218 results on '"Mitchell P.J."'
Search Results
2. Sedimentation rates in the Baltic Sea: A machine learning approach
- Author
-
Mitchell, P.J., Spence, M.A., Aldridge, J., Kotilainen, A.T., and Diesing, M.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Intravenous alteplase for stroke with unknown time of onset guided by advanced imaging: systematic review and meta-analysis of individual patient data
- Author
-
Acosta, Boris Raul, Aegidius, Karen, Albiker, Christian, Alegiani, Anna, Almendrote, Miriam, Alonso, Angelika, Althaus, Katharina, Amarenco, Pierre, Amiri, Hemasse, Anders, Bettina, Aniculaesei, Adriana, Appleton, Jason, Arenillas, Juan, Back, Christina, Bähr, Christian, Bardutzky, Jürgen, Baronnet-Chauvet, Flore, Bathe-Peters, Rouven, Bayer-Karpinska, Anna, Becerra, Juan L., Beck, Christoph, Belchí Guillamon, Olga, Benoit, Amandine, Berhoune, Nadia, Bindila, Daniela, Birchenall, Julia, Blanc-Lasserre, Karine, Blanco Gonzales, Miguel, Bobinger, Tobias, Bodechtel, Ulf, Bodiguel, Eric, Bojaryn, Urszula, Bonnet, Louise, Bouamra, Benjamin, Bourgeois, Paul, Boutitie, Florent, Breuer, Lorenz, Breynaert, Ludovic, Broughton, David, Brouns, Raf, Brugirard, Sébastian, Bruneel, Bart, Buggle, Florian, Cakmak, Serkan, Calleja, Ana, Calvet, David, Carrera, David, Chen, Hsin-Chieh, Cheng, Bastian, Cheripelli, Bharath, Cho, Tae-Hee, Choe, Chi-un, Choy, Lillian, Christensen, Hanne, Ciatipis, Mareva, Cloud, Geoffrey, Cogez, Julien, Cortijo, Elisa, Crozier, Sophie, Damgaard, Dorte, Dani, Krishna, De Coene, Beatrijs, De Hollander, Isabel, De Keyser, Jacques, De Klippel, Nina, De Maeseneire, Charlotte, De Smedt, Ann, del Mar Castellanos Rodrigo, Maria, Deltour, Sandrine, Demeestere, Jelle, Derex, Laurent, Desfontaines, Philippe, Dittrich, Ralf, Dixit, Anand, Dobbels, Laurens, Domigo, Valérie, Dorado, Laura, Druart, Charlotte, Dupont, Kristina Hougaard, Dusart, Anne, Dziewas, Rainer, Ebinger, Martin, Ebner, Matthias, Edjali-Goujon, Myriam, Eisele, Philipp, El Tawil, Salwa, Elhfnawy, Ahmed, Endres, Matthias, Etexberria, Ana, Evans, Nicholas, Fandler, Simon, Fazekas, Franz, Felix, Sandra, Fiebach, Jochen B., Fiehler, Jens, Filipov, Alexandra, Filipski, Katharina, Fleischmann, Robert, Foerch, Christian, Ford, Ian, Gaenslen, Alexandra, Galinovic, Ivana, Gancedo, Elena Meseguer, Ganeshan, Ramanan, García Esperón, Carlos, Garrido, Alicia, Gattringer, Thomas, Geraghty, Olivia, Geran, Rohat, Gerloff, Christian, Gerner, Stefan, Godon-Hardy, Sylvie, Göhler, Jos, Golsari, Amir, Gomis, Meritxell, Gorriz, David, Gramse, Verena, Grau, Laia, Griebe, Martin, Guerrero, Cristina, Guerzoglu, Damla, Guettier, Sophie, Guiraud, Vincent, Gumbinger, Christoph, Gunreben, Ignaz, Haertig, Florian, Hametner, Christian, Hanseeuw, Bernard, Hansen, Andreas, Hansen, Jakob, Harbo, Thomas, Harloff, Andreas, Harmel, Peter, Häusler, Karl Georg, Heinen, Florian, Held, Valentin, Hellwig, Simon, Hemelsoet, Dimitri, Hennerici, Michael, Herm, Juliane, Hermans, Sylvia, Hernández, María, Hervas Vicente, Jose, Hjort, Niels, Hobeanu, Cristina, Hobohm, Carsten, Höfner, Elmar, Hohenbichler, Katharina, Hommel, Marc, Hoppe, Julia, Hornberger, Eva, Hoyer, Carolin, Huang, Xuya, Ipsen, Nils, Isern, Irina, Ispierto, Lourdes, Iversen, Helle, Jeppesen, Lise, Jimenez, Marta, Jungehülsing, Jan, Jüttler, Eric, Kalladka, Dheeraj, Kallmünzer, Bernd, Kar, Arindam, Kellert, Lars, Kemmling, André, Kessler, Tobias, Khan, Usman, Klein, Matthias, Kleinschnitz, Christoph, Klockziem, Matti, Knops, Michael, Koehler, Luzie, Koehrmann, Martin, Kohlfürst, Heinz, Kollmar, Rainer, Kraft, Peter, Krause, Thomas, Kristensen, Bo, Kröber, Jan M., Kurka, Natalia, Ladoux, Alexandre, Laloux, Patrice, Lamy, Catherine, Landrault, Emmanuelle, Lauer, Arne, Lebely, Claire, Leempoel, Jonathan, Lees, Kennedy, Leger, Anne, Legrand, Laurence, Lemmens, Robin, Li, Lin, Löbbe, Anna-Mareike, London, Frederic, Lopez-cancio, Elena, Lorenz, Matthias, Louw, Stephen, Lovelock, Caroline, Lozano Sánchez, Manuel, Lucente, Giuseppe, Lückl, Janos, Luna, Alain, Macha, Kosmas, Machet, Alexandre, Mackenrodt, Daniel, Madzar, Dominik, Majoie, Charles, Männer, Anika, Maqueda, Vicky, Marstrand, Jacob, Martinez, Alicia, Marzina, Annika, Mechthouff, Laura, Meden, Per, Meersman, Guy, Meier, Julia, Mellerio, Charles, Menn, Oliver, Meyer, Nadja, Michalski, Dominik, Michels, Peter, Michelsen, Lene, Millán Torne, Monica, Minnerup, Jens, Modrau, Boris, Moeller, Sebastian, Møller, Anette, Morel, Nathalie, Moreton, Fiona, Morin, Ludovic, Moulin, Thierry, Moynihan, Barry, Mueller, Anne K., Muir, Keith W., Mulero, Patricia, Mundiyanapurath, Sibu, Mutzenbach, Johannes, Nagel, Simon, Naggara, Oliver, Nallasivan, Arumugam, Navalpotro, Irene, Nave, Alexander H., Nederkoorn, Paul, Neeb, Lars, Neugebauer, Hermann, Neumann-Haefelin, Tobias, Nighoghossian, Norbert, Oberndorfer, Stefan, Opherk, Christian, Oppel, Lorenz, Oppenheim, Catherine, Orthgieß, Johannes, Ostergaard, Leif, Paindeville, Perrine, Palomeras, Ernest, Panitz, Verena, Patel, Bhavni, Peeters, Andre, Peeters, Dirk, Pellisé, Anna, Pelz, Johann, Pereira, Anthony, Pérez de la Ossa, Natalia, Perry, Richard, Petraza, Salvador, Peysson, Stéphane, Pfeilschifter, Waltraud, Pichler, Alexander, Pierskalla, Alexandra, Pledl, Hans-Werner, Poli, Sven, Pomrehn, Katrin, Poulsen, Marika, Prats, Luis, Presas, Silvia, Prohaska, Elisabeth, Puetz, Volker, Puig, Josep, Puig Alcántara, Josep, Purrucker, Jan, Quenardelle, Veronique, Ramachandran, Sankaranarayanan, Raphaelle, Soulliard, Raposo, Nicolas, Reiff, Tilman, Remmers, Michel, Renou, Pauline, Ribitsch, Martin, Richter, Hardy, Ringleb, Peter, Ritter, Martin, Ritzenthaler, Thomas, Rodier, Gilles, Rodriguez-Regent, Christine, Rodríguez-Yáñez, Manuel, Roennefarth, Maria, Roffe, Christine, Rosenbaum, Sverre, Rosso, Charlotte, Röther, Joachim, Rozanski, Michal, Ruiz de Morales, Noelia, Russo, Francesca, Rutgers, Matthieu, Sagnier, Sharmilla, Samson, Yves, Sánchez, Josep, Sauer, Tamara, Schäfer, Jan H., Schieber, Simon, Schill, Josef, Schlak, Dennis, Schlemm, Ludwig, Schmidt, Sein, Schonewille, Wouter, Schröder, Julian, Schulz, Andreas, Schurig, Johannes, Schwarting, Sönke, Schwarz, Alexander, Schwarzbach, Christopher, Seidel, Matthias, Seiler, Alexander, Sembill, Jochen, Serena Leal, Joaquin, Shetty, Ashit, Sibon, Igor, Simonsen, Claus Z., Singer, Oliver, Sivagnanaratham, Aravinth, Smets, Ide, Smith, Craig, Soors, Peter, Sprigg, Nikola, Spruegel, Maximilian, Stark, David, Steinert, Susanne, Stösser, Sebastian, Stuermlinger, Markus, Swinnen, Bart, Tamazyan, Ruben, Tembl, Jose, Terceno Izaga, Mikel, Thijs, Vincent, Thomalla, Götz, Touze, Emmanuel, Truelsen, Thomas, Turc, Guillaume, Turine, Gaetane, Tütüncü, Serdar, Tyrell, Pippa, Ustrell, Xavier, Vadot, Wilfried, Vallet, Anne-Evelyne, Vallet, Pauline, van den Berg, Lucie, van den Berg, Sophie, van Eendenburg, Cecile, Van Hooff, Robbert-Jan, van Sloten, Isabelle, Vanacker, Peter, Vancaester, Evelien, Vanderdonckt, Patrick, Vandermeeren, Yves, Vanhee, Frederik, Veltkamp, Roland, Vestergaard, Karsten, Viguier, Alain, Vilas, Dolores, Villringer, Kersten, Voget, Dieke, von Schrader, Jörg, von Weitzel, Paul, Warburton, Elisabeth, Weber, Claudia, Weber, Jörg, Wegscheider, Karl, Wegscheider, Mirko, Weimar, Christian, Weinstich, Karin, Weise, Christopher, Weise, Gesa, Willems, Chris, Winder, Klemens, Wittayer, Matthias, Wolf, Marc, Wolf, Martin, Wolff, Valerie, Wollboldt, Christian, Wollenweber, Frank, Wouters, Anke, Yalo, Bertrand, Yger, Marion, Younan, Nadia, Yperzeele, Laetita, Zegarac, Vesna, Zeiner, Pia, Ziemann, Ulf, Zonneveld, Thomas, Zuber, Mathieu, Akutsu, Tsugio, Aoki, Junya, Arakawa, Shuji, Doijiri, Ryosuke, Egashira, Yusuke, Enomoto, Yukiko, Fukuda-Doi, Mayumi, Furui, Eisuke, Furuta, Konosuke, Gotoh, Seiji, Hamasaki, Toshimitsu, Hasegawa, Yasuhiro, Hirano, Teryuki, Homma, Kazunari, Ichijyo, Masahiko, Ide, Toshihiro, Igarashi, Shuichi, Iguchi, Yasuyuki, Ihara, Masafumi, Ikenouchi, Hajime, Inoue, Manabu, Inoue, Tsuyoshi, Itabashi, Ryo, Ito, Yasuhiro, Iwama, Toru, Kamiyama, Kenji, Kamiyoshi, Shoko, Kanai, Haruka, Kanematsu, Yasuhisa, Kanzawa, Takao, Kimura, Kazumi, Kitayama, Jiro, Kitazono, Takanari, Koga, Masatoshi, Kondo, Rei, Kudo, Kohsuke, Kusumi, Masayoshi, Kuwahara, Ken, Matsumoto, Shoji, Matsuoka, Hideki, Mihara, Ban, Minematsu, Kazuo, Miura, Ken, Miwa, Kaori, Morita, Naomi, Mouri, Wataru, Murata, Kayo, Nagakane, Yoshinari, Nakase, Taizen, Ohara, Hiromi, Ohara, Nobuyuki, Ohnishi, Hideyuki, Ohta, Hajime, Ohtaki, Masafumi, Ohtani, Ryo, Ohtsuki, Toshiho, Ohyama, Hideo, Okada, Takashi, Okada, Yasushi, Osaki, Masato, Sakai, Nobuyuki, Sanbongi, Yoshiki, Sasaki, Naoshi, Sasaki, Makoto, Sato, Shoichiro, Seki, Kenta, Shimizu, Wataru, Shiokawa, Yoshiaki, Sozu, Takashi, Suzuki, Junichiro, Suzuki, Rieko, Takagi, Yasushi, Takizawa, Shunya, Tanahashi, Norio, Tanaka, Eijiro, Tanaka, Ryota, Tateishi, Yohei, Terada, Tomoaki, Terasaki, Tadashi, Todo, Kenichi, Tokunaga, Azusa, Toyoda, Kazunori, Tsujino, Akira, Ueda, Toshihiro, Uesaka, Yoshikazu, Uotani, Mihoko, Urabe, Takao, Watanabe, Masao, Yagita, Yoshiki, Yakushiji, Yusuke, Yamamoto, Haruko, Yasui, Keizo, Yonehara, Toshiro, Yoshimura, Sohei, Yoshimura, Shinichi, Aarnio, K., Alemseged, F., Anderson, C., Ang, T., Archer, M.L., Attia, J., Bailey, P., Balabanski, A., Barber, A., Barber, P.A., Bernhardt, J., Bivard, A., Blacker, D., Bladin, C.F., Brodtmann, A., Cadilhac, D., Campbell, B.C.V., Carey, L., Celestino, S., Chan, L., Chang, W.H., ChangI, A., Chen, C.H., Chen, C.-I., Chen, H.F., Chen, T.C., Chen, W.H., Chen, Y.Y., Cheng, C.A., Cheong, E., Chiou, Y.W., Choi, P.M., Chu, H.J., Chuang, C.S., Chung, T.C., Churilov, L., Clissold, B., Connelly, A., Coote, S., Coulton, B., Cowley, E., Cranefield, J., Curtze, S., D'Este, C., Davis, S.M., Day, S., Desmond, P.M., Dewey, H.M., Ding, C., Donnan, G.A., Drew, R., Eirola, S., Field, D., Frost, T., Garcia-Esperon, C., George, K., Gerraty, R., Grimley, R., Guo, Y.C., Hankey, G., Harvey, J., Ho, S.C., Hogan, K., Howells, D., Hsiao, P.M., Hsu, C.H., Hsu, C.T., Hsu, C.-S., Hsu, J.P., Hsu, Y.D., Hsu, Y.T., Hu, C.J., Huang, C.C., Huang, H.Y., Huang, M.Y., Huang, S.C., Huang, W.S., Jackson, D., Jeng, J.S., Jiang, S.K., Kaauwai, L., Kasari, O., King, J., Kleinig, T.J., Koivu, M., Kolbe, J., Krause, M., Kuan, C.W., Kung, W.L., Kyndt, C., Lau, C.L., Lee, A., Lee, C.Y., Lee, J.T., Lee, Y., Lee, Y.C., Levi, C., Levi, C.R., Lien, L.M., Lim, J.C., Lin, C.C., Lin, C.H., Lin, C.M., Lin, D., Liu, C.H., Liu, J., Lo, Y.C., Loh, P.S., Low, E., Lu, C.H., Lu, C.J., Lu, M.K., Ly, J., Ma, H., Macaulay, L., Macdonnell, R., Mackey, E., Macleod, M., Mahadevan, J., Maxwell, V., McCoy, R., McDonald, A., McModie, S., Meretoja, A., Mishra, S., Mitchell, P.J., Miteff, F., Moore, A., Muller, C., Ng, F., Ng, F.C., Ng, J-L., O'Brian, W., O'Collins, V., Oxley, T.J., Parsons, M.W., Patel, S., Peng, G.S., Pesavento, L., Phan, T., Rodrigues, E., Ross, Z., Sabet, A., Sallaberger, M., Salvaris, P., Shah, D., Sharma, G., Sibolt, G., Simpson, M., Singhal, S., Snow, B., Spratt, N., Stark, R., Sturm, J., Sun, M.C., Sun, Y., Sung, P.S., Sung, Y.F., Suzuki, M., Tan, M., Tang, S.C., Tatlisumak, T., Thijs, V., Tiainen, M., Tsai, C.H., Tsai, C.K., Tsai, C.L., Tsai, H.T., Tsai, L.K., Tseng, C.H., Tseng, L.T., Tsoleridis, J., Tu, H., Tu, H.T-H., Vallat, W., Virta, J., Wang, W.C., Wang, Y.T., Waters, M., Weir, L., Wijeratne, T., Williams, C., Wilson, W., Wong, A.A., Wong, K., Wu, T.Y., Wu, Y.H., Yan, B., Yang, F.C., Yang, Y.W., Yassi, N., Yeh, H.L., Yeh, J.H., Yeh, S.J., Yen, C.H., Young, D., Ysai, C.L., Zhang, W.W., Zhao, H., Zhao, L., Althaus-Knaurer, Katharina, Bendszus, Martin, Berrouschot, Jörg, Bluhmki, Erich, Bovi, Paolo, Chatellier, Gilles, Cove, Lynda, Davis, Stephen, Dixit, A., Donnan, Geoffrey, Ehrenkrona, Christina, Eschenfelder, Christoph, Fatar, Marc, Francisco Arenillas, Juan, Gruber, Franz, Hacke, Werner, Kala, Lalit, Kapeller, Peter, Kaste, Markku, Kessler, Christof, Köhrmann, Martin, Laage, Rico, Lees, Kennedy R., Leys, Didier, Luna Rodriguez, Alain, Mas, Jean-Louis, Mikulik, Robert, Molina, Carlos, Muddegowda, Girish, Muir, Keith, Niederkorn, Kurt, Nuñez, Xavier, Schellinger, Peter, Schwab, Stefan, Serena, Joaquin, Sobesky, Jan, Steiner, Thorsten, Svenson, Ann-Sofie, Toni, Danilo, von Kummer, Rüdiger, Wahlgren, Nils, Wardlaw, Joanna, Betensky, Rebecca A., Boulouis, Gregoire, Carandang, Raphael A., Copen, William A., Cougo, Pedro, Cutting, Shawna, Drake, Kendra, Ford, Andria L., Hallenbeck, John, Harris, Gordon J., Hoesch, Robert, Hsia, Amie, Kase, Carlos, Latour, Lawrence, Lev, Michael H., Muzikansky, Alona, Nagaraja, Nandakumar, Schwamm, Lee H., Searls, Eric, Song, Shlee S., Starkman, Sidney, Warach, Steven, Wu, Ona, Yoo, Albert J., Zand, Ramin, Ma, Henry, Schwamm, Lee H, Bladin, Christopher F, Campbell, Bruce C V, Churilov, Leonid, Fiebach, Jochen B, Kleinig, Timothy J, Latour, Lawrence L, Levi, Christopher R, Molina, Carlos A, Muir, Keith W, Parsons, Mark W, Pedraza, Salvador, Schellinger, Peter D, Simonsen, Claus Z, Song, Shlee S, Hsu, Chung Y, Yassi, Nawaf, Donnan, Geoffrey A, and Davis, Stephen M
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. A global call to action to improve the care of people with fragility fractures
