10 results on '"Bravo Anguiano, Y."'
Search Results
2. Estudio epidemiológico de la esclerosis múltiple en La Rioja
- Author
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Bártulos Iglesias, M., Marzo Sola, M.E., Estrella Ruiz, L.A., and Bravo Anguiano, Y.
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- 2015
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3. Hemorragia intracerebral
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Rebollo Álvarez-Amandi, M., Palacio Portilla, E., Bravo Anguiano, Y., and Ricart Colomé, C.
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- 2003
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4. Miocardiopatia no compactada presentándose como ictus de repetición
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Trejo Gabriel Y Galán, J.M., primary, Sánchez Mata, N., additional, Bravo Anguiano, Y., additional, and Téllez García, J.M., additional
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- 2010
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5. Prevalence of asymptomatic peripheral artery disease in patients with non-cardioembolic ischemic stroke,Prevalencia de enfermedad arterial periférica asintomática en pacientes con ictus isquémico no cardioembólico
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Álvarez-Sabín, J., Gil-Núñez, A., Quintana, M., Barbera, G., Alonso Leciñana Cases, M., Calleja Puerta, S., Casado Naranjo, I., Díez Tejedor, E., Escamilla Crespo, C., Fernández Fernández, O., Gállego Cullere, J., Lago Martín, A., López Fernández, J. C., Maestre Moreno, J., Martí-Fábregas, J., Martín González, R., Obach Tuca, V., Rebollo Álvarez-Amandi, M., Romero López, J., Rubio Borrego, F., Gómez Díaz-Castroverde, A., Vidal Sánchez, J. A., Moris La Tassa, G., Tejada García, J., Timiraos Fernández, J. J., Pérez Concha, T., Revilla García, M. A., Guereca Baranaiarn, L., Urtasunocariz, M., Ríos Gómez, C., Tejero Juste, C., García Gómara, M. J., Bravo Anguiano, Y., Gil Pujades, A., Palacios Marchesini, M., García Sánchez, S., Cano Orgaz, A., Purroy García, F., Obach Baurier, V., Arboix Damunt, A., Sanclemente Ansó, C., Rey Pérez, A., Canovas Verge, D., Fabregat Fabra, N., Rodríguez Campello, A., Comas Bergua, P., Cardona Cortela, P., Garcés Redondo, M., Robles Del Olmo, B., Olivella Rius, J., Martínez Ramírez, S., Torres Rodríguez, M. J., Pareja Martínez, A., Chamarro Lázaro, R., Pons Amate, J. M., Romero Martínez, M. A., Galiano Blancart, R. F., Vilar Fabra, C., Domínguez Sanz, F., Gracia Fleta, F., Plaza Macías, I., Villaverde González, R., Salamero Martínez, J. J., Medrano Martínez, V., Tortosa Conesa, D., Soria Torrecillas, J. J., Marey López, J., Romero López, J. M., Lustres Pérez, M., Ortega Casarrubios, M. A., Egido Herrero, J. A., Ruiz Ezquerro, J. J., Gómez Sánchez, J. C., Martín Polo, J., Gutiérrez Martin, F., Calleja Sanz, A. I., Peñas Martínez, M. L., Rojo Martínez, E., López Manzanares, L., Domingo García, J., García Castañón, I., Díaz Guzmán, J., Hernández Gallego, J. M., Sánchez Sánchez, C., Eimil Ortiz, M., González Santiago, R., Zabala Goiburu, J. A., Sánchez Del Valle, O., Morín Martín, M. M., Jiménez Caballero, P. E., Ferrero Ros, M., Vallejo Maroto, I., Gil Peralta, A., Aguilera Navarro, J. M., Carmona Nimo, E., García Moreno, J. M., Cueli Rincón, B., Hernández Ramos, F., Martínez Laso, A., Pilo La Fuente, B., Puerto Alonso, J. L., Tamayo Toledo, J. A., Moya Molina, M. A., Márquez Martínez, M., Gálvez Gálvez, C., Girón Úbeda, J. M., Del Saz Saucedo, P., Fernández Pérez, M. D., Antonio Arjona-Padillo, Olivares Romero, J., Peinado Cantero, M. L., Villegas Rodríguez, I., Vega Pérez, J. M., Maestre Martínez, M. A., Portillo Rivero, M. R., Sánchez Ortiz, C., Ochoa Sepúlveda, J. J., Bescansa Heredero, E., Vega López, O., Suárez Cuervo, A., Pueyo Morlans, M., Medina Rodríguez, A., Sáenz Galván, C., Marrero Falcón, C., and Mirdavood, S.
