29 results on '"Palomeras, E"'
Search Results
2. Tratamiento de reperfusión en el ictus isquémico agudo por disección arterial cervicocerebral: descripción de los resultados de un estudio nacional multicéntrico
- Author
-
Campo-Caballero, D., de la Riva, P., de Arce, A., Martínez-Zabaleta, M., Rodríguez-Antigüedad, J., Ekiza, J., Iruzubieta, P., Purroy, F., Fuentes, B., de Lera Alfonso, M., Krupinski, J., Mengual Chirife, J.J., Palomeras, E., Guisado-Alonso, D., Rodríguez-Yáñez, M., Ustrell, X., Tejada García, J., de Felipe Mimbrera, A., Paré-Curell, M., Tembl, J., Cajaraville, S., Garcés, M., and Serena, J.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Sex and gender differences in acute stroke care: metrics, access to treatment and outcome. A territorial analysis of the Stroke Code System of Catalonia
- Author
-
Silva, Y, Sánchez-Cirera, L, Terceño, M, Dorado, L, Valls, A, Martínez, M, Abilleira, S, Rubiera, M, Quesada, H, Llull, L, Rodríguez-Campello, A, Martí-Fàbregas, J, Seró, L, Purroy, F, Payo, I, García, S, Cánovas, D, Krupinski, J, Mas, N, Palomeras, E, Cocho, D, Font, MÀ, Catena, E, Puiggròs, E, Pedroza, C, Marín, G, Carrión, D, Costa, X, Almendros, MC, Torres, I, Colom, C, Velasquez, JA, Diaz, G, Jiménez, X, Subirats, T, Deulofeu, A, Hidalgo, V, Salvat-Plana, M, Pérez de la Ossa, N, Silva, Y, Sánchez-Cirera, L, Terceño, M, Dorado, L, Valls, A, Martínez, M, Abilleira, S, Rubiera, M, Quesada, H, Llull, L, Rodríguez-Campello, A, Martí-Fàbregas, J, Seró, L, Purroy, F, Payo, I, García, S, Cánovas, D, Krupinski, J, Mas, N, Palomeras, E, Cocho, D, Font, MÀ, Catena, E, Puiggròs, E, Pedroza, C, Marín, G, Carrión, D, Costa, X, Almendros, MC, Torres, I, Colom, C, Velasquez, JA, Diaz, G, Jiménez, X, Subirats, T, Deulofeu, A, Hidalgo, V, Salvat-Plana, M, and Pérez de la Ossa, N
- Abstract
Introduction: Previous studies have reported differences in the management and outcome of women stroke patients in comparison with men. We aim to analyze sex and gender differences in the medical assistance, access to treatment and outcome of acute stroke patients in Catalonia. Patients and methods: Data were obtained from a prospective population-based registry of stroke code activations in Catalonia (CICAT) from January/2016 to December/2019. The registry includes demographic data, stroke severity, stroke subtype, reperfusion therapy, and time workflow. Centralized clinical outcome at 90 days was assessed in patients receiving reperfusion therapy. Results: A total of 23,371 stroke code activations were registered (54% men, 46% women). No differences in prehospital time metrics were observed. Women more frequently had a final diagnosis of stroke mimic, were older and had a previous worse functional situation. Among ischemic stroke patients, women had higher stroke severity and more frequently presented proximal large vessel occlusion. Women received more frequently reperfusion therapy (48.2% vs 43.1%, p < 0.001). Women tended to present a worse outcome at 90 days, especially for the group receiving only IVT (good outcome 56.7% vs 63.8%; p < 0.001), but not for the group of patients treated with IVT + MT or MT alone, although sex was not independently associated with clinical outcome in logistic regression analysis (OR 1.07; 95% CI, 0.94–1.23; p = 0.27) nor in the analysis after matching using the propensity score (OR 1.09; 95% CI, 0.97–1.22). Discussion and conclusion: We found some differences by sex in that acute stroke was more frequent in older women and the stroke severity was higher. We found no differences in medical assistance times, access to reperfusion treatment and early complications. Worse clinical outcome at 90 days in women was conditioned by stroke severity and older age, but not by sex itself.
- Published
- 2023
4. 20447. TIEMPO DE PROGRESIÓN DE EDSS DE 3 A 6. LA GRÁFICA CLÁSICA Y NUESTRA EXPERIENCIA EN UN HOSPITAL COMARCAL
- Author
-
Cano Orgaz, A., Casado, V., Sanz, P., Muriana, D., Guanyabens, N., Álvarez, M., and Palomeras, E.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. 20439. PRIMEROS RESULTADOS DE RIMEGEPANT COMO TRATAMIENTO PREVENTIVO DE LA MIGRAÑA EN PRÁCTICA CLÍNICA EN UN HOSPITAL COMARCAL
- Author
-
Cano Orgaz, A., Corderi, A., Sánchez, A., Casado, V., Sanz, P., Muriana, D., Guanyabens, N., Álvarez, M., and Palomeras, E.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. 20444. EFICACIA DEL EPTINEZUMAB EN PACIENTES QUE HAN FRACASADO A DOS ANTICUERPOS ANTI-CGRP
- Author
-
Cano Orgaz, A., Casado, V., Corderi, A., Sánchez, A., Sanz, P., Muriana, D., Guanyabens, N., Álvarez, M., and Palomeras, E.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Reperfusion therapy in acute ischaemic stroke due to cervical and cerebral artery dissection: Results from a Spanish multicentre study
- Author
-
Campo-Caballero, D., primary, de la Riva, P., additional, de Arce, A., additional, Martínez-Zabaleta, M., additional, Rodríguez-Antigüedad, J., additional, Ekiza, J., additional, Iruzubieta, P., additional, Purroy, F., additional, Fuentes, B., additional, de Lera Alfonso, M., additional, Krupinski, J., additional, Mengual Chirife, J.J., additional, Palomeras, E., additional, Guisado-Alonso, D., additional, Rodríguez-Yáñez, M., additional, Ustrell, X., additional, Tejada García, J., additional, de Felipe Mimbrera, A., additional, Paré-Curell, M., additional, Tembl, J., additional, Cajaraville, S., additional, Garcés, M., additional, and Serena, J., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Workflow times and outcomes in patients triaged for a suspected severe stroke
- Author
-
García-Tornel, Á, Seró, L, Urra, X, Cardona, P, Zaragoza, J, Krupinski, J, Gómez-Choco, M, Sala, NM, Catena, E, Palomeras, E, Serena, J, Hernandez-Perez, M, Boned, S, Olivé-Gadea, M, Requena, M, Muchada, M, Tomasello, A, Molina, CA, Salvat-Plana, M, Escudero, M, Jimenez, X, Davalos, A, Jovin, TG, Purroy, F, Abilleira, S, Ribo, M, de la Ossa, NP, García-Tornel, Á, Seró, L, Urra, X, Cardona, P, Zaragoza, J, Krupinski, J, Gómez-Choco, M, Sala, NM, Catena, E, Palomeras, E, Serena, J, Hernandez-Perez, M, Boned, S, Olivé-Gadea, M, Requena, M, Muchada, M, Tomasello, A, Molina, CA, Salvat-Plana, M, Escudero, M, Jimenez, X, Davalos, A, Jovin, TG, Purroy, F, Abilleira, S, Ribo, M, and de la Ossa, NP
- Abstract
Introduction: Current recommendations for regional stroke destination suggest that patients with severe acute stroke in non-urban areas should be triaged based on the estimated transport time to a referral thrombectomy-capable center. Methods: We performed a post hoc analysis to evaluate the association of pre-hospital workflow times with neurological outcomes in patients included in the RACECAT trial. Workflow times evaluated were known or could be estimated before transport allocation. Primary outcome was the shift analysis on the modified Rankin score at 90 days. Results: Among the 1,369 patients included, the median time from onset to emergency medical service (EMS) evaluation, the estimated transport time to a thrombectomy-capable center and local stroke center, and the estimated transfer time between centers were 65 minutes (interquartile ratio [IQR] = 43–138), 61 minutes (IQR = 36–80), 17 minutes (IQR = 9–27), and 62 minutes (IQR = 36–73), respectively. Longer time intervals from stroke onset to EMS evaluation were associated with higher odds of disability at 90 days in the local stroke center group (adjusted common odds ratio (acOR) for each 30-minute increment = 1.03, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.01–1.06), with no association in the thrombectomy-capable center group (acOR for each 30-minute increment = 1.01, 95% CI = 0.98–1.01, pinteraction = 0.021). No significant interaction was found for other pre-hospital workflow times. In patients evaluated by EMS later than 120 minutes after stroke onset, direct transport to a thrombectomy-capable center was associated with better disability outcomes (acOR = 1.49, 95% CI = 1.03–2.17). Conclusion: We found a significant heterogeneity in the association between initial transport destination and neurological outcomes according to the elapse of time between the stroke onset and the EMS evaluation (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT02795962). ANN NEUROL 2022;92:931–942.
