68 results on '"J. Pablo Villablanca"'
Search Results
2. Fatal intracranial hemorrhage from brain AVM in a 7-week-old infant: case report and recent literature review
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Leanna L Huard, Ting Zhang, Harry V. Vinters, Xinhai Robert Zhang, and J. Pablo Villablanca
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Intracranial Arteriovenous Malformations ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Thalamus ,Autopsy ,Radiosurgery ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Seizures ,Humans ,Medicine ,Spontaneous hemorrhage ,Rupture ,Mass/lesion ,business.industry ,Brain ,Infant ,Arteriovenous malformation ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Treatment Outcome ,Pediatric brain ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neurosurgery ,Radiology ,business ,Intracranial Hemorrhages ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Brain arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) are vascular abnormalities that typically present with spontaneous hemorrhage, seizure, or as a mass lesion. Pediatric brain AVMs are rarely diagnosed but carry a higher rate of rupture. We report a 7-week-old infant with rapid fatal intracranial hemorrhage from an undiagnosed brain. AVM confirmed at autopsy. Literature review on pediatric patients who had acute death caused by previously undiagnosed brain AVM from 1992 to 2018 revealed that cerebellum is the most frequent location of such AVMs, followed by thalamus. All the children had extensive intracranial hemorrhage that led to their deterioration despite surgical intervention.
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- 2020
3. Cortical morphometric correlational networks associated with cognitive deficits in first episode schizophrenia
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Kenneth L. Subotnik, Keith H. Nuechterlein, Catalina Raymond, Alex D. Pham, Abby Perschon, Todd A. Tishler, J. Pablo Villablanca, Faizan Anwar, Benjamin M. Ellingson, Talia Oughourlian, Joseph Ventura, and Chencai Wang
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Precuneus ,Neuropsychological Tests ,First episode schizophrenia ,Cortical volume ,Correlation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cognition ,Betweenness centrality ,medicine ,Humans ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Biological Psychiatry ,Fusiform gyrus ,business.industry ,Brain ,medicine.disease ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Schizophrenia ,business ,Cognition Disorders ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Schizophrenia (SCZ) is a chronic cognitive and behavioral disorder associated with abnormal cortical activity during information processing. Several brain structures associated with the seven performance domains evaluated using the MATRICS (Measurement and Treatment Research to Improve Cognition in Schizophrenia) Consensus Cognitive Battery (MCCB) have shown cortical volume loss in first episode schizophrenia (FES) patients. However, the relationship between morphological organization and MCCB performance remains unclear. Therefore, in the current observational study, high-resolution structural MRI scans were collected from 50 FES patients, and the morphometric correlation network (MCN) using cortical volume was established to characterize the cortical pattern associated with poorer MCCB performance. We also investigated topological properties, such as the modularity, the degree and the betweenness centrality. Our findings show structural volume was directly and strongly associated with the cognitive deficits of FES patients in the precuneus, anterior cingulate, and fusiform gyrus, as well as the prefrontal, parietal, and sensorimotor cortices. The medial orbitofrontal, fusiform, and superior frontal gyri were not only identified as the predominant nodes with high degree and betweenness centrality in the MCN, but they were also found to be critical in performance in several of the MCCB domains. Together, these results suggest a widespread cortical network is altered in FES patients and that performance on the MCCB domains is associated with the core pathophysiology of SCZ.
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- 2020
4. Association between cortical volume and gray-white matter contrast with second generation antipsychotic medication exposure in first episode male schizophrenia patients
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Kenneth L. Subotnik, Todd A. Tishler, Catalina Raymond, Won Jong Chwa, Keith H. Nuechterlein, Faizan Anwar, Joseph Ventura, Benjamin M. Ellingson, Cathy Tran, and J. Pablo Villablanca
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Second generation antipsychotics ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Precuneus ,Intracortical myelin ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Cortical volume ,Article ,White matter ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Clinical Research ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Gray Matter ,Mri scan ,Antipsychotic ,Biological Psychiatry ,Psychiatry ,First episode ,Risperidone ,business.industry ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Serious Mental Illness ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,White Matter ,Brain Disorders ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Mental Health ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Right superior ,Cardiology ,Schizophrenia ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug ,Antipsychotic Agents - Abstract
This cross-sectional study examines the differences in cortical volume and gray-to-white matter contrast (GWC) in first episode schizophrenia patients (SCZ) compared to healthy control participants (HC) and in SCZ patients as a function of exposure to second generation antipsychotic medication. We hypothesize 1) SCZ exhibit regionally lower cortical volumes relative to HCs, 2) cortical volume will be greater with longer exposure to second generation antipsychotics prior to the MRI scan, and 3) lower GWC with longer exposure to second generation antipsychotics prior to the MRI scan, suggesting more blurring from greater intracortical myelin. To accomplish this, MRI scans from 71 male SCZ patients treated with second generation oral risperidone and 42 male HCs were examined. 3D T1-weighted MPRAGE images collected at 1.5T were used to estimate cortical volume and GWC by sampling signal intensity at 30% within the cortical ribbon. Average cortical volume and GWC were calculated and compared between SCZ and HC. Cortical volume and GWC in SCZ patients were correlated with duration of medication exposure for the time period prior to the scan. First-episode SCZ patients had significantly lower cortical volume compared to HCs in bilateral temporal, superior and rostral frontal, postcentral gyral, and parahippocampal regions. In SCZ patients, greater cortical volume was associated with (log-transformed) duration of second-generation antipsychotic medication exposure in bilateral precuneus, right lingual, and right superior parietal regions. Lower GWC was correlated with longer duration of medication exposure bilaterally in the superior frontal lobes. In summary, second generation antipsychotics may increase cortical volume and decrease GWC in first episode SCZ patients.
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- 2020
5. Early Blood‐Brain Barrier Disruption after Mechanical Thrombectomy in Acute Ischemic Stroke
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Zhong-Song Shi, Viktor Szeder, Fernando Vinuela, Doojin Kim, David S Liebeskind, Satoshi Tateshima, Latisha K Sharma, Gary Duckwiler, Jeffrey L. Saver, Yince Loh, Noriko Salamon, Lei Feng, J. Pablo Villablanca, Reza Jahan, and Paul M. Vespa
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Brain Ischemia ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Lesion ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Hematoma ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Endovascular treatment ,Stroke ,Acute ischemic stroke ,Aged ,Cerebral Hemorrhage ,Thrombectomy ,Aged, 80 and over ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging Scan ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Mechanical thrombectomy ,Blood-Brain Barrier ,cardiovascular system ,Cardiology ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Blood-brain barrier disruption ,medicine.symptom ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE The impact of blood-brain barrier (BBB) disruption can be detected by intraparenchymal hyperdense lesion on the computed tomography (CT) scan after endovascular stroke therapy. The purpose of this study was to determine whether early BBB disruption predicts intracranial hemorrhage and poor outcome in patients with acute ischemic stroke treated with mechanical thrombectomy. METHODS We analyzed patients with anterior circulation stroke treated with mechanical thrombectomy and identified BBB disruption on the noncontrast CT images immediately after endovascular treatment. Follow-up CT or magnetic resonance imaging scan was performed at 24 hours to assess intracranial hemorrhage. We dichotomized patients into those with moderate BBB disruption versus those with minor BBB disruption and no BBB disruption. We evaluated the association of moderate BBB disruption after mechanical thrombectomy with intracranial hemorrhage and clinical outcomes. RESULTS Moderate BBB disruption after mechanical thrombectomy was found in 56 of 210 patients (26.7%). Moderate BBB disruption was independently associated with higher rates of hemorrhagic transformation (OR 25.33; 95% CI 9.93-64.65; P < .001), parenchymal hematoma (OR 20.57; 95% CI 5.64-74.99; P < .001), and poor outcome at discharge (OR 2.35; 95% CI 1.09-5.07; P = .03). The association of BBB disruption with intracranial hemorrhage remained in patients with successful reperfusion after mechanical thrombectomy. The location of BBB disruption was not associated with intracranial hemorrhage and poor outcome. CONCLUSIONS Moderate BBB disruption is common after mechanical thrombectomy in a quarter of patients with acute ischemic stroke and increases the risk of intracranial hemorrhage and poor outcome.
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- 2018
6. Quantitative Analysis of Neural Foramina in the Lumbar Spine: An Imaging Informatics and Machine Learning Study
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Steven Moran, Alex A. T. Bui, Christine J. Ahn, Matthew D. Edwards, Luke Macyszyn, Diane Villaroman, Christopher P. Ames, Noriko Salamon, Joel Beckett, Mark A. Attiah, J. Pablo Villablanca, Diana Babayan, and Bilwaj Gaonkar
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musculoskeletal diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Imaging informatics ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,business.industry ,Healthy population ,MEDLINE ,musculoskeletal system ,Text mining ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Lumbar ,Networking and Information Technology R&D (NITRD) ,Artificial Intelligence ,medicine ,Biomedical Imaging ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Lumbar spine ,sense organs ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,business ,Original Research - Abstract
PURPOSE: To use machine learning tools and leverage big data informatics to statistically model the variation in the area of lumbar neural foramina in a large asymptomatic population. MATERIALS AND METHODS: By using an electronic health record and imaging archive, lumbar MRI studies in 645 male (mean age, 50.07 years) and 511 female (mean age, 48.23 years) patients between 20 and 80 years old were identified. Machine learning algorithms were used to delineate lumbar neural foramina autonomously and measure their areas. The relationship between neural foraminal area and patient age, sex, and height was studied by using multivariable linear regression. RESULTS: Neural foraminal areas correlated directly with patient height and inversely with patient age. The associations involved were statistically significant (P < .01). CONCLUSION: By using machine learning and big data techniques, a linear model encoding variation in lumbar neural foraminal areas in asymptomatic individuals has been established. This model can be used to make quantitative assessments of neural foraminal areas in patients by comparing them to the age-, sex-, and height-adjusted population averages. © RSNA, 2019 Supplemental material is available for this article.
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- 2019
7. Surgical Replantation of Avulsed Lumbosacral Ventral Roots and Urodynamic Studies in a Rhesus Macaque (Macaca mulatta) Model of Cauda Equina/Conus Medullaris Injury and Repair
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Una Lee, Kari L. Christe, Huiyi H. Chang, Leif A. Havton, Marcus Ohlsson, Jaime H. Nieto, and J. Pablo Villablanca
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biology ,business.industry ,Urodynamic studies ,Cauda equina ,Injury and repair ,Anatomy ,biology.organism_classification ,Conus medullaris ,Rhesus macaque ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Medicine ,Ventral Roots ,business ,Lumbosacral joint ,Surgical Replantation - Published
- 2019
8. Radiographic and Magnetic Resonance Imaging Identification of Thoracolumbar Spine Variants with Implications for the Positioning of the Conus Medullaris in Rhesus Macaques
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Jaime H. Nieto, Marcus Ohlsson, J. Pablo Villablanca, Kari L. Christe, and Leif A. Havton
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musculoskeletal diseases ,0301 basic medicine ,Rib cage ,Histology ,business.industry ,Lumbar vertebrae ,Anatomy ,musculoskeletal system ,Spinal cord ,Vertebra ,Conus medullaris ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Thoracic vertebrae ,medicine ,Spinal canal ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Vertebral column ,Biotechnology - Abstract
The anatomy of the vertebral column in mammals may differ between species and between subjects of the same species, especially with regards to the composition of the thoracolumbar spine. We investigated, using several noninvasive imaging techniques, the thoracolumbar spine of a total of 44 adult rhesus macaques of both genders. Radiographic examination of the vertebral column showed a predominant spine phenotype with 12 rib-bearing thoracic vertebrae and 7 lumbar vertebrae without ribs in 82% of subjects, whereas a subset of subjects demonstrated 13 rib-bearing thoracic vertebrae and 6 lumbar vertebrae without ribs. Computer tomography studies of the thoraco-lumbar spine in two cases with a pair of supernumerary ribs showed facet joints between the most caudal pair of ribs and the associated vertebra, supporting a thoracic phenotype. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies were used to determine the relationship between the lumbosacral spinal cord and the vertebral column. The length of the conus medullaris portion of the spinal cord was 1.5 ± 0.3 vertebral units, and its rostral and caudal positions in the spinal canal were at 2.0 ± 0.3 and 3.6 ± 0.4 vertebral units below the thoracolumbar junction, respectively (n = 44). The presence of a set of supernumerary ribs did not affect the length or craniocaudal position of the conus medullaris, and subjects with13 rib-bearing vertebrae may from a functional or spine surgical perspective be considered as exhibiting12 thoracic vertebrae and an L1 vertebra with ribs. Anat Rec, 300:300-308, 2017. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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- 2016
9. Utilization of Emergent Neuroimaging for Thrombolysis-Eligible Stroke Patients
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Scott Hamilton, Sidney Starkman, J. Pablo Villablanca, Katherine A. Fu, Nerses Sanossian, Adrian M Burgos, Jeffrey L. Saver, Robin Conwit, and David S Liebeskind
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Perfusion scanning ,Thrombolysis ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,medicine.disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neuroimaging ,Interquartile range ,Angiography ,medicine ,Medical imaging ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,business ,Stroke ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
BACKGROUND Advances in diagnostic imaging of stroke include multimodal techniques such as noninvasive angiography and perfusion imaging. We aimed to characterize trends in neuroimaging utilization among acute stroke patients. Utilization of multimodal imaging for acute stroke in the community has remained largely uncharacterized despite its increased adoption at academic medical centers. METHODS We quantified neuroimaging utilization in the emergency department (ED) for 1,700 hyperacute stroke patients presenting
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- 2016
10. pH-weighted molecular MRI in human traumatic brain injury (TBI) using amine proton chemical exchange saturation transfer echoplanar imaging (CEST EPI)
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J. Pablo Villablanca, Martin M. Monti, Ararat Chakhoyan, Catalina Raymond, Benjamin M. Ellingson, David L. McArthur, Azim Laiwalla, Noriko Salamon, Ina B. Wanner, Paul M. Vespa, Jingwen Yao, Courtney Real, David A. Hovda, and Kasra Khatibi
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Traumatic ,Male ,Excitotoxicity ,medicine.disease_cause ,lcsh:RC346-429 ,0302 clinical medicine ,Traumatic brain injury ,Injury - Trauma - (Head and Spine) ,Edema ,Brain Injuries, Traumatic ,TBI ,Acidosis ,screening and diagnosis ,Echo-Planar Imaging ,Glasgow Outcome Scale ,05 social sciences ,Regular Article ,Injuries and accidents ,Middle Aged ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,pH imaging ,3. Good health ,Molecular Imaging ,Detection ,Neurology ,Neurological ,lcsh:R858-859.7 ,Biomedical Imaging ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Protons ,CEST ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Adult ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Ischemia ,Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) ,lcsh:Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,lcsh:Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,Traumatic Head and Spine Injury ,Aged ,business.industry ,Glasgow Coma Scale ,Neurosciences ,medicine.disease ,Hyperintensity ,Brain Disorders ,Brain Injuries ,Injury (total) Accidents/Adverse Effects ,Neurology (clinical) ,Injury - Traumatic brain injury ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Cerebral acidosis is a consequence of secondary injury mechanisms following traumatic brain injury (TBI), including excitotoxicity and ischemia, with potentially significant clinical implications. However, there remains an unmet clinical need for technology for non-invasive, high resolution pH imaging of human TBI for studying metabolic changes following injury. The current study examined 17 patients with TBI and 20 healthy controls using amine chemical exchange saturation transfer echoplanar imaging (CEST EPI), a novel pH-weighted molecular MR imaging technique, on a clinical 3T MR scanner. Results showed significantly elevated pH-weighted image contrast (MTRasym at 3 ppm) in areas of T2 hyperintensity or edema (P, Highlights • Cerebral acidosis is a consequence of traumatic brain injury (TBI) with significant clinical implications. • Amine CEST EPI is a novel pH-weighted molecular MR imaging technique for clinical 3T MR scanners. • Results showed significantly elevated pH-weighted image contrast (MTRasym at 3 ppm) in T2 hyperintense lesions. • This pH-weighted MR contrast correlated with Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), 6 month clinical outcome, and time from initial injury to MRI exam.
