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result(s) for
"Dobrocky, Tomas"
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Outcome after surgical treatment of cerebrospinal fluid leaks in spontaneous intracranial hypotension—a matter of time
by
Beck, Jürgen
,
Levin, Häni
,
Marvin, Jesse Christopher
in
Cerebrospinal fluid
,
Hypotension
,
Microsurgery
2022
ObjectiveSpinal cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leaks cause spontaneous intracranial hypotension (SIH). Microsurgery can sufficiently seal spinal CSF leaks. Yet, some patients suffer from residual symptoms. Aim of the study was to assess predictors for favorable outcome after surgical treatment of SIH.MethodsWe included consecutive patients with SIH treated surgically from January 2013 to May 2020. Subjects were surveyed by a questionnaire. Primary outcome was resolution of symptoms as rated by the patient. Secondary outcome was postoperative headache intensity on the numeric rating scale (NRS). Association between variables and outcome was assessed using univariate and multivariate regression. A cut-off value for continuous variables was calculated by a ROC analysis.ResultsSixty-nine out of 86 patients (80.2%) returned the questionnaire and were analyzed. Mean age was 46.7 years and 68.1% were female. A significant association with the primary and secondary outcome was found only for preoperative symptom duration (p = 0.001 and p < 0.001), whereby a shorter symptom duration was associated with a better outcome. Symptom duration remained a significant predictor in a multivariate model (p = 0.013). Neither sex, age, type of pathology, lumbar opening pressure, nor initial presentation were associated with the primary outcome. ROC analysis yielded treatment within 12 weeks as a cut-off for better outcome.ConclusionShorter duration of preoperative symptoms is the most powerful predictor of favorable outcome after surgical treatment of SIH. While an initial attempt of conservative treatment is justified, we advocate early definitive treatment within 12 weeks in case of persisting symptoms.
Journal Article
Stroke thrombectomy complication management
by
Piechowiak, Eike I
,
Dobrocky, Tomas
,
Den Hollander, Juergen
in
Blood clots
,
Blood pressure
,
Carotid arteries
2021
Endovascular mechanical thrombectomy (EVT) is widely accepted as the first-line treatment for acute ischemic stroke in patients with large vessel occlusion. Being an invasive treatment, this method is associated with various preoperative, perioperative, and postoperative complications. These complications may influence peri-interventional morbidity and mortality and therefore treatment efficacy and clinical outcome. The aim of this review is to discuss the most common types of complications associated with EVT, the probable mechanisms of injury, and effective methods to manage and prevent complications.
Journal Article
Infarct in new territory after endovascular stroke treatment: A diffusion-weighted imaging study
2020
Data on infarcts in new territory (INT) in patients undergoing endovascular stroke treatment for acute large-vessel occlusions are sparse. Aim of this study was to assess the prevalence, risk factors, and clinical relevance of INT. For this purpose, all patients in a single-center prospective registry who underwent endovascular stroke treatment and received pre- and post-interventional diffusion-weighted imaging were included (N = 259). Using an established scoring system, INT were classified according to size (I-III, ≤2 mm, >2 mm ≤20 mm, >20 mm) and likelihood of being related to the intervention (A, high likelihood; B, low likelihood). Additionally, a new type of infarct, that occurred in a territory distal to the occlusion, but was initially not hypoperfused, was defined as an infarct in initially not hypoperfused territory (IINHT). A total of 180 INT and 38 IINHT were observed in 32.8% (N = 85/259) of patients. In most patients, INT were angiographically occult (90.2%), and 13 patients had INT/IINHT larger than 2 cm (type III). Absence of protection during stent-retrieval and a cardio-embolic stroke origin were associated with higher incidence of INT/IINHT, whereas pretreatment with IV tPA showed no association, even when different bolus timing was considered. INT/IINHT were associated with lower rates of functional independence with increasing size type after adjusting for confounders
(
adjusted Odds Ratio per size group increase 0.63, 95% confidence interval 0.46–0.86). In conclusion, INT and IINHT are not rare, are associated with poor outcome with increasing size, and they may serve as a surrogate endpoint for safety evaluation of new devices and endovascular techniques. Further research on associated factors is warranted.
Journal Article
Outcome of patients with large vessel occlusion in the anterior circulation and low NIHSS score
2020
Background
Optimal management of patients with large vessel occlusion (LVO) and low NIHSS score is unknown, which was the aim to investigate in this study.
Methods
This is a retrospective analysis of a prospective single tertiary care centre 14-year cohort of patients with LVO in the anterior circulation and NIHSS score ≤ 5 on admission. Outcome was analysed according to primary intended therapy.