- Author
-
Dreinhöfer, K.E., Mitchell, P.J., Bégué, T., Cooper, C., Costa, M.L., Falaschi, P., Hertz, K., Marsh, D., Maggi, S., Nana, A., Palm, H., Speerin, R., and Magaziner, J.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Association of Endovascular Thrombectomy vs Medical Management with Functional and Safety Outcomes in Patients Treated beyond 24 Hours of Last Known Well: The SELECT Late Study
- Author
-
Sarraj, A. Kleinig, T.J. Hassan, A.E. Portela, P.C. Ortega-Gutierrez, S. Abraham, M.G. Manning, N.W. Siegler, J.E. Goyal, N. Maali, L. Blackburn, S. Wu, T.Y. Blasco, J. Renú, A. Sangha, N.S. Arenillas, J.F. McCullough-Hicks, M.E. Wallace, A. Gibson, D. Pujara, D.K. Shaker, F. De Lera Alfonso, M. Olivé-Gadea, M. Farooqui, M. Vivanco Suarez, J.S. Iezzi, Z. Khalife, J. Lechtenberg, C.G. Qadri, S.K. Moussa, R.B. Abdulrazzak, M.A. Almaghrabi, T.S. Mir, O. Beharry, J. Krishnaiah, B. Miller, M. Khalil, N. Sharma, G.J. Katsanos, A.H. Fadhil, A. Duncan, K.R. Hu, Y. Martin-Schild, S.B. Tsivgoulis, G.K. Cordato, D. Furlan, A. Churilov, L. Mitchell, P.J. Arthur, A.S. Parsons, M.W. Grotta, J.C. Sitton, C.W. Ribo, M. Albers, G.W. Campbell, B.C.V. and Sarraj, A. Kleinig, T.J. Hassan, A.E. Portela, P.C. Ortega-Gutierrez, S. Abraham, M.G. Manning, N.W. Siegler, J.E. Goyal, N. Maali, L. Blackburn, S. Wu, T.Y. Blasco, J. Renú, A. Sangha, N.S. Arenillas, J.F. McCullough-Hicks, M.E. Wallace, A. Gibson, D. Pujara, D.K. Shaker, F. De Lera Alfonso, M. Olivé-Gadea, M. Farooqui, M. Vivanco Suarez, J.S. Iezzi, Z. Khalife, J. Lechtenberg, C.G. Qadri, S.K. Moussa, R.B. Abdulrazzak, M.A. Almaghrabi, T.S. Mir, O. Beharry, J. Krishnaiah, B. Miller, M. Khalil, N. Sharma, G.J. Katsanos, A.H. Fadhil, A. Duncan, K.R. Hu, Y. Martin-Schild, S.B. Tsivgoulis, G.K. Cordato, D. Furlan, A. Churilov, L. Mitchell, P.J. Arthur, A.S. Parsons, M.W. Grotta, J.C. Sitton, C.W. Ribo, M. Albers, G.W. Campbell, B.C.V.
- Abstract
Importance: The role of endovascular thrombectomy is uncertain for patients presenting beyond 24 hours of the time they were last known well. Objective: To evaluate functional and safety outcomes for endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) vs medical management in patients with large-vessel occlusion beyond 24 hours of last known well. Design, Setting, and Participants: This retrospective observational cohort study enrolled patients between July 2012 and December 2021 at 17 centers across the United States, Spain, Australia, and New Zealand. Eligible patients had occlusions in the internal carotid artery or middle cerebral artery (M1 or M2 segment) and were treated with EVT or medical management beyond 24 hours of last known well. Interventions: Endovascular thrombectomy or medical management (control). Main Outcomes and Measures: Primary outcome was functional independence (modified Rankin Scale score 0-2). Mortality and symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (sICH) were safety outcomes. Propensity score (PS)-weighted multivariable logistic regression analyses were adjusted for prespecified clinical characteristics, perfusion parameters, and/or Alberta Stroke Program Early CT Score (ASPECTS) and were repeated in subsequent 1:1 PS-matched cohorts. Results: Of 301 patients (median [IQR] age, 69 years [59-81]; 149 female), 185 patients (61%) received EVT and 116 (39%) received medical management. In adjusted analyses, EVT was associated with better functional independence (38% vs control, 10%; inverse probability treatment weighting adjusted odds ratio [IPTW aOR], 4.56; 95% CI, 2.28-9.09; P <.001) despite increased odds of sICH (10.1% for EVT vs 1.7% for control; IPTW aOR, 10.65; 95% CI, 2.19-51.69; P =.003). This association persisted after PS-based matching on (1) clinical characteristics and ASPECTS (EVT, 35%, vs control, 19%; aOR, 3.14; 95% CI, 1.02-9.72; P =.047); (2) clinical characteristics and perfusion parameters (EVT, 35%, vs control, 17%; aOR, 4.17; 95% CI, 1.15-15
- Published
- 2023
6. Risk factors of unexplained early neurological deterioration after treatment for ischemic stroke due to large vessel occlusion: a post hoc analysis of the HERMES study
- Author
-
Bourcier, R., Goyal, M., Muir, K.W., Desal, H., Dippel, D.W.J., Majoie, C.B.L.M., van Zwam, W.H., Jovin, T.G., Mitchell, P.J., Demchuk, A.M., van Oostenbrugge, R.J., Brown, S.B., Campbell, B., White, P., Hill, M.D., Saver, J.L., Weimar, C., Jahan, R., Guillemin, F., Bracard, S., Naggara, O., HERMES Trialists Collaboration, Bourcier, R., Goyal, M., Muir, K.W., Desal, H., Dippel, D.W.J., Majoie, C.B.L.M., van Zwam, W.H., Jovin, T.G., Mitchell, P.J., Demchuk, A.M., van Oostenbrugge, R.J., Brown, S.B., Campbell, B., White, P., Hill, M.D., Saver, J.L., Weimar, C., Jahan, R., Guillemin, F., Bracard, S., Naggara, O., and HERMES Trialists Collaboration
- Abstract
Background: Early neurological deterioration (END) after endovascular treatment (EVT) in patients with anterior circulation acute ischemic stroke (AIS) is associated with poor outcome. END may remain unexplained by parenchymal hemorrhage (UnEND). We aim to analyze the risk factors of UnEND in the medical management (MM) and EVT arms of the HERMES study. Methods: We conducted a post-hoc analysis of anterior AIS patients who underwent EVT for proximal anterior occlusions. Risk factors of UnEND, defined as a worsening of ≥4 points between baseline National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) and NIHSS at 24 hours without hemorrhage, were compared between both arms using mixed logistic regression models adjusted for baseline characteristics. An interaction analysis between the EVT and MM arms for risk factors of UnEND was conducted. Results: Among 1723 patients assessable for UnEND, 160 patients experienced an UnEND (9.3%), including 9.1% (78/854) in the EVT arm and 9.4% (82/869) in the MM arm. There was no significant difference in the incidence of UnEND between the two study arms. In the EVT population, independent risk factors of UnEND were lower baseline NIHSS, higher baseline glucose, and lower collateral grade. In the MM population, the only independent predictor of UnEND was higher baseline glucose. However, we did not demonstrate an interaction between EVT and MM for baseline factors as risk factors of UnEND. UnEND was, similarly in both treatment groups, a significant predictor of unfavorable outcome in both the EVT (p<0.001) and MM (p<0.001) arms. Conclusions: UnEND is not an uncommon event, with a similar rate which ever treatment arm is considered. In the clinical scenario of AIS due to large vessel occlusion, no patient-related factor seems to increase the risk for UnEND when treated by EVT compared with MM.
- Published
- 2023
7. Transdisciplinary synthesis for ecosystem science, policy and management: The Australian experience
- Author
-
Lynch, A.J.J., Thackway, R., Specht, A., Beggs, P.J., Brisbane, S., Burns, E.L., Byrne, M., Capon, S.J., Casanova, M.T., Clarke, P.A., Davies, J.M., Dovers, S., Dwyer, R.G., Ens, E., Fisher, D.O., Flanigan, M., Garnier, E., Guru, S.M., Kilminster, K., Locke, J., Mac Nally, R., McMahon, K.M., Mitchell, P.J., Pierson, J.C., Rodgers, E.M., Russell-Smith, J., Udy, J., and Waycott, M.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Clinical outcome of patients with mild pre-stroke morbidity following endovascular treatment: a HERMES substudy
- Author
-
McDonough, R.V., Ospel, J.M., Majoie, C.B.L.M., Saver, J.L., White, P., Dippel, D.W.J., Brown, S.B., Demchuk, A.M., Jovin, T.G., Mitchell, P.J., Bracard, S., Campbell, B.C.V., Muir, K.W., Hill, M.D., Guillemin, F., Goyal, M., HERMES Collaborators, Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, ANS - Neurovascular Disorders, ACS - Microcirculation, Radiology and nuclear medicine, and Neurology
- Subjects
thrombectomy ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,General Medicine ,stroke - Abstract
BackgroundAnalyses of the effect of pre-stroke functional levels on the outcome of endovascular therapy (EVT) have focused on the course of patients with moderate to substantial pre-stroke disability. The effect of complete freedom from pre-existing disability (modified Rankin Scale (mRS) 0) versus predominantly mild pre-existing disability/symptoms (mRS 1–2) has not been well delineated.MethodsThe HERMES meta-analysis pooled data from seven randomized trials that tested the efficacy of EVT. We tested for a multiplicative interaction effect of pre-stroke mRS on the relationship between treatment and outcomes. Ordinal regression was used to assess the association between EVT and 90-day mRS (primary outcome) in the subgroup of patients with pre-stroke mRS 1–2. Multivariable regression modeling was then used to test the effect of mild pre-stroke disability/symptoms on the primary and secondary outcomes (delta-mRS, mRS 0–2/5–6) compared with patients with pre-stroke mRS 0.ResultsWe included 1764 patients, of whom 199 (11.3%) had pre-stroke mRS 1–2. No interaction effect of pre-stroke mRS on the relationship between treatment and outcome was observed. Patients with pre-stroke mRS 1–2 had worse outcomes than those with pre-stroke mRS 0 (adjusted common OR (acOR) 0.53, 95% CI 0.40 to 0.70). Nonetheless, a significant benefit of EVT was observed within the mRS 1–2 subgroup (cOR 2.08, 95% CI 1.22 to 3.55).ConclusionsPatients asymptomatic/without disability prior to onset have better outcomes following EVT than patients with mild disability/symptoms. Patients with pre-stroke mRS 1–2, however, more often achieve good outcomes with EVT compared with conservative management. These findings indicate that mild pre-existing disability/symptoms influence patient prognosis after EVT but do not diminish the EVT treatment effect.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Diffusion tensor imaging of acute inflammatory lesion evolution in multiple sclerosis
- Author
-
Liu, Y., Mitchell, P.J., Kilpatrick, T.J., Stein, M.S., Harrison, L.C., Baker, J., Ditchfield, M., Li, K., Egan, G.F., Butzkueven, H., and Kolbe, S.C.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The AL 333-160 fourth metatarsal from Hadar compared to that of humans, great apes, baboons and proboscis monkeys: Non-conclusive evidence for pedal arches or obligate bipedality in Hadar hominins
- Author
-
Mitchell, P.J., Sarmiento, E.E., and Meldrum, D.J.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. A single centre study of coil embolization of intracranial aneurysms comparing bare platinum and PGLA-coated coils
- Author
-
Bose, R.S., Dowling, R.J., Yan, B., and Mitchell, P.J.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Outcome Prediction Based on Automatically Extracted Infarct Core Image Features in Patients with Acute Ischemic Stroke
- Author
-
Tolhuisen, M.L., Hoving, J.W., Koopman, M.S., Kappelhof, M., Voorst, H. van, Bruggeman, A.E., Demchuck, A.M., Dippel, D.W., Emmer, B.J., Bracard, S., Guillemin, F., Oostenbrugge, R.J. van, Mitchell, P.J., Zwam, W.H. van, Hill, M.D., Roos, Y., Jovin, T.G., Berkhemer, O.A., Campbell, B.C., Saver, J., White, P., Muir, K.W., Goyal, M., Marquering, H.A., Jenniskens, S.F.M., Majoie, C.B.L.M., Caan, M.W., Tolhuisen, M.L., Hoving, J.W., Koopman, M.S., Kappelhof, M., Voorst, H. van, Bruggeman, A.E., Demchuck, A.M., Dippel, D.W., Emmer, B.J., Bracard, S., Guillemin, F., Oostenbrugge, R.J. van, Mitchell, P.J., Zwam, W.H. van, Hill, M.D., Roos, Y., Jovin, T.G., Berkhemer, O.A., Campbell, B.C., Saver, J., White, P., Muir, K.W., Goyal, M., Marquering, H.A., Jenniskens, S.F.M., Majoie, C.B.L.M., and Caan, M.W.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext, Infarct volume (FIV) on follow-up diffusion-weighted imaging (FU-DWI) is only moderately associated with functional outcome in acute ischemic stroke patients. However, FU-DWI may contain other imaging biomarkers that could aid in improving outcome prediction models for acute ischemic stroke. We included FU-DWI data from the HERMES, ISLES, and MR CLEAN-NO IV databases. Lesions were segmented using a deep learning model trained on the HERMES and ISLES datasets. We assessed the performance of three classifiers in predicting functional independence for the MR CLEAN-NO IV trial cohort based on: (1) FIV alone, (2) the most important features obtained from a trained convolutional autoencoder (CAE), and (3) radiomics. Furthermore, we investigated feature importance in the radiomic-feature-based model. For outcome prediction, we included 206 patients: 144 scans were included in the training set, 21 in the validation set, and 41 in the test set. The classifiers that included the CAE and the radiomic features showed AUC values of 0.88 and 0.81, respectively, while the model based on FIV had an AUC of 0.79. This difference was not found to be statistically significant. Feature importance results showed that lesion intensity heterogeneity received more weight than lesion volume in outcome prediction. This study suggests that predictions of functional outcome should not be based on FIV alone and that FU-DWI images capture additional prognostic information.
