142 results on '"Majoie, C. B. L. M."'
Search Results
2. Tranexamic acid to prevent operation in chronic subdural haematoma (TORCH): study protocol for a randomised placebo-controlled clinical trial
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Immenga, S., Lodewijkx, R., Roos, Y. B. W. E. M., Middeldorp, S., Majoie, C. B. L. M., Willems, H. C., Vandertop, W. P., and Verbaan, D.
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- 2022
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3. Impact of the COVID-19 outbreak on acute stroke care
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Rinkel, L. A., Prick, J. C. M., Slot, R. E. R., Sombroek, N. M. A., Burggraaff, J., Groot, A. E., Emmer, B. J., Roos, Y. B. W. E. M., Brouwer, M. C., van den Berg-Vos, R. M., Majoie, C. B. L. M., Beenen, L. F. M., van de Beek, D., Visser, M. C., van Schaik, S. M., and Coutinho, J. M.
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- 2021
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4. Presentation outside office hours does not negatively influence treatment times for reperfusion therapy for acute ischemic stroke
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Groot, A. E., de Bruin, H., Nguyen, T. T. M., Kappelhof, M., de Beer, F., Visser, M. C., Zwetsloot, C. P., Halkes, P. H. A., de Kruijk, J., van der Meulen, W. D. M., van der Ree, T. C., Kwa, V. I. H., van Schaik, S. M., Hani, L., van den Berg, R., Sprengers, M. E. S., Roosendaal, S. D., Emmer, B. J., Nederkoorn, P. J., Majoie, C. B. L. M., Roos, Y. B. W. E. M., and Coutinho, J. M.
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- 2021
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5. The Effect of Non-contrast CT Slice Thickness on Thrombus Density and Perviousness Assessment
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Tolhuisen, M. L., Enthoven, J., Santos, E. M. M., Niessen, W. J., Beenen, L. F. M., Dippel, D. W. J., van der Lugt, A., van Zwam, W. H., Roos, Y. B. W. E. M., van Oostenbrugge, R. J., Majoie, C. B. L. M., Marquering, H. A., Hutchison, David, Series editor, Kanade, Takeo, Series editor, Kittler, Josef, Series editor, Kleinberg, Jon M., Series editor, Mattern, Friedemann, Series editor, Mitchell, John C., Series editor, Naor, Moni, Series editor, Pandu Rangan, C., Series editor, Steffen, Bernhard, Series editor, Terzopoulos, Demetri, Series editor, Tygar, Doug, Series editor, Weikum, Gerhard, Series editor, Cardoso, M. Jorge, editor, Arbel, Tal, editor, Gao, Fei, editor, Kainz, Bernhard, editor, van Walsum, Theo, editor, Shi, Kuangyu, editor, Bhatia, Kanwal K., editor, Peter, Roman, editor, Vercauteren, Tom, editor, Reyes, Mauricio, editor, Dalca, Adrian, editor, Wiest, Roland, editor, Niessen, Wiro, editor, and Emmer, Bart J., editor
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- 2017
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6. Robust Vaccine-Induced as Well as Hybrid B- and T-Cell Immunity across SARS-CoV-2 Vaccine Platforms in People with HIV
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Verburgh, Myrthe L., primary, van Pul, Lisa, additional, Grobben, Marloes, additional, Boyd, Anders, additional, Wit, Ferdinand W. N. M., additional, van Nuenen, Ad C., additional, van Dort, Karel A., additional, Tejjani, Khadija, additional, van Rijswijk, Jacqueline, additional, Bakker, Margreet, additional, van der Hoek, Lia, additional, Schim van der Loeff, Maarten F., additional, van der Valk, Marc, additional, van Gils, Marit J., additional, Kootstra, Neeltje A., additional, Reiss, Peter, additional, Reiss, P., additional, Wit, F. W. N. M., additional, van der Valk, M., additional, Boyd, A., additional, Verburgh, M. L., additional, van der Wulp, I. A. J., additional, Vanbellinghen, M. C., additional, van Eeden, C. J., additional, Schim van der Loeff, M. F., additional, Koole, J. C. D., additional, del Grande, L., additional, Agard, I., additional, Zaheri, S., additional, Hillebregt, M. M. J., additional, Ruijs, Y. M. C., additional, Benschop, D. P., additional, el Berkaoui, A., additional, Kootstra, N. A., additional, Harskamp-Holwerda, A. M., additional, Maurer, I., additional, Mangas Ruiz, M. M., additional, Boeser-Nunnink, B. D. N., additional, Starozhitskaya, O. S., additional, van der Hoek, L., additional, Bakker, M., additional, van Gils, M. J., additional, Dol, L., additional, Rongen, G., additional, Geerlings, S. E., additional, Goorhuis, A., additional, Hovius, J. W. R., additional, Nellen, F. J. B., additional, Prins, J. M., additional, van der Poll, T., additional, Wiersinga, W. J., additional, van Vugt, M., additional, de Bree, G., additional, Lemkes, B. A., additional, Spoorenberg, V., additional, van Eden, J., additional, Pijnappel, F. J. J., additional, Weijsenfeld, A., additional, Smalhout, S., additional, Hylkema-van den Bout, I. J., additional, Bruins, C., additional, Spelbrink, M. E., additional, Postema, P. G., additional, Bisschop, P. H. L. T., additional, Dekker, E., additional, van der Velde, N., additional, Franssen, R., additional, Willemsen, J. M. R., additional, Vogt, L., additional, Portegies, P., additional, Geurtsen, G. J., additional, Visser, I., additional, Schadé, A., additional, Nieuwkerk, P. T., additional, van Steenwijk, R. P., additional, Jonkers, R. E., additional, Majoie, C. B. L. M., additional, Caan, M. W. A., additional, van den Born, B. J. H., additional, Stroes, E. S. G., additional, and van Oorspronk, S., additional
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- 2023
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7. High Cellular Monocyte Activation in People Living With Human Immunodeficiency Virus on Combination Antiretroviral Therapy and Lifestyle-Matched Controls Is Associated With Greater Inflammation in Cerebrospinal Fluid
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Booiman, Thijs, Wit, Ferdinand W., Maurer, Irma, De Francesco, Davide, Sabin, Caroline A., Harskamp, Agnes M., Prins, Maria, Garagnani, Paolo, Pirazzini, Chiara, Franceschi, Claudio, Fuchs, Dietmar, Gisslén, Magnus, Winston, Alan, Reiss, Peter, Kootstra, Neeltje A., Reiss, P., Wit, F. W. N. M., Schouten, J., Kooij, K. W., van Zoest, R. A., Elsenga, B. C., Janssen, F. R., Heidenrijk, M., Zikkenheiner, W., van der Valk, M., Kootstra, N. A., Booiman, T., Harskamp-Holwerda, A. M., Boeser-Nunnink, B., Maurer, I., Mangas Ruiz, M. M., Girigorie, A. F., Villaudy, J., Frankin, E., Pasternak, A., Berkhout, B., van der Kuyl, T., Portegies, P., Schmand, B. A., Geurtsen, G. J., ter Stege, J. A., Klein Twennaar, M., Majoie, C. B. L. M., Caan, M. W. A., Su, T., Weijer, K., Bisschop, P. H. L. T., Kalsbeek, A., Wezel, M., Visser, I., Ruhé, H. G., Franceschi, C., Garagnani, P., Pirazzini, C., Capri, M., Dall’Olio, F., Chiricolo, M., Salvioli, S., Hoeijmakers, J., Pothof, J., Prins, M., Martens, M., Moll, S., Berkel, J., Totté, M., Kovalev, S., Gisslén, M., Fuchs, D., Zetterberg, H., Winston, A., Underwood, J., McDonald, L., Stott, M., Legg, K., Lovell, A., Erlwein, O., Doyle, N., Kingsley, C., Sharp, D. J., Leech, R., Cole, J. H., Zaheri, S., Hillebregt, M. M. J., Ruijs, Y. M. C., Benschop, D. P., Burger, D., de Graaff-Teulen, M., Guaraldi, G., Bürkle, A., Sindlinger, T., Moreno-Villanueva, M., Keller, A., Sabin, C., de Francesco, D., Libert, C., and Dewaele, S.
