10 results on '"Halinder Mangat"'
Search Results
2. 508 Comparing effectiveness and safety of levetiracetam loading doses among patients with status epilepticus.
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Bertha De Los Santos, Brian J Barnes, Rose Cohen, and Halinder Mangat
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Medicine - Abstract
OBJECTIVES/GOALS: Our long-term goal is to improve the clinical outcomes of patients with status epilepticus through increasing the level of evidence surrounding guidelines. The specific objective of our proposed work is to compare the outcomes and adverse drug events between the Neurocritical Care and American Epilepsy Society levetiracetam dose recommendations. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: This is a retrospective, single site, cohort study comparing outcomes of hospitalized patients with status epilepticus treated with levetiracetam bolus at the University of Kansas Health System. Patients outcomes will be compared based on levetiracetam bolus dose received. The primary outcome will be seizure reoccurrence within 24 hours. Secondary outcomes include number of additional anti-epileptic drugs administered, cumulative dose of benzodiazepines administered within 24 hours of levetiracetam bolus administration and incidence of adverse drug reactions. All study data will be extracted retrospectively from the EPIC chart review following patient list generation through the HERON i2b2 database query. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: Aim 1 will characterize levetiracetam dosing among patients admitted to the University of Kansas Medical Center for status epilepticus during routine clinical care. We hypothesize that given the inconsistency in dosing recommendations from various professional societies and drug references, we will observe inconsistent dosing of levetiracetam among those hospitalized due to status epilepticus.
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- 2022
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3. Guiding Principles for a Pediatric Neurology ICU (neuroPICU) Bedside Multimodal Monitor.
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Yonina C. Eldar, Daniel Gopher, Amihai Gottlieb, Rotem Lammfromm, Halinder Mangat, Nimrod Peleg, Steven Pon, Igal Rozenberg, Nicholas Schiff, David Stark, Peter Yan, Hillel Pratt, Barry Kosofsky, and Zachary M. Grinspan
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- 2016
- Full Text
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4. Towards Improved Organizational Governance of Neurotrauma Surveillance; Comment on 'Neurotrauma Surveillance in National Registries of Low- and Middle- Income Countries: A Scoping Review and Comparative Analysis of Data Dictionaries'
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Hanna Schenck, Halinder Mangat, RS: MHeNs - R3 - Neuroscience, Neurochirurgie, and MUMC+: MA AIOS Neurochirurgie (9)
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Governance ,Health (social science) ,Surveillance ,Health Information Management ,CHALLENGES ,Leadership and Management ,Health Policy ,TRAUMATIC BRAIN-INJURY ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,CARE ,Neurotrauma ,Data Elements - Abstract
Neurotrauma surveillance data on burden and severity of disease serves as a tool to define legislations, guide high-yield risk-specific prevention, and evaluate and monitor management strategies for adequate resource allocation. In this scoping review, Barthélemy and colleagues demonstrate the gap in neurotrauma surveillance in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) and suggest strategies for governance in neurotrauma surveillance. We underline state accountability as well as the need for the close integration of academic and tertiary care clinical practitioners and policy-makers in addressing the public health crisis caused by neurotrauma. Additionally, multiple sources for surveillance must be included, especially in communities where victims may remain without access to formal healthcare. Finally, we offer insights into possible ways of increasing the visibility of neurotrauma on political agendas.