- Published
- 2022
13. Validation of linear cerebral atrophy markers in multiple sclerosis
- Author
-
Butzkueven, H., Kolbe, S.C., Jolley, D.J., Brown, J.Y., Cook, M.J., van der Mei, I.A.F., Groom, P.S., Carey, J., Eckholdt, J., Rubio, J.P., Taylor, B.V., Mitchell, P.J., Egan, G.F., and Kilpatrick, T.J.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Prediction of Outcome and Endovascular Treatment Benefit: Validation and Update of the MR PREDICTS Decision Tool
- Author
-
Venema, E., Roozenbeek, B., Mulder, Maxim, Brown, S., Majoie, C., Steyerberg, Ewout W., Demchuk, A.M., Muir, K.W., Davalos, A., Mitchell, P.J., Bracard, S., Berkhemer, O.A., Lycklama, A.N.G.J., Oostenbrugge, R.J. van, Roos, Y., Zwam, W.H. van, Lugt, A. van der, Hill, M.D., White, P., Campbell, B.C., Guillemin, F., Saver, J.L., Jovin, T.G., Goyal, M., Dijk, E.J. van, Boogaarts, H.D., Jenniskens, S.F.M., Meijer, A., Dippel, D.W., Lingsma, H.F., Venema, E., Roozenbeek, B., Mulder, Maxim, Brown, S., Majoie, C., Steyerberg, Ewout W., Demchuk, A.M., Muir, K.W., Davalos, A., Mitchell, P.J., Bracard, S., Berkhemer, O.A., Lycklama, A.N.G.J., Oostenbrugge, R.J. van, Roos, Y., Zwam, W.H. van, Lugt, A. van der, Hill, M.D., White, P., Campbell, B.C., Guillemin, F., Saver, J.L., Jovin, T.G., Goyal, M., Dijk, E.J. van, Boogaarts, H.D., Jenniskens, S.F.M., Meijer, A., Dippel, D.W., and Lingsma, H.F.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext, [Figure: see text].
- Published
- 2021
15. Cerebral Large Vessel Occlusion Caused by Fat Embolism-A Case Series and Review of the Literature.
- Author
-
Ooi S., Raviskanthan S., Campbell B.C.V., Hutton E.J., Mitchell P.J., Cloud G.C., Ooi S., Raviskanthan S., Campbell B.C.V., Hutton E.J., Mitchell P.J., and Cloud G.C.
- Abstract
The diagnosis of fat embolism syndrome typically involves neurological, respiratory and dermatological manifestations of microvascular occlusion 24-72 h after a precipitating event. However, fat embolism causing cerebral large vessel occlusion strokes and their sequelae have rarely been reported in the literature. This case series reports three patients with fat emboli post operatively causing cerebral large vessel occlusions, as well as a review of the literature to identify differences in clinical presentations and outcomes in stroke secondary to fat emboli causing large vessel occlusions compared to those with fat embolism syndrome.© Copyright © 2021 Ooi, Raviskanthan, Campbell, Hutton, Mitchell and Cloud.
- Published
- 2021
16. COVID-19 Pandemic Impact on Care for Stroke in Australia: Emerging Evidence From the Australian Stroke Clinical Registry.
- Author
-
Mitchell P.J., Campbell B.C.V., Cadilhac D.A., Kim J., Tod E.K., Morrison J.L., Breen S.J., Jaques K., Grimley R., Jones B., Cloud G.C., Kleinig T., Hillier S., Castley H., Lindley R.I., Lannin N.A., Middleton S., Yan B., Hill K., Clissold B.B., Faux S.G., Anderson C.S., Mitchell P.J., Campbell B.C.V., Cadilhac D.A., Kim J., Tod E.K., Morrison J.L., Breen S.J., Jaques K., Grimley R., Jones B., Cloud G.C., Kleinig T., Hillier S., Castley H., Lindley R.I., Lannin N.A., Middleton S., Yan B., Hill K., Clissold B.B., Faux S.G., and Anderson C.S.
- Abstract
We present information on acute stroke care for the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia using data from the Australian Stroke Clinical Registry (AuSCR). The first case of COVID-19 in Australia was recorded in late January 2020 and national restrictions to control the virus commenced in March. To account for seasonal effects of stroke admissions, patient-level data from the registry from January to June 2020 were compared to the same period in 2019 (historical-control) from 61 public hospitals. We compared periods using descriptive statistics and performed interrupted time series analyses. Perceptions of stroke clinicians were obtained from 53/72 (74%) hospitals participating in the AuSCR (80% nurses) via a voluntary, electronic feedback survey. Survey data were summarized to provide contextual information for the registry-based analysis. Data from the registry covered locations that had 91% of Australian COVID-19 cases to the end of June 2020. For the historical-control period, 9,308 episodes of care were compared with the pandemic period (8,992 episodes). Patient characteristics were similar for each cohort (median age: 75 years; 56% male; ischemic stroke 69%). Treatment in stroke units decreased progressively during the pandemic period (control: 76% pandemic: 70%, p < 0.001). Clinical staff reported fewer resources available for stroke including 10% reporting reduced stroke unit beds. Several time-based metrics were unchanged whereas door-to-needle times were longer during the peak pandemic period (March-April, 2020; 82 min, control: 74 min, p = 0.012). Our data emphasize the need to maintain appropriate acute stroke care during times of national emergency such as pandemic management.© Copyright © 2021 Cadilhac, Kim, Tod, Morrison, Breen, Jaques, Grimley, Jones, Cloud, Kleinig, Hillier, Castley, Lindley, Lannin, Middleton, Yan, Hill, Clissold, Mitchell, Anderson, Faux, Campbell and the AuSCR COVID-19 Reporting Consortium Group.
- Published
- 2021
17. Development of the Asia Pacific Consortium on Osteoporosis (APCO) Framework: clinical standards of care for the screening, diagnosis, and management of osteoporosis in the Asia-Pacific region.
- Author
-
Valleenukul T., Chit T.T., Tiu K.L., Yung C.K., Zhao Y.L., Chandran M., Mitchell P.J., Amphansap T., Bhadada S.K., Chadha M., Chan D.-C., Chung Y.-S., Ebeling P., Gilchrist N., Habib Khan A., Halbout P., Hew F.L., Lan H.-P.T., Lau T.C., Lee J.K., Lekamwasam S., Lyubomirsky G., Mercado-Asis L.B., Mithal A., Nguyen T.V., Pandey D., Reid I.R., Suzuki A., Valleenukul T., Chit T.T., Tiu K.L., Yung C.K., Zhao Y.L., Chandran M., Mitchell P.J., Amphansap T., Bhadada S.K., Chadha M., Chan D.-C., Chung Y.-S., Ebeling P., Gilchrist N., Habib Khan A., Halbout P., Hew F.L., Lan H.-P.T., Lau T.C., Lee J.K., Lekamwasam S., Lyubomirsky G., Mercado-Asis L.B., Mithal A., Nguyen T.V., Pandey D., Reid I.R., and Suzuki A.
- Abstract
Summary: Guidelines for doctors managing osteoporosis in the Asia-Pacific region vary widely. We compared 18 guidelines for similarities and differences in five key areas. We then used a structured consensus process to develop clinical standards of care for the diagnosis and management of osteoporosis and for improving the quality of care. Purpose(s): Minimum clinical standards for assessment and management of osteoporosis are needed in the Asia-Pacific (AP) region to inform clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) and to improve osteoporosis care. We present the framework of these clinical standards and describe its development. Method(s): We conducted a structured comparative analysis of existing CPGs in the AP region using a "5IQ" model (identification, investigation, information, intervention, integration, and quality). One-hundred data elements were extracted from each guideline. We then employed a four-round Delphi consensus process to structure the framework, identify key components of guidance, and develop clinical care standards. Result(s): Eighteen guidelines were included. The 5IQ analysis demonstrated marked heterogeneity, notably in guidance on risk factors, the use of biochemical markers, self-care information for patients, indications for osteoporosis treatment, use of fracture risk assessment tools, and protocols for monitoring treatment. There was minimal guidance on long-term management plans or on strategies and systems for clinical quality improvement. Twenty-nine APCO members participated in the Delphi process, resulting in consensus on 16 clinical standards, with levels of attainment defined for those on identification and investigation of fragility fractures, vertebral fracture assessment, and inclusion of quality metrics in guidelines. Conclusion(s): The 5IQ analysis confirmed previous anecdotal observations of marked heterogeneity of osteoporosis clinical guidelines in the AP region. The Framework provides practical, clear, and feasible recommend
- Published
- 2021
18. Utility of Severity-Based Prehospital Triage for Endovascular Thrombectomy: ACT-FAST Validation Study.
- Author
-
Davis S.M., Alemseged F., Ng F., Mitchell P.J., Parsons M.W., Yassi N., Campbell B.C.V., Zhao H., Smith K., Bernard S., Stephenson M., Ma H., Chandra R.V., Phan T., Bladin C.F., Churilov L., Crompton D., Dewey H.M., Wijeratne T., Cloud G., Thijs V., Kleinig T.J., Ng J.L., Williams C., Davis S.M., Alemseged F., Ng F., Mitchell P.J., Parsons M.W., Yassi N., Campbell B.C.V., Zhao H., Smith K., Bernard S., Stephenson M., Ma H., Chandra R.V., Phan T., Bladin C.F., Churilov L., Crompton D., Dewey H.M., Wijeratne T., Cloud G., Thijs V., Kleinig T.J., Ng J.L., and Williams C.
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: Severity-based assessment tools may assist in prehospital triage of patients to comprehensive stroke centers (CSCs) for endovascular thrombectomy (EVT), but criticisms regarding diagnostic inaccuracy have not been adequately addressed. This study aimed to quantify the benefits and disadvantages of severity-based triage in a large real-world paramedic validation of the Ambulance Clinical Triage for Acute Stroke Treatment (ACT-FAST) algorithm. Method(s): Ambulance Victoria paramedics assessed the prehospital ACT-FAST algorithm in patients with suspected stroke from November 2017 to July 2019 following an 8-minute training video. All patients were transported to the nearest stroke center as per current guidelines. ACT-FAST diagnostic accuracy was compared with hospital imaging for the presence of large vessel occlusion (LVO) and need for CSC-level care (LVO, intracranial hemorrhage, and tumor). Patient-level time saving to EVT was modeled using a validated Google Maps algorithm. Disadvantages of CSC bypass examined potential thrombolysis delays in non-LVO infarcts, proportion of patients with false-negative EVT, and CSC overburdening. Result(s): Of 517 prehospital assessments, 168/517 (32.5%) were ACT-FAST positive and 132/517 (25.5%) had LVO. ACT-FAST sensitivity and specificity for LVO was 75.8% and 81.8%, respectively. Positive predictive value was 58.8% for LVO and 80.0% when intracranial hemorrhage and tumor (CSC-level care) were included. Within the metropolitan region, 29/55 (52.7%) of ACT-FAST-positive patients requiring EVT underwent a secondary interhospital transfer. Prehospital bypass with avoidance of secondary transfers was modeled to save 52 minutes (95% CI, 40.0-61.5) to EVT commencement. ACT-FAST was false-positive in 8 patients receiving thrombolysis (8.1% of 99 non-LVO infarcts) and false-negative in 4 patients with EVT requiring secondary transfer (5.4% of 74 EVT cases). CSC bypass was estimated to over-triage 1.1 patients-pe
- Published
- 2021
19. Publisher Correction to: Development of the Asia Pacific Consortium on Osteoporosis (APCO) framework: clinical standards of care for the screening, diagnosis, and management of osteoporosis in the Asia-Pacific region (Osteoporosis International, (2021), 32, 7, (1249-1275), 10.1007/s00198-020-05742-0).
- Author
-
Chandran M., Mitchell P.J., Amphansap T., Bhadada S.K., Chadha M., Chan D.-C., Chung Y.-S., Ebeling P., Gilchrist N., Habib Khan A., Halbout P., Hew F.L., Lan H.-P.T., Lau T.C., Lee J.K., Lekamwasam S., Lyubomirsky G., Mercado-Asis L.B., Mithal A., Nguyen T.V., Pandey D., Reid I.R., Suzuki A., Chit T.T., Tiu K.L., Valleenukul T., Yung C.K., Zhao Y.L., Chandran M., Mitchell P.J., Amphansap T., Bhadada S.K., Chadha M., Chan D.-C., Chung Y.-S., Ebeling P., Gilchrist N., Habib Khan A., Halbout P., Hew F.L., Lan H.-P.T., Lau T.C., Lee J.K., Lekamwasam S., Lyubomirsky G., Mercado-Asis L.B., Mithal A., Nguyen T.V., Pandey D., Reid I.R., Suzuki A., Chit T.T., Tiu K.L., Valleenukul T., Yung C.K., and Zhao Y.L.
- Abstract
Publisher Correction to this paper has been published: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00198-021-05953-z.Copyright © 2021, The Author(s).