6. Prevalence of asymptomatic peripheral artery disease in patients with non-cardioembolic ischemic stroke | Prevalencia de enfermedad arterial periférica asintomática en pacientes con ictus isquémico no cardioembólico
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Jose Alvarez-Sabin, Gil-Núñez, A., Quintana, M., Barbera, G., Álvarez-Sabín, J., Alonso Leciñana Cases, M., Calleja Puerta, S., Casado Naranjo, I., Díez Tejedor, E., Escamilla Crespo, C., Fernández Fernández, O., Gállego Cullere, J., Lago Martín, A., López Fernández, J. C., Maestre Moreno, J., Martí-Fábregas, J., Martín González, R., Obach Tuca, V., Rebollo Álvarez-Amandi, M., Romero López, J., Rubio Borrego, F., Gómez Díaz-Castroverde, A., Vidal Sánchez, J. A., Moris La Tassa, G., Tejada García, J., Timiraos Fernández, J. J., Pérez Concha, T., Revilla García, M. A., Guereca Baranaiarn, L., Urtasunocariz, M., Ríos Gómez, C., Tejero Juste, C., García Gómara, M. J., Bravo Anguiano, Y., Gil Pujades, A., Palacios Marchesini, M., García Sánchez, S., Cano Orgaz, A., Purroy García, F., Obach Baurier, V., Arboix Damunt, A., Sanclemente Ansó, C., Rey Pérez, A., Canovas Verge, D., Fabregat Fabra, N., Rodríguez Campello, A., Comas Bergua, P., Cardona Cortela, P., Garcés Redondo, M., Robles Del Olmo, B., Olivella Rius, J., Martínez Ramírez, S., Torres Rodríguez, M. J., Pareja Martínez, A., Chamarro Lázaro, R., Pons Amate, J. M., Romero Martínez, M. A., Galiano Blancart, R. F., Vilar Fabra, C., Domínguez Sanz, F., Gracia Fleta, F., Plaza Macías, I., Villaverde González, R., Salamero Martínez, J. J., Medrano Martínez, V., Tortosa Conesa, D., Soria Torrecillas, J. J., Marey López, J., Romero López, J. M., Lustres Pérez, M., Ortega Casarrubios, M. A., Egido Herrero, J. A., Ruiz Ezquerro, J. J., Gómez Sánchez, J. C., Martín Polo, J., Gutiérrez Martin, F., Calleja Sanz, A. I., Peñas Martínez, M. L., Rojo Martínez, E., López Manzanares, L., Domingo García, J., García Castañón, I., Díaz Guzmán, J., Hernández Gallego, J. M., Sánchez Sánchez, C., Eimil Ortiz, M., González Santiago, R., Zabala Goiburu, J. A., Sánchez Del Valle, O., Morín Martín, M. M., Jiménez Caballero, P. E., Ferrero Ros, M., Vallejo Maroto, I., Gil Peralta, A., Aguilera Navarro, J. M., Carmona Nimo, E., García Moreno, J. M., Cueli Rincón, B., Hernández Ramos, F., Martínez Laso, A., Pilo La Fuente, B., Puerto Alonso, J. L., Tamayo Toledo, J. A., Moya Molina, M. A., Márquez Martínez, M., Gálvez Gálvez, C., Girón Úbeda, J. M., Del Saz Saucedo, P., Fernández Pérez, M. D., Arjona Padillo, A., Olivares Romero, J., Peinado Cantero, M. L., Villegas Rodríguez, I., Vega Pérez, J. M., Maestre Martínez, M. A., Portillo Rivero, M. R., Sánchez Ortiz, C., Ochoa Sepúlveda, J. J., Bescansa Heredero, E., Vega López, O., Suárez Cuervo, A., Pueyo Morlans, M., Medina Rodríguez, A., Sáenz Galván, C., Marrero Falcón, C., and Mirdavood, S.
7. [Cancer-associated stroke: a study of prevalence and predictors among ischaemic stroke patients].
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Bravo-Anguiano Y, Echavarría-Iñiguez A, Madrigal-Lkhou E, and Muñoz-Martín A
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Prevalence, Stroke complications, Brain Ischemia complications, Ischemic Stroke, Neoplasms complications
- Abstract
Introduction: The association between cancer and stroke is well documented and entails a worse prognosis for both pathologies. However, the prevalence of active and occult cancer among stroke patients is not sufficiently established, and neither are the predictors of cancer-associated stroke. Their knowledge is important for better identification and optimisation of the treatment of these patients., Patients and Methods: The aim of this retrospective study is to analyse the characteristics of ischaemic stroke in patients with and without active cancer in a sample of patients admitted to a stroke unit for two years. An overall descriptive and case-control analysis is performed to assess the differences between the two groups., Results: In a sample of 616 patients with ischaemic stroke, a prevalence of cancer was found to be 19.2%, which was active (prior or diagnosed after the stroke) in 7.5% of them. Active cancer was associated with the finding of lesions in several vascular territories, lower haemoglobin and haematocrit values, and higher fibrinogen and C-reactive protein values, a tendency to worse functional status and higher mortality at three months., Conclusions: A high prevalence of systemic cancer, of any type, as well as active and occult, was found among patients with ischaemic stroke. The presence of ischaemic lesions in several vascular territories and some laboratory markers could be factors to consider in attributing the stroke to cancer or looking for an occult neoplasm in some patients.
