adjudication deemed 106 (73.1%) of the aneurysms large or giant. A safety endpoint was experienced by 9/145 (6.2%) patients, successfully achieving the safety PG of <15%. The effectiveness PG of >46% aneurysm occlusion was also achieved, with the effectiveness endpoint being met in 80/139 (57.6%)ConclusionAs compared with historically derived performance benchmarks, the FRED flow diverter is both safe and effective for the treatment of appropriately selected intracranial aneurysms.Clinical registration numberNCT01801007
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- 2022
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9. Transcirculation approach for stent-assisted coiling of intracranial aneurysms: a multicenter study
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Mascitelli, Justin R, Levitt, Michael R, Griessenauer, Christoph J, Kim, Louis J, Gross, Bradley, Abla, Adib, Winkler, Ethan, Jankowitz, Brian, Grandhi, Ramesh, Goren, Oded, and Schirmer, Clemens M
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BackgroundThe transcirculation approach (TCA) for stent-assisted coiling (SAC) of intracranial aneurysms may be useful for certain wide-neck bifurcation aneurysms as well as those with acute-angle efferent branches.ObjectiveTo describe a multicenter experience using the TCA for SAC.MethodsA multicenter, retrospective study (2016–2020) of aneurysm treatment using SAC via the TCA. Angiographic outcome was scored using the Raymond Scale (adequate occlusion 1 and 2), and clinical outcome was scored using a modified Rankin Scale (good outcome 0–2)ResultsTwenty-nine patients with 29 aneurysms were included (62.1% female; average age 61; 89.7% unruptured; 13.8% previously treated; average dome size 6.4 mm; average neck 4.4 mm). Aneurysm locations included internal carotid artery–fetal posterior cerebral artery (n=4), internal carotid artery terminus (n=4), anterior communicating artery (n=8), vertebral artery–posterior inferior cerebellar artery (n=2), and basilar tip (n=11). The TCA used communicating arteries (93.1%; average 1.6 mm), intermediate catheters (51.7%), jailing technique (62.1%), and staged procedures (10.3%). The most common stent was the Neuroform Atlas (Stryker; 69%). Immediate adequate occlusion was obtained in 75.9%, and five patients with inadequate occlusion progressed to adequate occlusion at follow-up. One (3.4%) procedural complication occurred: a watershed stroke in the setting of baseline four-vessel extracranial disease. Two patients had a poor outcome unrelated to the TCA. The majority of patients (86.4%) had a good clinical outcome. One case of in-stent stenosis due to non-compliance with medication was seen, which resolved with medication resumption.ConclusionsThe TCA for SAC can be performed for a variety of aneurysms with a low complication rate and good clinical outcomes.
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- 2021
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10. Letter: Considerations for Performing Emergent Neurointerventional Procedures in a COVID-19 Environment
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Pandey, Aditya S, Ringer, Andrew J, Rai, Ansaar, Kan, Peter T, Jabbour, Pascal M, Siddiqui, Adnan, Levy, Elad, Snyder, Kenneth V, Riina, Howard A, Tanweer, Omar, Levitt, Michael R, Kim, Louis J, Veznedaroglu, Erol, Binning, Mandy, Arthur, Adam S, Mocco, J, Schirmer, Clemens M, Thompson, B Gregory, Langer, David, Arthur, Adam, Bain, Mark, Bendock, Bernard, Binning, Mandy Jo, Boulos, Alan S, Crowley, Webster, Fessler, Richard, Grande, Andrew, Guterman, Lee, Hanel, Ricardo, Hoit, Daniel, Hopkins, L Nelson, Howington, Jay, James, Robert, Jankowitz, Brian, Kan, Peter, Khalessi, Alex A, Kim, Louis, Langer, David, Lanzino, Giuseppe, Levitt, Michael, Levy, Elad, Lopes, Demetrius, Mack, William, Mericle, Robert, Mocco, J, Ogilvy, Chris, Pandey, Aditya, Replogle, Robert, Riina, Howard, Ringer, Andrew, Rodriguez, Rafael, Saugaveau, Eric, Schirmer, Clemens, Siddiqui, Adnan, Spiotta, Alex, Sultan, Ali, Tawk, Rabih, Thomas, Ajith, Turner, Raymond, Veznedaroglu, Erol, Welch, Babu, and White, Jonathan
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- 2020
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11. Predictors of preoperative endovascular embolization of meningiomas: subanalysis of anatomic location and arterial supply
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Barros, Guilherme, Feroze, Abdullah H, Sen, Rajeev, Kelly, Cory M, Barber, Jason, Hallam, Danial K, Ghodke, Basavaraj, Osbun, Joshua W, Kim, Louis J, and Levitt, Michael R
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IntroductionEndovascular embolization of intracranial meningiomas is commonly used as an adjunct to surgical resection. We sought to describe the anatomic locations and vascular supplies of meningiomas to identify characteristics predictive of successful preoperative endovascular embolization.MethodsWe conducted a retrospective review of 139 meningioma cases receiving cerebral angiograms for possible preoperative endovascular embolization at our institution between December 2000 and March 2017. The extent of embolization, arterial supply, anatomic location, and procedural complications were recorded for each case. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed to identify tumor characteristics that predicted successful embolization.ResultsOf the total meningioma patients undergoing preoperative angiography, 78% (108/139) were successfully embolized, with a 2.8% periprocedural complication rate (3/108). Within the subset of patients with successful embolization, 31% (33/108) achieved complete angiographic embolization. Significant multivariate predictors of embolization (either partial or complete) were convexity/parasagittal locations (OR 5.15, 95% CI 0.93 to 28.54, p=0.060), meningohypophyseal trunk (MHT, OR 4.65, 95% CI 1.63 to 13.23, p=0.004), middle meningeal artery (MMA, OR 10.89, 95% CI 3.43 to 34.64, p<0.001), and ascending pharyngeal artery supply (APA, OR 9.96, 95% CI 1.88 to 52.73, p=0.007). Significant predictors for complete embolization were convexity/parasagittal locations (OR 4.79, 95% CI 1.66 to 13.84, p=0.004) and embolized APA supply (OR 6.94, 95% CI 1.90 to 25.39, p=0.003). Multiple arterial supply was a negative predictor of complete embolization (OR 0.38, 95% CI 0.15 to 0.98, p=0.05).ConclusionsTumor characteristics can be used to predict the likelihood of preoperative meningioma embolization. Parasagittal and convexity meningiomas, and those with APA supply, are most likely to achieve complete angiographic embolization.