- Published
- 2021
20. A quantitative method for analysis of in vitro neurite outgrowth
- Author
-
Mitchell, P.J., Hanson, J.C., Quets-Nguyen, A.T., Bergeron, M., and Smith, R.C.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Operator scheduling strategies in supervisory control of multiple UAVs
- Author
-
Cummings, M.L. and Mitchell, P.J.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Short-term effects of methylprednisolone on cerebral volume in multiple sclerosis relapses
- Author
-
Chapman, C., Tubridy, N., Cook, M.J., Mitchell, P.J., MacGregor, L.R., Lovelock, C., Litewka, L., Sedal, L., Kilpatrick, T.J., and Butzkueven, H.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Intravenous alteplase for stroke with unknown time of onset guided by advanced imaging: systematic review and meta-analysis of individual patient data
- Author
-
Thomalla, Götz, primary, Boutitie, Florent, additional, Ma, Henry, additional, Koga, Masatoshi, additional, Ringleb, Peter, additional, Schwamm, Lee H, additional, Wu, Ona, additional, Bendszus, Martin, additional, Bladin, Christopher F, additional, Campbell, Bruce C V, additional, Cheng, Bastian, additional, Churilov, Leonid, additional, Ebinger, Martin, additional, Endres, Matthias, additional, Fiebach, Jochen B, additional, Fukuda-Doi, Mayumi, additional, Inoue, Manabu, additional, Kleinig, Timothy J, additional, Latour, Lawrence L, additional, Lemmens, Robin, additional, Levi, Christopher R, additional, Leys, Didier, additional, Miwa, Kaori, additional, Molina, Carlos A, additional, Muir, Keith W, additional, Nighoghossian, Norbert, additional, Parsons, Mark W, additional, Pedraza, Salvador, additional, Schellinger, Peter D, additional, Schwab, Stefan, additional, Simonsen, Claus Z, additional, Song, Shlee S, additional, Thijs, Vincent, additional, Toni, Danilo, additional, Hsu, Chung Y, additional, Wahlgren, Nils, additional, Yamamoto, Haruko, additional, Yassi, Nawaf, additional, Yoshimura, Sohei, additional, Warach, Steven, additional, Hacke, Werner, additional, Toyoda, Kazunori, additional, Donnan, Geoffrey A, additional, Davis, Stephen M, additional, Gerloff, Christian, additional, Acosta, Boris Raul, additional, Aegidius, Karen, additional, Albiker, Christian, additional, Alegiani, Anna, additional, Almendrote, Miriam, additional, Alonso, Angelika, additional, Althaus, Katharina, additional, Amarenco, Pierre, additional, Amiri, Hemasse, additional, Anders, Bettina, additional, Aniculaesei, Adriana, additional, Appleton, Jason, additional, Arenillas, Juan, additional, Back, Christina, additional, Bähr, Christian, additional, Bardutzky, Jürgen, additional, Baronnet-Chauvet, Flore, additional, Bathe-Peters, Rouven, additional, Bayer-Karpinska, Anna, additional, Becerra, Juan L., additional, Beck, Christoph, additional, Belchí Guillamon, Olga, additional, Benoit, Amandine, additional, Berhoune, Nadia, additional, Bindila, Daniela, additional, Birchenall, Julia, additional, Blanc-Lasserre, Karine, additional, Blanco Gonzales, Miguel, additional, Bobinger, Tobias, additional, Bodechtel, Ulf, additional, Bodiguel, Eric, additional, Bojaryn, Urszula, additional, Bonnet, Louise, additional, Bouamra, Benjamin, additional, Bourgeois, Paul, additional, Breuer, Lorenz, additional, Breynaert, Ludovic, additional, Broughton, David, additional, Brouns, Raf, additional, Brugirard, Sébastian, additional, Bruneel, Bart, additional, Buggle, Florian, additional, Cakmak, Serkan, additional, Calleja, Ana, additional, Calvet, David, additional, Carrera, David, additional, Chen, Hsin-Chieh, additional, Cheripelli, Bharath, additional, Cho, Tae-Hee, additional, Choe, Chi-un, additional, Choy, Lillian, additional, Christensen, Hanne, additional, Ciatipis, Mareva, additional, Cloud, Geoffrey, additional, Cogez, Julien, additional, Cortijo, Elisa, additional, Crozier, Sophie, additional, Damgaard, Dorte, additional, Dani, Krishna, additional, De Coene, Beatrijs, additional, De Hollander, Isabel, additional, De Keyser, Jacques, additional, De Klippel, Nina, additional, De Maeseneire, Charlotte, additional, De Smedt, Ann, additional, del Mar Castellanos Rodrigo, Maria, additional, Deltour, Sandrine, additional, Demeestere, Jelle, additional, Derex, Laurent, additional, Desfontaines, Philippe, additional, Dittrich, Ralf, additional, Dixit, Anand, additional, Dobbels, Laurens, additional, Domigo, Valérie, additional, Dorado, Laura, additional, Druart, Charlotte, additional, Dupont, Kristina Hougaard, additional, Dusart, Anne, additional, Dziewas, Rainer, additional, Ebner, Matthias, additional, Edjali-Goujon, Myriam, additional, Eisele, Philipp, additional, El Tawil, Salwa, additional, Elhfnawy, Ahmed, additional, Etexberria, Ana, additional, Evans, Nicholas, additional, Fandler, Simon, additional, Fazekas, Franz, additional, Felix, Sandra, additional, Fiebach, Jochen B., additional, Fiehler, Jens, additional, Filipov, Alexandra, additional, Filipski, Katharina, additional, Fleischmann, Robert, additional, Foerch, Christian, additional, Ford, Ian, additional, Gaenslen, Alexandra, additional, Galinovic, Ivana, additional, Gancedo, Elena Meseguer, additional, Ganeshan, Ramanan, additional, García Esperón, Carlos, additional, Garrido, Alicia, additional, Gattringer, Thomas, additional, Geraghty, Olivia, additional, Geran, Rohat, additional, Gerner, Stefan, additional, Godon-Hardy, Sylvie, additional, Göhler, Jos, additional, Golsari, Amir, additional, Gomis, Meritxell, additional, Gorriz, David, additional, Gramse, Verena, additional, Grau, Laia, additional, Griebe, Martin, additional, Guerrero, Cristina, additional, Guerzoglu, Damla, additional, Guettier, Sophie, additional, Guiraud, Vincent, additional, Gumbinger, Christoph, additional, Gunreben, Ignaz, additional, Haertig, Florian, additional, Hametner, Christian, additional, Hanseeuw, Bernard, additional, Hansen, Andreas, additional, Hansen, Jakob, additional, Harbo, Thomas, additional, Harloff, Andreas, additional, Harmel, Peter, additional, Häusler, Karl Georg, additional, Heinen, Florian, additional, Held, Valentin, additional, Hellwig, Simon, additional, Hemelsoet, Dimitri, additional, Hennerici, Michael, additional, Herm, Juliane, additional, Hermans, Sylvia, additional, Hernández, María, additional, Hervas Vicente, Jose, additional, Hjort, Niels, additional, Hobeanu, Cristina, additional, Hobohm, Carsten, additional, Höfner, Elmar, additional, Hohenbichler, Katharina, additional, Hommel, Marc, additional, Hoppe, Julia, additional, Hornberger, Eva, additional, Hoyer, Carolin, additional, Huang, Xuya, additional, Ipsen, Nils, additional, Isern, Irina, additional, Ispierto, Lourdes, additional, Iversen, Helle, additional, Jeppesen, Lise, additional, Jimenez, Marta, additional, Jungehülsing, Jan, additional, Jüttler, Eric, additional, Kalladka, Dheeraj, additional, Kallmünzer, Bernd, additional, Kar, Arindam, additional, Kellert, Lars, additional, Kemmling, André, additional, Kessler, Tobias, additional, Khan, Usman, additional, Klein, Matthias, additional, Kleinschnitz, Christoph, additional, Klockziem, Matti, additional, Knops, Michael, additional, Koehler, Luzie, additional, Koehrmann, Martin, additional, Kohlfürst, Heinz, additional, Kollmar, Rainer, additional, Kraft, Peter, additional, Krause, Thomas, additional, Kristensen, Bo, additional, Kröber, Jan M., additional, Kurka, Natalia, additional, Ladoux, Alexandre, additional, Laloux, Patrice, additional, Lamy, Catherine, additional, Landrault, Emmanuelle, additional, Lauer, Arne, additional, Lebely, Claire, additional, Leempoel, Jonathan, additional, Lees, Kennedy, additional, Leger, Anne, additional, Legrand, Laurence, additional, Li, Lin, additional, Löbbe, Anna-Mareike, additional, London, Frederic, additional, Lopez-cancio, Elena, additional, Lorenz, Matthias, additional, Louw, Stephen, additional, Lovelock, Caroline, additional, Lozano Sánchez, Manuel, additional, Lucente, Giuseppe, additional, Lückl, Janos, additional, Luna, Alain, additional, Macha, Kosmas, additional, Machet, Alexandre, additional, Mackenrodt, Daniel, additional, Madzar, Dominik, additional, Majoie, Charles, additional, Männer, Anika, additional, Maqueda, Vicky, additional, Marstrand, Jacob, additional, Martinez, Alicia, additional, Marzina, Annika, additional, Mechthouff, Laura, additional, Meden, Per, additional, Meersman, Guy, additional, Meier, Julia, additional, Mellerio, Charles, additional, Menn, Oliver, additional, Meyer, Nadja, additional, Michalski, Dominik, additional, Michels, Peter, additional, Michelsen, Lene, additional, Millán Torne, Monica, additional, Minnerup, Jens, additional, Modrau, Boris, additional, Moeller, Sebastian, additional, Møller, Anette, additional, Morel, Nathalie, additional, Moreton, Fiona, additional, Morin, Ludovic, additional, Moulin, Thierry, additional, Moynihan, Barry, additional, Mueller, Anne K., additional, Muir, Keith W., additional, Mulero, Patricia, additional, Mundiyanapurath, Sibu, additional, Mutzenbach, Johannes, additional, Nagel, Simon, additional, Naggara, Oliver, additional, Nallasivan, Arumugam, additional, Navalpotro, Irene, additional, Nave, Alexander H., additional, Nederkoorn, Paul, additional, Neeb, Lars, additional, Neugebauer, Hermann, additional, Neumann-Haefelin, Tobias, additional, Oberndorfer, Stefan, additional, Opherk, Christian, additional, Oppel, Lorenz, additional, Oppenheim, Catherine, additional, Orthgieß, Johannes, additional, Ostergaard, Leif, additional, Paindeville, Perrine, additional, Palomeras, Ernest, additional, Panitz, Verena, additional, Patel, Bhavni, additional, Peeters, Andre, additional, Peeters, Dirk, additional, Pellisé, Anna, additional, Pelz, Johann, additional, Pereira, Anthony, additional, Pérez de la Ossa, Natalia, additional, Perry, Richard, additional, Petraza, Salvador, additional, Peysson, Stéphane, additional, Pfeilschifter, Waltraud, additional, Pichler, Alexander, additional, Pierskalla, Alexandra, additional, Pledl, Hans-Werner, additional, Poli, Sven, additional, Pomrehn, Katrin, additional, Poulsen, Marika, additional, Prats, Luis, additional, Presas, Silvia, additional, Prohaska, Elisabeth, additional, Puetz, Volker, additional, Puig, Josep, additional, Puig Alcántara, Josep, additional, Purrucker, Jan, additional, Quenardelle, Veronique, additional, Ramachandran, Sankaranarayanan, additional, Raphaelle, Soulliard, additional, Raposo, Nicolas, additional, Reiff, Tilman, additional, Remmers, Michel, additional, Renou, Pauline, additional, Ribitsch, Martin, additional, Richter, Hardy, additional, Ritter, Martin, additional, Ritzenthaler, Thomas, additional, Rodier, Gilles, additional, Rodriguez-Regent, Christine, additional, Rodríguez-Yáñez, Manuel, additional, Roennefarth, Maria, additional, Roffe, Christine, additional, Rosenbaum, Sverre, additional, Rosso, Charlotte, additional, Röther, Joachim, additional, Rozanski, Michal, additional, Ruiz de Morales, Noelia, additional, Russo, Francesca, additional, Rutgers, Matthieu, additional, Sagnier, Sharmilla, additional, Samson, Yves, additional, Sánchez, Josep, additional, Sauer, Tamara, additional, Schäfer, Jan H., additional, Schieber, Simon, additional, Schill, Josef, additional, Schlak, Dennis, additional, Schlemm, Ludwig, additional, Schmidt, Sein, additional, Schonewille, Wouter, additional, Schröder, Julian, additional, Schulz, Andreas, additional, Schurig, Johannes, additional, Schwarting, Sönke, additional, Schwarz, Alexander, additional, Schwarzbach, Christopher, additional, Seidel, Matthias, additional, Seiler, Alexander, additional, Sembill, Jochen, additional, Serena Leal, Joaquin, additional, Shetty, Ashit, additional, Sibon, Igor, additional, Simonsen, Claus Z., additional, Singer, Oliver, additional, Sivagnanaratham, Aravinth, additional, Smets, Ide, additional, Smith, Craig, additional, Soors, Peter, additional, Sprigg, Nikola, additional, Spruegel, Maximilian, additional, Stark, David, additional, Steinert, Susanne, additional, Stösser, Sebastian, additional, Stuermlinger, Markus, additional, Swinnen, Bart, additional, Tamazyan, Ruben, additional, Tembl, Jose, additional, Terceno Izaga, Mikel, additional, Thomalla, Götz, additional, Touze, Emmanuel, additional, Truelsen, Thomas, additional, Turc, Guillaume, additional, Turine, Gaetane, additional, Tütüncü, Serdar, additional, Tyrell, Pippa, additional, Ustrell, Xavier, additional, Vadot, Wilfried, additional, Vallet, Anne-Evelyne, additional, Vallet, Pauline, additional, van den Berg, Lucie, additional, van den Berg, Sophie, additional, van Eendenburg, Cecile, additional, Van Hooff, Robbert-Jan, additional, van Sloten, Isabelle, additional, Vanacker, Peter, additional, Vancaester, Evelien, additional, Vanderdonckt, Patrick, additional, Vandermeeren, Yves, additional, Vanhee, Frederik, additional, Veltkamp, Roland, additional, Vestergaard, Karsten, additional, Viguier, Alain, additional, Vilas, Dolores, additional, Villringer, Kersten, additional, Voget, Dieke, additional, von Schrader, Jörg, additional, von Weitzel, Paul, additional, Warburton, Elisabeth, additional, Weber, Claudia, additional, Weber, Jörg, additional, Wegscheider, Karl, additional, Wegscheider, Mirko, additional, Weimar, Christian, additional, Weinstich, Karin, additional, Weise, Christopher, additional, Weise, Gesa, additional, Willems, Chris, additional, Winder, Klemens, additional, Wittayer, Matthias, additional, Wolf, Marc, additional, Wolf, Martin, additional, Wolff, Valerie, additional, Wollboldt, Christian, additional, Wollenweber, Frank, additional, Wouters, Anke, additional, Yalo, Bertrand, additional, Yger, Marion, additional, Younan, Nadia, additional, Yperzeele, Laetita, additional, Zegarac, Vesna, additional, Zeiner, Pia, additional, Ziemann, Ulf, additional, Zonneveld, Thomas, additional, Zuber, Mathieu, additional, Akutsu, Tsugio, additional, Aoki, Junya, additional, Arakawa, Shuji, additional, Doijiri, Ryosuke, additional, Egashira, Yusuke, additional, Enomoto, Yukiko, additional, Furui, Eisuke, additional, Furuta, Konosuke, additional, Gotoh, Seiji, additional, Hamasaki, Toshimitsu, additional, Hasegawa, Yasuhiro, additional, Hirano, Teryuki, additional, Homma, Kazunari, additional, Ichijyo, Masahiko, additional, Ide, Toshihiro, additional, Igarashi, Shuichi, additional, Iguchi, Yasuyuki, additional, Ihara, Masafumi, additional, Ikenouchi, Hajime, additional, Inoue, Tsuyoshi, additional, Itabashi, Ryo, additional, Ito, Yasuhiro, additional, Iwama, Toru, additional, Kamiyama, Kenji, additional, Kamiyoshi, Shoko, additional, Kanai, Haruka, additional, Kanematsu, Yasuhisa, additional, Kanzawa, Takao, additional, Kimura, Kazumi, additional, Kitayama, Jiro, additional, Kitazono, Takanari, additional, Kondo, Rei, additional, Kudo, Kohsuke, additional, Kusumi, Masayoshi, additional, Kuwahara, Ken, additional, Matsumoto, Shoji, additional, Matsuoka, Hideki, additional, Mihara, Ban, additional, Minematsu, Kazuo, additional, Miura, Ken, additional, Morita, Naomi, additional, Mouri, Wataru, additional, Murata, Kayo, additional, Nagakane, Yoshinari, additional, Nakase, Taizen, additional, Ohara, Hiromi, additional, Ohara, Nobuyuki, additional, Ohnishi, Hideyuki, additional, Ohta, Hajime, additional, Ohtaki, Masafumi, additional, Ohtani, Ryo, additional, Ohtsuki, Toshiho, additional, Ohyama, Hideo, additional, Okada, Takashi, additional, Okada, Yasushi, additional, Osaki, Masato, additional, Sakai, Nobuyuki, additional, Sanbongi, Yoshiki, additional, Sasaki, Naoshi, additional, Sasaki, Makoto, additional, Sato, Shoichiro, additional, Seki, Kenta, additional, Shimizu, Wataru, additional, Shiokawa, Yoshiaki, additional, Sozu, Takashi, additional, Suzuki, Junichiro, additional, Suzuki, Rieko, additional, Takagi, Yasushi, additional, Takizawa, Shunya, additional, Tanahashi, Norio, additional, Tanaka, Eijiro, additional, Tanaka, Ryota, additional, Tateishi, Yohei, additional, Terada, Tomoaki, additional, Terasaki, Tadashi, additional, Todo, Kenichi, additional, Tokunaga, Azusa, additional, Tsujino, Akira, additional, Ueda, Toshihiro, additional, Uesaka, Yoshikazu, additional, Uotani, Mihoko, additional, Urabe, Takao, additional, Watanabe, Masao, additional, Yagita, Yoshiki, additional, Yakushiji, Yusuke, additional, Yasui, Keizo, additional, Yonehara, Toshiro, additional, Yoshimura, Shinichi, additional, Aarnio, K., additional, Alemseged, F., additional, Anderson, C., additional, Ang, T., additional, Archer, M.L., additional, Attia, J., additional, Bailey, P., additional, Balabanski, A., additional, Barber, A., additional, Barber, P.A., additional, Bernhardt, J., additional, Bivard, A., additional, Blacker, D., additional, Bladin, C.F., additional, Brodtmann, A., additional, Cadilhac, D., additional, Campbell, B.C.V., additional, Carey, L., additional, Celestino, S., additional, Chan, L., additional, Chang, W.H., additional, ChangI, A., additional, Chen, C.H., additional, Chen, C.