- Published
- 2022
9. Outcomes After Direct Thrombectomy or Combined Intravenous and Endovascular Treatment Are Not Different
- Author
-
Abilleira, Sònia, Ribera, Aida, Cardona, Pedro, Rubiera, Marta, López-Cancio, Elena, Amaro, Sergi, Rodríguez-Campello, Ana, Camps-Renom, Pol, Cánovas, David, de Miquel, Maria Angels, Tomasello, Alejandro, Remollo, Sebastian, López-Rueda, Antonio, Vivas, Elio, Perendreu, Joan, Gallofré, Miquel, Martí-Fàbregas, J., Delgado-Mederos, R., Martínez-Domeño, A., Marín, R., Roquer, J., Ois, Á., Jiménez-Conde, J., Guimaraens, L., Chamorro, Á., Obach, V., Urra, X., Macho, J.M., Blasco, J., San Roman, L., Martínez-Yélamos, A., Quesada, H., Lara, B, Cayuela, N., Aja, L., Mora, P., Molina, C., Ribó, M., Pagola, J., Rodríguez-Luna, D., Muchada, M., Coscojuela, P., Dávalos, A., Millán, M., Pérez de la Ossa, N., Gomis, M., Dorado, L., Castaño, C., Garcia, M.C., Estela, J., Krupinski, J., Huertas-Folch, S., Nicolás-Herrerias, M.C., Gómez-Choco, M., García, S., Martínez, R., Sanahuja, J., Purroy, F., Serena, J., Castellanos, M., Silva, Y., Marés, R., Pellisé, A., Ustrell, X., Baiges, J.J., Garcés, M., Saura, J., Soler-Insa, J.M., Aragonés, J.M., Cocho, D., and Palomeras, E.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Reperfusion treatment in acute ischaemic stroke due to cervical and cerebral artery dissection: results of a Spanish national multicentre study
- Author
-
Campo-Caballero D, de la Riva P, de Arce A, Martínez-Zabaleta M, Rodríguez-Antigüedad J, Ekiza J, Iruzubieta P, Purroy F, Fuentes B, de Lera Alfonso M, Krupinski J, Mengual Chirife JJ, Palomeras E, Guisado-Alonso D, Rodríguez-Yáñez M, Ustrell X, Tejada García J, de Felipe Mimbrera A, Paré-Curell M, Tembl J, Cajaraville S, Garcés M, and Serena J
- Subjects
Disección, Dissection, Fibrinolysis, Fibrinólisis, Ictus, Reperfusion, Reperfusión, Stroke, Thrombectomy, Trombectomía ,cardiovascular diseases - Abstract
Ischaemic stroke (IS) due to cervical and cerebral artery dissection (CAD) is a rare entity, and few data are available on the use of such reperfusion therapies as intravenous fibrinolysis and mechanical thrombectomy in these patients. We analysed the use of these treatments in patients with IS due to CAD and compared them against patients receiving reperfusion treatment for IS of other aetiologies.We conducted an observational, retrospective, multicentre study of patients with IS due to CAD recorded in the National Stroke Registry of the Spanish Society of Neurology during the period 2011-2019. Comparative analyses were performed between: a) patients with CAD treated and not treated with reperfusion therapies and b) patients treated with reperfusion for IS due to CAD and patients treated with reperfusion for IS due to other causes. Epidemiological data, stroke variables, and outcomes at discharge and at 3 months were included in the analysis.The study included 21,037 patients with IS: 223 (1%) had IS due to CAD, of whom 68 (30%) received reperfusion treatment. Reperfusion treatments were used less frequently in cases of vertebral artery dissection and more frequently in patients with carotid artery occlusion. Compared to patients with IS due to other causes, patients with CAD were younger, more frequently underwent mechanical thrombectomy, and less frequently received intravenous fibrinolysis. Rates of haemorrhagic complications, mortality, and independence at 3 months were similar in both groups.Reperfusion therapy is frequently used in patients with IS due to CAD. The outcomes of these patients demonstrate the efficacy and safety of reperfusion treatments, and are comparable to the outcomes of patients with IS due to other aetiologies.