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- 2020
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12. Transradial intraoperative cerebral angiography: a multicenter case series and technical report
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Osbun, Joshua W, Patel, Bhuvic, Levitt, Michael R, Yahanda, Alexander T, Shah, Amar, Dlouhy, Kathleen M, Thatcher, Joshua P, Chicoine, Michael R, Kim, Louis J, and Zipfel, Gregory J
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BackgroundUse of the radial artery as an access site for neurointerventional procedures is gaining popularity after several studies in interventional cardiology have demonstrated superior patient safety, decreased length of stay, and patient preference compared with femoral artery access. The transradial approach has yet to be characterized for intraoperative cerebral angiography.ObjectiveTo report a multicenter experience on the use of radial artery access in intraoperative cerebral angiography, including case series and discussion of technical nuances.Methods27 patients underwent attempted transradial cerebral angiography betweenMay 2017 and May 2019. Data were collected regarding technique, patient positioning, vessels selected, technical success rate, and access site complications.Results24 of the 27 patients (88.8%) underwent successful transradial intraoperative cerebral angiography. 18 patients (66.7%) were positioned supine, 6 patients (22.2%) were positioned prone, 1 patient (3.7%) was positioned lateral, and 2 patients (7.4%) were positioned three-quarters prone. A total of 31 vessels were selected including 13 right carotid arteries (8 common, 1 external, 4 internal), 11 left carotid arteries (9 common and 2 internal), and 6 vertebral arteries (5 right and 1 left). Two patients (7.4%) required conversion to femoral access in order to complete the intraoperative angiogram (1 due to arterial vasospasm and 1 due to inadvertent venous catheterization). One procedure (3.7%) was aborted because of inability to obtain the appropriate fluoroscopic views due to patient positioning. No patient experienced stroke, arterial dissection, or access site complication.ConclusionsTransradial intraoperative cerebral angiography is safe and feasible with potential for improved operating room workflow ergonomics, faster patient mobility in the postoperative period, and reduced costs.
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- 2020
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13. Minimizing SARS-CoV-2 exposure when performing surgical interventions during the COVID-19 pandemic
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Pandey, Aditya S, Ringer, Andrew J, Rai, Ansaar T, Kan, Peter, Jabbour, Pascal, Siddiqui, Adnan H, Levy, Elad I, Snyder, Kenneth V, Riina, Howard, Tanweer, Omar, Levitt, Michael R, Kim, Louis J, Veznedaroglu, Erol, Binning, Mandy J, Arthur, Adam S, Mocco, J, Schirmer, Clemens, Thompson, Byron Gregory, and Langer, David
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BackgroundInfection from the SARS-CoV-2 virus has led to the COVID-19 pandemic. Given the large number of patients affected, healthcare personnel and facility resources are stretched to the limit; however, the need for urgent and emergent neurosurgical care continues. This article describes best practices when performing neurosurgical procedures on patients with COVID-19 based on multi-institutional experiences.MethodsWe assembled neurosurgical practitioners from 13 different health systems from across the USA, including those in hot spots, to describe their practices in managing neurosurgical emergencies within the COVID-19 environment.ResultsPatients presenting with neurosurgical emergencies should be considered as persons under investigation (PUI) and thus maximal personal protective equipment (PPE) should be donned during interaction and transfer. Intubations and extubations should be done with only anesthesia staff donning maximal PPE in a negative pressure environment. Operating room (OR) staff should enter the room once the air has been cleared of particulate matter. Certain OR suites should be designated as covid ORs, thus allowing for all neurosurgical cases on covid/PUI patients to be performed in these rooms, which will require a terminal clean post procedure. Each COVID OR suite should be attached to an anteroom which is a negative pressure room with a HEPA filter, thus allowing for donning and doffing of PPE without risking contamination of clean areas.ConclusionBased on a multi-institutional collaborative effort, we describe best practices when providing neurosurgical treatment for patients with COVID-19 in order to optimize clinical care and minimize the exposure of patients and staff.