Results
Among 185 patients (median age 67.4 years), 52.4% received primary conservative therapy (including 26.8% secondary reperfusion in case of secondary neurological deterioration), 12.4% IV thrombolysis (IVT) only and 35.1% primary endovascular therapy (EVT). 95 (51.4%) patients experienced neurological deterioration until 3 months. Primary-IVT-only and primary-EVT compared to conservative-therapy patients had better 3 months’ outcome (54.5% vs. 30.8%:
adjusted
OR 6.02;
adjusted
p
= 0.004 for mRS 0–1 and 54.7% vs. 30.8%:
adjusted
OR 5.09;
adjusted
p
= 0.002, respectively). Also mRS shift analysis favored primary-IVT-only and primary-EVT patients (
adjusted
OR 6.25;
adjusted
p
= 0.001 and
adjusted
OR 3.14;
adjusted
p
= 0.003). Outcome in primary-IVT-only vs. primary-EVT patients did not differ significantly. Patients who received secondary EVT because of neurological deterioration after primary-conservative-therapy had worse 3 months’ outcome than primary-EVT patients (20.8% vs. 30.8%:
adjusted
OR 0.24;
adjusted
p
= 0.047 for mRS 0–1 and
adjusted
OR 0.31;
adjusted
p
= 0.019 in mRS shift analysis). Survival and symptomatic intracranial haemorrhage did not differ amongst groups.
Conclusions
Our data indicate that primary IVT and/or EVT may be better than primary conservative therapy in patients with LVO in the anterior circulation and low NIHSS score. Furthermore, primary EVT was better than secondary EVT in case of neurological deterioration. There is an unmet need for RCTs to find the optimal therapy for this patient group.
Journal Article
Impact of sex in stroke in the young
by
Heldner, Mirjam R.
,
Arnold, Marcel
,
Dobrocky, Tomas
in
Adolescent
,
Atrial fibrillation
,
Atrial Fibrillation - complications
2023
Limited data is available on sex differences in young stroke patients describing discrepant findings. This study aims to investigate the sex differences in young stroke patients.
Prospective cohort study comparing risk factors, etiology, stroke localization, severity on admission, management and outcome in patients aged 16-55 years with acute ischemic stroke consecutively included in the Bernese stroke database between 01/2015 to 12/2018 with subgroup analyses for very young (16-35y) and young patients (36-55y).
689 patients (39% female) were included. Stroke in women dominated in the very young (53.8%, p<0.001) and in men in the young (63.9%, p<0.001). As risk factors only sleep-disordered breathing was more predominant in men in the very young, whereas arterial hypertension, diabetes and atrial fibrillation did not differ in women and men older than 35y. The higher frequency of stroke in women in the very young may be explained by the sex specific risk factors such as pregnancy, puerperium, the use of oral contraceptives, and hormonal replacement therapy. Stroke severity at presentation, etiology, stroke localization, management, and outcome did not differ between women and men.
The main finding of this study is that sex specific risk factors in women may contribute to a large extent to the higher incidence of stroke in the very young in women. Important modifiable stroke risk factors, such as arterial hypertension, diabetes mellitus and atrial fibrillation did not differ in women and men, either in the young as well as in the very young. These findings have major implications for primary preventive strategies of stroke in young people.
Journal Article
Stent-Retriever Thrombectomy and Rescue Treatment of M1 Occlusions Due to Underlying Intracranial Atherosclerotic Stenosis: Cohort Analysis and Review of the Literature
by
Arnold, Marcel
,
Dobrocky, Tomas
,
Bellwald, Sebastian
in
Angioplasty
,
Arteriosclerosis
,
Cardiovascular system
2019
Background and PurposeData on the management of large vessel occlusion in patients with anterior circulation acute ischemic stroke (AIS) due to underlying intracranial stenosis are scarce. The aim of this retrospective study was to compare endovascular treatment and outcome in AIS patients with and without underlying stenosis of the M1 segment.Materials and MethodsA total of 533 acute stroke patients with an isolated M1 occlusion who underwent mechanical thrombectomy between 02/2010 and 08/2017 were included. Underlying intracranial atherosclerotic stenosis (ICAS) was present in 10 patients (1.9%), whereas 523 patients (98.1%) had an embolic occlusion without stenosis.ResultsThere was no difference in age, admission National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale, risk factors, Alberta stroke program early CT score or collaterals between the groups. Procedure time (155 vs 40 min, P = 0.001) was significantly longer in the ICAS group where rescue stent-angioplasty was performed in all patients. There was no statistical difference in final modified thrombolysis in cerebral infarction score between both groups (70 vs 88%, P = 0.115). Favorable outcome (modified Rankin Scale ≤ 2) at 90 days was less frequent in patients with ICAS than in the embolic group (0 vs 49.4%, P = 0.004). The mortality rate tended to be higher in the ICAS group (44.4 vs 19.4%, P = 0.082).ConclusionIn patients with AIS, rescue therapy with stent placement to treat underlying ICAS of the M1 segment is technically feasible; however, in our study, a significantly lower rate of favorable outcome was observed in these patients compared to those with thromboembolic M1 occlusions.Level of EvidenceLevel 3, non-randomized controlled study.