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- 2023
5. Emergency Neurological Life Support: Fourth Edition, Updates in the Approach to Early Management of a Neurological Emergency
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Chitra Venkatasubramanian, Vineeta Singh, and Halinder Mangat
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Neurology (clinical) ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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6. Intensive vs Standard Treatment of Hyperglycemia and Functional Outcome in Patients With Acute Ischemic Stroke: The SHINE Randomized Clinical Trial
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Carolina Mendoza-Puccini, Alexis Simpkins, David Tirschwell, Matthew Vibbert, Jiaying Zhang, James Quinn, Robert Regenhardt, Laurie Gutmann, Sudeepta Dandapat, Joseph Carrera, Avi Landman, Halinder Mangat, Rukhsana Hossain, Brent Becker, Panagiotis Fotiadis, Paulina Sergot, Amie Hsia, Ashish Kulhari, Alexandra Reynolds, Neal Parikh, RAHUL DAMANI, Nicholas Morris, Peter Akpunonu, and Eliza Miller
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Injections, Subcutaneous ,Hypoglycemia ,01 natural sciences ,law.invention ,Brain Ischemia ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,law ,Modified Rankin Scale ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Medicine ,Humans ,Hypoglycemic Agents ,Insulin ,030212 general & internal medicine ,0101 mathematics ,Infusions, Intravenous ,Stroke ,Aged ,business.industry ,Standard treatment ,010102 general mathematics ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Interim analysis ,Treatment Outcome ,Relative risk ,Hyperglycemia ,Tissue Plasminogen Activator ,Female ,business - Abstract
Importance Hyperglycemia during acute ischemic stroke is common and is associated with worse outcomes. The efficacy of intensive treatment of hyperglycemia in this setting remains unknown. Objectives To determine the efficacy of intensive treatment of hyperglycemia during acute ischemic stroke. Design, Setting, and Participants The Stroke Hyperglycemia Insulin Network Effort (SHINE) randomized clinical trial included adult patients with hyperglycemia (glucose concentration of >110 mg/dL if had diabetes or ≥150 mg/dL if did not have diabetes) and acute ischemic stroke who were enrolled within 12 hours from stroke onset at 63 US sites between April 2012 and August 2018; follow-up ended in November 2018. The trial included 1151 patients who met eligibility criteria. Interventions Patients were randomized to receive continuous intravenous insulin using a computerized decision support tool (target blood glucose concentration of 80-130 mg/dL [4.4-7.2 mmol/L]; intensive treatment group: n = 581) or insulin on a sliding scale that was administered subcutaneously (target blood glucose concentration of 80-179 mg/dL [4.4-9.9 mmol/L]; standard treatment group: n = 570) for up to 72 hours. Main Outcomes and Measures The primary efficacy outcome was the proportion of patients with a favorable outcome based on the 90-day modified Rankin Scale score (a global stroke disability scale ranging from 0 [no symptoms or completely recovered] to 6 [death]) that was adjusted for baseline stroke severity. Results Among 1151 patients who were randomized (mean age, 66 years [SD, 13.1 years]; 524 [46%] women, 923 [80%] with diabetes), 1118 (97%) completed the trial. Enrollment was stopped for futility based on prespecified interim analysis criteria. During treatment, the mean blood glucose level was 118 mg/dL (6.6 mmol/L) in the intensive treatment group and 179 mg/dL (9.9 mmol/L) in the standard treatment group. A favorable outcome occurred in 119 of 581 patients (20.5%) in the intensive treatment group and in 123 of 570 patients (21.6%) in the standard treatment group (adjusted relative risk, 0.97 [95% CI, 0.87 to 1.08],P = .55; unadjusted risk difference, −0.83% [95% CI, −5.72% to 4.06%]). Treatment was stopped early for hypoglycemia or other adverse events in 65 of 581 patients (11.2%) in the intensive treatment group and in 18 of 570 patients (3.2%) in the standard treatment group. Severe hypoglycemia occurred only among patients in the intensive treatment group (15/581 [2.6%]; risk difference, 2.58% [95% CI, 1.29% to 3.87%]). Conclusions and Relevance Among patients with acute ischemic stroke and hyperglycemia, treatment with intensive vs standard glucose control for up to 72 hours did not result in a significant difference in favorable functional outcome at 90 days. These findings do not support using intensive glucose control in this setting. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:NCT01369069