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- 2020
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14. Factors Affecting Selection of TraineE for Neurointervention (FASTEN)
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Elfil, Mohamed, Morsi, Rami Z., Ghozy, Sherief, Elmashad, Ahmed, Siddiqui, Adnan, Al-Bayati, Alhamza R., Alaraj, Ali, Brook, Allan, Kam, Anthony W., Chatterjee, Arindam Rano, Patsalides, Athos, Waldau, Ben, Prestigiacomo, Charles J., Matouk, Charles, Schirmer, Clemens M., Altschul, David, Parrella, David T., Toth, Gabor, Jindal, Gaurav, Shaikh, Hamza A., Dolia, Jaydevsinh N., Fifi, Johanna T., Fraser, Justin F., DO, Justin Thomas, Amuluru, Krishna, Kim, Louis J., Harrigan, Mark, Amans, Matthew R., Kole, Max, Mokin, Max, Abraham, Michael, Jumaa, Mouhammad, Janjua, Nazli, Zaidat., Osama, Youssef, Patrick P., Khandelwal, Priyank, Wang, Qingliang Tony, Grandhi, Ramesh, Hanel, Ricardo, Kellogg, Ryan T., Ortega-Gutierrez, Santiago, Sheth, Sunil, Nguyen, Thanh N., Szeder, Viktor, Hu, Yin C., Yoo, Albert J., Tanweer, Omar, Jankowitz, Brian, Heit, Jeremy J., Williamson, Richard, Kass-Hout, Tareq, Crowley, Richard W., El-Ghanem, Mohammad, and Al-Mufti, Fawaz
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Background and importance Neurointervention is a very competitive specialty in the United States due to the limited number of training spots and the larger pool of applicants. The training standards are continuously updated to ensure solid training experiences. Factors affecting candidate(s) selection have not been fully established yet. Our study aims to investigate the factors influencing the selection process.Methods A 52-question survey was distributed to 93 program directors (PDs). The survey consisted of six categories: (a) Program characteristics, (b) Candidate demographics, (c) Educational credentials, (d) Personal traits, (e) Research and extracurricular activities, and (f) Overall final set of characteristics. The response rate was 59.1%. As per the programs’ characteristics, neurosurgery was the most involved specialty in running the training programs (69%). Regarding demographics, the need for visa sponsorship held the greatest prominence with a mean score of 5.9 [standard deviation (SD) 2.9]. For the educational credentials, being a graduate from a neurosurgical residency and the institution where the candidate's residency training is/was scored the highest [5.4 (SD = 2.9), 5.4 (SD = 2.5), respectively]. Regarding the personal traits, assessment by faculty members achieved the highest score [8.9 (SD = 1)]. In terms of research/extracurricular activities, fluency in English had the highest score [7.2 (SD = 1.9)] followed by peer-reviewed/PubMed-indexed publications [6.4 (SD = 2.2)].Conclusion Our survey investigated the factors influencing the final decision when choosing the future neurointerventional trainee, including demographic, educational, research, and extracurricular activities, which might serve as valuable guidance for both applicants and programs to refine the selection process.
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- 2024
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15. Alternative Surgical Approaches in the Treatment of Petroclival Meningiomas
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Bambakidis, Nicholas C, Kumar Kakarla, U., Gore, Pankaj A, Fernando Gonzalez, L., Kim, Louis J, Nakaji, Peter, Porter, Randall W, Phillip Daspit, C., and Spetzler, Robert F
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- 2024
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16. Matricidal cavernous aneurysms: a multicenter case series
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Dacus, Mallory R, Nickele, Chris, Welch, Babu G, Ban, Vin Shen, Ringer, Andrew J, Kim, Louis J, Levitt, Michael R, Lanzino, Giuseppe, Kan, Peter, and Arthur, Adam S
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BackgroundCavernous carotid artery aneurysms (CCAs) represent a unique subset of intracranial aneurysms due to their distinct natural history and the anatomy of the cavernous sinus. Enlarging CCAs can cause elastic compression of the parent internal carotid artery (ICA). We suggest defining aneurysms that cause luminal stenosis of their parent vessels as ‘matricidal aneurysms.’Though many patients are asymptomatic, presenting symptoms of CCAs include ophthalmoplegia with resulting diplopia, vision changes, pain, ptosis, facial numbness, and cavernous-carotid fistula. Less commonly, patients with CCAs can present with epistaxis, subarachnoid hemorrhage, and—in cases of matricidal aneurysms—ischemia due to stenosis. The proper management of stenosis caused by a matricidal CCA is not well established and may not be intuitive.MethodsWe present a multicenter retrospective case series of patients with matricidal CCAs.ResultsForty patients with matricidal aneurysms presented with both asymptomatic and symptomatic stenosis. These patients were either treated with conservative medical management, coiling, flow diversion, or endovascular sacrifice of the parent artery. Planned treatment modalities were not executed in 11 cases (28% treatment failure rate). Presenting symptoms, patient outcomes, and follow-up data are presented for all cases.ConclusionMatricidal aneurysms require careful consideration and planning. The restricted anatomy of the cavernous sinus can make successful execution of endovascular interventions more difficult. Direct elastic compression of the parent artery does not respond to angioplasty and stenting in the same way atherosclerotic stenosis does. Because of this, planning for the possibility of parent vessel sacrifice is important.
