108 results on '"Mauro, Magoni"'
Search Results
2. Recanalization Therapies for Large Vessel Occlusion Due to Cervical Artery Dissection: A Cohort Study of the EVA-TRISP Collaboration
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Christopher Traenka, Johannes Lorscheider, Christian Hametner, Philipp Baumgartner, Jan Gralla, Mauro Magoni, Nicolas Martinez-Majander, Barbara Casolla, Katharina Feil, Rosario Pascarella, Panagiotis Papanagiotou, Annika Nordanstig, Visnja Padjen, Carlo W. Cereda, Marios Psychogios, Christian H. Nolte, Andrea Zini, Patrik Michel, Yannick Béjot, Andreas Kastrup, Marialuisa Zedde, Georg Kägi, Lars Kellert, Hilde Henon, Sami Curtze, Alessandro Pezzini, Marcel Arnold, Susanne Wegener, Peter Ringleb, Turgut Tatlisumak, Paul J. Nederkoorn, Stefan T. Engelter, and Henrik Gensicke
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cervical artery dissection ,stroke ,endovascular treatment ,thrombolysis ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Background and Purpose This study aimed to investigate the effect of endovascular treatment (EVT, with or without intravenous thrombolysis [IVT]) versus IVT alone on outcomes in patients with acute ischemic stroke (AIS) and intracranial large vessel occlusion (LVO) attributable to cervical artery dissection (CeAD). Methods This multinational cohort study was conducted based on prospectively collected data from the EVA-TRISP (EndoVAscular treatment and ThRombolysis for Ischemic Stroke Patients) collaboration. Consecutive patients (2015–2019) with AIS-LVO attributable to CeAD treated with EVT and/or IVT were included. Primary outcome measures were (1) favorable 3-month outcome (modified Rankin Scale score 0–2) and (2) complete recanalization (thrombolysis in cerebral infarction scale 2b/3). Odds ratios with 95% confidence intervals (OR [95% CI]) from logistic regression models were calculated (unadjusted, adjusted). Secondary analyses were performed in the patients with LVO in the anterior circulation (LVOant) including propensity score matching. Results Among 290 patients, 222 (76.6%) had EVT and 68 (23.4%) IVT alone. EVT-treated patients had more severe strokes (National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score, median [interquartile range]: 14 [10–19] vs. 4 [2–7], P
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- 2023
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3. Characteristics of Early Presenters after Intracerebral Hemorrhage
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Andrea Morotti, Jawed Nawabi, Frieder Schlunk, Loris Poli, Paolo Costa, Federico Mazzacane, Giorgio Busto, Elisa Scola, Francesco Arba, Laura Brancaleoni, Sebastiano Giacomozzi, Luigi Simonetti, Michele Laudisi, Anna Cavallini, Massimo Gamba, Mauro Magoni, Roberto Gasparotti, Alessandro Padovani, Alessandro Pezzini, Andrea Zini, Enrico Fainardi, and Ilaria Casetta
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Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Published
- 2022
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4. Endovascular Treatment in Patients With Acute Ischemic Stroke and Comorbid Cancer: Analysis of the Italian Registry of Endovascular Treatment in Acute Stroke
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Federica Letteri, Giovanni Pracucci, Valentina Saia, Fabrizio Sallustio, Alfredo Paolo Mascolo, Valerio Da Ros, Rossana Tassi, Maurizio Acampa, Sandra Bracco, Alessandro De Vito, Ilaria Casetta, Andrea Saletti, Guido Bigliardi, Stefano Vallone, Marta Iacobucci, Patrizia Nencini, Vanessa Palumbo, Sergio Nappini, Laura Malfatto, Cinzia Finocchi, Lucio Castellan, Simona Sacco, Nicola Giannini, Guido Andrea Lazzarotti, Roberto Cavallo, Chiara Comelli, Adriana Critelli, Nicola Cavasin, Simona Marcheselli, Nunzio Paolo Nuzzi, Mauro Magoni, Roberto Gasparotti, Paolo Invernizzi, Marco Pavia, Angelica Tinelli, Nicola Burdi, Tiziana Tassinari, Riccardo Padolecchia, Marco Petruzzellis, Luigi Chiumarulo, Maria Valeria Saddi, Giovanni Dui, Monia Russo, Pietro Amistà, Andrea Zini, Salvatore Mangiafico, and Danilo Toni
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active cancer ,comorbid cancer ,endovascular treatment ,ischemic stroke ,metastasis ,3‐month functional independence ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Background Acute stroke patients with comorbid cancer (CC) are more preferably addressed with endovascular treatment (EVT) than thrombolytic therapy, due to the presumed potential risk of hemorrhagic transformation and systemic bleeding. This study aims to evaluate clinical and procedural outcomes of acute stroke patients with CC receiving EVT. Methods Using the Italian Registry of Endovascular Treatment in Acute Stroke, we reviewed prospectively collected data of CC patients treated with EVT from 2011 to 2017. Outcome measures were modified Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction score, symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage rate, and 3‐month modified Rankin scale. We also compared CC patients with a control group without cancer (non‐comorbid cancer) receiving EVT and matched the 2 populations with a 1:1 propensity score. Results Out of 4598 stroke patients treated with EVT, 165 (3.6%) had a CC. Modified Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction 2b‐3 was obtained in 73.8% of CC and 74.5% of non‐comorbid cancer patients (P=0.84), whereas the rate of symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage rate was 8.2% and 6.9%, respectively. Three‐month all‐cause mortality was 33.3% in CC patients and 18.6% non‐comorbid cancer patients (P
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- 2023
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5. Tandem occlusions involving the internal carotid and anterior cerebral arteries—A rare form of stroke: Results from the multicenter EVATRISP collaboration study
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Andrei Filioglo, Naaem Simaan, Asaf Honig, Mirjam Heldner, Alessandro Pezzini, Nicolas Martinez-Majander, Visnja Padjen, Philipp Baumgartner, Panagiotis Papanagiotou, Alexander Salerno, Christian Nolte, Annika Nordanstig, Stefan Engelter, Andrea Zini, Marialuisa Zedde, João Pedro Marto, Marcel Arnold, Mauro Magoni, Henrik Gensicke, Jose Cohen, and Ronen Leker
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cerebrovascular disease ,endovascular ,stroke ,thrombectomy ,anterior cerebral artery ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
BackgroundPatients with stroke secondary to isolated anterior cerebral artery (ACA) occlusions have poor outcomes. Whether tandem occlusions (TO) of the extracranial internal carotid (ICA) and the ACA carry even worse outcomes that remain unknown.MethodsPatients with TO involving ICA and ACA occlusions were identified from 14 participating centers from the EndoVascular treatment And ThRombolysis in Ischemic Stroke Patients (EVATRISP) project which is a multicenter, observational, cohort study with prospective accrual of data followed by retrospective data analysis. Patients with isolated ACA stroke served as controls.ResultsIncluded were 92 patients with isolated ACA and 16 patients with ICA-ACA TO stroke. On univariate analyses, patients with TO had more severe strokes on admission [median NIHSS (IQR) 13.5 (9–21) vs. 8 (5–12), p = 0.003] and were more often treated with thrombectomy (81 vs. 40%, p = 0.002). Mortality rates were higher among TO patients (31 vs. 11%, p = 0.03). Rates of favorable functional outcomes were numerically lower among TO patients (38 vs. 60%) but the difference was not statistically significant (p = 0.09). On multivariate analyses, the presence of TO did not modify the chances for favorable outcomes.ConclusionTO stroke with ICA and isolated ACA involvement is rare and results in more severe initial neurological deficits and higher mortality compared to those seen in patients with isolated ACA stroke.
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- 2022
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6. Arterial tortuosity syndrome causing recurrent transient ischemic attacks in young adult: a case report
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Stefano Cotti Piccinelli, Enrico Premi, Sonia Bonacina, Nicola Gilberti, Veronica Vergani, Massimo Gamba, Raffaella Spezi, Ilenia Delrio, Michaël Bernier, Angelo Costa, Marco Ravanelli, Marina Colombi, Roberto Gasparotti, Alessandro Padovani, and Mauro Magoni
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Arterial tortuosity syndrome ,Transient ischemic attack ,Thrombolysis ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Abstract Background Arterial Tortuosity Syndrome (ATS) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder characterized by elongated and tortuous arteries. Although ATS showed a significant clinical and pathophysiological overlap with other syndromes involving connective tissues, only few cases of cerebrovascular events related to this syndrome have been described so far. Case presentation We report the case of a 33-years-old male diagnosed with ATS since childhood, that experienced three sudden episodes of expressive aphasia and right hemiparesis with spontaneous resolution. He was treated with recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (r-TPA) at a dosage of 0.9 mg/kg with a complete recovery. Brain Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) showed the absence of acute ischemic lesions and the patient was diagnosed with recurrent transient ischemic attacks (TIA). Intracranial and supra-aortic trunks Magnetic Resonance Angiography (MRA) and Angio-CT scan of the thoracic and abdominal aorta showed marked vessel tortuosity without stenosis. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of an ATS patient with TIA in young age that was treated with intravenous thrombolysis with recombinant plasminogen activator. Conclusion Our report strengthens the relationship between ATS and juvenile cerebrovascular events, suggesting that an extensive study of body vessels in order to detect potential stenoses or occlusions in these cases is needed. The greater predisposition to cerebrovascular events in ATS could benefit from a more aggressive primary and secondary prevention therapy.
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- 2021
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7. Post COVID-19 vaccination headache: A clinical and epidemiological evaluation
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Giulia Ceccardi, Francesca Schiano di Cola, Marco Di Cesare, Paolo Liberini, Mauro Magoni, Cristiano Perani, Roberto Gasparotti, Renata Rao, and Alessandro Padovani
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COVID-19 ,vaccination ,headache ,SARS-CoV-2 ,migraine ,trigeminovascular complex ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
IntroductionThis study aimed to assess the prevalence and clinical characteristics of headaches, in particular secondary headaches.Materials and MethodsThis observational study was performed at the ASST Spedali Civili of Brescia, Italy. Visits to the Emergency Department (ED) and subsequent hospitalizations regarding a new or worsening headache in the 16 days following the administration of the COVID-19 vaccine between January 2021 and January 2022 were recorded and compared with those of January 2019–January 2020.ResultsThe ratio between ED admissions due to headaches and total ED admissions was significantly higher in 2021 compared with 2019 (4.84% vs. 4.27%; p
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- 2022
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8. Aberrant origin of the occipital artery from the internal carotid artery: utility of the occipital tap maneuver
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Enrico Premi, MD, Andrea Pilotto, MD, Alberto Benussi, MD, Francesca Prandini, MD, Mauro Magoni, MD, and Alessandro Padovani, MD, PhD
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Ascending pharyngeal artery ,Doppler ultrasound ,Occipital artery ,Occipital tap maneuver ,Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
We have described a case of a suspected transient ischemic attack with a double lumen potentially resembling a dissection of the internal carotid artery on Doppler ultrasound. The identification of an arterial branch from the internal carotid artery and flowing near it using magnetic resonance imaging suggested an aberrant origin of an ascending pharyngeal artery or occipital artery. Performance of the occipital tap maneuver in the occipital artery perfusion territory demonstrated a reflected flow in the double lumen, supporting the aberrant origin of the occipital artery from the internal carotid artery. The occipital tap maneuver can represent an easy-to-do procedure to distinguish anatomic variants and study double-lumen findings.
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- 2021
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9. Citicoline Treatment in Acute Ischemic Stroke: A Randomized, Single-Blind TMS Study
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Enrico Premi, Valentina Cantoni, Alberto Benussi, Nicola Gilberti, Veronica Vergani, Ilenia Delrio, Massimo Gamba, Raffaella Spezi, Angelo Costa, Alessandro Padovani, Barbara Borroni, and Mauro Magoni
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stroke ,transcranial magnetic stimulation ,short-latency afferent inhibition (SAI) ,citicoline ,cholinergic system (CS) ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
BackgroundRecent research on animal models of ischemic stroke supports the idea that pharmacological treatment potentially enhancing intrinsic brain plasticity could modulate acute brain damage, with improved functional recovery. One of these new drugs is citicoline, which could provide neurovascular protection and repair effects.ObjectivesThe objective of this randomized, single-blind experimental study was to evaluate whether the treatment with Rischiaril® Forte was able to restore intracortical excitability measures, evaluated through transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) protocols, in patients with acute ischemic stroke.MethodsPatients with acute ischemic stroke were recruited and assigned to an eight-week therapy of standard treatment (control group - CG) or CDP-choline (Rischiaril® Forte, containing 1,000 mg of citicoline sodium salt) added to conventional treatment (treatment group - TG). Each subject underwent a clinical evaluation and neurophysiological assessment using TMS, pretretament and posttreatment.ResultsA total of thirty participants (mean [SD] age, 68.1 [9.6] years; 11 women [37%]) completed the study. We did not observe significant changes in clinical scores after CDP-choline treatment (all p > 0.05), but we observed a significant improvement in short-interval intracortical inhibition (SAI) (p = 0.003) in the TG group compared to the CG group.ConclusionsThe eight-week treatment with citicoline after acute ischemic stroke may restore intracortical excitability measures, which partially depends on cholinergic transmission. This study extends current knowledge of the application of citicoline in acute ischemic stroke.
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- 2022
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10. EndoVAscular treatment and ThRombolysis for Ischemic Stroke Patients (EVA-TRISP) registry: basis and methodology of a pan-European prospective ischaemic stroke revascularisation treatment registry
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Charles B L M Majoie, Martin Bendszus, Patrik Michel, Marcel Arnold, Jan Gralla, Urs Fischer, Jan F Scheitz, Didier Leys, Peter Arthur Ringleb, Daniel Strbian, David J Seiffge, Panagiotis Papanagiotou, George Ntaios, Andreas Kastrup, Ronen R Leker, José E Cohen, Nicolas Bricout, Alex Brehm, Hilde Henon, Zsolt Kulcsar, Turgut Tatlisumak, Alexandros Rentzos, Katarina Jood, Nicolas Martinez-Majander, Alessandro Pezzini, Ashraf Eskandari, Jan Liman, Katharina Feil, Lars Kellert, Markus Möhlenbruch, Georg Bohner, Marios Psychogios, Mauro Magoni, Annika Nordanstig, Andrea Zini, Henrik Gensicke, Sanne M Zinkstok, Sami Curtze, Christian Hametner, Visnja Padjen, Susanne Wegener, Georg Kägi, Christian H Nolte, Jan-Erik Karlsson, Camilla Karlsson, Christopher Traenka, Hebun Erdur, Johannes Weber, Stefan Engelter, Gerli Sibolt, Philippe Lyrer, Merih I Baharoglu, Hakan Sarikaya, Dejana R Jovanovic, Andreas Luft, Kimmo Lappalainen, John Gomori, Ivan Vukasinovic, Vladimir Cvetic, Eftychia Kapsalaki, and Paul J J Nederkoorn
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Medicine - Abstract
Purpose The Thrombolysis in Ischemic Stroke Patients (TRISP) collaboration was a concerted effort initiated in 2010 with the purpose to address relevant research questions about the effectiveness and safety of intravenous thrombolysis (IVT). The collaboration also aims to prospectively collect data on patients undergoing endovascular treatment (EVT) and hence the name of the collaboration was changed from TRISP to EVA-TRISP. The methodology of the former TRISP registry for patients treated with IVT has already been published. This paper focuses on describing the EVT part of the registry.Participants All centres committed to collecting predefined variables on consecutive patients prospectively. We aim for accuracy and completeness of the data and to adapt local databases to investigate novel research questions. Herein, we introduce the methodology of a recently constructed academic investigator-initiated open collaboration EVT registry built as an extension of an existing IVT registry in patients with acute ischaemic stroke (AIS).Findings to date Currently, the EVA-TRISP network includes 20 stroke centres with considerable expertise in EVT and maintenance of high-quality hospital-based registries. Following several successful randomised controlled trials (RCTs), many important clinical questions remain unanswered in the (EVT) field and some of them will unlikely be investigated in future RCTs. Prospective registries with high-quality data on EVT-treated patients may help answering some of these unanswered issues, especially on safety and efficacy of EVT in specific patient subgroups.Future plans This collaborative effort aims at addressing clinically important questions on safety and efficacy of EVT in conditions not covered by RCTs. The TRISP registry generated substantial novel data supporting stroke physicians in their daily decision making considering IVT candidate patients. While providing observational data on EVT in daily clinical practice, our future findings may likewise be hypothesis generating for future research as well as for quality improvement (on EVT). The collaboration welcomes participation of further centres willing to fulfill the commitment and the outlined requirements.