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- 2017
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8. The prognostic value of extracranial vascular characteristics on procedural duration and revascularization success in endovascularly treated acute ischemic stroke patients
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Holswilder, G., Stuart, M. P. M. E., Dompeling, T., Kruyt, N. D., Goeman, J. J., van der Lugt, A., Schonewille, W. J., Lycklama à Nijeholt, G. J., Majoie, C. B. L. M., Yo, L. S. F., Meijer, F. J. A., Marquering, H. A., Wermer, M. J. H., van Walderveen, M. A. A., Holswilder, G., Stuart, M. P. M. E., Dompeling, T., Kruyt, N. D., Goeman, J. J., van der Lugt, A., Schonewille, W. J., Lycklama à Nijeholt, G. J., Majoie, C. B. L. M., Yo, L. S. F., Meijer, F. J. A., Marquering, H. A., Wermer, M. J. H., and van Walderveen, M. A. A.
- Abstract
Introduction: Vascular anatomy might affect endovascular treatment success in acute ischemic stroke patients with large vessel occlusion. We investigated the prognostic value of extracranial vascular characteristics on procedural time and revascularization success in patients with large vessel occlusion in the anterior cerebral circulation. Patients and methods: We included 828 patients endovascularly treated within 6.5 hours of symptom onset from the Dutch MR CLEAN-Registry. We evaluated aortic arch configuration, stenosis and tortuosity of supra-aortic arteries, and internal carotid arteries (ICAs) on pre-intervention CTA. We constructed logistic prediction models for outcome variables procedural duration (≥60 minutes) and non-successful revascularization (extended thrombolysis in cerebral infarction (eTICI) of 0–2A) using baseline characteristics and assessed the effect of extracranial vascular characteristics on model performance. Results: Cervical ICA tortuosity and stenosis ≥99% improved prediction of long procedural duration compared with baseline characteristics from area under the curve of 0.61 (95% CI: 0.57–0.65) to 0.66 (95% CI: 0.62–0.70) (P < 0.001). Cervical ICA tortuosity was significantly associated with non-successful recanalization. Prediction of non-successful revascularization did not improve after including aortic arch elongation, acute take-off angle, aortic variant, origin stenosis of supra-aortic arteries, and cervical ICA tortuosity, with an area under the curve of 0.63 (95% CI: 0.59–0.67) compared with 0.59 (95% CI: 0.55–0.63) (P = 0.11). Conclusion: Extracranial vascular characteristics have additional prognostic value for procedural duration, but not for revascularization success, compared with baseline characteristics. Performance of both prediction models is limited in patients treated for large vessel occlusion.
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- 2022
9. Age determination of subdural hematomas: survey among radiologists
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Postema, F. A. M., Sieswerda-Hoogendoorn, Tessa, Majoie, C. B. L. M., and van Rijn, R. R.
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- 2014
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10. Infarct Evolution in Patients with Anterior Circulation Large-Vessel Occlusion Randomized to IV Alteplase and Endovascular Treatment versus Endovascular Treatment Alone.
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Hoving, J. W., van Voorst, H., Kappelhof, M., Tolhuisen, M., Treurniet, K. M., LeCouffe, N. E., Rinkel, L. A., Koopman, M. S., Cavalcante, F., Konduri, P. R., van den Wijngaard, I. R., Ghariq, E., Meijer, F. J. Anton, Coutinho, J. M., Marquering, H. A., Roos, Y. B. W. E. M., Emmer, B. J., and Majoie, C. B. L. M.
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- 2023
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11. Do people living with HIV experience greater age advancement than their HIV-negative counterparts?
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De Francesco, Davide, Wit, Ferdinand W., Burkle, Alexander, Oehlke, Sebastian, Kootstra, Neeltje A., Winston, Alan, Franceschi, Claudio, Garagnani, Paolo, Pirazzini, Chiara, Libert, Claude, Grune, Tilman, Weber, Daniela, Jansen, Eugene H. J. M., Sabin, Caroline A., Reiss, Peter, Reiss, P., Winston, A., Wit, F. W., Prins, M., van der Loeff, M. F. Schim, Schouten, J., Schmand, B., Geurtsen, G. J., Sharp, D. J., Caan, M. W. A., Majoie, C., Villaudy, J., Berkhout, B., Kootstra, N. A., Gisslen, M., Pasternak, A., Sabin, C. A., Guaraldi, G., Burkle, A., Libert, C., Franceschi, C., Kalsbeek, A., Fliers, E., Hoeijmakers, J., Pothof, J., van der Valk, M., Bisschop, P. H., Portegies, P., Zaheri, S., Burger, D., Cole, J. H., Biirkle, A., Zikkenheiner, W., Janssen, F. R., Underwood, J., Kooij, K. W., van Zoest, R. A., Doyle, N., van der Loeff, M. Schim, Schmand, B. A., Verheij, E., Verboeket, S. O., Elsenga, B. C., Hillebregt, M. M. J., Ruijs, Y. M. C., Benschop, D. P., Tembo, L., McDonald, L., Stott, M., Legg, K., Lovell, A., Erlwein, O., Kingsley, C., Norsworthy, P., Mullaney, S., Kruijer, T., del Grande, L., Olthof, V, Visser, G. R., May, L., Verbraak, F., Demirkaya, N., Visser, I, Majoie, C. B. L. M., Su, T., Leech, R., Huguet, J., Frankin, E., van der Kuyl, A., Weijer, K., Siteur-Van Rijnstra, E., Harskamp-Holwerda, A. M., Maurer, I, Ruiz, M. M. Mangas, Girigorie, A. F., Boeser-Nunnink, B., Kals-Beek, A., Bisschop, P. H. L. T., de Graaff-Teulen, M., Dewaele, S., Garagnani, P., Pirazzini, C., Capri, M., Dall'Olio, F., Chiricolo, M., Salvioli, S., Fuchs, D., Zetterberg, H., Weber, D., Grune, T., Jansen, E. H. J. M., De Francesco, D., Sindlinger, T., Oehlke, S., Global Health, AII - Infectious diseases, APH - Aging & Later Life, Experimental Immunology, ANS - Neurodegeneration, AMS - Restoration & Development, Medical Psychology, and APH - Mental Health
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,CYTOMEGALOVIRUS ,HIV Infections ,DISEASE ,0302 clinical medicine ,Biomarkers of aging ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Immunology and Allergy ,030212 general & internal medicine ,the Co-morBidity in Relation to AIDS (COBRA) Collaboration ,POPULATION ,Immunodeficiency ,education.field_of_study ,premature aging ,virus diseases ,11 Medical And Health Sciences ,Middle Aged ,Hepatitis B ,SOUTH-AFRICA ,Infectious Diseases ,Anti-Retroviral Agents ,Cohort ,Female ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,medicine.drug ,Adult ,Premature aging ,medicine.medical_specialty ,BIOMARKERS ,Immunology ,Population ,biomarkers of aging ,17 Psychology And Cognitive Sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Virology ,ddc:570 ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,accelerated aging ,education ,Aged ,accelerated aging, aging, biological age, biomarkers of aging, HIV, premature aging ,Science & Technology ,business.industry ,aging ,Biology and Life Sciences ,HIV ,06 Biological Sciences ,medicine.disease ,COMORBIDITIES ,biological age ,INFECTED INDIVIDUALS ,IMMUNOGLOBULIN-G ANTIBODY ,PROTEASE INHIBITORS ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,030104 developmental biology ,RISK-FACTORS ,business ,Saquinavir - Abstract
Objectives: Despite successful antiretroviral (ARV) therapy, people living with HIV (PLWH) may show signs of premature/accentuated aging. We compared established biomarkers of aging in PLWH, appropriately-chosen HIV-negative individuals, and blood donors, and explored factors associated with biological age advancement.Design: Cross-sectional analysis of 134 PLWH on suppressive ARV therapy, 79 lifestyle-comparable HIV-negative controls aged ≥45 years from the Co-morBidity in Relation to AIDS (COBRA) cohort, and 35 age-matched blood donors (BD).Methods: Biological age was estimated using a validated algorithm based on ten biomarkers. Associations between ‘age advancement’ (biological minus chronological age) and HIV status/parameters, lifestyle, cytomegalovirus (CMV), hepatitis B (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections were investigated using linear regression.Results: The average (95% CI) age advancement was greater in both HIV-positive [13.2 (11.6, 14.9) years] and HIV-negative [5.5 (3.8, 7.2) years] COBRA participants compared to BD [-7.0 (-4.1, -9.9) years, both p's < 0.001)], but also in HIV-positive compared to HIV-negative participants (p < 0.001). Chronic HBV, higher anti-CMV IgG titer and CD8+ T-cell count were each associated with increased age advancement, independently of HIV-status/group. Among HIV-positive participants, age advancement was increased by 3.5 (0.1, 6.8) years among those with nadir CD4+ < 200 cells/μL and by 0.1 (0.06, 0.2) years for each additional month of exposure to saquinavir.Conclusions: Both treated PLWH and lifestyle-comparable HIV-negative individuals show signs of age advancement compared to BD, to which persistent CMV, HBV co-infection and CD8+ T-cell activation may have contributed. Age advancement remained greatest in PLWH and was related to prior immunodeficiency and cumulative saquinavir exposure. published
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- 2019
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12. Unsupervised Deep Learning for Stroke Lesion Segmentation on Follow-up CT Based on Generative Adversarial Networks.
