36 results on '"Vijaya, Pamidimukkala"'
Search Results
2. A rare clinical scenario of hypothyroid-induced rhabdomyolysis
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Chaitanya Siva Marupudi, Vijaya Pamidimukkala, Usha Kiran Behera, Viswa Jyothi Yakkala, Venkata Sudheer Bolimera, Naren Polavarapu, and Sirichandana Gangasani
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creatine phosphokinase ,hemodialysis ,hypothyroidism ,rhabdomyolysis ,Medicine - Abstract
Muscle involvement is common in hypothyroidism and is seen in nearly 80% of the cases. However, rhabdomyolysis is a rare manifestation and is usually triggered by precipitating factors such as exercise, statins, and toxins. We describe the case of a 58-year-old woman with de novo hypothyroidism presenting with severe rhabdomyolysis requiring hemodialysis. A 58-year-old diabetic and hypertensive female was presented at our tertiary care center with symptoms of generalized weakness, difficulty in walking, and decreased urine output. Her blood investigations showed elevated creatine phosphokinase (CPK), renal parameters, and thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) levels suggestive of autoimmune thyroiditis with rhabdomyolysis. She was treated with thyroid hormone supplementation and hemodialysis. The patient recovered gradually with normalization of renal parameters. Although muscle involvement is common in hypothyroidism, rhabdomyolysis is a rare manifestation. Diagnosis is established by demonstrating elevated CPK and TSH levels. Management consists of hydration and thyroid hormone supplementation. Hemodialysis is required in severe cases with established acute kidney injury.
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- 2024
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3. Ultra-thin everolimus-eluting stents in atherosclerotic lesions: Three years follow-up with subgroup analysis of ultra-long stents
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Raghava Sarma Polavarapu, Vijaya Pamidimukkala, Anurag Polavarapu, Yudhistar Siripuram, Keerthika Chowdary Ravella, Murali Babu Rao Rachaputi, Naren Polavarapu, Kalyan Chakravarthi Pulivarthi, Sravanthi Byrapaneni, Sirichandana Gangasani, Michael Noronha, and Srinivasa Rao Chinta
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Biodegradable polymer ,Drug-eluting stents ,Everolimus ,Percutaneous coronary intervention ,Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Objectives: To assess the long-term (3 years) safety and efficacy of Tetrilimus everolimus-eluting stent (EES) and subgroup analysis of outcomes of ultra-long (44/48 mm) Tetrilimus EES implantation in patients with long coronary lesions. Material and methods: In this observational, single-centre, single-arm, investigator-initiated registry, 558 patients who underwent implantation of Tetrilimus EES for the treatment of coronary artery disease were retrospectively included. The primary endpoint was occurrence of any major adverse cardiac event (MACE) at 12 months follow-up (composite of cardiac death, myocardial infarction [MI], and target lesion revascularization [TLR]) and we hereby report 3 years follow-up data. Stent thrombosis was assessed as a safety endpoint. A subgroup analysis of patients with long coronary lesions is also reported. Results: A total of 558 patients (57.0 ± 10.2 years) received 766 Tetrilimus EES (1.3 ± 0.5 stents/patient) to treat 695 coronary lesions. In subgroup analysis of 143 patients implanted with ultra-long EES, 155 lesions were intervened successfully with only one Tetrilimus EES (44/48 mm) implanted per lesion. At 3 years, event rates of 9.1% MACE with predominance of MI (4.4%), followed by 2.9% TLR and 1.7% cardiac death, and only 1.0% stent thrombosis were reported in overall population, while in a subgroup of patients implanted with ultra-long EES, 10.4% MACE and 1.5% stent thrombosis were reported. Conclusions: Three years clinical outcomes showed favourable long-term safety and excellent performance of Tetrilimus EES in high-risk patients and complex coronary lesions in routine clinical practice, including a subgroup of patients with long coronary lesions, with acceptable primary and safety endpoints.
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- 2023
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4. Secondary prevention with a structured semi-interactive stroke prevention package in INDIA (SPRINT INDIA): a multicentre, randomised controlled trial
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Jeyaraj Durai Pandian, Mahesh Pundlik Kate, Padmavathyamma Narayanapillai Sylaja, Dheeraj Khurana, Vijaya Pamidimukkala, Biman Kanti Ray, Vivek Keshavan Nambiar, Sanjith Aaron, Gaurav Kumar Mittal, Sundarachary Nagarjunakonda, Aparna Ramakrishna Pai, Sankar Prasad Gorthi, Somasundaram Kumaravelu, Yerasu Muralidhar Reddy, Sunil Narayan, Nomal Chandra Borah, Rupjyoti Das, Girish Baburao Kulkarni, Vikram Huded, Thomas Mathew, M Vasantha Padma Srivastava, Rohit Bhatia, Pawan Tarkeshwarnath Ojha, Jayanta Roy, Sherly Mary Abraham, Anand Girish Vaishnav, Arvind Sharma, Shaikh Afshan Jabeen, Abhishek Pathak, Sanjeev Kumar Bhoi, Sudhir Sharma, Sulena Sulena, Aralikatte Onkarappa Saroja, Neetu Ramrakhiani, Madhusudhan Byadarahalli Kempegowda, Sapna Erat Sreedharan, Gautam Das, Tina George, Ivy Sebastian, Rajeshwar Sahonta, Shyam Krishnakumar Jaiswal, Lalitha Pidaparthi, Rajeshwari Aghoram, Jemin Jeyachandra Webster, Rakesh Hasmukhlal Shah, Menka Jha, Karkal Ravishankar Niak, Deepti Arora, Shweta Jain Verma, Rahul Huilgol, Aneesh Dhasan, Vishnu Renjith, Himani Khatter, Prabhakaran Sarma, Sadasivan Laila Visakh, Sukhmandeep Kaur, Tagallamudi Nagamalleswara Rao, Venkatesh Dumpala, Gargi Podder, Arindam Biswas, Karthika Rani, Nishanthini Dhamodharan, Shilpa Sekhar, Satish Kumar Chinka, Varsha Aroor Prabhu, Farhaz Zaha, Sarvotham Ramanathan, Deepika Pabbu, Nupur Choudhury, Ramya Ramanathan, Saji K James, Neha Kuthalia, Sakshi Sharma, Mayuri Ramchandra Gaikwad, Purbita Sen, Sumita Basumatary, Rachana Dhruvesh Bhatt, Dipal Patel, Mareena Cyriac, Sasmita Swain, Narinder Kumar, Amaresh Kurubara, Devang Sharma, Meenakshi Sharma, Rupinder Dhaliwal, Jagarlapudi Murali Krishna Murthy, Prem Pais, Denis Xavier, Parthasarathy Satishchandra, Subash Kaul, Vishnubhatla Sreenivas, Suresh Chandran, Rajneesh Kumar Calton, and Jacob George
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Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Summary: Background: There is a high burden of stroke, including recurrent stroke, in India. We aimed to assess the effect of a structured semi-interactive stroke prevention package in patients with subacute stroke to reduce recurrent strokes, myocardial infarction, and death. Methods: This was a multicentre, randomised, clinical trial conducted in 31 centres of the Indian Stroke Clinical Trial Network (INSTRuCT). Adult patients with first stroke and access to a mobile cellular device were randomly allocated (1:1) to intervention and control groups by the research coordinators at each centre using a central, in-house, web-based randomisation system. The participants and research coordinators at each centre were not masked to group assignment. The intervention group received regular short SMS messages and videos that promoted risk factor control and medication adherence and an educational workbook, in one of 12 languages, and the control group received standard care. The primary outcome was a composite of recurrent stroke, high-risk transient ischaemic attack, acute coronary syndrome, and death at 1 year. The outcome and safety analyses were done in the intention-to-treat population. The trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03228979 and Clinical Trials Registry-India (CTRI/2017/09/009600) and was stopped for futility after interim analysis. Findings: Between April 28, 2018, and Nov 30, 2021, 5640 patients were assessed for eligibility. 4298 patients were randomised to the intervention group (n=2148) or control group (n=2150). 620 patients were not followed up at 6 months and a further 595 patients were not followed up at 1 year because the trial was stopped for futility after interim analysis. 45 patients were lost to follow-up before 1 year. Acknowledgment of receipt of the SMS messages and videos by the intervention group patients was low (17%). The primary outcome occurred in 119 (5·5%) of 2148 patients in the intervention group and 106 (4·9%) of 2150 patients in the control group (adjusted odds ratio 1·12; 95% CI 0·85–1·47; p=0·370). Among the secondary outcome measures, alcohol cessation and smoking cessation were higher in the intervention group than in the control group (alcohol cessation 231 [85%] of 272 in the intervention group vs 255 [78%] of 326 in the control group; p=0·036; smoking cessation 202 [83%] vs 206 [75%]; p=0·035). Medication compliance was better in the intervention group than in the control group (1406 [93·6%] of 1502 vs 1379 [89·8%] of 1536; p
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- 2023
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5. Prospective Observational Cohort Study of Tenecteplase: Results From the Indian Registry in Ischemic Stroke-Tenecteplase.