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- 2019
7. Efficacy and safety of minimally invasive surgery with thrombolysis in intracerebral haemorrhage evacuation (MISTIE III): a randomised, controlled, open-label, blinded endpoint phase 3 trial
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Daniel F Hanley, Richard E Thompson, Michael Rosenblum, Gayane Yenokyan, Karen Lane, Nichol McBee, Steven W Mayo, Amanda J Bistran-Hall, Dheeraj Gandhi, W Andrew Mould, Natalie Ullman, Hasan Ali, J Ricardo Carhuapoma, Carlos S Kase, Kennedy R Lees, Jesse Dawson, Alastair Wilson, Joshua F Betz, Elizabeth A Sugar, Yi Hao, Radhika Avadhani, Jean-Louis Caron, Mark R Harrigan, Andrew P Carlson, Diederik Bulters, David LeDoux, Judy Huang, Cully Cobb, Gaurav Gupta, Ryan Kitagawa, Michael R Chicoine, Hiren Patel, Robert Dodd, Paul J Camarata, Stacey Wolfe, Agnieszka Stadnik, P Lynn Money, Patrick Mitchell, Rosario Sarabia, Sagi Harnof, Pal Barzo, Andreas Unterberg, Jeanne S Teitelbaum, Weimin Wang, Craig S Anderson, A David Mendelow, Barbara Gregson, Scott Janis, Paul Vespa, Wendy Ziai, Mario Zuccarello, Issam A Awad, Azmil Abdul-Rahim, Amal Abou-Hamden, Michael Abraham, Azam Ahmed, Carlos Alarcon Alba, E. Francois Aldrich, David Altschul, Sepideh Amin-Hanjani, Doug Anderson, Safdar Ansari, David Antezana, Agnieszka Ardelt, Fuat Arikan, Marcelino Baguena, Alexandra Baker, Steven J. Barrer, Kyra J. Becker, Thomas Bergman, Azize Boström, Jamie Braun, Peter Brindley, William C. Broaddus, Robert Brown, Andras Buki, Bing Cao, Ying Cao, Julian Carrion-Penagos, Julio Chalela, Tiffany Chang, Indalecio Moran Chorro, Shakeel Chowdhry, Luisa Corral, Laszlo Csiba, Jason Davies, Alberto Torres Díaz, Colin P. Derdeyn, Michael Diringer, Rachel Dlugash, Robert Ecker, Tracey Economas, Pedro Enriquez, Erzsebet Ezer, Yuhua Fan, Hua Feng, Douglas Franz, W. David Freeman, Matthew Fusco, Walter Galicich, Mary Leigh Gelea, Joshua Goldstein, Alejandro Carrasco Gonzalez, Christina Grabarits, Steven Greenberg, Daryl Gress, Eugene Gu, Christiana Hall, Fernando Muñoz Hernandez, Robert Hoesch, Brian L. Hoh, Jennifer Houser, Rong Hu, Yi Huang, Mohammed Akbar Hussain, Salvatore Insinga, Ashutosh Jadhav, Jennifer Jaffe, Babak S. Jahromi, Jack Jallo, Michael James, Robert F. James, Brian Jankowitz, Esther Jeon, Draga Jichici, Karin Jonczak, Ben Jonker, Nicki Karlen, Naureen Keric, Thomas Kerz, Jared Knopman, Carolyn Koenig, Satish Krishnamurthy, Avinash Kumar, Inam Kureshi, John Laidlaw, Arun Lakhanpal, Julius Gene Latorre, Dana Leifer, James Leiphart, Sarah Lenington, Yunke Li, George Lopez, Darren Lovick, Christianto Lumenta, Jinbiao Luo, Matthew B. Maas, Joel MacDonald, Larami MacKenzie, Vikram Madan, Ryan Majkowski, Otto Major, Rishi Malhorta, Marc Malkoff, Halinder Mangat, Ahmed Maswadeh, Charles Matouk, Kate McArthur, Scott McCaul, Joshua Medow, Geza Mezey, Janet Mighty, David Miller, Krishna K. Mohan, Keith Muir, Lorenzo Muñoz, Peter Nakaji, Alex Nee, Saman Nekoovaght-Tak, Paul Nyquist, Roddy O'Kane, Mohamed Okasha, Cian O'Kelly, Noeleen Ostapkovich, Aditya Pandey, Adrian Parry-Jones, Krissia Rivera Perla, Ania Pollack, Sean Polster, Nader Pouratian, Terry Quinn, Ventatakrishna Rajajee, Kesava Reddy, Mohammed Rehman, Ronald Reimer, Fred Rincon, Igor Rybinnik, Baltasar Sanchez, Lauren Sansing, Michael Schneck, Ludwig Schuerer, David Schul, Jeffrey Schweitzer, David B. Seder, Donald Seyfried, Kevin Sheth, Alejandro Spiotta, Michael Stechison, Katalin Szabo, Gonzalo Tamayo, Krisztian Tanczos, Philipp Taussky, John Terry, Fernando Testai, Kathrine Thomas, Carol B. Thompson, Gregory Thompson, James C. Torner, Huy Tran, Kristi Tucker, Lior Ungar, Panos Varelas, Nataly Montano Vargas, Hartmut Vatter, Chitra Venkatasubramanian, Krista Vermillion, Dennis Vollmer, Yan Wang, Ying Wang, Jiajun Wen, Louis Tony Whitworth, Byron Willis, Myriha Wrencher, Shawn E. Wright, Yongge Xu, Lisa Yanase, Xuxia Yi, Zhiyuan Yu, and Ali Zomorodi