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- 2018
11. Selective middle cerebral artery occlusion in the rabbit: Technique and characterization with pathologic findings and multimodal MRI
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Christopher Williams, Benjamin M. Ellingson, Robert J. Harris, Reza Jahan, Sandra Duarte-Vogel, J. Pablo Villablanca, Neal M Rao, Harry V. Vinters, and Dieter R. Enzmann
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0301 basic medicine ,Ischemia ,Infarction ,Fluid-attenuated inversion recovery ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.artery ,Occlusion ,medicine ,Animals ,cardiovascular diseases ,Stroke ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery ,medicine.disease ,Hyperintensity ,Disease Models, Animal ,030104 developmental biology ,Angiography ,Middle cerebral artery ,Rabbits ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background A reliable animal model of ischemic stroke is vital for pre-clinical evaluation of stroke therapies. We describe a reproducible middle cerebral artery (MCA) embolic occlusion in the French Lop rabbit characterized with multimodal MRI and histopathologic tissue analysis. New method Fluoroscopic-guided microcatheter placement was performed in five consecutive subjects with angiographic confirmation of MCA occlusion with autologous clot. Multimodal MRI was obtained prior to occlusion and up to six hours post after which repeat angiography confirmed sustained occlusion. The brain was harvested for histopathologic examination. Results Angiography confirmed successful MCA catheterization and durable (>6 h) MCA occlusion in all animals. There was increase of ADC volume over time and variable final core volume presumably related to individual variation in collateral flow. FLAIR hyperintensity indicative of cytotoxic edema and parenchymal contrast enhancement reflective of blood brain barrier disruption was observed over time. Tissue staining of the ischemic brain showed edema and structural alterations consistent with infarction. Comparison with existing methods This study describes a technique of selective catheterization and embolic occlusion of the MCA in the rabbit with MRI characterization of evolution of ischemia in the model. Conclusions We demonstrate the feasibility of a rabbit model of embolic MCA occlusion with angiographic documentation. Serial MR imaging demonstrated changes comparable to those observed in human ischemic stroke, confirmed histopathologically.
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- 2018
12. Middle cerebral artery geometric features are associated with plaque distribution and stroke
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Wei-Hai Xu, Yao Meng, Ming-Li Li, David S Liebeskind, Harry Trieu, Shan Gao, Yannan Yu, J. Pablo Villablanca, Yu-Yuan Xu, and Feng Feng
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Adult ,Carotid Artery Diseases ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Middle Cerebral Artery ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Asymptomatic ,Magnetic resonance angiography ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.artery ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Distribution (pharmacology) ,Humans ,Stroke ,Aged ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Intracranial Arteriosclerosis ,Plaque, Atherosclerotic ,Ischemic stroke ,Middle cerebral artery ,Cardiology ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
ObjectiveWe aimed to investigate the geometric features of the middle cerebral artery (MCA) and their relevance to plaque distribution and ischemic stroke.MethodsWe reviewed our institutional vessel wall imaging database. Patients with symptomatic MCA atherosclerosis, asymptomatic MCA atherosclerosis, or without MCA atherosclerosis were included. The MCA geometric features, including M1 segment shape and M1 curve orientation, were defined on magnetic resonance angiography. Plaque distribution and other plaque parameters were identified on vessel wall imaging. The association among MCA geometric features, plaque distribution, and ischemic stroke were analyzed.ResultsA total of 977 MCAs were analyzed (87 atherosclerotic symptomatic MCAs, 459 atherosclerotic asymptomatic MCAs, and 431 plaque-free MCAs). Overall, curved M1 segments were the predominant shape across all groups. In 91.1% of curved atherosclerotic MCAs, the plaque involved the inner wall of the curve. Plaque not involving the inner wall was shorter (p < 0.0001) and thinner (p = 0.005) compared to plaque involving the inner wall. Inferior plaque was observed in 39.9% of inferior-oriented M1 curves compared to 21.7% in non–inferior-oriented M1 curves (p < 0.0001). The absence of an inferior-oriented M1 curve (odds ratio 0.45, 95% confidence interval 0.27–0.77) and presence of superior plaque (odds ratio 2.67, 95% confidence interval 1.52–4.67) were independently associated with stroke after adjusting for plaque length and thickness, degree of stenosis, and remodeling ratio.ConclusionsMCA geometric features are associated with plaque distribution and stroke. Our findings provide insight into the vascular pathophysiology of MCA atherosclerosis.
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- 2018
13. Aspiration of sterile post-operative spinal fluid collections using low-dose computed tomography guidance
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Daniel C. Lu, Haydn Hoffman, Christian Geannette, J. Pablo Villablanca, and Tyson Hadduck
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Male ,Weakness ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Percutaneous ,Spinal stenosis ,Radiography ,Computed tomography ,Spinal canal stenosis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Postoperative Complications ,Spinal Stenosis ,Physiology (medical) ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,030222 orthopedics ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Cauda equina ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Spinal cord ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,Surgery, Computer-Assisted ,Drainage ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Sterile postoperative seromas can develop after posterior spinal surgery and cause pain, weakness, and numbness. Management typically involves operative evacuation. We propose that these collections can be managed with percutaneous computed tomography (CT) guided aspiration, potentially saving the patient an additional surgery. Here, we evaluate the safety and efficacy of this approach. Patients who developed symptomatic postoperative seromas within 60 days following surgery for spinal canal stenosis and had stable neurologic exams were considered for CT-guided percutaneous aspiration. To be considered for this approach, patients had to have pre-procedural evidence of radiographic spinal cord or cauda equina compression, hemodynamic stability, and low suspicion for infection. A total of 16 symptomatic collections were aspirated among 15 patients. The mean volume of fluid removed was 32.0 mL. There were no peri- or post-procedural complications. Eight (50%) had resolution or substantial improvement of their symptoms (p = 0.0002 when compared to the null hypothesis). One patient had short interval improvement but return of their initial symptoms 12 h following aspiration, 3/16 (19%) had minimal improvement, and 4/16 (25%) had no change in symptoms. Fluid collections that appeared denser on the pre-procedural CT were associated with retrieval of more sanguineous appearing fluid (p = 0.08). Neither the amount nor quality of fluid aspirated was associated with outcome. We conclude that percutaneous CT-guided aspiration of postoperative seromas is safe and should be considered as an alternative to open surgical evacuation in patients with stable neurologic exams.
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- 2018
14. An integrated, ontology-driven approach to constructing observational databases for research
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William Hsu, Aichi Chien, Nestor R Gonzalez, Päivi Pajukanta, J. Pablo Villablanca, Fernando Vinuela, and Alex A. T. Bui
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Biomedical Research ,Meaningful Use ,Databases, Factual ,Computer science ,Aneurysm, Ruptured ,Ontology (information science) ,computer.software_genre ,Vocabulary ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Image analysis ,User-Computer Interface ,0302 clinical medicine ,Data Mining ,Electronic Health Records ,0303 health sciences ,Database ,Health Services ,Biological Sciences ,Data Accuracy ,3. Good health ,Computer Science Applications ,Retrospective study ,Networking and Information Technology R&D ,Vocabulary, Controlled ,Networking and Information Technology R&D (NITRD) ,Data extraction ,Data analysis ,Controlled ,Comparative effectiveness research ,Biomedical Engineering ,Health Informatics ,Context (language use) ,External Data Representation ,Article ,Databases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Clinical Research ,Information and Computing Sciences ,Genetics ,Humans ,Factual ,Natural Language Processing ,030304 developmental biology ,Human Genome ,Intracranial Aneurysm ,Intracranial aneurysm ,Aneurysm ,Data science ,Ruptured ,Systems Integration ,Biomedical ontology ,Workflow ,Data quality ,Database Management Systems ,Generic health relevance ,computer ,Medical Informatics ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Display Omitted Incomplete and inconsistent data limit the use of observational data in research.An ontology-driven framework is proposed for extracting and representing data.The ontology facilitates standardization, data extraction, and semantic retrieval.Two examples illustrate how the ontology supports the analytic workflow. The electronic health record (EHR) contains a diverse set of clinical observations that are captured as part of routine care, but the incomplete, inconsistent, and sometimes incorrect nature of clinical data poses significant impediments for its secondary use in retrospective studies or comparative effectiveness research. In this work, we describe an ontology-driven approach for extracting and analyzing data from the patient record in a longitudinal and continuous manner. We demonstrate how the ontology helps enforce consistent data representation, integrates phenotypes generated through analyses of available clinical data sources, and facilitates subsequent studies to identify clinical predictors for an outcome of interest. Development and evaluation of our approach are described in the context of studying factors that influence intracranial aneurysm (ICA) growth and rupture. We report our experiences in capturing information on 78 individuals with a total of 120 aneurysms. Two example applications related to assessing the relationship between aneurysm size, growth, gene expression modules, and rupture are described. Our work highlights the challenges with respect to data quality, workflow, and analysis of data and its implications toward a learning health system paradigm.