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- 2021
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11. Intravenous fibrinolysis plus endovascular thrombectomy versus direct endovascular thrombectomy for anterior circulation acute ischemic stroke: clinical and infarct volume results
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Massimo Gamba, Nicola Gilberti, Enrico Premi, Angelo Costa, Michele Frigerio, Dikran Mardighian, Veronica Vergani, Raffaella Spezi, Ilenia Delrio, Andrea Morotti, Loris Poli, Valeria De Giuli, Filomena Caria, Alessandro Pezzini, Roberto Gasparotti, Alessandro Padovani, and Mauro Magoni
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Ischemic stroke ,Intravenous thrombolysis ,Endovascular therapy ,Combined therapy ,Large vessels occlusion ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Abstract Background endovascular therapy (ET) is the standard of care for anterior circulation acute ischemic stroke (AIS) caused by large vessel occlusion (LVO). The role of adjunctive intravenous thrombolysis (IVT) in these patients remains unclear. The present study aims to investigate whether IVT followed by ET (CoT, combined therapy) provides additional benefits over direct ET for anterior circulation AIS with LVO. Methods we achieved a single center retrospective study of patients with AIS caused by anterior circulation LVO, referred to our center between January 2014 and January 2017 and treated with ET. Functional recovery (modified Rankin at 3-months follow-up), recanalization rate (thrombolysis in cerebral infarction [TICI] score) and time, early follow-up brain CT scan infarct volume (EFIV) (for recanalized patients only), symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage (sICH) and 3-month mortality were the outcomes of interests. Independent predictors of the outcomes were explored with multivariable logistic regression. Results 145 subjects were included in the study, of whom 70 underwent direct ET and 75 were treated with CoT. Functional independence at 3-months was more frequent in CoT subjects compared to patients who received direct ET (mRS score 0–1: 48.5% vs 18.6%; P
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- 2019
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12. Alterations of frontal-temporal gray matter volume associate with clinical measures of older adults with COVID-19
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Kuaikuai Duan, Enrico Premi, Andrea Pilotto, Viviana Cristillo, Alberto Benussi, Ilenia Libri, Marcello Giunta, H. Jeremy Bockholt, Jingyu Liu, Riccardo Campora, Alessandro Pezzini, Roberto Gasparotti, Mauro Magoni, Alessandro Padovani, and Vince D. Calhoun
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COVID-19 ,Computed tomography ,Gray matter volume ,Frontal-temporal network ,Source-based morphometry ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 ,Neurophysiology and neuropsychology ,QP351-495 - Abstract
COVID-19, the infectious disease caused by the most recently discovered severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2), has become a global pandemic. It dramatically affects people's health and daily life. Neurological complications are increasingly documented for patients with COVID-19. However, the effect of COVID-19 on the brain is less studied, and existing quantitative neuroimaging analyses of COVID-19 were mainly based on the univariate voxel-based morphometry analysis (VBM) that requires corrections for a large number of tests for statistical significance, multivariate approaches that can reduce the number of tests to be corrected have not been applied to study COVID-19 effect on the brain yet. In this study, we leveraged source-based morphometry (SBM) analysis, a multivariate extension of VBM, to identify changes derived from computed tomography scans in covarying gray matter volume patterns underlying COVID-19 in 120 neurological patients (including 58 cases with COVID-19 and 62 patients without COVID-19 matched for age, gender and diseases). SBM identified that lower gray matter volume (GMV) in superior/medial/middle frontal gyri was significantly associated with a higher level of disability (modified Rankin Scale) at both discharge and six months follow-up phases even when controlling for cerebrovascular diseases. GMV in superior/medial/middle frontal gyri was also significantly reduced in patients receiving oxygen therapy compared to patients not receiving oxygen therapy. Patients with fever presented significant GMV reduction in inferior/middle temporal gyri and fusiform gyrus compared to patients without fever. Patients with agitation showed GMV reduction in superior/medial/middle frontal gyri compared to patients without agitation. Patients with COVID-19 showed no significant GMV differences from patients without COVID-19 in any brain region. Results suggest that COVID-19 may affect the frontal-temporal network in a secondary manner through fever or lack of oxygen.
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- 2021
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13. The impact of COVID-19 pandemic on AMI and stroke mortality in Lombardy: Evidence from the epicenter of the pandemic.
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Camillo Rossi, Paolo Berta, Salvatore Curello, Pietro Giorgio Lovaglio, Mauro Magoni, Marco Metra, Aldo Maria Roccaro, Stefano Verzillo, and Giorgio Vittadini
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BackgroundThe first Covid-19 epidemic outbreak has enormously impacted the delivery of clinical healthcare and hospital management practices in most of the hospitals around the world. In this context, it is important to assess whether the clinical management of non-Covid patients has not been compromised. Among non-Covid cases, patients with Acute Myocardial Infarction (AMI) and stroke need non-deferrable emergency care and are the natural candidates to be studied. Preliminary evidence suggests that the time from onset of symptoms to emergency department (ED) presentation has significantly increased in Covid-19 times as well as the 30-day mortality and in-hospital mortality.MethodsWe check, in a causal inference framework, the causal effect of the hospital's stress generated by Covid-19 pandemic on in-hospital mortality rates (primary end-point of the study) of AMI and stroke over several time-windows of 15-days around the implementation date of the State of Emergency restrictions for COVID-19 (March, 9th 2020) using two quasi-experimental approaches, regression-discontinuity design (RDD) and difference-in-regression-discontinuity (DRD) designs. Data are drawn from Spedali Civili of Brescia, one of the most hit provinces in Italy by Covid-19 during March and May 2020.FindingsDespite the potential adverse effects on expected mortality due to a longer time to hospitalization and staff extra-burden generated by the first wave of Covid-19, the AMI and stroke mortality rates are overall not statistically different during the first wave of Covid-19 than before the first peak. The obtained results provided by RDD models are robust also when we account for seasonality and unobserved factors with DRD models.InterpretationThe non-statistically significant impact on mortality rates for AMI and stroke patients provides evidence of the hospital ability to manage -with the implementation of a dual track organization- the simultaneous delivery of high-quality cares to both Covid and non-Covid patients.
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- 2021
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14. Ischaemic cerebral small vessel disease caused by adenosine deaminase 2 deficiency syndrome
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Alessia Giossi, Silvia Clara Giliani, Massimo Gamba, Paola Toniati, Mauro Magoni, and Alessandro Pezzini
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Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2023
15. Cortical Inhibitory Imbalance in Functional Paralysis
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Alberto Benussi, Enrico Premi, Valentina Cantoni, Silvia Compostella, Eugenio Magni, Nicola Gilberti, Veronica Vergani, Ilenia Delrio, Massimo Gamba, Raffaella Spezi, Angelo Costa, Michele Tinazzi, Alessandro Padovani, Barbara Borroni, and Mauro Magoni
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functional neurological disorders ,functional paralysis ,transcranial magnetic stimulation ,short interval intracortical inhibition ,motor threshold ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
BackgroundFunctional neurological disorders are characterized by neurological symptoms that have no identifiable pathology and little is known about their underlying pathophysiology.ObjectivesTo analyze motor cortex excitability and intracortical inhibitory and excitatory circuits’ imbalance in patients with flaccid functional weakness.MethodsTwenty-one consecutive patients with acute onset of flaccid functional weakness were recruited. Single and paired-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) protocols were used to analyze resting motor thresholds (RMT) and intracortical inhibitory (short interval intracortical inhibition – SICI) and excitatory (intracortical facilitation – ICF) circuits’ imbalance between the affected and non-affected motor cortices.ResultsWe observed a significant increase in RMT and SICI in the affected motor cortex (p < 0.001), but not for ICF, compared to the contralateral unaffected side.ConclusionThis study extends current knowledge of functional weakness, arguing for a specific central nervous system abnormality which may be involved in the symptoms’ pathophysiology.
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- 2020
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16. Modulation of long-term potentiation-like cortical plasticity in the healthy brain with low frequency-pulsed electromagnetic fields
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Enrico Premi, Alberto Benussi, Antonio La Gatta, Stefano Visconti, Angelo Costa, Nicola Gilberti, Valentina Cantoni, Alessandro Padovani, Barbara Borroni, and Mauro Magoni
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Long-term potentiation-like cortical plasticity ,Low frequency-pulsed electromagnetic fields ,Diamagnetism ,Neuroplasticity ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 ,Neurophysiology and neuropsychology ,QP351-495 - Abstract
Abstract Background Non-depolarizing magnetic fields, like low frequency-pulsed electromagnetic fields (LF-PEMFs) have shown the ability to modulate living structures, principally by influencing synaptic activity and ion channels on cellular membranes. Recently, the CTU Mega 20 device was presented as a molecular accelerator, using energy up to 200 J and providing high-power (2 Tesla) pulsating fields with a water-repulsive (diamagnetic) action and tissue biostimulation. We tested the hypothesis that LF-PEMFs could modulate long-term corticospinal excitability in healthy brains by applying CTU Mega 20®. Ten healthy subjects without known neurological and/or psychiatric diseases entered the study. A randomized double-blind sham-controlled crossover design was employed, recording TMS parameters (amplitude variation of the motor evoked potential as index of cortical excitability perturbations of the motor system) before (pre) and after (post + 0, + 15, + 30 min) a single CTU Mega 20 session on the corresponding primary right-hand motor area, using a real (magnetic field = 2 Tesla; intensity = 90 J; impulse frequency = 7 Hz; duration = 15 min) or sham device. A two-way repeated measures ANOVA with TIME (pre, post + 0, + 15, + 30 min) and TREATMENT (real vs. sham stimulation) as within-subjects factor was applied. Results A significant TIME × TREATMENT interaction was found (p
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- 2018
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17. Subclinical Vascular Brain Lesions in Young Adults With Acute Ischemic Stroke
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Valeria De Giuli, Mario Grassi, Michele Besana, Marialuisa Zedde, Andrea Zini, Corrado Lodigiani, Simona Marcheselli, Anna Cavallini, Giuseppe Micieli, Maurizia Rasura, Maria Luisa DeLodovici, Giampaolo Tomelleri, Nicoletta Checcarelli, Alberto Chiti, Elisa Giorli, Massimo Del Sette, Lucia Tancredi, Antonella Toriello, Massimiliano Braga, Andrea Morotti, Debora Pezzini, Martina Locatelli, Valentina Mazzoleni, Sonia Bonacina, Massimo Gamba, Mauro Magoni, Rosalba Patella, Alessandra Spalloni, Anna Maria Simone, Rosario Pascarella, Sandro Beretta, Alessandro Padovani, Roberto Gasparotti, Alessandro Pezzini, Nicola Gilberti, Paola Ferrazzi, Elena Banfi, Luca Librè, Elisabetta Traverso, Erika Schirinzi, Federico Carimati, Manuel Cappellari, Giampiero Locatelli, Laura Demelas, Davide Ferrario, Alessandra Persico, Giovanni Orlandi, Manuela Napoli, Claudio Moratti, and Mario Guidotti
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Brain Ischemia ,Brain ischemia ,White matter ,Young Adult ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Myocardial infarction ,Young adult ,Stroke ,Acute ischemic stroke ,Aged ,Ischemic Stroke ,Subclinical infection ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,business.industry ,Brain ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases ,Cardiology ,Brain lesions ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Background: Subclinical vascular brain lesions are highly prevalent in elderly patients with stroke. Little is known about predisposing factors and their impact on long-term outcome of patients with stroke at a young age. Methods: We quantified magnetic resonance-defined subclinical vascular brain lesions, including lacunes and white matter hyperintensities, perivascular spaces and cerebral microbleeds, and assessed total small-vessel disease (SVD) score in patients with first-ever acute ischemic stroke aged 18 to 45 years, and followed them up, as part of the multicentre Italian Project on Stroke in Young Adults. The primary end point was a composite of ischemic stroke, transient ischemic attack, myocardial infarction, or other arterial events. We assessed the predictive accuracy of magnetic resonance features and whether the addition of these markers improves outcome prediction over a validated clinical tool, such as the Italian Project on Stroke in Young Adults score. Results: Among 591 patients (males, 53.8%; mean age, 37.5±6.4 years), 117 (19.8%) had subclinical vascular brain lesions. Family history of stroke was associated with lacunes (odds ratio, 2.24 [95% CI, 1.30–3.84]) and total SVD score (odds ratio, 2.06 [95% CI, 1.20–3.53] for score≥1), hypertension with white matter hyperintensities (odds ratio, 2.29 [95% CI, 1.22–4.32]). After a median follow-up of 36.0 months (25th–75th percentile, 38.0), lacunes and total SVD score were associated with primary end point (hazard ratio, 2.13 [95% CI, 1.17–3.90] for lacunes; hazard ratio, 2.17 [95% CI, 1.20–3.90] for total SVD score ≥1), and the secondary end point brain ischemia (hazard ratio, 2.55 [95% CI, 1.36–4.75] for lacunes; hazard ratio, 2.61 [95% CI, 1.42–4.80] for total SVD score ≥1). The predictive performances of the models, including magnetic resonance features were comparable to those of the random model. Adding individual magnetic resonance features to the Italian Project on Stroke in Young Adults score did not improve model prediction. Conclusions: Subclinical vascular brain lesions affect ≈2 in 10 young adults with ischemic stroke. Although lacunes and total SVD score are associated with thrombotic recurrence, they do not improve accuracy of outcome prediction over validated clinical predictors.