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van Voorst, H., Konduri, P. R., van Poppel, L. M., van der Steen, W., van der Sluijs, P. M., Slot, E. M. H., Emmer, B. J., van Zwam, W. H., Roos, Y. B. W. E. M., Majoie, C. B. L. M., Zaharchuk, G., Caan, M. W. A., and Marquering, H. A.
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- 2022
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13. Evaluation of a modified cholangiographic classification system for primary sclerosing cholangitis
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Rajaram, R., Ponsioen, C. Y., Majoie, C. B. L. M., Reeders, J. W. A. J., and Laméris, J. S.
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- 2001
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14. Primary nerve-sheath tumours of the trigeminal nerve: clinical and MRI findings
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Majoie, C. B. L. M., Hulsmans, F. J. H., Castelijns, J. A., Sie, L. H., Walter, A., Valk, J., and Albrecht, K. W.
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- 1999
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15. Presentation outside office hours does not negatively influence treatment times for reperfusion therapy for acute ischemic stroke
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Groot, A. E., primary, de Bruin, H., additional, Nguyen, T. T. M., additional, Kappelhof, M., additional, de Beer, F., additional, Visser, M. C., additional, Zwetsloot, C. P., additional, Halkes, P. H. A., additional, de Kruijk, J., additional, van der Meulen, W. D. M., additional, van der Ree, T. C., additional, Kwa, V. I. H., additional, van Schaik, S. M., additional, Hani, L., additional, van den Berg, R., additional, Sprengers, M. E. S., additional, Roosendaal, S. D., additional, Emmer, B. J., additional, Nederkoorn, P. J., additional, Majoie, C. B. L. M., additional, Roos, Y. B. W. E. M., additional, and Coutinho, J. M., additional
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- 2020
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16. Impact of the COVID-19 outbreak on acute stroke care
- Author
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Rinkel, L. A., primary, Prick, J. C. M., additional, Slot, R. E. R., additional, Sombroek, N. M. A., additional, Burggraaff, J., additional, Groot, A. E., additional, Emmer, B. J., additional, Roos, Y. B. W. E. M., additional, Brouwer, M. C., additional, van den Berg-Vos, R. M., additional, Majoie, C. B. L. M., additional, Beenen, L. F. M., additional, van de Beek, D., additional, Visser, M. C., additional, van Schaik, S. M., additional, and Coutinho, J. M., additional
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- 2020
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17. Primary sclerosing cholangitis
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Majoie, C. B. L. M., Huibregtse, K., and Reeders, J. W. A. J.
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- 1997
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18. Primary sclerosing cholangitis: sonographic findings
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Majoie, C. B. L. M., Smits, N. J., Phoa, S. S. K. S., Reeders, J. W. A. J., and Jansen, P. L. M.
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- 1995
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19. Elevated Lipoprotein(a) in Perinatally HIV-Infected Children Compared with Healthy Ethnicity-Matched Controls
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van den Hof, Malon, Haneveld, Mirthe J. Klein, Blokhuis, Charlotte, Scherpbier, Henriette J., Jansen, Hans P. G., Kootstra, Neeltje A., Dallinga-Thie, Geesje M., van Deventer, Sander J. H., Tsimikas, Sotirios, Pajkrt, Dasja, van den Hof, M., Blokhuis, C., Cohen, S., Pajkrt, D., Scherpbier, H. J., Kuijpers, T. W., van der Plas, A., Weijsenfeld, A., ter Stege, J. S., Kootstra, N. A., Caan, M. W. A., Mutsaerts, H. J. M. M., Majoie, C. B. L. M., Verbraak, F. D., Schmand, B., Geurtsen, G., Mathot, R. A. A., Wit, F. W. N. M., Reiss, P., Teunissen, C. E., Kuhle, J., Meijer, J. C. M., Paediatric Infectious Diseases / Rheumatology / Immunology, APH - Aging & Later Life, AII - Infectious diseases, Graduate School, ARD - Amsterdam Reproduction and Development, APH - Quality of Care, APH - Personalized Medicine, Paediatric Pulmonology, General Paediatrics, Experimental Immunology, Vascular Medicine, ACS - Atherosclerosis & ischemic syndromes, ACS - Diabetes & metabolism, AGEM - Digestive immunity, AGEM - Endocrinology, metabolism and nutrition, Biomedical Engineering and Physics, Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, ACS - Microcirculation, Pharmacy, Global Health, APH - Methodology, APH - Societal Participation & Health, APH - Mental Health, and ACS - Pulmonary hypertension & thrombosis
- Subjects
lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) - Abstract
Background: HIV-associated cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk in combination antiretroviral therapy (cART)-treated perinatally HIV-infected patients (PHIV+) remains unknown due to the young age of this population. Lipoprotein(a) (Lp(a)) has been established as an independent causal risk factor for CVD in the general population but has not been well established in the population of PHIV+. Methods: We cross-sectionally compared lipid profiles, including nonfasting Lp(a), together with total cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and triglycerides between 35 cART-treated PHIV+ children aged 8-18 years and 37 controls who were matched for age, sex, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status. We explored associations between Lp(a) and disease-and treatment-related factors (inflammation, monocyte activation, and vascular), biomarkers, and neuroimaging outcomes using linear regression models. Results: PHIV+ children had significantly higher levels of Lp(a) compared with controls (median, 43.6 [21.6-82.4] vs 21.8 [16.8-46.6] mg/dL; P =. 033). Other lipid levels were comparable between groups. Additional assessment of apolipoprotein B, apolipoprotein CIII, apolipoprotein E, and APOE genotype revealed no significant differences. Higher Lp(a) levels were associated with higher plasma apoB levels and with lower monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 and TG levels in PHIV+ children. Lp(a) was not associated with HIV-or cART-related variables or with neuroimaging outcomes. Conclusions: cART-treated PHIV+ children appear to have higher levels of Lp(a) compared with ethnicity-matched controls, which may implicate higher CVD risk in this population. Future research should focus on the association between Lp(a) and (sub)clinical CVD measurements in cART-treated PHIV+ patients. Dutch Trial Register number: NRT4074.
