32 results on '"Yazbeck M"'
Search Results
2. Bruns nystagmus occurring after resection of a giant cerebellopontine angle acoustic neuroma
- Author
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Dabboucy, B., Yazbeck, M., Bassim, M., and Comair, Y.
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Global Survey of Outcomes of Neurocritical Care Patients: Analysis of the PRINCE Study Part 2
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Rao C, Suarez J, Martin R, Bauza C, Georgiadis A, Calvillo E, Hemphill J, Sung G, Oddo M, Taccone F, LeRoux P, Domeniconi G, Camputaro L, Villalobos M, Allasia M, Goldenberg F, Teran M, Rosciani F, Alvarez H, Costilla M, Videtta W, Perez D, Raffa P, Seppelt I, Rodgers H, Paxton J, Bhonagiri D, Aneman A, Jenkinson E, Bradford C, Finfer S, Yarad E, Bass F, Hammond N, O'Connor A, Bird S, Smith R, Barge D, Shilkin J, Woods W, Roberts B, O'Leary M, Vallance S, Helbok R, Beer R, Pfaulser B, Schiefecker A, Almemari A, Mukaddam S, Wittebole X, Berghe C, Dujardin M, Renard S, Hantson P, Biston P, Meyfroidt G, da Silva I, de Oliveira J, Neto A, Domingues J, Rodrigues P, Teitelbaum J, Chapman M, McCredie V, Marinoff N, Perez A, Kutsogiannis D, Bernard F, Kramer A, Moretti J, Aguilera S, Poch E, Romero C, Wong G, Song J, Xu G, Mejia-Mantilla J, Madrinan-Navia H, Martinez J, Ochoa M, Bautista D, Varga M, Gomez M, Ciro J, Gil B, Murillo R, Hernandez O, Ramirez-Arce J, Breitenfeld T, Gallardo A, Delgado H, Gonzalez J, Hache-Marliere M, Pinto D, Llano M, Salgado E, Jibaja M, Wright J, Harvey D, Verma V, Hopkins P, Chan A, Welbourne J, Dowling S, Katila A, Lasocki S, Wartenberg K, Hobohm C, Poli S, Schirotzek I, Bosel J, Schoenenberger S, Francken S, Shieber S, Kern A, Falla J, Herrera E, Gilvaz P, Goyal K, Sokhal N, Sohal J, Aggarwal D, Ray B, Pattnaik S, Garg S, Dixit S, Rawal R, Samavedam S, Madhusudan M, Paul G, Mishra S, Shushma P, Shukla U, Sinha V, Vanamoorthy P, Vadi S, Mokhtari M, Rasulo F, Pegoli M, Bilotta F, Nagayama M, Kobata H, Vosylius S, Abdullah J, Granillo J, Mijangos-Mendez J, Horn J, Muller M, Kuiper M, Abdo W, McArthur C, Newby L, Hashmi M, Shiraz S, Abrego G, Coronel E, Rivera O, Paucar J, Gomez O, Palo J, Lokin J, Misiewska-Kaczur A, Dias C, Amorim P, Andre S, Rodriguez-Vega G, Gritsan A, Titova Y, Al Jabbary A, Al Zahrani A, Pelunkova L, Zraiki H, Deeb A, Al Bshabshe A, Al-Jehani H, Al-Suwaidan F, Svigelj V, Ramos-Gomez L, Aguilar G, Badenes R, Pou J, Zavala E, Julian F, Barrachina L, Tegedor B, Tena S, Krauchi O, Tamayo G, Sanchez B, Gonzalezluengo R, Puvanendiran S, Merlani P, Laiwattana D, Promsin P, Nazliel B, Eriksson E, Chalela J, Miller D, Guisado R, Gordon E, Murthy H, Paulson A, Rajajee V, Sheehan K, Williamson C, Ball R, Allan P, Berkeley J, Muehlschlegel S, Carandang R, Hall W, Sarwal A, Damani R, Maldonado N, Tan B, Gupta P, Lazaridis C, Bershad E, Ansari S, Singares E, Manno E, Provencio J, Chaudhry B, McBride M, Dhar R, Roberts D, Allen M, Schumacher H, Habre W, Sheth K, Greer D, Kunze K, Varelas P, Tack L, Porter N, Junker C, Rodricks M, Tuppeny M, Basignani C, Napolitano S, Anderson G, Donaldson K, Davis R, Sternberg S, Giraldo E, Tran H, Coplin W, Badjatia N, Fathy A, Reshi R, Bonomo J, Seder D, Connolyy L, McCrum B, Carter T, Treggiari M, Dickinson M, Rison R, Mirski M, John S, Bleck T, Malek A, Trim T, Smith M, Athar M, Rincon F, Altaweel L, Vespa P, Emanuel B, Eskiogly E, McNett M, Sukumaran A, Shutter L, Milzman D, Glassner S, OPhelan K, Rosenthal E, Kottapally M, Smith W, Ko N, Josephson S, Kim A, Singhal N, Ahmad A, Meeker M, Hirsch K, Nair D, Chou S, Santos G, Clark S, Feske S, Henderson G, Sorond F, Vaitkevicius H, Chung D, Kim J, Amatangelo M, Kapinos G, Torbey M, Kahn D, Chang C, Koenig M, Gorman M, Langdon J, Dissin J, Cross L, Peled H, Claassen J, Ali A, Layon A, Miller A, Wilensky E, Kumar M, Levine J, Maldonado I, Schneck M, Lele A, Sarma A, Yazbeck M, Johnston G, Jarquin-Valdivia A, Johnson L, Kuisle L, Sajjad R, Glickman S, Garvin R, Parra A, DeFilippis M, Fletcher J, Freeman W, Rao V, Olmecah H, Dugan G, Medary I, Hoesch R, Brehaut S, Afshinnik A, Moreda M, Graffagnino C, Laskowitz D, Naidech A, Francis B, Berman M, Tesoro E, Medow J, Jordan D, Aiyagari V, Rosengart A, De Georgia M, Bowling S, Sharaby M, Nathan B, Landry R, Hebert C, Hubner K, Karanjia N, Hightower B, Cummings K, Kirkwood J, Frank J, Hassan A, Sanchez O, Cordina S, Mora J, Bui T, PRINCE Study Investigators, UCL - SSS/IREC/MEDA - Pôle de médecine aiguë, UCL - SSS/IREC/SLUC - Pôle St.-Luc, UCL - (SLuc) Service de soins intensifs, and Meyfroidt, Geert
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medicine.medical_specialty ,IMPACT ,NEUROSCIENCES ,Clinical Neurology ,lnfectious Diseases and Global Health Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 4] ,TRAUMATIC BRAIN-INJURY ,UNITED-STATES ,Outcomes ,INTENSIVE-CARE ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Logistic regression ,VALIDATION ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Critical Care Medicine ,General & Internal Medicine ,Observational study ,Intensive care ,Severity of illness ,Epidemiology ,Neurocritical care ,Medicine ,Case report form ,Science & Technology ,business.industry ,LENGTH-OF-STAY ,Glasgow Coma Scale ,Neurointensive care ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Critical care ,Prospective ,Emergency medicine ,PATTERNS ,Neurosciences & Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,CRITICALLY-ILL PATIENTS ,GLASGOW COMA SCALE ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Contains fulltext : 218566pub.