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- 2022
18. Neurological disorders throughout acute SARS-CoV2 infection: a comparative study between vaccinated and non-vaccinated patients
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Viviana Cristillo, Andrea Pilotto, Stefano Cotti Piccinelli, Ilenia Libri, Martina Locatelli, Marcello Giunta, Valentina Mazzoleni, Debora Pezzini, Davide Arici, Stefano Gipponi, Francesca Schiano Cola, Elisabetta Cottini, Massimo Gamba, Mauro Magoni, and Alessandro Padovani
- Abstract
Background The role of vaccination on Covid-19 severity in neurological patients is still unknown. We aim at describing clinical characteristics and outcomes of breakthrough and unvaccinated Covid-19 patients hospitalized for neurological disorders. Methods Two hundred thirty-two Covid-19 patients were admitted to a neuro-Covid Unit form March 2021 to February 2022. Out of the total sample, 74 (32%) were full vaccinated. The prevalence, clinical characteristics and final outcomes of neurological syndromes were compared between vaccinated and unvaccinated cases. Results Breakthrough vaccinated cases were older (years 72.4+16.3 vs 67.0+18.9 years, p=0.029), showed higher pre-admission comorbidity score and Clinical Frailty scale score (4.46+1.6 vs 3.75+2.0, p=0.008) with no differences in terms of disease progression or mortality rate (16.2% vs 15.2%), compared to full-dose vaccinated patients. Cox-regression analysis showed age and NEWS2 score as the variables with a significant relation to mortality between the two groups, independently from pre-morbid conditions and inflammatory response. Conclusion This study on breakthrough COVID-19 infection could help identify vulnerable neurological patients with higher risk of poor outcomes.
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- 2023
19. Unravelling neurotransmitters impairment in Primary Progressive Aphasias
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Enrico Premi, Juergen Dukart, Irene Mattioli, Ilenia Libri, Marta Pengo, Yasmine Gadola, Maria Cotelli, Rosa Manenti, Giuliano Binetti, Stefano Gazzina, Antonella Alberici, Mauro Magoni, Giacomo Koch, Roberto Gasparotti, Alessandro Padovani, and Barbara Borroni
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behavioural disturbances ,History ,positron emission tomography ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,Polymers and Plastics ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,neurotransmitters ,magnetic resonance imaging ,primary progressive aphasia ,Neurology ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neurology (clinical) ,Anatomy ,Business and International Management - Abstract
Primary progressive aphasias (PPAs) are a group of neurodegenerative diseases mainly characterized by language impairment, and with variably presence of dysexecutive syndrome, behavioural disturbances and parkinsonism. Detailed knowledge of neurotransmitters impairment and its association with clinical features hold the potential to develop new tailored therapeutic approaches. In the present study, we applied JuSpace toolbox, which allowed for cross-modal correlation of Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)-based measures with nuclear imaging derived estimates covering various neurotransmitter systems including dopaminergic, serotonergic, noradrenergic, GABAergic and glutamatergic neurotransmission. We included 103 PPA patients and 80 age-matched healthy controls (HC). We tested if the spatial patterns of grey matter volume (GMV) alterations in PPA patients (relative to HC) are correlated with specific neurotransmitter systems. As compared to HC, voxel-based brain changes in PPA were significantly associated with spatial distribution of serotonin, dopamine, and glutamatergic pathways (p p = 0.035) and serotonin transporter (p = 0.020). Moreover, we observed a significant negative correlation between positive behavioural symptoms, as measured with Frontal Behavioural Inventory, and GMV colocalization of D1 receptors (p = 0.007) and serotonin transporter (p
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- 2022
20. Age-dependent effect of susceptibility factors on the risk of intracerebral haemorrhage: Multicenter Study on Cerebral Hemorrhage in Italy (MUCH-Italy)
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Martina Locatelli, Rosa Musolino, Monica Acciarresi, Paolo La Spina, Valentina Saba, Sonia Bonacina, Mauro Magoni, Cristiano Azzini, Mario Grassi, Giovanni de Gaetano, Debora Pezzini, Cinzia Finocchi, Alessandro De Vito, Giampaolo Tomelleri, Domenico Marco Bonifati, Augusto Di Castelnuovo, Giorgio Silvestrelli, Massimo Del Sette, Francesco Grillo, Simona Marcheselli, Corrado Lodigiani, Alfonso Ciccone, Marialuisa Zedde, Andrea Zini, Lucia Princiotta Cariddi, Rocco Salvatore Calabrò, Andrea Morotti, Alessandro Pezzini, Carlo Gandolfo, Marco Ritelli, Massimo Gamba, Licia Iacovello, Anna Cavallini, Giuseppe Martini, Maurizio Paciaroni, Marina Colombi, Maria Luisa DeLodovici, Alberto Chiti, Alessia Giossi, Rossana Tassi, Valentina Mazzoleni, Alessandro Padovani, and Antonella Toriello
- Subjects
Male ,Risk ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Databases, Factual ,Age dependent ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Logistic regression ,cerebrovascular ,stroke ,Stroke risk ,Databases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal medicine ,80 and over ,medicine ,Humans ,Stroke ,Factual ,Aged ,Cerebral Hemorrhage ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Age Factors ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Case-Control Studies ,Female ,Italy ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Quartile ,Multicenter study ,Surgery ,Alcohol intake ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
ObjectiveTo investigate the age-dependent impact of traditional stroke risk factors on the occurrence of intracerebral haemorrhage (ICH).MethodsWe performed a case–control analysis, comparing consecutive patients with ICH with age-matched and sex-matched stroke-free controls, enrolled in the setting of the Multicenter Study on Cerebral Hemorrhage in Italy (MUCH-Italy) between 2002 and 2014 by multivariable logistic regression model within subgroups stratified by age quartiles (Q1–Q4).ResultsWe analysed 3492 patients and 3492 controls. The impact of untreated hypertension on the risk of ICH was higher in the lower than in the upper age quartile (OR 11.64, 95% CI 7.68 to 17.63 in Q1 vs OR 6.05, 95% CI 3.09 to 11.85 in Q4 with intermediate ORs in Q2 and Q3), while the opposite trend was observed for untreated hypercholesterolaemia (OR 0.63, 95% CI 0.45 to 0.97 in Q1 vs OR 0.36, 95% CI 0.26 to 0.56 in Q4 with intermediate ORs in Q2 and Q3). The effect of untreated diabetes and excessive alcohol intake was detected only in the older age group (OR 3.63, 95% CI 1.22 to 10.73, and OR 1.69, 95% CI 1.13 to 2.51, respectively).ConclusionsOur findings provide evidence of age-dependent differences in the effects of susceptibility factors on the risk of ICH.
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- 2021
21. Association of the careggi collateral score with radiological outcomes after thrombectomy for stroke with an occlusion of the middle cerebral artery
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Manuel, Cappellari, Valentina, Saia, Giovanni, Pracucci, Enrico, Fainardi, Patrizia, Nencini, Laura, Malfatto, Rossana, Tassi, Paolo, Cerrato, Michelangelo, Mancuso, Angela, Pesare, Paolino, La Spina, Enrico Maria, Lotti, Alfonsina, Casalena, Marco, Petruzzellis, Claudio, Baracchini, Alessandra Giai, Via, Carmen, Gaudiano, Fabrizio, Sallustio, Tiziana, Tassinari, Adriana, Critelli, Maurizio, Melis, Alessandra, Persico, Ilaria, Casetta, Simona, Sacco, Delfina, Ferrandi, Simona, Marcheselli, Monia, Russo, Cecilia, Zivelonghi, Nicolò, Mandruzzato, Paolo, Invernizzi, Daniele, Romano, Ettore, Nicolini, Umberto, Scoditti, Mauro, Magoni, Lucia Princiotta, Cariddi, Stefano, Vallone, Domenico, Inzitari, Danilo, Toni, and Salavatore, Mangiafico
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Collateral score ,Middle Cerebral Artery ,Endovascular Procedures ,Infarct growth ,Brain Edema ,Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery ,Hematology ,Cerebral edema ,Intracerebral hemorrhage ,Stroke ,Thrombectomy ,Treatment Outcome ,Humans ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
We aimed to examine the association between Careggi Collateral Score (CCS) and radiological outcomes in a large multicenter cohort of patients receiving thrombectomy for stroke with occlusion of middle cerebral artery (MCA). We conducted a study on prospectively collected data from 1785 patients enrolled in the Italian Registry of Endovascular Treatment in Acute Stroke. According to the extension of the retrograde reperfusion in the cortical anterior cerebral artery-MCA territories, CCS ranges from 0 (absence of retrograde filling) to 4 (visualization of collaterals until the alar segment of the MCA). Radiological outcomes at 24 h were the presence and severity of infarct growth defined by the absolute change in ASPECTS from baseline to 24 h; presence and severity of cerebral bleeding defined as no ICH, HI-1, HI-2, PH-1, or PH-2; presence and severity of cerebral edema (CED) defined as no CED, CED-1, CED-2, or CED-3. Using CCS = 0 as reference, ORs of CCS grades were significantly associated in the direction of better radiological outcome on infarct growth (0.517 for CCS = 1, 0.413 for CCS = 2, 0.358 for CCS = 3, 0.236 for CCS = 4), cerebral bleeding grading (0.485 for CCS = 1, 0.445 for CCS = 2, 0.400 for CCS = 3, 0.379 for CCS = 4), and CED grading (0.734 for CCS = 1, 0.301 for CCS = 2, 0.295 for CCS = 3, 0.255 for CSS = 4) shift in ordinal regression analysis after adjustment for pre-defined variables (age, NIHSS score, ASPECTS, occlusion site, onset-to-groin puncture time, procedure time, and TICI score). Using CCS = 4 as reference, ORs of CCS grades were significantly associated in the direction of worse radiological outcome on infarct growth (1.521 for CCS = 3, 1.754 for CCS = 2, 2.193 for CCS = 1, 4.244 for CCS = 0), cerebral bleeding grading (2.498 for CCS = 0), and CED grading (1.365 for CCS = 2, 2.876 for CCS = 1, 3.916 for CCS = 0) shift. The CCS could improve the prognostic estimate of radiological outcomes in patients receiving thrombectomy for stroke with MCA occlusion.
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- 2022
22. Expanding the role of education in frontotemporal dementia: a functional dynamic connectivity (the chronnectome) study
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Armin Iraji, Alberto Benussi, Viviana Cristillo, Roberto Gasparotti, Mauro Magoni, Vince D. Calhoun, Enrico Premi, Barbara Borroni, Anna Micheli, Alessandro Padovani, Stefano Gazzina, Maria Cotelli, and Antonella Alberici
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Aging ,Settore M-PSI/02 - PSICOBIOLOGIA E PSICOLOGIA FISIOLOGICA ,Severity of Illness Index ,Imaging data ,Education ,Correlation ,03 medical and health sciences ,Functional brain ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cognitive Reserve ,Connectome ,medicine ,Metastate ,Humans ,Proxy (statistics) ,Inverse correlation ,Aged ,Cognitive reserve ,Chronnectome ,Frontotemporal ,MRI ,General Neuroscience ,Brain ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,030104 developmental biology ,Frontotemporal Dementia ,Educational Status ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Developmental Biology ,Frontotemporal dementia - Abstract
In the present study, we aim at investigating whether education modulates dynamical properties of time-varying whole-brain network connectivity (the chronnectome) in frontotemporal dementia (FTD) at a given level of symptom severity. Dynamic connectivity parameters were evaluated in 128 patients with FTD using independent component analysis, sliding-time window correlation, and k-means approach to resting state-magnetic resonance imaging data. We evaluated the relationship between education, a proxy measure of cognitive reserve, and 4 indexes of metastate dynamic connectivity: (1) the number of distinct metastates a patient passes through, (2) the number of switches from one metastate to another, (3) the span of the realized metastates, and (4) the total distance traveled in the state space. We found a significant inverse correlation between years of education and the 4 indexes of metastate dynamic fluidity (all p-values ≤ 0.03, false discovery rate-corrected). This study suggests that patients with FTD with higher education but comparable clinical severity show more global functional brain impairment, suggesting that patients with higher cognitive reserve can cope with more global brain fluidity reduction.
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- 2020
23. Direct thrombectomy for stroke in the presence of absolute exclusion criteria for thrombolysis
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Paolo Invernizzi, Roberto Menozzi, Federico Carimati, Cristina Dell’Aera, Maria Ruggiero, Mauro Gentile, Bruno Bonetti, Giuseppe Ganci, Stefano Barbero, Patrizia Nencini, Rossana Tassi, Marina Mannino, Simona Sacco, Umberto Scoditti, Ilaria Casetta, Davide Castellano, Luigi Simonetti, Maria Pia Prontera, Luigi Chiumarulo, Lucio Castellan, Stefano Forlivesi, Mauro Magoni, Valentina Saia, Francesco Causin, Alfredo Petrone, Giovanni Orlandi, Nicola Limbucci, Sandra Bracco, Alfonsina Casalena, Ettore Nicolini, Elisa Francesca Maria Ciceri, Nicola Cavasin, Manuel Corato, Guido Squassina, Manuel Cappellari, Annalisa Sugo, Cinzia Finocchi, Federica Schirru, Sergio Vinci, Fabrizio Sallustio, Nunzio Paolo Nuzzi, Wiliam Auteri, Roberto Gasparotti, Valerio Da Ros, Marco Petruzzelli, Pietro Amistà, Pietro Filauri, Guido Bigliardi, Mauro Bergui, Domenico Inzitari, Giuseppe Carità, Alessandro Sgreccia, Cristiano Azzini, Andrea Naldi, Edoardo Puglielli, Giuseppe Craparo, Stefano Vallone, Nicola Burdi, Giulio Guidetti, G Lazzarotti, R. Cavallo, Samuele Cioni, Sara Biguzzi, Salvatore Mangiafico, Federica Viaro, Danilo Toni, Adriana Critelli, Giovanni Pracucci, Maria Federica Denaro, Andrea Zini, and Carlo Pellegrino
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Brain Ischemia/drug therapy ,Brain Ischemia ,NO ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Hematoma ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,Outcome ,Stroke ,Thrombectomy ,Thrombolysis ,Humans ,Thrombolytic Therapy ,Treatment Outcome ,Modified Rankin Scale ,Internal medicine ,Occlusion ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Neuroradiology ,Intracerebral hemorrhage ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Neurology ,Cohort ,Cardiology ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cohort study - Abstract
Intravenous thrombolysis (IVT)-ineligible patients undergoing direct thrombectomy tended to have poorer functional outcome as compared with IVT-eligible patients undergoing bridging therapy. We aimed to assess radiological and functional outcomes in large vessel occlusion-related stroke patients receiving direct thrombectomy in the presence of absolute exclusion criteria for IVT vs relative exclusion criteria for IVT and vs non-exclusion criteria for IVT. A cohort study on prospectively collected data from 2282 patients enrolled in the Italian Registry of Endovascular Treatment in Acute Stroke cohort for treatment with direct thrombectomy (n = 486, absolute exclusion criteria for IVT alone; n = 384, absolute in combination with relative exclusion criteria for IVT; n = 777, relative exclusion criteria for IVT alone; n = 635, non-exclusion criteria for IVT). After adjustment for unbalanced variables (model 1), ORs for 3-month death was higher in the presence of absolute exclusion criteria for IVT alone (vs relative exclusion criteria for IVT alone) (1.595, 95% CI 1.042–2.440) and in the presence of absolute exclusion criteria for IVT alone (vs non-exclusion criteria for IVT) (1.235, 95% CI 1.014–1.504). After adjustment for predefined variables (model 2: age, sex, pre-stroke mRS ≤ 1, NIHSS, occlusion in the anterior circulation, onset-to-groin time, and procedure time), ORs for 3-month death was higher in the presence of absolute exclusion criteria for IVT alone (vs relative exclusion criteria for IVT alone) (1.235, 95% CI 1.014–1.504) and in the presence of absolute exclusion criteria for IVT alone (vs non-exclusion criteria for IVT) (1.246, 95% CI 1.039–1.495). No significant difference was found between the groups as regards any type of intracerebral hemorrhage and parenchymal hematoma within 24 h, successful and complete recanalization after procedure, and modified Rankin Scale score 0–2 at 3 months. After adjustment for predefined variables of model 2, ORs for death were higher in the presence of recent administration of IV heparin (OR: 2.077), platelet count
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- 2020
24. Association of prestroke metformin use, stroke severity, and thrombolysis outcome
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Sixtine Gilliot, Hebun Erdur, Christian H. Nolte, Paul J. Nederkoorn, Mauro Magoni, Christian Hametner, Andrea Zini, Patrik Michel, Pierre Seners, Michael J Scherrer, Laura P. Westphal, Ashraf Eskandari, Jonathan M. Coutinho, Sami Curtze, Yannick Béjot, Nicolas Martinez-Majander, Céline Brenière, Georg Kägi, Adrien E. Groot, Didier Leys, Alexandros A Polymeris, Laura Vandelli, Ulrike Held, Alessandro Pezzini, Stefan T. Engelter, Andreas R. Luft, Jan F. Scheitz, Marcel Arnold, Marjaana Tiainen, Roni Widmer, Klaus Steigmiller, Susanne Wegener, Peter A. Ringleb, Christopher Traenka, Mirjam Rachel Heldner, Visnja Padjen, Dejana R. Jovanović, Turgut Tatlisumak, Guillaume Turc, Henrik Gensicke, University of Zurich, Neurology, ACS - Atherosclerosis & ischemic syndromes, ANS - Neurovascular Disorders, Graduate School, and ACS - Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,610 Medicine & health ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,Modified Rankin Scale ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Humans ,Hypoglycemic Agents ,Thrombolytic Therapy ,cardiovascular diseases ,10064 Neuroscience Center Zurich ,Stroke ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Recovery of Function ,10060 Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Prevention Institute (EBPI) ,Thrombolysis ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Metformin ,10040 Clinic for Neurology ,3. Good health ,2728 Neurology (clinical) ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Propensity score matching ,Cohort ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
ObjectiveTo evaluate whether pretreatment with metformin (MET) is associated with less stroke severity and better outcome after IV thrombolysis (IVT), we analyzed a cohort of 1,919 patients with stroke with type 2 diabetes mellitus in a multicenter exploratory analysis.MethodsData from patients with diabetes and ischemic stroke treated with IVT were collected within the European Thrombolysis in Ischemic Stroke Patients (TRISP) collaboration. We applied propensity score matching (PSM) to obtain balanced baseline characteristics of patients treated with and without MET.ResultsOf 1,919 patients with stroke with type 2 diabetes who underwent IVT, 757 (39%) had received MET before stroke (MET+), whereas 1,162 (61%) had not (MET−). MET+ patients were younger with a male preponderance. Hypercholesterolemia and pretreatment with statins, antiplatelets, or antihypertensives were more common in the MET+ group. After PSM, the 2 groups were well balanced with respect to demographic and clinical aspects. Stroke severity on admission (NIH Stroke Scale 10.0 ± 6.7 vs 11.3 ± 6.5), 3-month degree of independence on modified Rankin Scale (2 [interquartile range (IQR) 1.0–4.0] vs 3 [IQR 1.0–4.0]), as well as mortality (12.5% vs 18%) were significantly lower in the MET+ group. The frequency of symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhages did not differ between groups. HbA1c levels were well-balanced between the groups.ConclusionsPatients with stroke and diabetes on treatment with MET receiving IVT had less severe strokes on admission and a better functional outcome at 3 months. This suggests a protective effect of MET resulting in less severe strokes as well as beneficial thrombolysis outcome.