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Catheters ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Clinical trials ,Randomized controlled trial ,Modified Rankin Scale ,law ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Mortalitat ,Humans ,Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures ,Thrombolytic Therapy ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Mortality ,education ,Stroke ,Aged ,Cerebral Hemorrhage ,education.field_of_study ,Intention-to-treat analysis ,business.industry ,Glasgow Coma Scale ,Catèters ,General Medicine ,Odds ratio ,Thrombolysis ,Middle Aged ,Infart cerebral ,medicine.disease ,Intention to Treat Analysis ,Treatment Outcome ,Cerebral infarctio ,Female ,business ,Assaigs clínics - Abstract
Acute stroke due to supratentorial intracerebral haemorrhage is associated with high morbidity and mortality. Open craniotomy haematoma evacuation has not been found to have any benefit in large randomised trials. We assessed whether minimally invasive catheter evacuation followed by thrombolysis (MISTIE), with the aim of decreasing clot size to 15 mL or less, would improve functional outcome in patients with intracerebral haemorrhage. MISTIE III was an open-label, blinded endpoint, phase 3 trial done at 78 hospitals in the USA, Canada, Europe, Australia, and Asia. We enrolled patients aged 18 years or older with spontaneous, non-traumatic, supratentorial intracerebral haemorrhage of 30 mL or more. We used a computer-generated number sequence with a block size of four or six to centrally randomise patients to image-guided MISTIE treatment (1·0 mg alteplase every 8 h for up to nine doses) or standard medical care. Primary outcome was good functional outcome, defined as the proportion of patients who achieved a modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score of 0-3 at 365 days, adjusted for group differences in prespecified baseline covariates (stability intracerebral haemorrhage size, age, Glasgow Coma Scale, stability intraventricular haemorrhage size, and clot location). Analysis of the primary efficacy outcome was done in the modified intention-to-treat (mITT) population, which included all eligible, randomly assigned patients who were exposed to treatment. All randomly assigned patients were included in the safety analysis. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01827046. Between Dec 30, 2013, and Aug 15, 2017, 506 patients were randomly allocated: 255 (50%) to the MISTIE group and 251 (50%) to standard medical care. 499 patients (n=250 in the MISTIE group; n=249 in the standard medical care group) received treatment and were included in the mITT analysis set. The mITT primary adjusted efficacy analysis estimated that 45% of patients in the MISTIE group and 41% patients in the standard medical care group had achieved an mRS score of 0-3 at 365 days (adjusted risk difference 4% [95% CI -4 to 12]; p=0·33). Sensitivity analyses of 365-day mRS using generalised ordered logistic regression models adjusted for baseline variables showed that the estimated odds ratios comparing MISTIE with standard medical care for mRS scores higher than 5 versus 5 or less, higher than 4 versus 4 or less, higher than 3 versus 3 or less, and higher than 2 versus 2 or less were 0·60 (p=0·03), 0·84 (p=0·42), 0·87 (p=0·49), and 0·82 (p=0·44), respectively. At 7 days, two (1%) of 255 patients in the MISTIE group and ten (4%) of 251 patients in the standard medical care group had died (p=0·02) and at 30 days, 24 (9%) patients in the MISTIE group and 37 (15%) patients in the standard medical care group had died (p=0·07). The number of patients with symptomatic bleeding and brain bacterial infections was similar between the MISTIE and standard medical care groups (six [2%] of 255 patients vs three [1%] of 251 patients; p=0·33 for symptomatic bleeding; two [1%] of 255 patients vs 0 [0%] of 251 patients; p=0·16 for brain bacterial infections). At 30 days, 76 (30%) of 255 patients in the MISTIE group and 84 (33%) of 251 patients in the standard medical care group had one or more serious adverse event, and the difference in number of serious adverse events between the groups was statistically significant (p=0·012). For moderate to large intracerebral haemorrhage, MISTIE did not improve the proportion of patients who achieved a good response 365 days after intracerebral haemorrhage. The procedure was safely adopted by our sample of surgeons. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke and Genentech. [Abstract copyright: Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.]
