10 results on '"Jean Francois Albucher"'
Search Results
2. Abstract WP104: Core/perfusion Mismatch Prevalence According To ASPECT Score In Acute Ischemic Stroke With Large Vessel Occlusion
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Pierre Seners, Nicole Yuen, Jose Bernardo Escribano Paredes, Sarah J Snyder, Emmanuel Carrera, Michael Mlynash, Jeremy J Heit, Maarten G Lansberg, Soren Christensen, Jean-Francois Albucher, Christophe Cognard, Igor Sibon, Michael Obadia, Julien Savatovsky, Jean-Marc Olivot, and Gregory W Albers
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Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
Background: In acute ischemic stroke (AIS) with large vessel occlusion (LVO), core/perfusion mismatch modifies the effect of mechanical thrombectomy (MT) on clinical outcome, MT appears to have greater benefit in patients with significant mismatch. We aimed to study the prevalence of core/perfusion mismatch according to ASPECT score in a large population of LVO-related AIS imaged either with MRI or CT. Methods: Retrospective study including AIS patients with ICA/M1 occlusion and baseline perfusion imaging (MRI or CT) performed within 24hrs from last seen well. To avoid selection bias, patients were selected from (1) the registries of 3 comprehensive centers with systematic use of MRI- or CT-perfusion imaging and including both MT-treated and untreated patients, and (2) one thrombectomy trial where MT decisions were performed blinded to the results of MRI perfusion imaging. Core/perfusion mismatch was defined as mismatch ratio (Tmax>6s volume/ core volume) >1.8 and volume (Tmax>6s - core volume) >15 mL. ASPECT score was rated on diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) or non-contrast CT blinded from the perfusion imaging. Results: Overall, 580 and 350 patients were included in the MRI and CT cohorts. Last-seen-well to imaging time was 4.8hrs (IQR 3.0-8.7) and 3.2hrs (1.3-8.0) in the MRI and CT cohorts, respectively, median ASPECT score was 7 (5-8) and 8 (7-9), and core/perfusion mismatch was present in 393/580 (68%) and 315/350 (90%) patients. In both cohorts, 75% of patients were treated with MT following imaging. In the MRI cohort, mismatch prevalence was 44% (75/170) and 92% (378/410) for DWI-ASPECTS 0-5 and 6-10, respectively. In the CT cohort, mismatch prevalence was 47% (15/32) and 94% (300/318) for ASPECTS 0-5 and 6-10, respectively. Conclusion: About 90% of patients with ASPECTS 6-10 have a core/perfusion mismatch regardless of imaging type. However, patients with ASPECTS ≤5 are heterogeneous in terms of mismatch status. Therefore, perfusion imaging may be particularly useful to select appropriate MT candidates with low ASPECT scores, regardless of imaging type, which has implications for large core trials.
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- 2023
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3. Abstract 49: Association Of Intravenous Thrombolysis And Pre-interventional Reperfusion: A Post-hoc Analysis Of The Swift Direct Trial
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Adnan Mujanovic, Omer EKER, Gaultier Marnat, Daniel Strbian, Petra Ijas, Cécile Preterre, Aude Triquenot, Jean-Francois Albucher, Maxime Gauberti, David Weisenburger-Lile, Marielle Sophie, Omid NIkoubashman, Anastasios Mpotsaris, Benjamin Gory, Vi Tuan Hua, Marc Ribo, David S Liebeskind, Tomas Dobrocky, Thomas Meinel, Lukas Bütikofer, Jan Gralla, Urs Fischer, and Johannes Kaesmacher
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Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
Background: One potential benefit of intravenous thrombolysis (IVT) before mechanical thrombectomy (MT) is pre-interventional reperfusion. Currently, there is a paucity of data regarding the occurrence of pre-interventional reperfusion in patients randomized to IVT or no-IVT before MT. Methods: SWIFT DIRECT was a randomized controlled trial including acute ischemic stroke IVT-eligible patients being directly admitted to a comprehensive stroke center, with allocation to either MT alone or IVT + MT. Primary endpoint of this analysis was the occurrence of pre-interventional reperfusion defined as pre-interventional expanded Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction score ≥2a. The effect of IVT and potential treatment effect heterogeneity were analyzed using logistic regression analyses. Results: Out of the 396 patients analyzed, pre-interventional reperfusion occurred in 20 (10.0%) of patients randomized to IVT+MT, and 7 (3.6%) of patients randomized to MT alone. Receiving IVT favored the occurrence of pre-interventional reperfusion (aOR 2.91 [95% CI 1.23 - 6.87]). There was no IVT treatment effect heterogeneity on the occurrence of pre-interventional reperfusion with different strata of Randomization-to-Groin-Puncture (p for interaction=0.33), although the effect tended to be stronger in patients with Randomization-to-Groin-Puncture >28 minutes (aOR 4.65 [95% CI 1.16 - 18.68]). There were no significant difference in rates of functional outcomes between patients with and without pre-interventional reperfusion. Conclusion: Even for patients with proximal large vessel occlusions and direct access to MT, IVT leads towards an absolute increase of 6.9% (95% CI 1.7-12.2%) in the rates of pre-interventional reperfusion. The effect of IVT tended to be more pronounced when Randomization-to-Groin-Puncture intervals were longer, but this heterogeneity did not reach statistical significance.