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access) Contains fulltext : 218566pos.pdf (Author’s version postprint ) (Open Access) BACKGROUND: Neurocritical care is devoted to the care of critically ill patients with acute neurological or neurosurgical emergencies. There is limited information regarding epidemiological data, disease characteristics, variability of clinical care, and in-hospital mortality of neurocritically ill patients worldwide. We addressed these issues in the Point PRevalence In Neurocritical CarE (PRINCE) study, a prospective, cross-sectional, observational study. METHODS: We recruited patients from various intensive care units (ICUs) admitted on a pre-specified date, and the investigators recorded specific clinical care activities they performed on the subjects during their first 7 days of admission or discharge (whichever came first) from their ICUs and at hospital discharge. In this manuscript, we analyzed the final data set of the study that included patient admission characteristics, disease type and severity, ICU resources, ICU and hospital length of stay, and in-hospital mortality. We present descriptive statistics to summarize data from the case report form. We tested differences between geographically grouped data using parametric and nonparametric testing as appropriate. We used a multivariable logistic regression model to evaluate factors associated with in-hospital mortality. RESULTS: We analyzed data from 1545 patients admitted to 147 participating sites from 31 countries of which most were from North America (69%, N = 1063). Globally, there was variability in patient characteristics, admission diagnosis, ICU treatment team and resource allocation, and in-hospital mortality. Seventy-three percent of the participating centers were academic, and the most common admitting diagnosis was subarachnoid hemorrhage (13%). The majority of patients were male (59%), a half of whom had at least two comorbidities, and median Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) of 13. Factors associated with in-hospital mortality included age (OR 1.03; 95% CI, 1.02 to 1.04); lower GCS (OR 1.20; 95% CI, 1.14 to 1.16 for every point reduction in GCS); pupillary reactivity (OR 1.8; 95% CI, 1.09 to 3.23 for bilateral unreactive pupils); admission source (emergency room versus direct admission [OR 2.2; 95% CI, 1.3 to 3.75]; admission from a general ward versus direct admission [OR 5.85; 95% CI, 2.75 to 12.45; and admission from another ICU versus direct admission [OR 3.34; 95% CI, 1.27 to 8.8]); and the absence of a dedicated neurocritical care unit (NCCU) (OR 1.7; 95% CI, 1.04 to 2.47). CONCLUSION: PRINCE is the first study to evaluate care patterns of neurocritical patients worldwide. The data suggest that there is a wide variability in clinical care resources and patient characteristics. Neurological severity of illness and the absence of a dedicated NCCU are independent predictors of in-patient mortality.
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- 2019
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- View/download PDF
4. Worldwide Organization of Neurocritical Care: Results from the PRINCE Study Part 1
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Suarez, J. I., Martin, R. H., Bauza, C., Georgiadis, A., Venkatasubba Rao, C. P., Calvillo, E., Hemphill, J. C., Sung, G., Oddo, M., Taccone, Fabio Silvio, Leroux, P. D., Layon, A. J., Sarwal, A., Ali, A., Lele, A., Jarquin-Valdivia, A. A., Misiewska-Kaczur, A., Ahmad, A., Deeb, A. M., Jabbary, A. A., Fathy, A., Chan, A., Kern, CHRISTOPH ALEXANDER, Gritsan, A., Bshabshe, A. A., Malek, A., Schiefecker, A., Neto, A. R., ALHAJJ HASSAN, Ali, Zahrani, A. R. A., Sukumaran, A. V., Sarma, A. K., Aneman, A., Kramer, A., Naidech, A., Lacerda Gallardo, A. J., Miller, A., O'Connor, A., Kim, A., Afshinnik, A., Katila, A., Paulson, A., Parra, A., Rosengart, A., Almemari, A., Sanchez, B., Ray, B., Mccrum, B., Tegedor, B. V., Nathan, B., Tan, B., Emanuel, B., Pfaulser, B., Nazliel, B., Gil, B., Hightower, B., Francis, B., Roberts, B., Chaudhry, B., Romero, C., Graffagnino, C., VANDEN BERGHE, GREET CLARA, Hobohm, C., Dias, C., Bradford, C., Basignani, C., Chang, C., Junker, C., Lazaridis, C., Mcarthur, C., Williamson, C., Hebert, C., Ethan Kahn, D., Harvey, D., Laskowitz, D. T., Milzman, D., Chung, D., Greer, D., Seder, D., Miller, D. W., Barge, D., Roberts, D., Jordan, D., Bhonagiri, D., Nair, D., Aggarwal, D. G., Kutsogiannis, D. J., Laiwattana, D., Pinto, D. B., Bautista, D., Perez, D., Herrera, E. A., Singares, E. S., Manno, E., Wilensky, E. M., Giraldo, E. A., Jenkinson, E., Yarad, E., Zavala, E., Tesoro, E., Eskiogly, E., Bershad, E. M., Rosenthal, E., Coronel, E. B., Gordon, E., Salgado, E., Poch, E. J., Eriksson, E., Taccone, F. S., Al-Suwaidan, F., Sorond, F., Bilotta, F., Goldenberg, F. D., Rosciani, F., Bass, F., Bernard, F., Julian, F. B., Rasulo, F., Rincon, F., Santos, G., Anderson, G., Henderson, G., Meyfroidt, G., Wong, G. K. C., Aguilar, G., Rodriguez-Vega, G., Tamayo, G., Johnston, G., Kapinos, G., Abrego, G. C., Paul, G., Xu, G., Domeniconi, G., Dugan, G., Murthy, H. H. K., Peled, H., Zraiki, H., Alvarez, H., Rodgers, H., Vaitkevicius, H., Schumacher, H. C., Kobata, H., Al-Jehani, H., Lopez Delgado, H. J., Olmecah, H. M., Madrinan-Navia, H., Tran, H., Seppelt, I., Schirotzek, I., Medary, I. B., Maldonado, I. L., da Silva, I. R. F., Hemphill III, J. C., Javier Provencio, J., Mora, J. E., Abdullah, J. M., Langdon, J. R., Claassen, J., de Oliveira, J., Shilkin, J., Horn, J., Teitelbaum, J., Frank, J. I., Fletcher, J. J., Berkeley, J., Andersson, KIM JIMMY, Kirkwood, J., Welbourne, J., Song, J., Domingues, J. R. S., Paxton, J., Falla, J., Lokin, J., Dissin, J., Bonomo, J., Martinez, J. E., Mejia-Mantilla, J. H., Ramirez-Arce, J., Palo, J. E., Moretti, J. I., Gonzalez, J. R. Y., Levine, J. M., Medow, J., Pou, J. A. L., Ciro, J. D., Paucar, J. L. C., Wright, J. C., Bosel, J., Martinez, J., Mijangos-Mendez, J. C., Chalela, J., Granillo, J. F., Sohal, J., Hirsch, K. G., Donaldson, K., Cummings, K., Hubner, K. E., Wartenberg, K., Goyal, K., Sheth, K., Kunze, K., O'Phelan, K., Sheehan, K., Altaweel, L., Cross, L., Barrachina, L. G., Kuisle, L., Connolyy, L. S., Tack, L., Johnson, L., Shutter, L., Pelunkova, L., Ramos-Gomez, L. A., Camputaro, L. A., Kamran Athar, M., Madhusudan, M., Hashmi, M., Mokhtari, M., Jibaja, M., Muller, M. C. A., Costilla, M., Mirski, M., Ochoa, M. E., Pegoli, M., Dujardin, M. -F., Allasia, M., Teran, M. D., Gorman, Michael Murray, Chapman, M., Amatangelo, M., Nagayama, M., Dickinson, M., Koenig, M., Moreda, M., Berman, M., De Georgia, M., Kuiper, M., O'Leary, M., Rodricks, M., Schneck, M., Torbey, M., Defilippis, M., Meeker, M., Allen, David Michael, Llano, M., Villalobos, M., Treggiari, M., Tuppeny, M., Sharaby, M., Kottapally, M., Mcnett, M., Mcbride, M., Gomez, M., Varga, M., Kumar, M., Yazbeck, M. F., Smith, M., Stevenson