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- 2020
25. Long-term outcome of cervical artery dissection
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Carlo Gandolfo, Maurizia Rasura, Alessandro Padovani, Maurizio Paciaroni, Marina Mannino, Sandro Sanguigni, Maurizio Melis, Maria Sessa, Giorgio Silvestrelli, Massimo Del Sette, Sonia Bonacina, Mauro Magoni, Paolo Cerrato, Alessandro Adami, Andrea Morotti, Maria Vittoria Calloni, Alessandro Pezzini, Carla Zanferrari, Patrizia Nencini, Giuseppe Micieli, Manuel Cappellari, Mario Grassi, Martina Locatelli, Marialuisa Zedde, Giuseppina Calabrese, Valeria Bignamini, Claudio Baracchini, Simona Marcheselli, Valeria Terruso, Anna Bersano, Paolo La Spina, Rita Bella, Eugenio Magni, Elisa Giorli, Corrado Lodigiani, Andrea Zini, Rocco Salvatore Calabrò, Enrico Maria Lotti, Fabio Melis, Anna Cavallini, Cristiano Azzini, Maria Luisa DeLodovici, Carlo Dallocchio, Rossana Tassi, Massimiliano Braga, and Mauro Gentile
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Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Longitudinal study ,Subarachnoid hemorrhage ,Cervical Artery ,Dermatology ,Cervical artery dissection ,arteries ,03 medical and health sciences ,Stroke in young adults ,0302 clinical medicine ,cohort studies ,multicenter studies as topic ,risk factors ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,cervical artery dissection ,outcome ,stroke in young adults ,adolescent ,dissection ,female ,humans ,Italy ,stroke ,vertebral artery dissection ,Risk factor ,Stroke ,Outcome ,Neuroradiology ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Dissection ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cohort study - Abstract
Long-term consequences of cervical artery dissection (CeAD), a major cause of ischemic stroke in young people, have been poorly investigated. The Italian Project on Stroke at Young Age - Cervical Artery Dissection (IPSYS CeAD) project is a multicenter, hospital-based, consecutively recruiting, observational, cohort study aimed to address clinically important questions about long-term outcome of CeAD patients, which are not covered by other large-scale registries. Patients with radiologically diagnosed CeAD were consecutively included in the registry. Baseline demographic and clinical variables, as well as information on risk factors, were systematically collected for each eligible patient. Follow-up evaluations were conducted between 3 and 6 months after the initial event (t1) and then annually (t2 at 1 year, t3 at 2 years , and so on), in order to assess outcome events (long-term recurrent CeAD, any fatal/nonfatal ischemic stroke, transient ischemic attack (TIA), or other arterial thrombotic event, and death from any cause). Between 2000 and 2019, data from 1530 patients (age at diagnosis, 47.2 ± 11.5 years; women, 660 [43.1%]) have been collected at 39 Italian neurological centers. Dissection involved a single vessel in 1308 (85.5%) cases and caused brain ischemia in 1303 (85.1%) (190 TIA/1113 ischemic stroke). Longitudinal data are available for 1414 (92.4%) patients (median follow-up time in patients who did not experience recurrent events, 36.0 months [25th to 75th percentile, 63.0]). The collaborative IPSYS CeAD effort will provide novel information on the long-term outcome of CeAD patients. This could allow for tailored treatment approaches based on patients' individual characteristics.
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- 2020
26. Subarachnoid Extension Predicts Lobar Intracerebral Hemorrhage Expansion
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Mauro Magoni, Loris Poli, Massimo Gamba, Giorgio Busto, Paolo Costa, Federico Mazzacane, Valeria De Giuli, Eleonora Leuci, Enrico Fainardi, Elisa Candeloro, Anna Cavallini, Giuseppe Micieli, Ilaria Casetta, Alessandro Padovani, Andrea Morotti, and Alessandro Pezzini
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Logistic regression ,NO ,Cohort Studies ,hematoma expansion ,Internal medicine ,subarachnoid extension ,medicine ,Humans ,computed tomography ,intracerebral hemorrhage ,stroke ,Stroke ,Aged ,Cerebral Hemorrhage ,Retrospective Studies ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Intracerebral hemorrhage ,Hematoma ,Univariate analysis ,business.industry ,Confounding ,Brain ,Reproducibility of Results ,Odds ratio ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Logistic Models ,Cohort ,Population study ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Background and Purpose— We investigated whether subarachnoid extension (SAHE) of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) is associated with hematoma expansion (HE). Methods— Retrospective analysis of patients with primary spontaneous ICH admitted at 3 academic hospitals in Italy. The study population was divided into a development and a replication cohort. SAHE was rated on baseline noncontrast computed tomography by investigators blinded to clinical data. The main outcome of interest was HE, defined as ICH growth >33% mL and/or >6 mL. Predictors of HE were explored with multivariable logistic regression stratified by ICH location (lobar versus nonlobar). Results— A total of 360 and 192 patients were included in the development and replication cohort, respectively. SAHE was identified with good interrater reliability ( K =0.82), and its frequency was 27.8% in the development and 24.5% in the replication cohort. In univariate analysis, HE was more common in patients with SAHE (52.0% versus 27.3%; P P =0.001) whereas there was no association with HE in nonlobar ICH (odds ratio, 0.55 [95% CI, 0.17–1.84]; P =0.334). The increased risk of HE in lobar ICH with SAHE was confirmed in the replication cohort (odds ratio, 3.46 [95% CI, 1.07–11.20]; P =0.038). Conclusions— SAHE predicts HE in lobar ICH. This may improve the stratification of HE risk in clinical practice or future trials targeting HE. Further research is needed to confirm our findings and characterize the underlying biological mechanisms.
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- 2020
27. Sex differences in outcome after thrombectomy for acute ischemic stroke. A propensity score-matched study
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Ilaria, Casetta, Enrico, Fainardi, Giovanni, Pracucci, Valentina, Saia, Fabrizio, Sallustio, Valerio, da Ros, Sergio, Nappini, Patrizia, Nencini, Guido, Bigliardi, Sergio, Vinci, Francesco, Grillo, Sandra, Bracco, Rossana, Tassi, Mauro, Bergui, Paolo, Cerrato, Andrea, Saletti, Alessandro, De Vito, Roberto, Gasparotti, Mauro, Magoni, Luigi, Simonetti, Andrea, Zini, Maria, Ruggiero, Marco, Longoni, Lucio, Castellan, Laura, Malfatto, Paola, Castellini, Mirco, Cosottini, Alessio, Comai, Enrica, Franchini, Emilio, Lozupone, Giacomo, Della Marca, Edoardo, Puglielli, Alfonsina, Casalena, Claudio, Baracchini, Daniele, Savio, Enrica, Duc, Giuseppe, Ricciardi, Manuel, Cappellari, Luigi, Chiumarulo, Marco, Petruzzellis, Anna, Cavallini, Nicola, Cavasin, Adriana, Critelli, Nicola, Burdi, Giovanni, Boero, Andrea, Giorgianni, Maurizio, Versino, Francesco, Biraschi, Ettore, Nicolini, Simone, Comelli, Maurizio, Melis, Riccardo, Padolecchia, Tiziana, Tassinari, Nunzio, Paolo Nuzzi, Simona, Marcheselli, Simona, Sacco, Paolo, Invernizzi, Ivan, Gallesio, Delfina, Ferrandi, Maria, Fancello, Maria, Valeria Saddi, Monia, Russo, Aldo, Pischedda, Antonio, Baule, Marina, Mannino, Francesco, Florio, Vincenzo, Inchingolo, Maria, Elena Flacco, Daniele, Romano, Umberto, Silvagni, Domenico, Inzitari, Salvatore, Mangiafico, and Danilo, Toni
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Ischemic stroke ,thrombectomy ,Original Research Articles ,sex ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,NO ,Ischemic stroke, thrombectomy, sex - Abstract
Background and purpose We sought to investigate whether there are gender differences in clinical outcome after stroke due to large vessel occlusion (LVO) after mechanical thrombectomy (EVT) in a large population of real-world patients. Methods From the Italian Registry of Endovascular Thrombectomy, we extracted clinical and outcome data of patients treated for stroke due to large vessel occlusion. We compared clinical and safety outcomes in men and women who underwent EVT alone or in combination with intravenous thrombolysis (IVT) in the total population and in a Propensity Score matched set. Results Among 3422 patients included in the study, 1801 (52.6%) were women. Despite older age at onset (mean 72.4 vs 68.7; p Conclusions Subject to the limitations of a non-randomized comparison, women with stroke due to LVO treated with mechanical thrombectomy had a better chance to achieve complete recanalization, and 3-month functional independence than men. The results could be driven by women who underwent combined treatment.
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- 2022
28. Clinical outcome of neurological patients with COVID-19: the impact of healthcare organization improvement between waves
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Valentina Mazzoleni, Alessandro Padovani, Stefano Gipponi, Andrea Pilotto, Elisabetta Cottini, Massimo Gamba, Viviana Cristillo, Andrea Scalvini, Francesca Schiano di Cola, Marco Maria Fontanella, Stefano Masciocchi, Enrico Premi, Andrea Morotti, Martina Locatelli, Stefano Cotti Piccinelli, Ileina Libri, Alberto Benussi, Debora Pezzini, Mauro Magoni, and Marcello Giunta
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,Dermatology ,Outcomes ,Single Center ,Cohort Studies ,Disease severity ,Internal medicine ,Pandemic ,Health care ,medicine ,Humans ,COVID-19 ,Mortality ,Neurological disease ,Steroid therapy ,Pandemics ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Proportional hazards model ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Delivery of Health Care ,Cohort study - Abstract
Objective The aim of this study is to evaluate the differences in clinical presentations and the impact of healthcare organization on outcomes of neurological COVID-19 patients admitted during the first and second pandemic waves. Methods In this single-center cohort study, we included all patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection admitted to a Neuro-COVID Unit. Demographic, clinical, and laboratory data were compared between patients admitted during the first and second waves of the COVID-19 pandemic. Results Two hundred twenty-three patients were included, of whom 112 and 111 were hospitalized during the first and second pandemic waves, respectively. Patients admitted during the second wave were younger and exhibited pulmonary COVID-19 severity, resulting in less oxygen support (n = 41, 36.9% vs n = 79, 70.5%, p p = 0.004). The different healthcare strategies and early steroid treatment emerged as significant predictors of mortality independently from age, pre-morbid conditions and COVID-19 severity in Cox regression analyses. Conclusions Differences in healthcare strategies during the second phase of the COVID-19 pandemic probably explain the differences in clinical outcomes independently of disease severity, underlying the importance of standardized early management of neurological patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection.
