1,004 results on '"Hetts, Steven W"'
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2. Brain and lung arteriovenous malformation rescreening practices for children and adults with hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia
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Beslow, Lauren A., Kim, Helen, Hetts, Steven W., Ratjen, Felix, Clancy, Marianne S., Gossage, James R., and Faughnan, Marie E.
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- 2024
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3. Endovascular Therapy for Intracranial Giant Cell Arteritis : Systematic Review, Technical Considerations and the Effect of Intra-arterial Calcium Channel Blockers.
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Caton, M Travis, Mark, Ian T, Narsinh, Kazim H, Baker, Amanda, Cooke, Daniel L, Hetts, Steven W, Dowd, Christopher F, Halbach, Van V, Higashida, Randall T, Ko, Nerissa U, Chung, Sharon A, and Amans, Matthew R
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Humans ,Constriction ,Pathologic ,Calcium Channel Blockers ,Treatment Outcome ,Angioplasty ,Angioplasty ,Balloon ,Stents ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Giant Cell Arteritis ,Cerebral ischemia ,Intracranial stenosis ,Vasculitis ,Verapamil ,Cardiovascular ,Stroke ,Brain Disorders ,Neurosciences - Abstract
BackgroundGiant cell arteritis (GCA) is a systemic vasculitis that may cause ischemic stroke. Rarely, GCA can present with aggressive intracranial stenoses, which are refractory to medical therapy. Endovascular treatment (EVT) is a possible rescue strategy to prevent ischemic complications in intracranial GCA but the safety and efficacy of EVT in this setting are not well-described.MethodsA systematic literature review was performed to identify case reports and series with individual patient-level data describing EVT for intracranial GCA. The clinical course, therapeutic considerations, and technique of seven endovascular treatments in a single patient from the authors' experience are presented.ResultsThe literature review identified 9 reports of 19 treatments, including percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) with or without stenting, in 14 patients (mean age 69.6 ± 6.3 years). Out of 12 patients 8 (66.7%) with sufficient data had > 1 pre-existing cardiovascular risk factor. All patients had infarction on MRI while on glucocorticoids and 7/14 (50%) progressed despite adjuvant immunosuppressive agents. Treatment was PTA alone in 15/19 (78.9%) cases and PTA + stent in 4/19 (21.1%). Repeat treatments were performed in 4/14 (28.6%) of patients (PTA-only). Non-flow limiting dissection was reported in 2/19 (10.5%) of treatments. The indications, technical details, and results of PTA are discussed in a single illustrative case. We report the novel use of intra-arterial calcium channel blocker infusion (verapamil) as adjuvant to PTA and as monotherapy, resulting in immediate improvement in cerebral blood flow.ConclusionEndovascular treatment, including PTA with or without stenting or calcium channel blocker infusion, may be effective therapies in medically refractory GCA with intracranial stenosis.
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- 2022
4. Evaluating Radioactive Analogs of Doxorubicin to Quantify ChemoFilter Binding and Whole-Body Positron Emission Tomography/Magnetic Resonance Imaging for Drug Biodistribution
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Kumar, Parth, Yee, Colin, Blecha, Joseph E, Hayes, Thomas R, Kilbride, Bridget F, Stillson, Carol, Losey, Aaron D, Mastria, Eric, Jordan, Caroline D, Huynh, Tony L, Moore, Terilyn, Wilson, Mark W, VanBrocklin, Henry F, and Hetts, Steven W
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Bioengineering ,Biomedical Imaging ,Rare Diseases ,Animals ,Doxorubicin ,Hepatic Artery ,Humans ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Positron-Emission Tomography ,Swine ,Tissue Distribution ,Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
PurposeTo evaluate radiolabeled doxorubicin (Dox) analogs as tracers of baseline Dox biodistribution in vivo during hepatic intra-arterial chemotherapy and to assess the efficacy of ChemoFilter devices to bind Dox in vitro.Materials and methodsIn an in vitro static experiment, [fluorine-18]N-succinimidyl 4-fluorobenzoate ([18F]SFB) and [fluorine-18]fluorobenzoyl-doxorubicin ([18F]FB-Dox) were added to a beaker containing a filter material (Dowex cation exchange resin, single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) resin, or sulfonated polymer coated mesh). In an in vitro flow model, [18F]FB-Dox was added into a Dox solution in phosphate-buffered saline, and the solution flowed via a syringe column containing the filter materials. In an in vitro flow experiment, using micro-positron emission tomography (PET), images were taken as [18F]SFB and [18F]FB-Dox moved through a phantom. For in vivo biodistribution testing, a catheter was placed into the common hepatic artery of a swine, and [18F]FB-Dox was infused over 30 seconds. A 10-minute dynamic image and three 20-minute static images were acquired using 3T PET/MR imaging.ResultsIn the in vitro static experiment, [18F]FB-Dox demonstrated 76.7%, 88.0%, and 52.4% binding to the Dowex resin, ssDNA resin, and coated mesh, respectively. In the in vitro flow model, the first-pass binding of [18F]FB-Dox to the Dowex resin, ssDNA resin, and coated mesh was 76.7%, 74.2%, and 76.2%, respectively, and the total bound fraction was 80.9%, 84.6%, and 79.9%, respectively. In the in vitro flow experiment using micro-PET, the phantom demonstrated a greater amount of [18F]FB-Dox bound to both filter cartridges than of the control [18F]SFB. In in vivo biodistribution testing, the first 10 minutes depicted [18F]FB-Dox moving through the right upper quadrant of the abdomen. A region-of-interest analysis showed that the relative amount increased by 2.97 times in the gallbladder and 1.08 times in the kidney. The amount decreased by 0.74 times in the brain and 0.57 times in the heart.Conclusions[18F]FB-Dox can be used to assess Dox binding to ChemoFilters as well as in vivo biodistribution. This sets the stage for the evaluation of ChemoFilter effectiveness in reducing systemic toxicity from intra-arterial chemotherapy.
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- 2022
5. 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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Humans ,Intracranial Aneurysm ,Treatment Outcome ,Embolization ,Therapeutic ,Prospective Studies ,Stents ,Stroke ,Endovascular Procedures ,aneurysm ,flow diverter ,intervention ,technology ,Comparative Effectiveness Research ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Bioengineering ,Cardiovascular - Abstract
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 46% aneurysm occlusion was also achieved, with the effectiveness endpoint being met in 80/139 (57.6%) CONCLUSION: As 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
6. Transvenous Approaches to the Vertebral‐Venous Plexus for Endovascular Treatment of Cervical Epidural Arteriovenous Fistulas: Anatomy and Technique
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Caton, Michael T, Isikbay, Masis, Narsinh, Kazim H, Baker, Amanda, Milburn, James, Cooke, Daniel L, Hetts, Steven W, Dowd, Christopher F, Higashida, Randall T, and Amans, Matthew R
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Background: Spinal epidural arteriovenous fistulas (seAVF) are a rare subset of vascular lesions that are most commonly found in the cervical levels. Unlike spinal dural AVF, seAVF are typically supplied by multiple arteries, including direct branches from the vertebral artery, which increases the risk of nontarget embolization using a transarterial endovascular approach. In these cases, transvenous embolization may be a preferable option, but accessing the cervical epidural venous space, also termed the internal vertebral venous plexus, can be challenging and requires advanced foreknowledge of cervical venous channels. Methods: The authors review salient neurovascular anatomy and present 2 techniques for endovascular access of the cervical epidural space to treat seAVF. Results: The physiology and structure of the cervical internal vertebral venous plexus is briefly reviewed. Next, the authors describe 2 complementary methods for transvenous access to the cervical internal vertebral venous plexus via the jugular vein (cranial‐caudal) and the vertebral vein (caudal‐cranial). The first approach involves retrograde microcatheterization via the jugular bulb and condylar veins. The second approach involves direct antegrade approach via the vertebral vein, arising from the brachiocephalic vein. Both approaches enable stable catheter positioning for coil embolization at remote cervical levels to treat a wide spectrum of seAVF. Conclusions: Accessing the cervical epidural venous space is technically demanding and requires effective planning and knowledge of relevant spinal venous anatomy. These techniques are important tools for safe and effective endovascular treatment of seAVF.
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- 2022
7. Validation of the Ruptured Arteriovenous Malformation Grading Scale in a pediatric cohort.
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Garcia, Joseph H, Rutledge, Caleb, Winkler, Ethan A, Carrete, Luis, Morshed, Ramin A, Lu, Alex Y, Saggi, Satvir, Fox, Christine K, Fullerton, Heather J, Kim, Helen, Cooke, Daniel L, Hetts, Steven W, Lawton, Michael T, Gupta, Nalin, and Abla, Adib A
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Pediatric ,Stroke ,Clinical Research ,Brain Disorders ,Humans ,Child ,Retrospective Studies ,Intracranial Arteriovenous Malformations ,Intracranial Hemorrhages ,ROC Curve ,Aneurysm ,Ruptured ,Treatment Outcome ,arteriovenous malformation ,pediatric ,disability ,vascular disease ,vascular disorders ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
ObjectivePediatric brain arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) are the leading cause of spontaneous intracranial hemorrhage (SICH) in children. Although the incidence of SICH is low in pediatric populations, such events cause substantial morbidity. The recently created Ruptured Arteriovenous Malformation Grading Scale (RAGS) is proposed as a reliable and novel grading system to specifically serve as a predictor of clinical outcomes in patients following AVM rupture, similar to the Hunt and Hess (HH) grade for ruptured aneurysms. While these data are promising, pediatric patients were notably absent from the original study validating the RAGS. Therefore, correlation of the RAGS score with clinical outcomes following AVM rupture in individuals younger than 18 years of age using the RAGS score is needed. The objective of this study was to validate the RAGS in a cohort of pediatric patients with AVMs who presented with hemorrhage, thereby demonstrating the score's generalizability, and expanding its external validity.MethodsA cohort of children with ruptured AVMs were retrospectively reviewed. Using disability, measured by the modified Rankin Scale (mRS), as the response variable, the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) was calculated for patients based on their RAGS scores for three time periods. The AUROC values were then compared with those generated by two commonly used clinical grading systems, the HH classification and Glasgow Coma Scale.ResultsA total of 81 children who presented with ruptured AVMs were included in the study, with a mean follow-up duration of 4 years. The RAGS score outperformed other clinical grading scales in predicting mRS scores, with AUROC values of 0.81, 0.82, and 0.81 at three distinct follow-up periods.ConclusionsThe RAGS score correlated well with the clinical outcome after AVM rupture in pediatric patients. Additional validation studies across multiple treatment centers are needed to further demonstrate the generalizability of the scoring system.
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- 2022
8. Endovascular treatment strategy, technique, and outcomes for dural arteriovenous fistulas of the marginal sinus region.
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Caton, Michael Travis, Narsinh, Kazim H, Baker, Amanda, Hetts, Steven W, Cooke, Daniel L, Higashida, Randall T, Dowd, Christopher F, Halbach, Van V, and Amans, Matthew R
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Cranial Sinuses ,Humans ,Central Nervous System Vascular Malformations ,Treatment Outcome ,Embolization ,Therapeutic ,Retrospective Studies ,Endovascular Procedures ,coil ,fistula ,liquid embolic material ,posterior fossa ,technique - Abstract
BackgroundDural arteriovenous fistulas (AVF) of the foramen magnum region (FMR) are technically challenging lesions to treat. Transvenous (TV), transarterial (TA), and surgical approaches have been described, but the optimum treatment strategy is not defined.ObjectiveTo report treatment strategies and outcomes for FMR-AVF at a single, high-volume referral center.MethodsA retrospective review from January 2010 to August 2020 identified patients with FMR-AVF at a single referral center. Angiographic features, treatment (observation, endovascular, surgical), and follow-up of angiographic and clinical results were recorded. The technical aspects of TV embolization are then presented in detail.Results29 FMR-AVF were identified in 28 patients. Of these, 24/29 (82.8%) were treated and 5/29 (17.2%) were observed. Treatment was endovascular in 21/24 (87.5%), combined (endovascular+surgical) in 2/24 (8.3%), and surgical in 1/24 (4.2%). Endovascular treatments were 76.2% TV, 14.3% TA, and 9.5% combined TV/TA. Sufficient follow-up data were available for 20/28 (71.4%) with mean follow-up of 16.8 months. No AVF recurrence was seen for TA/TV, combined endovascular/surgical, or surgical groups, and there was one recurrence (7.1%) in the TV group. Symptomatic improvement was seen in all groups: TV (71.4% complete, 28.6% partial), TA (66.7% complete, 33.3% no follow-up), TV+TA (100% partial), endovascular/surgical (100% complete), and surgical (100% partial). Minor non-neurologic complications included 1/14 (7.1%) in the TV group and 1/3 (33.3%) in the TA/TV group.ConclusionEndovascular treatment is safe and effective for most FMR-AVF. TV embolization has a high cure rate with few complications.