Porter, N., Hammond, N., Karanjia, N., Sokhal, N., Singhal, N. S., Badjatia, N., Maldonado, N., Ko, N., Marinoff, N., Hernandez Aguilar, Orisel, Krauchi, O. R., Sanchez, O., Gomez, O., Rivera, O. S., Gilvaz, P. C., Raffa, P., Varelas, P., Promsin, P., Merlani, P., Shushma, P., Allan, P., Biston, P., Vespa, P., Amorim, P., de Azambuja Rodrigues, P. M., Hopkins, P., Hantson, P., Vanamoorthy, P., Gupta, P., Garvin, R., Badenes, R., Damani, R., Helbok, R., Dhar, R., Rawal, R., Carandang, R., Guisado, R., Luengo, R. -I. G., Sajjad, R., Davis, R., Rison, R. A., Hoesch, R., Murillo, R., Smith, R., Ball, R., Beer, R., Reshi, R. A., Landry, R., Puvanendiran, S., Ansari, S., Mukaddam, S., Garg, S., Mishra, S., Clark, S., Napolitano, Silvano, Pattnaik, S., Vosylius, S., John, S., Josephson, S. A., Glickman, S., Brehaut, S. S., Shiraz, S. A., Aguilera, S., Sternberg, S., Chou, S., Vallance, S., Lasocki, S., Schoenenberger, S., Bird, S., Finfer, S., Shieber, S., Vadi, S., Samavedam, S., Cordina, S., Feske, S., Glassner, S., Dixit, S., Dowling, S., Tena, S. A., Bowling, S., Francken, S., Muehlschlegel, S., Renard, S., Poli, S., Carter, T., Bleck, T. P., Trim, T., Breitenfeld, T., Van Bui, T., Shukla, U., Sinha, V., Rajajee, V., Aiyagari, V., Mccredie, V., Svigelj, V., Verma, V., Rao, V. A., David Freeman, W., Smith, W. S., Videtta, W., Habre, W., Hall, W., Coplin, W. M., Abdo, W. F., Wittebole, X., Titova, Y., PRINCE Study Investigators, Layon, A.J., Sarwal, A., Ali, A., Lele, A., Jarquin-Valdivia, A.A., Misiewska-Kaczur, A., Ahmad, A., Deeb, A.M., Jabbary, A.A., Fathy, A., Chan, A., Kern, A., Georgiadis, A., Gritsan, A., Bshabshe, A.A., Malek, A., Schiefecker, A., Neto, A.R., Hassan, A., Zahrani, ARA, Sukumaran, A.V., Sarma, A.K., Aneman, A., Kramer, A., Naidech, A., Lacerda Gallardo, A.J., Miller, A., O'Connor, A., Kim, A., Afshinnik, A., Katila, A., Paulson, A., Parra, A., Rosengart, A., Almemari, A., Sanchez, B., Ray, B., McCrum, B., Tegedor, B.V., Nathan, B., Tan, B., Emanuel, B., Pfaulser, B., Nazliel, B., Gil, B., Hightower, B., Francis, B., Roberts, B., Chaudhry, B., Romero, C., Graffagnino, C., Berghe, C., Hobohm, C., Dias, C., Bradford, C., Basignani, C., Chang, C., Venkatasubba Rao, C.P., Junker, C., Lazaridis, C., McArthur, C., Williamson, C., Hebert, C., Ethan Kahn, D., Harvey, D., Laskowitz, D.T., Milzman, D., Chung, D., Greer, D., Seder, D., Miller, D.W., Barge, D., Roberts, D., Jordan, D., Bhonagiri, D., Nair, D., Aggarwal, D.G., Kutsogiannis, D.J., Laiwattana, D., Pinto, D.B., Bautista, D., Perez, D., Herrera, E.A., Singares, E.S., Manno, E., Wilensky, E.M., Giraldo, E.A., Jenkinson, E., Yarad, E., Zavala, E., Tesoro, E., Eskiogly, E., Bershad, E.M., Rosenthal, E., Coronel, E.B., Gordon, E., Salgado, E., Poch, E.J., Calvillo, E., Eriksson, E., Taccone, F.S., Al-Suwaidan, F., Sorond, F., Bilotta, F., Goldenberg, F.D., Rosciani, F., Bass, F., Bernard, F., Julian, F.B., Rasulo, F., Rincon, F., Santos, G., Anderson, G., Henderson, G., Meyfroidt, G., Sung, G., Wong, GKC, Aguilar, G., Rodriguez-Vega, G., Tamayo, G., Johnston, G., Kapinos, G., Abrego, G.C., Paul, G., Xu, G., Domeniconi, G., Dugan, G., Murthy, HHK, Peled, H., Zraiki, H., Alvarez, H., Rodgers, H., Vaitkevicius, H., Schumacher, H.C., Kobata, H., Al-Jehani, H., Lopez Delgado, H.J., Olmecah, H.M., Madrinan-Navia, H., Tran, H., Seppelt, I., Schirotzek, I., Medary, I.B., Maldonado, I.L., da Silva, IRF, Hemphill Iii, J.C., Javier Provencio, J., Mora, J.E., Abdullah, J.M., Langdon, J.R., Claassen, J., de Oliveira, J., Shilkin, J., Horn, J., Teitelbaum, J., Frank, J.I., Fletcher, J.J., Berkeley, J., Kim, J., Kirkwood, J., Welbourne, J., Song, J., Domingues, JRS, Paxton, J., Falla, J., Lokin, J., Dissin, J., Bonomo, J., Martinez, J.E., Mejia-Mantilla, J.H., Ramirez-Arce, J., Palo, J.E., Moretti, J.I., Suarez, J.I., Gonzalez, JRY, Levine, J.M., Medow, J., Pou, JAL, Ciro, J.D., Paucar, JLC, Wright, J.C., Bosel, J., Martinez, J., Mijangos-Mendez, J.C., Chalela, J., Granillo, J.F., Sohal, J., Hirsch, K.G., Donaldson, K., Cummings, K., Hubner, K.E., Wartenberg, K., Goyal, K., Sheth, K., Kunze, K., O'Phelan, K., Sheehan, K., Altaweel, L., Cross, L., Barrachina, L.G., Kuisle, L., Connolyy, L.S., Tack, L., Johnson, L., Shutter, L., Pelunkova, L., Ramos-Gomez, L.A., Camputaro, L.A., Kamran Athar, M., Madhusudan, M., Hashmi, M., Mokhtari, M., Jibaja, M., Muller, MCA, Costilla, M., Mirski, M., Ochoa, M.E., Pegoli, M., Dujardin, M.F., Allasia, M., Teran, M.D., Gorman, M., Chapman, M., Amatangelo, M., Nagayama, M., Dickinson, M., Koenig, M., Moreda, M., Berman, M., De Georgia, M., Kuiper, M., O'Leary, M., Rodricks, M., Schneck, M., Torbey, M., DeFilippis, M., Meeker, M., Allen, M., Llano, M., Villalobos, M., Treggiari, M., Tuppeny, M., Sharaby, M., Kottapally, M., McNett, M., McBride, M., Gomez, M., Varga, M., Kumar, M., Yazbeck, M.F., Smith, M., Stevenson Porter, N., Hammond, N., Karanjia, N., Sokhal, N., Singhal, N.S., Badjatia, N., Maldonado, N., Ko, N., Marinoff, N., Hernandez, O., Krauchi, O.R., Sanchez, O., Gomez, O., Rivera, O.S., Gilvaz, P.C., Raffa, P., Varelas, P., Promsin, P., Merlani, P., Shushma, P., Allan, P., Biston, P., Vespa, P., Amorim, P., de Azambuja Rodrigues, P.M., Hopkins, P., Hantson, P., Vanamoorthy, P., Gupta, P., Garvin, R., Badenes, R., Damani, R., Helbok, R., Dhar, R., Rawal, R., Carandang, R., Guisado, R., Luengo, R.G., Sajjad, R., Davis, R., Rison, R.A., Hoesch, R., Murillo, R., Smith, R., Ball, R., Beer, R., Reshi, R.A., Landry, R., Puvanendiran, S., Ansari, S., Mukaddam, S., Garg, S., Mishra, S., Clark, S., Napolitano, S., Pattnaik, S., Vosylius, S., John, S., Josephson, S.A., Glickman, S., Brehaut, S.S., Shiraz, S.A., Aguilera, S., Sternberg, S., Chou, S., Vallance, S., Lasocki, S., Schoenenberger, S., Bird, S., Finfer, S., Shieber, S., Vadi, S., Samavedam, S., Cordina, S., Feske, S., Glassner, S., Dixit, S., Dowling, S., Tena, S.A., Bowling, S., Francken, S., Muehlschlegel, S., Renard, S., Poli, S., Carter, T., Bleck, T.P., Trim, T., Breitenfeld, T., Van Bui, T., Shukla, U., Sinha, V., Rajajee, V., Aiyagari, V., McCredie, V., Svigelj, V., Verma, V., Rao, V.A., David Freeman, W., Smith, W.S., Videtta, W., Habre, W., Hall, W., Coplin, W.M., Abdo, W.F., Wittebole, X., Titova, Y., Intensive Care Medicine, ANS - Neuroinfection & -inflammation, Other Research, ACS - Pulmonary hypertension & thrombosis, UCL - SSS/IREC/MEDA - Pôle de médecine aiguë, and UCL - (SLuc) Service de soins intensifs