- Published
- 2020
11. Bottlenecks in the Acute Stroke Care System during the COVID-19 Pandemic in Catalonia
- Author
-
Ramos-Pachón, A, García-Tornel, Á, Millán, M, Ribó, M, Amaro, S, Cardona, P, Martí-Fàbregas, J, Roquer, J, Silva, Y, Ustrell, X, Purroy, F, Gómez-Choco, M, Zaragoza-Brunet, J, Cánovas, D, Krupinski, J, Sala, NM, Palomeras, E, Cocho, D, Redondo, L, Repullo, C, Sanjurjo, E, Carrión, D, López, M, Almendros, MC, Barceló, M, Monedero, J, Catena, E, Rybyeba, M, Diaz, G, Jiménez-Fàbrega, X, Solà, S, Hidalgo, V, Pueyo, MJ, Pérez De La Ossa, N, Urra, X, Ramos-Pachón, A, García-Tornel, Á, Millán, M, Ribó, M, Amaro, S, Cardona, P, Martí-Fàbregas, J, Roquer, J, Silva, Y, Ustrell, X, Purroy, F, Gómez-Choco, M, Zaragoza-Brunet, J, Cánovas, D, Krupinski, J, Sala, NM, Palomeras, E, Cocho, D, Redondo, L, Repullo, C, Sanjurjo, E, Carrión, D, López, M, Almendros, MC, Barceló, M, Monedero, J, Catena, E, Rybyeba, M, Diaz, G, Jiménez-Fàbrega, X, Solà, S, Hidalgo, V, Pueyo, MJ, Pérez De La Ossa, N, and Urra, X
- Abstract
Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic resulted in significant healthcare reorganizations, potentially striking standard medical care. We investigated the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on acute stroke care quality and clinical outcomes to detect healthcare system's bottlenecks from a territorial point of view. Methods: Crossed-data analysis between a prospective nation-based mandatory registry of acute stroke, Emergency Medical System (EMS) records, and daily incidence of COVID-19 in Catalonia (Spain). We included all stroke code activations during the pandemic (March 15-May 2, 2020) and an immediate prepandemic period (January 26-March 14, 2020). Primary outcomes were stroke code activations and reperfusion therapies in both periods. Secondary outcomes included clinical characteristics, workflow metrics, differences across types of stroke centers, correlation analysis between weekly EMS alerts, COVID-19 cases, and workflow metrics, and impact on mortality and clinical outcome at 90 days. Results: Stroke code activations decreased by 22% and reperfusion therapies dropped by 29% during the pandemic period, with no differences in age, stroke severity, or large vessel occlusion. Calls to EMS were handled 42 min later, and time from onset to hospital arrival increased by 53 min, with significant correlations between weekly COVID-19 cases and more EMS calls (rho = 0.81), less stroke code activations (rho = -0.37), and longer prehospital delays (rho = 0.25). Telestroke centers were afflicted with higher reductions in stroke code activations, reperfusion treatments, referrals to endovascular centers, and increased delays to thrombolytics. The independent odds of death increased (OR 1.6 [1.05-2.4], p 0.03) and good functional outcome decreased (mRS ≤2 at 90 days: OR 0.6 [0.4-0.9], p 0.015) during the pandemic period. Conclusion: During the COVID-19 pandemic, Catalonia's stroke system's weakest points were the delay to EMS alert and a decline of stroke code activations, reper
- Published
- 2021
12. Impact of COVID-19 infection on the outcome of patients with ischemic stroke
- Author
-
Martí-Fàbregas, J, Guisado-Alonso, D, Delgado-Mederos, R, Martínez-Domeño, A, Prats-Sánchez, L, Guasch-Jiménez, M, Cardona, P, Núñez-Guillén, A, Requena, M, Rubiera, M, Olivé, M, Bustamante, A, Gomis, M, Amaro, S, Llull, L, Ustrell, X, de Oliveira, GC, Seró, L, Gomez-Choco, M, Mena, L, Serena, J, Viturro, SB, Purroy, F, Vicente, M, Rodríguez-Campello, A, Ois, A, Catena, E, Garcia-Carreira, MC, Barrachina, O, Palomeras, E, Krupinski, J, Almeria, M, Zaragoza, J, Esteve, P, Cocho, D, Moreira, A, van Eendenburg, C, Codas, JE, de la Ossa, NP, Salvat, M, Camps-Renom, P, Martí-Fàbregas, J, Guisado-Alonso, D, Delgado-Mederos, R, Martínez-Domeño, A, Prats-Sánchez, L, Guasch-Jiménez, M, Cardona, P, Núñez-Guillén, A, Requena, M, Rubiera, M, Olivé, M, Bustamante, A, Gomis, M, Amaro, S, Llull, L, Ustrell, X, de Oliveira, GC, Seró, L, Gomez-Choco, M, Mena, L, Serena, J, Viturro, SB, Purroy, F, Vicente, M, Rodríguez-Campello, A, Ois, A, Catena, E, Garcia-Carreira, MC, Barrachina, O, Palomeras, E, Krupinski, J, Almeria, M, Zaragoza, J, Esteve, P, Cocho, D, Moreira, A, van Eendenburg, C, Codas, JE, de la Ossa, NP, Salvat, M, and Camps-Renom, P
- Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: We evaluated whether stroke severity, functional outcome, and mortality are different in patients with ischemic stroke with or without coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection. METHODS: A prospective, observational, multicentre cohort study in Catalonia, Spain. Recruitment was consecutive from mid-March to mid-May 2020. Patients had an acute ischemic stroke within 48 hours and a previous modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score of 0 to 3. We collected demographic data, vascular risk factors, prior mRS score, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score, rate of reperfusion therapies, logistics, and metrics. Primary end point was functional outcome at 3 months. Favourable outcome was defined depending on the previous mRS score. Secondary outcome was mortality at 3 months. We performed mRS shift and multivariable analyses. RESULTS: We evaluated 701 patients (mean age 72.3±13.3 years, 60.5% men) and 91 (13%) had COVID-19 infection. Median baseline National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score was higher in patients with COVID-19 compared with patients without COVID-19 (8 [3–18] versus 6 [2–14], P=0.049). Proportion of patients with a favourable functional outcome was 33.7% in the COVID-19 and 47% in the non-COVID-19 group. However, after a multivariable logistic regression analysis, COVID-19 infection did not increase the probability of unfavourable functional outcome. Mortality rate was 39.3% among patients with COVID-19 and 16.1% in the non-COVID-19 group. In the multivariable logistic regression analysis, COVID-19 infection was a risk factor for mortality (hazard ratio, 3.14 [95% CI, 2.10–4.71]; P<0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Patients with ischemic stroke and COVID-19 infection have more severe strokes and a higher mortality than patients with stroke without COVID-19 infection. However, functional outcome is comparable in both groups.