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- 2015
15. A review of the diagnosis and management of vertebral basilar (posterior) circulation disease
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J. Pablo Villablanca, Satoshi Tateshima, Noriko Salamon, David S Liebeskind, Gary Duckwiler, Neil A. Martin, Reza Jahan, Jeffrey L. Saver, Bryan Yoo, Sidney Starkman, James I. Ausman, Nestor R Gonzalez, Tianyi Niu, Paul M. Vespa, and Manuel Buitrago Blanco
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Gold standard ,Disease ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,medicine.disease ,Collateral circulation ,Thrombosis ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Embolus ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Angiography ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,business ,Stroke ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
We have reviewed the English literature published in the last 70 years on Diseases of the Vertebral Basilar Circulation, or Posterior Circulation Disease (PCD). We have found that errors have been made in the conduct and interpretation of these studies that have led to incorrect approaches to the management of PCD. Because of the difficulty in evaluating the PC, the management of PCD has been incorrectly applied from anterior circulation disease (ACD) experience to PCD. PCD is a common form of stroke affecting 20-40% patients with stroke. Yet, the evidence is strong that the Anterior Circulation (AC) and Posterior Circulations (PC) differ in their pathology, in their clinical presentations, in the rapidity of development of symptoms, in optimal imaging methods, and in available treatments. There appears to be two categories of patients who present with PCD. The first, acute basilar artery occlusion has a more rapid onset. The diagnosis must be made quickly and if imaging proves a diagnosis of Basilar Artery Occlusion (BAO), the treatment of choice is Interventional removal of the basilar artery thrombosis or embolus. The second category of PCD and the most commonly seen PCD disease process presents with non-specific symptoms and early warnings of PCD that now can be related to ischemic events in the entire PC vessels. These warning symptoms and signs occur much earlier than those in the AC. IA angiography is still the gold standard of diagnosis and is superior in definition to MR and CT angiography which are commonly used as a convenient screening imaging tool to evaluate PCD but are both inferior to IA angiography in definition for lesions below 3-4 mm. In at least two reported studies 7T MR angiography appears superior to other imaging modalities and will become the gold standard of imaging of PCD in the future. Medical treatments applied to the ACD have not been proven of value in specific forms of PCD. Interventional therapy was promising but of unproven value in Randomized Controlled Trials (RCT) except for the treatment of Basilar Artery Occlusion (BAO). Surgical revascularization has been proved to be highly successful in patients, who are refractory to medical therapy. These studies have been ignored by the scientific community basically because of an incorrect interpretation of the flawed EC-IC Bypass Trial in 1985 as applying to all stroke patients. Moreover, the EC-IC Bypass Study did not include PCD patients in their study population, but the study results were extrapolated to patients with PCD without any scientific basis. This experience led clinicians to an incorrect bias that surgical treatments are of no value in PCD. Thus, incorrectly, surgical treatments of PCD have not been considered among the therapeutic possibilities for PCD. QMRA is a new quantitative MR technique that measures specific blood flow in extra and intracranial vessels. QMRA has been used to select those patients who may benefit from medical, or interventional, or surgical treatment for PCD based on flow determinations with a high success rate. QMRA accurately predicts the flows in many large and small vessels in the PC and AC and clearly indicates that both circulations are intimately related. From medical and surgical studies, the longer one waits for surgical treatment the higher the risk of a poor outcome results. This observation becomes obvious when the rapidity of development of PCD is compared with ACD. Recent advances in endovascular therapy in the treatment of acute basilar thrombosis is a clear sign that early diagnosis and treatment of PCD will reduce the morbidity and mortality of these diseases. In this review it is evident that there are multiple medical and surgical treatments for PCD depending upon the location of the lesion(s) and the collateral circulation demonstrated. It is clear that the AC and PC have significant differences. With the exception of the large population studies from Oxford England, the reported studies on the management of PCD in the literature represent small selected subsets of the universe of PC diseases, the information from which is not generalizable to the universe of PCD patients. At this point in the history of PCD, there are not large enough databases of similar patients to provide a basis for valid randomized studies, with the exception of the surgical studies. Thus, a high index of suspicion of the early warning symptoms of PCD should lead to a rapid individual clinical assessment of patients selecting those with PCD. Medical, interventional, and/or surgical treatments should be chosen based on knowledge presented in this review. Recording the results in a national Registry on a continuing basis will provide the data that may help advance the management of PCD based on larger data bases of well documented patient information to guide the selection of future therapies for PCD treatments. It is also clear that the management of patients within the complex of diseases that comprise PCD should be performed in centers with expertise in the imaging, medical, interventional and surgical approaches to diseases of the PCD.
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- 2017
16. Quantitative Analysis of Hypoperfusion in Acute Stroke
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Elizabeth A. Krupinski, David S Liebeskind, Arash Meshksar, Kambiz Nael, Bruce M. Coull, and J. Pablo Villablanca
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Adult ,Brain Infarction ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Perfusion Imaging ,Concordance ,Clinical Sciences ,Contrast Media ,Infarction ,Cerebral Revascularization ,Perfusion scanning ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,cerebral revascularization ,Article ,Diffusion ,ASL ,80 and over ,medicine ,Humans ,Stroke ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Neurosciences ,perfusion-weighted MRI ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Retrospective cohort study ,Arteries ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,stroke ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,reperfusion ,Perfusion ,Cerebrovascular Circulation ,Female ,Spin Labels ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Background and Purpose— This study compares the concordance between arterial spin labeling (ASL) and dynamic susceptibility contrast (DSC) for the identification of regional hypoperfusion and diffusion-perfusion mismatch tissue classification using a quantitative method. Methods— The inclusion criteria for this retrospective study were as follows: patients with acute ischemic syndrome with symptom onset 6 sec as the reference. In a subset of patients who were successfully recanalized, the identical analysis was performed and the infarction and hypoperfused lesion volumes were used for paired pre- and posttreatment comparisons. Results— Forty-one patients met our inclusion criteria. Twenty patients underwent successful endovascular revascularization (TICI>2a), resulting in a total of 61 ASL-DSC data pairs for comparison. The hypoperfusion volume on ASL-cerebral blood flow best approximated the DSC-time to peak volume ( r =0.83) in pretreatment group and time to maximum ( r =0.46) after recanalization. Both ASL-cerebral blood flow and DSC-TTP overestimated the hypoperfusion volume compared with time to maximum volume in pretreatment ( F =27.41, P F =8.78, P Conclusions— ASL-cerebral blood flow overestimates the DSC time to maximum hypoperfusion volume and mismatch classification in patients with acute ischemic syndrome. Continued overestimation of hypoperfused volume after recanalization suggests flow pattern and velocity changes in addition to arterial transit delay can affects the performance of ASL.
- Published
- 2013
17. Natural History of Asymptomatic Unruptured Cerebral Aneurysms Evaluated at CT Angiography: Growth and Rupture Incidence and Correlation with Epidemiologic Risk Factors
- Author
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Satoshi Tateshima, Reza Jahan, Neil A. Martin, James Sayre, Nestor R Gonzalez, John G. Frazee, Fernando Vinuela, Gary Duckwiler, and J. Pablo Villablanca
- Subjects
Male ,Statistics as Topic ,Aneurysm, Ruptured ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Risk Factors ,80 and over ,Prevalence ,Tomography ,Cancer ,Aged, 80 and over ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Middle Aged ,Los Angeles ,X-Ray Computed ,Stroke ,Natural history ,Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging ,Disease Progression ,cardiovascular system ,Biomedical Imaging ,Female ,Radiology ,medicine.symptom ,Treatment threshold ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,and over ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Asymptomatic ,Aneurysm ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,cardiovascular diseases ,Aged ,business.industry ,Prevention ,Disease progression ,Neurosciences ,Reproducibility of Results ,Intracranial Aneurysm ,medicine.disease ,Ruptured ,Brain Disorders ,Cerebral Angiography ,Angiography ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business - Abstract
Purpose: To characterize the relationship between aneurysm size and epidemiologic risk factors with growth and rupture by using computed tomographic (CT) angiography. Materials and Methods: In this HIPAA-compliant, institutional review board approved study, patients with known asymptomatic unruptured intracerebral aneurysms were followed up longitudinally with CT angiographic examinations. Growth was defined as an increase in one or more dimensions above the measurement error, and at least 5% volume by using the ABC/2 method. Associations of epidemiologic factors with aneurysm growth and rupture were analyzed by using logistic regression analysis. Intra- and interobserver agreement coefficients for dimension, volume, and growth were evaluated by using the Pearson correlation coefficient and difference of means with 95% confidence intervals, the agreement statistic, and the McNemar χ2. Results: Patients (n = 165) with aneurysms (n = 258) had a mean fol-low- up time of 2.24 years from time of diagnosis. Forty-six of 258 (18%) aneurysms in 38 patients grew larger. Spontaneous rupture occurred in four of 228 (1.8%) intradural aneurysms of average size (6.2 mm). Risk of aneurysm rupture per patient-year was 2.4% (95% CI: 0.5%, 7.12%) with growth and 0.2% (95% CI: 0.006%, 1.22%) without growth (P = .034). There was a 12-fold higher risk of rupture for growing aneurysms (P < .002), with high intra- and interobserver correlation coefficients for size, volume, and growth. Tobacco smoking (3.806, one degree of freedom; P < .015,) and initial size (5.895, two degrees of freedom; P < .051) were independent covariates, predicting 78.4% of growing aneurysms. Conclusion: These results support imaging follow-up of all patients with aneurysms, including those whose aneurysms are smaller than the current 7-mm treatment threshold. Aneurysm growth, size, and smoking were associated with increased rupture risk. © RSNA, 2013.
- Published
- 2013
18. Abnormal Trajectory of Intracortical Myelination in Schizophrenia Implicates White Matter in Disease Pathophysiology and the Therapeutic Mechanism of Action of Antipsychotics
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Jim Mintz, Keith H. Nuechterlein, Todd A. Tishler, Meghan H. Pyle, Joseph Ventura, George Bartzokis, Mher Khanoyan, Po H. Lu, Benjamin M. Ellingson, Laurie R. Casaus, Kenneth L. Subotnik, Lori L. Altshuler, Chandra J. Kirkpatrick, J. Pablo Villablanca, and Erika P. Raven
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Atypical antipsychotic ,Disease ,White matter ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Antipsychotic ,Biological Psychiatry ,Myelin Sheath ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,equipment and supplies ,medicine.disease ,Risperidone ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,White Matter ,Pathophysiology ,030227 psychiatry ,Frontal Lobe ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Frontal lobe ,Schizophrenia ,embryonic structures ,Cardiology ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Antipsychotic Agents - Abstract
Background Postmortem and imaging studies provide converging evidence that the frontal lobe myelination trajectory is dysregulated in schizophrenia (SZ) and suggest that early in treatment, antipsychotic medications increase intracortical myelin (ICM). We used magnetic resonance imaging to examine whether the ICM trajectory in SZ is dysregulated and altered by antipsychotic treatment. Methods We examined 93 subjects with SZ (64 men and 29 women) taking second-generation oral antipsychotics with medication exposures of 0–333 months in conjunction with 80 healthy control subjects (52 men and 28 women). Frontal lobe ICM volume was estimated using a novel dual contrast magnetic resonance imaging method that combines two images that track different tissue components. Results When plotted against oral antipsychotic exposure duration, ICM of subjects with SZ was higher as a function of medication exposure during the first year of treatment but declined thereafter. In the age range examined, ICM of subjects with SZ was lower with increased age, while ICM of healthy control subjects was not. Conclusions In adults with SZ, the relationship between length of exposure to oral second-generation antipsychotics and ICM was positive during the first year of treatment but was negative after this initial period, consistent with suboptimal later adherence after initial adherence. This ICM trajectory resembles clinically observed antipsychotic response trajectory with high rates of remission in the first year followed by progressively lower response rates. The results support postmortem evidence that SZ pathophysiology involves ICM deficits and suggest that correcting these deficits may be an important mechanism of action for antipsychotics.
- Published
- 2016
19. Mechanical thrombectomy for acute ischemic stroke with cerebral microbleeds
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Reza Jahan, Viktor Szeder, Yince Loh, Latisha K Ali, David S Liebeskind, Doojin Kim, Satoshi Tateshima, Jeffrey L. Saver, Paul M. Vespa, Zhong-Song Shi, Nestor R Gonzalez, Noriko Salamon, Fernando Vinuela, Gary Duckwiler, J. Pablo Villablanca, Lei Feng, and Sidney Starkman
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hemorrhage ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Brain Ischemia ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Hematoma ,Modified Rankin Scale ,Clinical Research ,Internal medicine ,Occlusion ,medicine ,80 and over ,Humans ,Acute ischemic stroke ,Stroke ,Cerebral Hemorrhage ,Thrombectomy ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Penumbra ,General Medicine ,Thrombolysis ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Surgery ,Brain Disorders ,Mechanical thrombectomy ,Cerebrovascular Disorders ,Good Health and Well Being ,Cardiology ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
BackgroundThe influence of cerebral microbleeds (CMBs) on post-thrombolytic hemorrhagic transformation (HT) in patients with acute ischemic stroke remains controversial.ObjectiveTo investigate the association of CMBs with HT and clinical outcomes among patients with large-vessel occlusion strokes treated with mechanical thrombectomy.MethodsWe analyzed patients with acute stroke treated with Merci Retriever, Penumbra system or stent-retriever devices. CMBs were identified on pretreatment T2-weighted, gradient-recall echo MRI. We analyzed the association of the presence, burden, and distribution of CMBs with HT, procedural complications, in-hospital mortality, and clinical outcome.ResultsCMBs were detected in 37 (18.0%) of 206 patients. Seventy-three foci of microbleeds were identified. Fourteen patients (6.8%) had ≥2 CMBs, only 1 patient had ≥5 CMBs. Strictly lobar CMBs were found in 12 patients, strictly deep CMBs in 12 patients, strictly infratentorial CMBs in 2 patients, and mixed CMBs in 11 patients. There were no significant differences between patients with CMBs and those without CMBs in the rates of overall HT (37.8% vs 45.6%), parenchymal hematoma (16.2% vs 19.5%), procedure-related vessel perforation (5.4% vs 7.1%), in-hospital mortality (16.2% vs 18.3%), and modified Rankin Scale score 0–3 at discharge. CMBs were not independently associated with HT or in-hospital mortality in patients treated with either thrombectomy or intravenous thrombolysis followed by thrombectomy.ConclusionsPatients with CMBs are not at increased risk for HT and mortality following mechanical thrombectomy for acute stroke. Excluding such patients from mechanical thrombectomy is unwarranted. The risk of HT in patients with ≥5 CMBs requires further study.