- Published
- 2023
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8. Delayed Neurological Improvement After Full Endovascular Reperfusion in Acute Anterior Circulation Ischemic Stroke.
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Talavera B, Gómez-Vicente B, Martínez-Galdámez M, López-Cancio E, García-Cabo C, Castellanos M, Roel A, Tejada-Meza H, Marta-Moreno J, Pérez-Lázaro C, Navarro-Pérez MP, Bravo-Anguiano Y, Bártulos-Iglesias M, Tejada-García J, Rodrigo-Stevens G, Martínez-Zabaleta M, de la Riva P, Timiraos-Fernández JJ, Del Mar Freijo M, Luna A, García-Sánchez JM, Del Carmen Gil-Alzueta M, Palacio-Portilla EJ, Jiménez-López Y, López-Mesonero L, Redondo-Robles L, Mayo-Iscar A, and Arenillas JF
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Brain Ischemia diagnostic imaging, Cerebral Revascularization methods, Endovascular Procedures methods, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Ischemic Stroke diagnostic imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Nervous System Diseases diagnostic imaging, Prospective Studies, Registries, Retrospective Studies, Brain Ischemia surgery, Cerebral Revascularization trends, Endovascular Procedures trends, Ischemic Stroke surgery, Nervous System Diseases surgery
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: We aimed to determine the prevalence and predictors of delayed neurological improvement (DNI) after complete endovascular reperfusion in anterior circulation acute ischemic stroke (AIS)., Methods: Retrospective analysis of an online multicenter prospective reperfusion registry of patients with consecutive anterior circulation AIS treated with endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) from January 2018 to June 2019 in tertiary stroke centers of the NORDICTUS (NORD-Spain Network for Research and Innovation in ICTUS) network. We included patients with AIS with a proximal occlusion in whom a modified Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction 3 reperfusion pattern was obtained. DNI was defined if, despite absence of early neurological improvement during the first 24 hours, patients achieved functional independence on day 90. Clinical and radiological variables obtained before EVT were analyzed as potential predictors of DNI., Results: Of 1565 patients with consecutive AIS treated with EVT, 1381 had proximal anterior circulation occlusions, 803 (58%) of whom achieved a modified Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction 3. Of these, 628 patients fulfilled all selection criteria and were included in the study. Mean age was 73.8 years, 323 (51.4%) were female, and median baseline National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale was 16. Absence of early neurological improvement was observed in 142 (22.6%) patients; 32 of these (22.5%) achieved good long-term outcome and constitute the DNI group. Predictors of DNI in multivariable-adjusted logistic regression were male sex (odds ratio, 6.4 [95% CI, 2.1–22.3] P=0.002), lower pre-EVT National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score (odds ratio, 1.4 [95% CI, 1.2–1.5], P<0.001), and intravenous thrombolysis (odds ratio, 9.1 [95% CI, 2.7–30.90], P<0.001)., Conclusions: One-quarter of patients with anterior circulation AIS who do not clinically improve within the first 24 hours after complete cerebral endovascular recanalization will achieve long-term functional independence, regardless of the poor early clinical course. Male sex, lower initial clinical severity, and use of intravenous thrombolysis before EVT predicted this clinical pattern.
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- 2021
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9. Oral Anticoagulation and Risk of Symptomatic Hemorrhagic Transformation in Stroke Patients Treated With Mechanical Thrombectomy: Data From the Nordictus Registry.