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- 2022
9. Pivotal trial of the Neuroform Atlas stent for treatment of posterior circulation aneurysms: one-year outcomes
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Jankowitz, Brian T, Jadhav, Ashutosh P, Gross, Bradley, Jovin, Tudor G, Alhajeri, Abdulnasser A, Fraser, Justin F, Hanel, Ricardo A, Sauvageau, Eric, Aghaebrahim, Amin, Frei, Donald, Bellon, Richard, Loy, David, Puri, Ajit S, Malek, Adel M, Thomas, Ajith, Toth, Gabor, Lopes, Demetrius Klee, Crowley, R Webster, Arthur, Adam S, Reavey-Cantwell, John, Lin, Eugene, Siddiqui, Adnan H, Alexander, Michael J, Khaldi, Ahmad, Colby, Geoffrey P, Caplan, Justin M, Satti, Sudhakar R, Turk, Aquilla S, Spiotta, Alejandro M, Klucznik, Richard, Hallam, Danial K, Kung, David, Froehler, Michael T, Callison, R Charles, Kan, Peter, Hetts, Steven W, and Zaidat, Osama O
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Bioengineering ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Assistive Technology ,Stroke ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Aged ,Cerebral Angiography ,Embolization ,Therapeutic ,Female ,Humans ,Intracranial Aneurysm ,Middle Aged ,Prospective Studies ,Retrospective Studies ,Stents ,Treatment Outcome ,aneurysm ,coil ,stent ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundStent-assisted coiling of wide-necked intracranial aneurysms (IAs) using the Neuroform Atlas Stent System (Atlas) has shown promising results.ObjectiveTo present the primary efficacy and safety results of the ATLAS Investigational Device Exemption (IDE) trial in a cohort of patients with posterior circulation IAs.MethodsThe ATLAS trial is a prospective, multicenter, single-arm, open-label study of unruptured, wide-necked, IAs treated with the Atlas stent and adjunctive coiling. This study reports the results of patients with posterior circulation IAs. The primary efficacy endpoint was complete aneurysm occlusion (Raymond-Roy (RR) class I) on 12-month angiography, in the absence of re-treatment or parent artery stenosis >50%. The primary safety endpoint was any major ipsilateral stroke or neurological death within 12 months. Adjudication of the primary endpoints was performed by an imaging core laboratory and a Clinical Events Committee.ResultsThe ATLAS trial enrolled and treated 116 patients at 25 medical centers with unruptured, wide-necked, posterior circulation IAs (mean age 60.2±10.5 years, 81.0% (94/116) female). Stents were placed in all patients with 100% technical success rate. A total of 95/116 (81.9%) patients had complete angiographic follow-up at 12 months, of whom 81 (85.3%) had complete aneurysm occlusion (RR class I). The primary effectiveness outcome was achieved in 76.7% (95% CI 67.0% to 86.5%) of patients. Overall, major ipsilateral stroke and secondary persistent neurological deficit occurred in 4.3% (5/116) and 1.7% (2/116) of patients, respectively.ConclusionsIn the ATLAS IDE posterior circulation cohort, the Neuroform Atlas Stent System with adjunctive coiling demonstrated high rates of technical and safety performance. Trial registration number https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02340585.
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- 2022
10. Somatic mosaicism in the MAPK pathway in sporadic brain arteriovenous malformation and association with phenotype.
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Gao, Sen, Nelson, Jeffrey, Weinsheimer, Shantel, Winkler, Ethan A, Rutledge, Caleb, Abla, Adib A, Gupta, Nalin, Shieh, Joseph T, Cooke, Daniel L, Hetts, Steven W, Tihan, Tarik, Hess, Christopher P, Ko, Nerissa, Walcott, Brian P, McCulloch, Charles E, Lawton, Michael T, Su, Hua, Pawlikowska, Ludmila, and Kim, Helen
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Neurosciences ,Genetics ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Age of Onset ,Aged ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Cohort Studies ,DNA ,Female ,Genetic Variation ,Humans ,Intracranial Arteriovenous Malformations ,Intracranial Hemorrhages ,MAP Kinase Signaling System ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Mosaicism ,Mutation ,Phenotype ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Prevalence ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins p21(ras) ,Signal Transduction ,Exome Sequencing ,Young Adult ,  ,arteriovenous malformation ,cerebrovascular malformation ,somatic mutation ,MAPK pathway ,genotype-phenotype correlation ,intracerebral hemorrhage ,vascular disorders ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
ObjectiveSporadic brain arteriovenous malformation (BAVM) is a tangled vascular lesion characterized by direct artery-to-vein connections that can cause life-threatening intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH). Recently, somatic mutations in KRAS have been reported in sporadic BAVM, and mutations in other mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling pathway genes have been identified in other vascular malformations. The objectives of this study were to systematically evaluate somatic mutations in MAPK pathway genes in patients with sporadic BAVM lesions and to evaluate the association of somatic mutations with phenotypes of sporadic BAVM severity.MethodsThe authors performed whole-exome sequencing on paired lesion and blood DNA samples from 14 patients with sporadic BAVM, and 295 genes in the MAPK signaling pathway were evaluated to identify genes with somatic mutations in multiple patients with BAVM. Digital droplet polymerase chain reaction was used to validate KRAS G12V and G12D mutations and to assay an additional 56 BAVM samples.ResultsThe authors identified a total of 24 candidate BAVM-associated somatic variants in 11 MAPK pathway genes. The previously identified KRAS G12V and G12D mutations were the only recurrent mutations. Overall, somatic KRAS G12V was present in 14.5% of BAVM lesions and G12D was present in 31.9%. The authors did not detect a significant association between the presence or allelic burden of KRAS mutation and three BAVM phenotypes: lesion size (maximum diameter), age at diagnosis, and age at ICH.ConclusionsThe authors confirmed the high prevalence of somatic KRAS mutations in sporadic BAVM lesions and identified several candidate somatic variants in other MAPK pathway genes. These somatic variants may contribute to understanding of the etiology of sporadic BAVM and the clinical characteristics of patients with this condition.
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- 2022
11. De Novo Brain Vascular Malformations in Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia
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Atherton, Mary E., Chakinala, Murali M., Clancy, Marianne S., Faughnan, Marie E., Gossage, James R., Hammill, Adrienne M., Henderson, Katharine, Hetts, Steven, Hountras, Peter, Iyer, Vivek, Kasthuri, Raj S., Kim, Helen, Krings, Timo, Lawton, Michael T., Lin, Doris, Mager, Johannes Jurgen, Marchuk, Douglas A., McWilliams, Justin P., McDonald, Jamie, Pawlikowska, Ludmila, Pollak, Jeffrey, Ratjen, Felix, Swanson, Karen, Vethanayagam, Dilini, Weinsheimer, Shantel, White, Andrew J., Whitehead, Kevin J., Wilcox, Pearce, Beslow, Lauren A., Hetts, Steven W., McCulloch, Charles E., Clancy, Marianne, and Bagheri, Negar
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- 2024
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12. Cessation and resumption of elective neurointerventional procedures during the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic and future pandemics
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Malisch, Tim W, Ansari, Sameer A, Duckwiler, Gary R, Fargen, Kyle M, Hetts, Steven W, Marden, Franklin A, Patsalides, Athos, Schirmer, Clemens M, Brook, Allan, and Fraser, Justin F
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Prevention ,Pneumonia & Influenza ,Good Health and Well Being ,COVID-19 ,Delivery of Health Care ,Elective Surgical Procedures ,Humans ,Pandemics ,SARS-CoV-2 ,neurointervention ,clinical service ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
At the time of this writing, the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic continues to be a global threat, disrupting usual processes, and protocols for delivering health care around the globe. There have been significant regional and national differences in the scope and timing of these disruptions. Many hospitals were forced to temporarily halt elective neurointerventional procedures with the first wave of the pandemic in the spring of 2020, in order to prioritize allocation of resources for acutely ill patients and also to minimize coronavirus disease 2019 transmission risks to non-acute patients, their families, and health care workers. This temporary moratorium on elective neurointerventional procedures is generally credited with helping to "flatten the curve" and direct scarce resources to more acutely ill patients; however, there have been reports of some delaying seeking medical care when it was in fact urgent, and other reports of patients having elective treatment delayed with the result of morbidity and mortality. Many regions have resumed elective neurointerventional procedures, only to now watch coronavirus disease 2019 positivity rates again climbing as winter of 2020 approaches. A new wave is now forecast which may have larger volumes of hospitalized coronavirus disease 2019 patients than the earlier wave(s) and may also coincide with a wave of patients hospitalized with seasonal influenza. This paper discusses relevant and practical elements of cessation and safe resumption of nonemergent neurointerventional services in the setting of a pandemic.
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- 2021
13. Retinal emboli after cervicopetrous junction internal carotid artery pseudoaneurysm stenting
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Mekonnen, Zesemayat K, Everett, Lesley A, Hetts, Steven W, and Afshar, Armin R
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Ophthalmology and Optometry ,Atherosclerosis ,Cardiovascular ,Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision ,Cerebrovascular ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Brain Disorders ,6.4 Surgery ,Eye ,Endovascular surgery ,Internal carotid artery pseudoaneurysm ,Retinal artery occlusion ,Retinal emboli - Abstract
PurposeTo describe acute and chronic retinal ischemic changes following an internal carotid artery pseudoaneurysm stenting procedure, and to review current evidence for risk factors and management of post-procedural retinal ischemic events.ObservationA 50-year-old man presented with a 3-month history of pulsatile tinnitus, headache, and intermittent blurry vision. A CT angiogram of head and neck showed bilateral cervicopetrous internal carotid artery (ICA) pseudoaneurysms. The patient underwent successful repair with angioplasty and stenting of the flow-limiting high-grade (>95%) stenosis of his left high cervical ICA. On post-operative day 1, the patient reported monocular vision loss with a large central scotoma. He was found to have a central macular area of retinal whitening and multiple areas of perivascular retinal whitening on exam, concerning for retinal artery occlusions secondary to peri-procedural emboli. Dual antiplatelet therapy was started and a stroke evaluation was performed. Two months later, his visual acuity in the affected eye was counting fingers and his left eye fundus examination was notable for multiple areas of scattered hemorrhages, microaneurysms, and retinal exudates in the distribution of prior retinal ischemia. OCT imaging revealed atrophic changes in the left macula. Subsequently, the patient completed stage-2 repair of the left ICA pseudoaneurysm followed by uncomplicated repair of the right ICA. Four months later, his left eye visual acuity and retinal findings remained stable.Conclusions and importancePost-procedure retinal emboli and ischemia are important, vision threatening possible ocular complications for patients undergoing carotid vascular and endovascular procedures.