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Internationality ,Scope of practice ,Latin Americans ,medicine.medical_treatment ,lnfectious Diseases and Global Health Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 4] ,Pharmacists ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,law.invention ,0302 clinical medicine ,Clinical Protocols ,Central Nervous System Diseases ,law ,Observational study ,Epidemiology ,Neurocritical care ,Case report form ,Academic Medical Centers ,Intensive care unit ,Telemedicine ,Europe ,Intensive Care Units ,Prospective ,Transportation of Patients ,Neurology ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Critical care ,Outcomes ,Original Work ,Respiratory Therapy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Asia ,Tomography Scanners, X-Ray Computed ,Critical Care ,Health Personnel ,Oceania ,Respiratory therapist ,Neurosurgery ,Pharmacist ,Personnel Management ,Resource Allocation ,Middle East ,03 medical and health sciences ,Physicians ,medicine ,Humans ,Fellowships and Scholarships ,business.industry ,Internship and Residency ,Neurointensive care ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Latin America ,Family medicine ,North America ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Delivery of Health Care ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Introduction Neurocritical care focuses on the care of critically ill patients with an acute neurologic disorder and has grown significantly in the past few years. However, there is a lack of data that describe the scope of practice of neurointensivists and epidemiological data on the types of patients and treatments used in neurocritical care units worldwide. To address these issues, we designed a multicenter, international, point-prevalence, cross-sectional, prospective, observational, non-interventional study in the setting of neurocritical care (PRINCE Study). Methods In this manuscript, we analyzed data from the initial phase of the study that included registration, hospital, and intensive care unit (ICU) organizations. We present here descriptive statistics to summarize data from the registration case report form. We performed the Kruskal–Wallis test followed by the Dunn procedure to test for differences in practices among world regions. Results We analyzed information submitted by 257 participating sites from 47 countries. The majority of those sites, 119 (46.3%), were in North America, 44 (17.2%) in Europe, 34 (13.3%) in Asia, 9 (3.5%) in the Middle East, 34 (13.3%) in Latin America, and 14 (5.5%) in Oceania. Most ICUs are from academic institutions (73.4%) located in large urban centers (44% > 1 million inhabitants). We found significant differences in hospital and ICU organization, resource allocation, and use of patient management protocols. The highest nursing/patient ratio was in Oceania (100% 1:1). Dedicated Advanced Practiced Providers are mostly present in North America (73.7%) and are uncommon in Oceania (7.7%) and the Middle East (0%). The presence of dedicated respiratory therapist is common in North America (85%), Middle East (85%), and Latin America (84%) but less common in Europe (26%) and Oceania (7.7%). The presence of dedicated pharmacist is highest in North America (89%) and Oceania (85%) and least common in Latin America (38%). The majority of respondents reported having a dedicated neuro-ICU (67% overall; highest in North America: 82%; and lowest in Oceania: 14%). Conclusion The PRINCE Study results suggest that there is significant variability in the delivery of neurocritical care. The study also shows it is feasible to undertake international collaborations to gather global data about the practice of neurocritical care. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1007/s12028-019-00750-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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- 2020
5. Abstract P-039
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Woodger, O., primary, Acharya, A., additional, Menon, K., additional, and Yazbeck, M., additional
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- 2018
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6. Diagnosis and management of bone cement implantation syndrome: case report and brief review.
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Kalra A, Sharma A, Palaniswamy C, El-Oshar S, Desai P, Yazbeck M, Zanotti-Cavazzoni SL, Kalra, Ankur, Sharma, Abhishek, Palaniswamy, Chandrasekar, El-Oshar, Seraj, Desai, Priyank, Yazbeck, Moussa, and Zanotti-Cavazzoni, Sergio L
- Published
- 2013
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7. Attitudes toward people with intellectual disabilities: an Australian perspective.
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Yazbeck M, McVilly K, and Parmenter TR
- Abstract
Attitudes in Australia toward people with intellectual disabilities were investigated among students, disability services professionals, and the general population. Three previously validated questionnaires and a measure of respondent self-reported 'social desirability' were used. Students and disability services professionals exhibited similar attitudes, with both groups reporting significantly more positive attitudes than members of the general population. More positive attitudes were evident among younger people, people with higher educational attainment, and individuals with a prior knowledge of or regular contact with people with intellectual disabilities. These respondents were less likely to support the principles of eugenics and more likely to support the paradigm of community inclusion. The authors make recommendations concerning the development of policies and strategies to foster the acceptance and inclusion of adults with intellectual disabilities in the wider community. Further studies that include the use of qualitative techniques and target people in the general population are recommended. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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8. Facial nerve decompression of a PICA vessel loop: A case report.