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Saraf, Amit, Gilvaz, Percival C., Ramakrishnan, Tirppur C. R., Kumar, R. N. Komal, Meenakshi-Sundaram, Salvadeeswaran, Sontakke, Santosh M., Alurkar, Anand, Kumaravelu, Somasundaram, Vijaya, Pamidimukkala, Udar, Mangesh, Arjundas, Deepak, Desai, Soaham, Sharma, Mukesh, BV, Suresh, Nair, Rithesh R., Pathan, Sadique, Pujari, Shripad S., Kumar, Sudhir, Machhavada, Keyur, and Kalita, Jayantee
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- 2024
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6. Clinical features and outcome of stroke with COVID-19. COVID-19 Stroke Study Group (CSSG), India
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Rohit Bhatia, M V Padma Srivastava, P N Sylaja, Snigdha Komakula, Ashish Upadhyay, Vibhor Pardasani, Thomas Iype, Rajsrinivas Parthasarathy, Rajshekhar Reddy, Suman Kushwaha, Jayanta Roy, P Satish, Anjan Trikha, Naveet Wig, Lalit Dhar, Deepti Vibha, Venugopalan Y Vishnu, Awadh Kishore Pandit, Anu Gupta, A Elavarasi, Ayush Agarwal, Vipul Gupta, Rakesh K Singh, Harsh Oza, Hiral Halani, Dileep Ramachandran, Githin B George, Praveen Panicker, M K Suresh, S Kumaravelu, Dheeraj Khurana, Srijithesh P Rajendran, Vijaya Pamidimukkala, Salil Gupta, Jeyaraj D Pandian, Debashish Chowdhury, Nirendra K Rai, Arvind Sharma, and Vivek K Nambiar
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covid-19 ,ischemic stroke ,sars-cov-2 ,stroke ,thrombolysis ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Background and Purpose: Occurrence of stroke has been reported among patients with COVID-19. The present study compares clinical features and outcomes of stroke patients with and without COVID-19. Methods: The COVID-19 Stroke Study Group (CSSG) is a multicentric study in 18 sites across India to observe and compare the clinical characteristics of patients with stroke admitted during the current pandemic period and a similar epoch in 2019. The present study reports patients of stroke with and without COVID-19 (CoVS and non-CoVS, respectively) seen between February 2020 and July 2020. Demographic, clinical, treatment, and outcome details of patients were collected. Results: The mean age and gender were comparable between the two groups. CoVS patients had higher stroke severity and extent of cerebral involvement on imaging. In-hospital complications and death were higher among CoVS patients (53.06% vs. 17.51%; P < 0.001) and (42.31% vs. 7.6%; P < 0.001), respectively. At 3 months, higher mortality was observed among CoVS patients (67.65% vs. 13.43%; P < 0.001) and good outcome (modified Rankin score [mRS]: 0–2) was seen more often in non-CoVS patients (68.86% vs. 33.33%; P < 0.001). The presence of COVID-19 and baseline stroke severity were independent predictors of mortality. Conclusions: CoVS is associated with higher severity, poor outcome, and increased mortality. Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection and baseline stroke severity are independent predictors of mortality.
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- 2021
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7. RE-OPEN: Randomised trial of biosimilar TNK versus TPA during endovascular therapy for acute ischaemic stroke due to large vessel occlusions
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Bhatia, Rohit, primary, Srivastava, MV Padma, additional, Fatima, Saman, additional, Sarkar, Risha, additional, Longkumer, Imnameren, additional, Gaikwad, Shailesh, additional, Devaranjan, Leve S Joseph, additional, Garg, Ajay, additional, Durai Pandian, Jeyaraj, additional, Khurana, Dheeraj, additional, Sylaja, PN, additional, Jain, Shweta, additional, Arora, Deepti, additional, Dhasan, Aneesh, additional, Aaron, Sanjith, additional, Miraclin, Angel T, additional, Vijaya, Pamidimukkala, additional, Rajendran, Srijithesh P, additional, Roy, Jayanta, additional, Ray, Biman Kanti, additional, Nambiar, Vivek, additional, Alapatt, Paul J, additional, and Sharma, Meenakshi, additional
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- 2024
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8. INSTRuCT: Protocol, Infrastructure, and Governance
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Pandian, Jeyaraj Durai, Verma, Shweta Jain, Arora, Deepti, Sharma, Meenakshi, Dhaliwal, Rupinder, Khatter, Himani, Huilgol, Rahul, Sylaja, P.N., Dhasan, Aneesh, Renjith, Vishnu, Pathak, Abhishek, Pai, Aparna, Sharma, Arvind, Vaishnav, Anand, Ray, Biman, Khurana, Dheeraj, Mittal, Gaurav, Kulkarni, Girish, Sebastian, Ivy, Roy, Jayanta, Kumaravelu, Somasundaram, John, Lydia, Kate, Mahesh, Srivastava, M.V., Kempegowda, Madhusudhan Byadarahalli, Borah, Nomal, Ramrakhiani, Neetu, Rai, Nirendra, Ojha, Pawan, Bhatia, Rohit, Das, Rupjyoti, Sureshbabu, Sachin, Jabeen, Shaikh Afshan, Bhoi, Sanjeev, Aaron, Sanjith, Sarma, Prabhakaran, Saroja, Aralikatte Onkarappa, Abraham, Sherly, Sharma, Sudhir, Sulena, Sulena, Gorthi, Sankar, Nagarjunakonda, Sundarachary, Narayan, Sunil, Mathew, Thomas, George, Tina, Vijaya, Pamidimukkala, Huded, Vikram, Nambiar, Vivek, and Reddy, Y. Muralidhar
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- 2021
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9. Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the frequency, clinical spectrum and outcomes of pediatric guillain-Barre syndrome in India: A multicentric ambispective cohort study
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Garg, Divyani, Dhamija, Rajinder, Choudhary, Aditya, Shree, Ritu, Kumar, Sujit, Samal, Priyanka, Pathak, Abhishek, Vijaya, Pamidimukkala, Sireesha, Yareeda, Nair, Sruthi, Sharma, Sanjay, Desai, Soaham, Sinha, Human, Agarwal, Ayush, Upadhyay, Ashish, Srivastava, M. Padma, Bhatia, Rohit, Pandit, Awadh, Singh, Rajesh, Reyaz, Alisha, Yogeesh, P., Salunkhe, Manish, Lal, Vivek, Modi, Manish, Singh, Gagandeep, Singla, Monika, Panda, Samhita, Gopalakrishnan, Maya, Puri, Inder, Sharma, Sudhir, Kumar, Bismay, Kushwaha, Prashant, Chovatiya, Harshadkumar, Ferreira, Teresa, Bhoi, Sanjeev, Bhartiya, Manish, Kaul, Subhash, Patil, Anuja, Mathukumalli, Neeharika, Nagappa, Madhu, Sharma, P., Basheer, Aneesh, Ramachandran, Dileep, Balaram, Neetha, Sebastian, Jospeh, Vishnu, Venugopalan, and Consortium, On Behalf Of The Gbs
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Influence ,Statistics ,Risk factors ,Patient outcomes ,Pediatric research ,Epidemics -- Influence -- Statistics -- India ,Pediatric diseases -- Statistics -- Patient outcomes ,Guillain-Barre syndrome -- Statistics -- Patient outcomes -- Risk factors ,COVID-19 -- Influence -- Statistics ,Children -- Diseases - Published
- 2022
10. Efficacy and Safety of Intravenous Tenecteplase Bolus in Acute Ischemic Stroke: Results of Two Open-Label, Multicenter Trials
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Ramakrishnan, Tirppur C. R., Kumaravelu, Somasundaram, Narayan, Sunil K., Buddha, Sai S., Murali, Ch., Majeed, Palakkapparampil H. A., Meenakshi-Sundaram, Salvadeeswaran, Wadia, Rustom S., Sharma, Vikram, Basu, Indraneel, Vijaya, Pamidimukkala, Salam, Kizhakkaniyakath A., Barmare, Shahid, Vaid, Zubin, Nirmal Raj, K. K., Wattamwar, Pandurang R., Asokan, Konbappan, Dhonge, Vijaykumar, Nellikunja, Shankara, Namjoshi, Deepak, Srinivasa, Rangasetty, Laddhad, Deepak S., Deshpande, Shirish D., Raghunath, Balakrishnan, Kalita, Jayantee, Kumar, Mritunjai, Misra, Usha K., Pradeep, Methil, and For the Tenecteplase in Stroke Investigators
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- 2018
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11. Simultaneous Bilateral Carotid Stenting in High-risk Patients: A Single-center Experience with Review of Literature
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Lakshmi Sudha Prasanna Karanam, Sridhar Reddy Baddam, Anurag Polavarapu, Vijaya Pamidimukkala, and Raghavasarma Polavarapu
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Carotid stenting ,high risk ,hyperperfusion ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Background: The aim of the present study is to determine the role of simultaneous carotid artery stenting in high-risk patients with triple vessel coronary artery disease and to determine the safety and efficacy of the procedure in these cases. Materials and Methods: The present study is a retrospective analysis of 33 patients who underwent carotid artery stenting in the same setting in our institution from 2009 to 2016. There were 22 male and 11 females with a mean age of 65 years (53–76 years). Demographic factors clinical characteristics and atherosclerosis risk factors were documented. Results: Technical success was 100% in our series. Intraprocedural and postprocedural events in the form of hypotension and bradycardia due to hemodynamic depression were seen in 11 patients. We did not encounter hyperperfusion syndrome in any of our patients. Twenty-nine patients underwent cardiac bypass surgery after 3 weeks, and 4 patients were kept on medical management for coronary artery disease. No deaths or major strokes occurred in our series. Conclusion: Simultaneous bilateral carotid artery stenting is a safe treatment option even in patients with high-risk factors and can be considered as the therapeutic option in patients with significant bilateral carotid artery disease.