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- 2021
14. Intrasaccular flow disruption (WEB) of a large wide-necked basilar apex aneurysm using PulseRider-assistance.
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Narsinh, Kazim H, Caton, M Travis, Mahmood, Nausheen F, Higashida, Randall T, Halbach, Van V, Hetts, Steven W, Amans, Matthew R, Dowd, Christopher F, and Cooke, Daniel L
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Basilar apex aneurysm ,Intrasaccular flow disruption ,Wide-necked ,Rare Diseases ,Assistive Technology ,Neurosciences ,Bioengineering - Abstract
Large, wide-necked basilar apex aneurysms are difficult to treat. Microsurgical clipping can result in neurologic morbidity and mortality. Endovascular treatment often leaves remnants that need retreatment and/or stent placement with dual antiplatelet therapy. The Woven EndoBridge (WEB) is an intrasaccular flow disruption device that can be used without dual antiplatelet therapy. However, the WEB cannot typically be used in large or giant aneurysms > 10 mm because the largest diameter device is the 11 × 9.6 mm single layer sphere (SLS). We present a case in which we use a PulseRider aneurysm neck reconstruction device in the basilar artery to assist in WEB deployment within a 22 mm basilar apex aneurysm with 14 mm neck, thereby permitting aspirin monotherapy postoperatively.
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- 2021
15. Combined Use of X-ray Angiography and Intraprocedural MRI Enables Tissue-based Decision Making Regarding Revascularization during Acute Ischemic Stroke Intervention.
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Narsinh, Kazim H, Kilbride, Bridget F, Mueller, Kerstin, Murph, Daniel, Copelan, Alexander, Massachi, Jonathan, Vitt, Jeffrey, Sun, Chung-Huan, Bhat, Himanshu, Amans, Matthew R, Dowd, Christopher F, Halbach, Van V, Higashida, Randall T, Moore, Terilyn, Wilson, Mark W, Cooke, Daniel L, and Hetts, Steven W
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Humans ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Cerebral Angiography ,Thrombectomy ,Intraoperative Period ,Retrospective Studies ,Decision Making ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Infant ,Newborn ,Female ,Male ,Stroke ,Ischemic Stroke ,Clinical Research ,Biomedical Imaging ,Brain Disorders ,Neurosciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging - Abstract
Background For patients with acute ischemic stroke undergoing endovascular mechanical thrombectomy with x-ray angiography, the use of adjuncts to maintain vessel patency, such as stents or antiplatelet medications, can increase risk of periprocedural complications. Criteria for using these adjuncts are not well defined. Purpose To evaluate use of MRI to guide critical decision making by using a combined biplane x-ray neuroangiography 3.0-T MRI suite during acute ischemic stroke intervention. Materials and Methods This retrospective observational study evaluated consecutive patients undergoing endovascular intervention for acute ischemic stroke between July 2019 and May 2020 who underwent either angiography with MRI or angiography alone. Cerebral tissue viability was assessed by using MRI as the reference standard. For statistical analysis, Fisher exact test and Student t test were used to compare groups. Results Of 47 patients undergoing acute stroke intervention, 12 patients (median age, 69 years; interquartile range, 60-77 years; nine men) underwent x-ray angiography with MRI whereas the remaining 35 patients (median age, 80 years; interquartile range, 68-86 years; 22 men) underwent angiography alone. MRI results influenced clinical decision making in one of three ways: whether or not to perform initial or additional mechanical thrombectomy, whether or not to place an intracranial stent, and administration of antithrombotic or blood pressure medications. In this initial experience, decision making during endovascular acute stroke intervention in the combined angiography-MRI suite was better informed at MRI, such that therapy was guided in real time by the viability of the at-risk cerebral tissue. Conclusion Integrating intraprocedural 3.0-T MRI into acute ischemic stroke treatment was feasible and guided decisions of whether or not to continue thrombectomy, to place stents, or to administer antithrombotic medication or provide blood pressure medications. © RSNA, 2021 Online supplemental material is available for this article. See also the editorial by Lev and Leslie-Mazwi in this issue.
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- 2021
16. Dimensional analysis of magnetophoresis
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Heo, Won-Seok, Hetts, Steven W., and Rayz, Vitaliy L.
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- 2023
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17. Asymptomatic rotational vertebral artery compression in a child due to head positioning for cranial surgery: illustrative case
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Caton, M Travis, Narsinh, Kazim, Baker, Amanda, Abla, Adib A, Roland, Jarod L, Halbach, Van V, Fox, Christine K, Fullerton, Heather J, and Hetts, Steven W
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BACKGROUNDThe authors recently reported a series of children with vertebral artery (VA) compression during head turning who presented with recurrent posterior circulation stroke. Whether VA compression occurs during head positioning for cranial surgery is unknown.OBSERVATIONSThe authors report a case of a child with incidental rotational occlusion of the VA observed during surgical head positioning for treatment of an intracranial arteriovenous fistula. Intraoperative angiography showed dynamic V3 occlusion at the level of C2 with distal reconstitution via a muscular branch “jump” collateral, supplying reduced flow to the V4 segment. She had no clinical history or imaging suggesting acute or prior stroke. Sequential postoperative magnetic resonance imaging scans demonstrated signal abnormality of the left rectus capitus muscle, suggesting ischemic edema.LESSONSThis report demonstrates that rotational VA compression during neurosurgical head positioning can occur in children but may be asymptomatic due to the presence of muscular VA–VA “jump” collaterals and contralateral VA flow. Although unilateral VA compression may be tolerated by children with codominant VAs, diligence when rotating the head away from a dominant VA is prudent during patient positioning to avoid posterior circulation ischemia or thromboembolism.
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- 2021
18. Endovascular Thrombectomy for Pediatric Acute Ischemic Stroke: A Multi-Institutional Experience of Technical and Clinical Outcomes.
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Ravindra, Vijay M, Alexander, Matthew, Taussky, Philipp, Bollo, Robert J, Hassan, Ameer E, Scoville, Jonathan P, Griauzde, Julius, Awad, Al-Wala, Jumaa, Mouhammad, Zaidi, Syed, Lee, Jonathan J, Hafeez, Muhammad Ubaid, Nascimento, Fábio A, LoPresti, Melissa A, Couldwell, William T, Hetts, Steven W, Lam, Sandi K, Kan, Peter, and Grandhi, Ramesh
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Pediatric ,Neurosciences ,Brain Disorders ,Stroke ,Hematology ,Clinical Research ,Adolescent ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Cohort Studies ,Endovascular Procedures ,Female ,Humans ,Ischemic Stroke ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Reperfusion ,Retrospective Studies ,Thrombectomy ,Treatment Outcome ,Cerebrovascular ,Endovascular ,Anticoagulation ,Ischemic stroke ,Pediatrics ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Clinical sciences ,Biological psychology - Abstract
BackgroundEndovascular thrombectomy is a promising treatment for acute ischemic stroke in children, but outcome and technical data in pediatric patients with large-vessel occlusions are lacking.ObjectiveTo assess technical and clinical outcomes of thrombectomy in pediatric patients.MethodsWe undertook a retrospective cohort study of pediatric patients who experienced acute ischemic stroke from April 2017 to April 2019 who had immediate, 30-, and 90-d follow-up. Patients were treated with endovascular thrombectomy at 5 US pediatric tertiary care facilities. We recorded initial and postprocedural modified Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction (mTICI) grade ≥ 2b, initial and postprocedural Pediatric National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (PedNIHSS) score, and pediatric modified Rankin scale (mRS) score 0 to 2 at 90 d.ResultsThere were 23 thrombectomies in 21 patients (mean age 11.6 ± 4.9 yr, median 11.5, range 2.1-19; 52% female). A total of 19 (83%) thrombectomies resulted in mTICI grade ≥ 2b recanalization. The median PedNIHSS score was 13 on presentation (range 4-33) and 2 (range 0-26) at discharge (mean reduction 11.3 ± 6.1). A total of 14 (66%) patients had a mRS score of 0 to 2 at 30-d follow-up; 18/21 (86%) achieved that by 90 d. The median mRS was 1 (range 0-4) at 30 d and 1 (range 0-5) at 90 d. One patient required a blood transfusion after thrombectomy.ConclusionIn this large series of pediatric patients treated with endovascular thrombectomy, successful recanalization was accomplished via a variety of approaches with excellent clinical outcomes; further prospective longitudinal study is needed.
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- 2021
19. Endovascular Biopsy of Vertebrobasilar Aneurysm in Patient With Polyarteritis Nodosa.
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Narsinh, Kazim H, Narsinh, Kamileh, McCoy, David B, Sun, Zhengda, Halabi, Cathra, Meisel, Karl, Tihan, Tarik, Chaganti, Krishna, Amans, Matthew R, Halbach, Van V, Higashida, Randall T, Hetts, Steven W, Dowd, Christopher F, Winkler, Ethan A, Abla, Adib A, Nowakowski, Tomasz J, and Cooke, Daniel L
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endovascular biopsy ,fusiform aneurysm ,gene expression profile ,polyarteritis nodosa ,single cell RNA sequencing ,Genetics ,Prevention ,Brain Disorders ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Cardiovascular ,Clinical Sciences ,Psychology - Abstract
Background and Purpose: The management of unruptured intracranial aneurysms remains controversial. The decisions to treat are heavily informed by estimated risk of bleeding. However, these estimates are imprecise, and better methods for stratifying the risk or tailoring treatment strategy are badly needed. Here, we demonstrate an initial proof-of-principle concept for endovascular biopsy to identify the key molecular pathways and gene expression changes associated with aneurysm formation. We couple this technique with single cell RNA sequencing (scRNAseq) to develop a roadmap of the pathogenic changes of a dolichoectatic vertebrobasilar aneurysm in a patient with polyarteritis nodosa. Methods: Endovascular biopsy and fluorescence activated cell sorting was used to isolate the viable endothelial cells (ECs) using the established techniques. A single cell RNA sequencing (scRNAseq) was then performed on 24 aneurysmal ECs and 23 patient-matched non-aneurysmal ECs. An integrated panel of bioinformatic tools was applied to determine the differential gene expression, enriched signaling pathways, and cell subpopulations hypothesized to drive disease pathogenesis. Results: We identify a subset of 7 (29%) aneurysm-specific ECs with a distinct gene expression signature not found in the patient-matched control ECs. A gene set enrichment analysis identified these ECs to have increased the expression of genes regulating the leukocyte-endothelial cell adhesion, major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I, T cell receptor recycling, tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα) response, and interferon gamma signaling. A histopathologic analysis of a different intracranial aneurysm that was later resected yielded a diagnosis of polyarteritis nodosa and positive staining for TNFα. Conclusions: We demonstrate feasibility of applying scRNAseq to the endovascular biopsy samples and identify a subpopulation of ECs associated with cerebral aneurysm in polyarteritis nodosa. Endovascular biopsy may be a safe method for deriving insight into the disease pathogenesis and tailoring the personalized treatment approaches to intracranial aneurysms.
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- 2021
20. Factors Associated with Unfavorable Clinical Presentations in Patients with Ruptured BrainArteriovenous Malformations
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Garcia, Joseph H., Carrete, Luis, Rutledge, W. Caleb, Raygor, Kunal P., Winkler, Ethan A., Pereira, Matheus Prado, Nelson, Jeffrey, Kim, Helen, Cooke, Daniel L., Hetts, Steven W., Lawton, Michael T., and Abla, Adib A.
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- 2023
- Full Text
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21. The Role of Liver Imaging in Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia.
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Harwin, Joelle, Sugi, Mark D, Hetts, Steven W, Conrad, Miles B, and Ohliger, Michael A
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Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT) is an autosomal dominant vascular disorder characterized by spontaneous epistaxis, telangiectasia, and visceral vascular malformations. Hepatic vascular malformations are common, though a minority are symptomatic. Symptoms are dependent on the severity and exact type of shunting caused by the hepatic malformation: Arteriosystemic shunting leads to manifestations of high output cardiac failure, and arterioportal shunting leads to portal hypertension. Radiologic imaging, including ultrasound, computed tomography (CT), and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), is an important tool for assessing liver involvement. Doppler ultrasonography is the first-line screening modality for HHT-related liver disease, and it has a standardized scale. Imaging can determine whether shunting is principally to the hepatic vein or the portal vein, which can be a key determinant of patients' symptoms. Liver-related complications can be detected, including manifestations of portal hypertension, focal liver masses as well as ischemic cholangiopathy. Ultrasound and MRI also have the ability to quantify blood flow through the liver, which in the future may be used to determine prognosis and direct antiangiogenic therapy.