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- 2023
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4. Abstract 6: Relationship Between Hypoperfusion Intensity Ratio And Ischemic Core Growth Rate Is Similar On CT And MRI For Unselected Acute LVO Patients
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Pierre Seners, Maarten G Lansberg, Jeremy J Heit, Jose Bernardo Escribano Paredes, Emmanuel Carrera, Michael Mlynash, Nicole Yuen, Sarah Snyder, Soren Christensen, Jean-Francois Albucher, Christophe Cognard, Igor Sibon, Michael Obadia, Julien Savatovsky, Jean-Marc Olivot, and Gregory W Albers
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Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
Background: Predicting infarct growth rate (IGR) in acute stroke with large vessel occlusion (LVO) is important for treatment decision-making. IGR has typically been studied in patients treated with thrombectomy, which likely has underestimated the prevalence of ‘fast progressors’, as large core patients are less frequently treated. We aimed to study IGR in an unselected LVO population and study the association between Hypoperfusion Intensity Ratio (HIR, a surrogate marker of collaterals) and IGR as assessed by both CT and MRI. Methods: Retrospective study including ICA/M1 stroke patients with witnessed stroke onset and baseline perfusion imaging (MRI or CT) performed within 24hrs from symptoms onset. To avoid selection bias, patients were selected from (1) the registries of 3 centers with systematic use of MRI- or CT-perfusion and including both MT-treated and untreated patients, and (2) one trial where thrombectomy decisions were performed blinded from perfusion MRI results. IGR was defined as core volume/onset-to-imaging time, and fast progressors as IGR≥10mL/hr. HIR was defined as the proportion of Tmax>6s volume with Tmax>10s. Results: Overall, 423 and 215 patients were included in the MRI and CT cohorts. Median IGR was 6.4mL/hr (IQR 2.2-21.3) and 5.2mL/hr (0-25.2) in the MRI and CT cohorts, and median HIR was 0.44 (0.27-0.59) and 0.45 (0.25-0.60). 174 (41%) MRI patients and 86 (40%) CT patients were fast progressors. IGR was increasing with increase of HIR quartiles in both cohorts ( P P P Conclusion: In this unselected LVO population, 40% of patients were fast progressors regardless of imaging modality. HIR was a strong predictor of IGR in both CT and MRI-assessed patients, and may help for patient triage, e.g . for transfer decision from an outside hospital for thrombectomy.