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- 2022
29. Imaging markers of intracerebral hemorrhage expansion in patients with unclear symptom onset
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Andrea Morotti, Gregoire Boulouis, Andreas Charidimou, Loris Poli, Paolo Costa, Valeria De Giuli, Eleonora Leuci, Federico Mazzacane, Giorgio Busto, Francesco Arba, Laura Brancaleoni, Sebastiano Giacomozzi, Luigi Simonetti, Michele Laudisi, Anna Cavallini, Massimo Gamba, Mauro Magoni, Claudio Cornali, Marco M Fontanella, Andrew D Warren, Edip M Gurol, Anand Viswanathan, Roberto Gasparotti, Ilaria Casetta, Enrico Fainardi, Andrea Zini, Alessandro Pezzini, Alessandro Padovani, Steven M Greenberg, Jonathan Rosand, and Joshua N Goldstein
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Male ,Hematoma ,Anticoagulants ,unclear onset ,intracerebral hemorrhage ,Stroke ,Economica ,Neurology ,hematoma expansion ,outcome ,Humans ,Female ,CT ,Prospective Studies ,Biomarkers ,Retrospective Studies ,Cerebral Hemorrhage - Abstract
Background: Hematoma expansion (HE) is common and associated with poor outcome in intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) with unclear symptom onset (USO). Aims: We tested the association between non-contrast computed tomography (NCCT) markers and HE in this population. Methods: Retrospective analysis of patients with primary spontaneous ICH admitted at five centers in the United States and Italy. Baseline NCCT was analyzed for presence of the following markers: intrahematoma hypodensities, heterogeneous density, blend sign, and irregular shape. Variables associated with HE (hematoma growth > 6 mL and/or > 33% from baseline to follow-up imaging) were explored with multivariable logistic regression. Results: Of 2074 patients screened, we included 646 subjects (median age = 75, 53.9% males), of whom 178 (27.6%) had HE. Hypodensities (odds ratio (OR) = 2.67, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.79–3.98), heterogeneous density (OR = 2.16, 95% CI = 1.46–3.21), blend sign (OR = 2.28, 95% CI = 1.38–3.75) and irregular shape (OR = 1.82, 95% CI = 1.21–2.75) were independently associated with a higher risk of HE, after adjustment for confounders (ICH volume, anticoagulation, and time from last seen well (LSW) to NCCT). Hypodensities had the highest sensitivity for HE (0.69), whereas blend sign was the most specific marker (0.90). All NCCT markers were more frequent in early presenters (time from LSW to NCCT ⩽ 6 h, n = 189, 29.3%), and more sensitive in this population as well (hypodensities had 0.77 sensitivity). Conclusion: NCCT markers are associated with HE in ICH with USO. These findings require prospective replication and suggest that NCCT features may help the stratification of HE in future studies on USO patients.
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- 2022
30. Antithrombotic therapy in the postacute phase of cervical artery dissection: the Italian Project on Stroke in Young Adults Cervical Artery Dissection
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Debora Pezzini, Mario Grassi, Maria Luisa Zedde, Andrea Zini, Anna Bersano, Carlo Gandolfo, Giorgio Silvestrelli, Claudio Baracchini, Paolo Cerrato, Corrado Lodigiani, Simona Marcheselli, Maurizio Paciaroni, Maurizia Rasura, Manuel Cappellari, Massimo Del Sette, Anna Cavallini, Andrea Morotti, Giuseppe Micieli, Enrico Maria Lotti, Maria Luisa Delodovici, Mauro Gentile, Mauro Magoni, Cristiano Azzini, Maria Vittoria Calloni, Elisa Giorli, Massimiliano Braga, Paolo La Spina, Fabio Melis, Rossana Tassi, Valeria Terruso, Rocco Salvatore Calabrò, Valeria Piras, Alessia Giossi, Martina Locatelli, Valentina Mazzoleni, Sandro Sanguigni, Carla Zanferrari, Marina Mannino, Irene Colombo, Carlo Dallocchio, Patrizia Nencini, Valeria Bignamini, Alessandro Adami, Paolo Costa, Rita Bella, Rosario Pascarella, Alessandro Padovan, and Alessandro Pezzini
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Vertebral Artery Dissection ,Young Adult ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,Humans ,Surgery ,CEREBROVASCULAR DISEASE ,Arteries ,Neurology (clinical) ,CLINICAL NEUROLOGY ,STROKE ,Brain Ischemia - Abstract
ObjectiveTo explore the impact of antithrombotic therapy discontinuation in the postacute phase of cervical artery dissection (CeAD) on the mid-term outcome of these patients.MethodsIn a cohort of consecutive patients with first-ever CeAD, enrolled in the setting of the multicentre Italian Project on Stroke in Young Adults Cervical Artery Dissection, we compared postacute (beyond 6 months since the index CeAD) outcomes between patients who discontinued antithrombotic therapy and patients who continued taking antithrombotic agents during follow-up. Primary outcome was a composite of ischaemic stroke and transient ischaemic attack. Secondary outcomes were (1) Brain ischaemia ipsilateral to the dissected vessel and (2) Recurrent CeAD. Associations with the outcome of interest were assessed by the propensity score (PS) method.ResultsOf the 1390 patients whose data were available for the outcome analysis (median follow-up time in patients who did not experience outcome events, 36.0 months (25th–75th percentile, 62.0)), 201 (14.4%) discontinued antithrombotic treatment. Primary outcome occurred in 48 patients in the postacute phase of CeAD. In PS-matched samples (201 vs 201), the incidence of primary outcomes among patients taking antithrombotics was comparable with that among patients who discontinued antithrombotics during follow-up (5.0% vs 4.5%; p(log rank test)=0.526), and so was the incidence of the secondary outcomes ipsilateral brain ischaemia (4.5% vs 2.5%; p(log rank test)=0.132) and recurrent CeAD (1.0% vs 1.5%; p(log rank test)=0.798).ConclusionsDiscontinuation of antithrombotic therapy in the postacute phase of CeAD does not appear to increase the risk of brain ischaemia during follow-up.
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- 2022
31. Imaging features and ultraearly hematoma growth in intracerebral hemorrhage associated with COVID-19
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Andrea Morotti, Andrea Pilotto, Valentina Mazzoleni, Enrico Fainardi, Ilaria Casetta, Anna Cavallini, Giulia Del Moro, Elisa Candeloro, Francesco Janes, Paolo Costa, Andrea Zini, Eleonora Leuci, Federico Mazzacane, Serena Magno, Oriela Rustemi, Fabio Raneri, Giuseppe Canova, Mariarosaria Valente, Andrea Giorgianni, Francesca Solazzo, Maurizio Versino, Marco Mauri, Mauro Gentile, Ludovica Migliaccio, Stefano Forlivesi, Eugenio Magni, Elisabetta Del Zotto, Alberto Benussi, Enrico Premi, Massimo Gamba, Loris Poli, Alessandro Pezzini, Roberto Gasparotti, Mauro Magoni, Stefano Gipponi, and Alessandro Padovani
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Hematoma ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Anticoagulants ,COVID-19 ,COVID-19, Intracerebral hemorrhage, SARS-CoV-2, Stroke ,Stroke ,Economica ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neurology (clinical) ,cardiovascular diseases ,Intracerebral hemorrhage ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Biomarkers ,Diagnostic Neuroradiology ,Cerebral Hemorrhage ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Purpose Intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) is an uncommon but deadly event in patients with COVID-19 and its imaging features remain poorly characterized. We aimed to describe the clinical and imaging features of COVID-19-associated ICH. Methods Multicenter, retrospective, case–control analysis comparing ICH in COVID-19 patients (COV19 +) versus controls without COVID-19 (COV19 −). Clinical presentation, laboratory markers, and severity of COVID-19 disease were recorded. Non-contrast computed tomography (NCCT) markers (intrahematoma hypodensity, heterogeneous density, blend sign, irregular shape fluid level), ICH location, and hematoma volume (ABC/2 method) were analyzed. The outcome of interest was ultraearly hematoma growth (uHG) (defined as NCCT baseline ICH volume/onset-to-imaging time), whose predictors were explored with multivariable linear regression. Results A total of 33 COV19 + patients and 321 COV19 − controls with ICH were included. Demographic characteristics and vascular risk factors were similar in the two groups. Multifocal ICH and NCCT markers were significantly more common in the COV19 + population. uHG was significantly higher among COV19 + patients (median 6.2 mL/h vs 3.1 mL/h, p = 0.027), and this finding remained significant after adjustment for confounding factors (systolic blood pressure, antiplatelet and anticoagulant therapy), in linear regression (B(SE) = 0.31 (0.11), p = 0.005). This association remained consistent also after the exclusion of patients under anticoagulant treatment (B(SE) = 0.29 (0.13), p = 0.026). Conclusions ICH in COV19 + patients has distinct NCCT imaging features and a higher speed of bleeding. This association is not mediated by antithrombotic therapy and deserves further research to characterize the underlying biological mechanisms.
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- 2022
32. Intravenous fibrinolysis plus endovascular thrombectomy versus direct endovascular thrombectomy for anterior circulation acute ischemic stroke: clinical and infarct volume results
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Angelo Costa, M. Frigerio, Dikran Mardighian, Filomena Caria, Loris Poli, Mauro Magoni, Nicola Gilberti, Veronica Vergani, Enrico Premi, Roberto Gasparotti, Valeria De Giuli, Raffaella Spezi, Andrea Morotti, Alessandro Pezzini, Alessandro Padovani, Ilenia Delrio, and Massimo Gamba
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Endovascular therapy ,Logistic regression ,Single Center ,lcsh:RC346-429 ,Intravenous thrombolysis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,Internal medicine ,Fibrinolysis ,medicine ,Humans ,Thrombolytic Therapy ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Administration, Intravenous stroke/*therapy Thrombectomy/*methods ischemic stroke ,lcsh:Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Thrombectomy ,Intracerebral hemorrhage ,Aged, 80 and over ,Ischemic stroke ,Cerebral infarction ,business.industry ,Retrospective cohort study ,General Medicine ,Thrombolysis ,Recovery of Function ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Stroke ,Treatment Outcome ,Large vessels occlusion ,Tissue Plasminogen Activator ,Infarct volume ,Administration ,Cardiology ,Administration, Intravenous ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Combined therapy ,Intravenous stroke/*therapy Thrombectomy/*methods ischemic stroke ,Research Article - Abstract
Background and Purpose endovascular therapy (ET) is the standard of care for anterior circulation acute ischemic stroke (AIS) caused by large vessel occlusion (LVO). The role of adjunctive intravenous thrombolysis (IVT) in these patients is still unclear. The present study aims to test whether IVT plus ET (CoT, combined therapy) provides additional benefits over direct ET for anterior circulation AIS by LVO. Methods we performed a single center retrospective observational study of patients with AIS caused by anterior circulation LVO, referred to our center between January 2014 and January 2017 and treated with ET. The patients were divided in 2 groups based on the treatment they received: CoT and, if IVT contraindicated, direct ET. We compared functional recovery (modified Rankin at 3-months follow-up), recanalization rate (thrombolysis in cerebral infarction [TICI] score) and time, early follow-up infarct volume (EFIV) (for recanalized patients only) as well as safety profile, defined as symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage (sICH) and 3-month mortality, between groups. Results 145 subjects were included in the study, 70 in direct ET group and 75 in CoT group. Patients who received CoT presented more frequently a functional independence at 3-months follow-up compared to patients who received direct ET (mRS score 0-1: 48.5% vs 18.6%; P
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- 2019
33. The impact of COVID-19 pandemic on AMI and Stroke mortality in Lombardy: Evidence from the epicenter of the pandemic
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Marco Metra, Mauro Magoni, Stefano Verzillo, Giorgio Vittadini, Salvatore Curello, Aldo M. Roccaro, Paolo Berta, Camillo Rossi, and Pietro Giorgio Lovaglio
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Mortality rate ,Context (language use) ,Emergency department ,medicine.disease ,Causal inference ,Pandemic ,Emergency medicine ,Health care ,medicine ,Adverse effect ,business ,Stroke - Abstract
BackgroundThe Covid-19 pandemic has enormously impacted the delivery of clinical healthcare and hospital management practices in most of the hospitals around the world for both Covid and no-Covid patients. In this context, it is extremely important to assess whether the clinical management of no-Covid cases has not seriously been compromised during the first epidemic outbreak. Among no-Covid cases, patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and stroke need non-deferrable emergency care and are the natural candidates as no-Covid patients to be studied. Preliminary evidence suggests that i) the time from onset of symptoms to emergency department (ED) presentation has increased in Covid-19 times as well 30-day mortality during the pandemic has been higher. We aimed to complement this evidence assessing if the additional stress due to the high inflow of Covid-19 patients at hospital level has modified AMI and Stroke admission criteria and related mortality rates in a causal inference framework.MethodsTo study the impact of Covid pandemic on mortality rates for AMI and Stroke we adopt two quasi-experimental approaches, regression-discontinuity design (RDD) and difference-in-regression-discontinuity (DRD) designs by which we identify the plausible causal effect on mortality of the Covid-19-related hospital stress due to the introduction of State of Emergency restrictions.FindingsWe check the causal effect of the Covid-19 pandemic on mortality rates of AMI and stroke over several time-windows of 15-days around the implementation date of the State of Emergency restrictions for COVID-19 (March, 9th). Despite the potential adverse effect on expected mortality due to a longer time to hospitalization, the AMI and Stroke mortality rates are overall not statistically different from the one observed in the control group. The obtained results provided by RDD and DRD models are robust also when we account for seasonality and unobserved factors.InterpretationIn a quasi-experimental setting we assessed the causal impact of the hospital and staff extra-burden generated by the first wave of Covid-19 patients on mortality rates of no-Covid non-deferrable urgent cases (AMI and Stroke) hospitalized at Spedali Civili of Brescia, one of the most hit provinces in Italy by Covid-19 during March and May 2020. We find a non-statistically significant impact on mortality rates for AMI and Stroke patients providing evidence of the hospital ability to manage - with the implementation of a double track organization-the simultaneously delivery of high quality cares to both Covid and no-Covid patients. Availability of similar data for the regional context as a whole is needed to further substantiate the findings and explore existing differences in efficacy of different managerial settings implemented in Lombardy hospitals.FundingAll authors - except for Stefano Verzillo-acknowledge financial support from the Region of Lombardy, project 2014IT16RFOP012 ‘Misura a sostegno dello sviluppo di collaborazioni per l’identificazione di terapie e sistemi di diagnostica, protezione e analisi per contrastare l’emergenza Coronavirus e altre emergenze virali del futuro’. Stefano Verzillo has participated as external econometrician from European Commission, Joint Research Center to this project without receiving any funding or financial support, in compliance with EC rules. His contribution has been offered in the Conceptualization and Writing and Editing stages.Role of the Funding sourceThe founder had no roles in our study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish and preparation of the manuscript.