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Msheik A and Yazbeck M
- Abstract
Introduction and Importance: Facial nerve palsy is a common condition with various etiologies. However, compression due to a vessel loop is an exceptionally rare cause. This case report highlights the unusual presentation and management of facial nerve palsy caused by vascular compression, emphasizing the importance of considering rare etiologies in persistent cases., Case Presentation: We describe the case of a young female patient who presented with a history of right blepharospasm and facial muscle twitching for several years. Cranial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed a posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA) vessel loop compressing the exit of the acoustofacial bundle at the level of the brainstem., Clinical Discussion: The patient's condition necessitated a microscopic surgical decompression to relieve the compression on the facial nerve. During the procedure, the facial nerve was freed and cushioned using Teflon. This intervention highlights the potential for surgical resolution in cases of facial nerve palsy caused by vascular compression, despite its rarity., Conclusion: Postoperatively, the patient was free from blepharospasm and showed significant clinical improvement in facial muscle control. This case underscores the importance of considering vascular compression in the differential diagnosis of persistent facial nerve palsy and demonstrates the efficacy of surgical decompression in such cases., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest No conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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9. The effect of resection of gliomas of the primary motor and sensory cortex on functional recovery and seizure outcome: A 10-year retrospective study.
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Yazbeck M, Kassem N, Nassar N, Farhat H, Dabboucy B, Tlaiss Y, and Comair Y
- Abstract
Background: Gliomas, the most common primary brain tumors, pose surgical challenges in eloquent cortex regions due to potential deficits affecting patients' quality of life (QOL) and increased mortality risk. This study investigates motor and sensory recovery postresection of Rolandic cortex gliomas in 40 patients, alongside seizure outcomes and the efficacy of intraoperative techniques such as awake craniotomy., Methods: This was a 10-year monocentric retrospective study based on the experience of a neurosurgeon in the resection of Rolandic gliomas and its impact on 40 patients' QOL in a period from 2011 to 2020. The primary outcomes were tumor recurrence and the efficacy of the surgery defined as survival status, seizure status, and sensory and motor neurological deficits. Data collection included demographic, tumor, and surgical outcome variables. The extent of resection (EOR) was classified as gross total resection (GTR) (EOR ≥95%) or subtotal resection (EOR <95%). Statistical analysis involved descriptive statistics and inferential tests for outcome comparisons., Results: Patients were aged an average of 42.3 ± 14 years and distributed between 72.5% of males and 27.5% of females. The most common presentation was seizures (65%). The tumor was located in the frontal lobe at 65%, the motor at 75%, and the top tumor pathology was oligodendroglioma (42.5%). The recurrence rate in the study was 20% (8 of 40), and the 1-year survival rate was 92.5%. After the resection, significant improvement was shown in Karnofsky's performance status ( P = 0.007), in normal daily activities ( P = 0.001), in fine motor skills ( P = 0.020), and work hobbies ( P = 0.046). No statistically significant improvement was shown in seizures and deficit rates. Recurrence was not associated with the demographic characteristics, clinical presentation, tumor-related characteristics (location, area, side, and mutation), tumor resection, and adjuvant treatment ( P > 0.05)., Conclusion: GTR of Rolandic gliomas can be achieved with the use of meticulous stimulation mapping, and complete functional recovery is attainable despite common belief., Competing Interests: There are no conflicts of interest., (Copyright: © 2024 Surgical Neurology International.)
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- 2024
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10. Combined Endoscopic Transmaxillary Approach for Resection of an Extracranial V3 Schwannoma: 2-Dimensional Operative Video.
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Rault F, Jannelli G, Yazbeck M, Jacquesson T, and Jouanneau E
- Abstract
Tumours of the pterygopalatine (PPF) and infratemporal fossa (ITF) are rare tumours and are difficult to access. The lateral cervical approach is hampered by the mandibular angle and the vascular nervous elements.1 The classic endonasal endoscopic medial maxillectomy approach has been developed over the past 2 decades but does not allow good control of the most lateral and inferior part of the ITF.2 The surgical video presents a 68-year-old woman with trigeminal neuralgia. The radiologic workup showed a trigeminal V3 schwannoma (TS) into the PPF and ITF. This tumor grew during the follow-up despite fractionated radiosurgery. A 2-dimensional intraoperative video illustrates the gross total removal of the TS through a combined endoscopic endonasal and transgingival transmaxillary approach. The combination of these 2 approaches allows on the one hand, a better view of the lateral and inferior part of the maxillary sinus and ITF and on the other hand, a gain of handling in the operating field and security for our surgical procedure.3 The mini-Caldwell-Luc approach gives good aesthetic results without stomatological complication. Neuralgia disappeared after the surgery, and a gross total resection was achieved, and no recurrence was observed during the follow-up. This combined approach is a good alternative of medial extended maxillectomy, which presents a risk for the lacrimal duct risk and postoperative aesthetic deformity because of the removal of the medial and anterior wall of the maxillary sinus. The patient consented to the procedure and publication of her image., (Copyright © Congress of Neurological Surgeons 2024. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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11. Cervical Giant Cell Tumor Removal With an Anterolateral Approach With Vertebral Artery Transposition: 2-Dimensional Operative Video.
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Rault F, Yazbeck M, Andrei B, and Froelich S
- Published
- 2023
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12. Unveiling Dandy-Walker syndrome: A surprising twist in the tale of acute hydrocephalus and Down syndrome child.
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Fahed E, Msheik A, Yazbeck M, Rahal M, Antoun S, Geagea C, and Younes P
- Abstract
The correlation between Down syndrome and Dandy-Walker syndrome is an exceptionally uncommon occurrence. To date, only four cases have been documented. All previously reported cases involved individuals under the age of 37 months, with prenatal or birth diagnoses. Additionally, most of these cases displayed a limited life expectancy and experienced poor developmental outcomes. In this report, we present the first-ever instance of an 11-year-old male patient, previously undiagnosed with Dandy-Walker syndrome, who presented with acute intracranial hypertension. Magnetic Resonance Imaging revealed an active hydrocephalus caused by a Dandy-Walker malformation. The patient's condition was effectively managed through the implementation of a ventriculo-cysto-peritoneal shunt. This case highlights the coexistence of Dandy-Walker syndrome and Down syndrome in an asymptomatic young patient. Furthermore, it demonstrates that active hydrocephalus in such cases can be successfully addressed through either endoscopic third ventriculostomy or ventriculo-cysto-peritoneal shunt procedures., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (© 2023 The Authors.)
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- 2023
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13. Severe hyponatremia and bilateral sequential facial palsy: A case report.
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Yazbeck M, Msheik A, Berjaoui C, Dabboucy B, and Comair Y
- Abstract
Facial palsy (FP) is a known consequence of head trauma, manifesting either immediately at the time of injury or with delayed onset, typically occurring 2 days or more post-trauma. Unilateral FP is the more common presentation and is often attributed to partial or complete transection of facial nerves or delayed onset edema. Conversely, bilateral facial palsy is a rare occurrence, reported in only a small number of cases, accounting for approximately 3% of patients presenting with bilateral weakness. In this report, we present the case of a previously healthy 28-year-old female who suffered a closed head injury during the Beirut Port Blast. Four days following the incident, the patient exhibited right-sided peripheral FP, which was consistent with a right temporal bone fracture. Subsequently, on the fifth day, the right-sided FP worsened, accompanied by the development of new FP on the left side, characterized by sparing of the frontal region, indicating a central origin for the left-sided FP. Laboratory investigations revealed severe hypovolemic hyponatremia with a sodium level of 105 mmol/L. As isotonic saline fluid replacement was initiated, there was progressive improvement in the left-sided FP. The right-sided palsy also resolved gradually with the implementation of facial rehabilitation therapy. It is important to note that severe head trauma, particularly with a concussive injury, can lead to facial paralysis through various mechanisms. Furthermore, severe hyponatremia should be considered a potential cause of central facial palsy, particularly in the presence of bilateral facial involvement. A thorough evaluation is encompassing assessment of palsy patterns, comprehensive imaging studies, and metabolic investigations is crucial for accurate diagnosis and timely intervention, resulting in successful treatment., (© 2023 The Authors.)