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- 2023
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5. The Boston criteria version 2.0 for cerebral amyloid angiopathy: a multicentre, retrospective, MRI-neuropathology diagnostic accuracy study
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Andreas Charidimou, Gregoire Boulouis, Matthew P Frosch, Jean-Claude Baron, Marco Pasi, Jean Francois Albucher, Gargi Banerjee, Carmen Barbato, Fabrice Bonneville, Sebastian Brandner, Lionel Calviere, François Caparros, Barbara Casolla, Charlotte Cordonnier, Marie-Bernadette Delisle, Vincent Deramecourt, Martin Dichgans, Elif Gokcal, Jochen Herms, Mar Hernandez-Guillamon, Hans Rolf Jäger, Zane Jaunmuktane, Jennifer Linn, Sergi Martinez-Ramirez, Elena Martínez-Sáez, Christian Mawrin, Joan Montaner, Solene Moulin, Jean-Marc Olivot, Fabrizio Piazza, Laurent Puy, Nicolas Raposo, Mark A Rodrigues, Sigrun Roeber, Jose Rafael Romero, Neshika Samarasekera, Julie A Schneider, Stefanie Schreiber, Frank Schreiber, Corentin Schwall, Colin Smith, Levente Szalardy, Pascale Varlet, Alain Viguier, Joanna M Wardlaw, Andrew Warren, Frank A Wollenweber, Marialuisa Zedde, Mark A van Buchem, M Edip Gurol, Anand Viswanathan, Rustam Al-Shahi Salman, Eric E Smith, David J Werring, Steven M Greenberg, Charidimou, A, Boulouis, G, Frosch, M, Baron, J, Pasi, M, Albucher, J, Banerjee, G, Barbato, C, Bonneville, F, Brandner, S, Calviere, L, Caparros, F, Casolla, B, Cordonnier, C, Delisle, M, Deramecourt, V, Dichgans, M, Gokcal, E, Herms, J, Hernandez-Guillamon, M, Jäger, H, Jaunmuktane, Z, Linn, J, Martinez-Ramirez, S, Martínez-Sáez, E, Mawrin, C, Montaner, J, Moulin, S, Olivot, J, Piazza, F, Puy, L, Raposo, N, Rodrigues, M, Roeber, S, Romero, J, Samarasekera, N, Schneider, J, Schreiber, S, Schreiber, F, Schwall, C, Smith, C, Szalardy, L, Varlet, P, Viguier, A, Wardlaw, J, Warren, A, Wollenweber, F, Zedde, M, van Buchem, M, Gurol, M, Viswanathan, A, Al-Shahi Salman, R, Smith, E, Werring, D, and Greenberg, S
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diagnoisi ,Amyloid beta-Peptides ,pathology [Cerebral Hemorrhage] ,Middle Aged ,MED/46 - SCIENZE TECNICHE DI MEDICINA DI LABORATORIO ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,diagnostic imaging [Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy] ,Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy ,methods [Magnetic Resonance Imaging] ,biomarker ,Humans ,Neurology (clinical) ,ddc:610 ,Neuropathology ,MRI ,Aged ,Cerebral Hemorrhage ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) is an age-related small vessel disease, characterised pathologically by progressive deposition of amyloid β in the cerebrovascular wall. The Boston criteria are used worldwide for the in-vivo diagnosis of CAA but have not been updated since 2010, before the emergence of additional MRI markers. We report an international collaborative study aiming to update and externally validate the Boston diagnostic criteria across the full spectrum of clinical CAA presentations.METHODS: In this multicentre, hospital-based, retrospective, MRI and neuropathology diagnostic accuracy study, we did a retrospective analysis of clinical, radiological, and histopathological data available to sites participating in the International CAA Association to formulate updated Boston criteria and establish their diagnostic accuracy across different populations and clinical presentations. Ten North American and European academic medical centres identified patients aged 50 years and older with potential CAA-related clinical presentations (ie, spontaneous intracerebral haemorrhage, cognitive impairment, or transient focal neurological episodes), available brain MRI, and histopathological assessment for CAA diagnosis. MRI scans were centrally rated at Massachusetts General Hospital (Boston, MA, USA) for haemorrhagic and non-haemorrhagic CAA markers, and brain tissue samples were rated by neuropathologists at the contributing sites. We derived the Boston criteria version 2.0 (v2.0) by selecting MRI features to optimise diagnostic specificity and sensitivity in a prespecified derivation cohort (Boston cases 1994-2012, n=159), then externally validated the criteria in a prespecified temporal validation cohort (Boston cases 2012-18, n=59) and a geographical validation cohort (non-Boston cases 2004-18; n=123), comparing accuracy of the new criteria to the currently used modified Boston criteria with histopathological assessment of CAA as the diagnostic standard. We also assessed performance of the v2.0 criteria in patients across all cohorts who had the diagnostic gold standard of brain autopsy.FINDINGS: The study protocol was finalised on Jan 15, 2017, patient identification was completed on Dec 31, 2018, and imaging analyses were completed on Sept 30, 2019. Of 401 potentially