-I., additional, Chen, H.F., additional, Chen, T.C., additional, Chen, W.H., additional, Chen, Y.Y., additional, Cheng, C.A., additional, Cheong, E., additional, Chiou, Y.W., additional, Choi, P.M., additional, Chu, H.J., additional, Chuang, C.S., additional, Chung, T.C., additional, Churilov, L., additional, Clissold, B., additional, Connelly, A., additional, Coote, S., additional, Coulton, B., additional, Cowley, E., additional, Cranefield, J., additional, Curtze, S., additional, D'Este, C., additional, Davis, S.M., additional, Day, S., additional, Desmond, P.M., additional, Dewey, H.M., additional, Ding, C., additional, Donnan, G.A., additional, Drew, R., additional, Eirola, S., additional, Field, D., additional, Frost, T., additional, Garcia-Esperon, C., additional, George, K., additional, Gerraty, R., additional, Grimley, R., additional, Guo, Y.C., additional, Hankey, G., additional, Harvey, J., additional, Ho, S.C., additional, Hogan, K., additional, Howells, D., additional, Hsiao, P.M., additional, Hsu, C.H., additional, Hsu, C.T., additional, Hsu, C.-S., additional, Hsu, J.P., additional, Hsu, Y.D., additional, Hsu, Y.T., additional, Hu, C.J., additional, Huang, C.C., additional, Huang, H.Y., additional, Huang, M.Y., additional, Huang, S.C., additional, Huang, W.S., additional, Jackson, D., additional, Jeng, J.S., additional, Jiang, S.K., additional, Kaauwai, L., additional, Kasari, O., additional, King, J., additional, Kleinig, T.J., additional, Koivu, M., additional, Kolbe, J., additional, Krause, M., additional, Kuan, C.W., additional, Kung, W.L., additional, Kyndt, C., additional, Lau, C.L., additional, Lee, A., additional, Lee, C.Y., additional, Lee, J.T., additional, Lee, Y., additional, Lee, Y.C., additional, Levi, C., additional, Levi, C.R., additional, Lien, L.M., additional, Lim, J.C., additional, Lin, C.C., additional, Lin, C.H., additional, Lin, C.M., additional, Lin, D., additional, Liu, C.H., additional, Liu, J., additional, Lo, Y.C., additional, Loh, P.S., additional, Low, E., additional, Lu, C.H., additional, Lu, C.J., additional, Lu, M.K., additional, Ly, J., additional, Ma, H., additional, Macaulay, L., additional, Macdonnell, R., additional, Mackey, E., additional, Macleod, M., additional, Mahadevan, J., additional, Maxwell, V., additional, McCoy, R., additional, McDonald, A., additional, McModie, S., additional, Meretoja, A., additional, Mishra, S., additional, Mitchell, P.J., additional, Miteff, F., additional, Moore, A., additional, Muller, C., additional, Ng, F., additional, Ng, F.C., additional, Ng, J-L., additional, O'Brian, W., additional, O'Collins, V., additional, Oxley, T.J., additional, Parsons, M.W., additional, Patel, S., additional, Peng, G.S., additional, Pesavento, L., additional, Phan, T., additional, Rodrigues, E., additional, Ross, Z., additional, Sabet, A., additional, Sallaberger, M., additional, Salvaris, P., additional, Shah, D., additional, Sharma, G., additional, Sibolt, G., additional, Simpson, M., additional, Singhal, S., additional, Snow, B., additional, Spratt, N., additional, Stark, R., additional, Sturm, J., additional, Sun, M.C., additional, Sun, Y., additional, Sung, P.S., additional, Sung, Y.F., additional, Suzuki, M., additional, Tan, M., additional, Tang, S.C., additional, Tatlisumak, T., additional, Thijs, V., additional, Tiainen, M., additional, Tsai, C.H., additional, Tsai, C.K., additional, Tsai, C.L., additional, Tsai, H.T., additional, Tsai, L.K., additional, Tseng, C.H., additional, Tseng, L.T., additional, Tsoleridis, J., additional, Tu, H., additional, Tu, H.T-H., additional, Vallat, W., additional, Virta, J., additional, Wang, W.C., additional, Wang, Y.T., additional, Waters, M., additional, Weir, L., additional, Wijeratne, T., additional, Williams, C., additional, Wilson, W., additional, Wong, A.A., additional, Wong, K., additional, Wu, T.Y., additional, Wu, Y.H., additional, Yan, B., additional, Yang, F.C., additional, Yang, Y.W., additional, Yassi, N., additional, Yeh, H.L., additional, Yeh, J.H., additional, Yeh, S.J., additional, Yen, C.H., additional, Young, D., additional, Ysai, C.L., additional, Zhang, W.W., additional, Zhao, H., additional, Zhao, L., additional, Althaus-Knaurer, Katharina, additional, Berrouschot, Jörg, additional, Bluhmki, Erich, additional, Bovi, Paolo, additional, Chatellier, Gilles, additional, Cove, Lynda, additional, Davis, Stephen, additional, Dixit, A., additional, Donnan, Geoffrey, additional, Ehrenkrona, Christina, additional, Eschenfelder, Christoph, additional, Fatar, Marc, additional, Francisco Arenillas, Juan, additional, Gruber, Franz, additional, Kala, Lalit, additional, Kapeller, Peter, additional, Kaste, Markku, additional, Kessler, Christof, additional, Köhrmann, Martin, additional, Laage, Rico, additional, Lees, Kennedy R., additional, Luna Rodriguez, Alain, additional, Mas, Jean-Louis, additional, Mikulik, Robert, additional, Molina, Carlos, additional, Muddegowda, Girish, additional, Muir, Keith, additional, Niederkorn, Kurt, additional, Nuñez, Xavier, additional, Schellinger, Peter, additional, Serena, Joaquin, additional, Sobesky, Jan, additional, Steiner, Thorsten, additional, Svenson, Ann-Sofie, additional, von Kummer, Rüdiger, additional, Wardlaw, Joanna, additional, Betensky, Rebecca A., additional, Boulouis, Gregoire, additional, Carandang, Raphael A., additional, Copen, William A., additional, Cougo, Pedro, additional, Cutting, Shawna, additional, Drake, Kendra, additional, Ford, Andria L., additional, Hallenbeck, John, additional, Harris, Gordon J., additional, Hoesch, Robert, additional, Hsia, Amie, additional, Kase, Carlos, additional, Latour, Lawrence, additional, Lev, Michael H., additional, Muzikansky, Alona, additional, Nagaraja, Nandakumar, additional, Schwamm, Lee H., additional, Searls, Eric, additional, Song, Shlee S., additional, Starkman, Sidney, additional, Yoo, Albert J., additional, and Zand, Ramin, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Cell type-specific and sexually dimorphic expression of transcription factor AP-2 in the adult mouse brain
- Author
-
Coelho, D.J., Sims, D.J., Ruegg, P.J., Minn, I., Muench, A.R., and Mitchell, P.J.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Standards of Practice in Acute Ischemic Stroke Intervention International Recommendations
- Author
-
Pierot, L., Jarayaman, M., Szikora, I., Hirsch, J., Baxter, B., Miyachi, S., Mahadevan, J., Chong, W., Mitchell, P.J., Coulthard, A., Rowley, H.A., Sanelli, P.C., Tampieri, D., Brouwer, P., Fiehler, J., Kocer, N., Vilela, P., Rovira, A., Fischer, U., Caso, V., Wort, B. van der, Sakai, N., Matsumaru, Y., Yoshimura, S., Biscoito, L., Pumar, M., Diaz, O., Fraser, J., Lifante, I., Liebeskind, D.S., Nogueira, R.G., Hacke, W., Brainin, M., Yan, B., Soderman, M., Taylor, A., Pongpech, S., Terbrugge, K., Asian-Australian Federation Interv, Australian-New Zealand Soc Neurora, American Soc Neuroradiology ASNR, Canadian Soc Neuroradiology CSNR, European Soc Minimally Invasive Ne, European Soc Neuroradiology ESNR, European Stroke Org ESO, Japanese Soc Neuro Endovasc Therap, Soc Ibero-Latino Amer Diagnostic T, Soc Neurointerventional Surg SNIS, Soc Vasc Interventional Neurology, World Stroke Org WSO, World Federation Interventional Th, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Reims (CHU Reims), Hémostase et Remodelage Vasculaire Post-Ischémie (HERVI - EA 3801), Université de Reims Champagne-Ardenne (URCA), Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, Mahidol University [Bangkok], and Toronto Western Hospital
- Subjects
medicine.medical_treatment ,System of care ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,law.invention ,Brain Ischemia ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,[SDV.MHEP.CSC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology/Cardiology and cardiovascular system ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Intervention (counseling) ,medicine ,Humans ,Stroke ,Acute ischemic stroke ,Neuroradiology ,Thrombectomy ,Endovascular ,business.industry ,Endovascular Procedures ,General Medicine ,Thrombolysis ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,Mechanical thrombectomy ,Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) ,Medical emergency ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
International audience; ABSTRACT: After five positive randomized controlled trials showed benefit of mechanical thrombectomy in the management of acute ischemic stroke with emergent large-vessel occlusion, a multi-society meeting was organized during the 17th Congress of the World Federation of Interventional and Therapeutic Neuroradiology in October 2017 in Budapest, Hungary. This multi-society meeting was dedicated to establish standards of practice in acute ischemic stroke intervention aiming for a consensus on the minimum requirements for centers providing such treatment. In an ideal situation, all patients would be treated at a center offering a full spectrum of neuroendovascular care (a level 1 center). However, for geographical reasons, some patients are unable to reach such a center in a reasonable period of time. With this in mind, the group paid special attention to define recommendations on the prerequisites of organizing stroke centers providing medical thrombectomy for acute ischemic stroke, but not for other neurovascular diseases (level 2 centers). Finally, some centers will have a stroke unit and offer intravenous thrombolysis, but not any endovascular stroke therapy (level 3 centers). Together, these level 1, 2, and 3 centers form a complete stroke system of care. The multi-society group provides recommendations and a framework for the development of medical thrombectomy services worldwide.; RÉSUMÉ : Les normes de pratique recommandées à l’échelle internationale lors d’interventions consécutives à un accident ischémique cérébral aigu . En octobre 2017, à Budapest, une rencontre pluridisciplinaire de spécialistes s’est organisée dans le cadre du 17 e congrès de la World Federation of Interventional and Therapeutic Neuroradiology . Cette rencontre portait sur l’établissement de normes relatives aux interventions consécutives à des accidents ischémiques aigus. Elle a eu lieu, précisons-le, après que cinq essais randomisés contrôlés (ERC) ont montré les avantages de la thrombectomie mécanique dans la prise en charge de patients victimes d’un accident ischémique cérébral aigu montrant des signes naissants d’occlusion des plus gros vaisseaux sanguins. Les normes dont il a été alors question visaient aussi à atteindre un consensus quant aux exigences minimales auxquelles devaient se conformer les établissements de santé offrant la thrombectomie mécanique. Dans l’idéal, tous les patients devraient être traités dans un établissement offrant un éventail complet de soins neuro-endovasculaires (de niveau 1). Toutefois, en raison de l’éloignement géographique, quelques patients demeurent incapables de se rendre dans un tel établissement dans des délais raisonnables. Dans cette optique, le groupe réuni à Budapest a défini de façon particulière des recommandations définissant les aspects permettant aux autres établissements (de niveau 2) d’organiser en amont des soins en thrombectomie destinés à des patients victimes d’accidents ischémiques cérébraux aigus mais pas d’autres maladies neurovasculaires. Enfin, d’autres établissements (de niveau 3) pourront compter sur une unité de traitement des AVC, notamment au moyen de la thrombolyse intraveineuse; toutefois, ils ne pourront offrir aucune autre thérapie endovasculaire. Réunis, l’ensemble de ces établissements de niveaux 1, 2 et 3 constitue un réseau complet de soins destinés aux patients victimes d’un AVC. Le groupe multidisciplinaire réuni lors de cette rencontre a ainsi élaboré des recommandations et un cadre de référence visant le développement de la thrombectomie dans le monde entier.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Melbourne mobile stroke unit and reperfusion therapy: Greater clinical impact of thrombectomy than thrombolysis.
- Author
-
Yan B., Kim J., Yassi N., Campbell B.C.V., Davis S.M., Donnan G.A., Parsons M.W., Zhao H., Coote S., Easton D., Langenberg F., Stephenson M., Smith K., Bernard S., Cadilhac D.A., Bladin C.F., Churilov L., Crompton D.E., Dewey H.M., Sanders L.M., Wijeratne T., Cloud G., Brooks D.M., Asadi H., Thijs V., Chandra R.V., Ma H., Desmond P.M., Dowling R.J., Mitchell P.J., Yan B., Kim J., Yassi N., Campbell B.C.V., Davis S.M., Donnan G.A., Parsons M.W., Zhao H., Coote S., Easton D., Langenberg F., Stephenson M., Smith K., Bernard S., Cadilhac D.A., Bladin C.F., Churilov L., Crompton D.E., Dewey H.M., Sanders L.M., Wijeratne T., Cloud G., Brooks D.M., Asadi H., Thijs V., Chandra R.V., Ma H., Desmond P.M., Dowling R.J., and Mitchell P.J.