- Published
- 2021
13. Effectiveness of thrombectomy in stroke according to baseline prognostic factors: inverse probability of treatment weighting analysis of a population-based registry
- Author
-
Rudilosso, S, Ríos, J, Rodríguez, A, Gomis, M, Vera, V, Gómez-Choco, M, Renú, A, Matos, N, Llull, L, Purroy, F, Amaro, S, Terceño, M, Obach, V, Serena, J, Martí-Fàbregas, J, Cardona, P, Molina, C, Rodríguez-Campello, A, Cánovas, D, Krupinski, J, Ustrell, X, Torres, F, Román, LS, Salvat-Plana, M, Jiménez-Fàbrega, FX, Palomeras, E, Catena, E, Colom, C, Cocho, D, Baiges, J, Aragones, JM, Diaz, G, Costa, X, Almendros, MC, Rybyeba, M, Barceló, M, Carrión, D, Lòpez, MN, Sanjurjo, E, de la Ossa, NP, Urra, X, Chamorro, Á, Rudilosso, S, Ríos, J, Rodríguez, A, Gomis, M, Vera, V, Gómez-Choco, M, Renú, A, Matos, N, Llull, L, Purroy, F, Amaro, S, Terceño, M, Obach, V, Serena, J, Martí-Fàbregas, J, Cardona, P, Molina, C, Rodríguez-Campello, A, Cánovas, D, Krupinski, J, Ustrell, X, Torres, F, Román, LS, Salvat-Plana, M, Jiménez-Fàbrega, FX, Palomeras, E, Catena, E, Colom, C, Cocho, D, Baiges, J, Aragones, JM, Diaz, G, Costa, X, Almendros, MC, Rybyeba, M, Barceló, M, Carrión, D, Lòpez, MN, Sanjurjo, E, de la Ossa, NP, Urra, X, and Chamorro, Á
- Abstract
Background and Purpose In real-world practice, the benefit of mechanical thrombectomy (MT) is uncertain in stroke patients with very favorable or poor prognostic profiles at baseline. We studied the effectiveness of MT versus medical treatment stratifying by different baseline prognostic factors. Methods Retrospective analysis of 2,588 patients with an ischemic stroke due to large vessel occlusion nested in the population-based registry of stroke code activations in Catalonia from January 2017 to June 2019. The effect of MT on good functional outcome (modified Rankin Score ≤2) and survival at 3 months was studied using inverse probability of treatment weighting (IPTW) analysis in three pre-defined baseline prognostic groups: poor (if pre-stroke disability, age >85 years, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale [NIHSS] >25, time from onset >6 hours, Alberta Stroke Program Early CT Score <6, proximal vertebrobasilar occlusion, supratherapeutic international normalized ratio >3), good (if NIHSS <6 or distal occlusion, in the absence of poor prognostic factors), or reference (not meeting other groups’ criteria). Results Patients receiving MT (n=1,996, 77%) were younger, had less pre-stroke disability, and received systemic thrombolysis less frequently. These differences were balanced after the IPTW stratified by prognosis. MT was associated with good functional outcome in the reference (odds ratio [OR], 2.9; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.0 to 4.4), and especially in the poor baseline prognostic stratum (OR, 3.9; 95% CI, 2.6 to 5.9), but not in the good prognostic stratum. MT was associated with survival only in the poor prognostic stratum (OR, 2.6; 95% CI, 2.0 to 3.3). Conclusions Despite their worse overall outcomes, the impact of thrombectomy over medical management was more substantial in patients with poorer baseline prognostic factors than patients with good prognostic factors.
- Published
- 2021
14. VALIDATION OF THE MODIFIED-RACE SCALE TO DETECT NEUROLOGICAL DETERIORATION DURING HOSPITALIZATION OF STROKE PATIENTS
- Author
-
Querol, MS, Sebastian, ML, Fajardo, J, Fabregas, C, Serras, L, Fagundez, O, Balaguer, E, Soria, S, Carabi, M, Lopez, R, Palomera, E, Millan, M, de la Ossa, NP, and Palomeras, E
- Published
- 2020
15. SEX DIFFERENCES IN ACUTE STROKE CARE, METRICS, ACCESS TO TREATMENT AND OUTCOME: A TERRITORIAL ANALYSIS OF THE STROKE CODE SYSTEM OF CATALONIA
- Author
-
Blas, YS, Abilleira, S, Sanchez-Cirera, L, Munoz-Narbona, L, Ribo, M, Cardona, P, Llull, L, Roquer, J, Marti-Fabregas, J, Garcia-Sanchez, S, Ustrell, X, Purroy, F, Zaragoza, J, Canovas, D, Krupinski, J, Mas, N, Palomeras, E, Cocho, D, Lopez, N, Sanjurjo, E, Carrion, D, Lopez, M, Almendros, MC, Barcelo, M, Monedero, J, Catena, E, Redondo, L, Rybyeba, M, Diaz, G, and de la Ossa, NP
- Published
- 2020
16. AIDS and Cerebrovascular Disease
- Author
-
Roquer, J., Palomeras, E., and Pou, A.
- Published
- 1996
17. Cough reflex attenuation and swallowing dysfunction in sub-acute post-stroke patients: prevalence, risk factors, and clinical outcome
- Author
-
Vilardell, N, Rofes, L, Nascimento, WV, Muriana, D, Palomeras, E, and Clave, P
- Subjects
cough ,aspiration pneumonia ,deglutition ,deglutition disorders ,citric acid ,stroke - Abstract
BackgroundCough and swallowing impairments in post-stroke patients (PSP) have been associated with increased risk for respiratory complications. AimsTo assess the prevalence of alterations in protective cough responses in subacute PSP and its association with oropharyngeal dysphagia (OD), clinical, and neurotopographic stroke factors and clinical outcomes. MethodsThree months after stroke, the cough reflex test (CRT) was performed by nebulizing incremental citric acid concentrations (7.8-1000mmolL(-1)) to determine the concentration that elicited two and five coughs; OD was assessed by the volume-viscosity swallow test. Clinical and neurotopographic stroke risk factors and complications (readmissions, respiratory infections, institutionalization, and mortality) were recorded from 3 to 12months post-stroke. ResultsWe included 225 PSP. Prevalence of impaired CRT was 5.8%, that of OD was 40.4% (20.4% with impaired safety of swallow), and of both impairments was, 1.8%. No specific risk factors associated with impaired CRT were found; however, hemorrhagic, wide circulation infarction (TACI), and brainstem strokes delayed the cough response. OD was associated with age, TACI and poor functional and nutritional status. Outcome of PSPs was unaffected by impaired CRT but OD and impaired safety of swallow increased institutionalization, respiratory infections, and mortality with the poorest outcome for those with both impairments. ConclusionsPrevalence of subacute post-stroke OD and swallow safety impairments was much higher than CRT attenuation, and risk factors strongly differed suggesting that the swallow response receives a stronger cortical control than the cough reflex. OD has a greater impact on PSP clinical outcome than impaired cough, the poorest prognosis being for patients with both airway protective dysfunctions.
