26 research outputs found
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Differential Features of Culprit Intracranial Atherosclerotic Lesions: A Whole-Brain Vessel Wall Imaging Study in Patients With Acute Ischemic Stroke.
BackgroundIntracranial atherosclerotic disease tends to affect multiple arterial segments. Using whole-brain vessel wall imaging, we sought to study the differences in plaque features among various types of plaques in patients with a recent unilateral anterior circulation ischemic stroke.Methods and resultsSixty-one patients with unilateral anterior circulation ischemic stroke were referred to undergo whole-brain vessel wall imaging (before and after contrast) within 1 month of symptom onset for intracranial atherosclerotic disease evaluations. Each plaque was classified as a culprit, probably culprit, or nonculprit lesion, according to its likelihood of causing the stroke. The associations between plaque features (thickening pattern, plaque-wall contrast ratio, high signal on T1-weighted images, plaque contrast enhancement ratio, enhancement grade, and enhancement pattern) and culprit lesions were estimated using mixed multivariable logistic regression after adjustment for maximum wall thickness. In 52 patients without motion corruption in whole-brain vessel wall imaging, a total of 178 intracranial plaques in the anterior circulation were identified, including 52 culprit lesions (29.2%), 51 probably culprit lesions (28.7%), and 75 nonculprit lesions (42.1%). High signal on T1-weighted images (adjusted odds ratio, 9.1; 95% confidence interval, 1.9-44.1; P=0.006), grade 2 (enhancement ratio of plaque ≥ enhancement ratio of pituitary) contrast enhancement (adjusted odds ratio, 17.4; 95% confidence interval, 1.8-164.9; P=0.013), and type 2 (≥50% cross-sectional wall involvement) enhancement pattern (adjusted odds ratio, 10.1; 95% confidence interval, 1.3-82.2; P=0.030) were independently associated with culprit lesions.ConclusionsHigh signal on T1-weighted images, grade 2 contrast enhancement, and type 2 enhancement pattern are associated with cerebrovascular ischemic events, which may provide valuable insights into risk stratification
Randomized controlled trial of a coordinated care intervention to improve risk factor control after stroke or transient ischemic attack in the safety net: Secondary stroke prevention by Uniting Community and Chronic care model teams Early to End Disparities (SUCCEED)
BACKGROUND: Recurrent strokes are preventable through awareness and control of risk factors such as hypertension, and through lifestyle changes such as healthier diets, greater physical activity, and smoking cessation. However, vascular risk factor control is frequently poor among stroke survivors, particularly among socio-economically disadvantaged blacks, Latinos and other people of color. The Chronic Care Model (CCM) is an effective framework for multi-component interventions aimed at improving care processes and outcomes for individuals with chronic disease. In addition, community health workers (CHWs) have played an integral role in reducing health disparities; however, their effectiveness in reducing vascular risk among stroke survivors remains unknown. Our objectives are to develop, test, and assess the economic value of a CCM-based intervention using an Advanced Practice Clinician (APC)-CHW team to improve risk factor control after stroke in an under-resourced, racially/ethnically diverse population. METHODS/DESIGN: In this single-blind randomized controlled trial, 516 adults (≥40 years) with an ischemic stroke, transient ischemic attack or intracerebral hemorrhage within the prior 90 days are being enrolled at five sites within the Los Angeles County safety-net setting and randomized 1:1 to intervention vs usual care. Participants are excluded if they do not speak English, Spanish, Cantonese, Mandarin, or Korean or if they are unable to consent. The intervention includes a minimum of three clinic visits in the healthcare setting, three home visits, and Chronic Disease Self-Management Program group workshops in community venues. The primary outcome is blood pressure (BP) control (systolic BP <130 mmHg) at 1 year. Secondary outcomes include: (1) mean change in systolic BP; (2) control of other vascular risk factors including lipids and hemoglobin A1c, (3) inflammation (C reactive protein [CRP]), (4) medication adherence, (5) lifestyle factors (smoking, diet, and physical activity), (6) estimated relative reduction in risk for recurrent stroke or myocardial infarction (MI), and (7) cost-effectiveness of the intervention versus usual care. DISCUSSION: If this multi-component interdisciplinary intervention is shown to be effective in improving risk factor control after stroke, it may serve as a model that can be used internationally to reduce race/ethnic and socioeconomic disparities in stroke in resource-constrained settings. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier NCT01763203
WEAVE Trial: Final Results in 152 On-Label Patients.