- Abstract
Background and Purpose-Mobile stroke units (MSUs) are increasingly used worldwide to provide prehospital triage and treatment. The benefits of MSUs in giving earlier thrombolysis have been well established, but the impacts of MSUs on endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) and effect on disability avoidance are largely unknown. We aimed to determine the clinical impact and disability reduction for reperfusion therapies in the first operational year of the Melbourne MSU. Methods-Treatment time metrics for MSU patients receiving reperfusion therapy were compared with control patients presenting to metropolitan Melbourne stroke units via standard ambulance within MSU operating hours. The primary outcome was median time difference in first ambulance dispatch to treatment modeled using quantile regression analysis. Time savings were subsequently converted to disability-adjusted life years avoided using published estimates. Results-In the first 365-day operation of the Melbourne MSU, prehospital thrombolysis was administered to 100 patients (mean age, 73.8 years; 62% men). The median time savings per MSU patient, compared with the control cohort, was 26 minutes (P<0.001) for dispatch to hospital arrival and 15 minutes (P<0.001) for hospital arrival to thrombolysis. The calculated overall time saving from dispatch to thrombolysis was 42.5 minutes (95% CI, 36.0-49.0). In the same period, 41 MSU patients received EVT (mean age, 76 years; 61% men) with median dispatch-to-treatment time saving of 51 minutes ([95% CI, 30.1-71.9], P<0.001). This included a median time saving of 17 minutes ([95% CI, 7.6-26.4], P=0.001) for EVT hospital arrival to arterial puncture for MSU patients. Estimated median disability-adjusted life years saved through earlier provision of reperfusion therapies were 20.9 for thrombolysis and 24.6 for EVT. Conclusions-The Melbourne MSU substantially reduced time to reperfusion therapies, with the greatest estimated disability avoidance driven by the more powerful i
- Published
- 2020
27. A field and video annotation guide for baited remote underwater stereo‐video surveys of demersal fish assemblages
- Author
-
Langlois, T., Goetze, J., Bond, T., Monk, J., Abesamis, R.A., Asher, J., Barrett, N., Bernard, A.T.F., Bouchet, P.J., Birt, M.J., Cappo, M., Currey‐Randall, L.M., Driessen, D., Fairclough, D.V., Fullwood, L.A.F., Gibbons, B.A., Harasti, D., Heupel, M.R., Hicks, J., Holmes, T.H., Huveneers, C., Ierodiaconou, D., Jordan, A., Knott, N.A., Lindfield, S., Malcolm, H.A., McLean, D., Meekan, M., Miller, D., Mitchell, P.J., Newman, S.J., Radford, B., Rolim, F.A., Saunders, B.J., Stowar, M., Smith, A.N.H., Travers, M.J., Wakefield, C.B., Whitmarsh, S.K., Williams, J., Harvey, E.S., Codling, E., Langlois, T., Goetze, J., Bond, T., Monk, J., Abesamis, R.A., Asher, J., Barrett, N., Bernard, A.T.F., Bouchet, P.J., Birt, M.J., Cappo, M., Currey‐Randall, L.M., Driessen, D., Fairclough, D.V., Fullwood, L.A.F., Gibbons, B.A., Harasti, D., Heupel, M.R., Hicks, J., Holmes, T.H., Huveneers, C., Ierodiaconou, D., Jordan, A., Knott, N.A., Lindfield, S., Malcolm, H.A., McLean, D., Meekan, M., Miller, D., Mitchell, P.J., Newman, S.J., Radford, B., Rolim, F.A., Saunders, B.J., Stowar, M., Smith, A.N.H., Travers, M.J., Wakefield, C.B., Whitmarsh, S.K., Williams, J., Harvey, E.S., and Codling, E.
- Abstract
1. Baited remote underwater stereo‐video systems (stereo‐BRUVs) are a popular tool to sample demersal fish assemblages and gather data on their relative abundance and body size structure in a robust, cost‐effective and non‐invasive manner. Given the rapid uptake of the method, subtle differences have emerged in the way stereo‐BRUVs are deployed and how the resulting imagery is annotated. These disparities limit the interoperability of datasets obtained across studies, preventing broadscale insights into the dynamics of ecological systems. 2. We provide the first globally accepted guide for using stereo‐BRUVs to survey demersal fish assemblages and associated benthic habitats. 3. Information on stereo‐BRUVs design, camera settings, field operations and image annotation are outlined. Additionally, we provide links to protocols for data validation, archiving and sharing. 4. Globally, the use of stereo‐BRUVs is spreading rapidly. We provide a standardized protocol that will reduce methodological variation among researchers and encourage the use of Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable workflows to increase the ability to synthesize global datasets and answer a broad suite of ecological questions.
- Published
- 2020
28. Public Health and Cost Benefits of Successful Reperfusion After Thrombectomy for Stroke
- Author
-
Kunz, W.G. (Wolfgang), Almekhlafi, M. (Mohammed), Menon, B.K. (Bijoy K.), Saver, J.L. (Jeffery L.), Hunink, M.G. (Myriam G.), Dippel, D.W.J. (Diederik), Majoie, C.B.L.M. (Charles B L M), Liebeskind, D.S. (David S.), Jovin, T.G. (Tudor G.), Davalos, A. (Antoni), Bracard, S. (Serge), Guillemin, F. (Francis), Campbell, B.C.V. (Bruce C. V.), Mitchell, P.J. (Peter J.), White, P. (Philip), Muir, K.W. (Keith), Brown, S. (Scott), Demchuk, A.M. (Andrew), Hill, M.D. (Michael D.), Goyal, M. (Mayank), Kunz, W.G. (Wolfgang), Almekhlafi, M. (Mohammed), Menon, B.K. (Bijoy K.), Saver, J.L. (Jeffery L.), Hunink, M.G. (Myriam G.), Dippel, D.W.J. (Diederik), Majoie, C.B.L.M. (Charles B L M), Liebeskind, D.S. (David S.), Jovin, T.G. (Tudor G.), Davalos, A. (Antoni), Bracard, S. (Serge), Guillemin, F. (Francis), Campbell, B.C.V. (Bruce C. V.), Mitchell, P.J. (Peter J.), White, P. (Philip), Muir, K.W. (Keith), Brown, S. (Scott), Demchuk, A.M. (Andrew), Hill, M.D. (Michael D.), and Goyal, M. (Mayank)
- Abstract
Background and Purpose- The benefit that endovascular thrombectomy offers to patients with stroke with large vessel occlusions depends strongly on reperfusion grade as defined by the expanded Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction (eTICI) scale. Our aim was to determine the lifetime health and cost consequences of the quality of reperfusion for patients, healthcare systems, and society. Methods- A Markov model estimated lifetime quality-adjusted life years (QALY) and lifetime costs of endovascular thrombectomy-treated patients with stroke based on eTICI grades. The analysis was performed over a lifetime horizon in a United States setting, adopting healthcare and societal perspectives. The reference case analysis was conducted for stroke at 65 years of age. National health and cost consequences of improved eTICI 2c/3 reperfusion rates were estimated. Input parameters were based on best available evidence. Results- Lifetime QALYs increased for every grade of improved reperfusion (median QALYs for eTICI 0/1: 2.62; eTICI 2a: 3.46; eTICI 2b: 5.42; eTICI 2c: 5.99; eTICI 3: 6.73). Achieving eTICI 3 over eTICI 2b reperfusion resulted on average in 1.31 incremental QALYs as well as healthcare and societal cost savings of $10 327 and $20 224 per patient. A 10% increase in the eTICI 2c/3 reperfusion rate of all annually endovascular thrombectomy-treated patients with stroke in the United States is estimated to yield additional 3656 QALYs and save $21.0 million and $36.8 million for the healthcare system and society, respectively. Conclusions- Improved reperfusion grants patients with stroke additional QALYs and leads to long-term cost savings. Procedural strategies to achieve complete reperfusion should be assessed for safety and feasibility, even when initial reperfusion seems to be adequate.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Effect of atrial fibrillation on endovascular thrombectomy for acute ischemic stroke. A meta-analysis of individual patient data from six randomised trials: Results from the HERMES collaboration
- Author
-
Smaal, J.A. (J. A.), Ridder, I.R. (Inger) de, Heshmatollah, A. (A.), Zwam, W.H. (Wim) van, Dippel, D.W.J. (Diederik), Majoie, C.B. (C. B.), Brown, S. (Scott), Goyal, M. (Mayank), Campbell, B.C.V. (Bruce C. V.), Muir, K.W. (Keith), Demchuck, A.M. (A. M.), Dávalos, A. (Antoni), Jovin, T.G. (Tudor G.), Mitchell, P.J. (P. J.), White, P. (Philip), Saver, J.L. (Jeffery L.), Hill, M.D. (M. D.), Roos, Y.B.W.E.M. (Yvo), Lugt, A. (Aad) van der, Oostenbrugge, R.J. (Robert) van, Smaal, J.A. (J. A.), Ridder, I.R. (Inger) de, Heshmatollah, A. (A.), Zwam, W.H. (Wim) van, Dippel, D.W.J. (Diederik), Majoie, C.B. (C. B.), Brown, S. (Scott), Goyal, M. (Mayank), Campbell, B.C.V. (Bruce C. V.), Muir, K.W. (Keith), Demchuck, A.M. (A. M.), Dávalos, A. (Antoni), Jovin, T.G. (Tudor G.), Mitchell, P.J. (P. J.), White, P. (Philip), Saver, J.L. (Jeffery L.), Hill, M.D. (M. D.), Roos, Y.B.W.E.M. (Yvo), Lugt, A. (Aad) van der, and Oostenbrugge, R.J. (Robert) van
- Abstract
Background: Atrial fibrillation is an important risk factor for ischemic stroke, and is associated with an increased risk of poor outcome after ischemic stroke. Endovascular thrombectomy is safe and effective in acute ischemic stroke patients with large vessel occlusion of the anterior circulation. This meta-analysis aims to investigate whether there is an interaction between atrial fibrillation and treatment effect of endovascular thrombectomy, and secondarily whether atrial fibrillation is associated with worse outcome in patients with ischemic stroke due to large vessel occlusion. Methods: Individual patient data were from six of the recent randomised clinical trials (MR CLEAN, EXTEND-IA, REVASCAT, SWIFT PRIME, ESCAPE, PISTE) in which endovascular thrombectomy plus standard care was compared to standard care alone. Primary outcome measure was the shift on the modified Rankin scale (mRS) at 90 days. Secondary outcomes were functional independence (mRS 0–2) at 90 days, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score at 24 h, symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage and mortality at 90 days. The primary effect parameter was the adjusted common odds ratio, estimated with ordinal logistic regression (shift analysis); treatment effect modification of atrial fibrillation was assessed with a multiplicative interaction term. Results: Among 1351 patients, 447 pa
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. The validity of animal models of predisposition to depression
- Author
-
Willner, P. and Mitchell, P.J.
- Published
- 2002
31. Clinical course and medical management of neonates with severe cardiac failure related to vein of Galen malformation. (Original Article)
- Author
-
Frawley, G.P., Dargaville, P.A., Mitchell, P.J., Tress, B.M., and Loughnan, P.
- Subjects
Diseases ,Prognosis ,Patient outcomes ,Congenital heart defects -- Prognosis -- Patient outcomes ,Mortality ,Newborn infants -- Diseases -- Prognosis -- Patient outcomes ,Neonatal diseases -- Prognosis -- Patient outcomes ,Aneurysm -- Patient outcomes -- Prognosis ,Congenital heart disease -- Prognosis -- Patient outcomes ,Infants (Newborn) -- Diseases -- Prognosis -- Patient outcomes ,Aneurysms -- Patient outcomes -- Prognosis - Abstract
Background: Neonatal presentation of vein of Galen aneurysmal malformations (VGAMs) with intractable cardiac failure is considered a poor prognostic sign. Interventional neuroradiology with embolisation has been shown to control cardiac [...]
- Published
- 2002
32. Effects of single and repeated electroconvulsive shock on the social and agonistic behaviour of resident rats
- Author
-
Mitchell, P.J, Fairhall, S.J, Fletcher, A, and Redfern, P.H
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Standards of practice in acute ischemic stroke intervention: international recommendations
- Author
-
Pierot, L., Jayaraman, M.V., Szikora, I., Hirsch, J.A., Baxter, B., Miyachi, S., Mahadevan, J., Chong, W., Mitchell, P.J., Coulthard, A., Rowley, H.A., Sanelli, P.C., Tampieri, D., Brouwer, P.A., Fiehler, J., Kocer, N., Vilela, P., Rovira, A., Fischer, U., Caso, V., Worp, B. van der, Sakai, N., Matsumaru, Y., Yoshimura, S., Anxionnat, R., Desal, H., Biscoito, L., Pumar, J.M., Diaz, O., Fraser, J.F., Linfante, I., Liebeskind, D.S., Nogueira, R.G., Hacke, W., Brainin, M., Yan, B., Soderman, M., Taylor, A., Pongpech, S., Tanaka, M., Karel, T., AAFITN, Australian New Zealand Soc, Amer Soc Neuroradiology ASNR, Canadian Soc Neuroradiology, ESMINT, European Soc Neuroradiology, ESO, JSNET, French Soc Neuroradiology SFNR, Ibero-Latin Amer Soc Diagnostic, SNIS, SVIN, WSO, World Federation Interventional, İÜC, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Reims (CHU Reims), Hémostase et Remodelage Vasculaire Post-Ischémie (HERVI - EA 3801), Université de Reims Champagne-Ardenne (URCA), Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, Centre hospitalier universitaire de Nantes (CHU Nantes), Chiba University [Japan], and Toronto Western Hospital
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Acute ischemic stroke ,MEDLINE ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Article ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,law.invention ,mechanical thrombectomy ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neuroimaging ,[SDV.MHEP.CSC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology/Cardiology and cardiovascular system ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Intervention (counseling) ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,standards of practice ,Stroke ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,Thrombectomy ,Neuroradiology ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Thrombolysis ,medicine.disease ,stroke ,Clinical neurology ,3. Good health ,Mechanical thrombectomy ,Emergency medicine ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Medical emergency ,emergent large vessel occlusion ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Large vessel occlusion - Abstract
After the five positive randomized controlled trials showing the benefit of mechanical thrombectomy (MT) in the management of acute ischemic stroke (AIS) with emergent large vessel occlusion (ELVO), a multisociety meeting was organized during the 16th Congress of the World Federation of Interventional and Therapeutic Neuroradiology (WFITN), October 2015, Gold Coast (Australia). This meeting was dedicated to the training of physicians performing MT, and recommendations were published thereafter in multiple scientific journals.1 The same group of scientific societies decided to organize a similar meeting during the 17th WFITN Congress, October 2017, Budapest (Hungary). This multisociety meeting was dedicated to standards of practice in acute ischemic stroke intervention (AISI), aiming for a consensus on the minimum requirements for centers providing such treatment. In an ideal situation, all patients would be treated at a center offering a full spectrum of neuroendovascular care (a level 1 center). However, for geographical reasons, some patients are unable to reach such a center in a reasonable period of time. With this in mind, the group paid special attention to define recommendations on the prerequisites of organizing stroke centers providing MT for AIS, but not for other neurovascular diseases (a level 2 center). Finally, some centers will have a stroke unit and offer intravenous thrombolysis, but not any endovascular stroke therapy (a level 3 center). Together, these level 1, 2, and 3 centers form a complete stroke system of care. The requirements for these centers are summarized in table 1. View this table: Table 1 General summary of capabilities of level 1, 2, and 3 centers Due to the relatively short time elapsed since the evidence in favor of MT has been published, some organizational aspects still require scientific validation. However, considering the extremely fast growth of such activities around the world, the multisociety group considered it timely and rational to set-up recommendations and a framework for …
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Penumbral imaging and functional outcome in patients with anterior circulation ischaemic stroke treated with endovascular thrombectomy versus medical therapy: a meta-analysis of individual patient-level data
- Author
-