- Published
- 2017
18. Access to Endovascular Treatment in Remote Areas
- Author
-
Pérez de la Ossa, Natalia, primary, Abilleira, Sònia, additional, Dorado, Laura, additional, Urra, Xabier, additional, Ribó, Marc, additional, Cardona, Pere, additional, Giralt, Eva, additional, Martí-Fàbregas, Joan, additional, Purroy, Francisco, additional, Serena, Joaquín, additional, Cánovas, David, additional, Garcés, Moisés, additional, Krupinski, Jurek, additional, Pellisé, Anna, additional, Saura, Júlia, additional, Molina, Carlos, additional, Dávalos, Antoni, additional, Gallofré, Miquel, additional, Delgado Mederos, R, additional, Martínez Domeño, A, additional, Marín Bueno, R, additional, Roquer, J, additional, Rodríguez-Campello, A, additional, Ois, Á, additional, Jiménez-Conde, J, additional, Cuadrado-Godia, E, additional, Guimaraens, L, additional, Chamorro, A, additional, Obach, V, additional, Amaro, S, additional, Macho, JM, additional, Blasco, J, additional, San Roman Manzanera, L, additional, López, A, additional, Martínez-Yélamos, A, additional, Quesada, H, additional, Lara, B, additional, Cayuela, N, additional, Aja, L, additional, de Miquel, MA, additional, Mora, P, additional, Rubiera, M, additional, Pagola, J, additional, Rodríguez-Luna, D, additional, Muchada, M, additional, Tomasello, A, additional, Coscojuela, P, additional, Millán, M, additional, Gomis, M, additional, López-Cancio, E, additional, Castaño, C, additional, Remollo, S, additional, Del Carmen Garcia, M, additional, Estela, J, additional, Perendreu, J, additional, Huertas, S, additional, Nicolás, MC, additional, Gómez-Choco, M, additional, García, S, additional, Martínez, R, additional, Sanahuja, J, additional, Castellanos, M, additional, Silva, Y, additional, van Eendenburg, C, additional, Marés, R, additional, Ustrell, X, additional, Baiges, J, additional, Soler Insa, JM, additional, Aragonés, JM, additional, Cocho Calderón, L, additional, Otermin, P, additional, and Palomeras, E, additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Association Between Time to Reperfusion and Outcome Is Primarily Driven by the Time From Imaging to Reperfusion
- Author
-
Ribo, Marc, primary, Molina, Carlos A., additional, Cobo, Erik, additional, Cerdà, Neus, additional, Tomasello, Alejandro, additional, Quesada, Helena, additional, De Miquel, Maria Angeles, additional, Millan, Mónica, additional, Castaño, Carlos, additional, Urra, Xabier, additional, Sanroman, Luis, additional, Dàvalos, Antoni, additional, Jovin, Tudor, additional, Sanjuan, E., additional, Rubiera, M., additional, Pagola, J., additional, Flores, A., additional, Muchada, M., additional, Meler, P., additional, Huerga, E., additional, Gelabert, S., additional, Coscojuela, P., additional, Rodriguez, D., additional, Santamarina, E., additional, Maisterra, O., additional, Boned, S., additional, Seró, L., additional, Rovira, A., additional, Muñoz, L., additional, Pérez de la Ossa, N., additional, Gomis, M., additional, Dorado, L., additional, López-Cancio, E., additional, Palomeras, E., additional, Munuera, J., additional, García Bermejo, P., additional, Remollo, S., additional, García-Sort, R., additional, Cuadras, P., additional, Puyalto, P., additional, Hernández-Pérez, M., additional, Jiménez, M., additional, Martínez-Piñeiro, A., additional, Lucente, G., additional, Chamorro, A., additional, Obach, V., additional, Cervera, A., additional, Amaro, S., additional, Llull, L., additional, Codas, J., additional, Balasa, M., additional, Navarro, J., additional, Ariño, H., additional, Aceituno, A., additional, Rudilosso, S., additional, Renu, A., additional, Macho, J. M., additional, Blasco, J., additional, López, A., additional, Macías, N., additional, Cardona, P., additional, Rubio, F., additional, Cano, L., additional, Lara, B., additional, Aja, L., additional, Serena, J., additional, Albers, G., additional, Lees, K., additional, Arenillas, J., additional, Roberts, R., additional, Goyal, M., additional, Demchuk, A.M., additional, Minhas, P., additional, Al-Ajlan, F., additional, Salluzzi, M., additional, Zimmel, L., additional, Patel, S., additional, Eesa, M., additional, von Kummer, R., additional, Martí-Fàbregas, J., additional, Jankowitz, B., additional, Salvat-Plana, M., additional, and Hernandez-Pérez, M., additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Sex and gender differences in acute stroke care: metrics, access to treatment and outcome. A territorial analysis of the Stroke Code System of Catalonia.
- Author
-
Silva Y, Sánchez-Cirera L, Terceño M, Dorado L, Valls A, Martínez M, Abilleira S, Rubiera M, Quesada H, Llull L, Rodríguez-Campello A, Martí-Fàbregas J, Seró L, Purroy F, Payo I, García S, Cánovas D, Krupinski J, Mas N, Palomeras E, Cocho D, Font MÀ, Catena E, Puiggròs E, Pedroza C, Marín G, Carrión D, Costa X, Almendros MC, Torres I, Colom C, Velasquez JA, Diaz G, Jiménez X, Subirats T, Deulofeu A, Hidalgo V, Salvat-Plana M, and Pérez de la Ossa N
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Female, Aged, Spain epidemiology, Prospective Studies, Sex Factors, Treatment Outcome, Stroke diagnosis
- Abstract
Introduction: Previous studies have reported differences in the management and outcome of women stroke patients in comparison with men. We aim to analyze sex and gender differences in the medical assistance, access to treatment and outcome of acute stroke patients in Catalonia., Patients and Methods: Data were obtained from a prospective population-based registry of stroke code activations in Catalonia (CICAT) from January/2016 to December/2019. The registry includes demographic data, stroke severity, stroke subtype, reperfusion therapy, and time workflow. Centralized clinical outcome at 90 days was assessed in patients receiving reperfusion therapy., Results: A total of 23,371 stroke code activations were registered (54% men, 46% women). No differences in prehospital time metrics were observed. Women more frequently had a final diagnosis of stroke mimic, were older and had a previous worse functional situation. Among ischemic stroke patients, women had higher stroke severity and more frequently presented proximal large vessel occlusion. Women received more frequently reperfusion therapy (48.2% vs 43.1%, p < 0.001). Women tended to present a worse outcome at 90 days, especially for the group receiving only IVT (good outcome 56.7% vs 63.8%; p < 0.001), but not for the group of patients treated with IVT + MT or MT alone, although sex was not independently associated with clinical outcome in logistic regression analysis (OR 1.07; 95% CI, 0.94-1.23; p = 0.27) nor in the analysis after matching using the propensity score (OR 1.09; 95% CI, 0.97-1.22)., Discussion and Conclusion: We found some differences by sex in that acute stroke was more frequent in older women and the stroke severity was higher. We found no differences in medical assistance times, access to reperfusion treatment and early complications. Worse clinical outcome at 90 days in women was conditioned by stroke severity and older age, but not by sex itself.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Early and Delayed Infarct Growth in Patients Undergoing Mechanical Thrombectomy: A Prospective, Serial MRI Study.
- Author
-
Hernández-Pérez M, Werner M, Remollo S, Martín C, Cortés J, Valls A, Ramos A, Dorado L, Serena J, Munuera J, Puig J, Pérez de la Ossa N, Gomis M, Carbonell J, Castaño C, Muñoz-Narbona L, Palomeras E, Domenech S, Massuet A, Terceño M, Davalos A, and Millán M
- Subjects
- Humans, Aged, Prospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Cerebral Infarction complications, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Thrombectomy methods, Retrospective Studies, Stroke therapy, Endovascular Procedures methods, Brain Ischemia complications
- Abstract
Background: We studied the evolution over time of diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) lesion volume and the factors involved on early and late infarct growth (EIG and LIG) in stroke patients undergoing endovascular treatment (EVT) according to the final revascularization grade., Methods: This is a prospective cohort of patients with anterior large artery occlusion undergoing EVT arriving at 1 comprehensive stroke center. Magnetic resonance imaging was performed on arrival (pre-EVT), <2 hours after EVT (post-EVT), and on day 5. DWI lesions and perfusion maps were evaluated. Arterial revascularization was assessed according to the modified Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction (mTICI) grades. We recorded National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale at arrival and at day 7. EIG was defined as (DWI volume post-EVT-DWI volume pre-EVT), and LIG was defined as (DWI volume at 5d-DWI volume post-EVT). Factors involved in EIG and LIG were tested via multivariable lineal models., Results: We included 98 patients (mean age 70, median National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score 17, final mTICI≥2b 86%). Median EIG and LIG were 48 and 63.3 mL in patients with final mTICI<2b, and 3.6 and 3.9 cc in patients with final mTICI≥2b. Both EIG and LIG were associated with higher National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale at day 7 ( ρ =0.667; P <0.01 and ρ =0.614; P <0.01, respectively). In patients with final mTICI≥2b, each 10% increase in the volume of DWI pre-EVT and each extra pass leaded to growths of 9% (95% CI, 7%-10%) and 14% (95% CI, 2%-28%) in the DWI volume post-EVT, respectively. Furthermore, each 10% increase in the volume of DWI post-EVT, each extra pass, and each 10 mL increase in TMax6s post-EVT were associated with growths of 8% (95% CI, 6%-9%), 9% (95% CI, 0%-19%), and 12% (95% CI, 5%-20%) in the volume of DWI post-EVT, respectively., Conclusions: Infarct grows during and after EVT, especially in nonrecanalizers but also to a lesser extent in recanalizers. In recanalizers, number of passes and DWI volume influence EIG, while number of passes, DWI, and hypoperfused volume after the procedure determine LIG.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Determinants and Trends of the Use of Intravenous Thrombolysis for Minor Stroke: A Population-Based Study, 2016 to 2020.