- Published
- 2016
20. Utilization of Emergent Neuroimaging for Thrombolysis-Eligible Stroke Patients
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Nerses, Sanossian, Katherine A, Fu, David S, Liebeskind, Sidney, Starkman, Scott, Hamilton, J Pablo, Villablanca, Adrian M, Burgos, Robin, Conwit, and Jeffrey L, Saver
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Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Time Factors ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Neuroimaging ,Middle Aged ,Multimodal Imaging ,California ,Article ,Cerebral Angiography ,Stroke ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Humans ,Female ,Thrombolytic Therapy ,Emergencies ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Magnetic Resonance Angiography ,Aged - Abstract
Advances in diagnostic imaging of stroke include multimodal techniques such as noninvasive angiography and perfusion imaging. We aimed to characterize trends in neuroimaging utilization among acute stroke patients. Utilization of multimodal imaging for acute stroke in the community has remained largely uncharacterized despite its increased adoption at academic medical centers.We quantified neuroimaging utilization in the emergency department (ED) for 1,700 hyperacute stroke patients presenting2 hours after symptom onset who participated in the National Institutes of Health Field Administration of Stroke Therapy-Magnesium (FAST-MAG) study throughout Los Angeles and Orange Counties. FAST-MAG provided no recommendation as to imaging utilization.A total of 1,700 cases were imaged a median (interquartile range [IQR]) of 92 (74-120) minutes after last known well time and 28 (19-41) minutes after ED arrival. The initial scanner used in the ED was computed tomography (CT) in a preponderance of cases (N = 1,612, 95%), with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in 88 cases (5%). CT angiography (CTA) was obtained in 192 (11%) and perfusion CT (CTP) in 91 (5.4%) cases. MRI imaging was universally obtained using diffusion-weighted images, 60% with MR angiography and 33% included perfusion imaging. Rates of concomitant CTA or CTP use increased in the later years of the study from 4% in 2005-2006, 2% in 2007-2008, 8% in 2009-2010, and 26% in 2011-2012 (P for trend.001).Among acute stroke patients, noncontrast CT was the most common initial imaging strategy in clinical practice in the 2005-2012 time period, though use of concomitant CTA grew to one-quarter of cases, suggestive of an upward trend.
- Published
- 2016
21. The hyperdense vessel sign on CT predicts successful recanalization with the Merci device in acute ischemic stroke
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Satoshi Tateshima, Nestor R Gonzalez, Jeffrey L. Saver, Gary Duckwiler, David S Liebeskind, J. Pablo Villablanca, Fernando Vinuela, Michael T. Froehler, and Reza Jahan
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Mechanical Thrombolysis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Article ,Brain Ischemia ,Brain ischemia ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Angioplasty ,medicine ,Humans ,Thrombus ,Stroke ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Stent ,General Medicine ,Thrombolysis ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Stenosis ,Treatment Outcome ,Angiography ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business - Abstract
Background The success of mechanical clot retrieval for acute ischemic stroke may be influenced by the characteristics of the occlusive thrombus. The thrombus can be partly characterized by CT, as the hyperdense vessel sign (HVS) suggests erythrocyte-rich clot whereas fibrin-rich clot may be isodense. We hypothesized that the physical clot characteristics that determine CT density may also determine likelihood of retrieval with the Merci device. Methods We reviewed all acute stroke cases initially imaged with non-contrast CT before attempted Merci clot retrieval at a single center between 2004 and 2010. Each CT was blindly assessed for the presence or absence of the HVS, and post-retrieval angiograms were blindly assessed for reperfusion using the TICI scale. Results Of 67 patients analyzed (mean age 69; median NIHSS 19; 61% female), the HVS was seen in 42, and no HVS was present in 25. Successful recanalization was achieved in 79% of patients with the HVS (33/42), but in only 36% (9/25) of patients without HVS (p=0.001). The HVS was the only significant predictor of recanalization while accounting for age, treatment with IV-tPA, clot location, stroke etiology, time to treatment, and number of retrieval attempts. Conclusion The HVS in acute ischemic stroke was strongly predictive of successful recanalization using the Merci device. The HVS may indicate thrombi that are less adhesive compared with isodense clots that are more resistant to mechanical retrieval. The absence of HVS on pre-treatment CT may thus suggest the need for a more aggressive or alternative therapeutic approach.
- Published
- 2012
22. Blood–brain barrier permeability derangements in posterior circulation ischemic stroke: Frequency and relation to hemorrhagic transformation
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Meng Lee, Michael T. Froehler, Sidney Starkman, Nestor R Gonzalez, David S Liebeskind, Noriko Salamon, Doojin Kim, Gary Duckwiler, Reza Jahan, Bruce Ovbiagele, Fernando Vinuela, Jeffry R. Alger, Qing Hao, Matthew S. Tenser, Satoshi Tateshima, Jeffrey L. Saver, J. Pablo Villablanca, Latisha K Ali, and Paul M. Vespa
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Ischemia ,Infarction ,Vascular permeability ,Revascularization ,Article ,Brain Ischemia ,Capillary Permeability ,Brain ischemia ,Hematoma ,Internal medicine ,medicine.artery ,Vertebrobasilar Insufficiency ,medicine ,Humans ,cardiovascular diseases ,Vertebrobasilar insufficiency ,Aged ,Cerebral Hemorrhage ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Stroke ,Neurology ,Blood-Brain Barrier ,Ischemic Attack, Transient ,Anesthesia ,Middle cerebral artery ,cardiovascular system ,Cardiology ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business - Abstract
article i nfo Background: Early disruption of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) due to severe ischemia can be detected by MRI T2* permeability imaging. In middle cerebral artery (MCA) infarction, pretreatment T2* permeability de- rangements have been found in 22% of patients and are powerful predictors of hemorrhagic transformation after revascularization therapy. The frequency, clinical correlates, and relation to hemorrhagic transformation of permeability derangements in posterior circulation have not been previously explored, and may differ as ischemia volume and collateral status are different between vertebrobasilar and MCA infarcts. Methods: We analyzed clinical and pretreatment MRI data on consecutive patients undergoing recanalization therapy for acute vertebrobasilar ischemia at a medical center November 2001 through September 2009. Pre- treatment MRI permeability images were derived from perfusion source imaging acquisitions. Permeability abnormality was detected as persisting increased signal intensity at later time points in perfusion MRI acqui- sition, indicating local accumulation of contrast caused by BBB leakage. Results: Among the 14 patients meeting study entry criteria, mean age was 71.1 years and median pretreat- ment NIHSS was 20.5. Permeability imaging abnormality was present in 1 of the 14 patients (7%). Among 14 patients, post-treatment parenchymal hematoma occurred in one and more minor degrees of hemorrhagic transformation in four. The one patient with pretreatment permeability abnormality was the patient to de- velop post-treatment parenchymal hematoma (Fisher's exact test, P=0.07). Conclusion: Pretreatment permeability abnormality, an indicator of BBB derangements, is an infrequent finding in acute posterior circulation ischemic stroke and may be associated with an increased risk of parenchymal hematoma development undergoing recanalization therapy.
- Published
- 2012
23. Resuscitation After Prolonged Cardiac Arrest: Role of Cardiopulmonary Bypass and Systemic Hyperkalemia
- Author
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Oliver J. Liakopoulos, Nikola Hristov, Bradley S. Allen, Gerald D. Buckberg, Zhongtuo Tan, Georg Trummer, and J. Pablo Villablanca
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Resuscitation ,Time Factors ,Hyperkalemia ,Swine ,Defibrillation ,medicine.medical_treatment ,law.invention ,law ,medicine ,Cardiopulmonary bypass ,Animals ,Cardiopulmonary resuscitation ,Cardiopulmonary Bypass ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Heart Arrest ,Life support ,Anesthesia ,Ventricular Fibrillation ,Ventricular fibrillation ,Potassium ,Surgery ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Clinical death - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to determine (1) the role of emergency cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) after prolonged cardiac arrest and failed cardiopulmonary resuscitation, and (2) the use of systemic hyperkalemia during CPB to convert intractable ventricular fibrillation (VF).Thirty-one pigs (34 +/- 2 kg) underwent 15 minutes of cardiac arrest after induced VF, followed by 10 minutes of cardiopulmonary resuscitation-advanced life support. Peripheral CPB was used if cardiopulmonary resuscitation failed to restore stable circulation. Damage was assessed by evaluating hemodynamics, biochemical variables (creatine kinase-MB, neuron-specific enolase), neurologic deficit score, and brain magnetic resonance imaging.Cardiopulmonary resuscitation alone was successful in only 19% (6 of 31 pigs). Cardiopulmonary bypass was initiated in 81% of animals (25 of 31 pigs) either for hypotension (5 of 25 pigs) or intractable VF (20 of 25 pigs). Defibrillation was successful in 7 of 20 animals during the first 10 minutes after initiating CPB. Ventricular fibrillation persisted more than 10 minutes in 13 of 20 pigs, and animals were treated either with repeated defibrillation (6 of 13 pigs) or with a potassium bolus (7 of 13 pigs) to induce transient cardiac arrest. Overall survival at 24 hours was 84% with cardiopulmonary resuscitation (100% of pigs with hypotension; 71% in CPB-VF10 minutes). Despite CPB, fatal myocardial failure occurred after VF duration of more than 10 minutes in all pigs treated with electrical defibrillation, whereas hyperkalemia allowed 100% cardioversion and 86% survival. Biochemical variables remained elevated in all groups. Similarly, severe brain injury was present in all animals as confirmed by neurologic deficit score (197 +/- 10) and magnetic resonance imaging.Emergency CPB after prolonged cardiac arrest improves survival and allows systemic hyperkalemia to convert intractable VF, but fails to reduce neurologic damage.
- Published
- 2010
24. 3-T Contrast-Enhanced MR Angiography in Evaluation of Suspected Intracranial Aneurysm: Comparison with MDCT Angiography
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Alex Juncosa, Whitney B. Pope, Gerhard Laub, Léonard Mossaz, J. Pablo Villablanca, J. Paul Finn, and Kambiz Nael
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Adult ,Gadolinium DTPA ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Aneurysm ,medicine ,Humans ,Contrast (vision) ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,cardiovascular diseases ,Mdct angiography ,media_common ,Acceleration factor ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Mr angiography ,Reproducibility of Results ,Intracranial Aneurysm ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,High magnetic field strength ,medicine.disease ,Cerebral Angiography ,Angiography ,cardiovascular system ,Female ,Radiology ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Magnetic Resonance Angiography - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to prospectively evaluate a high-spatial-resolution contrast-enhanced 3-T MR angiography protocol for detection and characterization of intracranial aneurysms and to compare the results with those of MDCT angiography.Forty-one patients with suspected intracranial aneurysm underwent high-spatial-resolution 3D contrast-enhanced MR angiography and CT angiography (CTA). With a generalized autocalibrating partially parallel acquisition algorithm with an acceleration factor of 4 at 3 T, contrast-enhanced MR angiographic images were acquired over 20 seconds with a spatial-resolution of 0.7 x 0.7 x 0.8 mm. CTA images were acquired with a spatial resolution of 0.35 x 0.35 x 0.8 mm on a 16-MDCT scanner in 17 seconds. The images from the two studies were evaluated independently by two neuroradiologists for image quality, presence of aneurysm, and characterization of aneurysm. The dimensions of the aneurysm were measured independently with both techniques.A total of 25 aneurysms were identified with both contrast-enhanced MR angiography and CTA. A comparative analysis of detection and depiction of aneurysms showed excellent interobserver agreement for both contrast-enhanced MR angiography (kappa = 0.81) and CTA (kappa = 0.91) images. There was significant correlation between the techniques for both qualitative assessment of aneurysm depiction (rho = 0.92; 95% CI, 0.88-0.95) and quantitative dimensional measurement of aneurysm size (r = 0.94; 95% CI, 0.92-0.97).Contrast-enhanced MR angiography at 3 T is reliable for evaluation and characterization of intracranial aneurysms. The results are comparable with those of MDCTA.
- Published
- 2008
25. Cervical CT Angiography Comparing Routine Noncontrast and a Late Venous Scan as Masks for Automated Bone Subtraction
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Ernst Klotz, Hendrik Ditt, James Sayre, J. Pablo Villablanca, Stefan G. Ruehm, Michael Lell, and Christoph Panknin
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Patient Motion ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Quality Assurance, Health Care ,Image quality ,Movement ,Carotid arteries ,Bone removal ,Contrast Media ,Image registration ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Vascular Diseases ,cardiovascular diseases ,Aged ,Computed tomography angiography ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,musculoskeletal, neural, and ocular physiology ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Angiography ,Subtraction ,Angiography, Digital Subtraction ,Reproducibility of Results ,Phlebography ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Radiographic Image Enhancement ,Subtraction Technique ,Cervical Vertebrae ,Feasibility Studies ,Radiographic Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted ,Female ,Radiology ,Artifacts ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
Bone subtraction techniques have been shown to enhance cranial computed tomography angiography (CTA). The aims of this study were to assess the feasibility of bone subtraction CTA (BSCTA) in cervical CTA, test whether a late venous CT (LVCT) scan can be used as bone mask instead of a low-dose nonenhanced CT (NECT), and to evaluate the impact of patient motion on image quality.Thirty-six patients underwent BSCTA for the evaluation of the neck vessels with a 64-slice CT system using commercially available software. Eighteen patients had a low-dose NECT scan before CTA, and 18 patients had an LVCT scan after CTA. Subtraction quality for vascular segments was evaluated independently by 2 examiners. Cohen's Kappa was applied to evaluate interobserver reliability, and Wilcoxon signed rank test was used to test for differences between the 2 groups. Motion between the 2 scans was measured and correlated to image quality.BSCTA using both NECT and LVCT scans as masks was successfully applied in all patients. Image quality did not differ significantly between the 2 groups, and interobserver agreement was high (k 0.5-1). Motion between the scans was highest for the jaw and hyoid, and lowest for the upper and lower spine. Decreased image quality on the subtracted images was associated with increased motion for the external carotid and vertebral artery, independent of mask type (P = 0.002-0.04).BSCTA techniques can be successfully applied in the neck. If parenchymal phase imaging is indicated, the LVCT can be used as a bone subtraction mask and diagnostic scan, eg, for tumor imaging.