Journal Article
Direct epidural ethanol injection in aggressive vertebral hemangiomas to decompress the central canal: a multistep percutaneous treatment strategy
by
Cardia, Andrea
,
Dobrocky, Tomas
,
Kaesmacher, Johannes
in
Asymptomatic
,
Biopsy
,
Compression therapy
2026
BackgroundVertebral hemangiomas are incidental and typically, asymptomatic lesions of the spine, present in 10–12% of the population. However, aggressive vertebral hemangiomas (AVHs) can compromise the spinal canal, leading to spinal cord or nerve root compression, and require timely treatment to prevent permanent neurological deficits. Surgical management is challenging owing to the high vascularity of AVHs, and carries a significant risk of perioperative blood loss. Intraosseous ethanol injection is commonly used for sclerotization, but may not adequately deal with epidural components.ObjectiveTo carry out a staged treatment with an image-guided puncture and ethanol injection of the epidural component in 12 patients.MethodsWe retrospectively analyzed 12 patients with symptomatic AVHs who underwent targeted epidural ethanol injection followed by vertebral body cement augmentation, between 2017 and 2024, at three tertiary hospitals. Data collection included pre- and post-treatment imaging and clinical outcomes.ResultsAmong 12 patients (mean age 50, women 50%), all had extensive epidural involvement and were symptomatic, including spinal cord compression and pain. Reduction in size of more than 75% of the epidural hemangioma was achieved in 8 cases, with 11 patients experiencing complete symptom resolution. Laminectomy was performed in 3 cases, while corpectomy was avoided in all cases. Two patients had neurological worsening, with one achieving complete resolution and the other having mild residual impairment after rehabilitation due to a small spinal cord ischemic lesion. No other major complications occurred.ConclusionDirect epidural ethanol injection provides a minimally invasive alternative to surgery, such as corpectomy, including rapid size reduction of the compressive epidural component, and potentially, prevents retrograde flow into arterial collaterals. Adding vertebroplasty enhances vertebral stability.
Journal Article
Robotic-assisted intracranial aneurysm treatment: 1 year follow-up imaging and clinical outcomes
by
Hendriks, Eef Jacobus
,
Swaminathan, Saravana Kumar
,
Radovanovic, Ivan
in
aneurysm
,
Aneurysms
,
brain
2022
BackgroundThe use of robotics in medicine may enable increased technical accuracy, reduced procedural time and radiation exposure, and remote completion of procedures. We have previously described the first-in-human, robotic-assisted cerebral aneurysm treatment using the CorPath GRX Robotic System. In this report we discuss our early experiences and outcomes using this robotic device for endovascular treatment of intracranial aneurysms using stent-assisted coil embolization and flow diversion.MethodsThe patient and disease characteristics, procedural details, and follow-up imaging and clinical outcomes of consecutive patients undergoing robotically-assisted intracranial aneurysm embolization between November 2019 and February 2020 are presented.ResultsSix patients underwent robotically-assisted embolization of intracranial aneurysms. Four of the patients were treated with a neck-bridging stent (with or without coiling) and two patients were treated with a flow-diverting stent. Two patients were treated in the subacute period of subarachnoid hemorrhage and four patients were treated electively. All of the procedures could be completed robotically and there was no need for unplanned manual intervention. The technical success rate of the procedures was 100%. There was no morbidity or mortality associated with the procedures. One year follow-up imaging showed that four aneurysms were completely obliterated (Raymond-Roy Occlusion Classification (RROC) class I) and the remaining two were occluded with a residual neck (RROC class II).ConclusionsThe Corpath GRX Robotic System demonstrated a precise control over the microcatheter, wire and stent during aneurysm treatment. Robotic neuro-procedures seem to be safe and effective and demonstrate stable occlusion results in the midterm follow-up.
Journal Article
DOT sign indicates persistent hypoperfusion and poor outcome in patients with incomplete reperfusion following thrombectomy
by
Serrallach, Bettina
,
Dobrocky, Tomas
,
Chapot, René
in
Aged
,
Aged, 80 and over
,
Cardiac arrhythmia
2025
BackgroundDistal occlusions associated with incomplete reperfusion (expanded Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction,
Journal Article
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