Campbell, B.C., Majoie, C., Albers, G.W., Menon, B.K., Yassi, N., Sharma, G., Zwam, W.H. van, Oostenbrugge, R.J. van, Demchuk, A.M., Guillemin, F., White, P., Davalos, A., Lugt, A. van der, Butcher, K.S., Cherifi, A., Marquering, H.A., Cloud, G., Fernandez, J.M., Madigan, J., Oppenheim, C., Donnan, G.A., Roos, Y., Shankar, J., Lingsma, H., Bonafe, A., Raoult, H., Hernandez-Perez, M., Bharatha, A., Jahan, R., Jansen, O., Richard, S., Levy, E.I., Berkhemer, O.A., Soudant, M., Aja, L., Davis, S.M., Krings, T., Tisserand, M., Roman, L., Tomasello, A., Beumer, D., Brown, S., Liebeskind, D.S., Bracard, S., Muir, K.W., Dippel, D.W., Goyal, M., Saver, J.L., Jovin, T.G., Vries, J. de, Hill, M.D., Mitchell, P.J., Campbell, B.C., Majoie, C., Albers, G.W., Menon, B.K., Yassi, N., Sharma, G., Zwam, W.H. van, Oostenbrugge, R.J. van, Demchuk, A.M., Guillemin, F., White, P., Davalos, A., Lugt, A. van der, Butcher, K.S., Cherifi, A., Marquering, H.A., Cloud, G., Fernandez, J.M., Madigan, J., Oppenheim, C., Donnan, G.A., Roos, Y., Shankar, J., Lingsma, H., Bonafe, A., Raoult, H., Hernandez-Perez, M., Bharatha, A., Jahan, R., Jansen, O., Richard, S., Levy, E.I., Berkhemer, O.A., Soudant, M., Aja, L., Davis, S.M., Krings, T., Tisserand, M., Roman, L., Tomasello, A., Beumer, D., Brown, S., Liebeskind, D.S., Bracard, S., Muir, K.W., Dippel, D.W., Goyal, M., Saver, J.L., Jovin, T.G., Vries, J. de, Hill, M.D., and Mitchell, P.J.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext, BACKGROUND: CT perfusion (CTP) and diffusion or perfusion MRI might assist patient selection for endovascular thrombectomy. We aimed to establish whether imaging assessments of irreversibly injured ischaemic core and potentially salvageable penumbra volumes were associated with functional outcome and whether they interacted with the treatment effect of endovascular thrombectomy on functional outcome. METHODS: In this systematic review and meta-analysis, the HERMES collaboration pooled patient-level data from all randomised controlled trials that compared endovascular thrombectomy (predominantly using stent retrievers) with standard medical therapy in patients with anterior circulation ischaemic stroke, published in PubMed from Jan 1, 2010, to May 31, 2017. The primary endpoint was functional outcome, assessed by the modified Rankin Scale (mRS) at 90 days after stroke. Ischaemic core was estimated, before treatment with either endovascular thrombectomy or standard medical therapy, by CTP as relative cerebral blood flow less than 30% of normal brain blood flow or by MRI as an apparent diffusion coefficient less than 620 mum(2)/s. Critically hypoperfused tissue was estimated as the volume of tissue with a CTP time to maximum longer than 6 s. Mismatch volume (ie, the estimated penumbral volume) was calculated as critically hypoperfused tissue volume minus ischaemic core volume. The association of ischaemic core and penumbral volumes with 90-day mRS score was analysed with multivariable logistic regression (functional independence, defined as mRS score 0-2) and ordinal logistic regression (functional improvement by at least one mRS category) in all patients and in a subset of those with more than 50% endovascular reperfusion, adjusted for baseline prognostic variables. The meta-analysis was prospectively designed by the HERMES executive committee, but not registered. FINDINGS: We identified seven studies with 1764 patients, all of which were included in the meta-analysis
- Published
- 2019
35. Glucose Modifies the Effect of Endovascular Thrombectomy in Patients With Acute Stroke A Pooled-Data Meta-Analysis
- Author
-
Chamorro, A., Brown, S., Amaro, S., Hill, M.D., Muir, K.W., Dippel, D.W.J., van Zwam, W., Butcher, K., Ford, G.A., den Hertog, H.M., Mitchell, P.J., Demchuk, A.M., Majoie, C.B.L.M., Bracard, S., Sibon, I., Jadhav, A.P., Lara-Rodriguez, B., van der Lugt, A., Osei, E., Renu, A., Richard, S., Rodriguez-Luna, D., Donnan, G.A., Dixit, A., Almekhlafi, M., Deltour, S., Epstein, J., Guillon, B., Bakchine, S., Gomis, M., Rochemont, R.D., Lopes, D., Reddy, V., Rudel, G., Roos, Y.B.W.E.M., Bonafe, A., Diener, H.C., Berkhemer, O.A., Cloud, G.C., Davis, S.M., van Oostenbrugge, R., Guillemin, F., Goyal, M., Campbell, B.C.V., Menon, B.K., HERMES Collaboration, Chamorro, A., Brown, S., Amaro, S., Hill, M.D., Muir, K.W., Dippel, D.W.J., van Zwam, W., Butcher, K., Ford, G.A., den Hertog, H.M., Mitchell, P.J., Demchuk, A.M., Majoie, C.B.L.M., Bracard, S., Sibon, I., Jadhav, A.P., Lara-Rodriguez, B., van der Lugt, A., Osei, E., Renu, A., Richard, S., Rodriguez-Luna, D., Donnan, G.A., Dixit, A., Almekhlafi, M., Deltour, S., Epstein, J., Guillon, B., Bakchine, S., Gomis, M., Rochemont, R.D., Lopes, D., Reddy, V., Rudel, G., Roos, Y.B.W.E.M., Bonafe, A., Diener, H.C., Berkhemer, O.A., Cloud, G.C., Davis, S.M., van Oostenbrugge, R., Guillemin, F., Goyal, M., Campbell, B.C.V., Menon, B.K., and HERMES Collaboration
- Abstract
Background and Purpose-Hyperglycemia is a negative prognostic factor after acute ischemic stroke but is not known whether glucose is associated with the effects of endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) in patients with large-vessel stroke. In a pooled-data meta-analysis, we analyzed whether serum glucose is a treatment modifier of the efficacy of EVT in acute stroke.Methods-Seven randomized trials compared EVT with standard care between 2010 and 2017 (HERMES Collaboration [highly effective reperfusion using multiple endovascular devices]). One thousand seven hundred and sixty-four patients with large-vessel stroke were allocated to EVT (n=871) or standard care (n=893). Measurements included blood glucose on admission and functional outcome (modified Rankin Scale range, 0-6; lower scores indicating less disability) at 3 months. The primary analysis evaluated whether glucose modified the effect of EVT over standard care on functional outcome, using ordinal logistic regression to test the interaction between treatment and glucose level.Results-Median (interquartile range) serum glucose on admission was 120 (104-140) mg/dL (6.6 mmol/L [5.7-7.7] mmol/L). EVT was better than standard care in the overall pooled-data analysis adjusted common odds ratio (acOR), 2.00 (95% CI, 1.69-2.38); however, lower glucose levels were associated with greater effects of EVT over standard care. The interaction was nonlinear such that significant interactions were found in subgroups of patients split at glucose < or >90 mg/dL (5.0 mmol/L; P=0.019 for interaction; acOR, 3.81; 95% CI, 1.73-8.41 for patients < 90 mg/dL versus 1.83; 95% CI, 1.53-2.19 for patients >90 mg/dL), and glucose < or > 100 mg/dL (5.5 mmol/L; P=0.004 for interaction; acOR, 3.17; 95% CI, 2.04-4.93 versus acOR, 1.72; 95% CI, 1.42-2.08) but not between subgroups above these levels of glucose.Conclusions-EVT improved stroke outcomes compared with standard treatment regardless of glucose levels, but the treatment e
- Published
- 2019
36. Homosistinurie: beskrywing van 'n geval
- Author
-
Mitchell, P.J.
- Abstract
Homocystinuria is an inborn error in the methionine metabolic pathway. It is due to an absence of the enzyme cystathionine synthesase and is inherited probably as a result of autosomal recessive transmission. It is characterized by a 'Marfan-like' appearance, ectopia lentis, a marked thrombo-embolic tendency and often mental retardation. Large quantities of methionine and homocystine are present in the blood, and homocystine in the urine. Treatment is not yet clear but a low-methionine diet with cystine supplementation started at an early age holds the most promise. A case of homocystinuria, probably the first in the Republic of South Africa, is described.
- Published
- 2017
37. Ectopic expression of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone and peripherin in the respiratory epithelium of mice lacking transcription factor AP-2 α
- Author
-
Kramer, P.R, Guerrero, G, Krishnamurthy, R, Mitchell, P.J, and Wray, S
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. IQ driving QI: the Asia Pacific Consortium on Osteoporosis (APCO): an innovative and collaborative initiative to improve osteoporosis care in the Asia Pacific.
- Author
-
Chandran, M., Bhadada, S.K., Ebeling, P.R., Gilchrist, N.L., Khan, A.H., Halbout, P., Lekamwasam, S., Lyubomirsky, G., Mitchell, P.J., Nguyen, T.V., and Tiu, K.L.
- Subjects
OSTEOPOROSIS treatment ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,CONSORTIA ,INTELLECT ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,OSTEOGENESIS imperfecta ,OSTEOPOROSIS ,QUALITY assurance - Abstract
Summary: Asia Pacific Consortium on Osteoporosis (APCO) comprises of clinical experts from across the Asia Pacific region, uniting to develop solutions to problems facing osteoporosis management and care. The vision of APCO is to reduce the burden of osteoporosis and fragility fractures in the Asia Pacific region. Introduction: The Asia Pacific (AP) region comprises 71 countries with vastly different healthcare systems. It is predicted that by 2050, more than half the world's hip fractures will occur in this region. The Asia Pacific Consortium on Osteoporosis (APCO) was set up in May 2019 with the vision of reducing the burden of osteoporosis and fragility fractures in the AP region. Methods: APCO has so far brought together 39 clinical experts from countries and regions across the AP to develop solutions to challenges facing osteoporosis management and fracture prevention in this highly populous region of the world. APCO aims to achieve its vision by engaging with relevant stakeholders including healthcare providers, policy makers and the public. The initial APCO project is to develop and implement a Framework of pan-AP minimum clinical standards for the screening, diagnosis and management of osteoporosis. Results and conclusions: The Framework will serve as a platform upon which new national clinical guidelines can be developed or existing guidelines be revised, in a standardised fashion. The Framework will also facilitate benchmarking for provision of quality of care. It is hoped that the principles underlying the formation and functioning of APCO can be adopted by other regions and that every health care facility and progressively every country in the world can follow our aspirational path and progress towards best practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Tenecteplase versus alteplase before thrombectomy for ischemic stroke.
- Author
-
Krause M., Phan T.G., Chong W., Chandra R.V., Slater L.-A., Harrington T.J., Faulder K.C., Steinfort B.S., Bladin C.F., Sharma G., Desmond P.M., Parsons M.W., Donnan G.A., Davis S.M., Campbell B.C.V., Mitchell P.J., Churilov L., Yassi N., Kleinig T.J., Dowling R.J., Yan B., Bush S.J., Dewey H.M., Thijs V., Scroop R., Simpson M., Brooks M., Asadi H., Wu T.Y., Shah D.G., Wijeratne T., Ang T., Miteff F., Levi C.R., Rodrigues E., Zhao H., Salvaris P., Garcia-Esperon C., Bailey P., Rice H., De Villiers L., Brown H., Redmond K., Leggett D., Fink J.N., Collecutt W., Wong A.A., Muller C., Coulthard A., Mitchell K., Clouston J., Mahady K., Field D., Ma H., Krause M., Phan T.G., Chong W., Chandra R.V., Slater L.-A., Harrington T.J., Faulder K.C., Steinfort B.S., Bladin C.F., Sharma G., Desmond P.M., Parsons M.W., Donnan G.A., Davis S.M., Campbell B.C.V., Mitchell P.J., Churilov L., Yassi N., Kleinig T.J., Dowling R.J., Yan B., Bush S.J., Dewey H.M., Thijs V., Scroop R., Simpson M., Brooks M., Asadi H., Wu T.Y., Shah D.G., Wijeratne T., Ang T., Miteff F., Levi C.R., Rodrigues E., Zhao H., Salvaris P., Garcia-Esperon C., Bailey P., Rice H., De Villiers L., Brown H., Redmond K., Leggett D., Fink J.N., Collecutt W., Wong A.A., Muller C., Coulthard A., Mitchell K., Clouston J., Mahady K., Field D., and Ma H.
- Abstract
Intravenous infusion of alteplase is used for thrombolysis before endovascular thrombectomy for ischemic stroke. Tenecteplase, which is more fibrin-specific and has longer activity than alteplase, is given as a bolus and may increase the incidence of vascular reperfusion. METHODS We randomly assigned patients with ischemic stroke who had occlusion of the internal carotid, basilar, or middle cerebral artery and who were eligible to undergo thrombectomy to receive tenecteplase (at a dose of 0.25 mg per kilogram of body weight; maximum dose, 25 mg) or alteplase (at a dose of 0.9 mg per kilogram; maximum dose, 90 mg) within 4.5 hours after symptom onset. The primary outcome was reperfusion of greater than 50% of the involved ischemic territory or an absence of retrievable thrombus at the time of the initial angiographic assessment. Noninferiority of tenecteplase was tested, followed by superiority. Secondary outcomes included the modified Rankin scale score (on a scale from 0 [no neurologic deficit] to 6 [death]) at 90 days. Safety outcomes were death and symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage. RESULTS Of 202 patients enrolled, 101 were assigned to receive tenecteplase and 101 to receive alteplase. The primary outcome occurred in 22% of the patients treated with tenecteplase versus 10% of those treated with alteplase (incidence difference, 12 percentage points; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2 to 21; incidence ratio, 2.2; 95% CI, 1.1 to 4.4; P=0.002 for noninferiority; P=0.03 for superiority). Tenecteplase resulted in a better 90-day functional outcome than alteplase (median modified Rankin scale score, 2 vs. 3; common odds ratio, 1.7; 95% CI, 1.0 to 2.8; P=0.04). Symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage occurred in 1% of the patients in each group. CONCLUSIONS Tenecteplase before thrombectomy was associated with a higher incidence of reperfusion and better functional outcome than alteplase among patients with ischemic stroke treated within 4.5 hours after symptom onset.Copyri
- Published
- 2018
40. Tenecteplase versus alteplase before endovascular thrombectomy (EXTEND-IA TNK): A multicenter, randomized, controlled study.
- Author
-
Shah D.G., Mitchell P.J., Churilov L., Yassi N., Kleinig T.J., Yan B., Dowling R.J., Bush S.J., Dewey H.M., Thijs V., Simpson M., Brooks M., Asadi H., Wu T.Y., Campbell B.C.V., Brown H., Redmond K., Leggett D., Cloud G., Madan A., Mahant N., O'Brien B., Worthington J., Parker G., Desmond P.M., Parsons M.W., Donnan G.A., Davis S.M., Wijeratne T., Ang T., Miteff F., Levi C., Krause M., Harrington T.J., Faulder K.C., Steinfort B.S., Bailey P., Rice H., de Villiers L., Scroop R., Collecutt W., Wong A.A., Coulthard A., Barber P.A., McGuinness B., Field D., Ma H., Chong W., Chandra R.V., Bladin C.F., Shah D.G., Mitchell P.J., Churilov L., Yassi N., Kleinig T.J., Yan B., Dowling R.J., Bush S.J., Dewey H.M., Thijs V., Simpson M., Brooks M., Asadi H., Wu T.Y., Campbell B.C.V., Brown H., Redmond K., Leggett D., Cloud G., Madan A., Mahant N., O'Brien B., Worthington J., Parker G., Desmond P.M., Parsons M.W., Donnan G.A., Davis S.M., Wijeratne T., Ang T., Miteff F., Levi C., Krause M., Harrington T.J., Faulder K.C., Steinfort B.S., Bailey P., Rice H., de Villiers L., Scroop R., Collecutt W., Wong A.A., Coulthard A., Barber P.A., McGuinness B., Field D., Ma H., Chong W., Chandra R.V., and Bladin C.F.
- Abstract
Background and hypothesis: Intravenous thrombolysis with alteplase remains standard care prior to thrombectomy for eligible patients within 4.5 h of ischemic stroke onset. However, alteplase only succeeds in reperfusing large vessel arterial occlusion prior to thrombectomy in a minority of patients. We hypothesized that tenecteplase is non-inferior to alteplase in achieving reperfusion at initial angiogram, when administered within 4.5 h of ischemic stroke onset, in patients planned to undergo endovascular therapy. Study design: EXTEND-IA TNK is an investigator-initiated, phase II, multicenter, prospective, randomized, open-label, blinded-endpoint non-inferiority study. Eligibility requires a diagnosis of ischemic stroke within 4.5 h of stroke onset, pre-stroke modified Rankin Scale<=3 (no upper age limit), large vessel occlusion (internal carotid, basilar, or middle cerebral artery) on multimodal computed tomography and absence of contraindications to intravenous thrombolysis. Patients are randomized to either IV alteplase (0.9 mg/kg, max 90 mg) or tenecteplase (0.25 mg/kg, max 25 mg) prior to thrombectomy. Study outcomes: The primary outcome measure is reperfusion on the initial catheter angiogram, assessed as modified treatment in cerebral infarction 2 b/3 or the absence of retrievable thrombus. Secondary outcomes include modified Rankin Scale at day 90 and favorable clinical response (reduction in National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale by >=8 points or reaching 0-1) at day 3. Safety outcomes are death and symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02388061.Copyright © 2017, © 2017 World Stroke Organization.