- Author
-
Font MÀ, García-Sánchez SM, Mengual JJ, Mena L, Avellaneda C, Serena J, Valls-Carbó A, Chamorro Á, Ustrell X, Molina C, Cardona P, Guasch-Jiménez M, Purroy F, Rodríguez-Campello A, Palomeras E, Cocho D, Krupinski J, Cánovas D, García-Alhama J, Zaragoza J, Puiggròs E, Matos N, Aragonès JM, Costa X, Sanjurjo E, Pedroza C, Monedero J, Almendros MC, Rybyeva M, Carrión D, Díaz G, Barceló M, Jiménez-Fàbrega X, Salvat-Plana M, Elosúa R, Pérez de la Ossa N, and Gómez-Choco M
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Prospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Thrombolytic Therapy, Thrombectomy, Fibrinolytic Agents therapeutic use, Brain Ischemia therapy, Stroke drug therapy, Stroke epidemiology, Stroke complications, Ischemic Stroke
- Abstract
Background: We analyzed the main factors associated with intravenous thrombolysis (IVT) in patients with minor ischemic stroke., Methods: Data were obtained from a prospective, government-mandated, population-based registry of stroke code patients in Catalonia (6 Comprehensive Stroke Centers, 8 Primary Stroke Centers, and 14 TeleStroke Centers). We selected patients diagnosed with ischemic stroke and National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) ≤5 at hospital admission from January 2016 to December 2020. We excluded patients with a baseline modified Rankin Scale score of ≥3, absolute contraindication for IVT, unknown stroke onset, or admitted to hospital beyond 4.5 after stroke onset. The main outcome was treatment with IVT. We performed univariable and binary logistic regression analyses to identify the most important factors associated with IVT., Results: We included 2975 code strokes; 1433 (48.2%) received IVT of which 30 (2.1%) had a symptomatic hemorrhagic transformation. Patients treated with IVT as compared to patients who did not receive IVT were more frequently women, had higher NIHSS, arrived earlier to hospital, were admitted to a Comprehensive Stroke Centers, and had large vessel occlusion. After binary logistic regression, NIHSS score 4 to 5 (odds ratio, 40.62 [95% CI, 31.73-57.22]; P <0.001) and large vessel occlusion (odds ratio, 16.39 [95% CI, 7.25-37.04]; P <0.001) were the strongest predictors of IVT. Younger age, female sex, baseline modified Rankin Scale score of 0, earlier arrival to hospital (<120 minutes after stroke onset), and the type of stroke center were also independently associated with IVT. The weight of large vessel occlusion on IVT was higher in patients with lower NIHSS., Conclusions: Minor stroke female patients, with higher NIHSS, arriving earlier to the hospital, presenting with large vessel occlusion and admitted to a Comprehensive Stroke Centers were more likely to receive intravenous thrombolysis.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Food borne-botulism during SARS-CoV-2 pandemic time. A case and a possible familial outbreak in Barcelona.
- Author
-
Casado-Ruiz V, Cano A, Suárez-López A, Muriana D, Guanyabens-Buscà N, Sanz-Cartagena P, Álvarez-Larruy M, and Palomeras E
- Subjects
- Disease Outbreaks, Female, Humans, Pandemics, SARS-CoV-2, Botulism diagnosis, Botulism epidemiology, Botulism etiology, COVID-19, Clostridium botulinum
- Abstract
Introduction: Botulism is a potentially fatal neuroparalytic syndrome caused by Clostridium botulinum neurotoxin. The 25% are food-borne botulism cases., Case Report: We describe a confirmed case of botulism attended in our hospital in September 2020, together with a second case in a patient's relative, suspected but not confirmed by laboratory tests. Clinical presentation consisted on general weakness, bilateral cranial palsy, mydriasis, and rapidly progressive tetraparesis in case 1, involving respiratory and swallowing function so she required hospitalization and support treatment. Non specific and transient symptoms occurred in case 2. SARS-CoV-2 infection was initially suspected in both cases due to pandemic situation in our country, ruled out by negative PCR. When B neurotoxin was detected in stool sample of patient 1 we confirmed the diagnosis of food-borne botulism probably linked to home-made conserved beans., Conclusion: Early clinical suspicion, together with laboratory and electromyography findings, and support treatment provided at hospital were crucial for favourable outcome. Being aware of this rare syndrom might contribute to its better management.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Impact of COVID-19 Infection on the Outcome of Patients With Ischemic Stroke.
- Author
-
Martí-Fàbregas J, Guisado-Alonso D, Delgado-Mederos R, Martínez-Domeño A, Prats-Sánchez L, Guasch-Jiménez M, Cardona P, Núñez-Guillén A, Requena M, Rubiera M, Olivé M, Bustamante A, Gomis M, Amaro S, Llull L, Ustrell X, Castilho de Oliveira G, Seró L, Gomez-Choco M, Mena L, Serena J, Bashir Viturro S, Purroy F, Vicente M, Rodríguez-Campello A, Ois A, Catena E, Carmen Garcia-Carreira M, Barrachina O, Palomeras E, Krupinski J, Almeria M, Zaragoza J, Esteve P, Cocho D, Moreira A, van Eendenburg C, Emilio Codas J, Pérez de la Ossa N, Salvat M, and Camps-Renom P
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Anticoagulants therapeutic use, COVID-19 complications, Case-Control Studies, Female, Humans, Ischemic Stroke complications, Ischemic Stroke mortality, Ischemic Stroke therapy, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Mortality, Multivariate Analysis, Prognosis, Prospective Studies, SARS-CoV-2, Severity of Illness Index, Thrombectomy, Thrombolytic Therapy, COVID-19 physiopathology, Functional Status, Ischemic Stroke physiopathology
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: We evaluated whether stroke severity, functional outcome, and mortality are different in patients with ischemic stroke with or without coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection., Methods: A prospective, observational, multicentre cohort study in Catalonia, Spain. Recruitment was consecutive from mid-March to mid-May 2020. Patients had an acute ischemic stroke within 48 hours and a previous modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score of 0 to 3. We collected demographic data, vascular risk factors, prior mRS score, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score, rate of reperfusion therapies, logistics, and metrics. Primary end point was functional outcome at 3 months. Favourable outcome was defined depending on the previous mRS score. Secondary outcome was mortality at 3 months. We performed mRS shift and multivariable analyses., Results: We evaluated 701 patients (mean age 72.3±13.3 years, 60.5% men) and 91 (13%) had COVID-19 infection. Median baseline National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score was higher in patients with COVID-19 compared with patients without COVID-19 (8 [3-18] versus 6 [2-14], P =0.049). Proportion of patients with a favourable functional outcome was 33.7% in the COVID-19 and 47% in the non-COVID-19 group. However, after a multivariable logistic regression analysis, COVID-19 infection did not increase the probability of unfavourable functional outcome. Mortality rate was 39.3% among patients with COVID-19 and 16.1% in the non-COVID-19 group. In the multivariable logistic regression analysis, COVID-19 infection was a risk factor for mortality (hazard ratio, 3.14 [95% CI, 2.10-4.71]; P <0.001)., Conclusions: Patients with ischemic stroke and COVID-19 infection have more severe strokes and a higher mortality than patients with stroke without COVID-19 infection. However, functional outcome is comparable in both groups.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Effectiveness of Thrombectomy in Stroke According to Baseline Prognostic Factors: Inverse Probability of Treatment Weighting Analysis of a Population-Based Registry.