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- 2020
22. Brain Arteriovenous Malformation Recurrence After Apparent Microsurgical Cure: Increased Risk in Children Who Present With Arteriovenous Malformation Rupture.
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Copelan, Alexander, Drocton, Gerald, Caton, M Travis, Smith, Eric R, Cooke, Daniel L, Nelson, Jeffrey, Abla, Adib A, Fox, Christine, Amans, Matthew R, Dowd, Christopher F, Halbach, Van V, Higashida, Randall T, Lawton, Michael T, Kim, Helen, Fullerton, Heather J, Gupta, Nalin, Hetts, Steven W, and UCSF Center For Cerebrovascular Research and UCSF Pediatric Brain Center
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UCSF Center For Cerebrovascular Research and UCSF Pediatric Brain Center ,Brain ,Humans ,Intracranial Arteriovenous Malformations ,Arteriovenous Fistula ,Rupture ,Recurrence ,Angiography ,Digital Subtraction ,Treatment Outcome ,Microsurgery ,Neurosurgical Procedures ,Retrospective Studies ,Adolescent ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Female ,Male ,Young Adult ,angiography ,arteriovenous malformation ,brain ,intracranial hemorrhages ,pediatrics ,Stroke ,Prevention ,Congenital Structural Anomalies ,Pediatric ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Patient Safety ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Background and purposeDo children have an increased risk for brain arteriovenous malformation (AVM) recurrence compared with adults and does this risk vary depending on initial presentation with AVM rupture?MethodsWe retrospectively studied 115 patients initially presenting with brain AVM under age 25 years who underwent complete surgical resection of the AVM as documented by digital subtraction angiography (DSA) and had delayed follow-up DSA to evaluate for AVM recurrence after apparent initial cure.ResultsThe mean time from baseline DSA to follow-up DSA was 2.3 years, ranging from 0 to 15 years. Twelve patients (10.4% of the 115 patient cohort and 16.7% of 72 patients with hemorrhage at initial presentation) demonstrated AVM recurrence on follow-up DSA. All patients with recurrence initially presented with intracranial hemorrhage, and intracranial hemorrhage was a significant predictor of recurrence (log rank P=0.037). Among patients with initial hemorrhage, the 5-year recurrence rate was 17.8% (95% CI, 8.3%-35.7%). All recurrences occurred in patients who were children at the time of their initial presentation; the oldest was 15 years of age at the time of initial AVM surgery. The 5-year recurrence rate for children (0-18 years of age) with an initial presentation of hemorrhage was 21.4% (95% CI, 10.1%-41.9%). Using Cox regression, we found the risk of AVM recurrence decreased by 14% per each year increase in age at the time of initial surgical resection (hazard ratio=0.86 [95% CI, 0.75-0.99]; P=0.031).ConclusionsThere is a high rate of recurrence of apparently cured brain AVMs in children who initially present with AVM rupture. Imaging follow-up is warranted to prevent re-rupture.
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- 2020
23. Consensus-based perioperative protocols during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Mummaneni, Praveen V, Burke, John F, Chan, Andrew K, Sosa, Julie Ann, Lobo, Errol P, Mummaneni, Valli P, Antrum, Sheila, Berven, Sigurd H, Conte, Michael S, Doernberg, Sarah B, Goldberg, Andrew N, Hess, Christopher P, Hetts, Steven W, Josephson, S Andrew, Kohi, Maureen P, Ma, C Benjamin, Mahadevan, Vaikom S, Molinaro, Annette M, Murr, Andrew H, Narayana, Sirisha, Roberts, John P, Stoller, Marshall L, Theodosopoulos, Philip V, Vail, Thomas P, Wienholz, Sandra, Gropper, Michael A, Green, Adrienne, and Berger, Mitchel S
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COVID-19 ,coronavirus disease 19 ,infection ,perioperative care ,surgical triage ,Clinical Research ,Good Health and Well Being ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Orthopedics - Abstract
ObjectiveDuring the COVID-19 pandemic, quaternary-care facilities continue to provide care for patients in need of urgent and emergent invasive procedures. Perioperative protocols are needed to streamline care for these patients notwithstanding capacity and resource constraints.MethodsA multidisciplinary panel was assembled at the University of California, San Francisco, with 26 leaders across 10 academic departments, including 7 department chairpersons, the chief medical officer, the chief operating officer, infection control officers, nursing leaders, and resident house staff champions. An epidemiologist, an ethicist, and a statistician were also consulted. A modified two-round, blinded Delphi method based on 18 agree/disagree statements was used to build consensus. Significant disagreement for each statement was tested using a one-sided exact binomial test against an expected outcome of 95% consensus using a significance threshold of p < 0.05. Final triage protocols were developed with unblinded group-level discussion.ResultsOverall, 15 of 18 statements achieved consensus in the first round of the Delphi method; the 3 statements with significant disagreement (p < 0.01) were modified and iteratively resubmitted to the expert panel to achieve consensus. Consensus-based protocols were developed using unblinded multidisciplinary panel discussions. The final algorithms 1) quantified outbreak level, 2) triaged patients based on acuity, 3) provided a checklist for urgent/emergent invasive procedures, and 4) created a novel scoring system for the allocation of personal protective equipment. In particular, the authors modified the American College of Surgeons three-tiered triage system to incorporate more urgent cases, as are often encountered in neurosurgery and spine surgery.ConclusionsUrgent and emergent invasive procedures need to be performed during the COVID-19 pandemic. The consensus-based protocols in this study may assist healthcare providers to optimize perioperative care during the pandemic.
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- 2020
24. Single-center series of boys with recurrent strokes and rotational vertebral arteriopathy.
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Fox, Christine K, Fullerton, Heather J, Hetts, Steven W, Halbach, Van V, Auguste, Kurtis I, Lawton, Michael T, and Gupta, Nalin
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Cervical Vertebrae ,Vertebral Artery ,Humans ,Recurrence ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,Angiography ,Digital Subtraction ,Vascular Surgical Procedures ,Rotation ,Adolescent ,Child ,Male ,Stroke ,Pediatric ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Brain Disorders ,Clinical Sciences ,Cognitive Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
ObjectiveTo describe a pediatric stroke syndrome with chronic focal vertebral arteriopathy adjacent to cervical abnormalities.MethodsAt a single pediatric stroke center, we identified consecutive children with stroke and vertebral arteriopathy of the V3 segment with adjacent cervical bony or soft tissue abnormalities. We abstracted clinical presentation, treatment, and follow-up data from medical charts.ResultsFrom 2005 to 2019, 10 children (all boys, ages 6-16 years) presented with posterior circulation strokes and vertebral arteriopathy with adjacent cervical pathology. Two children had bony abnormalities: one had a congenital arcuate foramen and one had os odontoideum with cervical instability. In children without bony pathology, vertebral artery narrowing during contralateral head rotation was visualized by digital subtraction angiography. Eight boys had recurrent ischemic events despite anti-thrombotic treatment (including 5 with multiple recurrences) and were treated surgically to prevent additional stroke. Procedures included vertebral artery decompression (n = 6), endovascular stent and spinal fusion (n = 1), and vertebral artery endovascular occlusion (n = 1). In boys treated with decompression, cervical soft tissue abnormalities (ruptured atlantoaxial bursa, ruptured joint capsule, or connective tissue scarring) were directly visualized during open surgery. No other etiology for stroke or dissection was found in any of the cases. Two boys without recurrent stroke were treated with activity restriction and antithrombotics. At a median follow-up of 51 months (range 17-84), there have been no additional recurrences.ConclusionsChildren with V3 segmental vertebral arteriopathy frequently have stroke recurrence despite antithrombotics. Cervical bone imaging and angiography with neck rotation can identify underlying pathology.
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- 2020
25. Clinical outcomes after revascularization for pediatric moyamoya disease and syndrome: A single-center series.
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Morshed, Ramin A, Abla, Adib A, Murph, Daniel, Dao, Jasmin M, Winkler, Ethan A, Burkhardt, Jan-Karl, Colao, Kathleen, Hetts, Steven W, Fullerton, Heather J, Lawton, Michael T, Gupta, Nalin, and Fox, Christine K
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Humans ,Moyamoya Disease ,Syndrome ,Postoperative Complications ,Treatment Outcome ,Cerebral Revascularization ,Retrospective Studies ,Cohort Studies ,Adolescent ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Infant ,Female ,Male ,Stroke ,Direct and indirect revascularization technique ,Moyamoya disease ,STA-MCA bypass ,Vascular disorders ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,Brain Disorders ,Neurosciences ,Patient Safety ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Moyamoya is a progressive cerebrovascular arteriopathy that affects children of any age. The goal of this study was to determine imaging and clinical outcomes as well as complication rates in a pediatric cohort undergoing either a combined direct/indirect or indirect-only revascularization approach. Patients with moyamoya disease or syndrome ≤ 18 years of age at the time of initial surgery were identified, and clinical data were collected retrospectively. Over a 12-year period, 26 patients underwent revascularization procedures on 49 hemispheres with a median follow-up of 2.6 years from surgery. Median age at surgery was 7.3 years (range 1.4-18.0 years). Thirty-three hemispheres (67.3%) underwent combined revascularization with a direct bypass and encephalomyosynangiosis, and sixteen hemispheres (32.7%) underwent indirect-only revascularization. The rate of 30-day perioperative complication was 10.2%, and the rate of postoperative clinical stroke by end of follow-up was 10.2% by hemisphere. There was a 5.7% rate of intraoperative bypass failure requiring conversion to an indirect revascularization approach. On follow-up imaging, 96.9% of direct bypasses remained patent. On multivariate analysis, higher preoperative Pediatric Stroke Outcome Measure (PSOM) scores were associated with lower rates of good clinical outcome on follow-up (unit OR 0.03; p = 0.03). Patients with age
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- 2020
26. Morphological changes of intracranial pressure quantifies vasodilatory effect of verapamil to treat cerebral vasospasm.