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- 2017
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12. Coronary Perforation with Emergence of Cardiac Tamponade During Coronary Intervention - A Cath Lab Nightmare
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Keerthika Chowdary Ravella, Vijaya Pamidimukkala, and Raghava Sarma Polavarapu
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Microbiology (medical) ,Immunology ,Immunology and Allergy - Abstract
Coronary perforation is an uncommon complication of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), that, in extreme cases, might result in cardiac tamponade. Here, we describe a case of coronary artery perforation in a 55-year-old female, presented with recent inferior wall myocardial infraction (IWMI). Coronary angiogram represented right coronary artery (RCA) lesion which was planned to manage with PCI. During PCI, coronary perforation emerged in RCA, leading to cardiac tamponade. Hence an immediate pericardiocentesis was performed and coronary perforation was tackled successfully using a covered stent. Keywords: Coronary perforation, percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), cardiac tamponade, cath lab nightmare.
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- 2022
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13. Abstract WP78: Low Cost Stroke Management Strategy With Hospital Outcome And One Year Follow-up From A Single Stroke Center, India
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VIJAYA PAMIDIMUKKALA, SRINIVASA RAO NUTAKKI, GAYATHRI PETLURI, NAREN POLAVARAPU, LAKSHMI PRASANNA K, BHARGHAVI DEVI M, DEEPIKA DULAM, RAMACHANDRA PRASAD YELAMANCHI, VISWA JYOTHI YAKKALA, HIMA SANJANA PERUMALLA, and VEERA RAGHAVA SARMA POLAVARAPU
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Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
Introduction: Stroke is a leading cause of economic burden in the Low Middle Income countries (LMIC’s). We want to study the outcome of acute strokes treated under Government scheme with minimal package (For Ischemic Stroke - 257 USD & For hemorrhagic stroke - 399 USD), but offered evidence-based stroke care other than thrombolysis. Methods: From January 2021 to March 2021, a total of 350 cases were treated in our Ankineedu stroke center. Out of these 125 (36%) acute stroke patients are treated under subsidized economical stroke care from admission to discharge. In-patient mortality, 3 months follow up and 1 year follow up recorded. All patients received standard medical treatment in Stroke unit with Antiplatelets, statins, DVT prophylaxis, Antihypertensives, dysphagia assessment, physiotherapy and Neurosurgery when required. All basic stroke investigations done - CT scan, MRI scan, MR Angio, Neck vessel doppler, Lipids, Renal Function test, RBS, ECG and ECHO. All patients discharged on secondary prevention. Average length of stay is 10 days. Results: There were 94 men and 31 women, age ranged from 18 years to 85 years (median 55 yrs). Type of stroke: Ischemic Stroke -74% and Haemorrhagic stroke - 26%, 4 patients (3.2%) underwent Neurosurgery. Risk factors: Hypertension - 82 (66%), Diabetes - 45 (36%), Cardiac problems - 17 (13.6%), Smoking - 20 (16%), Alcohol - 15 (12%). Total In-house mortality 5 (4%) and the remaining patients outcome at 3 months - Good outcome with modified rankin scale (mRS) 0-2 in 83 patients (66%), Fair Outcome with mRS (3-4) - 35 (28%), 1 patient (0.8%) bedridden and 1 patient (0.8%) died at home. Out of 125 patients, 60 patients (48%) came for 1 year follow up, of these 88% had mRS (0-2), 12% had mRS (3-5). Conclusion: In resource poor countries we can offer basic stroke care model to all needy patients with reasonable outcome. However, the follow up needs to be strengthened.
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- 2023
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14. Abstract 88: A Multicentric, Randomized, Controlled Phase III Study With Sovateltide (Tycamzzi™) Improving Outcomes In Patients With Acute Cerebral Ischemic Stroke
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Gulati, Anil, primary, Adwani, Sikandar, additional, Vijaya, Pamidimukkala, additional, Agrawal, Nilesh, additional, Ramakrishnan, TCR, additional, Hari, Rai, additional, Jain, Dinesh, additional, Sundarachary, Nagarjunakonda, additional, Pandian, Jeyaraj D, additional, Sardana, Vijay, additional, Sharma, Mridul, additional, Sidhu, Gursaran, additional, Anand, Sidharth, additional, Vibha, Deepti, additional, Aralikatte, Saroja, additional, Khurana, Dheeraj, additional, Joshi, Deepika, additional, Karadan, Ummer, additional, and Siddiqui, Mohd. Shafat Imam, additional
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- 2023
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15. 529: SOVATELTIDE (TYCAMZZI) IN PATIENTS WITH CEREBRAL ISCHEMIC STROKE: A RANDOMIZED MULTICENTER STUDY
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Gulati, Anil, primary, Adwani, Sikandar, additional, Vijaya, Pamidimukkala, additional, Agrawal, Nilesh, additional, Ramakrishnan, TCR, additional, Rai, Hari, additional, Jain, Dinesh, additional, Sundarachary, Nagarjunakonda, additional, Pandian, Jeyaraj, additional, Sardana, Vijay, additional, Sharma, Mridul, additional, Sidhu, Gursaran, additional, Anand, Sidharth, additional, Vibha, Deepti, additional, Aralikatte, Saroja, additional, Khurana, Dheeraj, additional, Joshi, Deepika, additional, Karadan, Ummer, additional, and Siddiqui, Mohd. Shafat Imam, additional
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- 2022
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16. Complications in Acute Stroke in India (CAST-I): A Multicenter Study
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Pandian, Jeyaraj D., Kaur, Arshpreet, Jyotsna, Rashmi, Sylaja, Padmavati N., Vijaya, Pamidimukkala, Padma, Madakasira V., Venkateswaralu, Kolichana, Sukumaran, Sajith, Mathew, Robert, Kaur, Parmdeep, Singh, Yash P., and Radhakrishnan, Kurupath
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- 2012
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17. Statistical Analysis Plan for the Secondary Prevention by Structured Semi-Interactive Stroke Prevention Package in INDIA (SPRINT INDIA): A Randomized Controlled Trial
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Khatter, Himani, primary, Pandian, Jeyaraj D., additional, Kate, Mahesh, additional, Sarma, Sankara, additional, Sylaja, PN, additional, Khurana, Dheeraj, additional, Vijaya, Pamidimukkala, additional, Ray, Biman Kanti, additional, Nambiar, Vivek, additional, Aaron, Sanjith, additional, George, Tina, additional, Mittal, Gaurav, additional, Sebastian, Ivy, additional, Sundarachary, Nagarjunakonda V., additional, Pai, Aparna R., additional, Gorthi, Sankar, additional, Somasundaram, Kumaravelu, additional, Sharma, Meenakshi, additional, Dhaliwal, Rupinder, additional, Reddy, Y. Muralidhar, additional, Narayan, Sunil, additional, Borah, NC, additional, Das, Rupjyoti, additional, Kulkarni, Girish B., additional, Huded, Vikram, additional, Mathew, Thomas, additional, Srivastava, Padma MV, additional, Bhatia, Rohit, additional, Ojha, Pawan, additional, Roy, Jayanta, additional, Abraham, Sherly, additional, Webster, Jemin, additional, Vaishnav, Anand, additional, Sharma, Arvind, additional, Jabeen, Shaik A., additional, Pathak, Abhishek, additional, Bhoi, Sanjeev, additional, Sharma, Sudheer, additional, Sulena, Sulena, additional, Saroja, Aralikatte Onkarappa, additional, Ramrakhiani, Neetu, additional, Kempegowda, Madhusudhan B., additional, Arora, Deepti, additional, Verma, Shweta J., additional, Huilgol, Rahul, additional, Dasan, Aneesh, additional, and Renjith, Vishnu, additional
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- 2022
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18. Post COVID-19 neurological manifestations – Retrospective study from a tertiary care hospital, India
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Vijaya, Pamidimukkala, Kiran, B.R., Srinivasa Reddy, S, Haritha Chowdary, A, Lakshmi Kumari, S, Rajya Lakshmi, M, Ranjith, K, Bhargavi Devi, M, Swetha, M, Deepika, D, Anvesh Kumar, K, Naren, P, Raghava Sarma, P.V., and Hima Sanjana, P
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- 2021
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19. Impact of COVID-19 on guillain-barre syndrome in India: A multicenter ambispective cohort study