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Ramos-Araque ME, Chavarría-Miranda A, Gómez-Vicente B, López-Cancio Martínez E, Castañón Apilánez M, Castellanos M, López Fernández M, Tejada Meza H, Marta Moreno J, Tejada García J, Beltrán Rodríguez I, de la Riva P, Díez N, Arias Rivas S, Santamaría Cadavid M, Bravo Anguiano Y, Bártulos Iglesias M, Palacio Portilla EJ, Revilla García M, Timiraos Fernández JJ, Arenaza Basterrechea N, Maciñeiras Montero JL, Vicente Alba P, Julián Villaverde FJ, Pinedo Brochado A, Azkune I, Mar FM, Luna A, and Arenillas JF
- Abstract
Introduction: We aimed to evaluate if prior oral anticoagulation (OAC) and its type determines a greater risk of symptomatic hemorrhagic transformation in patients with acute ischemic stroke (AIS) subjected to mechanical thrombectomy. Materials and Methods: Consecutive patients with AIS included in the prospective reperfusion registry NORDICTUS, a network of tertiary stroke centers in Northern Spain, from January 2017 to December 2019 were included. Prior use of oral anticoagulants, baseline variables, and international normalized ratio (INR) on admission were recorded. Symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (sICH) was the primary outcome measure. Secondary outcome was the relation between INR and sICH, and we evaluated mortality and functional outcome at 3 months by modified Rankin scale. We compared patients with and without previous OAC and also considered the type of oral anticoagulants. Results: About 1.455 AIS patients were included, of whom 274 (19%) were on OAC, 193 (70%) on vitamin K antagonists (VKA), and 81 (30%) on direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs). Anticoagulated patients were older and had more comorbidities. Eighty-one (5.6%) developed sICH, which was more frequent in the VKA group, but not in DOAC group. OAC with VKA emerged as a predictor of sICH in a multivariate regression model (OR, 1.89 [95% CI, 1.01-3.51], p = 0.04) and was not related to INR level on admission. Prior VKA use was not associated with worse outcome in the multivariate regression model nor with mortality at 3 months. Conclusions: OAC with VKA, but not with DOACs, was an independent predictor of sICH after mechanical thrombectomy. This excess risk was associated neither with INR value by the time thrombectomy was performed, nor with a worse functional outcome or mortality at 3 months., Competing Interests: JA reports having received speaker or consultant honoraria by: BI, Bayer, Daiichy Sankyo, Pfizer, Amgen, Medtronic. MC has received speaker honoraria from Pfizer-BristolMyers Squibb, Daichii-Sankyo, and Boehringer-Ingelheim, and for providing consultancy on advisory board meetings from Amgen and Allergan. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2020 Ramos-Araque, Chavarría-Miranda, Gómez-Vicente, López-Cancio Martínez, Castañón Apilánez, Castellanos, López Fernández, Tejada Meza, Marta Moreno, Tejada García, Beltrán Rodríguez, de la Riva, Díez, Arias Rivas, Santamaría Cadavid, Bravo Anguiano, Bártulos Iglesias, Palacio Portilla, Revilla García, Timiraos Fernández, Arenaza Basterrechea, Maciñeiras Montero, Vicente Alba, Julián Villaverde, Pinedo Brochado, Azkune, Mar, Luna and Arenillas.)
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- 2020
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10. Effects of home-based mirror therapy and cognitive therapeutic exercise on the improvement of the upper extremity functions in patients with severe hemiparesis after a stroke: a protocol for a pilot randomised clinical trial.
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Gonzalez-Santos J, Soto-Camara R, Rodriguez-Fernández P, Jimenez-Barrios M, Gonzalez-Bernal J, Collazo-Riobo C, Jahouh M, Bravo-Anguiano Y, and Trejo-Gabriel-Galan JM
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- Activities of Daily Living, Aged, Cognition, Humans, Motor Activity, Paresis etiology, Paresis therapy, Pilot Projects, Quality of Life, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Recovery of Function, Single-Blind Method, Treatment Outcome, Upper Extremity, Stroke complications, Stroke Rehabilitation
- Abstract
Introduction: Neuroplasticity is defined as the capacity of the brain to reorganise new neuronal pathways. Mirror therapy (MT) and cognitive therapeutic exercise (CTE) are two neurorehabilitation techniques based on neuroplasticity and designed to improve the motor functions of the affected upper extremity in patients with severe hemiparesis after a stroke. Home-based interventions are an appropriate alternative to promote independence and autonomy. The objective of this study is to evaluate which of these techniques, MT and CTE, combined with task-oriented training, is more effective in functional recovery and movement patterns of the upper extremities in patients with severe hemiparesis after a stroke., Methods and Analysis: This is a home-based, single-blind, controlled, randomised clinical trial with three parallel arms, including 154 patients who had a stroke aged above 18 years. The primary outcome will be the functionality of the affected upper extremity measured using the Fugl-Meyer Assessment. Secondary variables will include cognitive performance, emotional state, quality of life and activities of daily living. During 6 weeks, one of the intervention groups will receive a treatment based on MT and the other one on CTE, both combined with task-oriented training. No additional interventions will be provided to the control group. To assess the progress of patients who had a stroke in the subacute phase, all variables will be evaluated at different visits: initial (just before starting treatment and 4 weeks post-stroke), post-intervention (6 weeks after initial) and follow-up (6 months)., Ethics and Dissemination: This protocol has been approved by the Institutional Review Board (CEIm-2.134/2.019) and registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04163666). The results will be disseminated through open-access peer-reviewed journals, conference presentation, broadcast media and a presentation to stakeholders. These study results will provide relevant and novel information on effective neurorehabilitation strategies and improve the quality of intervention programmes aimed at patients after a stroke., Trial Registration Number: ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04163666)., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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