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Liu, Xiuyun, Vitt, Jeffrey R, Hetts, Steven W, Gudelunas, Koa, Ho, Nhi, Ko, Nerissa, and Hu, Xiao
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Humans ,Vasospasm ,Intracranial ,Verapamil ,Vasodilator Agents ,Infusions ,Intra-Arterial ,Cerebrovascular Circulation ,Intracranial Pressure ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Female ,Male ,cerebral vasospasm ,endovascular treatment ,intra-arterial treatment ,subarachnoid hemorrhage ,vasodilator ,Neurosciences ,Stroke ,Brain Disorders - Abstract
IntroductionAfter aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), both proximal and distal cerebral vasospasm can contribute to the development of delayed cerebral ischemia. Intra-arterial (IA) vasodilators are a mainstay of treatment for distal arterial vasospasm, but no methods of assessing the efficacy of interventions in real time have been established.ObjectiveTo introduce a new method for continuous intraprocedural assessment of endovascular treatment for cerebral vasospasm.MethodsThe premise of our approach was that distal cerebral arterial changes induce a consistent pattern in the morphological changes of intracranial pressure (ICP) pulse. This premise was demonstrated using a published algorithm in previous papers. In this study, we applied the algorithm to calculate the likelihood of cerebral vasodilation (VDI) and cerebral vasoconstriction (VCI) from intraprocedural ICP signals that are synchronized with injection of the IA vasodilator, verapamil. Cerebral blood flow velocities (CBFVs) on bilateral cerebral arteries were studied before and after IA therapy.Results192 recordings of patients with SAH were reviewed, and 27 recordings had high-quality ICP waveforms. The VCI was significantly lower after the first verapamil injection (0.47±0.017) than VCI at baseline (0.49±0.020, p
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- 2020
27. Pivotal Trial of the Neuroform Atlas Stent for Treatment of Anterior Circulation Aneurysms
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Zaidat, Osama O, Hanel, Ricardo A, Sauvageau, Eric A, Aghaebrahim, Amin, Lin, Eugene, Jadhav, Ashutosh P, Jovin, Tudor G, Khaldi, Ahmad, Gupta, Rishi G, Johnson, Andrew, Frei, Donald, Loy, David, Malek, Adel, Toth, Gabor, Siddiqui, Adnan, Reavey-Cantwell, John, Thomas, Ajith, Hetts, Steven W, Jankowitz, Brian T, Gross, Bradley, Ducruet, Andrew, Panczkowski, David, Shoirah, Hazem, Al-Bayati, Alhamza, Weiner, Greg, Kenmuir, Cynthia, Tadi, Prasanna, Walker, Gregory, Johnson, K, Frei, Don, Bellon, Richard, Atchie, Benjamin, Kaminsky, Ian, Huddle, Dan, Bain, Mark, Rasmussen, Peter, Hussain, M Shazam, Moore, Nina, Masaryk, Thomas, Elgabaly, Mohamed, Cerejo, Russell, Hardman, Julian, John, Seby, Bauer, Andrew, Peih-Chir Tsai, Jenny, Levy, Elad, Snyder, Kenneth, Davies, Jason, Ogilvy, Christopher, Rivet, Dennis, Alexander, Michael, Moser, Franklin, Maya, Marcel, Schiraldi, Michael, Eboli, Paula, Caplan, Justin, Jiang, Bowen, Bender, Matthew, Colby, Geoffrey, Satti, Sudhakar, Sivapatham, Thinesh, Kung, David, Pukenas, Bryan, Hurst, Robert, Smith, Michelle J, Puri, Ajit, Massari, Francesco, Rex, David, Fraser, Justin, Grupke, Stephen, Alhajeri, Abdulnasser, Klucznik, Richard, Diaz, Orlando, Britz, Gavin, Zhan, Yi, Spiotta, Alejandro, Lena, Jonathan, Turk, Aquilla, Chaudry, Mohamad, Fargen, Kyle, Turner, Raymond, Kan, Peter, Duckworth, Edward, Asif Taqi, Muhammad, Hou, Samuel, Arthur, Adam S, Elijovich, Lucas, Hoit, Daniel, Nickele, Christopher, Vachhani, Jay, Thomas Doss, Vinodh, Crowley, Richard, Lopes, Demetrius, Chen, Michael, Hallam, Danial, Ghodke, Basavaraj, Kim, Louis, Callison, Richard, Alshekhlee, Amer, and Kale, Sushant
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Bioengineering ,Stroke ,Assistive Technology ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Brain Disorders ,Adult ,Aged ,Embolization ,Therapeutic ,Endovascular Procedures ,Female ,Humans ,Intracranial Aneurysm ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Stents ,Treatment Outcome ,angiography ,intracranial aneurysm ,middle cerebral artery ,retreatment ,stent ,ATLAS Investigators ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Background and purposeStent-assisted coil embolization using the new generation Neuroform Atlas Stent System has shown promising safety and efficacy. The primary study results of the anterior circulation aneurysm cohort of the treatment of wide-neck, saccular, intracranial, aneurysms with the Neuroform Atlas Stent System (ATLAS trial [Safety and Effectiveness of the Treatment of Wide Neck, Saccular Intracranial Aneurysms With the Neuroform Atlas Stent System]) are presented.MethodsATLAS IDE trial (Investigational Device Exemption) is a prospective, multicenter, single-arm, open-label study of wide-neck (neck ≥4 mm or dome-to-neck ratio 50%) at the target location. The primary safety end point was any major stroke or ipsilateral stroke or neurological death within 12 months. Adjudication of the primary end points was performed by an independent Imaging Core Laboratory and the Clinical Events Committee.ResultsA total of 182 patients with wide-neck anterior circulation aneurysms at 25 US centers were enrolled. The mean age was 60.3±11.4 years, 73.1% (133/182) women, and 80.8% (147/182) white. Mean aneurysm size was 6.1±2.2 mm, mean neck width was 4.1±1.2 mm, and mean dome-to-neck ratio was 1.2±0.3. The most frequent aneurysm locations were the anterior communicating artery (64/182, 35.2%), internal carotid artery ophthalmic artery segment (29/182, 15.9%), and middle cerebral artery bifurcation (27/182, 14.8%). Stents were placed in the anticipated anatomic location in all patients. The study met both primary safety and efficacy end points. The composite primary efficacy end point of complete aneurysm occlusion (Raymond-Roy 1) without parent artery stenosis or aneurysm retreatment was achieved in 84.7% (95% CI, 78.6%-90.9%) of patients. Overall, 4.4% (8/182, 95% CI, 1.9%-8.5%) of patients experienced a primary safety end point of major ipsilateral stroke or neurological death.ConclusionsIn the ATLAS IDE anterior circulation aneurysm cohort premarket approval study, the Neuroform Atlas stent with adjunctive coiling met the primary end points and demonstrated high rates of long-term complete aneurysm occlusion at 12 months, with 100% technical success and
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- 2020
28. High-Flow Vascular Malformations in Children.
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Morshed, Ramin A, Winkler, Ethan A, Kim, Helen, Braunstein, Steve, Cooke, Daniel L, Hetts, Steven W, Abla, Adib A, Fullerton, Heather J, and Gupta, Nalin
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Humans ,Intracranial Arteriovenous Malformations ,Arteriovenous Fistula ,Embolization ,Therapeutic ,Radiosurgery ,Child ,pediatrics ,brain arteriovenous malformation ,dural arteriovenous fistula ,vein of Galen malformation ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Rare Diseases ,Cardiovascular ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Children can have a variety of intracranial vascular anomalies ranging from small and incidental with no clinical consequences to complex lesions that can cause substantial neurologic deficits, heart failure, or profoundly affect development. In contrast to high-flow lesions with direct arterial-to-venous shunts, low-flow lesions such as cavernous malformations are associated with a lower likelihood of substantial hemorrhage, and a more benign course. Management of vascular anomalies in children has to incorporate an understanding of how treatment strategies may affect the normal development of the central nervous system. In this review, we discuss the etiologies, epidemiology, natural history, and genetic risk factors of three high-flow vascular malformations seen in children: brain arteriovenous malformations, intracranial dural arteriovenous fistulas, and vein of Galen malformations.
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- 2020
29. Bringing high-grade arteriovenous malformations under control: clinical outcomes following multimodality treatment in children.
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Winkler, Ethan A, Lu, Alex, Morshed, Ramin A, Yue, John K, Rutledge, W Caleb, Burkhardt, Jan-Karl, Patel, Arati B, Ammanuel, Simon G, Braunstein, Steve, Fox, Christine K, Fullerton, Heather J, Kim, Helen, Cooke, Daniel, Hetts, Steven W, Lawton, Michael T, Abla, Adib A, and Gupta, Nalin
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ARUBA = A Randomized Trial of Unruptured Brain AVMs ,AVM = arteriovenous malformation ,DSA = digital subtraction angiography ,NBCA = N-butyl cyanoacrylate ,SAIVM = Scottish Audit of Intracranial Vascular Malformations ,SM = Spetzler-Martin ,SRS = stereotactic radiosurgery ,Supp-SM = supplemented SM ,arteriovenous malformation ,embolization ,mRS = modified Rankin Scale ,pediatric ,radiosurgery ,surgery ,treatment ,vascular disorders ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine - Abstract
OBJECTIVE:Brain arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) consist of dysplastic blood vessels with direct arteriovenous shunts that can hemorrhage spontaneously. In children, a higher lifetime hemorrhage risk must be balanced with treatment-related morbidity. The authors describe a collaborative, multimodal strategy resulting in effective and safe treatment of pediatric AVMs. METHODS:A retrospective analysis of a prospectively maintained database was performed in children with treated and nontreated pediatric AVMs at the University of California, San Francisco, from 1998 to 2017. Inclusion criteria were age ≤ 18 years at time of diagnosis and an AVM confirmed by a catheter angiogram. RESULTS:The authors evaluated 189 pediatric patients with AVMs over the study period, including 119 ruptured (63%) and 70 unruptured (37%) AVMs. The mean age at diagnosis was 11.6 ± 4.3 years. With respect to Spetzler-Martin (SM) grade, there were 38 (20.1%) grade I, 40 (21.2%) grade II, 62 (32.8%) grade III, 40 (21.2%) grade IV, and 9 (4.8%) grade V lesions. Six patients were managed conservatively, and 183 patients underwent treatment, including 120 resections, 82 stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS), and 37 endovascular embolizations. Forty-four of 49 (89.8%) high-grade AVMs (SM grade IV or V) were treated. Multiple treatment modalities were used in 29.5% of low-grade and 27.3% of high-grade AVMs. Complete angiographic obliteration was obtained in 73.4% of low-grade lesions (SM grade I-III) and in 45.2% of high-grade lesions. A periprocedural stroke occurred in a single patient (0.5%), and there was 1 treatment-related death. The mean clinical follow-up for the cohort was 4.1 ± 4.6 years, and 96.6% and 84.3% of patients neurologically improved or remained unchanged in the ruptured and unruptured AVM groups following treatment, respectively. There were 16 bleeding events following initiation of AVM treatment (annual rate: 0.02 events per person-year). CONCLUSIONS:Coordinated multidisciplinary evaluation and individualized planning can result in safe and effective treatment of children with AVMs. In particular, it is possible to treat the majority of high-grade AVMs with an acceptable safety profile. Judicious use of multimodality therapy should be limited to appropriately selected patients after thorough team-based discussions to avoid additive morbidity. Future multicenter studies are required to better design predictive models to aid with patient selection for multimodal pediatric care, especially with high-grade AVMs.
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- 2020
30. Wireless Resonant Circuits Printed Using Aerosol Jet Deposition for MRI Catheter Tracking
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Jordan, Caroline D, Thorne, Bradford RH, Wadhwa, Arjun, Losey, Aaron D, Ozhinsky, Eugene, Kondapavulur, Sravani, Fratello, Vincent, Moore, Teri, Stillson, Carol, Yee, Colin, Watkins, Ronald D, Scott, Greig C, Martin, Alastair J, Zhang, Xiaoliang, Wilson, Mark W, and Hetts, Steven W
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Engineering ,Biomedical Engineering ,Biomedical Imaging ,Bioengineering ,4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies ,Animals ,Catheters ,Equipment Design ,Female ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Interventional ,Swine ,Temperature ,Wireless Technology ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Aerosols ,RLC circuits ,Ink ,Inductors ,Wireless resonant circuits ,interventional MRI ,aerosol jet deposition ,tracking markers ,double helix design ,Artificial Intelligence and Image Processing ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Biomedical engineering ,Electronics ,sensors and digital hardware ,Computer vision and multimedia computation - Abstract
Interventional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) could allow for diagnosis and immediate treatment of ischemic stroke; however, such endovascular catheter-based procedures under MRI guidance are inherently difficult. One major challenge is tracking the tip of the catheter, as standard fabrication methods for building inductively coupled coil markers are rigid and bulky. Here, we report a new approach that uses aerosol jet deposition to three-dimensional (3-D) print an inductively coupled RF coil marker on a polymer catheter. Our approach enables lightweight conforming markers on polymer catheters and these low-profile markers allow the catheter to be more safely navigated in small caliber vessels. Prototype markers with an inductor with the geometry of a double helix are incorporated on catheters for in vitro studies, and we show that these markers exhibit good signal amplification. We report temperature measurements and, finally, demonstrate feasibility in a preliminary in vivo experiment. We provide material properties and electromagnetic simulation performance analysis. This paper presents fully aerosol jet-deposited and functional wireless resonant markers on polymer catheters for use in 3T clinical scanners.