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- 2019
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17. Clinical outcomes and cost-effectiveness analysis for the treatment of basilar tip aneurysms
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Abecassis, Isaac Josh, Sen, Rajeev, Kelly, Cory Michael, Levy, Samuel, Barber, Jason, Ghodke, Basavaraj, Levitt, Michael, Kim, Louis J, and Sekhar, Laligam N
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BackgroundEndovascular treatment of basilar tip aneurysms is less invasive than microsurgical clipping, but requires closer follow-up.ObjectiveTo characterize the additional costs associated with endovascular treatment of basilar tip aneurysms rather than microsurgical clipping.Materials and methodsWe obtained clinical records and billing information for 141 basilar tip aneurysms treated with clip ligation (n=48) or endovascular embolization (n=93). Costs included direct and indirect costs associated with index hospitalization, as well as re-treatments, follow-up visits, imaging studies, rehabilitation, and disability. Effectiveness of treatment was quantified by converting functional outcomes (modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score) into quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs). Cost-effectiveness was performed using cost/QALY ratios.ResultsAverage index hospitalization costs were significantly higher for patients with unruptured aneurysms treated with clip ligation ($71 400 ± $47 100) compared with coil embolization ($33 500 ± $22 600), balloon-assisted coiling ($26 200 ± $11 600), and stent-assisted coiling ($38 500 ± $20 900). Multivariate predictors for higher index hospitalization cost included vasospasm requiring endovascular intervention, placement of a ventriculoperitoneal shunt, longer length of stay, larger aneurysm neck and width, higher Hunt-Hess grade, and treatment-associated complications. At 1 year, endovascular treatment was associated with lower cost/QALY than clip ligation in unruptured aneurysms ($52 000/QALY vs $137 000/QALY, respectively, p=0.006), but comparable rates in ruptured aneurysms ($193 000/QALY vs $233 000/QALY, p=0.277). Multivariate predictors for higher cost/QALY included worse mRS score at discharge, procedural complications, and larger aneurysm width.ConclusionsCoil embolization of basilar tip aneurysms is associated with a lower cost/QALY. This effect is sustained during follow-up. Clinical condition at discharge is the most significant predictor of overall cost/QALY at 1 year.
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- 2019
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18. Endovascular thrombectomy in pediatric patients with large vessel occlusion
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Shoirah, Hazem, Shallwani, Hussain, Siddiqui, Adnan H, Levy, Elad I, Kenmuir, Cynthia L, Jovin, Tudor G, Levitt, Michael R, Kim, Louis J, Griauzde, Julius, Pandey, Aditya S, Gemmete, Joseph J, Abruzzo, Todd, Arthur, Adam S, Elijovich, Lucas, Hoit, Daniel, Cheema, Ahmed, Aghaebrahim, Amin, Sauvageau, Eric, Hanel, Ricardo, Ringer, Andrew J, Nascimento, Fábio A, Kan, Peter, and Mocco, J
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BackgroundPediatric acute ischemic stroke with underlying large vessel occlusion is a rare disease with significant morbidity and mortality. There is a paucity of data about the safety and outcomes of endovascular thrombectomy in these cases, especially with modern devices.MethodsWe conducted a retrospective review of all pediatric stroke patients who underwent endovascular thrombectomy in nine US tertiary centers between 2008 and 2017.ResultsNineteen patients (63.2% male) with a mean (SD) age of 10.9(6) years and weight 44.6 (30.8) kg were included. Mean (SD) NIH Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score at presentation was 13.9 (5.7). CT-based assessment was obtained in 88.2% of the patients and 58.8% of the patients had perfusion-based assessment. All procedures were performed via the transfemoral approach. The first-pass device was stentriever in 52.6% of cases and aspiration in 36.8%. Successful revascularization was achieved in 89.5% of the patients after a mean (SD) of 2.2 (1.5) passes, with a mean (SD) groin puncture to recanalization time of 48.7 (37.3) min (median 41.5). The mean (SD) reduction in NIHSS from admission to discharge was 10.2 (6.2). A good neurological outcome was achieved in 89.5% of the patients. One patient had post-revascularization seizure, but no other procedural complications or mortality occurred.ConclusionsEndovascular thrombectomy is safe and feasible in selected pediatric patients. Technical and neurological outcomes were comparable to adult literature with no safety concerns with the use of standard adult devices in patients as young as 18 months. This large series adds to the growing literature but further studies are warranted.
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- 2019
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19. Genetic correlates of wall shear stress in a patient-specific 3D-printed cerebral aneurysm model
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Levitt, Michael R, Mandrycky, Christian, Abel, Ashley, Kelly, Cory M, Levy, Samuel, Chivukula, Venkat K, Zheng, Ying, Aliseda, Alberto, and Kim, Louis J
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ObjectivesTo study the correlation between wall shear stress and endothelial cell expression in a patient-specific, three-dimensional (3D)-printed model of a cerebral aneurysm.Materials and methodsA 3D-printed model of a cerebral aneurysm was created from a patient’s angiogram. After populating the model with human endothelial cells, it was exposed to media under flow for 24 hours. Endothelial cell morphology was characterized in five regions of the 3D-printed model using confocal microscopy. Endothelial cells were then harvested from distinct regions of the 3D-printed model for mRNA collection and gene analysis via quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR.) Cell morphology and mRNA measurement were correlated with computational fluid dynamics simulations.ResultsThe model was successfully populated with endothelial cells, which survived under flow for 24 hours. Endothelial morphology showed alignment with flow in the proximal and distal parent vessel and aneurysm neck, but disorganization in the aneurysm dome. Genetic analysis of endothelial mRNA expression in the aneurysm dome and distal parent vessel was compared with the proximal parent vessels. ADAMTS-1 and NOS3 were downregulated in the aneurysm dome, while GJA4 was upregulated in the distal parent vessel. Disorganized morphology and decreased ADAMTS-1 and NOS3 expression correlated with areas of substantially lower wall shear stress and wall shear stress gradient in computational fluid dynamics simulations.ConclusionsCreating 3D-printed models of patient-specific cerebral aneurysms populated with human endothelial cells is feasible. Analysis of these cells after exposure to flow demonstrates differences in both cell morphology and genetic expression, which correlate with areas of differential hemodynamic stress.