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Vishnu, VenugopalanY, primary, Sireesha, Yareeda, additional, Shree, Ritu, additional, Nagappa, Madhu, additional, Patil, Anuja, additional, Singla, Monika, additional, Padma Srivastava, MV, additional, Dhamija, RK, additional, Balaram, Neetha, additional, Pathak, Abhishek, additional, Ramachandran, Dileep, additional, Kumar, Sujit, additional, Puri, Inder, additional, Sharma, Sudhir, additional, Panda, Samhita, additional, Desai, Soaham, additional, Samal, Priyanka, additional, Choudhary, Aditya, additional, Vijaya, Pamidimukkala, additional, Ferreira, Teresa, additional, Nair, SS, additional, Sinha, HP, additional, Bhoi, SK, additional, Sebastian, Joseph, additional, Sharma, Sanjay, additional, Basheer, Aneesh, additional, Bhartiya, Manish, additional, Mathukumalli, NL, additional, Jabeen, ShaikhAfshan, additional, Lal, Vivek, additional, Modi, Manish, additional, Sharma, PPraveen, additional, Kaul, Subash, additional, Singh, Gagandeep, additional, Agarwal, Ayush, additional, Garg, Divyani, additional, Jose, James, additional, Dev, Priya, additional, Iype, Thomas, additional, Gopalakrishnan, Maya, additional, Upadhyay, Ashish, additional, Bhatia, Rohit, additional, Pandit, AwadhK, additional, Singh, RajeshK, additional, Salunkhe, Manish, additional, Yogeesh, PM, additional, Reyaz, Alisha, additional, Nadda, Nishant, additional, Jha, Menkha, additional, Kumar, Bismay, additional, Kushwaha, PK, additional, Chovatiya, Harshadkumar, additional, Madduluri, Bhavani, additional, Ramesh, P, additional, Goel, Abeer, additional, and Yadav, Rahul, additional
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- 2022
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20. Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the frequency, clinical spectrum and outcomes of pediatric guillain-Barré syndrome in India: A multicentric ambispective cohort study
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Vishnu, VenugopalanY, primary, Garg, Divyani, additional, Dhamija, RajinderK, additional, Choudhary, Aditya, additional, Shree, Ritu, additional, Kumar, Sujit, additional, Samal, Priyanka, additional, Pathak, Abhishek, additional, Vijaya, Pamidimukkala, additional, Sireesha, Yareeda, additional, Nair, SruthiS, additional, Sharma, Sanjay, additional, Desai, Soaham, additional, Sinha, HumanP, additional, Agarwal, Ayush, additional, Upadhyay, Ashish, additional, Padma Srivastava, MV, additional, Bhatia, Rohit, additional, Pandit, AwadhK, additional, Singh, RajeshK, additional, Reyaz, Alisha, additional, Yogeesh, PM, additional, Salunkhe, Manish, additional, Lal, Vivek, additional, Modi, Manish, additional, Singh, Gagandeep, additional, Singla, Monika, additional, Panda, Samhita, additional, Gopalakrishnan, Maya, additional, Puri, Inder, additional, Sharma, Sudhir, additional, Kumar, Bismay, additional, Kushwaha, PrashantK, additional, Chovatiya, Harshadkumar, additional, Ferreira, Teresa, additional, Bhoi, SanjeevK, additional, Bhartiya, Manish, additional, Kaul, Subhash, additional, Patil, Anuja, additional, Mathukumalli, NeeharikaL, additional, Nagappa, Madhu, additional, Sharma, PPraveen, additional, Basheer, Aneesh, additional, Ramachandran, Dileep, additional, Balaram, Neetha, additional, and Sebastian, Jospeh, additional
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- 2022
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21. INSTRuCT
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Pandian, Jeyaraj Durai, primary, Verma, Shweta Jain, additional, Arora, Deepti, additional, Sharma, Meenakshi, additional, Dhaliwal, Rupinder, additional, Khatter, Himani, additional, Huilgol, Rahul, additional, Sylaja, P.N., additional, Dhasan, Aneesh, additional, Renjith, Vishnu, additional, Pathak, Abhishek, additional, Pai, Aparna, additional, Sharma, Arvind, additional, Vaishnav, Anand, additional, Ray, Biman, additional, Khurana, Dheeraj, additional, Mittal, Gaurav, additional, Kulkarni, Girish, additional, Sebastian, Ivy, additional, Roy, Jayanta, additional, Kumaravelu, Somasundaram, additional, John, Lydia, additional, Kate, Mahesh, additional, Srivastava, M.V., additional, Kempegowda, Madhusudhan Byadarahalli, additional, Borah, Nomal, additional, Ramrakhiani, Neetu, additional, Rai, Nirendra, additional, Ojha, Pawan, additional, Bhatia, Rohit, additional, Das, Rupjyoti, additional, Sureshbabu, Sachin, additional, Jabeen, Shaikh Afshan, additional, Bhoi, Sanjeev, additional, Aaron, Sanjith, additional, Sarma, Prabhakaran, additional, Saroja, Aralikatte Onkarappa, additional, Abraham, Sherly, additional, Sharma, Sudhir, additional, Sulena, Sulena, additional, Gorthi, Sankar, additional, Nagarjunakonda, Sundarachary, additional, Narayan, Sunil, additional, Mathew, Thomas, additional, George, Tina, additional, Vijaya, Pamidimukkala, additional, Huded, Vikram, additional, Nambiar, Vivek, additional, and Reddy, Y. Muralidhar, additional
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- 2021
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22. Abstract P30: Safety and Efficacy of Intravenous Tirofiban in Acute Ischemic Stroke With Extended Window Period
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Shwetha M, Raghava Sarma Polavarapu, Ranjith K, Naren Polavarapu, Bhargavi M, Sushma T, Ramadevi Alluri, Soma Sundaram A, Lakshmi Prasanna K, Vijaya Pamidimukkala, Ramesh Nelluri, Rajya Lakshmi M, and Srinivasa Rao N
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Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Thrombolysis ,Tirofiban ,Window period ,Endovascular therapy ,Internal medicine ,Ischemic stroke ,Cardiology ,Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Acute ischemic stroke ,medicine.drug ,Large vessel occlusion - Abstract
Introduction: Intravenous Thrombolysis is approved upto 4½ hrs and Endovascular Therapy upto 24 hrs in eligible Acute Ischemic Stroke (AIS) patients with Large Vessel Occlusion. There are still substantial number of AIS patients where there is no effective treatment available. In this Study we aim to test the safety and Efficacy of the reversible gp IIb/IIIa receptor inhibitor antagonist Tirofiban in AIS beyond 4 ½ hrs and within 24 hrs. Methodology: Among a total of 750 AIS patients admitted in our Stroke Unit, from July 2019 to March 2020, 100 Consecutive patients were included in this study and received Intravenous tirofiban as an initial bolus followed by infusion. Inclusion criteria were Age 18-80yrs, Window Period 4 ½ to 24 hrs. National Institute of health Stroke Scale score (NIHSS) between 5-20, No contraindication for lytic drugs. CT Brain excluding Hemorrhage or > 1/3 rd infarct. Cardioembolic strokes were excluded. Efficacy Assessments: NIHSS and modified Rankin scale (mRS) performed at baseline, within 48hrs, Day-7 and Day-90. The good outcome was defined as mRS 0-1 at 3 months. The safety outcomes were assessed by the incidence of Symptomatic Intracerebral hemorrhage (SICH), Systemic Bleeding and any mortality. Results: There were 74 males, 26 females with median Age of 56 yrs (range from 18 to 80yrs). The Median NIHSS is 10 (range from 5-20), Majority (87%) had anterior circulation strokes and 13% were in Posterior circulation. One patient (1%) developed symptomatic parenchymal Hemorrhage, 4 patients (4%) had mild haemorrhagic transformation within infarct, 8 patients (8%) had nonfatal systemic bleed in the form of Hematuria. Total Mortality - 2 patients (2%), one patient died in the hospital due to cardiac arrest and another patient died at home after discharge. At 3 months, 62 patients (62%) had good outcome (mRS 0-1) and 33 patients (33%) had favourable outcome (mRS 2-3). Conclusion: In this Observational Study we found that Intravenous Tirofiban is not only safe, but effective in AIS patients with extended window period. However, Randomized Clinical Trials are needed to further clarify our observation.
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- 2021
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23. Impact of COVID 19 on Guillain Barre Syndrome in India: A Multicenter Ambispective Cohort Study.
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Sireesha, Yareeda, Shree, Ritu, Nagappa, Madhu, Patil, Anuja, Singla, Monika, Srivastava, M. V. Padma, Dhamija, R. K., Balaram, Neetha, Pathak, Abhishek, Ramachandran, Dileep, Kumar, Sujit, Puri, Inder, Sharma, Sudhir, Panda, Samhita, Desai, Soaham, Samal, Priyanka, Choudhary, Aditya, Vijaya, Pamidimukkala, Ferreira, Teresa, and Nair, S. S.