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- 2019
20. Patterns of Co-occurring Comorbidities in People Living With HIV
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De Francesco, Davide, Verboeket, Sebastiaan O, Underwood, Jonathan, Bagkeris, Emmanouil, Wit, Ferdinand W, Mallon, Patrick W G, Winston, Alan, Reiss, Peter, Sabin, Caroline A, Study group members AMC, Reiss, P., Wit, F. W. N. M., Kooij, K. W., van Zoest, R. A., Verheij, E., Verboeket, Sebastiaan O., Prins, M., Kootstra, N. A., Harskamp-Holwerda, A. M., Maurer, Irma, Mangas Ruiz, M. M., Boeser-Nunnink, B. D. M., Geerlings, S. E., Goorhuis, A., Hovius, J. W. R., Nellen, F. J. B., van der Poll, Tom, Prins, J. M., Wiersinga, W. J., van Vugt, M., de Bree, G. J., Postema, P. G., Bisschop, P. H. L. T., Serlie, M. J. M., Dekker, E., van der Velde, N., Willemsen, J. M. R., Vogt, L., Portegies, P., Schmand, B. A., Geurtsen, G. J., Verbraak, F. D., Visser, I., Nieuwkerk, P. T., Majoie, C. B. L. M., Caan, M. W. A., van Lunsen, H. W., van den Born, B. J. H., Stroes, E. S. G., Intensive care medicine, Anatomy and neurosciences, Medical psychology, Internal medicine, APH - Aging & Later Life, Elderly care medicine, Amsterdam Neuroscience - Systems & Network Neuroscience, Ophthalmology, Psychiatry, APH - Mental Health, Radiology and nuclear medicine, ACS - Atherosclerosis & ischemic syndromes, Graduate School, Center of Experimental and Molecular Medicine, Global Health, Infectious diseases, APH - Global Health, Experimental Immunology, APH - Quality of Care, Cardiology, Endocrinology, Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Geriatrics, Nephrology, APH - Health Behaviors & Chronic Diseases, Neurology, Medical Psychology, APH - Societal Participation & Health, Adult Psychiatry, APH - Personalized Medicine, Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Vascular Medicine, AGEM - Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism, APH - Methodology, ACS - Microcirculation, ACS - Heart failure & arrhythmias, and ACS - Diabetes & metabolism
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,patterns of comorbidities ,medicine.medical_specialty ,multimorbidity ,comorbidities ,Major Articles ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Interquartile range ,Internal medicine ,Health care ,medicine ,Medical history ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Pathological ,business.industry ,Metabolic disorder ,HIV ,medicine.disease ,030112 virology ,Comorbidity ,Mental health ,Infectious Diseases ,Oncology ,Pharmacokinetic and Clinical Observations in PeoPle Over fiftY (POPPY) study and the AGEhIV Cohort Study ,business - Abstract
Background The aims of this study were to identify common patterns of comorbidities observed in people living with HIV (PLWH), using a data-driven approach, and evaluate associations between patterns identified. Methods A wide range of comorbidities were assessed in PLWH participating in 2 independent cohorts (POPPY: UK/Ireland; AGEhIV: Netherlands). The presence/absence of each comorbidity was determined using a mix of self-reported medical history, concomitant medications, health care resource use, and laboratory parameters. Principal component analysis (PCA) based on Somers’ D statistic was applied to identify patterns of comorbidities. Results PCA identified 6 patterns among the 1073 POPPY PLWH (85.2% male; median age [interquartile range {IQR}], 52 [47–59] years): cardiovascular diseases (CVDs), sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), mental health problems, cancers, metabolic disorders, chest/other infections. The CVDs pattern was positively associated with cancer (r = .32), metabolic disorder (r = .38), mental health (r = .16), and chest/other infection (r = .17) patterns (all P < .001). The mental health pattern was correlated with all the other patterns (in particular cancers: r = .20; chest/other infections: r = .27; both P < .001). In the 598 AGEhIV PLWH (87.6% male; median age [IQR], 53 [48–59] years), 6 patterns were identified: CVDs, chest/liver, HIV/AIDS events, mental health/neurological problems, STDs, and general health. The general health pattern was correlated with all the other patterns (in particular CVDs: r = .14; chest/liver: r = .15; HIV/AIDS events: r = .31; all P < .001), except STDs (r = –.02; P = .64). Conclusions Comorbidities in PLWH tend to occur in nonrandom patterns, reflecting known pathological mechanisms and shared risk factors, but also suggesting potential previously unknown mechanisms. Their identification may assist in adequately addressing the pathophysiology of increasingly prevalent multimorbidity in PLWH.
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- 2018
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21. Data-efficient deep learning of radiological image data for outcome prediction after endovascular treatment of patients with acute ischemic stroke
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Hilbert, A., Ramos, L. A., van Os, H. J. A., Olabarriaga, S. D., Tolhuisen, M. L., Wermer, M. J. H., Barros, R. S., van der Schaaf, I., Dippel, D., Roos, Y. B. W. E. M., van Zwam, W. H., Yoo, A. J., Emmer, B. J., Nijeholt, G. J. Lycklama a, Zwinderman, A. H., Strijkers, G. J., Majoie, C. B. L. M., Marquering, H. A., Hilbert, A., Ramos, L. A., van Os, H. J. A., Olabarriaga, S. D., Tolhuisen, M. L., Wermer, M. J. H., Barros, R. S., van der Schaaf, I., Dippel, D., Roos, Y. B. W. E. M., van Zwam, W. H., Yoo, A. J., Emmer, B. J., Nijeholt, G. J. Lycklama a, Zwinderman, A. H., Strijkers, G. J., Majoie, C. B. L. M., and Marquering, H. A.
- Abstract
Treatment selection is becoming increasingly more important in acute ischemic stroke patient care. Clinical variables and radiological image biomarkers (old age, pre-stroke mRS, NIHSS, occlusion location, ASPECTS, among others) have an important role in treatment selection and prognosis. Radiological biomarkers require expert annotation and are subject to inter-observer variability. Recently, Deep Learning has been introduced to reproduce these radiological image biomarkers. Instead of reproducing these biomarkers, in this work, we investigated Deep Learning techniques for building models to directly predict good reperfusion after endovascular treatment (EVT) and good functional outcome using CT angiography images. These models do not require image annotation and are fast to compute. We compare the Deep Learning models to Machine Learning models using traditional radiological image biomarkers. We explored Residual Neural Network (ResNet) architectures, adapted them with Structured Receptive Fields (RFNN) and auto-encoders (AE) for network weight initialization. We further included model visualization techniques to provide insight into the network's decision-making process. We applied the methods on the MR CLEAN Registry dataset with 1301 patients. The Deep Learning models outperformed the models using traditional radiological image biomarkers in three out of four cross-validation folds for functional outcome (average AUC of 0.71) and for all folds for reperfusion (average AUC of 0.65). Model visualization showed that the arteries were relevant features for functional outcome prediction. The best results were obtained for the ResNet models with RFNN. Auto-encoder initialization often improved the results. We concluded that, in our dataset, automated image analysis with Deep Learning methods outperforms radiological image biomarkers for stroke outcome prediction and has the potential to improve treatment selection.