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- 2019
8. Global monitoring in the neurocritical care unit
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David Tirschwell, MCCOY STEPHEN ELI, Halinder Mangat, Stephen Figueroa, DaiWai Olson, David Seder, Giuseppe Citerio, J. Michael Schmidt, Sarah Livesay, Olson, D, Andrew Kofke, W, O'Phelan, K, Gupta, P, Figueroa, S, Smirnakis, S, Leroux, P, Suarez, J, and Citerio, G
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Brain Diseases ,Critical Care ,business.industry ,Less invasive ,Neurointensive care ,Brain monitoring ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Neurophysiological Monitoring ,Unit (housing) ,Electrophysiology, Intracranial pressure, Neurocritical care, Neuroimaging, Neuromonitoring, Neuroprotection ,medicine ,Intracranial pressure monitoring ,Humans ,Neurology (clinical) ,Medical emergency ,State of the science ,Intensive care medicine ,business - Abstract
Effective methods of monitoring the status of patients with neurological injuries began with non-invasive observations and evolved during the past several decades to include more invasive monitoring tools and physiologic measures. The monitoring paradigm continues to evolve, this time back toward the use of less invasive tools. In parallel, the science of monitoring began with the global assessment of the patient’s neurological condition, evolved to focus on regional monitoring techniques, and with the advent of enhanced computing capabilities is now moving back to focus on global monitoring. The purpose of this session of the Second Neurocritical Care Research Conference was to collaboratively develop a comprehensive understanding of the state of the science for global brain monitoring and to identify research priorities for intracranial pressure monitoring, neuroimaging, and neuro-electrophysiology monitoring.
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- 2015
9. Multi-modality Neuro-Monitoring: Conventional Clinical Trial Design
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David Tirschwell, MCCOY STEPHEN ELI, Halinder Mangat, Claude Hemphill, David Seder, Giuseppe Citerio, J. Michael Schmidt, Sarah Livesay, Georgiadis, A, Palesch, Y, Zygun, D, Hemphill, J, Robertson, C, Leroux, P, Suarez, J, and Citerio, G
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Clinical Trials as Topic ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Critical Care ,business.industry ,Clinical study design ,Neurointensive care ,Intracranial pressure, Multi-modal monitoring, Neurocritical care, Randomized controlled trials ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Neurophysiological Monitoring ,Multi modality ,law.invention ,Randomized controlled trial ,Research Design ,law ,medicine ,Humans ,Medical physics ,Neurology (clinical) ,Intensive care medicine ,business - Abstract
Multi-modal monitoring has become an integral part of neurointensive care. However, our approach is at this time neither standardized nor backed by data from randomized controlled trials. The goal of the second Neurocritical Care Research Conference was to discuss research priorities in multi-modal monitoring, what research tools are available, as well as the latest advances in clinical trial design. This section of the meeting was focused on how such a trial should be designed so as to maximize yield and avoid mistakes of the past.
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- 2015
10. External Lumbar Drainage to Reduce ICP in Severe TBI: a Phase 1 Clinical Trial (ELASTIC)
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Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, University of Kansas, The Cleveland Clinic, Weill Medical College of Cornell University, and Halinder Mangat, Director of Research
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- 2024
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