- Author
-
Rudilosso S, Ríos J, Rodríguez A, Gomis M, Vera V, Gómez-Choco M, Renú A, Matos N, Llull L, Purroy F, Amaro S, Terceño M, Obach V, Serena J, Martí-Fàbregas J, Cardona P, Molina C, Rodríguez-Campello A, Cánovas D, Krupinski J, Ustrell X, Torres F, Román LS, Salvat-Plana M, Jiménez-Fàbrega FX, Palomeras E, Catena E, Colom C, Cocho D, Baiges J, Aragones JM, Diaz G, Costa X, Almendros MC, Rybyeba M, Barceló M, Carrión D, Lòpez MN, Sanjurjo E, de la Ossa NP, Urra X, and Chamorro Á
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: In real-world practice, the benefit of mechanical thrombectomy (MT) is uncertain in stroke patients with very favorable or poor prognostic profiles at baseline. We studied the effectiveness of MT versus medical treatment stratifying by different baseline prognostic factors., Methods: Retrospective analysis of 2,588 patients with an ischemic stroke due to large vessel occlusion nested in the population-based registry of stroke code activations in Catalonia from January 2017 to June 2019. The effect of MT on good functional outcome (modified Rankin Score ≤2) and survival at 3 months was studied using inverse probability of treatment weighting (IPTW) analysis in three pre-defined baseline prognostic groups: poor (if pre-stroke disability, age >85 years, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale [NIHSS] >25, time from onset >6 hours, Alberta Stroke Program Early CT Score <6, proximal vertebrobasilar occlusion, supratherapeutic international normalized ratio >3), good (if NIHSS <6 or distal occlusion, in the absence of poor prognostic factors), or reference (not meeting other groups' criteria)., Results: Patients receiving MT (n=1,996, 77%) were younger, had less pre-stroke disability, and received systemic thrombolysis less frequently. These differences were balanced after the IPTW stratified by prognosis. MT was associated with good functional outcome in the reference (odds ratio [OR], 2.9; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.0 to 4.4), and especially in the poor baseline prognostic stratum (OR, 3.9; 95% CI, 2.6 to 5.9), but not in the good prognostic stratum. MT was associated with survival only in the poor prognostic stratum (OR, 2.6; 95% CI, 2.0 to 3.3)., Conclusions: Despite their worse overall outcomes, the impact of thrombectomy over medical management was more substantial in patients with poorer baseline prognostic factors than patients with good prognostic factors.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Natural History of Swallow Function during the Three-Month Period after Stroke.
- Author
-
Arreola V, Vilardell N, Ortega O, Rofes L, Muriana D, Palomeras E, Álvarez-Berdugo D, and Clavé P
- Abstract
Oropharyngeal dysphagia is a prevalent complication following stroke (PS-OD), and one that is sometimes spontaneously recovered. This study describes the natural history of PS-OD between admission and three months post-stroke, and the factors associated with its prevalence and development. PS-OD was assessed with the volume-viscosity swallow test (V-VST) in all stroke patients on admission and at the three-month follow-up. We analyzed clinical, demographic, and neuroanatomical factors of 247 older post-stroke patients (National Institute of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) = 3.5 ± 3.8), comparing among those with PS-OD the ones with and without spontaneous recovery. PS-OD prevalence on admission was 39.7% (34.0% impaired safety; 30.8%, efficacy) and 41.7% (19.4% impaired safety; 39.3%, efficacy) at three months. Spontaneous swallow recovery occurred in 42.4% of patients with unsafe and in 29.9% with ineffective swallow, associated with younger age and optimal functional status. However, 26% of post-stroke patients developed new signs/symptoms of ineffective swallow related to poor functional, nutritional and health status, and institutionalization. PS-OD prevalence on admission and at the three-month follow-up was very high in the study population. PS-OD is a dynamic condition with some spontaneous recovery in patients with optimal functional status, but also new signs/symptoms can appear due to poor functionality. Regular PS-OD monitoring is needed to identify patients at risk of nutritional and respiratory complications.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. PATJ Low Frequency Variants Are Associated With Worse Ischemic Stroke Functional Outcome.