eligible patients presenting to Massachusetts General Hospital, 218 were eligible to be included in the analysis; of 160 patient datasets from other centres, 123 were included. Using the derivation cohort, we derived provisional criteria for probable CAA requiring the presence of at least two strictly lobar haemorrhagic lesions (ie, intracerebral haemorrhages, cerebral microbleeds, or foci of cortical superficial siderosis) or at least one strictly lobar haemorrhagic lesion and at least one white matter characteristic (ie, severe visible perivascular spaces in centrum semiovale or white matter hyperintensities in a multispot pattern). The sensitivity and specificity of these criteria were 74·8% (95% CI 65·4-82·7) and 84·6% (71·9-93·1) in the derivation cohort, 92·5% (79·6-98·4) and 89·5% (66·9-98·7) in the temporal validation cohort, 80·2% (70·8-87·6) and 81·5% (61·9-93·7) in the geographical validation cohort, and 74·5% (65·4-82·4) and 95·0% (83·1-99·4) in all patients who had autopsy as the diagnostic standard. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) was 0·797 (0·732-0·861) in the derivation cohort, 0·910 (0·828-0·992) in the temporal validation cohort, 0·808 (0·724-0·893) in the geographical validation cohort, and 0·848 (0·794-0·901) in patients who had autopsy as the diagnostic standard. The v2.0 Boston criteria for probable CAA had superior accuracy to the current Boston criteria (sensitivity 64·5% [54·9-73·4]; specificity 95·0% [83·1-99·4]; AUC 0·798 [0·741-0854]; p=0·0005 for comparison of AUC) across all individuals who had autopsy as the diagnostic standard.INTERPRETATION: The Boston criteria v2.0 incorporate emerging MRI markers of CAA to enhance sensitivity without compromising their specificity in our cohorts of patients aged 50 years and older presenting with spontaneous intracerebral haemorrhage, cognitive impairment, or transient focal neurological episodes. Future studies will be needed to determine generalisability of the v.2.0 criteria across the full range of patients and clinical presentations.FUNDING: US National Institutes of Health (R01 AG26484).
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- 2021
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6. Abstract Number ‐ 240: Association of intravenous thrombolysis and pre‐interventional reperfusion: a post‐hoc analysis of the SWIFT DIRECT trial
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Adnan Mujanovic, Omer Eker, Gaultier Marnat, Daniel Strbian, Petra Ijäs, Cécile Preterre, Aude Triquenot, Jean François Albucher, Maxime Gauberti, David Weisenburger‐Lile, Marielle Ernst, Omid Nikoubashman, Anastasios Mpotsaris, Benjamin Gory, Vi Tuan Hua, Marc Ribo, David Liebeskind, Tomas Dobrocky, Thomas Meinel, Lukas Bütikofer, Jan Gralla, Urs Fischer, and Johannes Kaesmacher
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Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Introduction One potential benefit of intravenous thrombolysis (IVT) before mechanical thrombectomy (MT) is pre‐interventional reperfusion. Currently, there is a paucity of data regarding the occurrence of pre‐interventional reperfusion in patients randomized to IVT or no‐IVT before MT. Methods SWIFT DIRECT was a randomized controlled trial including acute ischemic stroke IVT‐eligible patients being directly admitted to a comprehensive stroke center, with allocation to either MT alone or IVT + MT. Primary endpoint of this analysis was the occurrence of pre‐interventional reperfusion defined as pre‐interventional expanded Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction score ≥ 2a. The effect of IVT and potential treatment effect heterogeneity were analyzed using logistic regression analyses. Results Out of the 396 patients analyzed, pre‐interventional reperfusion occurred in 20 (10.0%) of patients randomized to IVT+MT, and 7 (3.6%) of patients randomized to MT alone. Receiving IVT favored the occurrence of pre‐interventional reperfusion (aOR 2.91 [95% CI 1.23 – 6.87]). There was no IVT treatment effect heterogeneity on the occurrence of pre‐interventional reperfusion with different strata of Randomization‐to‐Groin‐Puncture (p for interaction = 0.33), although the effect tended to be stronger in patients with Randomization‐to‐Groin‐Puncture >28 minutes (aOR 4.65 [95% CI 1.16 – 18.68]). There were no significant difference in rates of functional outcomes between patients with and without pre‐interventional reperfusion. Conclusions Even for patients with proximal large vessel occlusions and direct access to MT, IVT leads towards an absolute increase of 6.9% (95% CI 1.7‐12.2%) in the rates of pre‐interventional reperfusion. The effect of IVT tended to be more pronounced when Randomization‐to‐Groin‐Puncture intervals were longer, but this heterogeneity did not reach statistical significance.