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TREATMENT of Guillain-Barre syndrome ,RESEARCH ,GASTROENTERITIS ,FEVER ,PERIPHERAL neuropathy ,INTUBATION ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,BACKACHE ,TREATMENT duration ,SEX distribution ,GUILLAIN-Barre syndrome ,ABNORMAL reflexes ,COVID-19 pandemic ,LONGITUDINAL method ,DISCHARGE planning ,SYMPTOMS - Abstract
Introduction/Aims: Studies conducted during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID 19) pandemic have reported varied data regarding the incidence of Guillain--Barre syndrome (GBS). The present study investigated demographic and clinical features, management, and outcomes of patients with GBS during a specified period of the COVID 19 pandemic, and compared these features to those of GBS in the previous year. Methods: A multicenter, ambispective cohort study including 26 centers across India was conducted. Data from a pre COVID 19 period (March 1 to August 31, 2019) were collected retrospectively and collected ambispectively for a specified COVID 19 period (March 1 to August 31, 2020). The study was registered with the Clinical Trial Registry India (CTRI/2020/11/029143). Results: Data from 555 patients were included for analysis: pre COVID 19 (n = 334) and COVID 19 (n = 221). Males were more commonly affected during both periods (male:female, 2:1). Gastroenteritis was the most frequent antecedent event in 2019 (17.4%), whereas fever was the most common event in 2020 (10.7%). Paraparesis (21.3% versus [vs.] 9.3%, P = 0.001) and sensory involvement (51.1% vs. 41.3%; P = 0.023) were more common during COVID 19 in 2020, whereas back pain (26.3% vs. 18.4%; P = 0.032) and bowel symptoms (20.7% vs. 13.7%; P = 0.024) were more frequent in the pre COVID period. There was no difference in clinical outcomes between the two groups in terms of GBS disability score at discharge and 3 months after discharge. Independent predictors of disability in the pre COVID period included areflexia/hyporeflexia, the requirementfor intubation, and time to bulbar weakness; in the COVID 19 period, independent predictors included time from onset to admission, intubation, and intubation requirement. The mortality rate was 2.3% during the entire study period (13/555 cases). Discussion: Results of this study revealed an overall reduction in the frequency of GBS during the pandemic. The lockdown likely reduced the risk for antecedent infections due to social distancing and improved hygiene, which may have resulted in the reduction of the frequency of GBS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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24. Impact of ultra-long sirolimus-eluting stents on coronary artery lesions: one-year results of real-world FLEX-LONG Study
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Sirichandana Gangasani, Naren Polavarapu, Anurag Polavarapu, Sudheer Venkata Bolinera, Sravanthi Byrapaneni, Vijaya Pamidimukkala, Raghava Sarma Polavarapu, and Deepthi Gali
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hypercholesterolemia ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Prosthesis Design ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Absorbable Implants ,Diabetes Mellitus ,medicine ,Humans ,Myocardial infarction ,Retrospective Studies ,Sirolimus ,Smokers ,business.industry ,Clinical events ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Stent ,Drug-Eluting Stents ,Thrombosis ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Hypertension ,Population study ,Female ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,business ,Immunosuppressive Agents ,Mace ,medicine.drug ,Artery - Abstract
BACKGROUND The FLEX-LONG study assessed the safety and clinical outcomes of ultra-long (44 mm/48 mm) biodegradable polymer-coated Supraflex (Sahajanand Medical Technology Pvt. Ltd., Surat, India) sirolimus-eluting stents (SES) in real-world patients with complex, long coronary artery lesions. METHODS It was an investigator-initiated, retrospective, non-randomized, observational and single-center study, which evaluated one-year results of 141 patients who had undergone implantation of at least one ultra-long (44 mm/48 mm) Supraflex SES. The incidence of major adverse cardiac events (MACE), a composite of cardiac death, myocardial infarction (MI) and target lesion revascularization (TLR), at one-year follow-up was considered as primary outcome. Stent thrombosis was analyzed as a safety outcome. RESULTS The mean age of the study population was 56.2±9.6 years and 78.0% (110/141) patients were male. The study analyzed high risk patients, including 62 (44.0%) hypertensive and 60 (42.6%) diabetic patients. Total 147 target lesions were treated, including 25 (17.0%) total occlusions. Total 51 (34.7%) and 96 (65.3%) Supraflex SES of 44 mm and 48 mm were implanted, respectively. Average stent length and diameter were 46.6±1.9 mm and 3.4±0.2 mm, respectively. One-year follow-up was obtained in 100% of patients. There was one probable stent thrombosis after three weeks. At one-year follow-up, 99.3% of patients remained event free. CONCLUSIONS The results of the FLEX-LONG study support the use of ultra-long (44 mm/48 mm) Supraflex SES, in the treatment of high-risk real-world patients. The stent appeared to be safe and effective at one-year with low clinical events in complex, long coronary artery lesions.
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- 2020
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25. Safety and performance of everolimus-eluting stents comprising of biodegradable polymers with ultrathin stent platforms
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Sudheer Venkata Bolinera, Sravanthi Byrapaneni, Sanivarapu Srinivasa Reddy, Naren Polavarapu, Meghana Chilukuri, Raghava Sarma Polavarapu, Vijaya Pamidimukkala, Vemuri R. Tharaknath, Anurag Polavarapu, and Sirichandana Gangasani
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Polymers ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Everolimus eluting stent ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Prosthesis Design ,Coronary artery disease ,Lesion ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Absorbable Implants ,Clinical endpoint ,Medicine ,Humans ,Myocardial infarction ,Everolimus ,Registries ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Stent ,Retrospective cohort study ,Drug-Eluting Stents ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Female ,Stents ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Mace - Abstract
Background The registry investigated clinical outcomes after 12 months of implantation of ultra-thin strut (60 µm) biodegradable polymer-coated Tetrilimus everolimus-eluting stents (EES; Sahajanand Medical Technologies Pvt. Ltd., Surat, India) in patients with atherosclerotic coronary lesions. Additionally, sub-group analysis was performed to evaluate outcomes of ultra-long (44/48 mm) Tetrilimus EES in patients with long lesions. Methods This was an observational, single-center, single-arm and investigator-initiated retrospective registry. In this all-comers registry, patients who underwent implantation of Tetrilimus EES for treatment of coronary artery disease during routine clinical practice between February-2016 and August-2016 at tertiary care center of India were included. Primary endpoint was occurrence of any major adverse cardiac event (MACE) up to 12 months' follow-up. MACE was a composite of cardiac death, myocardial infarction (MI), and target lesion revascularization (TLR). Similar endpoints were observed in sub-group patients. Results Total 766 stents were implanted to treat 695 lesions in 558 patients. Of treated lesions, 11.4% lesions were type B2 and 78.3% were type C lesions. In sub-group analysis of 143 patients, a total of 155 long coronary lesions were intervened successfully with only one stent been implanted per lesion. At 12 months' follow-up, four (0.7%) cases of cardiac death, eight (1.4%) of MI, and two (0.4%) of TLR were reported, resulting in a 2.5% rate of MACE. The MACE rate was 2.8% in sub-group patients. Conclusions Twelve months' clinical data demonstrated favorable safety and excellent performance of Tetrilimus EES in high-risk patients and complex coronary lesions in routine clinical practice and also in patients with ultra-long lesions.