- Published
- 2023
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14. Craniocervical Rosai-Dorfman Disease presentation: Case report and review of literature.
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Yazbeck M, Comair Y, Berjaoui C, and Dabboucy B
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- Adult, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Brain, Diagnosis, Differential, Histiocytes pathology, Prognosis, Histiocytosis, Sinus diagnosis, Histiocytosis, Sinus surgery, Histiocytosis, Sinus pathology
- Abstract
Rosai Dorfman Disease (RDD) is a benign histiocytic lymphoproliferative disease that has variable presentations. The concurrent presentation of RDD in the spinal cord and brain parenchyma is an extremely rare entity. Here, we report another case of a 24-year-old gentleman who presented with a tuberculum sellae and bilateral cavernous extra-axial tumors extending to the subtemporal lobe and was found to have craniocervical lesions. Axillary lymph node biopsy was done showing markedly dilated sinuses filled with large histiocytes and emperipolesis of numerous lymphocytes and plasma cells confirming the diagnosis of RDD. Because the definitive diagnosis of RDD is always pathological, the clinical presentation plays a major role in widening the margin of differential diagnosis. Finally, surgical intervention is the first option to treat RDD with relatively satisfactory follow-up outcomes, and other adjuvant therapies optimize the prognosis., (Copyright © 2022 Sociedad Española de Neurocirugía. Published by Elsevier España, S.L.U. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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15. Microsurgical Endoscopy-Assisted Decompression of the Trigeminal Nerve Impingement: 2-Dimensional Operative Video.
- Author
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Rault F, Yazbeck M, and Froelich S
- Subjects
- Humans, Decompression, Trigeminal Nerve surgery, Endoscopy methods
- Published
- 2023
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16. EEG Connectivity in ADHD Compared to a Normative Database: A Cohort Analysis of 120 Subjects from the ICAN Study.
- Author
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Kerson C, Lubar J, deBeus R, Pan X, Rice R, Allen T, Yazbeck M, Sah S, Dhawan Y, Zong W, Roley-Roberts ME, and Arnold LE
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Electroencephalography, Cerebral Cortex, Cohort Studies, Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity, Neurofeedback
- Abstract
This study explores how EEG connectivity measures in children with ADHD ages 7-10 (n = 140) differ from an age-matched nonclinical database. We differentiated connectivity in networks, Brodmann area pairs, and frequencies. Subjects were in the International Collaborative ADHD Neurofeedback study, which explored neurofeedback for ADHD. Inclusion criteria were mainly rigorously diagnosed ADHD and a theta/beta power ratio (TBR) ≤ 4.5. Using statistical and machine learning algorithms, connectivity values were extracted in coherence, phase, and lag coherence at all Brodmann, subcortical, and cerebellar areas within the main networks in all EEG frequencies and then compared with a normative database. There is a higher rate of dysregulation (more than ± 1.97SD), in some cases as much as 75%, of the Brodmann pairs observed in coherence and phase between BAs 7, 10, and 11 with secondary connections from these areas to BAs 21, 30, 35, 37, 39, and 40 in the ADHD children as compared to the normative database. Left and right Brodmann areas 10 and 11 are highly disconnected to each other. The most dysregulated Brodmann Areas in ADHD are 7, 10, and 11, relevant to ADHD executive-function deficits and provide important considerations when developing interventions for ADHD children., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2023
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17. On absolute socioeconomic health inequality comparisons.
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Khaled MA, Makdissi P, and Yazbeck M
- Subjects
- Humans, United States, Socioeconomic Factors, Health Status Disparities, Income
- Abstract
This paper introduces a new graphical tool: the mean deviation concentration curve. Using a unified approach, we derive the associated dominance conditions that identify robust rankings of absolute socioeconomic health inequality for all indices obeying Bleichrodt and van Doorslaer's (J Health Econ 25:945-957, 2006) principle of income-related health transfer. We also derive dominance conditions that are compatible with other transfer principles available in the literature. To make the identification of all robust orderings implementable using survey data, we discuss statistical inference for these dominance tests. To illustrate the empirical relevance of the proposed approach, we compare joint distributions of income and health-related behavior in the United States., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2023
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18. Spillover effects of retirement: Does health vulnerability matter?
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Byrne D, Kwak DW, Tang KK, and Yazbeck M
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Employment, Australia epidemiology, Retirement psychology, Spouses psychology
- Abstract
The current literature investigating the impact of retirement and the associated spousal spillover effects overlooks the unintended effects of retirement on spouses in vulnerable health, namely spouses with long-term health conditions (LTHCs). In this paper, we fill this gap in the literature and investigate the impact of an individual's retirement on their partner's health outcomes when their partner has LTHCs. Given the inherent identification challenges associated with entry into retirement, we use the pension-qualifying age in Australia as an instrument. Based on data from the Household Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia survey, we find that the husband's retirement has a positive impact on the wife's quality-adjusted life years (QALY) and other physical and mental health outcomes. We also identify redistribution of domestic workload as a key transmission mechanism of the spousal spillover effects. Women with LTHCs will see their QALY and health improve only if their husband devotes more time to domestic tasks after retirement., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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19. Rare Spinal Epidural Hibernoma: A Case Report.
- Author
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Dabboucy B, Yazbeck M, Fares Y, Papatsoris A, Chakra MA, and Moussa M
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Conflicts of Interest: The authors declare that there are no relevant conflicts of interest.
- Published
- 2022
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20. Intradural dermoid cyst with complete dermal sinus of the posterior fossa: Contribution of 3D imaging with histopathological correlation.
- Author
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Ghosn JA, Mourad C, Farhat M, Yazbeck M, Mansour J, and Noun P
- Abstract
A 5-year-old girl who presented with two episodes of meningitis, had a patchy red area and a small skin dimple in the midline of the occiput on physical examination. Imaging revealed a well-demarcated oval intradural lesion of the posterior fossa with restricted diffusion and peripheral enhancement, raising the possibility of an abscess. The 3D volume rendering of CT images of the inner surface of bone showed chronic bone remodeling and a tiny bone defect of the outer table. This detailed anatomical evaluation has an added value to MRI characteristics to orient for a preoperative diagnosis of an intradural dermoid cyst with a dermal sinus, that was confirmed by histopathological analysis after surgical excision., (© 2022 The Authors.)
- Published
- 2022
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21. Orofacial dyskinesia post resection of pineal gland tumor.
- Author
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Yazbeck M, Dabboucy B, and Comair Y
- Abstract
We reported a case of a 33-year-old lady who was diagnosed with a Pineal tumor and underwent craniotomy and gross total surgical resection of the mass through a right occipital transtentorial approach. Immediately upon extubation, the patient started to have persistent chewing-like movements typical of orofacial dyskinesia that resulted later in buccal mucosal injury and swelling of the lips. The movements spontaneously resolved after 3 days. The patient was not taking any medications that were known to induce such movements. Literature review showed that one of the possible mechanisms could be that the suddenly reduced melatonin level in the acute postoperative period leads to dysregulation of dopamine secretion in the nigrostriatal and limbic system causing these abnormal movements. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first such reported complication of orofacial dyskinesia post craniotomy for resection of the pineal tumor in humans., (Published by Oxford University Press and JSCR Publishing Ltd. © The Author(s) 2020.)