- Published
- 2008
26. MDCT Angiography for Detection and Quantification of Small Intracranial Arteries: Comparison with Conventional Catheter Angiography
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Michelle C. Omura, Fernando J. Rodriguez, Sonia Dahliwal, James Sayre, Tyler Stockman, J. Pablo Villablanca, and Saman Hazany
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Cardiac Catheterization ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Cerebral arteries ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,cardiovascular diseases ,Aged ,Mdct angiography ,Aged, 80 and over ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,musculoskeletal, neural, and ocular physiology ,Angiography ,Subtraction ,Reproducibility of Results ,General Medicine ,Digital subtraction angiography ,Cerebral Arteries ,Middle Aged ,Radiographic Image Enhancement ,Catheter ,Catheter angiography ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,cardiovascular system ,Radiographic Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted ,Female ,Radiology ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Artery - Abstract
MDCT angiography can serve as an alternative to digital subtraction catheter angiography for the study of large and medium-sized arteries. Our goal was to achieve a better understanding of the capabilities and limitations of both MDCT angiography and digital subtraction angiography in the evaluation of intracranial arteries with an average diameter of 1.5 mm or less.A blinded retrospective analysis of the presence and size of nine small cerebral arteries on both 2D and 3D CT angiography (CTA) was conducted with 27 patients who had normal findings at CTA and digital subtraction angiography. Scans of 455 arterial segments obtained with either 4-MDCT or 16-MDCT were examined by two independent blinded reviewers. The sensitivity and specificity of CTA for each vessel were established. A chi-square test was used to determine interoperator reliability.The smallest arterial size reliably detected with MDCT angiography with our imaging and postprocessing protocol was 0.7 mm versus 0.4 mm for digital subtraction angiography. Interoperator reliability for vessel identification with MDCT angiography was 97% without significant differences in detection rates between 4-MDCT and 16-MDCT. Two-dimensional CTA depicted more than 90% of arteries studied but only 63% of anterior choroidal arteries and 27% of recurrent arteries of Heubner. There were no significant differences in mean arterial sizes measured with 2D CTA versus digital subtraction angiography for six of nine arteries. In six of nine arterial segments with a mean diameter of 1 mm or less, fewer arterial segments were visualized on 3D CTA than on 2D CTA.Except for the recurrent artery of Heubner and the anterior choroidal artery, MDCT angiography depicted 90% or more of all examined small intracranial arteries detected with digital subtraction angiography. The mean sensitivity was 0.91, and the mean specificity was 0.7.
- Published
- 2007
27. Radiographic and Magnetic Resonance Imaging Identification of Thoracolumbar Spine Variants with Implications for the Positioning of the Conus Medullaris in Rhesus Macaques
- Author
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Marcus, Ohlsson, Jaime H, Nieto, Kari L, Christe, J Pablo, Villablanca, and Leif A, Havton
- Subjects
Male ,Lumbar Vertebrae ,Spinal Cord ,Animals ,Female ,Ribs ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Macaca mulatta ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Thoracic Vertebrae - Abstract
The anatomy of the vertebral column in mammals may differ between species and between subjects of the same species, especially with regards to the composition of the thoracolumbar spine. We investigated, using several noninvasive imaging techniques, the thoracolumbar spine of a total of 44 adult rhesus macaques of both genders. Radiographic examination of the vertebral column showed a predominant spine phenotype with 12 rib-bearing thoracic vertebrae and 7 lumbar vertebrae without ribs in 82% of subjects, whereas a subset of subjects demonstrated 13 rib-bearing thoracic vertebrae and 6 lumbar vertebrae without ribs. Computer tomography studies of the thoraco-lumbar spine in two cases with a pair of supernumerary ribs showed facet joints between the most caudal pair of ribs and the associated vertebra, supporting a thoracic phenotype. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies were used to determine the relationship between the lumbosacral spinal cord and the vertebral column. The length of the conus medullaris portion of the spinal cord was 1.5 ± 0.3 vertebral units, and its rostral and caudal positions in the spinal canal were at 2.0 ± 0.3 and 3.6 ± 0.4 vertebral units below the thoracolumbar junction, respectively (n = 44). The presence of a set of supernumerary ribs did not affect the length or craniocaudal position of the conus medullaris, and subjects with13 rib-bearing vertebrae may from a functional or spine surgical perspective be considered as exhibiting12 thoracic vertebrae and an L1 vertebra with ribs. Anat Rec, 300:300-308, 2017. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
- Published
- 2015
28. New Cerebral Microbleeds After Mechanical Thrombectomy for Large-Vessel Occlusion Strokes
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Fernando Vinuela, Lei Feng, Reza Jahan, Satoshi Tateshima, Nestor R Gonzalez, J. Pablo Villablanca, Jeffrey L. Saver, Doojin Kim, Paul M. Vespa, Yince Loh, David S Liebeskind, Gary Duckwiler, Zhong-Song Shi, Viktor Szeder, Noriko Salamon, Latisha K Ali, and Sidney Starkman
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Clinical Sciences ,Observational Study ,Hemorrhage ,Modified Rankin Scale ,Clinical Research ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Occlusion ,80 and over ,Medicine ,Humans ,Stroke ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Thrombectomy ,Aged, 80 and over ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Penumbra ,Microcirculation ,Neurosciences ,Brain ,Retrospective cohort study ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,General Medicine ,Thrombolysis ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Arthritis & Rheumatology ,3. Good health ,Surgery ,Brain Disorders ,Mechanical thrombectomy ,Cardiology ,Female ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
The interval appearance of cerebral microbleeds (CMBs) after endovascular treatment has never been described. We investigated the frequency and predictors of new CMBs that developed shortly after mechanical thrombectomy for acute ischemic stroke, and its impact on clinical outcome. We retrospectively analyzed patients with large-vessel occlusion strokes treated with Merci Retriever, Penumbra System, or stent-retriever devices. Serial T2∗-weighted gradient-recall echo (GRE) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) before and 48 h after endovascular thrombectomy were assessed to identify new CMBs. We examined independent factors associated with new CMBs after mechanical thrombectomy. We analyzed the association of the presence, burden, and distribution of new CMBs with clinical outcome. A total of 187 consecutive patients with serial GRE were enrolled in this study. CMBs were evident in 36 (19.3%) patients before mechanical thrombectomy. New CMBs occurred in 41 (21.9%) patients after mechanical thrombectomy. Of the 68 new CMBs, 45 appeared in the lobar location, 18 in the deep location and 5 in the infratentorial location. The presence of baseline CMBs was associated with new CMBs after mechanical thrombectomy (OR 5.38; 95% CI 2.13–13.59; P
- Published
- 2015
29. 3 T Contrast-Enhanced Magnetic Resonance Angiography for Evaluation of the Intracranial Arteries
- Author
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Ali Nael, J. Pablo Villablanca, Kambiz Nael, Reza Habibi, Gerhard Laub, and J. Paul Finn
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Contrast Media ,computer.software_genre ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Magnetic resonance angiography ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,Voxel ,medicine.artery ,Humans ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,cardiovascular diseases ,Posterior communicating artery ,Aged ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Phlebography ,General Medicine ,Cerebral Arteries ,Middle Aged ,Confidence interval ,Cerebral Angiography ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Middle cerebral artery ,Angiography ,Female ,Radiology ,Tomography ,business ,Cerebellar artery ,Nuclear medicine ,Tomography, Spiral Computed ,computer ,Magnetic Resonance Angiography - Abstract
Purpose: We sought to prospectively evaluate the image quality and visualization of the intracranial arteries using high spatial resolution contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance angiography (CE-MRA) at 3 T and to perform intraindividual comparison with time-of-flight (TOF) MRA and multislice CT angiography (CTA). Materials and Methods: Twelve patients (5 men, 7 women, 37-71 years of age) with suspected cerebrovascular disease prospectively underwent MRA and CTA. MRA was performed on a 3 T MR system, including both 3-dimensional (3D) TOF (Voxel dimension: 0.6 X 0.5 X 0.9 mm 3 in 5 minutes and 40 seconds) and 3D CE-MRA (voxel dimension: 0.7 X 0.7 X 0.8 mm 3 in 20 seconds, using parallel acquisition with an acceleration factor of 4). CTA images were acquired on a 16-slice CT scanner (voxel dimension: 0.35 X 0.35 X 0.8 mm 3 in 17 seconds). The image quality and visualization of up to 26 intracranial arterial segments in each study was evaluated by 2 experienced radiologists. The arterial diameter for selective intracranial arteries was measured independently on each of the 3 studies, and statistical analysis and comparative correlation was performed. Results: A total of 312 arterial segments were examined by CE-MRA, TOF-MRA, and CTA. The majority of intracranial arteries (87%) were visualized with diagnostic image quality on CE-MRA with a significant correlation to TOF (R values = 0.84; 95% confidence interval 0.79-0.86, P < 0.0001), and to CTA (R values = 0.74; 95% confidence interavl 0.68-0.78, P < 0.001). The image quality for small intracranial arteries, including the anterior-inferior cerebellar artery, the posterior communicating artery, and the M3 branch of the middle cerebral artery, was significantly lower on CE-MRA compared with TOF and CTA (P < 0.03). There was a significant correlation for the dimensional measurements of arterial diameters at CE-MRA with TOF (r = 0.88, 95% confidence interval 0.81-0.93), and CTA (r = 0.83, 95% confidence interval 0.73-0.90). Conclusion: The described 3 T CE-MRA protocol, spanning from the cervical to the intracranial vessels, visualized and characterized the majority of intracranial arteries with image quality comparable with that obtained using TOF-MRA and CTA. Further clinical studies are required to establish the accuracy of the technique in a broader clinical setting.
- Published
- 2006
30. High Spatial-Resolution CE-MRA of the Carotid Circulation With Parallel Imaging
- Author
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Whitney B. Pope, Gerhard Laub, J. Pablo Villablanca, Kambiz Nael, Stefan G. Ruehm, J. Paul Finn, and Henrik J. Michaely
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Image quality ,Contrast Media ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Magnetic resonance angiography ,Imaging phantom ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,medicine.artery ,Image noise ,Humans ,Medicine ,Carotid Stenosis ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Superior cerebellar artery ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Observer Variation ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Phantoms, Imaging ,business.industry ,Arterial stenosis ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Atherosclerosis ,Anterior communicating artery ,Carotid Arteries ,Middle cerebral artery ,Female ,Radiology ,Artifacts ,business ,Nuclear medicine ,Magnetic Resonance Angiography - Abstract
Purpose: We sought to evaluate and compare the image quality and vessel delineation of the carotid arteries with high spatial-resolution contrast-enhanced MRA (CE-MRA) at 3.0 T using integrated parallel acquisition (iPAT) with acceleration factors of 2 and 4. Materials and Methods: Using an 8-channel neurovascular array coil, we performed prospective high-spatial resolution CE-MRA at 3.0 T of the head and neck on 24 patients (11 men, 13 women, ages 37-89) with suspected arterio-occlusive disease who were assigned randomly to 2 groups. Twelve patients (group A) were examined with a 3D-GRE sequence using iPAT with acceleration factor of 2. For the next 12 patients (group B) a near-identical sequence with an acceleration factor of 4 was applied. Higher iPAT factors were used to increase the spatial-resolution while keeping scan time unchanged. Two volunteers were scanned by both protocols. Phantom measurements were performed to assess the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). The presence of artifact, noise, image quality of the arterial segments, and the presence and degree of arterial stenosis were evaluated independently by 2 radiologists. Statistical analysis of data was performed by using Wilcoxon rank sum test and 2-sample Student t test (P < 0.05 was indicative a statistically significant difference). The interobserver variability was tested by kappa coefficient. Results: SNR values were significantly lower when iPAT with acceleration factor of 4 was used (P < 0.001). There was no significant difference between 2 groups in regards to image noise (P = 0.67) and artifact (P = 0.8). Both readers visualized the majority of carotid circulation with good image quality in both groups. For smaller intracranial arteries, such as the second-division of anterior and middle cerebral artery, anterior communicating artery, and superior cerebellar artery, the image quality and vessel delineation was significantly better at an iPAT factor of 4 (P < 0.01). The overall interobserver agreement for both the vessel depiction, and detection of arterial stenoses was higher in group B compared with group A. Conclusion: Use of parallel acquisition techniques with a high acceleration factor (iPAT-4) results in superior depiction of small intracranial arterial segments. Imaging at higher magnetic field strength, in addition to the use of an optimized 8-channel array coil, provides sufficient SNR to support faster parallel acquisition protocols, leading to improved spatial-resolution. More extensive clinical studies are warranted to establish the range of applications and confirm the accuracy of the technique.