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- 2019
22. Cross-sectional Comparison of the Prevalence of Age-Associated Comorbidities and Their Risk Factors Between HIV-Infected and Uninfected Individuals: The AGEhIV Cohort Study
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Schouten, Judith, Wit, Ferdinand W., Stolte, Ineke G., Kootstra, Neeltje A., van der Valk, Marc, Geerlings, Suzanne E., Prins, Maria, Reiss, Peter, Kooij, K. W., van Zoest, R. A., Elsenga, B. C., Stolte, I. G., Martens, M., Moll, S., Berkel, J., Möller, L., Visser, G. R., Welling, C., Zaheri, S., Gras, L. A. J., van Leeuwen, E., Godfried, M. H., Goorhuis, A., van der Meer, J. T. M., Nellen, F. J. B., van der Poll, T., Prins, J. M., Wiersinga, W. J., Postema, P. G., Bisschop, P. H. L. T., Serlie, M. J. M., Dekker, E., de Rooij, S. E. J. A., Vogt, L., Portegies, P., Schmand, B. A., Geurtsen, G. J., van Eck-Smit, B. L. F., de Jong, M., Richel, D. J., Verbraak, F. D., Demirkaya, N., Ruhé, H. G., Nieuwkerk, P. T., van Steenwijk, R. P., Majoie, C. B. L. M., Caan, M. W. A., van Lunsen, H. W., van den Born, B. J. H., Stroes, E. S. G., Graduate School, AII - Amsterdam institute for Infection and Immunity, Global Health, Experimental Immunology, Infectious diseases, APH - Amsterdam Public Health, Other departments, Other Research, Obstetrics and Gynaecology, General Internal Medicine, Center of Experimental and Molecular Medicine, ACS - Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences, Cardiology, AGEM - Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism, AMS - Amsterdam Movement Sciences, Endocrinology, CCA -Cancer Center Amsterdam, ANS - Amsterdam Neuroscience, Geriatrics, Nephrology, Neurology, Medical Microbiology and Infection Prevention, Oncology, Biomedical Engineering and Physics, Ophthalmology, Adult Psychiatry, Medical Psychology, Pulmonology, Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, Vascular Medicine, and Pharmacy
- Subjects
Male ,Microbiology (medical) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,HIV Infections ,Disease ,Cohort Studies ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Medicine ,Family history ,Prospective cohort study ,Immunodeficiency ,Aged ,business.industry ,Odds ratio ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Comorbidity ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Infectious Diseases ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Hypertension ,Immunology ,Female ,Ritonavir ,business ,Cohort study ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected individuals may be at increased risk of age-associated noncommunicable comorbidities (AANCCs). Cross-sectional analyses of AANCC prevalence (including cardiovascular, metabolic, pulmonary, renal, bone, and malignant disease) and risk factors in a prospective cohort study of HIV type 1-infected individuals and HIV-uninfected controls, who were aged ≥45 years and comparable regarding most lifestyle and demographic factors. HIV-infected participants (n = 540) had a significantly higher mean number of AANCCs than controls (n = 524) (1.3 [SD, 1.14] vs 1.0 [SD, 0.95]; P < .001), with significantly more HIV-infected participants having ≥1 AANCC (69.4% vs 61.8%; P = .009). Hypertension, myocardial infarction, peripheral arterial disease, and impaired renal function were significantly more prevalent among HIV-infected participants. Risk of AANCC by ordinal logistic regression was independently associated with age, smoking, positive family history for cardiovascular/metabolic disease, and higher waist-to-hip ratio, but also with HIV infection (odds ratio, 1.58 [95% confidence interval, 1.23-2.03]; P < .001). In those with HIV, longer exposure to CD4 counts
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- 2014
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23. Added value of multiphase CTA imaging for thrombus perviousness assessment
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Santos, Emilie M M (author), D’Esterre, C. D. (author), Treurniet, Kilian M. (author), Niessen, W.J. (author), Abou Najm, M (author), Goyal, M. (author), Demchuk, A. M. (author), Majoie, C. B L M (author), Menon, B. K. (author), Marquering, Henk A. (author), Santos, Emilie M M (author), D’Esterre, C. D. (author), Treurniet, Kilian M. (author), Niessen, W.J. (author), Abou Najm, M (author), Goyal, M. (author), Demchuk, A. M. (author), Majoie, C. B L M (author), Menon, B. K. (author), and Marquering, Henk A. (author)
- Abstract
Purpose: Thrombus perviousness has been associated with favorable functional outcome in acute ischemic stroke (AIS) patients. Measuring thrombus perviousness on CTA may be suboptimal due to potential delay in contrast agent arrival in occluded arteries at the moment of imaging. Dynamic sequences acquired over time can potentially overcome this issue. We investigate if dynamic CTA has added value in assessing thrombus perviousness. Methods: Prospectively collected image data of AIS patients with proven occlusion of the anterior or posterior circulation with thin-slice multi-phase CTA (MCTA) and non-contrast CT were co-registered (n = 221). Thrombus attenuation increase (TAI; a perviousness measure) was measured for the arterial, venous, and delayed phase of the MCTA and time-invariant CTAs (TiCTA). Associations with favorable clinical outcome (90-day mRS ≤ 2) were assessed using univariate and multivariable regressions and calculating areas under receiver operating curves (AUC). Results: TAI determined from the arterial phase CTA was superior in the association with favorable outcome with OR = 1.21 per 10 HU increase (95%CI 1.04–1.41, AUC 0.62, p = 0.014) compared to any other phase (venous 1.14(95%CI 1.01–1.30, AUC 0.58, p = 0.033), delayed 1.046(95%CI 0.919–1.19, AUC 0.53, p = 0.50)), and TiCTA (1.15(95%CI 1.02–1.30, AUC 0.60, p = 0.022). In the multivariable model, only TAI on arterial phase was significantly associated with favorable outcome (aOR 1.59, 95%CI 1.04–2.43, p = 0.032). Conclusion: Association between TAI with functional outcome was optimal on arterial-phase CTA such that dynamic CTA imaging has no additional benefits in current thrombus perviousness assessment, thereby suggesting that the delay of contrast arrival at the clot is a key variable for patient functional outcome., ImPhys/Quantitative Imaging
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- 2018
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24. Topographic distribution of cerebral infarct probability in patients with acute ischemic stroke: mapping of intra-arterial treatment effect
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Mattle, Heinrich, Van Oostenbrugge, R J, Berkhemer, O A, Dippel, D W J, Marquering, H A, Boers, A M M, Van Der Lugt, A, Van Zwam, W H, Roos, Y B W E M, Yoo, A J, Majoie, C B L M, and Slump, C H
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610 Medicine & health - Abstract
BACKGROUND Since proof emerged that IA treatment (IAT) is beneficial for patients with acute ischemic stroke, it has become the standard method of care. Despite these positive results, recovery to functional independence is established in only about one-third of treated patients. The effect of IAT is commonly assessed by functional outcome, whereas its effect on brain tissue salvage is considered a secondary outcome measure (at most). Because patient and treatment selection needs to be improved, understanding the treatment effect on brain tissue salvage is of utmost importance. OBJECTIVE To introduce infarct probability maps to estimate the location and extent of tissue damage based on patient baseline characteristics and treatment type. METHODS Cerebral infarct probability maps were created by combining automatically segmented infarct distributions using follow-up CT images of 281 patients from the MR CLEAN trial. Comparison of infarct probability maps allows visualization and quantification of probable treatment effects. Treatment impact was calculated for 10 Alberta Stroke Program Early CT Score (ASPECTS) and 27 anatomical regions. RESULTS The insular cortex had the highest infarct probability in both control and IAT populations (47.2% and 42.6%, respectively). Comparison showed significant lower infarct probability in 4 ASPECTS and 17 anatomical regions in favor of IAT. Most salvaged tissue was found within the ASPECTS M2 region, which was 8.5% less likely to infarct. CONCLUSIONS Probability maps intuitively visualize the topographic distribution of infarct probability due to treatment, which makes it a promising tool for estimating the effect of treatment.