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- 2019
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20. Endovascular Treatment of Acute Ischemic Stroke Under General Anesthesia: Predictors of Good Outcome
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Athiraman, Umeshkumar, Sultan-Qurraie, Ali, Nair, Bala, Tirschwell, David L., Ghodke, Basavaraj, Havenon, Adam D., Hallam, Danial K., Kim, Louis J., Becker, Kyra J., and Sharma, Deepak
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- 2018
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21. Targeted Embolization of Aneurysms Associated With Brain Arteriovenous Malformations at High Risk for Surgical Resection: A Case-Control Study
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Alexander, Matthew D, Hippe, Daniel S, Cooke, Daniel L, Hallam, Danial K, Hetts, Steven W, Kim, Helen, Lawton, Michael T, Sekhar, Laligam N, Kim, Louis J, and Ghodke, Basavaraj V
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- 2018
- Full Text
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22. Onyx embolization prior to stereotactic radiosurgery for brain arteriovenous malformations: a single-center treatment algorithm
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Nerva, John D, Barber, Jason, Levitt, Michael R, Rockhill, Jason K, Hallam, Danial K, Ghodke, Basavaraj V, Sekhar, Laligam N, and Kim, Louis J
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BackgroundEmbolization before stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) for brain arteriovenous malformations (BAVMs) is controversial.ObjectiveTo compare clinical and radiographic outcomes in patients undergoing pre-SRS embolization with ethylene copolymer (Onyx) with outcomes in patients undergoing SRS alone.MethodsSeventy consecutive patients with BAVMs who underwent SRS were retrospectively reviewed. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed to assess the factors associated with radiographic obliteration and complication.ResultsForty-one (59%) patients presented without BAVM rupture and 29 (41%) patients presented with rupture. Pre-SRS embolization was used in 20 patients (28.6%; 7 unruptured and 13 ruptured). Twenty-five of 70 (36%) patients sustained a complication from treatment, including 6 (9%) patients with a post-SRS latency period hemorrhage. Ten (14%) patients had persistent neurological deficits after treatment. Functional outcome (as modified Rankin Scale), complication rate, and radiographic obliteration at last follow-up were not significantly different between embolized and non-embolized groups in both unruptured and ruptured BAVMs. For unruptured BAVMs, 3- and 5-year rates of radiographic obliteration were 23% and 73% for non-embolized patients and 20% and 60% for embolized patients, respectively. For ruptured BAVMs, 3- and 5-year rates of radiographic obliteration were 45% and 72% for non-embolized patients and 53% and 82% for embolized patients, respectively.ConclusionPre-SRS embolization with Onyx was not associated with worse clinical or radiographic outcomes than SRS treatment without embolization. Pre-SRS embolization has a low complication rate and can safely be used to target high-risk BAVM features in carefully selected patients destined for SRS.
- Published
- 2018
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23. International multicentre validation of the arteriovenous malformation-related intracerebral haemorrhage (AVICH) score
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Neidert, Marian C., Lawton, Michael T., Kim, Louis J., Nerva, John D., Kurisu, Kaoru, Ikawa, Fusao, Konczalla, Juergen, Dinc, Nazife, Seifert, Volker, Habdank-Kolaczkowski, Julian, Hatano, Taketo, Hayase, Makoto, Podlesek, Dino, Schackert, Gabriele, Wanet, Thomas, Gla¨sker, Sven, Griessenauer, Christoph J., Ogilvy, Christopher S., Kneist, Andreas, Sure, Ulrich, Seifert, Burkhardt, Regli, Luca, Bozinov, Oliver, and Burkhardt, Jan-Karl
- Abstract
ObjectiveThe recently published arteriovenous malformation-related intracerebral haemorrhage (AVICH) score showed better outcome prediction for patients with arteriovenous malformation (AVM)-related intracerebral haemorrhage (ICH) than other AVM or ICH scores. Here we present the results of a multicentre, external validation of the AVICH score.MethodsAll participating centres (n=11) provided anonymous data on 325 patients to form the Spetzler-Martin (SM) grade, the supplemented SM (sSM) grade, the ICH score and the AVICH score. Modified Rankin score (mRS) at last follow-up (mean 25.6 months) was dichotomized into favourable (mRS 0-2, n=210) and unfavourable (mRS 3-6;n=115). Univariate and AUROC analyses were performed to validate the AVICH score.ResultsExcept nidus structure and AVM size, all single parameters forming the SM, sSM, ICH and AVICH score and the scores itself were significantly different between both outcome groups in the univariate analysis. The AVICH score was confirmed to be the highest predictive outcome score with an AUROC of 0.765 compared with 0.705 for the ICH score and 0.682 for the sSM grade.ConclusionThe multicentre-validated AVICH score predicts clinical outcome superior to pre-existing scores. We suggest the routine use of this score for future clinical outcome prediction and in clinical research.Trial registration numberNCT02920645.
- Published
- 2018
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24. Treatment and Outcome of Hemorrhagic Transformation After Intravenous Alteplase in Acute Ischemic Stroke: A Scientific Statement for Healthcare Professionals From the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association
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Yaghi, Shadi, Willey, Joshua Z., Cucchiara, Brett, Goldstein, Joshua N., Gonzales, Nicole R., Khatri, Pooja, Kim, Louis J., Mayer, Stephan A., Sheth, Kevin N., and Schwamm, Lee H.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Cerebral Revascularization for Aneurysms in the Flow-Diverter Era
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Straus, David C., Brito da Silva, Harley, McGrath, Lynn, Levitt, Michael R., Kim, Louis J., Ghodke, Basavaraj V., Barber, Jason K., and Sekhar, Laligam N.