- Published
- 2006
31. Aneurysms of the posterior circulation: detection and treatment planning using volume-rendered three-dimensional helical computerized tomography angiography
- Author
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Neil A. Martin, James Sayre, John G. Frazee, Reza Jahan, Adina Achiriolaie, Pierre Gobin, Fernando Vinuela, Parizad Hooshi, J. Pablo Villablanca, and Gary Duckwiler
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurosurgical Procedures ,Patient Care Planning ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,Aneurysm ,McNemar's test ,medicine ,Humans ,Single-Blind Method ,Radiation treatment planning ,Aged ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Subtraction ,Angiography, Digital Subtraction ,Intracranial Aneurysm ,Digital subtraction angiography ,Middle Aged ,Surgical Instruments ,medicine.disease ,Embolization, Therapeutic ,Triage ,Angiography ,Female ,Radiology ,Tomography ,business ,Tomography, Spiral Computed - Abstract
Object. The aim of this study was to determine whether computerized tomography (CT) angiography could be used to identify and characterize aneurysms of the posterior circulation and guide optimal treatment selection, and how data obtained using this method compared with intraoperative findings. Methods. Patients suspected of harboring brain aneurysms underwent CT angiography and digital subtraction (DS) angiography; the results were prospectively interpreted by blinded independent evaluators. All patients with posterior circulation aneurysms were consecutively enrolled in the study. After treatment, neurosurgeons and endovascular therapists evaluated the ability of CT and DS angiography to demonstrate features of the lesions important for triage between treatment options (Wilcoxon signed-rank test) and to allow for coil or clip preselection and complete treatment planning (McNemar test of proportions), while using intraoperative findings as the basis of truth. In 242 patients overall, CT angiography detected 38 aneurysms and two aneurysmal blisters in 32 patients. The sensitivity of CT angiography in revealing posterior circulation aneurysms was 100% compared with DS angiography, with no false-positive results. Furthermore, CT angiography was sufficient as the sole study at triage for 65% of the posterior circulation aneurysms (26 of 40 lesions; p < 0.001), including 62% of the complex lesions (p < 0.001), and permitted coil or clip preselection in 74% of treated cases (20 of 27 cases; p < 0.002). Results of CT angiography revealed information about mural calcification and intraluminal thrombus not available on DS angiography, which affected patient care. Conclusions. In this study population, CT angiography was comparable to DS angiography in the detection and characterization of aneurysms of the posterior circulation. Computerized tomography angiography was used successfully to triage patients between endovascular and neurosurgical treatment options in a significant proportion of cases and permitted treatment planning in more than 70% of treated cases.
- Published
- 2005
32. Intraaneurysmal flow visualization by using phase-contrast magnetic resonance imaging: feasibility study based on a geometrically realistic in vitro aneurysm model
- Author
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Yih Lin Nien, J. Pablo Villablanca, John Grinstead, Yuichi Murayama, Fernando Vinuela, Shantanu Sinha, Satoshi Tateshima, and Kazuo Tanishita
- Subjects
Flow visualization ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Acoustics ,Hemodynamics ,Intracranial Aneurysm ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,In Vitro Techniques ,Laser Doppler velocimetry ,Secondary flow ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Models, Biological ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Visualization ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,Flow (mathematics) ,Flow velocity ,Regional Blood Flow ,Contour line ,Laser-Doppler Flowmetry ,Humans ,Medicine ,Radiology ,business - Abstract
Object. The aim of this study was to evaluate the feasibility of complex intraaneurysmal flow visualization with the currently available phase-contrast magnetic resonance (MR) imaging modality. Methods. A geometrically realistic in vitro aneurysm model, in which detailed flow velocity analysis had already been conducted using laser Doppler velocimetry was used for this in vitro hemodynamic simulation, so that the results of phase-contrast velocity measurements could be compared with the previous reliable results. On a 1.5-tesla unit, three orthogonal components of velocity were obtained using a standard two-dimensional fast low—angle shot flow quantification sequence. Three-dimensional (3D) intraaneurysmal flow structures recorded during one cardiac cycle were depicted in one midsagittal and three axial cross-sectional planes with the aid of gray scale phase-contrast velocity maps. Isovelocity contour maps and secondary flow vectors were also created based on the phase-contrast velocity maps by using MATLAB software. The isovelocity contours in those three axial sections could demonstrate the shapes of inward and outward flow areas and their alternation over one cardiac cycle. The secondary flow vectors demonstrated twin vortices within the outward flow area adjacent to the boundary layer of inward and outward flow in all axial planes. Conclusions. The phase-contrast MR imaging method was able to depict the complex 3D intraaneurysmal flow structures in the in vitro aneurysm model. Detailed 3D intraaneurysmal flow information will be obtainable in vivo after improvements are made in spatial resolution, which is expected in the near future. The capability to visualize intraaneurysmal flow structures directly with the use of noninvasive MR imaging technology will have a positive impact on future clinical practice.
- Published
- 2004
33. Moderate and Severe Traumatic Brain Injury: Epidemiologic, Imaging and Neuropathologic Perspectives
- Author
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J. Pablo Villablanca, Dennis J. Chute, and David L. McArthur
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Traumatic brain injury ,General Neuroscience ,Brain ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Imaging modalities ,Radiography ,Symposium: Traumatic Brain Injury ,Neuroimaging ,Brain Injuries ,medicine ,Humans ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychiatry ,Psychology ,Intensive care medicine - Abstract
This article examines 3 contexts in which moderate or severe traumatic brain injury can be approached. The epidemiologic background of moderate and severe traumatic brain injury is presented, with particular attention paid to new findings from the study of a national hospital inpatient database. We review aspects of neuroimaging and how new imaging modalities can reveal fine detail about traumatic brain injury. Finally we examine the current state of neuropathologic evaluation of, and recent developments in, understanding of the neural disruptions that occur following traumatic brain injury, together with cellular reactions to these disruptions.
- Published
- 2004
34. Validation of Computed Tomographic Middle Cerebral Artery 'Dot' Sign
- Author
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Steven Sykes, Jeffrey L. Saver, Paul M. Vespa, Megan C. Leary, Gary Duckwiler, Jennifer N Llanes, Reza Jahan, Rinat Masamed, Bruce Ovbiagele, Margaret Tremwel, Katrina N Ferguson, Fernando Vinuela, Chelsea S. Kidwell, Kristi J. Gough, Y. Pierre Gobin, J. Pablo Villablanca, and Sidney Starkman
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Middle Cerebral Artery ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Radiography, Interventional ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Severity of Illness Index ,Cohort Studies ,Radiologic sign ,Predictive Value of Tests ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Humans ,cardiovascular diseases ,Thrombus ,Stroke ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Observer Variation ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Thrombosis ,Cerebral Angiography ,Predictive value of tests ,Acute Disease ,Middle cerebral artery ,Angiography ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,Intracranial Thrombosis ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Cerebral angiography - Abstract
Background and Purpose— The middle cerebral artery (MCA) “dot” sign consists of hyperdensity of an arterial structure, seen as a dot in the sylvian fissure. The MCA dot sign has been proposed to indicate thrombosis of M2 or M3 MCA branches, analogous to the hyperdense middle cerebral artery (HMCA) sign indicating M1 thrombosis. The MCA dot sign has not been validated previously against the gold standard of conventional cerebral angiography. Methods— Noncontrast CT scans and immediately subsequent cerebral angiograms from 54 acute stroke patients within 8 hours of symptom onset were analyzed. CT films were inspected for the MCA dot sign and HMCA sign. Vascular findings on CT were compared with findings at angiography. Results— Mean patient age was 71 years; median National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score was 16.5. Mean time from symptom onset to CT was 125 minutes, and that from CT to angiography was 117 minutes. All patients had arterial occlusion at angiography. Of the anterior circulation occlusions, M1 occlusions were noted in 28 patients, isolated M2 in 15, and isolated M3 in 4. One definite MCA dot sign was observed in 16.7% of patients, and an HMCA sign was observed in 13.9%. MCA dot sign performance in predicting the presence of M2 or M3 clot at angiography was as follows: sensitivity 38%, specificity 100%, positive predictive value 100%, negative predictive value 68%, and overall accuracy 73%. Conclusions— The MCA dot sign is a highly specific and moderately sensitive indicator of acute thrombus in the M2/M3 MCA branches, as validated by catheter angiography. The MCA dot sign is a useful additional acute stroke CT marker.
- Published
- 2003
35. Perfusion-Weighted Magnetic Resonance Imaging Thresholds Identifying Core, Irreversibly Infarcted Tissue
- Author
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Y. Pierre Gobin, Fernando Vinuela, Sidney Starkman, Ludy C. Shih, Reza Jahan, Chelsea S. Kidwell, Gary Duckwiler, Jeffrey L. Saver, J. Pablo Villablanca, Jeffry R. Alger, Paul M. Vespa, and Megan C. Leary
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Ischemia ,Infarction ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Severity of Illness Index ,Magnetic resonance angiography ,Central nervous system disease ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Stroke ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Drug Administration Routes ,Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery ,Cerebral Infarction ,Thrombolysis ,Middle Aged ,Perfusion-Weighted Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.disease ,Urokinase-Type Plasminogen Activator ,Tissue Plasminogen Activator ,Acute Disease ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,Perfusion ,Magnetic Resonance Angiography - Abstract
Background and Purpose— Identifying core, irreversibly infarcted tissue and salvageable penumbral tissue is crucial to informed, physiologically guided decision making regarding thrombolytic and other interventional therapies in acute ischemic stroke. Pretreatment perfusion MRI offers promise as a means to differentiate core from penumbral tissues. Methods— Diffusion-perfusion MRIs were performed before treatment and on day 7 in patients undergoing successful vessel recanalization with intra-arterial thrombolytic therapy. Perfusion maps of the time to peak of the residue function (T max ) were generated after deconvolution of an arterial input function. Initial perfusion abnormalities and final infarct regions were outlined by hand. Posttreatment images were coregistered to the pretreatment study. Voxel-by-voxel and volume analyses were performed to identify thresholds of perfusion abnormalities that best predict core, irreversibly infarcted tissue. Results— Fourteen patients (4 men, 10 women) with vessel recanalization were studied. Mean age was 73 years, and median entry National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score was 12. Mean time from symptom onset to start of intra-arterial infusion was 245 minutes and to recanalization was 338 minutes. With a voxel-by-voxel analysis, T max ≥6 and ≥8 seconds (sensitivity, 71% and 53%; specificity, 63% and 80%) correlated most highly with day 7 final infarct. With a volume analysis, T max ≥6 and ≥8 seconds ( r 2 =0.704 and r 2 =0.705) correlated most highly with day 7 final infarct. Conclusions— Perfusion-weighted imaging measures of ischemia severity accurately differentiate irreversibly injured core from penumbral, salvageable tissue. The best threshold for identifying core infarcted tissue is adjusted T max of ≥6 to 8 seconds.
- Published
- 2003
36. In Vitro Measurement of Fluid-Induced Wall Shear Stress in Unruptured Cerebral Aneurysms Harboring Blebs
- Author
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Taku Morino, Yuichi Murayama, Fernando Vinuela, Kiyoe Nomura, J. Pablo Villablanca, Kazuo Tanishita, and Satoshi Tateshima
- Subjects
Middle cerebral artery aneurysm ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,Aneurysm ,Shear stress ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,cardiovascular diseases ,Bleb (cell biology) ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Cardiac cycle ,business.industry ,Angiography ,Intracranial Aneurysm ,Anatomy ,Models, Theoretical ,medicine.disease ,Vasodilation ,Fully developed ,cardiovascular system ,Circle of Willis ,Outflow ,Stress, Mechanical ,Neurology (clinical) ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Background and Purpose— Little attention has been focused on the role of fluid-induced wall shear stress in fully developed cerebral aneurysms. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the alternation and distribution of wall shear stress over 1 cardiac cycle in patients’ aneurysms. Methods— A middle cerebral artery aneurysm and a basilar tip aneurysm with localized outpouching (blebs) in their domes were selected for this study. With the use of a stereo lithography machine, geometrically realistic aneurysm models were created on the basis of 3-dimensional CT angiograms. In vitro shearing velocity measurement was conducted with the use of laser-Doppler velocimetry at multiple points on the aneurysmal wall to calculate the value of wall shear stress. The wall shear stress was documented at multiple points in the aneurysm inflow zone, dome, and outflow zone. Results— Distribution of wall shear stress was not uniform in the aneurysm walls, and particular regions were exposed to relatively high wall shear stress. The wall shear stress changed dynamically throughout 1 cardiac cycle at the point where a high value of wall shear stress was noted. The blebs of both aneurysms were exposed to high wall shear stress. Unlike previous reports in which an ideal spherical aneurysm model was used, the aneurysm inflow zone was not exposed to high shear stress. Conclusions— In vitro aneurysm models based on the patients’ angiograms allowed us to conduct a more realistic evaluation of wall shear stress in the aneurysms harboring blebs. These results provide us with further indications of the correlation of wall shear stress with the natural history of cerebral aneurysms.