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- 2021
34. Cardiac sources of cerebral embolism in people with migraine
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Mauro Magoni, Valentina Mazzoleni, Sonia Bonacina, Mario Grassi, Roberto Monastero, Andrea Morotti, Alessandro Pezzini, Debora Pezzini, Alessandro Padovani, Massimo Gamba, V. De Giuli, Martina Locatelli, De Giuli, V, Grassi, M, Locatelli, M, Gamba, M, Morotti, A, Bonacina, S, Mazzoleni, V, Pezzini, D, Magoni, M, Monastero, R, Padovani, A, and Pezzini, A
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Male ,young adults ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Heart Diseases ,Aura ,Migraine Disorders ,Migraine with Aura ,MEDLINE ,Foramen Ovale, Patent ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,stomatognathic system ,Cerebral embolism ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,migraine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Stroke ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Atrial fibrillation ,Heart ,Odds ratio ,cardioembolism ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,stroke ,Migraine with aura ,Neurology ,Embolism ,Migraine ,Intracranial Embolism ,Cohort ,Cardiology ,Patent foramen ovale ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cohort study - Abstract
Background and purpose Whether the reported association between migraine with aura (MA) and cardioembolic stroke may be explained by a higher rate of atrial fibrillation (AF) or by other potential cardiac sources of cerebral embolism remains to be determined.Methods In the setting of a single centre cohort study of consecutive patients with acute brain ischaemia stratified by migraine status, the association between AF as well as patent foramen ovale (PFO) and migraine was explored.Results In all, 1738 patients (1017 [58.5%] men, mean age 67.9 +/- 14.9 years) qualified for the analysis. Aging was inversely associated with migraine, whilst women had a >3-fold increased disease risk (odds ratio [OR] 3.82, 95% confidence interval [CI] 2.58-5.66). No association between AF and history of migraine or its pathogenic subtypes was detected. Conversely, migraine was associated with PFO, both in the entire cohort (OR 1.84, 95% CI 1.07-3.16) and in patients aged
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- 2021
35. Correlation between brain glucose metabolism (
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Domenico, Albano, Enrico, Premi, Alessia, Peli, Luca, Camoni, Francesco, Bertagna, Rosanna, Turrone, Barbara, Borroni, Vince D, Calhoun, Carlo, Rodella, Mauro, Magoni, Alessandro, Padovani, Raffaele, Giubbini, and Barbara, Paghera
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Amyloid ,Aniline Compounds ,Glucose ,Alzheimer Disease ,Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 ,Cerebrovascular Circulation ,Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography ,Brain ,Humans ,Ethylene Glycols ,Amyloidosis - Abstract
This study compared the performance ofWe included 12 patients who underwentInter-reader agreement was high (Cohen's kappa 0.762 for
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- 2021
36. Migraine and Cryptogenic Ischemic Stroke
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R. Musolino, Sonia Bonacina, Nicoletta Checcarelli, Alessandro Padovani, Domenico Marco Bonifati, Paolo Cerrato, Elisa Giorli, Massimiliano Braga, Antonella Toriello, Debora Pezzini, Mauro Magoni, Massimo Del Sette, Carlo Gandolfo, Giorgio Dalla Volta, Alessandro Pezzini, Simona Marcheselli, Maurizio Paciaroni, Mario Grassi, Martina Locatelli, Maurizio Melis, Giorgio Silvestrelli, Alberto Chiti, Marialuisa Zedde, Lucia Tancredi, Maurizia Rasura, Valentina Mazzoleni, Giacomo Giacalone, Giuseppe Micieli, Sandro Sanguigni, Corrado Lodigiani, Anna Cavallini, Alessia Giossi, Andrea Zini, Rocco Salvatore Calabrò, Maria Luisa DeLodovici, Alessandro Adami, Valeria Bignamini, and Paolo Bovi
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Humans ,Young Adult ,Brain Ischemia ,Foramen Ovale, Patent ,Ischemic Stroke ,Migraine Disorders ,Stroke ,business.industry ,MEDLINE ,medicine.disease ,Neurology ,Migraine ,Internal medicine ,Ischemic stroke ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Patent ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Foramen Ovale - Published
- 2021
37. EndoVAscular treatment and ThRombolysis for Ischemic Stroke Patients (EVA-TRISP) registry: basis and methodology of a pan-European prospective ischaemic stroke revascularisation treatment registry
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Patrik Michel, Urs Fischer, Christian H. Nolte, Nicolas Bricout, Panagiotis Papanagiotou, Camilla Karlsson, Henrik Gensicke, Didier Leys, José E. Cohen, Stefan T. Engelter, John M. Gomori, Jan F. Scheitz, Philippe Lyrer, Christian Hametner, Andrea Zini, Ronen R. Leker, Johannes Weber, Susanne Wegener, Gerli Sibolt, Charles B. L. M. Majoie, Mauro Magoni, Jan Liman, Annika Nordanstig, Daniel Strbian, Alex Brehm, Paul J. Nederkoorn, Katharina Feil, Jan Gralla, Martin Bendszus, Nicolas Martinez-Majander, David J. Seiffge, Georg Bohner, Andreas Kastrup, Jan-Erik Karlsson, Georg Kägi, Hakan Sarikaya, Markus A Möhlenbruch, Katarina Jood, Lars Kellert, Kimmo Lappalainen, Zsolt Kulcsar, Alessandro Pezzini, Merih I Baharoglu, George Ntaios, Ashraf Eskandari, Hebun Erdur, Sami Curtze, Peter A. Ringleb, Andreas R. Luft, Marcel Arnold, Ivan Vukasinovic, Sanne M. Zinkstok, Hilde Hénon, Eftychia Z. Kapsalaki, Dejana R. Jovanović, Turgut Tatlisumak, Christopher Traenka, Visnja Padjen, Marios Psychogios, Alexandros Rentzos, Vladimir Cvetic, Clinicum, Neurologian yksikkö, HUS Neurocenter, HUS Medical Imaging Center, Department of Diagnostics and Therapeutics, Department of Neurosciences, Graduate School, ACS - Atherosclerosis & ischemic syndromes, Amsterdam Neuroscience - Neurovascular Disorders, Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, ACS - Microcirculation, Neurology, and EVA-TRISP Investigators
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Quality management ,IMPACT ,medicine.medical_treatment ,INTRACEREBRAL HEMORRHAGE ,RECANALIZATION ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,THERAPY ,3124 Neurology and psychiatry ,law.invention ,Brain Ischemia ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Ischaemic stroke ,Thrombolytic Therapy ,Registries ,610 Medicine & health ,Stroke ,Thrombectomy ,Endovascular Procedures ,General Medicine ,Thrombolysis ,stroke ,3. Good health ,Treatment Outcome ,Extravehicular Activity ,Brain Ischemia/drug therapy ,Fibrinolytic Agents/therapeutic use ,Humans ,Ischemic Stroke ,Stroke/drug therapy ,neurology ,stroke medicine ,Medicine ,INTRAVENOUS THROMBOLYSIS ,medicine.medical_specialty ,03 medical and health sciences ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,ALTEPLASE ,medicine ,Artery occlusion ,Endovascular treatment ,Intensive care medicine ,business.industry ,MECHANICAL THROMBECTOMY ,3112 Neurosciences ,medicine.disease ,RANDOMIZED-TRIAL ,ARTERY-OCCLUSION ,IV THROMBOLYSIS ,Observational study ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
PurposeThe Thrombolysis in Ischemic Stroke Patients (TRISP) collaboration was a concerted effort initiated in 2010 with the purpose to address relevant research questions about the effectiveness and safety of intravenous thrombolysis (IVT). The collaboration also aims to prospectively collect data on patients undergoing endovascular treatment (EVT) and hence the name of the collaboration was changed from TRISP to EVA-TRISP. The methodology of the former TRISP registry for patients treated with IVT has already been published. This paper focuses on describing the EVT part of the registry.ParticipantsAll centres committed to collecting predefined variables on consecutive patients prospectively. We aim for accuracy and completeness of the data and to adapt local databases to investigate novel research questions. Herein, we introduce the methodology of a recently constructed academic investigator-initiated open collaboration EVT registry built as an extension of an existing IVT registry in patients with acute ischaemic stroke (AIS).Findings to dateCurrently, the EVA-TRISP network includes 20 stroke centres with considerable expertise in EVT and maintenance of high-quality hospital-based registries. Following several successful randomised controlled trials (RCTs), many important clinical questions remain unanswered in the (EVT) field and some of them will unlikely be investigated in future RCTs. Prospective registries with high-quality data on EVT-treated patients may help answering some of these unanswered issues, especially on safety and efficacy of EVT in specific patient subgroups.Future plansThis collaborative effort aims at addressing clinically important questions on safety and efficacy of EVT in conditions not covered by RCTs. The TRISP registry generated substantial novel data supporting stroke physicians in their daily decision making considering IVT candidate patients. While providing observational data on EVT in daily clinical practice, our future findings may likewise be hypothesis generating for future research as well as for quality improvement (on EVT). The collaboration welcomes participation of further centres willing to fulfill the commitment and the outlined requirements.
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- 2021
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38. SARS-CoV-2 infection and acute ischemic stroke in Lombardy, Italy
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Matteo Cortinovis, Elisa Raimondi, Federico Pozzi, Alessandro Padovani, Laura Fusi, Federico Carimati, Sonia Bonacina, Mario Grassi, Valentina Mazzoleni, Alessandro Prelle, Anna Magherini, Simonetta Gerevini, Andrea Pilotto, Manuel Corato, Valeria De Giuli, Enrico Premi, Valentina Puglisi, Giorgio Silvestrelli, Francesco Santangelo, Alessia Giossi, Davide Sangalli, Maurizio Versino, Simone Beretta, Giuditta Giussani, Francesca Barbieri, Giampiero Grampa, Rubjona Xhani, Susanna Diamanti, Daria Valeria Roccatagliata, Alfonso Ciccone, Stefano Masciocchi, Elio Agostoni, Nicola Rifino, Massimo Gamba, Maria Sessa, Anna Cavallini, Sara La Gioia, Alberto Benussi, Bruno Censori, Martina Locatelli, Alessandro Pezzini, Andrea Salmaggi, Fernando Palluzzi, Mauro Magoni, Luisa Vinciguerra, Debora Pezzini, Simona Marcheselli, Carlo Ferrarese, Pezzini, A, Grassi, M, Silvestrelli, G, Locatelli, M, Rifino, N, Beretta, S, Gamba, M, Raimondi, E, Giussani, G, Carimati, F, Sangalli, D, Corato, M, Gerevini, S, Masciocchi, S, Cortinovis, M, La Gioia, S, Barbieri, F, Mazzoleni, V, Pezzini, D, Bonacina, S, Pilotto, A, Benussi, A, Magoni, M, Premi, E, Prelle, A, Agostoni, E, Palluzzi, F, De Giuli, V, Magherini, A, Roccatagliata, D, Vinciguerra, L, Puglisi, V, Fusi, L, Diamanti, S, Santangelo, F, Xhani, R, Pozzi, F, Grampa, G, Versino, M, Salmaggi, A, Marcheselli, S, Cavallini, A, Giossi, A, Censori, B, Ferrarese, C, Ciccone, A, Sessa, M, and Padovani, A
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Male ,Percentile ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Logistic regression ,Brain Ischemia ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Hospital Mortality ,Risk factor ,Stroke ,Survival analysis ,Ischemic Stroke ,Retrospective Studies ,Original Communication ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,Mortality rate ,COVID-19 ,Atrial fibrillation ,medicine.disease ,Italy ,Neurology ,Risk factors ,Viral infection ,Etiology ,Neurology (clinical) ,business - Abstract
Objective To characterize patients with acute ischemic stroke related to SARS-CoV-2 infection and assess the classification performance of clinical and laboratory parameters in predicting in-hospital outcome of these patients. Methods In the setting of the STROKOVID study including patients with acute ischemic stroke consecutively admitted to the ten hub hospitals in Lombardy, Italy, between March 8 and April 30, 2020, we compared clinical features of patients with confirmed infection and non-infected patients by logistic regression models and survival analysis. Then, we trained and tested a random forest (RF) binary classifier for the prediction of in-hospital death among patients with COVID-19. Results Among 1013 patients, 160 (15.8%) had SARS-CoV-2 infection. Male sex (OR 1.53; 95% CI 1.06–2.27) and atrial fibrillation (OR 1.60; 95% CI 1.05–2.43) were independently associated with COVID-19 status. Patients with COVID-19 had increased stroke severity at admission [median NIHSS score, 9 (25th to75th percentile, 13) vs 6 (25th to75th percentile, 9)] and increased risk of in-hospital death (38.1% deaths vs 7.2%; HR 3.30; 95% CI 2.17–5.02). The RF model based on six clinical and laboratory parameters exhibited high cross-validated classification accuracy (0.86) and precision (0.87), good recall (0.72) and F1-score (0.79) in predicting in-hospital death. Conclusions Ischemic strokes in COVID-19 patients have distinctive risk factor profile and etiology, increased clinical severity and higher in-hospital mortality rate compared to non-COVID-19 patients. A simple model based on clinical and routine laboratory parameters may be useful in identifying ischemic stroke patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection who are unlikely to survive the acute phase.
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- 2021
39. Correlation between brain glucose metabolism (18F-FDG) and cerebral blood flow with amyloid tracers (18F-Florbetapir) in clinical routine: Preliminary evidences
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Carlo Rodella, Luca Camoni, Barbara Borroni, Alessandro Padovani, Enrico Premi, Vince D. Calhoun, Raffaele Giubbini, Barbara Paghera, Domenico Albano, Mauro Magoni, Rosanna Turrone, Francesco Bertagna, and Alessia Peli
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Amyloid ,business.industry ,General Engineering ,Precuneus ,Clinical routine ,Correlation ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cerebral blood flow ,Posterior cingulate ,medicine ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,Default mode network ,Kappa ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Objective This study compared the performance of 18F-Florbetapir PET/CT early acquisitions to 18F-FDG PET/CT. Methods We included 12 patients who underwent 18F-FDG PET/CT and a dual-time 18F-Florbetapir PET/CT (1–6 min early-scan and 50 min late-scan). PET/CT were analyzed visually by three nuclear medicine physicians with different experience using a four-point scale (0 = no reduction, 1 = slight, 2 = moderate, 3 = severe reduction) for 18F-Florbetapir early-phase and 18F-FDG images in 10 cortical regions (bilateral frontal, temporal, parietal, occipital, posterior cingulate/precuneus), and 18F-Florbetapir late-phase in the same cortical regions using a three-point scale (0 = normal, 1 = abnormal with minor plaques, 2 = abnormal with major plaques). We used SPM12 for semiquantitative analysis applying a ROI-based correlation analysis (considering precuneus as target region and normalized for the mean global binding), a covariance-analysis taking precuneus as target and a comparison of global DMN (default mode network). Results Inter-reader agreement was high (Cohen’s kappa 0.762 for 18F-FDG, 0.775 for 18F-Florbetapir early-phase and 0.794 for late-phase). Regional visual scores of early-phase and 18F-FDG were significantly correlated (ρ = 0.867). Also ROI-based analysis, global brain visual analysis and DMN comparison revealed concordant results, especially at parietal and precuneus (p Conclusions 18F-Florbetapir early-phase scans significantly correlate on quantitative and visual images with 18F-FDG-PET/CT scans, suggesting that amyloid tracer could be instead of 18F-FDG.
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- 2021
40. Aberrant origin of the occipital artery from the internal carotid artery: utility of the occipital tap maneuver
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Mauro Magoni, Andrea Pilotto, Alberto Benussi, F. Prandini, Enrico Premi, and Alessandro Padovani
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RD1-811 ,Lumen (anatomy) ,Dissection (medical) ,Doppler ultrasound ,Ascending pharyngeal artery ,Occipital artery ,Occipital tap maneuver ,medicine.artery ,Case report ,medicine ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Anatomy ,medicine.disease ,RC666-701 ,Surgery ,Internal carotid artery ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Perfusion - Abstract
We have described a case of a suspected transient ischemic attack with a double lumen potentially resembling a dissection of the internal carotid artery on Doppler ultrasound. The identification of an arterial branch from the internal carotid artery and flowing near it using magnetic resonance imaging suggested an aberrant origin of an ascending pharyngeal artery or occipital artery. Performance of the occipital tap maneuver in the occipital artery perfusion territory demonstrated a reflected flow in the double lumen, supporting the aberrant origin of the occipital artery from the internal carotid artery. The occipital tap maneuver can represent an easy-to-do procedure to distinguish anatomic variants and study double-lumen findings.