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- 2020
26. E-25 | Ultra-thin Everolimus-eluting Stents in Atherosclerotic Lesions: Three Years Follow-up with Subgroup Analysis of Ultra-long Lesions
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Kalyan Pulivarthi, Polavarapu Veer R. Sarma, Murali Babu Rao Rachaputi, Michael Noronha, Srinivasa Rao Chinta, Lakshmi Sudha Prasanna, Anurag Polavarapu, Sravanthi Byrapaneni, Naren Polavarapu, Sirichandana Gangasani, Sudheer Venkata Bolimera, Sanivarapu Srinivasa Reddy, Meghana Chilukuri, Mohana Rao Pentakota, Yudhistar Siripuram, Vikas Somnath, Peter Praveen Herald, Vijaya Pamidimukkala, Phani Konide, Archana Potluri, and Sai Reshma Magam
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- 2022
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27. Premorbid nutrition and short term outcome of stroke: a multicentre study from India
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Pandian, Jeyaraj Durai, Jyotsna, Rashmi, Singh, Ruma, Sylaja, Padmavati N, Vijaya, Pamidimukkala, Padma, Madakasira Vasantha, Venkateswaralu, Kolichana, Sukumaran, Sajith, Radhakrishnan, Kurupath, Sarma, Prabhakaran S, Mathew, Robert, and Singh, Yashpal
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- 2011
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28. Ticagrelor Added to Aspirin in Acute Nonsevere Ischemic Stroke or Transient Ischemic Attack of Atherosclerotic Origin
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Pierre Amarenco, Hans Denison, Scott R. Evans, Anders Himmelmann, Stefan James, Mikael Knutsson, Per Ladenvall, Carlos A. Molina, Yongjun Wang, S. Claiborne Johnston, Kenneth Butcher, Shuya Li, Huaguang Zheng, David Skoloudik, Lawrence Wong, Ketevana Meshkova, Nijasri C. Suwanwela, Sebastian Ameriso, Leonardo Gonzalez, Pablo Ioli, Lorena Jure, Guillermo Povedano, Guadalupe Bruera, Gustavo Herrera, Juan Jose Martin Artesi, Virginia A. Pujol Lereis, Conrado J. Estol, Maia Gomez Schneider, Santiago Pigretti, Fernando Lipovestky, María Cristina Zurru, Stephen Davis, Andrew Wong, Tissa Wijeratne, Arman Sabet, Andrew Lee, Vincent Thijs, Robin Lemmens, Laetitia Yperzeele, Geert Vanhooren, Peter Vanacker, Iris Vansteenkiste, Vicky Maqueda, André Peeters, Marie-Christine Hasenbroekx, Van Daele, Wendy Hasenbroekx, Adinda De Pauw, Regilio Oedit, Wouter De Vooght, Philippe Desfontaines, Yves Vandermeeren, Marianna D.A. Dracoulakis, Rodrigo Bazan, Octavio M. Pontes Neto, Daniel D.C. Bezerra, Luiz C. Marrone, Pedro A. Kowacs, Carla H.C. Moro, Paulo C.O. Macelino, Marco Tulio A. Pedatella, Ekaterina Titianova, Ivan Staikov, Dimitar Maslarov, Plamen Petkov, Tanya Beleva, Borislav Kralev, Nikolay Sotirov, Dimcho Hristov, Rumeliya M. Ivanova, Margarita V. Mihailova, Ashfaq M. Shuaib, Andrew Demchuk, Michel Beaudry, Anthony R. Winder, Sumiti Nayar, Xingquan Zhao, Guoqiang Wen, Xueshuang Dong, Guozhong Li, Zhaohui Zhang, Huisheng Chen, Dong Wang, Xiaohong Li, Yuncheng Wu, Xu Zhang, Baorong Zhang, Wenke Hong, Xiaogang Li, Lijuan Wang, Li Liu, Xiaolin Xu, Peifu Wang, Weihong Zheng, Jinsheng Zeng, Yukai Wang, Yan Jia, Yongqiu Li, Bo Hu, Wei Shen, Zhi Song, Zhiping Hu, Yunhai Liu, Kaifu Ke, Deqin Geng, Shigang Zhao, Runxiu Zhu, Qiumin Qu, Xiuli Zhao, Qi Wan, Yunhua Yue, Huishan Du, Meiyun Zhang, Yan Wang, Dongfang Li, Dongyu Wang, Yongqiang Li, Xufang Xie, Tingmin Yu, Qi Liu, Mingxiu Yang, Xiaoping Pan, Lijun Xu, Deen Xu, Gang Li, Anding Xu, Martin Roubec, Petr Geier, Daniel Vaclavik, Jiri Neumann, Jana Bednarova, Robert Mikulik, David Hlinovsky, Charlotte Cordonnier, Igor Sibon, Caroline Arquizan, Sonia Alamowitch, Bertrand Lapergue, Jean-Marc Olivot, Nicolas Raposo, Marie-Hélène Mahagne, Emmanuel Touze, Gilles Rodier, Stéphane Vannier, Yves Samson, Michael Obadia, Emmanuel Ellie, Benoît Guillon, Serge Timsit, Yannick Bejot, Valérie Wolff, Didier Smadja, Aude Bagan-Triquenot, Pierre Garnier, Xavier Ducrocq, Peggy Reiner, Thierry Moulin, Frédéric Philippeau, Fernando Pico, Sébastien Richard, Joachim Röther, Jörg Berrouschot, Hassan Soda, Carsten Pohlmann, Christoph Terborg, Darius G. Nabavi, Rainer Dziewas, Martin Köhrmann, Jörg Glahn, Lars Marquardt, Bernd Kallmünzer, Karin Weißenborn, Yannie Oi-Yan Soo, Richard Li, Wing Chi Fong, Siu Hung Li, Raymond Cheung, Kin Keung Yip, Joshua Wai Ming Fok, Michael Y.P. Fu, Norbert Szegedi, Krisztián Pozsegovits, Attila Valikovics, Gyula Pánczél, Csilla Rózsa, Péter Diószeghy, Attila Csányi, Levente Kerényi, Valéria Nagy, László Szapáry, Dániel Bereczki, Sándor Molnár, Gyula Timár, András G. Folyovich, Mária Sátori, Ildikó Vastagh, Praveen S. Kumar, Rajnish Kumar, Atul Prasad, Vikram Sharma, Alok Verma, Indraneel Basu, Abu Z. Ansari, Vijaya Pamidimukkala, Raghavendra B, null S, Vivek D. Junewar, Sumit Singh, Advait Prakash Kulkarni, Padma M.V. Srivastava, K. Pramod, Sanjay G. Ramteke, Jaideep Bansal, Kewal Krishan, Hrishikesh Kumar, Priyanka V. Kashyap, T.C.R. Ramakrishnan, Gopal R. Adrasetty, Amit Yeole, Rahul B. Baviskar, Giancarlo Agnelli, Danilo Toni, Stefano Ricci, Rossana Tassi, Giuseppe Micieli, Michelangelo Mancuso, Giovanni Orlandi, Alberto Chiti, Marialuisa Delodovici, Federico Carimati, Alessandro De Vito, Francesco Perini, Cinzia Finocchi, Tiziana Tassinari, Massimo Del Sette, Luisa Roveri, Andrea Zini, Guido Bigliardi, Francesca R. Pezzella, Letizia Cupini, Alessandro Adami, Giampaolo Tomelleri, Carla Zanferrari, Angel A. Arauz Góngora, Minerva López Ruíz, Angelica Ruíz Franco, José O.J. Chacon Romero, Fernando Cruz Castillo, Jose L. Ruiz-Sandoval, Jesús D. López Tapia, Edgar A. Castillo Vargas, Juan F. Gongora Rivera, Guillermo Rivera Martinez, Jorge Villarreal Careaga, Nilton Custodio, Oscar G. Pamo Reyna, Cesar A. Castañeda, Edwin J. Pretell, Nestor Najar, Julio C. Perez, Luisa Cardoza, Carlos Chavez, Maria Reyes, Anna Członkowska, Waldemar Fryze, Piotr Sobolewski, Ryszard Nowak, Dorota Szkopek, Zbigniew Bąk, Sławomir Brzozowski, Waldemar Brola, Marek Zalisz, Konrad Rejdak, Marta Bilik, Małgorzata Fudala, Andrzej Tutaj, Anetta Lasek-Bal, Jan Kochanowicz, Bartosz Karaszewski, Tomasz Berkowicz, Beata Zwiernik, Dorota Różański, Jan P. Mejnartowicz, Szymon Jurga, Jacek Rożniecki, Maciej Świat, Ovidiu A. Bajenaru, Cristina A. Panea, Mihaela A. Simu, Rodica Balasa, Dan I. Cuciureanu, Bogdan O. Popescu, Monica Sabau, Corina Roman-Filip, Liudmila Odnopozova, Oleg Artyukov, Anna Milto, Liudmila V. Stakhovskaya, Sergei Aksentiev, Svetlana E. Chuprina, Elena B. Kuznetsova, Ilya I. Sholomov, Alexander Malygin, Elena Mordvintseva, Rostislav Y. Nilk, Inna Ershova, Dina Khasanova, Leila Akhmadeeva, Aida Iakupova, Ekaterina A. Drozdova, Marine Tanashyan, Evgenij Pudov, Lybov A. Shpagina, Svetlana Berns, Liudmila G. Lenskaya, Konstantin Golikov, Andrey V. Kovalenko, Elena Vasilieva, Elena Reznik, Mikhail Zykov, Evgeniy Kovalchuk, Dmitry Popov, Andrey Belkin, Olga Androfagina, Tatyana Lokshtanova, Elena V. Melnikova, Fahmi Al-Senani, Nouf Almansour, Fawaz Alhussein, Ali Alkhathaami, Saeed Alghamdi, Miroslav Brozman, Marta Mikloskova, Georgi Krastev, Vlastimil Serdahely, Michal Kovacik, Ladislav Gurcik, Miloslav Dvorak, Egon Kurca, Andrea Cimprichova, Marian Kycina, Erika Zacharova, Richard Risnovsky, Hee-Joon Bae, Kyung Bok Lee, Yong-Jin Cho, Jong-Moo Park, Joon-Tae Kim, Jun Lee, Jae-Kwan Cha, Sung-Il Sohn, Dong-Ick Shin, Soo Joo Lee, Byung-Chul Lee, Jay Chol Choi, Moo Seok Park, Dae-Il Chang, Joung-Ho Rha, Sang Min Sung, Yangha Hwang, Jaume Roquer González, Jaime Masjuan Vallejo, Meritxell Gomis Cortina, Francisco Moniche Álvarez, Miguel Ángel Gamero García, Soledad Pérez Sánchez, Francisco Purroy García, Santiago Trillo Senín, Tomás Segura Martín, Joaquín Serena Leal, Juan Arenillas Lara, Joan Martí-Fàbregas, Aida Lago Martín, Carlos Tejero Juste, Javier Marta Moreno, Nicolás López Hernández, Lars Sjöblom, Ann Charlotte Laska, Margarita Callander, Thomas Mooe, Jan-Erik Karlsson, Mihaela Oana Romanitan, Arne Lindgren, Niaz Ahmed, Björn Cederin, Christine Kremer, Tsong-Hai Lee, Jiann-Shing Jeng, Chih-Hung Chen, Helen L. Po, Chia-Wei Liou, Huey-Juan Lin, Ruey-Tay Lin, Hsiu-Fen Lin, Li-Ming Lien, Lung Chan, Wei-Shih Huang, Wen-Yi Huang, Ta-Cheng Chen, Chin-I Chen, Po-Lin Chen, Chun-Pai Yang, Yu Sun, Aurauma Chutinet, Tasanee Tantirittisak, Sombat Muengtaweepongsa, Yongchai Nilanont, Somsak Tiamkao, Chesda Udommongkol, Witoon Jantararotai, Tabtim Chongsuvivatwong, Suwat Srisuwananukorn, Wasutha Khaykhaew, Supachai Paiboonpol, Makorn Limudomporn, Saengduan Mayotarn, Kanoksri Samintharapanya, Arkhom Arayawichanon, Thanoot Thamangraksat, Duangpol Srimanee, Galyna Chmyr, Nataliya Tomakh, Alla Cherkez, Sergii Moskovko, Vadym Nikonov, Svitlana Shkrobot, Lyudmyla Shulga, Hanna Hrebeniuk, Valentyna Yavorska, Nataliia Lytvynenko, Marta Khavunka, Iryna Kobets, Nataliia Chemer, Ivanna Tashchuk, Olha Myronova, Thang H. Nguyen, Tan V. Vo, Thanh T. Tran, Nga T.P. Nguyen, Anh D. Nguyen, Binh T. Nguyen, Thang B. Nguyen, Ngoc H. Nguyen, Quang D. Nguyen, Nhan D. Le, Dai D. Pham., UCL - SSS/IONS - Institute of NeuroScience, UCL - (MGD) Service de neurologie, Yperzeele, Laetitia, and THALES Steering Committee and Investigators