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- 2017
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25. Quantitative agreement between [(15)O]H2O PET and model free QUASAR MRI-derived cerebral blood flow and arterial blood volume
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Heijtel, D. F. R., Petersen, E. T., Mutsaerts, H. J. M. M., Bakker, E., Schober, P., Stevens, M. F., van Berckel, B. N. M., Majoie, C. B. L. M., Booij, J., van Osch, M. J. P., van Bavel, E. T., Boellaard, R., Lammertsma, A. A., Nederveen, A. J., Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, Amsterdam institute for Infection and Immunity, Other Research, Anesthesiology, Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences, Amsterdam Neuroscience - Brain Imaging, Nuclear Medicine, and Biomedical Engineering and Physics
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to assess whether there was an agreement between quantitative cerebral blood flow (CBF) and arterial cerebral blood volume (CBVA) measurements by [(15)O]H2O positron emission tomography (PET) and model-free QUASAR MRI. Twelve healthy subjects were scanned within a week in separate MRI and PET imaging sessions, after which quantitative and qualitative agreement between both modalities was assessed for gray matter, white matter and whole brain region of interests (ROI). The correlation between CBF measurements obtained with both modalities was moderate to high (r(2): 0.28-0.60, P
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- 2016
26. Assessment of collateral status by dynamic ct angiography in acute mca stroke : Timing of acquisition and relationship with final infarct volume
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Van Den Wijngaard, I. R., Holswilder, G., Wermer, M. J H, Boiten, J., Algra, A., Dippel, D. W J, Dankbaar, J. W., Velthuis, B. K., Boers, A. M M, Majoie, C. B L M, Van Walderveen, M. A A, Van Den Wijngaard, I. R., Holswilder, G., Wermer, M. J H, Boiten, J., Algra, A., Dippel, D. W J, Dankbaar, J. W., Velthuis, B. K., Boers, A. M M, Majoie, C. B L M, and Van Walderveen, M. A A
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- 2016
27. Assessment of collateral status by dynamic ct angiography in acute mca stroke: Timing of acquisition and relationship with final infarct volume
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ZL Cerebrovasculaire Ziekten Medisch, Cardiovasculaire Epi Team 6, Circulatory Health, Brain, JC onderzoeksprogramma Cardiovasculaire Epidemiologie, MS Radiologie, Van Den Wijngaard, I. R., Holswilder, G., Wermer, M. J H, Boiten, J., Algra, A., Dippel, D. W J, Dankbaar, J. W., Velthuis, B. K., Boers, A. M M, Majoie, C. B L M, Van Walderveen, M. A A, ZL Cerebrovasculaire Ziekten Medisch, Cardiovasculaire Epi Team 6, Circulatory Health, Brain, JC onderzoeksprogramma Cardiovasculaire Epidemiologie, MS Radiologie, Van Den Wijngaard, I. R., Holswilder, G., Wermer, M. J H, Boiten, J., Algra, A., Dippel, D. W J, Dankbaar, J. W., Velthuis, B. K., Boers, A. M M, Majoie, C. B L M, and Van Walderveen, M. A A
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- 2016
28. Topographic distribution of cerebral infarct probability in patients with acute ischemic stroke: mapping of intra-arterial treatment effect
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Boers, A M M, primary, Berkhemer, O A, additional, Slump, C H, additional, van Zwam, W H, additional, Roos, Y B W E M, additional, van der Lugt, A, additional, van Oostenbrugge, R J, additional, Yoo, A J, additional, Dippel, D W J, additional, Marquering, H A, additional, and Majoie, C B L M, additional
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- 2016
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29. Assessment of Collateral Status by Dynamic CT Angiography in Acute MCA Stroke: Timing of Acquisition and Relationship with Final Infarct Volume
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van den Wijngaard, I. R., primary, Holswilder, G., additional, Wermer, M. J. H., additional, Boiten, J., additional, Algra, A., additional, Dippel, D. W. J., additional, Dankbaar, J. W., additional, Velthuis, B. K., additional, Boers, A. M. M., additional, Majoie, C. B. L. M., additional, and van Walderveen, M. A. A., additional
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- 2016
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30. Accuracy and precision of pseudo-continuous arterial spin labeling perfusion during baseline and hypercapnia: a head-to-head comparison with ¹⁵O H₂O positron emission tomography
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Heijtel, D. F. R., Mutsaerts, H. J. M. M., Bakker, E., Schober, P., Stevens, M. F., Petersen, E. T., van Berckel, B. N. M., Majoie, C. B. L. M., Booij, J., van Osch, M. J. P., VanBavel, E., Boellaard, R., Lammertsma, A. A., Nederveen, A. J., Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, AII - Amsterdam institute for Infection and Immunity, Other Research, Anesthesiology, ACS - Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences, ANS - Amsterdam Neuroscience, Nuclear Medicine, and Biomedical Engineering and Physics
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circulatory and respiratory physiology - Abstract
Measurements of the cerebral blood flow (CBF) and cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) provide useful information about cerebrovascular condition and regional metabolism. Pseudo-continuous arterial spin labeling (pCASL) is a promising non-invasive MRI technique to quantitatively measure the CBF, whereas additional hypercapnic pCASL measurements are currently showing great promise to quantitatively assess the CVR. However, the introduction of pCASL at a larger scale awaits further evaluation of the exact accuracy and precision compared to the gold standard. (15)O H₂O positron emission tomography (PET) is currently regarded as the most accurate and precise method to quantitatively measure both CBF and CVR, though it is one of the more invasive methods as well. In this study we therefore assessed the accuracy and precision of quantitative pCASL-based CBF and CVR measurements by performing a head-to-head comparison with (15)O H₂O PET, based on quantitative CBF measurements during baseline and hypercapnia. We demonstrate that pCASL CBF imaging is accurate during both baseline and hypercapnia with respect to (15)O H₂O PET with a comparable precision. These results pave the way for quantitative usage of pCASL MRI in both clinical and research settings
- Published
- 2014
31. Early administration of aspirin in patients treated with alteplase for acute ischaemic stroke: a randomised controlled trial
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Zinkstok, Sanne M., Roos, Yvo B., Aerden, L. A. M., van den Berg-Vos, R. M., Bakker, S. L. M., Bienfait, H. M. E., Bienfait, H. P., Boon, A. E., Brans, J. W. M., Bronner, I. M., de Bruijn, S. F. T. M., Franke, C. L., Hofstee, D. J., Jansen, B. P. W., Jellema, K., Kalkers, N. F., Portegies, P., Keizer, K., Kerkhoff, H., de Gans, K., Kloos, L. M. H., Kok, A. J. M., de Kort, P. L. M., de Kruijk, J. R., van der Kruijk, R. A., Kwa, V. I. H., Kruyt, N. D., Meijer, R. J., van der Meulen, W. D. M., Mulleners, W. M., Nederkoorn, P. J., van der Ree, T. C., Rooyer, F. A., Saxena, R., Schuiling, W. J., Verbiest, H. B. C., Verhey, J. C. B., Vermeer, S. E., Visée, H. F., Visser, M. C., van der Wiel, H. L., van der Worp, H. B., de Haan, R. J., Stam, J., Vermeulen, M., Peters, R. J. G., Majoie, C. B. L. M., Beenen, L. F., Marquering, H. A., van Geloven, N., Epidemiologie, MUMC+: KIO Kemta (9), RS: CAPHRI School for Public Health and Primary Care, Neurology, ACS - Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences, ANS - Amsterdam Neuroscience, Other departments, APH - Amsterdam Public Health, Clinical Research Unit, Cardiology, Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, Other Research, and Biomedical Engineering and Physics
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Drug Administration Schedule ,law.invention ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,Randomized controlled trial ,Modified Rankin Scale ,law ,Internal medicine ,Secondary Prevention ,medicine ,Clinical endpoint ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Platelet activation ,Infusions, Intravenous ,Stroke ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Aspirin ,business.industry ,Standard treatment ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,Tissue Plasminogen Activator ,Early Termination of Clinical Trials ,Platelet aggregation inhibitor ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Female ,business ,Intracranial Hemorrhages ,Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Summary Background Thrombolysis with intravenous alteplase is the only approved treatment for acute ischaemic stroke. After alteplase-induced recanalisation, reocclusion occurs in 14–34% of patients, probably because of platelet activation. Early administration of antiplatelet therapy after alteplase could reduce the risk of reocclusion and improve outcome. We compared the effects of early addition of intravenous aspirin to alteplase with standard alteplase without aspirin. Methods In this multicentre, randomised, open-label trial with blind-endpoint assessment, patients with acute ischaemic stroke treated with alteplase were randomly assigned to 300 mg intravenous aspirin within 90 min after start of alteplase treatment or to no additional treatment. In both groups, oral antiplatelet therapy was started 24 h after alteplase treatment. The primary endpoint was favourable outcome, defined as a score of 0–2 on the modified Rankin scale at 3 months. This trial is registered with the Netherlands Trial Register (NTR822). Findings Between July 29, 2008, and April 20, 2011, 642 patients (322 patients aspirin, 320 patients standard treatment) of the targeted 800 patients were enrolled. At that time, the trial was terminated prematurely because of an excess of symptomatic intracranial haemorrhage (SICH) and no evidence of benefit in the aspirin group. At 3 months, 174 (54·0%) patients in the aspirin group versus 183 (57·2%) patients in the standard treatment group had a favourable outcome (absolute difference −3·2%, 95% CI −10·8 to 4·2; crude relative risk 0·94, 0·82 to 1·09, p=0·42). Adjusted odds ratio was 0·91 (95% CI 0·66–1·26, p=0·58). SICH occurred more often in the aspirin group (14 [4·3%] patients) than in the standard treatment group (five [1·6%]; absolute difference 2·8%, 95% CI 0·2–5·4; p=0·04). SICH was more often the cause of poor outcome in the aspirin group compared with the standard treatment group (11 vs 1, p=0·006). Interpretation Early administration of intravenous aspirin in patients with acute ischaemic stroke treated with alteplase does not improve outcome at 3 months and increases the risk of SICH. The results of this trial do not support a change of the current guidelines, which advise to start antiplatelet therapy 24 h after alteplase. Funding The Dutch Heart Foundation.