- Abstract
BACKGROUND:Cerebral bypass has been an important tool in the treatment of complex intracranial aneurysms. The recent advent of flow-diverting stents (FDS) has expanded the capacity for endovascular arterial reconstruction.OBJECTIVE:We investigated how the advent of FDS has impacted the application and outcomes of cerebral bypass in the treatment of intracranial aneurysms.METHODS:We reviewed a consecutive series of cerebral bypasses during aneurysm surgery over the course of 10 years. FDS were in active use during the last 5 years of this series. We compared the clinical characteristics, surgical technique, and outcomes of patients who required cerebral bypass for aneurysm treatment during the preflow diversion era (PreFD) with those of the postflow diversion era (PostFD).RESULTS:We treated 1061 aneurysms in the PreFD era (from July 2005 through June 2010) and 1348 in the PostFD era (from July 2010 through June 2015). Eighty-five PreFD patients (8%) and 45 PostFD patients (3%) were treated with cerebral bypass. PreFD patients had better baseline functional status compared to PostFD patients with average preoperative modified Rankin Scale score of 0.55 in PreFD and 1.18 in PostFD.CONCLUSION:After the introduction of FDS, cerebral bypass was performed in a lower proportion of patients with aneurysms. Patients selected for bypass in the flow-diverter era had worse preoperative modified Rankin Scale scores indicating a greater complexity of the patients. Cerebral bypass in well-selected patients and revascularization remains an important technique in vascular neurosurgery. It is also useful as a rescue technique after failed FDS treatment of aneurysms.
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- 2017
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26. Craniotomy for Treatment of Chronic Subdural Hematoma
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Abecassis, Isaac Josh and Kim, Louis J.
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Chronic subdural hematomas are commonly encountered pathologies in neurologic surgery. Primary management for a symptomatic lesion usually entails surgical intervention. There is controversy regarding ideal modality selection among twist drill craniostomy, bur hole craniostomy, and craniotomy. Variations of the craniotomy include a minicraniotomy (usually defined as 30–40 mm diameter), minicraniectomy, and with or without either a partial or full membranectomy. In addition to medical complications, potential surgical complications include recurrence, seizures, intraparenchymal hemorrhage, and infection. Prior studies are summarized as well as rates of mortality, morbidity, reaccumulation requiring repeat operation, and clinical outcomes.
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- 2017
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27. 483 Partial Treatment as a Risk Factor in Up-Conversion of Type 1 dAVFs
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Walker, Erin, Srienc, Anja I., Guniganti, Ridhima Rao, Brinjikji, Waleed, Chen, Ching-Jen, Abecassis, Isaac Josh, Levitt, Michael Robert, Durnford, Andrew, Polifka, Adam J., Derdeyn, Colin P., Samaniego, Edgar A., Kwasnicki, Amanda M., Alaraj, Ali, Potgieser, Adriaan R.E., Sur, Samir, Tada, Yoshiteru, Winkler, Ethan A., Lai, Rosalind, Du, Rose, Abla, Adib Adnan, Satomi, Junichiro, Starke, Robert M., Van Dijk, Marc C., Amin-Hanjani, Sepideh, Hayakawa, Minako, Gross, Bradley A., Fox, William C., Butlers, Diederik, Kim, Louis J., Sheehan, Jason P., Lanzino, Giuseppe, Osbun, Joshua William, and Zipfel, Gregory J.
- Published
- 2023
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28. The dual microcatheter technique for transvenous embolization of dural arteriovenous fistulae
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Abecassis, Isaac Josh, Nerva, John D, Ghodke, Basavaraj V, Sekhar, Laligam N, Levitt, Michael R, and Kim, Louis J
- Abstract
BackgroundDural arteriovenous fistulae (dAVFs) comprise 10–15% of all intracranial arteriovenous malformations. The goal of surgical or endovascular intervention is complete obliteration of the fistulous connection(s). In cases where dAVF venous drainage is separate from normal cortical drainage, transvenous embolization can provide fast and effective fistula obliteration.ObjectiveTo describe a new method of efficient transvenous embolization (the ‘dual microcatheter technique’) for the treatment of dAVFs.MethodsThree patients with dAVFs were treated using the dual microcatheter technique for transvenous embolization. Two microcatheters were placed in the distal aspect of the dAVF venous pouch, after which coil embolization reduced fistula flow, and liquid embolic agent injection with reflux into arterial feeders completed the obliteration of the fistula.ResultsLesion grade ranged from Borden–Shucart grades 2 through 3. In all cases, dAVF venous drainage was isolated from the normal cerebral venous drainage. Dual microcatheter transvenous embolization was successful in all patients, with non-target embolization and no new postoperative deficits. At the last follow-up, all three patients were symptom-free without evidence of radiographic recurrence.ConclusionsThe dual microcatheter technique of transvenous dAVF embolization is safe and feasible in cases where dAVF venous outflow is isolated from normal cerebral venous drainage.
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- 2017
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29. Natural History and Management of Blunt Traumatic Pseudoaneurysms of the Internal Carotid Artery
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Morton, Ryan P., Levitt, Michael R., Emerson, Samuel, Ghodke, Basavaraj V., Hallam, Danial K., Sekhar, Laligam N., Kim, Louis J., and Chesnut, Randall M.
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- 2016
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30. 471 Prospective Comparison of CT and Digital Subtraction Angiography to Diagnose Penetrating Cerebrovascular Injuries: Preliminary Data
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Meyer, R. Michael, McAvoy, Malia, Lim, Do, Prijoles, Keiko, Walker, Melanie, Bonow, Robert Hitchens, Kim, Louis J., and Levitt, Michael R.