- Published
- 2020
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22. Rapid Response Electroencephalography for Urgent Evaluation of Patients in Community Hospital Intensive Care Practice.
- Author
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Yazbeck M, Sra P, and Parvizi J
- Subjects
- California, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Time Factors, Critical Care, Electroencephalography instrumentation, Hospitals, Community, Inventions, Seizures diagnosis
- Abstract
Introduction: Limited access to specialized technicians and trained neurologists results in delayed access to electroencephalography (EEG) and an accurate diagnosis of patients with critical neurological problems. This study evaluated the performance of Ceribell Rapid Response EEG System (RR-EEG), which promises fast EEG acquisition and interpretation without traditional technicians or EEG-trained specialists., Methods: The new technology was tested in a community hospital intensive care unit in Northern California. Three physicians (without previous training in EEG) were trained by the manufacturer of the RR-EEG and acquired EEG without the help of any EEG technicians. Time needed from order to EEG acquisition was noted. Quality of EEG and diagnostic information obtained with the new EEG technology were evaluated and compared with the same information from conventional clinical EEG system., Results: Ten patients were tested with this new EEG technology, and 6 of these patients went on to have conventional EEGs when the EEG technicians arrived at the site. In these cases, the conventional EEG was significantly delayed (11.2 ± 3.6 hours) compared with RR-EEG (5.0 ± 2.4 minutes; P < .005). Use of RR-EEG helped clinicians rule out status epilepticus and prevent overtreatment in 4 of 10 cases. RR-EEG and conventional EEG systems yielded similar diagnostic information., Conclusion: RR-EEG can be set up by nurses, and diagnostic information about the presence or absence of seizures can be appreciated by nurses. The RR-EEG system, compared with the conventional EEG, did not require EEG technologists and enabled significantly faster access to diagnostic EEG information. This report confirms the ease of use and speed of acquisition and interpretation of EEG information at a community hospital setting using an RR-EEG device. This new technology has the potential to improve emergent clinical decision making and prevent overtreatment of patients in the intensive care unit setting while empowering nursing staff with useful diagnostic information in real time and at the bedside.
- Published
- 2019
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23. A Pragmatic Method for Identification of Long-Stay Patients in the PICU.
- Author
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Woodger O, Menon K, Yazbeck M, and Acharya A
- Subjects
- Canada epidemiology, Child, Female, Health Services Research, Humans, Length of Stay, Male, Predictive Value of Tests, Retrospective Studies, Severity of Illness Index, Critical Care, Intensive Care Units, Pediatric, Long-Term Care
- Abstract
Objectives: To develop a pragmatic method of identifying long-stay patients (LSPs) in the PICU., Methods: We surveyed 40 expert stakeholders in 14 Canadian PICUs between February 2015 and March 2015 to identify key factors to use for defining LSPs in the PICU. We then describe a pragmatic method using these factors to analyze 523 admissions to an academic, tertiary-care PICU from February 1, 2015, to January 31, 2016., Results: The overall response rate was 70% (28 of 40). Of respondents, 75% (21of 28) stated that it was important to define LSPs and identified present and future resource consumption (18 of 21 [86%] and 16 of 21 [76%], respectively) as the key reasons for defining LSPs. Respondents valued a definition that was consistent and ranked a percentile cutoff as the preferred analytic method for defining LSPs. Of respondents, 86% (24 of 28) though the LSP definition should include factors other than length of stay. We developed a surrogate marker for LSPs using mechanical ventilation and presence of a central venous catheter in our sample population to compare to varying percentile cutoffs. We identified 108 patients at the 80th percentile as LSPs who used 67% of total bed days and had a median length of stay of 11.3 days., Conclusions: We present a pragmatic method for the retrospective identification of LSPs in the PICU that incorporates unit- and/or patient-specific characteristics. The next steps would be to validate this method using other patient and/or unit characteristics in different PICUs and over time., Competing Interests: POTENTIAL CONFLICT OF INTEREST: The authors have indicated they have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose., (Copyright © 2018 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.)
- Published
- 2018
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24. A framework for testing the equality between the health concentration curve and the 45-degree line.
- Author
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Khaled MA, Makdissi P, Tabri RV, and Yazbeck M
- Subjects
- Cross-Sectional Studies, Health Surveys, Humans, Health Status Disparities, Income statistics & numerical data, Models, Statistical
- Abstract
The health concentration curve is the standard graphical tool to depict socioeconomic health inequality in the literature on health inequality. This paper shows that testing for the absence of socioeconomic health inequality is equivalent to testing if the conditional expectation of health on income is a constant function that is equal to average health status. In consequence, any test for parametric specification of a regression function can be used to test for the absence of socioeconomic health inequality (subject to regularity conditions). Furthermore, this paper illustrates how to test for this equality using a test for parametric regression functional form and applies it to health-related behaviors from the National Health Survey 2014., (Copyright © 2018 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
- Published
- 2018
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25. Depression and religiosity and their correlates in Lebanese breast cancer patients.
- Author
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Abou Kassm S, Hlais S, Khater C, Chehade I, Haddad R, Chahine J, Yazbeck M, Abi Warde R, and Naja W
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Breast Neoplasms diagnosis, Breast Neoplasms ethnology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Depression psychology, Depressive Disorder, Major psychology, Dysthymic Disorder psychology, Female, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Lebanon epidemiology, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Surveys and Questionnaires, Breast Neoplasms psychology, Depression epidemiology, Depressive Disorder, Major epidemiology, Dysthymic Disorder epidemiology, Religion
- Abstract
Background: Breast cancer bears considerable morbidity and mortality and is well known to increase the risk of major depression, whereas religiosity has been reported to be protective. We searched for an association between depression and religiosity in breast cancer patients. We also sought to find an association between depression and various sociodemographic and disease variables., Methods: One hundred two patients were interviewed. Sociodemographic, cancer profile, and religiosity questionnaires were administered. We screened for depressive disorders by using the Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview and the Beck Depression Inventory., Results: Most of our participants (n = 79; 77.4%) had high religiosity score. The prevalences of lifetime major depression, current major depression, and major depression after cancer diagnosis were 50.9%, 30.1%, and 43.1%, respectively. We could not find a correlation between religiosity and current depression, while the association with depression after cancer diagnosis was close to but did not reach statistical significance (P = .055) and in favor of a deleterious role of religiosity. Depression was only linked to marital status and insurance coverage. No association was found with disease-related variables., Conclusions: Religiosity does not seem to be protective against depression development. The stress of cancer appears to be the main culprit in increasing the risk of depression., (Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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26. Income-related health transfers principles and orderings of joint distributions of income and health.
- Author
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Khaled MA, Makdissi P, and Yazbeck M
- Subjects
- Algorithms, Ethical Analysis methods, Health Policy, Humans, United States, Health Status Disparities, Income, Socioeconomic Factors
- Abstract
The objective of this article is to provide the analyst with the necessary tools that allow for a robust ordering of joint distributions of health and income. We contribute to the literature on the measurement and inference of socioeconomic health inequality in three distinct but complementary ways. First, we provide a formalization of the socioeconomic health inequality-specific ethical principle introduced by Erreygers et al. (2012) . Second, we propose new graphical tools and dominance tests for the identification of robust orderings of joint distributions of income and health associated with this new ethical principle. Finally, based on both pro-poor and pro-extreme ranks ethical principles we address a very important aspect of dominance literature: the inference. To illustrate the empirical relevance of the proposed approach, we compare joint distributions of income and a health-related behavior in the United States in 1997 and 2014., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Robust rankings of socioeconomic health inequality using a categorical variable.