- Published
- 2003
37. Three-dimensional helical computerized tomography angiography in the diagnosis, characterization, and management of middle cerebral artery aneurysms: comparison with conventional angiography and intraoperative findings
- Author
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Sylvester Lim, James Sayre, Fernando Vinuela, Neil A. Martin, John G. Frazee, Gary Duckwiler, J. Pablo Villablanca, Reza Jahan, Parizad Hooshi, John R. Bentson, and Y. Pierre Gobin
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Image subtraction ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Cohort Studies ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,Aneurysm ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Humans ,cardiovascular diseases ,Aged ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Vascular disease ,business.industry ,Subtraction ,Angiography, Digital Subtraction ,Intracranial Aneurysm ,Digital subtraction angiography ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Angiography ,Middle cerebral artery ,cardiovascular system ,Female ,Radiology ,Tomography ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business - Abstract
Object. Middle cerebral artery (MCA) aneurysms can be difficult to detect and characterize. The authors describe the utility and impact of helical computerized tomography (CT) angiography for the evaluation of aneurysms in this location, and compare this modality with digital subtraction (DS) angiography and intraoperative findings. Methods. Two hundred fifty-one patients with suspected cerebral aneurysms underwent CT angiography. Two-dimensional multiplanar reformatted images and three-dimensional CT angiograms were examined by two independent readers in a blinded fashion. Results were compared with findings on DS angiograms to determine the relative efficacy of these modalities in the detection and characterization of aneurysms. Questionnaires completed by neurosurgeons and endovascular therapists were used to determine the impact of CT angiograms on aneurysm management. Twenty-eight patients harboring 31 MCA aneurysms and 26 patients without aneurysms were identified using CT angiography. The sensitivity of CT angiography and DS angiography for MCA aneurysms was 97%; both techniques showed 100% specificity. In 76% of evaluations, the CT angiography studies provided information not available on DS angiography examinations. For the characterization of aneurysms, CT angiography was rated superior (72%) or equal (20%) to DS angiography in 92% of cases evaluated (p < 0.001). Computerized tomography angiography was evaluated as the only study needed for patient triage in 82% of cases (p < 0.001), and as the only study needed for treatment planning in 89% of surgically treated (p < 0.001) and in 63% of endovascularly treated cases (p < 0.001). The information acquired on CT angiograms changed the initial treatment plan in 24 (67%) of these 36 complex lesions (p < 0.01). The aneurysm appearance intraoperatively was identical or nearly identical to that seen on CT angiograms in 17 (89%) of 19 of the surgically treated cases. Conclusions. Computerized tomography angiography has unique advantages over DS angiography and is a viable alternative to the latter modality in the diagnosis, triage, and treatment planning in patients with MCA aneurysms.
- Published
- 2002
38. Magnetic Resonance Imaging-guided Neurosurgery in the Magnetic Fringe Fields: The Next Step in Neuronavigation
- Author
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Gregory Rubino, J. Pablo Villablanca, David McGill, Anna Wang-Mathieson, Keyvan Farahani, and Barbara Van de Wiele
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Operating Rooms ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neuronavigation ,Adolescent ,Biopsy ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Neurosurgery ,Surgical Equipment ,Intraoperative MRI ,Magnetics ,Postoperative Complications ,Medical imaging ,Surgical equipment ,Humans ,Medicine ,Medical physics ,Child ,Craniotomy ,Aged ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Brain ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Middle Aged ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Surgery ,Neurosurgical Procedure ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Safety ,business - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: We describe the development of an alternative approach to intraoperative magnetic resonance imaging (iMR)-guided neurosurgery and report our initial experience with 22 craniotomies and 16 brain biopsies. The advantages and disadvantages of each approach are examined. METHODS: An iMR suite houses a 0.2-T open configuration system (Siemens Medical Systems, Erlangen, Germany) and is equipped with anesthetic gases and a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-compatible anesthesia machine and monitor. Standard operating instruments and equipment were tested for safety and compatibility in the magnetic fringe fields surrounding the open MRI system. We then performed brain biopsies and craniotomies in the iMR suite. RESULTS: Standard operating equipment functioned properly in the 0.5- to 10-mT zone and was not affected by the magnet's attractive force. Twenty-two craniotomies and 16 brain biopsies were performed in the interventional suite, using serial intraoperative MRI guidance, without injury to patients or operating room staff. CONCLUSION: Full neurosurgical procedures may be performed in the weak fringe fields surrounding an MRI system, using standard operating room equipment. This approach to iMR-guided neurosurgery offers a significant cost advantage over retrofitting an entire operative suite with MRI-compatible surgical equipment. The surgeon's familiarity with standard equipment and the reliability of the equipment are additional advantages. Neurosurgery in the fringe fields allows the neurosurgeon to utilize serial MRI with a minimum of inconvenience, disruption, and change to the standard neurosurgical procedure. Serial intraoperative imaging to visualize the changes in the brain that are associated with neurosurgical intervention seems to enhance the ability to safely and effectively accomplish neurosurgical goals.
- Published
- 2000
39. Universal Calibration of Surgical Instruments for Spinal Stereotaxy
- Author
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J. E. Masciopinto, J. Pablo Villablanca, Michael J. Saracen, Orin Bloch, J. Patrick Johnson, and Kee D. Kim
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Bone Screws ,ComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISION ,Stereotaxic Techniques ,Software ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,medicine ,Humans ,Instrumentation (computer programming) ,Drill ,business.industry ,Equipment Design ,Surgical Instruments ,Surgery ,Spinal Fusion ,Radionics ,Stereotaxy ,Calibration ,Stereotaxic technique ,Surgical instrument ,Custom software ,Spinal Diseases ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Computer hardware - Abstract
PURPOSE: To describe new software applications and interchangeable instrumentation enabling the use of standard surgical instruments with image-guided systems for stereotactic spinal procedures. CONCEPT: The ability to adapt essentially any surgical instrument for stereotactic procedures will improve the safety and accuracy of image-guided spinal surgery. RATIONALE: Using universal dynamic registration hardware and software, standard surgical instruments are adapted for real-time image-guided surgery. The Radionics Optical Tracking System (Radionics, Inc., Burlington, MA) has custom software applications and universal hardware adaptation devices for spinal stereotaxy that allows the use of standard instruments for intraoperative guidance. An array of light-emitting diodes can be attached to essentially any rigid instrument with a definable tip and can then be calibrated to the system for intraoperative use. Stereotactic guidance of a drill, tap, and screwdriver may improve screw placement accuracy in spinal surgery because every step of the procedure can be monitored in real time. DISCUSSION: Most stereotactic systems have only a standard probe or limited instruments for localization, targeting, and tracking a procedure. The surgeon then resumes the operation using standard surgical instruments without the benefit of image guidance for the key steps of the procedure. Because each surgical step for screw placement in the spine has a potential for error, use of multiple instruments that can be interchanged for real-time image-guided spinal surgery may increase the accuracy and safety of spinal instrumentation procedures. These techniques can also be applied to intracranial image-guided surgery.
- Published
- 1999
40. DIAGNOSTIC IMAGING OF CYSTIC LESIONS IN THE CHILD'S ORBIT
- Author
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Mahmood F. Mafee, J. Pablo Villablanca, and Lawrence M. Kaufman
- Subjects
Diagnostic Imaging ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,Diagnostic tools ,Cystic lesion ,X ray computed ,Orbital Diseases ,Medical imaging ,Humans ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Cyst ,Eye Abnormalities ,Child ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Cysts ,business.industry ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Mr imaging ,eye diseases ,Child, Preschool ,Orbital Neoplasms ,sense organs ,Radiology ,Orbit (control theory) ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Orbit - Abstract
The child's orbit may be involved with a variety of cysts and cyst-like lesions. Such lesions may represent development anomalies of the globe and orbit, acquired lesions of the orbit, or cystic expansions from contiguous structures. CT and MR imaging are important diagnostic tools that aid the ophthalmologist in establishing the correct diagnosis and defining the extent of these cystic lesions.
- Published
- 1998
41. Abstract TP87: Comparative Analysis of 3-Dimensional Rotation Angiography versus 3-Dimensional Computed Tomography Angiography for Intracranial Aneurysm Treatment Detection and Planning
- Author
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Jonathan Park, Noriko Salamon, Gary Duckwiler, Fernando Vinuela, James Sayer, and J Pablo Villablanca
- Subjects
Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
Introduction: 3D Rotational Angiography (3DRA) is the gold standard for intracranial aneurysm (IA) detection, but is invasive and time consuming. While 3DCTA has shown to be sensitive for IA detection, no published studies have compared 3DRA to 3DCTA in guiding clinical management. Our aim was to compare suggested treatment for IA based on 3DRA and 3DCTA vs actual final treatment and outcome. Hypothesis: Management recommendations based on blinded review of 3DRA and 3DCTA for IA do not differ significantly. Methods: Prospective blinded review of contemporaneous 3DRA and 3DCTA was performed for patients with suspected IA. Two interventionalists and two neuroradiologists performed blinded, prospective review of 3DRA or 3DCTA, respectively. IA size, location, and morphology were assessed. After IA characterization, each observer independently recommended optimal therapy (conservative, coil, surgery, combined/other) while blinded to other reviewers’ decisions. Findings were analyzed with Spearman, and agreement coefficient 1 (AC1) inter-rater reliability statistics. Results: 41/52 enrolled patients had IA confirmed by 3DRA (52 IA total). 50/52 (96%) IA were initially identified by 3DCTA (both false negatives seen retrospectively). Average IA sac and neck size measured by 3DRA and 3DCTA correlated closely (p Conclusions: Recommendations for IA treatment based on 3DCTA correlate closely with those based on 3DRA, as well as with actual treatment in a majority of patients. 3DCTA holds promise as a primary imaging tool for IA detection and clinical decision making.
- Published
- 2013
42. Acute stroke: a comparison of different CT perfusion algorithms and validation of ischaemic lesions by follow-up imaging
- Author
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Michael Uder, B. Abels, Bernd Tomandl, J. Pablo Villablanca, and Michael Lell
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Perfusion scanning ,Coronary Angiography ,Statistics, Nonparametric ,Brain Ischemia ,Lesion ,Predictive Value of Tests ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Thrombolytic Therapy ,Least-Squares Analysis ,Stroke ,Neuroradiology ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Penumbra ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Predictive value of tests ,Angiography ,Radiographic Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted ,Female ,Radiology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Algorithm ,Algorithms ,Software - Abstract
To compare ischaemic lesions predicted by different CT perfusion (CTP) post-processing techniques and validate CTP lesions compared with final lesion size in stroke patients. Fifty patients underwent CT, CTP and CT angiography. Quantitative values and colour maps were calculated using least mean square deconvolution (LMSD), maximum slope (MS) and conventional singular value decomposition deconvolution (SVDD) algorithms. Quantitative results, core/penumbra lesion sizes and Alberta Stroke Programme Early CT Score (ASPECTS) were compared among the algorithms; lesion sizes and ASPECTS were compared with final lesions on follow-up MRI + MRA or CT + CTA as a reference standard, accounting for recanalisation status. Differences in quantitative values and lesion sizes were statistically significant, but therapeutic decisions based on ASPECTS and core/penumbra ratios would have been the same in all cases. CTP lesion sizes were highly predictive of final infarct size: Coefficients of determination (R 2) for CTP versus follow-up lesion sizes in the recanalisation group were 0.87, 0.82 and 0.61 (P
- Published
- 2012
43. Peak skin and eye lens radiation dose from brain perfusion CT based on Monte Carlo simulation
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M Khatonabadi, J. Pablo Villablanca, Maria Zankl, Chris H. Cagnon, John J. DeMarco, Donna M. Stevens, Dianna D. Cody, Cynthia H. McCollough, Michael F. McNitt-Gray, D Zhang, and A Turner
- Subjects
Scanner ,genetic structures ,Monte Carlo method ,Perfusion scanning ,Radiation Dosage ,Article ,law.invention ,Clinical Protocols ,law ,Lens, Crystalline ,Humans ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Radiation Injuries ,Radiometry ,Eye lens ,Skin ,Phantoms, Imaging ,business.industry ,Radiation dose ,Brain ,General Medicine ,Lens (optics) ,Tilt (optics) ,CT perfusion ,eye lens dose ,Monte Carlo simulation ,radiation dose ,skin dose ,Tomography ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Nuclear medicine ,Monte Carlo Method - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of our study was to accurately estimate the radiation dose to skin and the eye lens from clinical CT brain perfusion studies, investigate how well scanner output (expressed as volume CT dose index [CTDI(vol)]) matches these estimated doses, and investigate the efficacy of eye lens dose reduction techniques. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Peak skin dose and eye lens dose were estimated using Monte Carlo simulation methods on a voxelized patient model and 64-MDCT scanners from four major manufacturers. A range of clinical protocols was evaluated. CTDI(vol) for each scanner was obtained from the scanner console. Dose reduction to the eye lens was evaluated for various gantry tilt angles as well as scan locations. RESULTS: Peak skin dose and eye lens dose ranged from 81 mGy to 348 mGy, depending on the scanner and protocol used. Peak skin dose and eye lens dose were observed to be 66-79% and 59-63%, respectivelAmy, of the CTDI(vol) values reported by the scanners. The eye lens dose was significantly reduced when the eye lenses were not directly irradiated. CONCLUSION: CTDI(vol) should not be interpreted as patient dose; this study has shown it to overestimate dose to the skin or eye lens. These results may be used to provide more accurate estimates of actual dose to ensure that protocols are operated safely below thresholds. Tilting the gantry or moving the scanning region further away from the eyes are effective for reducing lens dose in clinical practice. These actions should be considered when they are consistent with the clinical task and patient anatomy.
- Published
- 2012
44. Association of laterality and size of perfusion lesions on neurological deficit in acute supratentorial stroke
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Meng Lee, Matthew S. Tenser, David S Liebeskind, Doojin Kim, Qing Hao, Bruce Ovbiagele, Jeffrey L. Saver, Noriko Salamon, J. Pablo Villablanca, Latisha K Ali, Sidney Starkman, Jeffry R. Alger, and Michael T. Froehler
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Magnetic resonance angiography ,Article ,Functional Laterality ,Brain Ischemia ,Lesion ,Brain ischemia ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Stroke ,Aged ,Muscle Weakness ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Neurology ,Laterality ,Cardiology ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Psychomotor Disorders ,Psychomotor disorder ,business ,Perfusion ,Magnetic Resonance Angiography - Abstract
Background The influence of lesion size and laterality on each component of the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale has not been delineated. The objective of this study was to use perfusion-weighted imaging to characterize the association of ischaemic volume and laterality on each component item and the total score of the Methods We analysed consecutive right-handed patients with first-ever supratentorial acute ischaemic strokes who underwent acute perfusion-weighted imaging at a single centre. Perfusion deficits were defined as mean transit time > 10 s. Ordinal regression was used to clarify the relationship between ischaemic volume, laterality, and Results Among 111 patients, 58 were left-hemisphere stroke, and 53 right-hemisphere stroke. Median ischaemic volume was 53 ml in left-hand stroke and 65 ml in right-hand stroke and median total National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale was 10 in left-hand stroke and eight in right-hand stroke. For individual National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale items, ischaemic volume correlated most closely with commands and visual field and most weakly with ataxia and neglect. Left-hand stroke predicted higher scores of total National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale and National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale items of questions, commands, right limb weakness, and language. Right-hand stroke predicted higher scores of left limb weakness and extinction. Conclusions Larger perfusion defects contribute to higher scores on the total and most individual items of the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale. However, lesion laterality contributes substantially to half the item scores, with greater association of left than right-brain side. These findings indicate that imaging-deficit correlations will be improved by designating lesions into an atlas, taking into account side in addition to size.