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- 2022
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31. 416 Low Allele Frequency Somatic Variants in Sporadic Saccular “Berry” Cerebral Aneurysms
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McAvoy, Malia, Karasozen, Yigit, Parada, Carolina, Busald, Tina, Osbun, Joshua W., Ruzevick, Jacob J., Emerson, Samuel, Nistal, Dominic A., Tyrtova, Evgeniya, Eaton, Jessica C., Swaminathan, Shreya, Levitt, Michael R., Gonzalez-Cuyar, Luis, Hale, Christopher, Byers, Peter, Kim, Louis J., Dorschner, Michael, and Ferreira, Manuel
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- 2022
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32. Middle Cerebral Artery Stenosis: Endovascular and Surgical Options
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Klopfenstein, Jeffrey D, Ponce, Francisco A, Kim, Louis J, Albuquerque, Felipe C, Nakaji, Peter, and Spetzler, Robert F
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- 2005
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33. Onyx embolization for dural arteriovenous fistulas: a multi-institutional study
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Li, Yangchun, Chen, Stephanie H, Guniganti, Ridhima, Kansagra, Akash P, Piccirillo, Jay F, Chen, Ching-Jen, Buell, Thomas, Sheehan, Jason P, Ding, Dale, Lanzino, Giuseppe, Brinjikji, Waleed, Kim, Louis J, Levitt, Michael R, Abecassis, Isaac Josh, Bulters, Diederik O, Durnford, Andrew, Fox, W Christopher, Polifka, Adam J, Gross, Bradley A., Sur, Samir, McCarthy, David J, Yavagal, Dileep R, Peterson, Eric C, Hayakawa, Minako, Derdeyn, Colin, Samaniego, Edgar A, Amin-Hanjani, Sepideh, Alaraj, Ali, Kwasnicki, Amanda, Charbel, Fady T, van Dijk, J Marc C, Potgieser, Adriaan RE, Satomi, Junichiro, Tada, Yoshiteru, Abla, Adib, Phelps, Ryan, Du, Rose, Lai, Pui Man Rosalind, Zipfel, Gregory J, and Starke, Robert M
- Abstract
BackgroundAlthough the liquid embolic agent, Onyx, is often the preferred embolic treatment for cerebral dural arteriovenous fistulas (DAVFs), there have only been a limited number of single-center studies to evaluate its performance.ObjectiveTo carry out a multicenter study to determine the predictors of complications, obliteration, and functional outcomes associated with primary Onyx embolization of DAVFs.MethodsFrom the Consortium for Dural Arteriovenous Fistula Outcomes Research (CONDOR) database, we identified patients who were treated for DAVF with Onyx-only embolization as the primary treatment between 2000 and 2013. Obliteration rate after initial embolization was determined based on the final angiographic run. Factors predictive of complete obliteration, complications, and functional independence were evaluated with multivariate logistic regression models.ResultsA total 146 patients with DAVFs were primarily embolized with Onyx. Mean follow-up was 29 months (range 0–129 months). Complete obliteration was achieved in 80 (55%) patients after initial embolization. Major cerebral complications occurred in six patients (4.1%). At last follow-up, 84% patients were functionally independent. Presence of flow symptoms, age over 65, presence of an occipital artery feeder, and preprocedural home anticoagulation use were predictive of non-obliteration. The transverse-sigmoid sinus junction location was associated with fewer complications, whereas the tentorial location was predictive of poor functional outcomes.ConclusionsIn this multicenter study, we report satisfactory performance of Onyx as a primary DAVF embolic agent. The tentorium remains a more challenging location for DAVF embolization, whereas DAVFs located at the transverse-sigmoid sinus junction are associated with fewer complications.
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- 2022
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34. Targeted Inhibition of Intrinsic Coagulation Limits Cerebral Injury in Stroke without Increasing Intracerebral Hemorrhage
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Choudhri, Tanvir F., Hoh, Brian L., Prestigiacomo, Charles J., Huang, Judy, Kim, Louis J., Schmidt, Ann Marie, Kisiel, Walter, Connolly, E. Sander, and Pinsky, David J.
- Abstract
Agents that restore vascular patency in stroke also increase the risk of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH). As Factor IXa is a key intermediary in the intrinsic pathway of coagulation, targeted inhibition of Factor IXa–dependent coagulation might inhibit microvascular thrombosis in stroke without impairing extrinsic hemostatic mechanisms that limit ICH. A competitive inhibitor of native Factor IXa for assembly into the intrinsic Factor X activation complex, Factor IXai, was prepared by covalent modification of the Factor IXa active site. In a modified cephalin clotting time assay, in vivo administration of Factor IXai caused a dose-dependent increase in time to clot formation (3.6-fold increase at the 300 μg/kg dose compared with vehicle-treated control animals, P < 0.05). Mice given Factor IXai and subjected to middle cerebral artery occlusion and reperfusion demonstrated reduced microvascular fibrin accumulation by immunoblotting and immunostaining, reduced 111In-labeled platelet deposition (42% decrease, P < 0.05), increased cerebral perfusion (2.6-fold increase in ipsilateral blood flow by laser doppler, P < 0.05), and smaller cerebral infarcts than vehicle-treated controls (70% reduction, P < 0.05) based on triphenyl tetrazolium chloride staining of serial cerebral sections. At therapeutically effective doses, Factor IXai was not associated with increased ICH, as opposed to tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) or heparin, both of which significantly increased ICH. Factor IXai was cerebroprotective even when given after the onset of stroke, indicating that microvascular thrombosis continues to evolve (and may be inhibited) even after primary occlusion of a major cerebrovascular tributary.