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- 2021
41. Hematoma Expansion in Intracerebral Hemorrhage With Unclear Onset
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Andrea Zini, Sebastiano Giacomozzi, Giorgio Busto, Alessandro Padovani, Valeria De Giuli, Michele Laudisi, Elisa Candeloro, Andrew D. Warren, Andrea Morotti, Alessandro Pezzini, Qi Li, Ilaria Casetta, Alessandro Biffi, Gregoire Boulouis, Steven M. Greenberg, Andreas Charidimou, Eleonora Leuci, Laura Brancaleoni, Christopher D. Anderson, Giuseppe Micieli, Jonathan Rosand, Loris Poli, Luigi Simonetti, Paolo Costa, Mauro Magoni, Francesco Arba, Joshua N. Goldstein, Federico Mazzacane, Anand Viswanathan, Enrico Fainardi, M. Edip Gurol, Anna Cavallini, and Massimo Gamba
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,LS5_11 ,Article ,Prospective Studies, Computed Tomography Angiography, Cohort Studies, Hematoma, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Middle Aged ,Cohort Studies ,Hematoma ,Economica ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Aged ,Cerebral Hemorrhage ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,Intracerebral hemorrhage ,business.industry ,Retrospective cohort study ,Odds ratio ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,Cohort ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Cohort study - Abstract
ObjectiveTo investigate the prevalence, predictors, and prognostic effect of hematoma expansion (HE) in patients with intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) with unclear symptom onset (USO).MethodsWe performed a retrospective analysis of patients with primary spontaneous ICH admitted at 5 academic medical centers in the United States and Italy. HE (volume increase >6 mL or >33% from baseline to follow-up noncontrast CT [NCCT]) and mortality at 30 days were the outcomes of interest. Baseline NCCT was also analyzed for presence of hypodensities (any hypodense region within the hematoma margins). Predictors of HE and mortality were explored with multivariable logistic regression.ResultsWe enrolled 2,165 participants, 1,022 in the development cohort and 1,143 in the replication cohort, of whom 352 (34.4%) and 407 (35.6%) had ICH with USO, respectively. When compared with participants having a clear symptom onset, patients with USO had a similar frequency of HE (25.0% vs 21.9%, p = 0.269 and 29.9% vs 31.5%, p = 0.423). Among patients with USO, HE was independently associated with mortality after adjustment for confounders (odds ratio [OR] 2.64, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.43–4.89, p = 0.002). This finding was similar in the replication cohort (OR 3.46, 95% CI 1.86–6.44, p < 0.001). The presence of NCCT hypodensities in patients with USO was an independent predictor of HE in the development (OR 2.59, 95% CI 1.27–5.28, p = 0.009) and replication (OR 2.43, 95% CI 1.42–4.17, p = 0.001) population.ConclusionHE is common in patients with USO and independently associated with worse outcome. These findings suggest that patients with USO may be enrolled in clinical trials of medical treatments targeting HE.
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- 2021
42. Clinical Features of Patients with Cervical Artery Dissection and Fibromuscular Dysplasia
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Sonia Bonacina, Mario Grassi, Marialuisa Zedde, Andrea Zini, Anna Bersano, Carlo Gandolfo, Giorgio Silvestrelli, Claudio Baracchini, Paolo Cerrato, Corrado Lodigiani, Simona Marcheselli, Maurizio Paciaroni, Maurizia Rasura, Manuel Cappellari, Massimo Del Sette, Anna Cavallini, Andrea Morotti, Giuseppe Micieli, Enrico Maria Lotti, Maria Luisa DeLodovici, Mauro Gentile, Mauro Magoni, Cristiano Azzini, Maria Vittoria Calloni, Elisa Giorli, Massimiliano Braga, Paolo La Spina, Fabio Melis, Rossana Tassi, Valeria Terruso, Rocco Salvatore Calabrò, Valeria Piras, Alessia Giossi, Martina Locatelli, Valentina Mazzoleni, Debora Pezzini, Sandro Sanguigni, Carla Zanferrari, Marina Mannino, Irene Colombo, Carlo Dallocchio, Patrizia Nencini, Valeria Bignamini, Alessandro Adami, Eugenio Magni, Rita Bella, Alessandro Padovani, Alessandro Pezzini, Rosario Pascarella, Maria Sessa, Emma Scelzo, Monica Laura Bandettini di Poggio, Francesca Boscain, Andrea Naldi, Valeria Caso, Massimo Gamba, Ilaria Casetta, Stefano Forlivesi, Giampaolo Tomelleri, Elena Schirinzi, Elena Verrengia, Graziamaria Nuzzaco, Sandro Beretta, Rossella Musolino, Daniele Imperiale, Maurizio Acampa, Antonio Gasparro, Maurizio Melis, Francesco Fisicaro, Ignazio Santilli, Manuel Corato, Marina Padroni, Eleonora Leuci, Federico Mazzacane, Alessandra Gaiani, Federica Assenza, Lucia Princiotta Cariddi, Cristina Sarti, Serena Monaco, Emanuele Puca, and Ludovico Ciolli
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,demography ,Adolescent ,Cervical Artery ,Migraine Disorders ,Dissection (medical) ,Fibromuscular dysplasia ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,cohort studies ,Recurrence ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Fibromuscular Dysplasia ,Humans ,risk factors ,dissection ,follow-up studies ,Carotid Arteries ,Female ,Italy ,Middle Aged ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Risk Factors ,Stroke ,Vertebral Artery Dissection ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,business.industry ,Settore MED/09 - MEDICINA INTERNA ,Follow up studies ,medicine.disease ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cohort study - Abstract
Background and Purpose: Observational studies have suggested a link between fibromuscular dysplasia and spontaneous cervical artery dissection (sCeAD). However, whether patients with coexistence of the two conditions have distinctive clinical characteristics has not been extensively investigated. Methods: In a cohort of consecutive patients with first-ever sCeAD, enrolled in the setting of the multicenter IPSYS CeAD study (Italian Project on Stroke in Young Adults Cervical Artery Dissection) between January 2000 and June 2019, we compared demographic and clinical characteristics, risk factor profile, vascular pathology, and midterm outcome of patients with coexistent cerebrovascular fibromuscular dysplasia (cFMD; cFMD+) with those of patients without cFMD (cFMD–). Results: A total of 1283 sCeAD patients (mean age, 47.8±11.4 years; women, 545 [42.5%]) qualified for the analysis, of whom 103 (8.0%) were diagnosed with cFMD+. In multivariable analysis, history of migraine (odds ratio, 1.78 [95% CI, 1.13–2.79]), the presence of intracranial aneurysms (odds ratio, 8.71 [95% CI, 4.06–18.68]), and the occurrence of minor traumas before the event (odds ratio, 0.48 [95% CI, 0.26–0.89]) were associated with cFMD. After a median follow-up of 34.0 months (25th to 75th percentile, 60.0), 39 (3.3%) patients had recurrent sCeAD events. cFMD+ and history of migraine predicted independently the risk of recurrent sCeAD (hazard ratio, 3.40 [95% CI, 1.58–7.31] and 2.07 [95% CI, 1.06–4.03], respectively) in multivariable Cox proportional hazards analysis. Conclusions: Risk factor profile of sCeAD patients with cFMD differs from that of patients without cFMD. cFMD and migraine are independent predictors of midterm risk of sCeAD recurrence.
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- 2021
43. Arterial tortuosity syndrome causing recurrent transient ischemic attacks in young adult: a case report
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Raffaella Spezi, Alessandro Padovani, Stefano Cotti Piccinelli, Michaël Bernier, Enrico Premi, Nicola Gilberti, Angelo Costa, Ilenia Delrio, Massimo Gamba, Mauro Magoni, Veronica Vergani, Marina Colombi, Sonia Bonacina, Marco Ravanelli, and Roberto Gasparotti
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Adult ,Joint Instability ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Arterial tortuosity syndrome ,Neurology ,Vascular Malformations ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Case Report ,Genetic/complications/drug therapy Tissue Plasminogen Activator Vascular Malformations/*complications/drug therapy Arterial tortuosity syndrome Thrombolysis Transient ischemic attack ,Magnetic resonance angiography ,Internal medicine ,medicine.artery ,Humans ,Medicine ,Transient/drug therapy/etiology Joint Instability/*complications/drug therapy Male Skin Diseases ,Transient ischemic attack ,RC346-429 ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Ischemic Attack ,Abdominal aorta ,Skin Diseases, Genetic ,Arteries ,General Medicine ,Thrombolysis ,medicine.disease ,Stenosis ,Ischemic Attack, Transient ,Tissue Plasminogen Activator ,Cardiology ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neurosurgery ,Ischemic Attack, Transient/drug therapy/etiology Joint Instability/*complications/drug therapy Male Skin Diseases, Genetic/complications/drug therapy Tissue Plasminogen Activator Vascular Malformations/*complications/drug therapy Arterial tortuosity syndrome Thrombolysis Transient ischemic attack ,business ,Plasminogen activator - Abstract
Background Arterial Tortuosity Syndrome (ATS) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder characterized by elongated and tortuous arteries. Although ATS showed a significant clinical and pathophysiological overlap with other syndromes involving connective tissues, only few cases of cerebrovascular events related to this syndrome have been described so far. Case presentation We report the case of a 33-years-old male diagnosed with ATS since childhood, that experienced three sudden episodes of expressive aphasia and right hemiparesis with spontaneous resolution. He was treated with recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (r-TPA) at a dosage of 0.9 mg/kg with a complete recovery. Brain Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) showed the absence of acute ischemic lesions and the patient was diagnosed with recurrent transient ischemic attacks (TIA). Intracranial and supra-aortic trunks Magnetic Resonance Angiography (MRA) and Angio-CT scan of the thoracic and abdominal aorta showed marked vessel tortuosity without stenosis. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of an ATS patient with TIA in young age that was treated with intravenous thrombolysis with recombinant plasminogen activator. Conclusion Our report strengthens the relationship between ATS and juvenile cerebrovascular events, suggesting that an extensive study of body vessels in order to detect potential stenoses or occlusions in these cases is needed. The greater predisposition to cerebrovascular events in ATS could benefit from a more aggressive primary and secondary prevention therapy.
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- 2021
44. COVID-19 impact on consecutive neurological patients admitted to the emergency department
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Ilenia Libri, Loris Poli, Sonia Bonacina, Alessandro Padovani, Laura Brambilla, Salvatore Caratozzolo, Stefano Cotti Piccinelli, Francesca Schiano, Massimiliano Filosto, Massimo Gamba, Roberto Gasparotti, Alessandro Pezzini, Veronica Vergani, Sergio Ferrari, Alberto Imarisio, Enrico Baldelli, Irene Volonghi, Mauro Magoni, Sara Mariotto, Martina Locatelli, Ilenia Delrio, Barbara Risi, Gianluigi Zanusso, Elisabetta Cottini, Ciro Paolillo, Alberto Benussi, Nicola Zoppi, Marcello Giunta, Viviana Cristillo, Enrico Premi, Matteo Cortinovis, Andrea Scalvini, Stefano Gazzina, Andrea Pilotto, Matteo Benini, Angelo Brandelli Costa, Nicola Gilberti, Paolo Liberini, Luca Rozzini, Barbara Borroni, Ranata Rao, Stefano Gipponi, Stefano Masciocchi, Matilde Leonardi, and Antonella Alberici
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Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,MEDLINE ,Specialty ,Comorbidity ,Patient care ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,clinical neurology ,Aspartate Aminotransferases ,Stroke ,Aged ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,Neurological status ,Medical record ,Age Factors ,Fibrinogen ,COVID-19 ,Alanine Transaminase ,Emergency department ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Triage ,stroke ,autoimmune encephalitis ,Hospitalization ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,C-Reactive Protein ,Italy ,Case-Control Studies ,Emergency medicine ,Delirium ,Female ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Nervous System Diseases ,medicine.symptom ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Encephalitis - Abstract
ObjectiveAim of this study was to analyse the impact of COVID-19 on clinical and laboratory findings and outcome of neurological patients consecutively admitted to the emergency department (ED) of a tertiary hub center.MethodsAll adult patients consecutively admitted to the ED for neurological manifestations from February 20th through April 30th 2020 at Spedali Civili of Brescia entered the study. Demographic, clinical, and laboratory data were extracted from medical records and compared between patients with and without COVID-19.ResultsOut of 505 consecutively patients evaluated at ED with neurological symptoms, 147 (29.1%) tested positive for SARS-CoV-2. These patients displayed at triage higher values of CRP, AST, ALT, and fibrinogen but not lymphopenia (pConclusionsCOVID-19 impacts on clinical presentation of neurological disorders, with higher frequency of stroke, encephalitis and delirium, and was strongly associated with increased hospitalisation, mortality and disability.
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- 2021
45. The impact of COVID-19 pandemic on AMI and stroke mortality in Lombardy: Evidence from the epicenter of the pandemic
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Mauro Magoni, Aldo M. Roccaro, Salvatore Curello, Marco Metra, Stefano Verzillo, Camillo Rossi, Pietro Giorgio Lovaglio, Paolo Berta, Giorgio Vittadini, Rossi, C, Berta, P, Curello, S, Lovaglio, P, Magoni, M, Metra, M, Roccaro, A, Verzillo, S, and Vittadini, G
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Viral Diseases ,Emergency Medical Services ,Critical Care and Emergency Medicine ,Databases, Factual ,Epidemiology ,Nosocomial Infections ,Myocardial Infarction ,Vascular Medicine ,Medical Conditions ,Pandemic ,Health care ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Emergency medical services ,Medicine ,Hospital Mortality ,Stroke ,Multidisciplinary ,Mortality rate ,covid ,Hospitals ,Hospitalization ,ami ,Infectious Diseases ,Neurology ,Italy ,COVID-19 ,Humans ,Pandemics ,Retrospective Studies ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Research Article ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Death Rates ,Cerebrovascular Diseases ,Science ,Cardiology ,Context (language use) ,Databases ,Population Metrics ,Factual ,Population Biology ,business.industry ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Covid 19 ,Retrospective cohort study ,Emergency department ,medicine.disease ,Health Care ,Health Care Facilities ,Emergency medicine ,business - Abstract
Background The first Covid-19 epidemic outbreak has enormously impacted the delivery of clinical healthcare and hospital management practices in most of the hospitals around the world. In this context, it is important to assess whether the clinical management of non-Covid patients has not been compromised. Among non-Covid cases, patients with Acute Myocardial Infarction (AMI) and stroke need non-deferrable emergency care and are the natural candidates to be studied. Preliminary evidence suggests that the time from onset of symptoms to emergency department (ED) presentation has significantly increased in Covid-19 times as well as the 30-day mortality and in-hospital mortality. Methods We check, in a causal inference framework, the causal effect of the hospital’s stress generated by Covid-19 pandemic on in-hospital mortality rates (primary end-point of the study) of AMI and stroke over several time-windows of 15-days around the implementation date of the State of Emergency restrictions for COVID-19 (March, 9th 2020) using two quasi-experimental approaches, regression-discontinuity design (RDD) and difference-in-regression-discontinuity (DRD) designs. Data are drawn from Spedali Civili of Brescia, one of the most hit provinces in Italy by Covid-19 during March and May 2020. Findings Despite the potential adverse effects on expected mortality due to a longer time to hospitalization and staff extra-burden generated by the first wave of Covid-19, the AMI and stroke mortality rates are overall not statistically different during the first wave of Covid-19 than before the first peak. The obtained results provided by RDD models are robust also when we account for seasonality and unobserved factors with DRD models. Interpretation The non-statistically significant impact on mortality rates for AMI and stroke patients provides evidence of the hospital ability to manage -with the implementation of a dual track organization- the simultaneous delivery of high-quality cares to both Covid and non-Covid patients.