- Published
- 2012
32. Additional value of intra-aneurysmal hemodynamics in discriminating ruptured versus unruptured intracranial aneurysms
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Schneiders, J. J., Marquering, H. A., Van Ooij, P., Van Den Berg, R., Nederveen, A. J., Verbaan, D., Vandertop, W. P., Pourquie, M., Rinkel, G. J E, VanBavel, E., Majoie, C. B L M, Schneiders, J. J., Marquering, H. A., Van Ooij, P., Van Den Berg, R., Nederveen, A. J., Verbaan, D., Vandertop, W. P., Pourquie, M., Rinkel, G. J E, VanBavel, E., and Majoie, C. B L M
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- 2015
33. Hemodynamic differences in intracranial aneurysms before and after rupture
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Cornelissen, B. M W, Schneiders, J. J., Potters, W. V., Van Den Berg, R., Velthuis, B. K., Rinkel, G. J E, Slump, C. H., VanBavel, E., Majoie, C. B L M, Marquering, H. A., Cornelissen, B. M W, Schneiders, J. J., Potters, W. V., Van Den Berg, R., Velthuis, B. K., Rinkel, G. J E, Slump, C. H., VanBavel, E., Majoie, C. B L M, and Marquering, H. A.
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- 2015
34. Additional value of intra-aneurysmal hemodynamics in discriminating ruptured versus unruptured intracranial aneurysms
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Neurologie, Brain, Circulatory Health, Schneiders, J. J., Marquering, H. A., Van Ooij, P., Van Den Berg, R., Nederveen, A. J., Verbaan, D., Vandertop, W. P., Pourquie, M., Rinkel, G. J E, VanBavel, E., Majoie, C. B L M, Neurologie, Brain, Circulatory Health, Schneiders, J. J., Marquering, H. A., Van Ooij, P., Van Den Berg, R., Nederveen, A. J., Verbaan, D., Vandertop, W. P., Pourquie, M., Rinkel, G. J E, VanBavel, E., and Majoie, C. B L M
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- 2015
35. Hemodynamic differences in intracranial aneurysms before and after rupture
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Neurologie, Brain, Circulatory Health, MS Radiologie, Cornelissen, B. M W, Schneiders, J. J., Potters, W. V., Van Den Berg, R., Velthuis, B. K., Rinkel, G. J E, Slump, C. H., VanBavel, E., Majoie, C. B L M, Marquering, H. A., Neurologie, Brain, Circulatory Health, MS Radiologie, Cornelissen, B. M W, Schneiders, J. J., Potters, W. V., Van Den Berg, R., Velthuis, B. K., Rinkel, G. J E, Slump, C. H., VanBavel, E., Majoie, C. B L M, and Marquering, H. A.
- Published
- 2015
36. Cerebral Perfusion Measurements in Elderly with Hypertension Using Arterial Spin Labeling
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Mutsaerts, H. J. M. M., primary, van Dalen, J. W., additional, Heijtel, D. F. R., additional, Groot, P. F. C., additional, Majoie, C. B. L. M., additional, Petersen, E. T., additional, Richard, E., additional, and Nederveen, A. J., additional
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- 2015
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37. Yield of spinal imaging in nonaneurysmal, nonperimesencephalic subarachnoid hemorrhage
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Germans, M. R., primary, Coert, B. A., additional, Majoie, C. B. L. M., additional, van den Berg, R., additional, Lycklama a Nijeholt, G., additional, Rinkel, G. J. E., additional, Verbaan, D., additional, and Vandertop, W. P., additional
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- 2015
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38. Proximal Cerebral Artery Stenosis in a Patient with Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome
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Vergouwen, M. D. I., Adriani, K. S., Roos, Y. B. W. E. M., Groothoff, J. W., Majoie, C. B. L. M., Amsterdam Neuroscience, Neurology, Amsterdam institute for Infection and Immunity, Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences, Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism, Amsterdam Public Health, Other Research, Paediatric Nephrology, and Radiology and Nuclear Medicine
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Letters - Published
- 2008
39. Linear and kernel fisher discriminant analysis for studying diffusion tensor images in schizophrenia
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Vos, F. M., Caan, M. W. A., Vermeer, K. A., Majoie, C. B. L. M., den Heeten, G. J., van Vliet, L. J., Anonymous, A., Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism, Amsterdam Neuroscience, Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, Other departments, Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences, Cancer Center Amsterdam, and Amsterdam Public Health
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Contextual image classification ,business.industry ,Covariance matrix ,Pattern recognition ,computer.software_genre ,Linear discriminant analysis ,Kernel (image processing) ,Voxel ,Computer Science::Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Principal component analysis ,Artificial intelligence ,Kernel Fisher discriminant analysis ,business ,computer ,Mathematics ,Diffusion MRI - Abstract
A new method is explored to study schizophrenia using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI). Both linear discriminant analysis (LDA) and kernel fisher discriminant analysis (KFDA) are combined with principal components analysis (PCA). Thus, a linear and non-linear combination of voxels is sought that separates patients from controls. PCA/KFDA does not show an improvement over PCA/LDA in classification. Because the PCA/LDA-mapping can be visualized, which enables localisation of differences, this method is preferred for analysis.
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- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Removal of bone in CT angiography by multiscale matched mask bone elimination
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Gratama van Andel, H. A. F., Venema, H. W., Streekstra, G. J., van Straten, M., Majoie, C. B. L. M., den Heeten, G. J., Grimbergen, C. A., Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism, Amsterdam Neuroscience, Other Research, Biomedical Engineering and Physics, Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences, Amsterdam Movement Sciences, Cancer Center Amsterdam, and Amsterdam Public Health
- Abstract
For clear visualization of vessels in CT angiography (CTA) images of the head and neck using maximum intensity projection (MIP) or volume rendering (VR) bone has to be removed. In the past we presented a fully automatic method to mask the bone [matched mask bone elimination (MMBE)] for this purpose. A drawback is that vessels adjacent to bone may be partly masked as well. We propose a modification, multiscale MMBE, which reduces this problem by using images at two scales: a higher resolution than usual for image processing and a lower resolution to which the processed images are transformed for use in the diagnostic process. A higher in-plane resolution is obtained by the use of a sharper reconstruction kernel. The out-of-plane resolution is improved by deconvolution or by scanning with narrower collimation. The quality of the mask that is used to remove bone is improved by using images at both scales. After masking, the desired resolution for the normal clinical use of the images is obtained by blurring with Gaussian kernels of appropriate widths. Both methods (multiscale and original) were compared in a phantom study and with clinical CTA data sets. With the multiscale approach the width of the strip of soft tissue adjacent to the bone that is masked can be reduced from 1.0 to 0.2 mm without reducing the quality of the bone removal. The clinical examples show that vessels adjacent to bone are less affected and therefore better visible. Images processed with multiscale MMBE have a slightly higher noise level or slightly reduced resolution compared with images processed by the original method and the reconstruction and processing time is also somewhat increased. Nevertheless, multiscale MMBE offers a way to remove bone automatically from CT angiography images without affecting the integrity of the blood vessels. The overall image quality of MIP or VR images is substantially improved relative to images processed with the original MMBE method
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- 2007
41. Image quality of multisection CT of the brain: thickly collimated sequential scanning versus thinly collimated spiral scanning with image combining
- Author
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van Straten, M., Venema, H. W., Majoie, C. B. L. M., Freling, N. J. M., Grimbergen, C. A., den Heeten, G. J., AGEM - Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism, ANS - Amsterdam Neuroscience, Other Research, Biomedical Engineering and Physics, Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, ACS - Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences, CCA -Cancer Center Amsterdam, and APH - Amsterdam Public Health
- Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Routine CT of the brain is traditionally performed with sequential CT. We assessed whether sequential CT can be replaced with thinly collimated multisection spiral CT without loss of image quality. MATERIALS AND METHODS: An observer study was conducted using data from 23 patients who were scanned with both a sequential (collimation, 4 x 5 mm) and a spiral technique (collimation, 4 x 1 mm; pitch, 0.875). Each sequential image was registered with 4 combined spiral CT images at 1.2 mm distance. Two neuroradiologists blindly scored 232 image pairs on 6 aspects: streak artifacts, visualization of brain tissue near skull, visualization of hypoattenuated lesions, gray/white matter differentiation, image noise, and overall image quality. A 5-point scale (range, -2 to 2) was used to score the preferences. The 23 pairs of complete scans were scored likewise. In this case, no registration was performed. RESULTS: Virtually all mean scores were positive (ie, showed a preference for the spiral technique). For the comparison of image pairs, the preferences with respect to streak artifacts (mean score, 1.36), visualization of brain tissue near the skull (mean score, 0.69), and overall image quality (mean score, 0.95) were significant (P < .001). With respect to visualization of hypo-attenuated lesions, image noise, and gray/white matter differentiation (mean scores, 0.18, 0.27, and 0.13), the preferences for spiral CT were not significant. The preferences for the spiral technique were also present at the comparison of the complete scans. CONCLUSION: Thinly collimated multisection spiral CT of the brain with image combining is superior to thickly collimated sequential CT
- Published
- 2007
42. Subtiele huidafwijkingen in de mediaanlijn als aanduiding van een neurodermaal sluitingsdefect
- Author
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Bleeker, F. E., van Furth, W. R., van der Horst, C. M. A. M., Majoie, C. B. L. M., Koot, R. W., Other departments, Amsterdam Neuroscience, Neurosurgery, Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences, Other Research, Plastic, Reconstructive and Hand Surgery, and Radiology and Nuclear Medicine
- Abstract
Three patients, aged 2, 2.5 and 24 years, presented with a skin lesion in the median or paramedian area at the nose, in the lumbar region and between the shoulders, respectively. The first patient suffered from recurrent infection, the skin lesion of the second patient was a coincidental finding, and the third patient had cosmetic problems. Although there were no signs of neurological deficits, neurodermal closing defects were found by MRI. Two patients underwent surgery to prevent infection and neurological complaints in the future. It is stressed that even if there are no neurological signs or infections, congenital dermal lesions situated in the midline should be considered as possible neural tube defects and therefore analysed by MRI. Ifa neurodermal dysraphism is found, patients should be referred to a neurosurgical centre. A good clinical assessment of the neural lesion, clinical signs and age will determine whether surgical resection is indicated to prevent or resolve neurological problems, infections or cosmetic complaints
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- 2006
43. Sequential MR imaging changes in nonketotic hyperglycinemia
- Author
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Mourmans, J., Majoie, C. B. L. M., Barth, P. G., Duran, M., Akkerman, E. M., Bwee Tien Poll-The, ACS - Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences, ANS - Amsterdam Neuroscience, Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, Paediatric Neurology, Laboratory Genetic Metabolic Diseases, AGEM - Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism, and Neurology
- Subjects
nervous system - Abstract
Serial diffusion-weighted (DWI) and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) were performed in a patient with neonatal onset nonketotic hyperglycinemia (NKH). At 3 weeks areas that are normally myelinated at this time showed increased T2-signal intensity and restricted diffusion, consistent with vacuolating myelinopathy. At 3 months, these areas had increased in the topographic pattern of normal myelination, whereas fractional anisotropy was compatible with axonal sparing. At 17 months, diffusion restriction had disappeared, likely because of coalescence of myelin vacuoles. A decrease of fractional anisotropy was observed in the previously myelinated areas indicative of axonal loss. We conclude that DWI and DTI can be used to identify and characterize white matter tract abnormalities in patients with NKH
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- 2006
44. Topographic distribution of cerebral infarct probability in patients with acute ischemic stroke: mapping of intra-arterial treatment effect.
- Author
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Boers, A. M. M., Berkhemer, O. A., Slump, C. H., van Zwam, W. H., Roos, Y. B. W. E. M., van der Lugt, A., van Oostenbrugge, R. J., Yoo, A. J., Dippel, D. W. J., Marquering, H. A., and Majoie, C. B. L. M.
- Subjects
INFARCTION ,STROKE treatment ,BRAIN ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CONVALESCENCE ,ETHICS committees ,MAPS ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,PATIENT selection ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,INTRA-arterial infusions ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Background Since proof emerged that IA treatment (IAT) is beneficial for patients with acute ischemic stroke, it has become the standard method of care. Despite these positive results, recovery to functional independence is established in only about one-third of treated patients. The effect of IAT is commonly assessed by functional outcome, whereas its effect on brain tissue salvage is considered a secondary outcome measure (at most). Because patient and treatment selection needs to be improved, understanding the treatment effect on brain tissue salvage is of utmost importance. Objective To introduce infarct probability maps to estimate the location and extent of tissue damage based on patient baseline characteristics and treatment type. Methods Cerebral infarct probability maps were created by combining automatically segmented infarct distributions using follow-up CT images of 281 patients from the MR CLEAN trial. Comparison of infarct probability maps allows visualization and quantification of probable treatment effects. Treatment impact was calculated for 10 Alberta Stroke Program Early CT Score (ASPECTS) and 27 anatomical regions. Results The insular cortex had the highest infarct probability in both control and IAT populations (47.2% and 42.6%, respectively). Comparison showed significant lower infarct probability in 4 ASPECTS and 17 anatomical regions in favor of IAT. Most salvaged tissue was found within the ASPECTS M2 region, which was 8.5% less likely to infarct. Conclusions Probability maps intuitively visualize the topographic distribution of infarct probability due to treatment, which makes it a promising tool for estimating the effect of treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
- Full Text
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45. Removal of bone in CT angiography of the cervical arteries by piecewise matched mask bone elimination (vol 31, pg 2924, 2004)
- Author
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van Straten, M., Venema, H. W., Streekstra, G. J., Majoie, C. B. L. M., den Heeten, G. J., Grimbergen, C. A., Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism, Amsterdam Neuroscience, Other Research, Biomedical Engineering and Physics, Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences, Amsterdam Movement Sciences, Cancer Center Amsterdam, and Amsterdam Public Health
- Published
- 2005
46. Automatic bone removal in CT angiography
- Author
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van Straten, M., Venema, H. W., Majoie, C. B. L. M., Ciancibello, L., Subramanyan, K., Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism, Amsterdam Neuroscience, Other Research, Biomedical Engineering and Physics, Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, and Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences
- Published
- 2005
47. Generalized versus Patient-Specific Inflow Boundary Conditions in Computational Fluid Dynamics Simulations of Cerebral Aneurysmal Hemodynamics
- Author
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Jansen, I. G. H., primary, Schneiders, J. J., additional, Potters, W. V., additional, van Ooij, P., additional, van den Berg, R., additional, van Bavel, E., additional, Marquering, H. A., additional, and Majoie, C. B. L. M., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Nonrigid Point Set Matching of White Matter Tracts for Diffusion Tensor Image Analysis
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Caan, M. W. A., primary, van Vliet, L. J., additional, Majoie, C. B. L. M., additional, van der Graaff, M. M., additional, Grimbergen, C. A., additional, and Vos, F. M., additional
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- 2011
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49. Observer variation in the evaluation of lumbar herniated discs and root compression: spiral CT compared with MRI
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van Rijn, J C, primary, Klemetso, N, additional, Reitsma, J B, additional, Bossuyt, P M, additional, Hulsmans, F J, additional, Peul, W C, additional, den Heeten, G J, additional, Stam, J, additional, and Majoie, C B L M, additional
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Neuroimaging of peroxisome biogenesis disorders (Zellweger spectrum) with prolonged survival.
- Author
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Barth, P G, Majoie, C B L M, Gootjes, J, Wanders, R J A, Waterham, H R, van der Knaap, M S, de Klerk, J B C, Smeitink, J, and Poll-The, B T
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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