8 results on '"Strambo, Davide"'
Search Results
2. Left atrial diameter thresholds and new incident atrial fibrillation in embolic stroke of undetermined source
- Author
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Perlepe, Kalliopi, Sirimarco, Gaia, Strambo, Davide, Eskandari, Ashraf, Karagkiozi, Efstathia, Vemmou, Anastasia, Koroboki, Eleni, Manios, Efstathios, Makaritsis, Konstantinos, Vemmos, Konstantinos, Michel, Patrik, and Ntaios, George
- Published
- 2020
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3. Larger ischemic cores and poor collaterals among large vessel occlusions presenting in the late evening.
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Sreekrishnan, Anirudh, Tiedt, Steffen, Seners, Pierre, Yuen, Nicole, Olivot, Jean-Marc, Mlynash, Michael, Lansberg, Maarten G., Heit, Jeremy J., Lee, Sarah, Michel, Patrik, Strambo, Davide, Salerno, Alexander, Paredes, José Bernardo Escribano, Carrera, Emmanuel, and Albers, Gregory W.
- Abstract
Components critical to cerebral perfusion have been noted to oscillate over a 24-h cycle. We previously reported that ischemic core volume has a diurnal relationship with stroke onset time when examined as dichotomized epochs (i.e. Day, Evening, Night) in a cohort of over 1,500 large vessel occlusion (LVO) patients. In this follow-up analysis, our goal was to explore if there is a sinusoidal relationship between ischemic core, collateral status (as measured by HIR), and stroke onset time. We retrospectively examined collection of LVO patients with baseline perfusion imaging performed within 24 h of stroke onset from four international comprehensive stroke centers. Both ischemic core volume and HIR, were utilized as the primary radiographic parameters. To evaluate for differences in these parameters over a continuous 24-h cycle, we conducted a sinusoidal regression analysis after linearly regressing out the confounders age and time to imaging. A total of 1506 LVO cases were included, with a median ischemic core volume of 13.0 cc (IQR: 0.0-42.0) and median HIR of 0.4 (IQR: 0.2-0.6). Ischemic core volume varied by stroke onset time in the unadjusted (p = 0.001) and adjusted (p = 0.003) sinusoidal regression analysis with a peak in core volume around 7:45PM. HIR similarly varied by stroke onset time in the unadjusted (p = 0.004) and adjusted (p = 0.002) models with a peak in HIR values at around 8:18PM. The results suggest that critical factors to the development of the ischemic core vary by stroke onset time and peak around 8PM. When placed in the context of prior studies, strongly suggest a diurnal component to the development of the ischemic core. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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4. Skiing Associated Stroke: Causes, Treatment, and Outcome.
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Strambo, Davide, Sirimarco, Gaia, Inácio, Nuno, Eskandari, Ashraf, and Michel, Patrick
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Background: Previous studies have described ischemic stroke temporally related to specific triggers, but only 1 series collected patients with acute ischemic stroke (AIS) following downhill skiing and all caused by cervical artery dissections. Here we describe our series of AIS temporally associated to ski practice, focusing on the frequency, pathogenesis, clinical presentation, and prognosis.Methods: We maintained a prospective list of Skiing Associated Strokes (SASs) from 2003 to 2017. From all AIS patients included in our stroke registry Acute Stroke Registry and Analysis of Lausanne (ASTRAL) over the same period, we identified a comparison group of non-SAS patients, matched for age and gender.Results: In the 12-year observation period, we identified 17 SASs (4 females, median age 51 years) and 51 matched control patients with nonski-associated strokes. Vascular risk factors, stroke features, and outcome were similar between the 2 groups. Stroke mechanism was arterial dissection in 11 of 17 SASs (65%) and in 7 of 51 control patients (14%, chi-square test: P < .05). In the other 6 cases of ski-associated stroke, etiology was cardiac embolism from atrial fibrillation in 2 patients, large vessel atherosclerosis with stenosis >50% in 1 patient, and undetermined in 3. Among the 11 patients with SAS caused by dissection, 8 reported minor falls while skiing, 1 had a major head trauma without loss of consciousness, and 2 had no traumatism (compared to preceding trauma in 29 of 147 [20%] of all other AIS caused by arterial dissection in ASTRAL, P < .01).Conclusions: Arterial dissection was a significantly more frequent stroke mechanism in SAS compared to matched controls, but other mechanisms occurred as well. Minor or moderate skiing-related trauma preceded most SAS with dissections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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5. Elevated Hypoperfusion Intensity Ratio (HIR) observed in patients with a large vessel occlusion (LVO) presenting in the evening.