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- 2023
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7. Rebleeding After Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage in Two Centers Using Different Blood Pressure Management Strategies
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Lionel Calviere, Celine S. Gathier, Marie Rafiq, Inez Koopman, Vanessa Rousseau, Nicolas Raposo, Jean François Albucher, Alain Viguier, Thomas Geeraerts, Christophe Cognard, Gabriel J. E. Rinkel, Mervyn D. I. Vergouwen, and Jean-Marc Olivot
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rebleeding ,intracranial aneurysm ,subarachnoid hemorrhage ,blood pressure ,delayed cerebral ischemia ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
BackgroundHigh systolic blood pressure (SBP) after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH) has been associated with an increased risk of rebleeding. It remains unclear if an SBP lowering strategy before aneurysm treatment decreases this risk without increasing the risk of a delayed cerebral ischemia (DCI). Therefore, we compared the rates of in-hospital rebleeding and DCI among patients with aSAH admitted in two tertiary care centers with different SBP management strategies.MethodsRetrospective cohort study. Consecutive patients from Utrecht and Toulouse admitted within 24 h after the aSAH onset were enrolled. In Toulouse, the target SBP before aneurysm treatment was ≤140 mm Hg, while, in Utrecht, an increased SBP was only treated in extreme situations. We compared SBP levels, the incidence of rebleeding within 24 h after admission, and DCI during hospitalization.ResultsWe enrolled 373 patients in Utrecht and 149 in Toulouse. The mean SBP on admission was similar but lower in Toulouse 4 h after admission (127.3 ± 17.4 vs. 138. ± 25.7 mmHg; p < 0.0001). After a median delay of 3.7 h (IQR, 2.3–7.4) from admission, 4 patients (3%) in Toulouse vs. 29 (8%) in Utrecht experienced a rebleeding. After adjustment for Prognosis on Admission of Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage (PAASH) score, aneurysm size, age, and delay from ictus to admission, the HR was 0.66 (95% CI: 0.23–1.92). Incidence of DCI was 18% in Toulouse and 25% in Utrecht (adjusted OR, 0.68; 95% CI: 0.41–1.11).ConclusionOur results suggest that an intensive SBP lowering strategy between admission and aneurysm treatment does not decrease the risk of rebleeding and does not increase the risk of DCI compared to a more conservative strategy.
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- 2022
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8. Underlying Small Vessel Disease Associated With Mixed Cerebral Microbleeds
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Clemence Blanc, Alain Viguier, Lionel Calviere, Mélanie Planton, Jean François Albucher, Vanessa Rousseau, Agnès Sommet, Fabrice Bonneville, Jérémie Pariente, Jean Marc Olivot, and Nicolas Raposo
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intracerebral hemorrhage ,cerebral amyloid angiopathy ,cerebral microbleeds ,cortical superficial siderosis ,cerebral small vessel disease ,neuroimaging ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Background and Purpose: Whether patients with both lobar and deep cerebral microbleeds (mixed CMB) have advanced cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA), hypertensive angiopathy (HA) or both is uncertain. To get insight into the underlying small vessel disease (SVD) associated with mixed CMB, we explored its association with cortical superficial siderosis (cSS), a key marker of CAA and other MRI markers of SVD in patients with intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH).Methods: Of 425 consecutive patients with acute ICH who had received brain MRIs, 260 had ≥1 CMB and were included in the analysis. They were categorized as strictly lobar CMB (suggesting CAA), strictly deep CMB (suggesting HA) or mixed CMB. Clinical and imaging characteristics were compared (1) between the three CMB groups and (2) within mixed CMB patients according to the symptomatic ICH location.Results: Overall, 111 (26%) patients had mixed CMB. Compared to strictly lobar CMB (n = 111) and strictly deep CMB (n = 38), patients with mixed CMB had a more severe burden of lacune, white matter hyperintensities and CMB. cSS was observed in 24.3% of patients with mixed CMB compared to 44.1% in strictly lobar CMB and 10.5% in strictly deep CMB (p < 0.0001). Among patients with mixed CMB, 44 (39.6%) had a lobar symptomatic ICH and 67 (60.4%) had a non-lobar ICH. Patients with non-lobar ICH were more likely to have hypertension, whereas those with lobar ICH were more likely to have cSS and chronic lobar ICH and had higher ratio lobar CMB count/total CMB count.Conclusions: Mixed CMB is frequently encountered in patients with ICH and appears as a heterogeneous group, suggesting that both CAA and HA may be contributing to mixed CMB. Neuroimaging markers including ICH location, cSS, and CMB distribution may indicate the predominant underlying vasculopathy, with potential prognostic implications.