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- 2020
31. A New Era of Extended Time Window Acute Stroke Interventions Guided by Imaging.
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Rehani, Bhavya, Ammanuel, Simon G, Zhang, Yi, Smith, Wade, Cooke, Daniel L, Hetts, Steven W, Josephson, S Andrew, Kim, Anthony, Hemphill, J Claude, and Dillon, William
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CT ,MRI ,acute stroke therapy ,late onset stroke ,stroke imaging ,stroke treatment ,Brain Disorders ,Stroke ,Clinical Research ,Biomedical Imaging ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities - Abstract
Ischemic stroke is one of the most debilitating and deadliest conditions worldwide. Intravenous t-PA is the current standard treatment within 4 hours after onset of symptoms. Recent randomized controlled trials have demonstrated the efficacy of neurointerventional intra-arterial treatment in acute ischemic stroke. About 20% of acute ischemic stroke are classified as wake-up strokes, which falls out of the conventional treatment time window. New evidence suggests that some patients with longer time from symptom onset (up to 24 hours) may benefit from thrombectomy, probably in part due to variations in collateral circulation among individual patients. Advanced imaging can play a crucial role in identifying patients who could benefit from endovascular intervention presenting within extended treatment time windows. In this article, we review the advanced imaging algorithm for ischemic stroke workup in the multiple studies published to date and summarize the results of the clinical trials for late ischemic stroke that can be clinically useful.
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- 2020
32. Endovascular Ion Exchange Chemofiltration Device Reduces Off-Target Doxorubicin Exposure in a Hepatic Intra-arterial Chemotherapy Model
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Yee, Colin, McCoy, David, Yu, Jay, Losey, Aaron, Jordan, Caroline, Moore, Terilyn, Stillson, Carol, Oh, Hee Jeung, Kilbride, Bridget, Roy, Shuvo, Patel, Anand, Wilson, Mark W, Hetts, Steven W, and Consortium, on behalf of the ChemoFilter
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Digestive Diseases ,Cardiovascular ,Rare Diseases ,Liver Disease ,Orphan Drug ,Animals ,Doxorubicin ,Heart ,Hepatic Artery ,Infusions ,Intra-Arterial ,Ion Exchange ,Liver ,Swine ,Tissue Distribution ,ChemoFilter Consortium - Abstract
PurposeTo determine if endovascular chemofiltration with an ionic device (ChemoFilter [CF]) can be used to reduce systemic exposure and off-target biodistribution of doxorubicin (DOX) during hepatic intra-arterial chemotherapy (IAC) in a preclinical model.Materials and methodsHepatic IAC infusions were performed in six pigs with normal livers. Animals underwent two 10-minute intra-arterial infusions of DOX (200 mg) into the common hepatic artery. Both the treatment group and the control group received initial IAC at 0 minutes and a second dose at 200 minutes. Prior to the second dose, CF devices were deployed in and adjacent to the hepatic venous outflow tract of treatment animals. Systemic exposure to DOX was monitored via blood samples taken during IAC procedures. After euthanasia, organ tissue DOX concentrations were analyzed. Alterations in systemic DOX exposure and biodistribution were compared by using one-tailed t tests.ResultsCF devices were well tolerated, and no hemodynamic, thrombotic, or immunologic complications were observed. Animals treated with a CF device had a significant reduction in systemic exposure when compared with systemic exposure in the control group (P
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- 2019
33. Neuroform Atlas Stent System for the treatment of intracranial aneurysm: primary results of the Atlas Humanitarian Device Exemption cohort
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Jankowitz, Brian T, Hanel, Ricardo, Jadhav, Ashutosh P, Loy, David N, Frei, Donald, Siddiqui, Adnan H, Puri, Ajit S, Khaldi, Ahmad, Turk, Aquilla S, Malek, Adel M, Sauvageau, Eric, Hetts, Steven W, and Zaidat, Osama O
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Stroke ,Bioengineering ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Assistive Technology ,Clinical Research ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,Adult ,Aged ,Blood Vessel Prosthesis ,Cerebral Angiography ,Cohort Studies ,Compassionate Use Trials ,Embolization ,Therapeutic ,Female ,Humans ,Intracranial Aneurysm ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Patient Discharge ,Prospective Studies ,Retreatment ,Self Expandable Metallic Stents ,Treatment Outcome ,atlas stent ,cerebral aneurysm ,stent-assisted coiling ,ATLAS ,neuroform ,wide-neck aneurysm ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
Background and objectiveStent-assisted coil embolization is a well-established treatment of intracranial wide-necked aneurysms. The Neuroform Atlas Stent System is a new generation microstent designed to enhance coil support, conformability, deliverability, and improve deployment accuracy. We present the 1-year efficacy and angiographic results of the Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) cohort from the Atlas Investigational Device Exemption (IDE) clinical trial.MethodThe Atlas IDE trial is a prospective, multicenter, single-arm, open-label study of unruptured wide-necked intracranial aneurysms treated with the Neuroform Atlas stent and approved coils. The primary efficacy endpoint was the rate of 12-month complete aneurysm angiographic occlusion (Raymond class I) without target aneurysm retreatment or significant parent artery stenosis (>50%) at the target location. The primary safety endpoint was the rate of major ipsilateral stroke or neurological death within 12 months. Imaging core laboratory and Clinical EventsCommittee adjudicated the primary endpoints.Results30 patients were enrolled at eight US centers, with 27 patients completing the 12-month angiographic follow-up. The mean age was 59.4±11.8 years and 24/30 patients (80%) were women. The mean aneurysm size was 5.3±1.7 mm and the dome:neck ratio was 1.1±0.2. Procedural technical success of Neuroform Atlas Stent deployment was 100%. 27 patients completed 12-month angiographic follow-up and 30 patients completed their 6-month follow-up. When applying the last observation carried forward method, the primary efficacy endpoint was observed in 26/30 patients (86.7%, 95% CI 69.3% to 96.2%) compared with 25/27 patients (92.6%, 95% CI 75.7% to 99.1%) who completed the 12-month angiographic follow-up. The primary safety endpoint of stroke occurred in one patient (3.3%), who made a complete clinical recovery at discharge. There were no neurological deaths.ConclusionThe Neuroform Atlas stent in conjunction with coils demonstrated a high rate of complete aneurysm occlusion at 12-month angiographic follow-up, with an improved safety profile in the HDE cohort.Clinical trialgov registration numberNCT0234058;Results.
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- 2019
34. The effect of preoperative embolization and flow dynamics on resection of brain arteriovenous malformations.
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Donzelli, Grace F, Nelson, Jeffrey, McCoy, David, McCulloch, Charles E, Hetts, Steven W, Amans, Matthew R, Dowd, Christopher F, Halbach, Van V, Higashida, Randall T, Lawton, Michael T, Kim, Helen, and Cooke, Daniel L
- Subjects
cerebrovascular procedures ,digital subtraction angiography ,embolization ,intracranial arteriovenous malformations ,vascular disorders ,Clinical Research ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
ObjectivePreoperative embolization of brain arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) is performed to facilitate resection, although its impact on surgical performance has not been clearly defined. The authors tested for associations between embolization and surgical performance metrics.MethodsThe authors analyzed AVM cases resected by one neurosurgeon from 2006 to 2017. They tested whether cases with and without embolization differed from one another with respect to patient and AVM characteristics using t-tests for continuous variables and Fisher's exact tests for categorical variables. They used simple and multivariable regression models to test whether surgical outcomes (blood loss, resection time, surgical clip usage, and modified Rankin Scale [mRS] score) were associated with embolization. Additional regression analyses integrated the peak arterial afferent contrast normalized for the size of the region of interest (Cmax/ROI) into models as an additional predictor.ResultsThe authors included 319 patients, of whom 151 (47%) had preoperative embolization. Embolized AVMs tended to be larger (38% with diameter > 3 cm vs 19%, p = 0.001), less likely to have hemorrhaged (48% vs 63%, p = 0.013), or be diffuse (19% vs 29%, p = 0.045). Embolized AVMs were more likely to have both superficial and deep venous drainage and less likely to have exclusively deep drainage (32% vs 17% and 12% vs 23%, respectively; p = 0.002). In multivariable analysis, embolization was not a significant predictor of blood loss or mRS score changes, but did predict longer operating times (+29 minutes, 95% CI 2-56 minutes; p = 0.034) and increased clip usage (OR 2.61, 95% CI 1.45-4.71; p = 0.001). Cmax/ROI was not a significant predictor, although cases with large Cmax/ROI tended to have longer procedure times (+25 minutes per doubling of Cmax/ROI, 95% CI 0-50 minutes; p = 0.051).ConclusionsIn this series, preoperative embolization was associated with longer median resection times and had no association with intraoperative blood loss or mRS score changes.
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- 2019
35. 2023 Guideline for the Management of Patients With Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage: A Guideline From the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association
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Hoh, Brian L., Ko, Nerissa U., Amin-Hanjani, Sepideh, Hsiang-Yi Chou, Sherry, Cruz-Flores, Salvador, Dangayach, Neha S., Derdeyn, Colin P., Du, Rose, Hänggi, Daniel, Hetts, Steven W., Ifejika, Nneka L., Johnson, Regina, Keigher, Kiffon M., Leslie-Mazwi, Thabele M., Lucke-Wold, Brandon, Rabinstein, Alejandro A., Robicsek, Steven A., Stapleton, Christopher J., Suarez, Jose I., Tjoumakaris, Stavropoula I., and Welch, Babu G.
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- 2023
- Full Text
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36. 3D Printed Absorber for Capturing Chemotherapy Drugs before They Spread through the Body
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Oh, Hee Jeung, Aboian, Mariam S, Yi, Michael YJ, Maslyn, Jacqueline A, Loo, Whitney S, Jiang, Xi, Parkinson, Dilworth Y, Wilson, Mark W, Moore, Terilyn, Yee, Colin R, Robbins, Gregory R, Barth, Florian M, DeSimone, Joseph M, Hetts, Steven W, and Balsara, Nitash P
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Chemical Sciences ,Cancer ,Good Health and Well Being ,Chemical sciences - Abstract
Despite efforts to develop increasingly targeted and personalized cancer therapeutics, dosing of drugs in cancer chemotherapy is limited by systemic toxic side effects. We have designed, built, and deployed porous absorbers for capturing chemotherapy drugs from the bloodstream after these drugs have had their effect on a tumor, but before they are released into the body where they can cause hazardous side effects. The support structure of the absorbers was built using 3D printing technology. This structure was coated with a nanostructured block copolymer with outer blocks that anchor the polymer chains to the 3D printed support structure and a middle block that has an affinity for the drug. The middle block is polystyrenesulfonate which binds to doxorubicin, a widely used and effective chemotherapy drug with significant toxic side effects. The absorbers are designed for deployment during chemotherapy using minimally invasive image-guided endovascular surgical procedures. We show that the introduction of the absorbers into the blood of swine models enables the capture of 64 ± 6% of the administered drug (doxorubicin) without any immediate adverse effects. Problems related to blood clots, vein wall dissection, and other biocompatibility issues were not observed. This development represents a significant step forward in minimizing toxic side effects of chemotherapy.