- Author
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Sreekrishnan, Anirudh, Seners, Pierre, Yuen, Nicole, Olivot, Jean-Marc, Mlynash, Michael, Lansberg, Maarten G, Heit, Jeremy J, Lee, Sarah, Michel, Patrik, Strambo, Davide, Salerno, Alexander, Paredes, José Bernardo Escribano, Carrera, Emmanuel, and Albers, Gregory W
- Abstract
Circadian variability has been implicated in timing of stroke onset, yet the full impact of underlying biological rhythms on acute stroke perfusion patterns is not known. We aimed to describe the relationship between time of stroke onset and perfusion profiles in patients with large vessel occlusion (LVO). A retrospective observational study was conducted using prospective registries of four stroke centers across North America and Europe with systematic use of perfusion imaging in clinical care. Included patients had stroke due to ICA, M1 or M2 occlusion and baseline perfusion imaging performed within 24h from last-seen-well (LSW). Stroke onset was divided into eight hour intervals: (1) Night: 23:00-6:59, (2) Day: 7:00-14:59, (3) Evening: 15:00-22:59. Core volume was estimated on CT perfusion (rCBF <30%) or DWI-MRI (ADC <620) and the collateral circulation was estimated with the Hypoperfusion Intensity Ratio (HIR = [Tmax>10s]/[Tmax>6s]). Non-parametric testing was conducted using SPSS to account for the non-normalized dependent variables. A total of 1506 cases were included (median age 74.9 years, IQR 63.0-84.0). Median NIHSS, core volumes, and HIR were 14.0 (IQR 8.0-20.0), 13.0mL (IQR 0.0-42.0), and 0.4 (IQR 0.2-0.6) respectively. Most strokes occurred during the Day (n = 666, 44.2%), compared to Night (n = 360, 23.9%), and Evening (n = 480, 31.9%). HIR was highest, indicating worse collaterals, in the Evening compared to the other timepoints (p = 0.006). Controlling for age and time to imaging, Evening strokes had significantly higher HIR compared to Day (p = 0.013). Our retrospective analysis suggests that HIR is significantly higher in the evening, indicating poorer collateral activation which may lead to larger core volumes in these patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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6. Carotid Atherosclerosis and Patent Foramen Ovale in Embolic Stroke of Undetermined Source.
- Author
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Ntaios, George, Sagris, Dimitrios, Strambo, Davide, Perlepe, Kalliopi, Sirimarco, Gaia, Georgiopoulos, Georgios, Nannoni, Stefania, Korompoki, Eleni, Manios, Efstathios, Makaritsis, Konstantinos, Vemmos, Konstantinos, and Michel, Patrik
- Abstract
Background: Carotid atherosclerosis and likely pathogenic patent foramen ovale (PFO) are two potential embolic sources in patients with embolic stroke of undetermined source (ESUS). The relationship between these two mechanisms among ESUS patients remains unclear.Aim: To investigate the relation between carotid atherosclerosis and likely pathogenic PFO in patients with ESUS. We hypothesized that ipsilateral carotid atherosclerotic plaques are less prevalent in ESUS with likely pathogenic PFO compared to patients with likely incidental PFO or without PFO.Methods: The presence of PFO was assessed with transthoracic echocardiography with microbubble test and, when deemed necessary, through trans-oesophageal echocardiography. The presence of PFO was considered as likely incidental if the RoPE (Risk of Paradoxical Embolism) score was 0-6 and likely pathogenic if 7-10.Results: Among 374 ESUS patients (median age: 61years, 40.4% women), there were 63 (49.6%) with likely incidental PFO, 64 (50.4%) with likely pathogenic PFO and 165 (44.1%) with ipsilateral carotid atherosclerosis. The prevalence of ipsilateral carotid atherosclerosis was lower in patients with likely pathogenic PFO (7.8%) compared to patients with likely incidental PFO (46.0%) or patients without PFO (53.0%) (p<0.001). After adjustment for multiple confounders, the prevalence of ipsilateral carotid atherosclerosis remained lower in patients with likely pathogenic PFO compared to patients with likely incidental PFO or without PFO (adjusted OR=0.32, 95%CI:0.104-0.994, p=0.049).Conclusions: The presence of carotid atherosclerosis is inversely related to the presence of likely pathogenic PFO in patients with ESUS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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7. Supraventricular Extrasystoles on Standard 12-lead Electrocardiogram Predict New Incident Atrial Fibrillation after Embolic Stroke of Undetermined Source: The AF-ESUS Study.