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Male ,Atherosclerotic stenosis ,Ticagrelor ,Neurology ,Neurologi ,Original Contributions ,population ,Constriction, Pathologic ,Severity of Illness Index ,Recurrence ,Secondary Prevention ,Medicine ,Cardiac and Cardiovascular Systems ,Stroke ,education.field_of_study ,Aspirin ,Kardiologi ,Dual Anti-Platelet Therapy ,Ischemic strokes ,Middle Aged ,stroke ,Ischemic Attack, Transient ,ComputingMethodologies_DOCUMENTANDTEXTPROCESSING ,Cardiology ,ÍNDICE DE GRAVIDADE DA DOENÇA ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,medicine.drug ,medicine.medical_specialty ,aspirin ,Population ,atherosclerosis ,death ,ticagrelor ,transient ischemic attack ,Clinical and Population Sciences ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,education ,Aged ,Ischemic Stroke ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,business.industry ,Atherosclerosis ,medicine.disease ,Cerebrovascular Disorders ,Ischemic stroke ,Human medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors - Abstract
Supplemental Digital Content is available in the text., Background and Purpose: Among patients with a transient ischemic attack or minor ischemic strokes, those with ipsilateral atherosclerotic stenosis of cervicocranial vasculature have the highest risk of recurrent vascular events. Methods: In the double-blind THALES (The Acute Stroke or Transient Ischemic Attack Treated With Ticagrelor and ASA for Prevention of Stroke and Death) trial, we randomized patients with a noncardioembolic, nonsevere ischemic stroke, or high-risk transient ischemic attack to ticagrelor (180 mg loading dose on day 1 followed by 90 mg twice daily for days 2–30) or placebo added to aspirin (300–325 mg on day 1 followed by 75–100 mg daily for days 2–30) within 24 hours of symptom onset. The present paper reports a prespecified analysis in patients with and without ipsilateral, potentially causal atherosclerotic stenosis ≥30% of cervicocranial vasculature. The primary end point was time to the occurrence of stroke or death within 30 days. Results: Of 11 016 randomized patients, 2351 (21.3%) patients had an ipsilateral atherosclerotic stenosis. After 30 days, a primary end point occurred in 92/1136 (8.1%) patients with ipsilateral stenosis randomized to ticagrelor and in 132/1215 (10.9%) randomized to placebo (hazard ratio 0.73 [95% CI, 0.56–0.96], P=0.023) resulting in a number needed to treat of 34 (95% CI, 19–171). In patients without ipsilateral stenosis, the corresponding event rate was 211/4387 (4.8%) and 230/4278 (5.4%), respectively (hazard ratio, 0.89 [95% CI, 0.74–1.08]; P=0.23, Pinteraction=0.245). Severe bleeding occurred in 4 (0.4%) and 3 (0.2%) patients with ipsilateral atherosclerotic stenosis on ticagrelor and on placebo, respectively (P=NS), and in 24 (0.5%) and 4 (0.1%), respectively, in 8665 patients without ipsilateral stenosis (hazard ratio=5.87 [95% CI, 2.04–16.9], P=0.001). Conclusions: In this exploratory analysis comparing ticagrelor added to aspirin to aspirin alone, we found no treatment by ipsilateral atherosclerosis stenosis subgroup interaction but did identify a higher absolute risk and a greater absolute risk reduction of stroke or death at 30 days in patients with ipsilateral atherosclerosis stenosis than in those without. In this easily identified population, ticagrelor added to aspirin provided a clinically meaningful benefit with a number needed to treat of 34 (95% CI, 19–171). Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT03354429.
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- 2020
29. Stroke and thrombolysis in developing countries
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Pandian, Jeyaraj Durai, Padma, Vasantha, Vijaya, Pamidimukkala, Sylaja, P. N., and Murthy, Jagaralpudi M. K.
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- 2007
30. Clinical profile and outcome of non-COVID strokes during pandemic and the pre pandemic period: COVID-Stroke Study Group (CSSG) India
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Vivek Nambiar, Sathish Parkipandla, Rajsrinivas Parthasarathy, Praveen Panicker, S Kumaravelu, Rajeshwar Sahonta, Rohit Bhatia, Kamal Kajal, Girish Baburao Kulkarni, Vijaya Pamidimukkala, Manshi Kashyap, Githin Benoy George, A V R Taallapalli, Dheeraj Khurana, Ajay Garg, P N Sylaja, Thomas Iype, Rakesh Singh, Hiral Halani, Ayush Agarwal, Ashish Duggal, Nirendra Rai, Sritheja Reddy, Salil Gupta, Vipul Gupta, Roopa Rajan, Shailesh Gaikwad, Anu Gupta, Sapna Erat Sreedharan, P M Yogeesh, Snigdha Komakula, Leve Joseph, Vivek Lal, Arvind Sharma, M V Padma Srivastava, Prashant Dixit, Ashish Datt Upadhyay, Mamta Singh, Pranjal Gupta, Debashish Chowdhury, Sucharita Ray, Jayanta Roy, Vibhor Pardasani, Mamta Parmar, Vamsi Chalasani, Deepti Vibha, Suman Kushwaha, Krishna Sreela, Rajshekar Reddy, Harsh Oza, Biswamohan Misra, Chirag Kamal Ahuja, Sudheer Pachipala, A.K. Pandit, Jeyaraj D Pandian, Srinivasareddy Sanivarapu, Srijithesh P. Rajendran, Manish Salunkhe, Venugopalan Y Vishnu, M K Suresh, Vikas Suri, and Dileep Ramachandran
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,rTPA, Recombinant Tissue Plasminogen Activator ,medicine.medical_treatment ,CVT, Cerebral Venous Thrombosis ,CSSG, COVID-19 Stroke Study Group ,India ,Stroke care ,Article ,Time-to-Treatment ,TNK, Tenecteplase ,Pandemic ,medicine ,Humans ,Endovascular treatment ,Stroke ,Pandemics ,Retrospective Studies ,COVID-19, Coronavirus disease 2019 ,Ischemic stroke ,RTPCR, Real Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,NIHSS, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale ,COVID-19 ,mRS, modified Rankin score ,Retrospective cohort study ,Thrombolysis ,CT, Computed Tomography ,SD, Standard Deviation ,ICH, Intracerebral Hemorrhage ,medicine.disease ,Door to needle time ,Neurology ,Emergency medicine ,Communicable Disease Control ,EVT, Endovascular Therapy ,IQR, Inter-quartile range ,LVO, Large Vessel Occlusion ,Neurology (clinical) ,ASPECTS, Alberta stroke program early CT score ,business - Abstract
Background As the health systems around the world struggled to meet the challenges of COVID-19 pandemic, care of many non-COVID emergencies was affected. Aims The present study examined differences in the diagnosis, evaluation and management of stroke patients during a defined period in the ongoing pandemic in 2020 when compared to a similar epoch in year 2019. Methods The COVID stroke study group (CSSG) India, included 18 stroke centres spread across the country. Data was collected prospectively between February and July 2020 and retrospectively for the same period in 2019. Details of demographics, stroke evaluation, treatment, in-hospital and three months outcomes were collected and compared between these two time points. Results A total of 2549 patients were seen in both study periods; 1237 patients (48.53%) in 2019 and 1312 (51.47%) in 2020. Although the overall number of stroke patients and rates of thrombolysis were comparable, a significant decline was observed in the month of April 2020, during the initial period of the pandemic and lockdown. Endovascular treatment reduced significantly and longer door to needle and CT to needle times were observed in 2020. Although mortality was higher in 2020, proportion of patients with good outcome were similar in both the study periods. Conclusions Although stroke admissions and rates of thrombolysis were comparable, some work flow metrics were delayed, endovascular stroke treatment rates declined and mortality was higher during the pandemic study period. Reorganization of stroke treatment pathways during the pandemic has likely improved the stroke care delivery across the globe.