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- 1999
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35. Reduction in Clostridium difficileInfections among Neurosurgical Patients Associated with Discontinuation of Antimicrobial Prophylaxis for the Duration of External Ventricular Drain Placement
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Dellit, Timothy H., Chan, Jeannie D., Fulton, Charlotte, Pergamit, Ronald F., McNamara, Elizabeth A., Kim, Louis J., Ellenbogen, Richard G., and Lynch, John B.
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- 2014
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36. Computational fluid dynamics of cerebral aneurysm coiling using high-resolution and high-energy synchrotron X-ray microtomography: comparison with the homogeneous porous medium approach
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Levitt, Michael R, Barbour, Michael C, Rolland du Roscoat, Sabine, Geindreau, Christian, Chivukula, Venkat K, McGah, Patrick M, Nerva, John D, Morton, Ryan P, Kim, Louis J, and Aliseda, Alberto
- Abstract
BackgroundComputational modeling of intracranial aneurysms provides insights into the influence of hemodynamics on aneurysm growth, rupture, and treatment outcome. Standard modeling of coiled aneurysms simplifies the complex geometry of the coil mass into a homogeneous porous medium that fills the aneurysmal sac. We compare hemodynamics of coiled aneurysms modeled from high-resolution imaging with those from the same aneurysms modeled following the standard technique, in an effort to characterize sources of error from the simplified model.MaterialsPhysical models of two unruptured aneurysms were created using three-dimensional printing. The models were treated with coil embolization using the same coils as those used in actual patient treatment and then scanned by synchrotron X-ray microtomography to obtain high-resolution imaging of the coil mass. Computational modeling of each aneurysm was performed using patient-specific boundary conditions. The coils were modeled using the simplified porous medium or by incorporating the X-ray imaged coil surface, and the differences in hemodynamic variables were assessed.ResultsX-ray microtomographic imaging of coils and incorporation into computational models were successful for both aneurysms. Porous medium calculations of coiled aneurysm hemodynamics overestimated intra-aneurysmal flow, underestimated oscillatory shear index and viscous dissipation, and over- or underpredicted wall shear stress (WSS) and WSS gradient compared with X-ray-based coiled computational fluid dynamics models.ConclusionsComputational modeling of coiled intracranial aneurysms using the porous medium approach may inaccurately estimate key hemodynamic variables compared with models incorporating high-resolution synchrotron X-ray microtomographic imaging of complex aneurysm coil geometry.
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- 2017
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37. Hemicraniectomy in older patients with malignant middle cerebral artery infarction.
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Nerva JD, Abecassis IJ, Morton RP, and Kim LJ
- Subjects
- Aged, Humans, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Craniotomy methods, Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery surgery, Neurosurgical Procedures methods
- Published
- 2015
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38. Immunotherapy for secondary glioblastoma multiforme: toward an isocitrate dehydrogenase vaccine.
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Abecassis IJ, Morton RP, Nerva JD, and Kim LJ
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- Animals, Female, Humans, Male, Cancer Vaccines immunology, Cancer Vaccines therapeutic use, Glioma immunology, Glioma therapy, Isocitrate Dehydrogenase genetics, Isocitrate Dehydrogenase immunology, Mutant Proteins immunology
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Operative cytoreduction for recurrent glioblastoma.
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Morton RP, Nerva JD, Abecassis IJ, Silbergeld DL, and Kim LJ
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- Female, Humans, Male, Brain Neoplasms surgery, Glioblastoma surgery, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local surgery
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Radiation dose reduction in neuroendovascular procedures.
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Levitt MR, Osbun JW, Ghodke BV, and Kim LJ
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- Female, Humans, Male, Algorithms, Angiography, Digital Subtraction methods, Image Enhancement methods, Neuroimaging methods
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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41. Intracranial pressure monitoring in severe traumatic brain injury.
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Levitt MR, Osbun JW, and Kim LJ
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- Female, Humans, Male, Radiography, Brain diagnostic imaging, Brain Injuries physiopathology, Intracranial Hypertension diagnosis, Intracranial Pressure, Monitoring, Physiologic, Neurologic Examination
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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42. The pharmacogenomics of clopidogrel.
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Levitt MR, Osbun JW, and Kim LJ
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- Aryl Hydrocarbon Hydroxylases genetics, Clopidogrel, Cytochrome P-450 CYP2C19, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Drug Resistance genetics, Heterozygote, Humans, Pharmacogenetics, Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors pharmacokinetics, Point-of-Care Systems, Receptors, Purinergic P2Y12 genetics, Receptors, Purinergic P2Y12 metabolism, Ticlopidine pharmacokinetics, Ticlopidine pharmacology, Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors pharmacology, Ticlopidine analogs & derivatives
- Published
- 2012
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43. Noninvasive cerebral blood flow velocity measurements using fast, high-resolution magnetic resonance angiography.
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Levitt MR and Kim LJ
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- Angioplasty methods, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Neurosurgery instrumentation, Blood Flow Velocity, Cerebral Angiography instrumentation, Cerebral Angiography methods, Cerebrovascular Circulation, Magnetic Resonance Angiography instrumentation, Magnetic Resonance Angiography methods
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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44. Magnetic resonance imaging at the molecular level.
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Peterson EC and Kim LJ
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- Brain Mapping trends, Chemical Engineering trends, Contrast Media chemistry, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging trends, Neurochemistry trends, Brain Mapping methods, Chemical Engineering methods, Contrast Media chemical synthesis, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Neurochemistry methods
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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