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- 2019
37. The University of California, San Francisco Documentation System for Retinoblastoma: Preparing to Improve Staging Methods for This Disease
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Damato, Bertil, Afshar, Armin R, Everett, Lesley, Banerjee, Anuradha, and Hetts, Steven W
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Ophthalmology and Optometry ,Rare Diseases ,Cancer ,Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision ,Eye ,Retinoblastoma ,Treatment ,Prognosis - Abstract
Background/aimsCurrent retinoblastoma staging systems do not adequately describe the disease, especially in eyes with multiple tumors. The aims of this study were to develop methods for documenting individual tumors and to score disease burden over time.MethodsA coding system was devised to describe each tumor according to affected eye, meridian, anteroposterior location, activity, growth pattern, type of seed, and treatment. A scoring system for quantifying disease burden was developed, taking account of tumor number, size, spread, and secondary effects on the eye.ResultsOur coding system allowed contemporaneous tumor documentation, producing datasets that enabled generation of fundus diagrams, Kaplan-Meier curves, and tables summarizing disease progression in individual tumors and eyes. Our data showed disparities between ocular and tumor documentation, e.g., indicating earlier tumor development in the left eye but younger age at presentation if disease was worse in the right eye. Actuarial rates of local treatment failure were lower when individual tumors were analyzed than when data were reported in terms of whole eyes.ConclusionOur methods for documenting individual retinoblastomas have facilitated the review of patients' progress in our routine practice and may provide data that could be used to refine retinoblastoma classifications in the future.
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- 2019
38. Quantification of 89Zr‐Iron oxide nanoparticle biodistribution using PET‐MR and ultrashort TE sequences
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Jordan, Caroline D, Han, Misung, Kondapavulur, Sravani, Vera, Denis Beckford, Neumann, Kiel D, Moore, Teri, Stillson, Carol, Krug, Roland, Behr, Spencer, Seo, Youngho, VanBrocklin, Henry F, Larson, Peder EZ, Wilson, Mark, Martin, Alastair J, and Hetts, Steven W
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Animals ,Female ,Ferric Compounds ,Hepatic Artery ,Image Processing ,Computer-Assisted ,Linear Models ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Metal Nanoparticles ,Multimodal Imaging ,Positron-Emission Tomography ,Radioisotopes ,Reproducibility of Results ,Swine ,Zirconium ,Physical Sciences ,Engineering ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging ,Clinical sciences - Published
- 2018
39. A two-scale approach for CFD modeling of endovascular Chemofilter device
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Maani, Nazanin, Hetts, Steven W, and Rayz, Vitaliy L
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Engineering ,Biomedical Engineering ,Cardiovascular ,Heart Disease ,Bioengineering ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Binding Sites ,Carcinoma ,Hepatocellular ,Computer Simulation ,Drug Delivery Systems ,Endovascular Procedures ,Filtration ,Hemodynamics ,Heparin ,Humans ,Hydrodynamics ,Infusions ,Intra-Arterial ,Liver Neoplasms ,Membranes ,Artificial ,Microscopy ,Electron ,Scanning ,Porosity ,Software ,Veins ,Intra-arterial chemotherapy ,Multiscale modeling ,Computational fluid dynamics ,Porous membrane ,Architected material ,Chemofiltration ,Mechanical Engineering ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
Two-scale CFD modeling is used to design and optimize a novel endovascular filtration device for removing toxins from flowing blood. The Chemofilter is temporarily deployed in the venous side of a tumor during the intra-arterial chemotherapy in order to filter excessive chemotherapy drugs such as Doxorubicin from the blood stream. The device chemically binds selective drugs to its surface thus filtering them from blood, after they have had the effect on the tumor and before they reach the heart and other organs. The Chemofilter consists of a porous membrane made of microscale architected materials and is installed on a structure similar to an embolic protection device. Simulations resolving the microscale structure of the device were carried out to determine the permeability of the microcell membrane. The resulting permeability coefficients were then used for macroscale simulations of the flow through the device modeled as a porous material. The microscale simulations indicate that greater number of microcell layers and smaller microcell size result in increased pressure drop across the membrane, while providing larger surface area for drug binding. In the macroscale simulations, the study of idealized prototypes show that the pressure drop can be reduced by increasing the membrane's tip angle and by decreasing the number of membrane's sectors. Such design, however, can conversely affect the overall drug binding. By decreasing the concentration of toxins in the cardiovascular system, the drug dosage can be increased while side effects are reduced, thus improving the effectiveness of treatment.
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- 2018
40. Drug capture materials based on genomic DNA-functionalized magnetic nanoparticles.
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Blumenfeld, Carl M, Schulz, Michael D, Aboian, Mariam S, Wilson, Mark W, Moore, Terilynn, Hetts, Steven W, and Grubbs, Robert H
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Myocardium ,Animals ,Swine ,Humans ,Rats ,Neoplasms ,Cisplatin ,Polyethylene Glycols ,Doxorubicin ,DNA ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Drug Delivery Systems ,Tissue Distribution ,Magnetics ,Magnetite Nanoparticles - Abstract
Chemotherapy agents are notorious for producing severe side-effects. One approach to mitigating this off-target damage is to deliver the chemotherapy directly to a tumor via transarterial infusion, or similar procedures, and then sequestering any chemotherapeutic in the veins draining the target organ before it enters the systemic circulation. Materials capable of such drug capture are yet to be fully realized. Here, we report the covalent attachment of genomic DNA to iron-oxide nanoparticles. With these magnetic materials, we captured three common chemotherapy agents-doxorubicin, cisplatin, and epirubicin-from biological solutions. We achieved 98% capture of doxorubicin from human serum in 10 min. We further demonstrate that DNA-coated particles can rescue cultured cardiac myoblasts from lethal levels of doxorubicin. Finally, the in vivo efficacy of these materials was demonstrated in a porcine model. The efficacy of these materials demonstrates the viability of genomic DNA-coated materials as substrates for drug capture applications.
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- 2018
41. Frequency and characteristics associated with inherited thrombophilia in patients with intracranial dural arteriovenous fistula.
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LaHue, Sara C, Kim, Helen, Pawlikowska, Ludmila, Nelson, Jeffrey, Cooke, Daniel L, Hetts, Steven W, and Singh, Vineeta
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MTHFR ,dural arteriovenous fistula ,factor V Leiden ,prothrombin ,thrombophilia ,vascular disorders ,Clinical Research ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
ObjectiveThe pathogenesis of dural arteriovenous fistulas (DAVFs) remains poorly defined. Prior studies on thrombophilia as a risk factor for DAVF development are limited by small sample sizes and poor generalizability.MethodsIn this longitudinal observational study, all patients with intracranial DAVFs evaluated at the University of California, San Francisco from December 1994 through April 2014 were identified. After obtaining patient consent, 3 thrombophilic mutations, factor V Leiden (rs6025), MTHFR (rs1801133), and prothrombin G20210A, were genotyped. The authors evaluated the association of thrombophilia status (presence of any thrombophilic mutation) and clinical and angiographic characteristics using either a 2-sample t-test or Fisher's exact test.ResultsA total of 116 patients with diagnosed intracranial DAVFs were included in the study. Twenty-five (22%) patients met criteria for thrombophilia. Focal neurological deficits tended to occur more frequently in the thrombophilia group (78% vs 57%, p = 0.09). Angiographic characteristics of DAVFs, including high-risk venous flow pattern, multiplicity of DAVF, and the presence of venous sinus thrombosis, did not differ significantly between the 2 groups but tended to be more common in the thrombophilic than in the nonthrombophilic group.ConclusionsThis study is one of the largest of thrombophilia and DAVF to date. The frequency of mutations associated with thrombophilia in this study was higher than that in the general population.
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- 2018
42. 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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Humans ,Intracranial Aneurysm ,Intracranial Arteriovenous Malformations ,Postoperative Complications ,Embolization ,Therapeutic ,Radiosurgery ,Risk Factors ,Case-Control Studies ,Retrospective Studies ,Cohort Studies ,Follow-Up Studies ,Random Allocation ,Adult ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Female ,Male ,Stroke ,Neurosciences ,Brain Disorders ,Neurodegenerative ,Epilepsy ,Clinical Research ,Patient Safety ,Arteriovenous malformation ,Aneurysm embolization ,Resection ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
BackgroundHigh-risk components of brain arteriovenous malformations (BAVMs) can be targeted to reduce the risk of lesion rupture.ObjectiveTo evaluate targeted embolization of aneurysms against other means of treatment with a case-control analysis; we previously investigated this approach associated with BAVMs.MethodsRetrospective analysis of patients with BAVMs was performed, identifying patients treated with intention to occlude only an aneurysm associated with a BAVM. For each targeted aneurysm embolization (TAE) patient identified, 4 control patients were randomly selected, controlling for rupture status, age, and Spetzler-Martin plus Lawton-Young supplemental score. Analysis was performed to compare rates of adverse events (hemorrhage, new seizure, and death) between the 2 groups.ResultsThirty-two patients met inclusion criteria, and 128 control patients were identified, out of 1103 patients treated during the study period. Thirty-four adverse events occurred (15 ruptures, 15 new seizures, and 11 deaths) during the follow-up period (mean 1157 d for the TAE cohort and 1036 d for the non-TAE cohort). Statistically lower associations were noted for the TAE group for any adverse event (hazard ratio 0.28, P = .037) and the composite outcome of hemorrhage or new seizure (hazard ratio 0.20, P = .029).ConclusionFor BAVMs at high risk for surgical resection, TAE can be performed safely and effectively. Patients treated with TAE had better outcomes than matched patients undergoing other combinations of treatment. TAE can be considered for BAVMs with high operative risk prior to radiosurgery or when no other treatment options are available.
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- 2018
43. Endovascular Biopsy: In Vivo Cerebral Aneurysm Endothelial Cell Sampling and Gene Expression Analysis
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Cooke, Daniel L, McCoy, David B, Halbach, Van V, Hetts, Steven W, Amans, Matthew R, Dowd, Christopher F, Higashida, Randall T, Lawson, Devon, Nelson, Jeffrey, Wang, Chih-Yang, Kim, Helen, Werb, Zena, McCulloch, Charles, Hashimoto, Tomoki, Su, Hua, and Sun, Zhengda
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Biotechnology ,Brain Disorders ,Cerebrovascular ,Genetics ,Cardiovascular ,Biopsy ,Endoglin ,Endothelial Cells ,Endothelium ,Vascular ,Endovascular Procedures ,Female ,Flow Cytometry ,Gene Expression ,Humans ,Intracranial Aneurysm ,Male ,Matrix Metalloproteinase 2 ,Receptor ,TIE-1 ,Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A ,von Willebrand Factor ,Cerebral aneurysm ,Vascular biology ,Gene expression ,Cerebrovascular procedures ,Endothelium ,Public Health and Health Services ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
There is limited data describing endothelial cell (EC) gene expression between aneurysms and arteries partly because of risks associated with surgical tissue collection. Endovascular biopsy (EB) is a lower risk alternative to conventional surgical methods, though no such efforts have been attempted for aneurysms. We sought (1) to establish the feasibility of EB to isolate viable ECs by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS), (2) to characterize the differences in gene expression by anatomic location and rupture status using single-cell qPCR, and (3) to demonstrate the utility of unsupervised clustering algorithms to identify cell subpopulations. EB was performed in 10 patients (5 ruptured, 5 non-ruptured). FACS was used to isolate the ECs and single-cell qPCR was used to quantify the expression of 48 genes. Linear mixed models and exploratory multilevel component analysis (MCA) and self-organizing maps (SOMs) were performed to identify possible subpopulations of cells. ECs were collected from all aneurysms and there were no adverse events. A total of 437 ECs was collected, 94 (22%) of which were aneurysmal cells and 319 (73%) demonstrated EC-specific gene expression. Ruptured aneurysm cells, relative controls, yielded a median p value of 0.40 with five genes (10%) with p values
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- 2018
44. Surgical Treatment vs Nonsurgical Treatment for Brain Arteriovenous Malformations in Patients with Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia: A Retrospective Multicenter Consortium Study.