- Published
- 2018
41. Subcontinental heat wave triggers terrestrial and marine, multi-taxa responses
- Author
-
Ruthrof, K.X., Breshears, D.D., Fontaine, J.B., Froend, R.H., Matusick, G., Kala, J., Miller, B.P., Mitchell, P.J., Wilson, S.K., van Keulen, M., Enright, N.J., Law, D.J., Wernberg, T., Hardy, G.E.St.J., Ruthrof, K.X., Breshears, D.D., Fontaine, J.B., Froend, R.H., Matusick, G., Kala, J., Miller, B.P., Mitchell, P.J., Wilson, S.K., van Keulen, M., Enright, N.J., Law, D.J., Wernberg, T., and Hardy, G.E.St.J.
- Abstract
Heat waves have profoundly impacted biota globally over the past decade, especially where their ecological impacts are rapid, diverse, and broad-scale. Although usually considered in isolation for either terrestrial or marine ecosystems, heat waves can straddle ecosystems of both types at subcontinental scales, potentially impacting larger areas and taxonomic breadth than previously envisioned. Using climatic and multi-species demographic data collected in Western Australia, we show that a massive heat wave event straddling terrestrial and maritime ecosystems triggered abrupt, synchronous, and multi-trophic ecological disruptions, including mortality, demographic shifts and altered species distributions. Tree die-off and coral bleaching occurred concurrently in response to the heat wave, and were accompanied by terrestrial plant mortality, seagrass and kelp loss, population crash of an endangered terrestrial bird species, plummeting breeding success in marine penguins, and outbreaks of terrestrial wood-boring insects. These multiple taxa and trophic-level impacts spanned >300,000 km2—comparable to the size of California—encompassing one terrestrial Global Biodiversity Hotspot and two marine World Heritage Areas. The subcontinental multi-taxa context documented here reveals that terrestrial and marine biotic responses to heat waves do not occur in isolation, implying that the extent of ecological vulnerability to projected increases in heat waves is underestimated.
- Published
- 2018
42. Biological responses to the press and pulse of climate trends and extreme events
- Author
-
Harris, Rebecca, Beaumont, L.J., Vance, T.R., Tozer, C.R., Remenyi, T.A., Perkins-Kirkpatrick, S.E., Mitchell, P.J., Nicotra, A.B., McGregor, S., Andrew, N.R., Letnic, M., Kearney, M.R., Wernberg, T., Hutley, L.B., Chambers, L.E., Fletcher, M.-S., Keatley, M.R., Woodward, C.A., Williamson, G., Duke, N.C., Bowman, D.M.J.S., Harris, Rebecca, Beaumont, L.J., Vance, T.R., Tozer, C.R., Remenyi, T.A., Perkins-Kirkpatrick, S.E., Mitchell, P.J., Nicotra, A.B., McGregor, S., Andrew, N.R., Letnic, M., Kearney, M.R., Wernberg, T., Hutley, L.B., Chambers, L.E., Fletcher, M.-S., Keatley, M.R., Woodward, C.A., Williamson, G., Duke, N.C., and Bowman, D.M.J.S.
- Abstract
The interaction of gradual climate trends and extreme weather events since the turn of the century has triggered complex and, in some cases, catastrophic ecological responses around the world. We illustrate this using Australian examples within a press–pulse framework. Despite the Australian biota being adapted to high natural climate variability, recent combinations of climatic presses and pulses have led to population collapses, loss of relictual communities and shifts into novel ecosystems. These changes have been sudden and unpredictable, and may represent permanent transitions to new ecosystem states without adaptive management interventions. The press–pulse framework helps illuminate biological responses to climate change, grounds debate about suitable management interventions and highlights possible consequences of (non-) intervention.
- Published
- 2018
43. An electrochemical route to pre-shaped ceramic bodies
- Author
-
Mitchell, P.J. and Wilcox, G.D.
- Subjects
Electrolytic cells -- Usage ,Electroforming -- Innovations ,Electrochemistry -- Innovations ,Ceramic materials -- Innovations ,Environmental issues ,Science and technology ,Zoology and wildlife conservation - Published
- 1992
44. Weak tradeoff between xylem safety and xylemspecific hydraulic efficiency across the world’s woody plant species
- Author
-
Maherali, H., Cao, K-.F., Schreiber, S.G., Brodribb, T.J., Westoby, M., Hacke, U.G., Jacobsen, A.L., Lens, F., Choat, B., Wright, I.J., Pittermann, J., Gleason, S., Bhaskar, R., Nardini, A., Morris, H., Mayr, S., Bucci, S.J., Mencuccini, M., Johnson, D.M., Mitchell, P.J., Fan, Z-.X., Sperry, J.S., Delzon, S., Zanne, A.E., Martínez-Vilalta, J., Cochard, H., Plavcová, L., McCulloh, K.A., Jansen, S., Domec, J-.C., Pratt, R.B., and Feild, T.S.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Endovascular thrombectomy for ischemic stroke increases disability-free survival, quality of life, and life expectancy and reduces cost.
- Author
-
Ma H., Chandra R.V., Bladin C.F., Rice H., de Villiers L., Desmond P.M., Meretoja A., Cadilhac D.A., Donnan G.A., Davis S.M., Campbell B.C.V., Mitchell P.J., Churilov L., Keshtkaran M., Hong K.-S., Kleinig T.J., Dewey H.M., Yassi N., Yan B., Dowling R.J., Parsons M.W., Wu T.Y., Brooks M., Simpson M.A., Miteff F., Levi C.R., Krause M., Harrington T.J., Faulder K.C., Steinfort B.S., Ang T., Scroop R., Barber P.A., McGuinness B., Wijeratne T., Phan T.G., Chong W., Ma H., Chandra R.V., Bladin C.F., Rice H., de Villiers L., Desmond P.M., Meretoja A., Cadilhac D.A., Donnan G.A., Davis S.M., Campbell B.C.V., Mitchell P.J., Churilov L., Keshtkaran M., Hong K.-S., Kleinig T.J., Dewey H.M., Yassi N., Yan B., Dowling R.J., Parsons M.W., Wu T.Y., Brooks M., Simpson M.A., Miteff F., Levi C.R., Krause M., Harrington T.J., Faulder K.C., Steinfort B.S., Ang T., Scroop R., Barber P.A., McGuinness B., Wijeratne T., Phan T.G., and Chong W.
- Abstract
Background: Endovascular thrombectomy improves functional outcome in large vessel occlusion ischemic stroke. We examined disability, quality of life, survival and acute care costs in the EXTEND-IA trial, which used CT-perfusion imaging selection. Method(s): Large vessel ischemic stroke patients with favorable CT-perfusion were randomized to endovascular thrombectomy after alteplase versus alteplase-only. Clinical outcome was prospectively measured using 90-day modified Rankin scale (mRS). Individual patient expected survival and net difference in Disability/Quality-adjusted life years (DALY/QALY) up to 15 years from stroke were modeled using age, sex, 90-day mRS, and utility scores. Level of care within the first 90 days was prospectively measured and used to estimate procedure and inpatient care costs (US$ reference year 2014). Result(s): There were 70 patients, 35 in each arm, mean age 69, median NIHSS 15 (IQR 12-19). The median (IQR) disability-weighted utility score at 90 days was 0.65 (0.00-0.91) in the alteplase-only versus 0.91 (0.65-1.00) in the endovascular group (p = 0.005). Modeled life expectancy was greater in the endovascular versus alteplase-only group (median 15.6 versus 11.2 years, p = 0.02). The endovascular thrombectomy group had fewer simulated DALYs lost over 15 years [median (IQR) 5.5 (3.2-8.7) versus 8.9 (4.7-13.8), p = 0.02] and more QALY gained [median (IQR) 9.3 (4.2-13.1) versus 4.9 (0.3-8.5), p = 0.03]. Endovascular patients spent less time in hospital [median (IQR) 5 (3-11) days versus 8 (5-14) days, p = 0.04] and rehabilitation [median (IQR) 0 (0-28) versus 27 (0-65) days, p = 0.03]. The estimated inpatient costs in the first 90 days were less in the thrombectomy group (average US$15,689 versus US$30,569, p = 0.008) offsetting the costs of interhospital transport and the thrombectomy procedure (average US$10,515). The average saving per patient treated with thrombectomy was US$4,365. Conclusion(s): Thrombectomy patients with large vessel
- Published
- 2017
46. Two-Year Results of a Randomized Placebo-Controlled Trial of Vertebroplasty for Acute Osteoporotic Vertebral Fractures
- Author
-
Kroon, F., Staples, M., Ebeling, P.R., Wark, J.D., Osborne, R.H., Mitchell, P.J., Wriedt, C.H.R., and Buchbinder, R.
- Subjects
THERAPEUTICS ,INJURY ,OSTEOPOROSIS ,FRACTURE HEALING ,CLINICAL TRIALS - Published
- 2014
47. NEW CARBON MATERIALS FOR MECHANICAL APPLICATIONS
- Author
-
ATKINS, B.R., BRADSHAW, J.R., and MITCHELL, P.J.
- Published
- 1961
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Severe hypoperfusion in the absence of a large ischemic core should not exclude patients from reperfusion therapies.
- Author
-
Rice H., Phan T.G., Chong W., Chandra R.V.., Bladin C., Badve M., De Villiers L., Desmond P., Donnan G., Davis S., Ma H., Campbell B.C.V., Mitchell P.J., Kleinig T.J., Dewey H.M., Churilov L., Yassi N., Yan B., Dowling R., Parsons M.W., Oxley T., Wu T., Brooks M., Simpson M., Miteff F., Levi C., Krause M., Harrington T., Faulder K., Steinfort B., Priglinger M., Ang T., Scroop R., Barber A., McGuinness B., Wijeratne T., Rice H., Phan T.G., Chong W., Chandra R.V.., Bladin C., Badve M., De Villiers L., Desmond P., Donnan G., Davis S., Ma H., Campbell B.C.V., Mitchell P.J., Kleinig T.J., Dewey H.M., Churilov L., Yassi N., Yan B., Dowling R., Parsons M.W., Oxley T., Wu T., Brooks M., Simpson M., Miteff F., Levi C., Krause M., Harrington T., Faulder K., Steinfort B., Priglinger M., Ang T., Scroop R., Barber A., McGuinness B., and Wijeratne T.
- Abstract
Background: Optimal imaging selection for endovascular therapy for ischemic stroke remains controversial with a range of criteria used in the recent positive trials. Large volume severe hypoperfusion (Tmax > 10 s) is one such criterion, with optimal threshold > 82 mL ('malignant profile'), in a previous study. We examined whether this was associated with poor response to reperfusion in the EXTEND-IA randomized trial, which did not exclude patients on this basis. Method(s): Patients receiving tPA < 4.5 h with major vessel occlusion and favorable CT-perfusion (CTP) were randomized (after written informed consent, IRB-approved) to thrombectomy after tPA versus tPA-alone. CTP eligibility required mismatch ratio > 1.2 between hypoperfused tissue (Tmax > 6 s) and irreversibly injured ischemic core (relative cerebral blood flow < 30%), absolute mismatch > 10 mL, ischemic core <70 mL (RAPID software, Stanford University). Tmax > 10 s volume was calculated and effect on clinical outcomes examined. Result(s): There were 70 patients, 35 in each arm, mean age = 69, median NIHSS = 15. In these patients with ischemic core < 70 mL, median Tmax > 10 s volume was 41 ml with 12/70(17%) > 82 ml, 6/70(8.6%) > 100 ml. Of the 'malignant' patients(Tmax10 s > 82 ml), 6/12(50%) had >90% reperfusion at 24 h (4 endovascular and 2 tPAonly), all of whom had 'early neurological recovery' (>=8 point NIHSS reduction or 0-1 by day 3) and 5/6(83%) had 90 day mRS0-1. No patient with <90% reperfusion had day 90 mRS < 3. Conclusion(s): In ischemic stroke patients <4.5 h after onset, large Tmax > 10 s volume in the absence of a large ischemic core was uncommon. Although the numbers in this study were small, the 83% rate of excellent functional outcome after reperfusion suggests that excluding such patients from therapy may not be justified.
- Published
- 2016
49. An eco-climatic framework for evaluating the resilience of vegetation to water deficit
- Author
-
Mitchell, P.J., O'Grady, A.P., Pinkard, E.A., Brodribb, T.J., Arndt, S.K., Blackman, C.J., Duursma, R.A., Fensham, R.J., Hilbert, D.W., Nitschke, C.R., Norris, J., Roxburgh, S., Ruthrof, K.X., Tissue, D.T., Mitchell, P.J., O'Grady, A.P., Pinkard, E.A., Brodribb, T.J., Arndt, S.K., Blackman, C.J., Duursma, R.A., Fensham, R.J., Hilbert, D.W., Nitschke, C.R., Norris, J., Roxburgh, S., Ruthrof, K.X., and Tissue, D.T.
- Abstract
The surge in global efforts to understand the causes and consequences of drought on forest ecosystems has tended to focus on specific impacts such as mortality. We propose an ecoclimatic framework that takes a broader view of the ecological relevance of water deficits, linking elements of exposure and resilience to cumulative impacts on a range of ecosystem processes. This ecoclimatic framework is underpinned by two hypotheses: (i) exposure to water deficit can be represented probabilistically and used to estimate exposure thresholds across different vegetation types or ecosystems; and (ii) the cumulative impact of a series of water deficit events is defined by attributes governing the resistance and recovery of the affected processes. We present case studies comprising Pinus edulis and Eucalyptus globulus, tree species with contrasting ecological strategies, which demonstrate how links between exposure and resilience can be examined within our proposed framework. These examples reveal how climatic thresholds can be defined along a continuum of vegetation functional responses to water deficit regimes. The strength of this framework lies in identifying climatic thresholds on vegetation function in the absence of more complete mechanistic understanding, thereby guiding the formulation, application and benchmarking of more detailed modelling.
- Published
- 2016
50. Endovascular thrombectomy reduces length of stay and treatment costs within 3 months of stroke.
- Author
-
Phan T.G., Davis S.M., Donnan G.A., Wijeratne T., Chong W., Badve M., Bladin C.F., Campbell B.C.V., Mitchell P.J., Kleinig T.J., Dewey H.M., Churilov L., Parsons M.W., Brooks M., Miteff F., Krause M., Harrington T.J., Scroop R., Barber P.A., McGuinness B., Phan T.G., Davis S.M., Donnan G.A., Wijeratne T., Chong W., Badve M., Bladin C.F., Campbell B.C.V., Mitchell P.J., Kleinig T.J., Dewey H.M., Churilov L., Parsons M.W., Brooks M., Miteff F., Krause M., Harrington T.J., Scroop R., Barber P.A., and McGuinness B.
- Abstract
Background: Recent trials have demonstrated improved outcomes with endovascular therapy for ischemic stroke compared with tPA. We examined the effects on resource utilization, length of stay and cost of care in the EXTEND-IA randomized trial. Method(s): Patients receiving tPA < 4.5 h who had major vessel occlusion and CT-perfusion evidence of salvageable brain tissue were randomized (after written informed consent, IRB-approved) to endovascular thrombectomy after tPA versus tPA alone. Length of stay in acute inpatient, rehabilitation and nursing care units over the first 3 months and costs were compared between groups (Wilcoxon test). Result(s): There were 70 patients, 35 in each arm, mean age 69, median NIHSS 15. Endovascular patients had shorter acute inpatient stays (mean 8 versus 12 days, p = 0.04) without increased time in intensive care (9 versus 11 hours, p = 0.51). Survivors spent less time in rehabilitation after endovascular treatment (mean 14 versus 33 days, p = 0.03). The cost of inpatient care in the first 3 months was similar for endovascular and tPA-only patients (mean AU$43,000 versus AU$45,000, respectively), including the AU$20,000 average cost for the thrombectomy. Ongoing nursing care (AU$146,000p.a.) was required for 5/35 patients (all tPA-only). Conclusion(s): In ischemic stroke patients with a proximal cerebral arterial occlusion and salvageable tissue on CT-perfusion imaging, thrombectomy reduced length of stay and was cost neutral compared with tPA alone over 3 months. The health-economic benefits would be expected to increase further over time. The magnitude of difference in inpatient care costs suggests this finding would generalize to other health systems.
- Published
- 2015
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.