Background and Purpose- The WEAVE trial (Wingspan Stent System Post Market Surveillance) is a postmarket surveillance trial mandated by the Food and Drug Administration to assess the periprocedural safety of the Wingspan Stent system in the treatment of symptomatic intracranial atherosclerotic disease. Methods- A total of 152 consecutive patients who met the Food and Drug Administration on-label usage criteria were enrolled at 24 hospitals and underwent angioplasty and stenting with the Wingspan stent. On-label criteria included age 22 to 80 years, symptomatic intracranial atherosclerotic stenosis of 70% to 99%, baseline modified Rankin Scale score ≤3, ≥2 strokes in the vascular territory of the stenotic lesion with at least 1 stroke while on medical therapy, and stenting of the lesion ≥8 days after the last stroke. The primary analysis assessed the periprocedural stroke, bleed, and death rate within 72 hours of the procedure with adjudication by a core study Stroke Neurologist. Results- The trial was stopped early after interim analysis of 152 consecutive patients demonstrated a lower than expected 2.6% (4/152 patients) periprocedural stroke, bleed, and death rate. This was lower than the 4% periprocedural primary event safety benchmark set for the interim analysis in the study. A total of 97.4% (148/152) patients were event-free at 72 hours, 1.3% (2/152) had nonfatal strokes, and 1.3% (2/152) of patients died. Conclusions- With experienced interventionalists, and proper patient selection following the on-label usage guidelines, the use of the Wingspan stent for intracranial atherosclerotic disease demonstrated a low periprocedural complication rate and excellent safety profile. This is the largest on-label, multicenter, prospective trial of the Wingspan stent system to date with the lowest reported complication rate. Clinical Trial Registration- URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov . Unique identifier: NCT02034058
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WEAVE Trial: Final Results in 152 On-Label Patients.
Background and Purpose- The WEAVE trial (Wingspan Stent System Post Market Surveillance) is a postmarket surveillance trial mandated by the Food and Drug Administration to assess the periprocedural safety of the Wingspan Stent system in the treatment of symptomatic intracranial atherosclerotic disease. Methods- A total of 152 consecutive patients who met the Food and Drug Administration on-label usage criteria were enrolled at 24 hospitals and underwent angioplasty and stenting with the Wingspan stent. On-label criteria included age 22 to 80 years, symptomatic intracranial atherosclerotic stenosis of 70% to 99%, baseline modified Rankin Scale score ≤3, ≥2 strokes in the vascular territory of the stenotic lesion with at least 1 stroke while on medical therapy, and stenting of the lesion ≥8 days after the last stroke. The primary analysis assessed the periprocedural stroke, bleed, and death rate within 72 hours of the procedure with adjudication by a core study Stroke Neurologist. Results- The trial was stopped early after interim analysis of 152 consecutive patients demonstrated a lower than expected 2.6% (4/152 patients) periprocedural stroke, bleed, and death rate. This was lower than the 4% periprocedural primary event safety benchmark set for the interim analysis in the study. A total of 97.4% (148/152) patients were event-free at 72 hours, 1.3% (2/152) had nonfatal strokes, and 1.3% (2/152) of patients died. Conclusions- With experienced interventionalists, and proper patient selection following the on-label usage guidelines, the use of the Wingspan stent for intracranial atherosclerotic disease demonstrated a low periprocedural complication rate and excellent safety profile. This is the largest on-label, multicenter, prospective trial of the Wingspan stent system to date with the lowest reported complication rate. Clinical Trial Registration- URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov . Unique identifier: NCT02034058
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WEAVE Trial: Final Results in 152 On-Label Patients.