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Meybodi, Ali Tayebi, Kim, Helen, Nelson, Jeffrey, Hetts, Steven W, Krings, Timo, terBrugge, Karel G, Faughnan, Marie E, Lawton, Michael T, and Brain Vascular Malformation Consortium HHTInvestigator Group
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Brain Vascular Malformation Consortium HHTInvestigator Group ,Brain ,Humans ,Intracranial Arteriovenous Malformations ,Central Nervous System Vascular Malformations ,Telangiectasia ,Hereditary Hemorrhagic ,Treatment Outcome ,Retrospective Studies ,Databases ,Factual ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Infant ,Female ,Male ,Young Adult ,AVM grading ,Arteriovenous malformation ,Brain vascular malformation consortium ,Embolization ,Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia ,Microsurgical resection ,Radiosurgery ,Rendu-Osler-Weber disease ,Neurosciences ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,Brain Disorders ,Rare Diseases ,Congenital Structural Anomalies ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
BackgroundCerebral arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) are common in patients with hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT). However, due to the rarity of HHT and little published evidence of outcomes from management of brain AVMs in this disease, current international HHT guidelines recommend an individualized approach. Specifically, the outcomes for surgical vs nonsurgical management of these lesions have not been reported to date.ObjectiveTo report long-term outcomes of surgical resection of brain AVMs in HHT patients compared to outcomes in nonsurgically treated patients.MethodsFrom the database of the Brain Vascular Malformation Consortium HHT project, 19 patients with 20 resected AVMs (group 1) and 22 patients with 33 AVMs who received nonsurgical treatment (group 2) were studied. The groups were retrospectively reviewed for changes in functional status (modified Rankin Scale score) during the follow-up period.ResultsDuring the follow-up period, 9% of patients in group 1 suffered from worsening of functional status, whereas this figure was 16% for group 2 (P > .05). Functional outcomes were not statistically different between the 2 groups at the latest follow-up (P > .05).ConclusionHHT patients treated surgically for brain AVMs appear to have long-term functional outcomes comparable to nonsurgical (including observational) therapy with fewer unfavorable outcomes. It is therefore reasonable to consider surgical resection as a management option in the multidisciplinary team's individualized treatment strategy for HHT patients with brain AVMs.
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- 2018
45. The Geometry of Y-Stent Configurations Used for Wide-Necked Aneurysm Treatment: Analyzing Double-Barrel Stents In Vitro Using Flat-Panel Computed Tomography
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Caton, M. Travis, Copelan, Alexander Z., Narsinh, Kazim H., Baker, Amanda, Abla, Adib A., Higashida, Randall T., Amans, Matthew R., Hetts, Steven W., and Cooke, Daniel L.
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Interventional magnetic resonance imaging guided carotid embolectomy using a novel resonant marker catheter: demonstration of preclinical feasibility
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Yang, Jeffrey K, Cote, Andre M, Jordan, Caroline D, Kondapavulur, Sravani, Losey, Aaron D, McCoy, David, Chu, Andrew, Yu, Jay F, Moore, Teri, Stillson, Carol, Settecase, Fabio, Alexander, Matthew D, Nicholson, Andrew, Cooke, Daniel L, Saeed, Maythem, Barry, Dave, Martin, Alastair J, Wilson, Mark W, and Hetts, Steven W
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Engineering ,Biomedical Engineering ,Clinical Research ,Bioengineering ,Cardiovascular ,Biomedical Imaging ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Animals ,Carotid Arteries ,Catheterization ,Catheters ,Embolectomy ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Swine ,InterventionalMRI ,Stroke ,Wireless resonant marker ,Interventional MRI ,Materials Engineering ,Analytical Chemistry ,Biomedical engineering ,Nanotechnology - Abstract
To assess the visualization and efficacy of a wireless resonant circuit (wRC) catheter system for carotid artery occlusion and embolectomy under real-time MRI guidance in vivo, and to compare MR imaging modality with x-ray for analysis of qualitative physiological measures of blood flow at baseline and after embolectomy. The wRC catheter system was constructed using a MR compatible PEEK fiber braided catheter (Penumbra, Inc, Alameda, CA) with a single insulated longitudinal copper loop soldered to a printed circuit board embedded within the catheter wall. In concordance with IACUC protocol (AN103047), in vivo carotid artery navigation and embolectomy were performed in four farm pigs (40-45 kg) under real-time MRI at 1.5T. Industry standard clots were introduced in incremental amounts until adequate arterial occlusion was noted in a total of n=13 arteries. Baseline vasculature and restoration of blood flow were confirmed via MR and x-ray imaging, and graded by the Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction (TICI) scale. Wilcoxon signed-rank tests were used to analyze differences in recanalization status between DSA and MRA imaging. Successful recanalizations (TICI 2b/3) were compared to clinical rates reported in literature via binomial tests. The wRC catheter system was visible both on 5° sagittal bSSFP and coronal GRE sequence. Successful recanalization was demonstrated in 11 of 13 occluded arteries by DSA analysis and 8 of 13 by MRA. Recanalization rates based on DSA (0.85) and MRA (0.62) were not significantly different from the clinical rate of mechanical aspiration thrombectomy reported in literature. Lastly, a Wilcoxon signed rank test indicated no significant difference between TICI scores analyzed by DSA and MRA. With demonstrated compatibility and visualization under MRI, the wRC catheter system is effective for in vivo endovascular embolectomy, suggesting progress towards clinical endovascular interventional MRI.
- Published
- 2017
47. Utility of perfusion imaging in acute stroke treatment: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Ryu, Won Hyung A, Avery, Michael B, Dharampal, Navjit, Allen, Isabel E, and Hetts, Steven W
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Humans ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,Treatment Outcome ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Thrombolytic Therapy ,Thrombectomy ,Case-Control Studies ,Cohort Studies ,Patient Selection ,Female ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Stroke ,Perfusion Imaging ,Endovascular Procedures ,CT perfusion ,MR perfusion ,Biomedical Imaging ,Brain Disorders ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Clinical Research - Abstract
BackgroundVariability in imaging protocols and techniques has resulted in a lack of consensus regarding the incorporation of perfusion imaging into stroke triage and treatment. The objective of our study was to evaluate the available scientific evidence regarding the utility of perfusion imaging in determining treatment eligibility in patients with acute stroke and in predicting their clinical outcome.MethodsWe performed a systematic review of the literature using PubMed, Web of Science, and Cochrane Library focusing on themes of medical imaging, stroke, treatment, and outcome (CRD42016037817). We included randomized controlled trials, cohort studies, and case-controlled studies published from 2011 to 2016. Two independent reviewers conducted the study appraisal, data abstraction, and quality assessments of the studies.ResultsOur literature search yielded 13 studies that met our inclusion criteria. In total, 994 patients were treated with the aid of perfusion imaging compared with 1819 patients treated with standard care. In the intervention group 51.1% of patients had a favorable outcome at 3 months compared with 45.6% of patients in the control group (p=0.06). Subgroup analysis of studies that used multimodal therapy (IV tissue plasminogen activator, endovascular thrombectomy) showed a significant benefit of perfusion imaging (OR 1.89, 95% CI 1.43 to 2.51, p
- Published
- 2017
48. Design of catheter radio frequency coils using coaxial transmission line resonators for interventional neurovascular MR imaging
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Zhang, Xiaoliang, Martin, Alastair, Jordan, Caroline, Lillaney, Prasheel, Losey, Aaron, Pang, Yong, Hu, Jeffrey, Wilson, Mark, Cooke, Daniel, and Hetts, Steven W
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Communications Engineering ,Engineering ,Electrical Engineering ,Physical Sciences ,Bioengineering ,Biomedical Imaging ,4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies ,Interventional MR ,endovascular imaging ,RF coil ,catheter coil ,coaxial transmission line ,transmission line resonator ,MR sensitivity ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Optical Physics ,Other Physical Sciences ,Biomedical engineering ,Atomic ,molecular and optical physics - Abstract
BackgroundIt is technically challenging to design compact yet sensitive miniature catheter radio frequency (RF) coils for endovascular interventional MR imaging.MethodsIn this work, a new design method for catheter RF coils is proposed based on the coaxial transmission line resonator (TLR) technique. Due to its distributed circuit, the TLR catheter coil does not need any lumped capacitors to support its resonance, which simplifies the practical design and construction and provides a straightforward technique for designing miniature catheter-mounted imaging coils that are appropriate for interventional neurovascular procedures. The outer conductor of the TLR serves as an RF shield, which prevents electromagnetic energy loss, and improves coil Q factors. It also minimizes interaction with surrounding tissues and signal losses along the catheter coil. To investigate the technique, a prototype catheter coil was built using the proposed coaxial TLR technique and evaluated with standard RF testing and measurement methods and MR imaging experiments. Numerical simulation was carried out to assess the RF electromagnetic field behavior of the proposed TLR catheter coil and the conventional lumped-element catheter coil.ResultsThe proposed TLR catheter coil was successfully tuned to 64 MHz for proton imaging at 1.5 T. B1 fields were numerically calculated, showing improved magnetic field intensity of the TLR catheter coil over the conventional lumped-element catheter coil. MR images were acquired from a dedicated vascular phantom using the TLR catheter coil and also the system body coil. The TLR catheter coil is able to provide a significant signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) increase (a factor of 200 to 300) over its imaging volume relative to the body coil.ConclusionsCatheter imaging RF coil design using the proposed coaxial TLR technique is feasible and advantageous in endovascular interventional MR imaging applications.
- Published
- 2017
49. Anterior circulation location-specific results for stent-assisted coiling - carotid versus distal aneurysms: 1-year outcomes from the Neuroform Atlas Stent Pivotal Trial.
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Hanel, Ricardo A., Cortez, Gustavo M., Jankowitz, Brian T., Sauvageau, Eric, Aghaebrahim, Amin, Lin, Eugene, Jadhav, Ashutosh P., Gross, Bradley, Khaldi, Ahmad, Gupta, Rishi, Frei, Donald, Loy, David, Price, Lori Lyn, Hetts, Steven W., and Zaidat, Osama O.
- Subjects
INTRACRANIAL aneurysm surgery ,CAROTID artery ,RESEARCH funding ,PATIENT safety ,THERAPEUTIC embolization ,SURGICAL stents ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH ,CEREBRAL circulation ,COMPARATIVE studies ,MEDICAL equipment safety measures ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Background The Neuroform Atlas Stent System is an established treatment modality for unruptured anterior and posterior circulation intracranial aneurysms. Location-specific results are needed to guide treatment decision-making. However, it is unclear whether there are differences in safety and efficacy outcomes between carotid and more distal anterior circulation aneurysms. Methods The ATLAS IDE trial was a prospective, multicenter, single-arm, open-label interventional study that evaluated the safety and efficacy of the Neuroform Atlas Stent System. We compared differences in efficacy and safety outcomes of proximal internal carotid artery (ICA) versus distal and bifurcation anterior circulation aneurysms. Results Of 182 cases, there were 70 aneurysms in the ICA and 112 in the distal anterior circulation (including ICA terminus/bifurcation). There were no significant differences in the primary efficacy endpoint (85.5% vs 83.9%, p=0.78) and complete aneurysm occlusion rates (88.7% vs 87.9%, p=0.78) between proximal ICA aneurysms and distal aneurysms, respectively. Complications were more often encountered in distal and bifurcation aneurysms, but the overall rate of major safety events was low and comparable between the two groups (1.4% vs 6.3%, p=0.14). Recanalization and retreatment rates were also similar between the groups. Conclusion The results of this study suggest that the Neuroform Atlas Stent System is a safe and efficacious treatment modality for unruptured anterior circulation intracranial aneurysms, regardless of aneurysm location. Trial registration number NCT02340585. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Clinical outcomes after revascularization for pediatric moyamoya disease and syndrome: A single-center series
- Author
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Morshed, Ramin A., Abla, Adib A., Murph, Daniel, Dao, Jasmin M., Winkler, Ethan A., Burkhardt, Jan-Karl, Colao, Kathleen, Hetts, Steven W., Fullerton, Heather J., Lawton, Michael T., Gupta, Nalin, and Fox, Christine K.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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