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Ntaios, George, Perlepe, Kalliopi, Lambrou, Dimitrios, Sirimarco, Gaia, Strambo, Davide, Eskandari, Ashraf, Karagkiozi, Efstathia, Vemmou, Anastasia, Koroboki, Eleni, Manios, Efstathios, Makaritsis, Konstantinos, Michel, Patrik, and Vemmos, Konstantinos
- Abstract
Background: The diagnosis of covert atrial fibrillation (AF) remains a major challenge to guide secondary prevention of patients with embolic stroke of undetermined source (ESUS).Aims: We analyzed consecutive ESUS patients from 3 prospective stroke registries to assess whether the presence of supraventricular extrasystoles (SVE) on standard 12-lead electrocardiogram (ECG) is associated with the detection of AF (primary outcome), stroke recurrence and death (secondary outcomes) during follow-up.Methods: We measured the number of SVEs in all available ECGs of patients hospitalized for ESUS. Multivariate stepwise regression with forward selection of covariates assessed the association between SVE (classified in 4 groups according to their number per 10 seconds of ECG: no SVE, >0-1SVEs, >1-2SVEs, and >2SVEs) and outcomes during follow-up. The Kaplan-Meier product limit method estimated the 10-year cumulative probabilities of outcomes in each SVE group. We calculated the negative prognostic value (NPV) of the presence of any SVE to predict new AF, defined as the probability that AF will not be detected during follow-up if there is no SVE.Results: Among 853 ESUS patients followed for 2857 patient-years (median age: 67 years, 43.0% women), 226 (26.5%) patients had at least 1 SVE at the standard 12-lead ECGs performed during hospitalization. AF was detected in 125 (14.7%) of patients in the overall population during follow-up: 8.9%, 22.5%, 28.1%, and 48.3% in patients with no SVE, greater than 0-1SVE, greater than 1-2SVE and greater than 2SVE respectively. In multivariate regression analysis, compared to patients with no SVEs, the corresponding hazard-ratios were 1.80 [95% confidence intervals (95%CI):1.06-3.05], 2.26 (95%CI:1.28-4.01) and 3.19 (95%CI:1.93-5.27). The NPV of the presence of any SVE for the prediction of new AF was 91.4%. There was no statistically significant association of SVE with the risk of ischemic stroke recurrence and death.Conclusions: In ESUS patients without SVEs during hospitalization, the probability that AF will not be detected during a follow-up of 3.4 years is more than 91%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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8. Bilateral Intracavernous Carotid Artery Occlusion Caused by Invasive Lymphocytic Hypophysitis.
- Author
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Peruzzotti-Jametti, Luca, Strambo, Davide, Sangalli, Francesca, De Bellis, Annamaria, Comi, Giancarlo, and Sessa, Maria
- Abstract
Lymphocytic hypophysitis is a rarely recognized disease that is characterized by inflammatory infiltration and destruction of the pituitary gland. The etiology of lymphocytic hypophysitis is still unclear, but an autoimmune pathogenesis has been advocated. In fact, histopathologic specimens reveal a diffuse infiltration of the hypophysis by CD3
+ CD4+ T cells and CD20+ plasma cells, and antipituitary antibodies are usually found in sera of affected patients. Although previous cases were found to be correlated only to pregnancy and the postpartum period, recent reports in men and women (without association with pregnancy) suggest a possibly higher prevalence of disease. We present the case of a 55-year-old woman affected by an unusually aggressive form of lymphocytic hypophysitis that infiltrated both cavernous sinuses causing bilateral internal carotid artery occlusion and acute ischemic stroke. Diagnosis was achieved with both a biopsy specimen of the pituitary gland and the detection of antipituitary antibodies. The prompt administration of steroid therapy was effective to obtain regression and stabilization of the disease, but both carotid arteries remained permanently occluded. The natural history of lymphocytic hypophysitis is unpredictable. It usually has a benign evolution, but in exceptional cases the inflammatory process may extend beyond the pituitary gland and infiltrate the surrounding structures. These extremely serious consequences highlight the importance of early diagnosis and treatment of this otherwise curable disease. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]- Published
- 2012
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