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- 2019
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9. ED Referral Dramatically Reduces Delays of Initial Evaluation in a French TIA Clinic
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Nicolas Raposo, Jean François Albucher, Vanessa Rousseau, Blandine Acket, François Chollet, and Jean Marc Olivot
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transient ischemic attack ,TIA clinic ,triage ,referral ,office-based physician ,emergency department ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Background: The risk of recurrent brain infarction (BI) is high within the first hours after a transient ischemic attack (TIA). Emergent, specialized, and tailored patient management in a TIA program reduces the risk of recurrent BI after TIA by 80%. New antithrombotic strategies have been successfully tested within 12 h after TIA onset. We aim to investigate the factors associated with a delay of more than 12 h from TIA onset to evaluation in our TIA clinic.Methods: In consecutive patients evaluated in our TIA clinic from 01/2012 to 11/2013, we prospectively collected delays from onset to arrival, baseline characteristics, discharge diagnosis and recurrent BI at 1 week. Referring pathways were dichotomized between office-based physicians (OBP) and emergency departments (ED). Univariate and multivariate logistic regression were performed.Results: 354 patients were evaluated. Mean (+/– SD) age was 61 years (+/−18). Median (IQR) ABCD2 score was 3 (2–4). Median (IQR) delay from onset to evaluation was 8 h (4–48). Overall, 185 (52%) were referred by OBP vs. 169 (48%) by ED. Evaluation was initiated within 12 h among 201 (57%) patients. After logistic regression, OBP referral was by comparison with ED the only independent factor associated with an evaluation delay >12 h (OR 5.7, 95% CI: 3.5–9.3, p < 0.0001).Conclusion: Our results suggest that preliminary assessment by OBP may increase the delay to initiate the emergent evaluation of TIA patients. Promoting direct admission to TIA clinics through ED may be an efficient alternative for high risk TIAs.
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- 2018
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10. Cerebral Hemodynamic Changes Induced by a Lumbar Puncture in Good-Grade Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
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Eric A. Schmidt, Stein Silva, Jean François Albucher, Aymeric Luzi, Isabelle Loubinoux, Anne Christine Januel, Christophe Cognard, Pierre Payoux, and François Chollet
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Subarachnoid hemorrhage ,Cerebral blood flow ,Lumbar puncture ,Intracranial pressure ,PET scanner ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Background: Patients with good-grade subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) are those without initial neurological deficit. However, they can die or present severe deficit due to secondary insult leading to brain ischemia. After SAH, in a known context of energy crisis, vasospasm, hydrocephalus and intracranial hypertension contribute to unfavorable outcome. Lumbar puncture (LP) is sometimes performed in an attempt to reduce intracranial pressure (ICP) and release headaches. We hypothesize that in good-grade SAH patients, a 20-ml LP releases headaches, reduces ICP and improves cerebral blood flow (CBF) as measured with O15 PET scan. Methods: Six good-grade (WFNS grade 1or 2) SAH patients (mean age 48 years, 2 women, 4 men) were prospectively included. All aneurysms (4 anterior communicating artery and 2 right middle cerebral artery) were coiled at day 1. Patients were managed according to our local protocol. LP was performed for severe headache (VAS >7) despite maximal painkiller treatment. Patients were included when the LP was clinically needed. The 20-ml LP was done in the PET scan (mean delay between SAH and LP: 3.5 days). LP allows hydrostatic measurement of ICP. Arterial blood pressure (ABP) was noninvasively gauged with photoplethysmography. Every signal was monitored and analyzed off-line. Regional CBF (rCBF) was measured semiquantitatively with O15 PET before and after LP. Then we calculated the difference between baseline and post-LP condition for each area: positive value means augmentation of rCBF after the LP, negative value means reduction of rCBF. Individual descriptive analysis of CBF was first performed for each patient; then a statistical group analysis was done with SPM for all voxels using t statistics converted to Z scores (p 3.2). Results: A 20-ml LP yielded a reduction in pain (–4), a drop in ICP (24.3 ± 12.5 to 6.9 ± 4.7 mm Hg), but no change in ABP. Descriptive and statistical image analysis showed a heterogeneous and biphasic change in cerebral hemodynamics: rCBF was not kept constant and either augmented or decreased after the drop in ICP. Hence, cerebrovascular reactivity was spatially heterogeneous within the brain. rCBF seems to augment in the brain region roughly close to the bleed and to be reduced in the rest of the brain, with a rough plane of symmetry. Conclusions: In good-grade SAH, LP releases headaches and lowers ICP. LP and the drop in ICP have a heterogeneous and biphasic effect on rCBF, suggesting that cerebrovascular reactivity is not spatially homogeneous within the brain.
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- 2012
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