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- 2011
45. CT and MRI early vessel signs reflect clot composition in acute stroke
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Samir H. Shah, Fernando Vinuela, William H. Yong, Satoshi Tateshima, Anna M. Abolian, Jeffrey L. Saver, Doojin Kim, Sidney Starkman, David S Liebeskind, Nerses Sanossian, Harry V. Vinters, Gary Duckwiler, Victor J. Marder, Noriko Salamon, Bruce Ovbiagele, Antonio L. Moya, J. Pablo Villablanca, Michael Tsang, Latisha K Ali, Amytis Towfighi, Chelsea S. Kidwell, David D. Zheng, and Reza Jahan
- Subjects
Blood Platelets ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Erythrocytes ,Infarction ,Article ,Central nervous system disease ,Brain ischemia ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Leukocytes ,Animals ,Humans ,Thrombolytic Therapy ,Thrombus ,Stroke ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Thrombectomy ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Aged, 80 and over ,Fibrin ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Endovascular Procedures ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery ,Thrombosis ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Treatment Outcome ,Tissue Plasminogen Activator ,Models, Animal ,Middle cerebral artery ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Artifacts ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed - Abstract
Background and Purpose— The purpose of this study was to provide the first correlative study of the hyperdense middle cerebral artery sign (HMCAS) and gradient-echo MRI blooming artifact (BA) with pathology of retrieved thrombi in acute ischemic stroke. Methods— Noncontrast CT and gradient-echo MRI studies before mechanical thrombectomy in 50 consecutive cases of acute middle cerebral artery ischemic stroke were reviewed blinded to clinical and pathology data. Occlusions retrieved by thrombectomy underwent histopathologic analysis, including automated quantitative and qualitative rating of proportion composed of red blood cells (RBCs), white blood cells, and fibrin on microscopy of sectioned thrombi. Results— Among 50 patients, mean age was 66 years and 48% were female. Mean (SD) proportion was 61% (±21) fibrin, 34% (±21) RBCs, and 4% (±2) white blood cells. Of retrieved clots, 22 (44%) were fibrin-dominant, 13 (26%) RBC-dominant, and 15 (30%) mixed. HMCAS was identified in 10 of 20 middle cerebral artery stroke cases with CT with mean Hounsfield Unit density of 61 (±8 SD). BA occurred in 17 of 32 with gradient-echo MRI. HMCAS was more commonly seen with RBC-dominant and mixed than fibrin-dominant clots (100% versus 67% versus 20%, P =0.016). Mean percent RBC composition was higher in clots associated with HMCAS (47% versus 22%, P =0.016). BA was more common in RBC-dominant and mixed clots compared with fibrin-dominant clots (100% versus 63% versus 25%, P =0.002). Mean percent RBC was greater with BA (42% versus 23%, P =0.011). Conclusions— CT HMCAS and gradient-echo MRI BA reflect pathology of occlusive thrombus. RBC content determines appearance of HMCAS and BA, whereas absence of HMCAS or BA may indicate fibrin-predominant occlusive thrombi.
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- 2011
46. Engagement of fusiform cortex and disengagement of lateral occipital cortex in the acquisition of radiological expertise
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Jeanette A. Mumford, Erin M. Harley, Dieter R. Enzmann, Robert D. Suh, J. Pablo Villablanca, John C. Mazziotta, Stephen A. Engel, and Whitney B. Pope
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Male ,vision ,genetic structures ,diagnosis ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Visual system ,Pattern Recognition ,Developmental psychology ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Professional Competence ,Face perception ,Physicians ,medicine ,Psychology ,Humans ,Visual Cortex ,Fusiform gyrus ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Cognitive neuroscience of visual object recognition ,Neurosciences ,Experimental Psychology ,Neural Inhibition ,Articles ,Fusiform face area ,Middle Aged ,radiology ,Visual cortex ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,expert ,Cognitive Sciences ,Female ,Occipital Lobe ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Occipital lobe ,Visual ,FFA ,Neuroscience - Abstract
The human visual pathways that are specialized for object recognition stretch from lateral occipital cortex (LO) to the ventral surface of the temporal lobe, including the fusiform gyrus. Plasticity in these pathways supports the acquisition of visual expertise, but precisely how training affects the different regions remains unclear. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging to measure neural activity in both LO and the fusiform gyrus in radiologists as they detected abnormalities in chest radiographs. Activity in the right fusiform face area (FFA) correlated with visual expertise, measured as behavioral performance during scanning. In contrast, activity in left LO correlated negatively with expertise, and the amount of LO that responded to radiographs was smaller in experts than in novices. Activity in the FFA and LO correlated negatively in experts, whereas in novices, the 2 regions showed no stable relationship. Together, these results suggest that the FFA becomes more engaged and left LO less engaged in interpreting radiographic images over the course of training. Achieving expert visual performance may involve suppressing existing neural representations while simultaneously developing others.
- Published
- 2009
47. Supraaortic arteries: contrast material dose reduction at 3.0-T high-spatial-resolution MR angiography--feasibility study
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Anderanik Tomasian, J. Pablo Villablanca, Derek G. Lohan, J. Paul Finn, Noriko Salamon, and Mehdi Jalili
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Adult ,Carotid Artery Diseases ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Contrast Media ,Arterial Occlusive Diseases ,Fibromuscular dysplasia ,Amaurosis Fugax ,Magnetic resonance angiography ,medicine ,Vertebrobasilar Insufficiency ,Fibromuscular Dysplasia ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Vertebrobasilar insufficiency ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Arterial stenosis ,business.industry ,Headache ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Intracranial Aneurysm ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Stroke ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Ischemic Attack, Transient ,Angiography ,Vertigo ,Feasibility Studies ,Female ,Radiology ,Moyamoya Disease ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,Magnetic Resonance Angiography ,Artery - Abstract
To evaluate and compare the diagnostic image quality resulting from three contrast agent dose regimens for 3.0-T high-spatial-resolution three-dimensional magnetic resonance (MR) angiography of the supraaortic arteries.Institutional review board approval was obtained; informed consent was waived for this HIPAA-compliant study. One hundred twenty consecutive patients who underwent 3.0-T three-dimensional high-spatial-resolution contrast material-enhanced MR angiography of the supraaortic arteries with an identical acquisition protocol were assigned to either the high-dose (0.154 mmol per kilogram of body weight), intermediate-dose (0.097 mmol/kg), or low-dose (0.047 mmol/kg) group. Two readers evaluated resulting images for arterial definition, venous contamination, and arterial stenosis. Signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) were evaluated at six consistent sites. Statistical analysis was performed with the Kruskal-Wallis, Wilcoxon signed rank, and analysis of variance tests and the kappa coefficient.Readers 1 and 2 scored vascular definition as excellent or sufficient for diagnosis in 1311 of 1360 segments and in 1313 of 1360 segments in the high-dose group (kappa = 0.73), in 1321 of 1354 and in 1319 of 1354 segments in the intermediate-dose group (kappa = 0.77), and in 1322 of 1350 and in 1320 of 1350 segments in the low-dose group (kappa= 0.66), respectively. Arterial occlusive disease was detected by reader 1 in 52, 27, and 98 segments in the high-, intermediate-, and low-dose groups, respectively. Arterial occlusive disease was detected by reader 2 in 48, 25, and 100 segments in high-, intermediate-, and low-dose groups, respectively. No significant difference existed among the three groups regarding arterial definition scores (reader 1, P = .21; reader 2, P = .25) and venous contamination scores (reader 1, P = .38; reader 2, P = .35). SNRs and CNRs were lower in the low-dose group (P.01).At 3.0 T, high-spatial-resolution MR angiography of the supraaortic arteries can be performed with contrast agent doses as low as 0.047 mmol/kg, without compromising image quality, acquisition speed, or spatial resolution.http://radiology.rsnajnls.org/cgi/content/full/249/3/980/DC1http://radiology.rsnajnls.org/cgi/content/full/249/3/980/DC2.
- Published
- 2008
48. 158 A contrast dose reduction study for 3D high spatial resolution contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance angiography of supra-aortic arteries at 3.0 Tesla
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Mayil S. Krishnam, Noriko Salamon, J. Pablo Villablanca, Anderanik Tomasian, Derek G. Lohan, and J. Paul Finn
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Medicine(all) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,lcsh:Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Magnetic resonance angiography ,lcsh:RC666-701 ,medicine ,High spatial resolution ,Contrast (vision) ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Contrast dose ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,Reduction (orthopedic surgery) ,media_common ,Angiology - Published
- 2008
49. Early neutrophilia is associated with volume of ischemic tissue in acute stroke
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Sidney Starkman, J. Pablo Villablanca, Susan W. Yun, Oh Young Bang, Bruce Ovbiagele, Noriko Salamon, David S Liebeskind, Jeffrey L. Saver, Tannaz Razinia, Latisha K Ali, Doojin Kim, and Brian Buck
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Leukocytosis ,Neutrophils ,Brain Ischemia ,Brain ischemia ,Central nervous system disease ,Leukocyte Count ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,cardiovascular diseases ,Lymphocytes ,Stroke ,Aged ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Aged, 80 and over ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Cerebral infarction ,business.industry ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Neutrophilia ,Quartile ,Acute Disease ,Multivariate Analysis ,Cardiology ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Background and Purpose— Few data exist on the relationship between differential subpopulations of peripheral leukocytes and early cerebral infarct size in ischemic stroke. Using diffusion-weighted MR imaging (DWI), we assessed the relationship of early total and differential peripheral leukocyte counts and volume of ischemic tissue in acute stroke. Methods— All included patents had laboratory investigations and neuroimaging collected within 24 hours of stroke onset. Total peripheral leukocyte counts and differential counts were analyzed individually and by quartiles. DWI lesions were outlined using a semiautomated threshold technique. The relationship between leukocyte quartiles and DWI infarct volumes was examined using multivariate quartile regression. Results— 173 patients met study inclusion criteria. Median age was 73 years. Total leukocyte counts and DWI volumes showed a strong correlation (Spearman rho=0.371, P P for trend P =0.004). After multivariate analysis, larger DWI volume remained strongly associated with higher total leukocyte and neutrophil counts (both probability values P =0.4971). Compared with the lowest quartiles, DWI volumes were 8.7 mL and 12.9 mL larger in the highest quartiles of leukocyte and neutrophil counts, respectively. Conclusions— Higher peripheral leukocyte and neutrophil counts, but not lymphocyte counts, are associated with larger infarct volumes in acute ischemic stroke. Attenuating neutrophilic response early after ischemic stroke may be a viable therapeutic strategy and warrants further study.
- Published
- 2007
50. Intra-aneurysmal hemodynamics in a large middle cerebral artery aneurysm with wall atherosclerosis
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Fernando Vinuela, Kazuo Tanishita, Hiroyoshi Omura, J. Pablo Villablanca, Satoshi Tateshima, Neil A. Martin, and James Sayre
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Cerebral arteries ,Models, Neurological ,Hemodynamics ,Aneurysm ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Shear stress ,Laser-Doppler Flowmetry ,Humans ,cardiovascular diseases ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Vascular disease ,business.industry ,Models, Cardiovascular ,Intracranial Aneurysm ,Laser Doppler velocimetry ,medicine.disease ,Intracranial Arteriosclerosis ,Cerebrovascular Circulation ,Middle cerebral artery ,Angiography ,cardiovascular system ,Surgery ,Vascular Resistance ,sense organs ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,business ,Blood Flow Velocity - Abstract
The remodeling of arterial extra-cellular matrix induced by hemodynamic stimuli is involved in the process of atherosclerosis in the carotid and cerebral arteries. Scarce information is available on the relationship between atherosclerotic changes in brain aneurysms itself and its intra-aneurysmal hemodynamics.Surgical exploration of a large MCA aneurysm depicted extensive atherosclerotic changes in the aneurysm wall. Computational tomographic angiography of this aneurysm was used to create an in vitro aneurysm model. This model was used to perform intra-aneurysmal flow measurement using particle imaging velocimetry and LDV. Intra-aneurysmal hemodynamic pattern with wall shear stress distribution was compared between areas with and without atherosclerotic changes.No high oscillation of wall shear stress was observed on the atherosclerotic plaque area. However, the magnitude of wall shear stress tended to be higher in the area without atherosclerotic changes than the area with those changes (P.001). There was no atherosclerotic change at the aneurysm inflow zone, where relatively fast flow velocity and higher magnitude of wall shear stress was noted.This single case of atherosclerosis in an aneurysm shows some similarity in hemodynamic values observed in cases of carotid atherosclerotic plaques.
- Published
- 2007
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