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- 2021
46. Effects of COVID-19 outbreak on stroke admissions in Brescia, Lombardy, Italy
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Alessandro Pezzini, Alberto Benussi, Enrico Premi, Andrea Pilotto, Alessandro Padovani, Mauro Magoni, Barbara Borroni, Ciro Paolillo, and Ilenia Libri
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Clinical Neurology ,MEDLINE ,novel coronavirus ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pandemic ,Medicine ,In patient ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Stroke ,business.industry ,neurology ,cerebrovascular disease ,COVID-19 ,mortality ,stroke ,Outbreak ,medicine.disease ,Emergency medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Italy was the first European country to be affected by the Covid-19 epidemic, with the outbreak estimated to have started in late February, 2020. Currently, Italy has reported more than 228000 Covid-19-positive cases, 14326 of which in the province of Brescia, Lombardy. Although emerging studies have shown a profound hypercoagulable state in Covid-19, it is still highly debated if Covid-19 increases the risk of cerebrovascular disorders. Some reports have shown high frequency of stroke in patients with Covid-191-3 while collaterally there was a decrease of approximately 39% of patients evaluated for stroke in U.S. hospitals,4 possibly due to the fear of seeking care in the midst of the pandemic.
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- 2021
47. Functional and radiological outcomes after bridging therapy versus direct thrombectomy in stroke patients with unknown onset: Bridging therapy versus direct thrombectomy in unknown onset stroke patients with 10-point ASPECTS
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Sergio Nappini, Laura Malfatto, Mirco Cosottini, Roberto Gandini, Andrea Zini, Roberto Gasparotti, Francesco Grillo, F. Granata, Marco Longoni, Guido Bigliardi, Mauro Bergui, Enrica Franchini, Michelangelo Mancuso, B. Bonetti, Danilo Toni, P. Castellini, M. Cappellari, G. Della Marca, Maria Ruggiero, Rossana Tassi, Domenico Inzitari, Samuele Cioni, Lucio Castellan, Patrizia Nencini, Roberto Menozzi, Elisa Francesca Maria Ciceri, Fabrizio Sallustio, Giovanni Pracucci, Emilio Lozupone, Alessio Comai, Salvatore Mangiafico, Stefano Vallone, Paolo Cerrato, F. Taglialatela, Mauro Magoni, Valentina Saia, A. De Vito, P. Zampieri, and Andrea Saletti
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thrombolysis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Alberta ,Brain Ischemia ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Alberta *Brain Ischemia/drug therapy Cohort Studies Humans Retrospective Studies *Stroke/diagnostic imaging/drug therapy Thrombectomy Thrombolytic Therapy Treatment Outcome Aspects stroke thrombolysis unknown onset ,medicine ,ASPECTS ,stroke ,thrombectomy ,unknown onset ,Humans ,Retrospective Studies ,Thrombectomy ,Thrombolytic Therapy ,Treatment Outcome ,Stroke ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Prospective cohort study ,Intracerebral hemorrhage ,business.industry ,Retrospective cohort study ,Thrombolysis ,Odds ratio ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,Neurology ,Propensity score matching ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Fibrinolytic agent - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE The aim was to assess functional and radiological outcomes after bridging therapy (intravenous thrombolysis plus mechanical thrombectomy) versus direct mechanical thrombectomy (MT) in unknown onset stroke patients. METHODS A cohort study was conducted on prospectively collected data from unknown onset stroke patients who received endovascular procedures at ≤6 h from symptom recognition or awakening time. RESULTS Of the 349 patients with a 10-point Alberta Stroke Program Early Computed Tomography Score (ASPECTS), 248 received bridging and 101 received direct MT. Of the 134 patients with 6-9-point ASPECTS, 123 received bridging and 111 received direct MT. Each patient treated with bridging was propensity score matched with a patient treated with direct MT for age, sex, study period, pre-stroke disability, stroke severity, type of stroke onset, symptom recognition to groin time (or awakening to groin time), ASPECTS and procedure time. In the two matched groups with 10-point ASPECTS (n = 73 vs. n = 73), bridging was associated with higher rates of excellent outcome (46.6% vs. 28.8%; odds ratio 2.302, 95% confidence interval 1.010-5.244) and successful recanalization (83.6% vs. 63%; odds ratio 3.028, 95% confidence interval 1.369-6.693) compared with direct MT; no significant association was found between bridging and direct MT with regard to rate of symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage (0% vs. 1.4%). In the two matched groups with 6-9-point ASPECTS (n = 45 vs. n = 45), no significant associations were found between bridging and direct MT with regard to rates of excellent functional outcome (44.4% vs. 31.1%), successful recanalization (73.3% vs. 76.5%) and symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage (0% vs. 0%). CONCLUSIONS Bridging at ≤ 6 h of symptom recognition or awakening time was associated with better functional and radiological outcomes in unknown onset stroke patients with 10-point ASPECTS.
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- 2020
48. Clinical features and outcomes of inpatients with neurological disease and COVID-19
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Alberto Benussi, Andrea Pilotto, Enrico Premi, Ilenia Libri, Marcello Giunta, Chiara Agosti, Antonella Alberici, Enrico Baldelli, Matteo Benini, Sonia Bonacina, Laura Brambilla, Salvatore Caratozzolo, Matteo Cortinovis, Angelo Costa, Stefano Cotti Piccinelli, Elisabetta Cottini, Viviana Cristillo, Ilenia Delrio, Massimiliano Filosto, Massimo Gamba, Stefano Gazzina, Nicola Gilberti, Stefano Gipponi, Alberto Imarisio, Paolo Invernizzi, Ugo Leggio, Matilde Leonardi, Paolo Liberini, Martina Locatelli, Stefano Masciocchi, Loris Poli, Renata Rao, Barbara Risi, Luca Rozzini, Andrea Scalvini, Francesca Schiano di Cola, Raffaella Spezi, Veronica Vergani, Irene Volonghi, Nicola Zoppi, Barbara Borroni, Mauro Magoni, Alessandro Pezzini, and Alessandro Padovani
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Medical record ,Disease ,Odds ratio ,Single Center ,medicine.disease ,Odds ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Delirium ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Stroke ,Cohort study - Abstract
ObjectiveTo report the clinical and laboratory characteristics, as well as treatment and clinical outcomes of patients admitted for neurological diseases with COVID-19 in a Neuro-COVID unit compared to patients without COVID-19.MethodsIn this retrospective, single centre cohort study, we included all adult inpatients with confirmed COVID-19, who had been discharged or died by April 5, 2020. Demographic, clinical, treatment, and laboratory data were extracted from medical records.Results173 patients were included in this study, of whom 56 resulted positive for COVID-19 and 117 resulted negative for COVID-19. Patients with COVID-19 were older, had a different distribution regarding admission diagnoses, including cerebrovascular disorders, and had a higher quick Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (qSOFA) score on admission (all pIn-hospital mortality rates and incident delirium were significantly higher in the COVID-19 group (all pppMultivariable regressions showed increasing odds of in-hospital death associated with higher qSOFA scores (odds ratio 4.47, 95% CI 1.21-16.5; p=0.025), lower platelet count (0.98, 0.97-0.99; p=0.005) and higher lactate dehydrogenase (1.01, 1.00-1.03; p=0.009) on admission.ConclusionsCOVID-19 patients admitted with neurological disease, including stroke, have a significantly higher in-hospital mortality, incident delirium and higher disability than patients without COVID-19.
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- 2020
49. Cortical Inhibitory Imbalance in Functional Paralysis
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Alessandro Padovani, Alberto Benussi, Massimo Gamba, Mauro Magoni, Veronica Vergani, Enrico Premi, Silvia Compostella, Valentina Cantoni, Ilenia Delrio, Eugenio Magni, Raffaella Spezi, Michele Tinazzi, Angelo Brandelli Costa, Nicola Gilberti, and Barbara Borroni
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motor threshold ,functional neurological disorders ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Central nervous system ,short interval intracortical inhibition ,Inhibitory postsynaptic potential ,050105 experimental psychology ,lcsh:RC321-571 ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,functional paralysis ,transcranial magnetic stimulation ,medicine ,Paralysis ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,lcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,Biological Psychiatry ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Functional weakness ,Brief Research Report ,Pathophysiology ,Transcranial magnetic stimulation ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,Excitatory postsynaptic potential ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Motor cortex - Abstract
Background Functional neurological disorders are characterized by neurological symptoms that have no identifiable pathology and little is known about their underlying pathophysiology. Objectives To analyze motor cortex excitability and intracortical inhibitory and excitatory circuits' imbalance in patients with flaccid functional weakness. Methods Twenty-one consecutive patients with acute onset of flaccid functional weakness were recruited. Single and paired-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) protocols were used to analyze resting motor thresholds (RMT) and intracortical inhibitory (short interval intracortical inhibition - SICI) and excitatory (intracortical facilitation - ICF) circuits' imbalance between the affected and non-affected motor cortices. Results We observed a significant increase in RMT and SICI in the affected motor cortex (p < 0.001), but not for ICF, compared to the contralateral unaffected side. Conclusion This study extends current knowledge of functional weakness, arguing for a specific central nervous system abnormality which may be involved in the symptoms' pathophysiology.
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- 2020
50. Mechanical Thrombectomy for Acute Intracranial Carotid Occlusion with Patent Intracranial Arteries: The Italian Registry of Endovascular Treatment in Acute Stroke
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Simona Marcheselli, Giovanni Orlandi, Sara Biguzzi, Marta Iacobucci, Marco Nezzo, Jessica Moller, Alfredo Paolo Mascolo, Valerio Da Ros, Raffaele Augelli, Marco Pavia, Sandro Zedda, Manuela De Michele, Andrea Boghi, Edoardo Puglielli, Alessandro De Vito, Federico Marrama, Lucio Castellan, Roberto Gandini, Rosario Rossi, Piera Tosi, Christian Commodaro, Alessandro Sgreccia, Ilaria Grisendi, Vittorio Semeraro, Paolo Invernizzi, Mauro Magoni, Giovanni Boero, Roberto Menozzi, Simona Sacco, Monia Russo, Francesco D'Argento, Patrizia Nencini, Marco Petruzzellis, Salvatore Mangiafico, Andrea Wlderk, Guido Bigliardi, Leonardo Renieri, Mauro Bergui, Francesco Causin, Andrea Saletti, Renato Argirò, Pierfrancesco Pugliese, Laura Malfatto, Giacomo Koch, Lucia Princiotta Cariddi, Giovanni Pracucci, Daniele Morosetti, Marina Mannino, Rossana Tassi, Adriana Critelli, Mirco Cosottini, Giovanni Frisullo, Nicola Cavasin, Manuel Cappellari, Nunzio Paolo Nuzzi, Olindo Di Benedetto, Francesco Vizzari, Enrica Franchini, Danilo Toni, Alessandra Sanna, Marina Diomedi, Andrea Zini, Federico Fusaro, Alessio Comai, Alfonsina Casalena, Andrea Naldi, Tiziana Tassinari, Stefano Vallone, Isabella Francalanza, Alessandro Rocco, Domenico Inzitari, Fabrizio Sallustio, Roberto Gasparotti, Antonio Caragliano, Francesco Pintus, Pietro Amistà, Luigi Ruiz, Claudio Baracchini, Valentina Saia, Luigi Chiumarulo, Giuseppe Craparo, Federica D’Agostino, Ivan Gallesio, Gigliola Chianale, Sandra Bracco, Luca Allegretti, Luigi Cirillo, and Sallustio F., Saia V., Marrama F., Pracucci G., Gandini R., Koch G., Mascolo A.P., D'Agostino F., Rocco A., Argiro' R., Nezzo M., Morosetti D., Wlderk A., Da Ros V., Diomedi M., Renieri L., Nencini P., Vallone S., Zini A., Bigliardi G., Caragliano A., Francalanza I., Bracco S., Tassi R., Bergui M., Naldi A., Saletti A., De Vito A., Gasparotti R., Magoni M., Cirillo L., Commodaro C., Biguzzi S., Castellan L., Malfatto L., Menozzi R., Grisendi I., Cosottini M., Orlandi G., Comai A., Franchini E., D'Argento F., Frisullo G., Puglielli E., Casalena A., Causin F., Baracchini C., Boghi A., Chianale G., Augelli R., Cappellari M., Chiumarulo L., Petruzzellis M., Sgreccia A., Tosi P., Cavasin N., Critelli A., Semeraro V., Boero G., Vizzari F., Cariddi L.P., Di Benedetto O., Pugliese P., Iacobucci M., De Michele M., Fusaro F., Moller J., Allegretti L., Tassinari T., Nuzzi N.P., Marcheselli S., Sacco S., Pavia M., Invernizzi P., Gallesio I., Ruiz L., Zedda S., Rossi R., Amista P., Russo M., Pintus F., Sanna A., Craparo G., Mannino M., Inzitari D., Mangiafico S., Toni D.
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Cervical Artery ,Settore MED/26 ,Registries Retrospective Studies Stroke/diagnostic imaging/surgery Thrombectomy Treatment Outcome Circle of Willis Endovascular treatment ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Brain Ischemia ,NO ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Settore MED/36 ,Internal medicine ,medicine.artery ,Occlusion ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Endovascular treatment ,Registries ,cardiovascular diseases ,Neuroradiology ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Thrombectomy ,Outcome ,Univariate analysis ,Circle of Willi ,business.industry ,Endovascular Procedures ,Odds ratio ,Stroke ,Circle of Willis, Stroke severity, Large vessel occlusion, Endovascular treatment, Outcome ,Stroke severity ,Carotid Arteries ,Treatment Outcome ,Italy ,Carotid artery occlusion ,Cardiology ,Circle of Willis ,Large vessel occlusion ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neurosurgery ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Purpose: Intracranial carotid artery occlusion represents an underinvestigated cause of acute ischemic stroke as well as an indication for mechanical thrombectomy. We investigated baseline and procedural characteristics, outcomes and predictors of outcome in patients with acute ischemic stroke secondary to intracranial carotid artery occlusion. Methods: A retrospective analysis of the Italian Registry of Endovascular Treatment in Acute Stroke was performed. Patients with intracranial carotid artery occlusion (infraclinoid and supraclinoid) with or without cervical artery occlusion but with patent intracranial arteries were included. The 3‑month functional independence, mortality, successful reperfusion and symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage were evaluated. Results: Intracranial carotid artery occlusion with patent intracranial arteries was diagnosed in 387 out of 4940 (7.8%) patients. The median age was 74 years and median baseline National Institute of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) was 18. Functional independence was achieved in 130 (34%) patients, successful reperfusion in 289 (75%) and symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage in 33 (9%), whereas mortality occurred in 111 (29%) patients. In univariate analysis functional independence was associated with lower age, lower NIHSS at presentation, higher rate of successful reperfusion and lower rate of symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage. Multivariable regression analysis found age (odds ratio, OR:1.03; P = 0.006), NIHSS at presentation (OR: 1.07; P < 0.001), diabetes (OR: 2.60; P = 0.002), successful reperfusion (OR:0.20; P < 0.001) and symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (OR: 4.17; P < 0.001) as the best independent predictors of outcome. Conclusion: Our study showed a not negligible rate of intracranial carotid artery occlusion with patent intracranial arteries, presenting mostly as severe stroke, with an acceptable rate of 3‑month functional independence. Age, NIHSS at presentation and successful reperfusion were the best independent predictors of outcome. © 2020, Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.
- Published
- 2020
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