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- 2021
31. Simultaneous Bilateral Carotid Stenting in High-risk Patients: A Single-center Experience with Review of Literature
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Raghavasarma Polavarapu, Lakshmi Sudha Prasanna Karanam, Sridhar Reddy Baddam, Anurag Polavarapu, and Vijaya Pamidimukkala
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Bradycardia ,medicine.medical_specialty ,lcsh:Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,Polymers and Plastics ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hemodynamics ,high risk ,medicine.disease ,Single Center ,Surgery ,Coronary artery disease ,Carotid stenting ,Bypass surgery ,lcsh:RC666-701 ,Carotid artery disease ,Medicine ,medicine.symptom ,business ,hyperperfusion ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Background: The aim of the present study is to determine the role of simultaneous carotid artery stenting in high-risk patients with triple vessel coronary artery disease and to determine the safety and efficacy of the procedure in these cases. Materials and Methods: The present study is a retrospective analysis of 33 patients who underwent carotid artery stenting in the same setting in our institution from 2009 to 2016. There were 22 male and 11 females with a mean age of 65 years (53–76 years). Demographic factors clinical characteristics and atherosclerosis risk factors were documented. Results: Technical success was 100% in our series. Intraprocedural and postprocedural events in the form of hypotension and bradycardia due to hemodynamic depression were seen in 11 patients. We did not encounter hyperperfusion syndrome in any of our patients. Twenty-nine patients underwent cardiac bypass surgery after 3 weeks, and 4 patients were kept on medical management for coronary artery disease. No deaths or major strokes occurred in our series. Conclusion: Simultaneous bilateral carotid artery stenting is a safe treatment option even in patients with high-risk factors and can be considered as the therapeutic option in patients with significant bilateral carotid artery disease.
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- 2017
32. Very late (>5 years) thrombus formation on an atrial septal defect device: a case report
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Michael Naronha, Vijaya Pamidimukkala, Anurag Polavarapu, Sudheer Venkata Bolinera, Sanivarapu Srinivasa Reddy, Sravanthi Byrapaneni, Naren Polavarapu, Muralibaburao Rachaputi, Deepti Gali, Raghava Sarma Polavarapu, Vikas Somnath Khamkar, Sirichandana Gangasani, Srinivas Soma, and Meghana Chilukuri
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Cardiology ,Medicine ,cardiovascular diseases ,Thrombus ,business ,medicine.disease - Abstract
Though percutaneous transcatheter atrial septal defect closure with newer generation occluder devices is a standard treatment at present, these devices have significant long-term risks (>1 year) associated with such as thrombus formation. Here, we present a case of 28 year-old patient presented with few symptoms and had a history of ASD device closure using amplatzer septal occluder device five years back. The patient was found to have a large thrombus (30×33 mm) attached to the device which was managed using anticoagulants and patients was advised for regular echocardiographic follow-up.
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- 2020
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33. Predicting falls in multiple sclerosis: Do electrophysiological measures have a better predictive accuracy compared to clinical measures?
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Lakshmi Narasimhan Ranganathan, Somasundaram Aadhimoolam Chinnadurai, Bhanu Kesavamurthy, Avathvadi Srinivasan, Vijaya Pamidimukkala, and Divya Gandhirajan
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Adult ,Male ,030506 rehabilitation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Adolescent ,Population ,Poison control ,Logistic regression ,Fear of falling ,03 medical and health sciences ,Disability Evaluation ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,education ,Postural Balance ,education.field_of_study ,Expanded Disability Status Scale ,Receiver operating characteristic ,business.industry ,Electrodiagnosis ,McDonald criteria ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,Vestibular Evoked Myogenic Potentials ,Logistic Models ,Neurology ,ROC Curve ,Area Under Curve ,Physical therapy ,Exercise Test ,Accidental Falls ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,0305 other medical science ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Background The risk of falls in people with Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is much greater than that of the general population due to impaired coordination, gait, sensation, muscle tone, strength, and cognition. These MS related falls hamper the day to day living of these individuals and are one of the prime factors aggravating the disease related morbidity. The fear of falling itself may make these individuals more dependent and hinder their professional and leisurely activities. Hence, the significance of identifying individuals who are at risk of falling and instituting preventive counter-measures cannot be overemphasized. Various simple clinical tests and questionnaires have been recommended for this purpose, but are far from ideal. Objective The objective was to find accurate measures to predict a future fall in MS patients. We also aimed to enquire about the prevalence of falls in MS population and its clinical profile which included detailed history about the past falls, Expanded disability status scale (EDSS) scores, Timed 25 foot walk (T25FW) scores, Activities specific balance confidence (ABC) scores, Falls efficacy scale international (FESI) scores, Multiple Sclerosis Walking Scale 12 (MSWS12) questionnaire. Design/Methods This was a prospective cohort study conducted at the Institute of Neurology, Chennai from January 2015 to August 2017. MS patients of any subtype attending Neurology OPD satisfying revised 2010 McDonald criteria were recruited. 134 subjects with MS consented to participate in this study and 113 of them who met the criteria were included. Baseline history was obtained about the number of falls in the previous year. EDSS, T25FW, ABC, FESI, and MSWS12 scores were obtained at the baseline. VEMP and SEP tests were done and the baseline P13/N23 cVEMP latencies, N10 oVEMP latency, and P37 lower limb SEP latency were obtained. These subjects were followed up for one year and were enquired if they had fallen during that period and the number of falls was recorded. Logistic regression models were used to compute the area under receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) for each variable tested. Pearson correlation coefficients were calculated for each variable with the number of future falls. Results Among the 113 patients, 72% (n = 81) had one or more falls during follow-up. Among all variables tested P13 cervical VEMP latency had the highest predictive accuracy (AUC = 0.820) followed by N10 ocular VEMP latency (AUC = 0.794) and P37 SEP latency (AUC = 0.732). P13 latency also had the highest correlation coefficient (R = 0.689, R2 = 0.475) with the number of future falls. Conclusion P13, N10 and P37 latencies were the most accurate in predicting a future fall when compared to clinical measures.
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- 2017
34. Shoulder taping reduces injury and pain in stroke patients
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Pandian, Jeyaraj D., primary, Kaur, Paramdeep, additional, Arora, Rajni, additional, Vishwambaran, Dheeraj K., additional, Toor, Gagan, additional, Mathangi, Santhosh, additional, Vijaya, Pamidimukkala, additional, Uppal, Ashok, additional, Kaur, Tanvinder, additional, and Arima, Hisatomi, additional
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- 2013
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35. 529: SOVATELTIDE (TYCAMZZI) IN PATIENTS WITH CEREBRAL ISCHEMIC STROKE: A RANDOMIZED MULTICENTER STUDY.
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Gulati, Anil, Adwani, Sikandar, Vijaya, Pamidimukkala, Agrawal, Nilesh, Ramakrishnan, TCR, Rai, Hari, Jain, Dinesh, Sundarachary, Nagarjunakonda, Pandian, Jeyaraj, Sardana, Vijay, Sharma, Mridul, Sidhu, Gursaran, Anand, Sidharth, Vibha, Deepti, Aralikatte, Saroja, Khurana, Dheeraj, Joshi, Deepika, Karadan, Ummer, and Siddiqui, Mohd. Shafat Imam
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- 2023
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36. Stroke and thrombolysis in developing countries.
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Durai Pandian, Jeyaraj, Padma, Vasantha, Vijaya, Pamidimukkala, Sylaja, P. N., and Murthy, Jagaralpudi M. K.
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CEREBROVASCULAR disease ,THROMBOLYTIC therapy ,TISSUE plasminogen activator ,THERAPEUTICS ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Over the past few decades, the burden of stroke in developing countries has grown to epidemic proportions. Two-thirds of global stroke occurs in low- and middle-income countries. We have found that little information is obtainable concerning the availability of thrombolysis therapy in developing countries. The epidemiology of stroke is well investigated in the developed world; however, in the developing world stroke is less well documented. Most of the available stroke data from these countries are hospital-based. Stroke thrombolysis is currently used in few developing countries like Brazil, Argentina, Senegal, Iran, Pakistan, China, Thailand, and India. The two main barriers for implementation of thrombolysis therapy in developing countries are the high cost of tissue plasminogen activator and lack of proper infrastructure. Most of the centers with the infrastructure to deliver thrombolysis for stroke are predominantly private sector, and only available in urban areas. Conclusion Until a more cost-effective thrombolytic agent and the proper infrastructure for widespread use of thrombolysis therapy are available, developing nations should focus on primary and secondary stroke prevention strategies and the establishment of stroke units wherever possible. Such multi-faceted approaches will be more cost-effective for developing countries than the use of thrombolysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
- Full Text
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