- Author
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Makdissi P and Yazbeck M
- Subjects
- Health Surveys, Humans, Self Report, Health Status Disparities, Socioeconomic Factors, Stochastic Processes
- Abstract
When assessing socioeconomic health inequalities, researchers often draw upon measures of income inequality that were developed for ratio scale variables. As a result, the use of categorical data (such as self-reported health status) produces rankings that may be arbitrary and contingent to the numerical scale adopted. In this paper, we develop a method that overcomes this issue by providing conditions for which these rankings are invariant to the numerical scale chosen by the researcher. In doing so, we draw on the insight provided by Allison and Foster (2004) and extend their method to the dimension of socioeconomic inequality by exploiting the properties of rank-dependent indices such as Wagstaff (2002) achievement and extended concentration indices. We also provide an empirical illustration using the National Institute of Health Survey 2012., (Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
- Published
- 2017
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28. Avoiding blindness to health status in health achievement and health inequality measurement.
- Author
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Makdissi P and Yazbeck M
- Subjects
- Humans, Social Class, Health Policy trends, Health Status, Health Status Disparities, Socioeconomic Factors
- Abstract
The concentration index, being focused on the socioeconomic dimension of health inequality and overlooking aversion to pure health inequality, can produce ethically contestable rankings of health distributions. A health transfer from a sicker but richer individual to healthier but poorer individual will decrease the concentration index. This paper presents a new class of health inequality indices that avoid this limitation by trading off socioeconomic-related health inequality against pure health inequality., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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29. Peer effects, fast food consumption and adolescent weight gain.
- Author
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Fortin B and Yazbeck M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Likelihood Functions, Male, Models, Statistical, Fast Foods statistics & numerical data, Feeding Behavior, Peer Group, Weight Gain
- Abstract
This paper aims at opening the black box of peer effects in adolescent weight gain. Using Add Health data on secondary schools in the U.S., we investigate whether these effects partly flow through the eating habits channel. Adolescents are assumed to interact through a friendship social network. We propose a two-equation model. The first equation provides a social interaction model of fast food consumption. To estimate this equation we use a quasi maximum likelihood approach that allows us to control for common environment at the network level and to solve the simultaneity (reflection) problem. Our second equation is a panel dynamic weight production function relating an individual's Body Mass Index z-score (zBMI) to his fast food consumption and his lagged zBMI, and allowing for irregular intervals in the data. Results show that there are positive but small peer effects in fast food consumption among adolescents belonging to a same friendship school network. Based on our preferred specification, the estimated social multiplier is 1.15. Our results also suggest that, in the long run, an extra day of weekly fast food restaurant visits increases zBMI by 4.45% when ignoring peer effects and by 5.11%, when they are taken into account., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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30. The epidemiology, risk factors, and impact on hospital mortality of status epilepticus after subdural hematoma in the United States.
- Author
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Seifi A, Asadi-Pooya AA, Carr K, Maltenfort M, Emami M, Bell R, Moussouttas M, Yazbeck M, and Rincon F
- Abstract
Introduction: Subdural hematoma (SDH) is a well described risk factor in the development of Status Epilepticus (SE), however the epidemiology of SE after SDH is unknown. In this study, we sought to determine the epidemiology of SE, the prevalence of risk factors, and impact on hospital mortality using a large administrative dataset., Methods: Data was derived from the Nationwide Inpatient Sample from 1988 through 2011. We queried the NIS database for patients older than 18 years, with a diagnosis of SDH and SE. Diagnoses were defined by ICD 9 CM codes 432.1, 852.2, 852.3 and 345.3 for SE. Adjusted incidence rates of admission and prevalence proportions were calculated. Multivariate logistic models were then fitted to assess for the impact of status epilepticus on hospital mortality., Results: Over the 23-year period, we identified more than 1,583,255 admissions with a diagnosis of SDH. The prevalence of SE in this cohort was 0.5% (7,421 admissions). The population adjusted incidence rate of admissions of SDH increased from 13/100,000 in 1988 to 38/100,000 in 2011. The prevalence of SE in SDH, increased from 0.5% in 1988 to 0.7% in 2011. In hospital mortality of patients with SDH and without SE decreased from 17.9% to 10.3% while in hospital mortality of patients with SDH and SE did not statistically change. Mortality increased over the same period (2.3/100,000 in 1988 to 3.9/100.000 in 2011) and the diagnosis of SE increased mortality in this cohort (OR 2.17, p < 0.0001). The risk of SE remained stable throughout the study period, but was higher among older patients, blacks, and in those with respiratory, metabolic, hematological, and renal system dysfunction., Conclusion: Our study demonstrates that the incidence of admissions of SDH is increasing in the United States. Despite a decline in the overall SDH related mortality, SE increased the risk of in-hospital death in patients with a primary diagnosis of SDH.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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31. Measuring socioeconomic health inequalities in presence of multiple categorical information.
- Author
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Makdissi P and Yazbeck M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Canada epidemiology, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Female, Health Status, Health Surveys, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Socioeconomic Factors, Stochastic Processes, United States epidemiology, Young Adult, Health Status Disparities
- Abstract
While many of the measurement approaches in health inequality measurement assume the existence of a ratio-scale variable, most of the health information available in population surveys is given in the form of categorical variables. Therefore, the well-known inequality indices may not always be readily applicable to measure health inequality as it may result in the arbitrariness of the health concentration index's value. In this paper, we address this problem by changing the dimension in which the categorical information is used. We therefore exploit the multi-dimensionality of this information, define a new ratio-scale health status variable and develop positional stochastic dominance conditions that can be implemented in a context of categorical variables. We also propose a parametric class of population health and socioeconomic health inequality indices. Finally we provide a twofold empirical illustration using the Joint Canada/United States Surveys of Health 2004 and the National Health Interview Survey 2010., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Service and support needs of Australian carers supporting a family member with disability at home.
- Author
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Burton-Smith R, McVilly KR, Yazbeck M, Parmenter TR, and Tsutsui T
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Australia, Case Management, Day Care, Medical, Female, Financial Support, Group Homes, Health Services Accessibility, Humans, Information Services, Male, Middle Aged, Nursing Homes, Patient Advocacy, Quality of Health Care, Respite Care, Surveys and Questionnaires, Transportation of Patients, Young Adult, Caregivers, Family, Health Services, Needs Assessment, Social Support
- Abstract
Background: As part of an international, multicentre project, the service and support needs of Australian family carers were investigated., Method: A sample of 1,390, 448 family carers completed a self-report survey, including an adaptation of the Family Needs Survey (FNS) and several open-ended questions. A mixed method design was used, employing quantitative and qualitative analyses., Results: On the FNS the most frequently endorsed items were those relating to the need for information about services and, in particular, future, out-of-home accommodation. Similarly, the need for respite services was endorsed by over 80% of respondents. Comments indicated that access to and the quality of respite, day support, and therapy programs were a priority., Conclusions: Participants expressed the need for greater access to information. Access to appropriate respite options, together with quality day support and therapy services, remain a priority for family carers.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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