Background and Purpose- The WEAVE trial (Wingspan Stent System Post Market Surveillance) is a postmarket surveillance trial mandated by the Food and Drug Administration to assess the periprocedural safety of the Wingspan Stent system in the treatment of symptomatic intracranial atherosclerotic disease. Methods- A total of 152 consecutive patients who met the Food and Drug Administration on-label usage criteria were enrolled at 24 hospitals and underwent angioplasty and stenting with the Wingspan stent. On-label criteria included age 22 to 80 years, symptomatic intracranial atherosclerotic stenosis of 70% to 99%, baseline modified Rankin Scale score ≤3, ≥2 strokes in the vascular territory of the stenotic lesion with at least 1 stroke while on medical therapy, and stenting of the lesion ≥8 days after the last stroke. The primary analysis assessed the periprocedural stroke, bleed, and death rate within 72 hours of the procedure with adjudication by a core study Stroke Neurologist. Results- The trial was stopped early after interim analysis of 152 consecutive patients demonstrated a lower than expected 2.6% (4/152 patients) periprocedural stroke, bleed, and death rate. This was lower than the 4% periprocedural primary event safety benchmark set for the interim analysis in the study. A total of 97.4% (148/152) patients were event-free at 72 hours, 1.3% (2/152) had nonfatal strokes, and 1.3% (2/152) of patients died. Conclusions- With experienced interventionalists, and proper patient selection following the on-label usage guidelines, the use of the Wingspan stent for intracranial atherosclerotic disease demonstrated a low periprocedural complication rate and excellent safety profile. This is the largest on-label, multicenter, prospective trial of the Wingspan stent system to date with the lowest reported complication rate. Clinical Trial Registration- URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov . Unique identifier: NCT02034058
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MR Multitasking‐based multi‐dimensional assessment of cardiovascular system (MT‐MACS) with extended spatial coverage and water‐fat separation
PurposeTo extend the MR MultiTasking-based Multidimensional Assessment of Cardiovascular System (MT-MACS) technique with larger spatial coverage and water-fat separation for comprehensive aortocardiac assessment.MethodsMT-MACS adopts a low-rank tensor image model for 7D imaging, with three spatial dimensions for volumetric imaging, one cardiac motion dimension for cine imaging, one respiratory motion dimension for free-breathing imaging, one T2-prepared inversion recovery time dimension for multi-contrast assessment, and one T2*-decay time dimension for water-fat separation. Nine healthy subjects were recruited for the 3T study. Overall image quality was scored on bright-blood (BB), dark-blood (DB), and gray-blood (GB) contrasts using a 4-point scale (0-poor to 3-excellent) by two independent readers, and their interreader agreement was evaluated. Myocardial wall thickness and left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) were quantified on DB and BB contrasts, respectively. The agreement in these metrics between MT-MACS and conventional breath-held, electrocardiography-triggered 2D sequences were evaluated.ResultsMT-MACS provides both water-only and fat-only images with excellent image quality (average score = 3.725/3.780/3.835/3.890 for BB/DB/GB/fat-only images) and moderate to high interreader agreement (weighted Cohen's kappa value = 0.727/0.668/1.000/1.000 for BB/DB/GB/fat-only images). There were good to excellent agreements in myocardial wall thickness measurements (intraclass correlation coefficients [ICC] = 0.781/0.929/0.680/0.878 for left atria/left ventricle/right atria/right ventricle) and LVEF quantification (ICC = 0.716) between MT-MACS and 2D references. All measurements were within the literature range of healthy subjects.ConclusionThe refined MT-MACS technique provides multi-contrast, phase-resolved, and water-fat imaging of the aortocardiac systems and allows evaluation of anatomy and function. Clinical validation is warranted