- Author
-
Mola-Caminal M, Carrera C, Soriano-Tárraga C, Giralt-Steinhauer E, Díaz-Navarro RM, Tur S, Jiménez C, Medina-Dols A, Cullell N, Torres-Aguila NP, Muiño E, Rodríguez-Campello A, Ois A, Cuadrado-Godia E, Vivanco-Hidalgo RM, Hernandez-Guillamon M, Solé M, Delgado P, Bustamante A, García-Berrocoso T, Mendióroz M, Castellanos M, Serena J, Martí-Fàbregas J, Segura T, Serrano-Heras G, Obach V, Ribó M, Molina CA, Alvarez-Sabín J, Palomeras E, Freijo M, Font MA, Rosand J, Rost NS, Gallego-Fabrega C, Lee JM, Heitsch L, Ibanez L, Cruchaga C, Phuah CL, Lemmens R, Thijs V, Lindgren A, Maguire J, Rannikmae K, Sudlow CL, Jern C, Stanne TM, Lorentzen E, Muñoz-Narbona L, Dávalos A, López-Cancio E, Worrall BB, Woo D, Kittner SJ, Mitchell BD, Montaner J, Roquer J, Krupinski J, Estivill X, Rabionet R, Vives-Bauzá C, Fernández-Cadenas I, and Jiménez-Conde J
- Subjects
- Brain Ischemia diagnosis, Brain Ischemia physiopathology, Brain Ischemia rehabilitation, Disability Evaluation, Gene Frequency, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Genome-Wide Association Study, Humans, Phenotype, Recovery of Function, Risk Factors, Stroke diagnosis, Stroke physiopathology, Stroke therapy, Stroke Rehabilitation, Treatment Outcome, Brain Ischemia genetics, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Stroke genetics, Tight Junction Proteins genetics
- Abstract
Rationale: Ischemic stroke is among the leading causes of adult disability. Part of the variability in functional outcome after stroke has been attributed to genetic factors but no locus has been consistently associated with stroke outcome., Objective: Our aim was to identify genetic loci influencing the recovery process using accurate phenotyping to produce the largest GWAS (genome-wide association study) in ischemic stroke recovery to date., Methods and Results: A 12-cohort, 2-phase (discovery-replication and joint) meta-analysis of GWAS included anterior-territory and previously independent ischemic stroke cases. Functional outcome was recorded using 3-month modified Rankin Scale. Analyses were adjusted for confounders such as discharge National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale. A gene-based burden test was performed. The discovery phase (n=1225) was followed by open (n=2482) and stringent joint-analyses (n=1791). Those cohorts with modified Rankin Scale recorded at time points other than 3-month or incomplete data on previous functional status were excluded in the stringent analyses. Novel variants in PATJ (Pals1-associated tight junction) gene were associated with worse functional outcome at 3-month after stroke. The top variant was rs76221407 (G allele, β=0.40, P=1.70×10
-9 )., Conclusions: Our results identify a set of common variants in PATJ gene associated with 3-month functional outcome at genome-wide significance level. Future studies should examine the role of PATJ in stroke recovery and consider stringent phenotyping to enrich the information captured to unveil additional stroke outcome loci.- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Statins do not increase Markers of Cerebral Angiopathies in patients with Cardioembolic Stroke.
- Author
-
Martí-Fàbregas J, Medrano-Martorell S, Merino E, Prats-Sánchez L, Marín R, Delgado-Mederos R, Camps-Renom P, Martínez-Domeño A, Gómez-Choco M, Lara L, Casado-Naranjo I, Cánovas D, Torres MJ, Freijo M, Calleja A, Bravo Y, Cocho D, Rodríguez-Campello A, Zandio B, Fuentes B, de Felipe A, Llull L, Maestre J, Hernández M, Garcés M, De Arce-Borda AM, Palomeras E, Rodríguez-Yáñez M, Díaz-Maroto I, Serrano M, Fernández-Domínguez J, Sanahuja J, Purroy F, Zedde M, Delgado-Mengual J, and Gich I
- Subjects
- Aged, Cerebral Hemorrhage etiology, Cerebral Hemorrhage metabolism, Female, Humans, Intracranial Embolism drug therapy, Male, Prognosis, Prospective Studies, Stroke drug therapy, Anticoagulants therapeutic use, Biomarkers analysis, Cerebral Hemorrhage pathology, Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors therapeutic use, Intracranial Embolism complications, Stroke complications
- Abstract
We investigated whether pre-treatment with statins is associated with surrogate markers of amyloid and hypertensive angiopathies in patients who need to start long-term oral anticoagulation therapy. A prospective multicenter study of patients naive for oral anticoagulants, who had an acute cardioembolic stroke. MRI was performed at admission to evaluate microbleeds, leukoaraiosis and superficial siderosis. We collected data on the specific statin compound, the dose and the statin intensity. We performed bivariate analyses and a logistic regression to investigate variables associated with microbleeds. We studied 470 patients (age 77.5 ± 6.4 years, 43.7% were men), and 193 (41.1%) of them received prior treatment with a statin. Microbleeds were detected in 140 (29.8%), leukoaraiosis in 388 (82.5%) and superficial siderosis in 20 (4.3%) patients. The presence of microbleeds, leukoaraiosis or superficial siderosis was not related to pre-treatment with statins. Microbleeds were more frequent in patients with prior intracerebral hemorrhage (OR 9.7, 95% CI 1.06-90.9) and in those pre-treated antiplatelets (OR 1.66, 95% CI 1.09-2.53). Prior treatment with statins was not associated with markers of bleeding-prone cerebral angiopathies in patients with cardioembolic stroke. Therefore, previous statin treatment should not influence the decision to initiate or withhold oral anticoagulation if these neuroimaging markers are detected.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. GRECOS Project (Genotyping Recurrence Risk of Stroke): The Use of Genetics to Predict the Vascular Recurrence After Stroke.
- Author
-
Fernández-Cadenas I, Mendióroz M, Giralt D, Nafria C, Garcia E, Carrera C, Gallego-Fabrega C, Domingues-Montanari S, Delgado P, Ribó M, Castellanos M, Martínez S, Freijo M, Jiménez-Conde J, Rubiera M, Alvarez-Sabín J, Molina CA, Font MA, Grau Olivares M, Palomeras E, Perez de la Ossa N, Martinez-Zabaleta M, Masjuan J, Moniche F, Canovas D, Piñana C, Purroy F, Cocho D, Navas I, Tejero C, Aymerich N, Cullell N, Muiño E, Serena J, Rubio F, Davalos A, Roquer J, Arenillas JF, Martí-Fábregas J, Keene K, Chen WM, Worrall B, Sale M, Arboix A, Krupinski J, and Montaner J
- Subjects
- Aged, Brain Ischemia diagnosis, Cardiovascular Diseases diagnosis, Cohort Studies, Female, Genotype, Humans, Ischemic Attack, Transient diagnosis, Ischemic Attack, Transient genetics, Male, North America, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Prognosis, Recurrence, Risk, Scotland, Spain, Stroke diagnosis, Brain Ischemia genetics, Cardiovascular Diseases genetics, Stroke genetics
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: Vascular recurrence occurs in 11% of patients during the first year after ischemic stroke (IS) or transient ischemic attack. Clinical scores do not predict the whole vascular recurrence risk; therefore, we aimed to find genetic variants associated with recurrence that might improve the clinical predictive models in IS., Methods: We analyzed 256 polymorphisms from 115 candidate genes in 3 patient cohorts comprising 4482 IS or transient ischemic attack patients. The discovery cohort was prospectively recruited and included 1494 patients, 6.2% of them developed a new IS during the first year of follow-up. Replication analysis was performed in 2988 patients using SNPlex or HumanOmni1-Quad technology. We generated a predictive model using Cox regression (GRECOS score [Genotyping Reurrence Risk of Stroke]) and generated risk groups using a classification tree method., Results: The analyses revealed that rs1800801 in the MGP gene (hazard ratio, 1.33; P =9×10
- 03 ), a gene related to artery calcification, was associated with new IS during the first year of follow-up. This polymorphism was replicated in a Spanish cohort (n=1.305); however, it was not significantly associated in a North American cohort (n=1.683). The GRECOS score predicted new IS ( P =3.2×10- 09 ) and could classify patients, from low risk of stroke recurrence (1.9%) to high risk (12.6%). Moreover, the addition of genetic risk factors to the GRECOS score improves the prediction compared with previous Stroke Prognosis Instrument-II score ( P =0.03)., Conclusions: The use of genetics could be useful to estimate vascular recurrence risk after IS. Genetic variability in the MGP gene was associated with vascular recurrence in the Spanish population., (© 2017 American Heart Association, Inc.)- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.