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result(s) for
"Rezai Jahromi, Behnam"
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Role of Damage Associated Molecular Pattern Molecules (DAMPs) in Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage (aSAH)
by
Niemelä, Mika
,
Hafez, Ahmad
,
Rezai Jahromi, Behnam
in
Alarmins - metabolism
,
Aneurysms
,
Brain Diseases - complications
2018
Aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH) represents only a small portion of all strokes, but accounts for almost half of the deaths caused by stroke worldwide. Neurosurgical clipping and endovascular coiling can successfully obliterate the bleeding aneurysms, but ensuing complications such as cerebral vasospasm, acute and chronic hydrocephalus, seizures, cortical spreading depression, delayed ischemic neurological deficits, and delayed cerebral ischemia lead to poor clinical outcomes. The mechanisms leading to these complications are complex and poorly understood. Early brain injury resulting from transient global ischemia can release molecules that may be critical to initiate and sustain inflammatory response. Hence, the events during early brain injury can influence the occurrence of delayed brain injury. Since the damage associated molecular pattern molecules (DAMPs) might be the initiators of inflammation in the pathophysiology of aSAH, so the aim of this review is to highlight their role in the context of aSAH from diagnostic, prognostic, therapeutic, and drug therapy monitoring perspectives. DAMPs represent a diverse and a heterogenous group of molecules derived from different compartments of cells upon injury. Here, we have reviewed the most important DAMPs molecules including high mobility group box-1 (HMGB1), S100B, hemoglobin and its derivatives, extracellular matrix components, IL-1α, IL-33, and mitochondrial DNA in the context of aSAH and their role in post-aSAH complications and clinical outcome after aSAH.
Journal Article
Hemodynamics in aneurysm blebs with different wall characteristics
by
Mut, Fernando
,
Rezai Jahromi, Behnam
,
Amin-Hanjani, Sepideh
in
aneurysm
,
Aneurysm, Ruptured - diagnostic imaging
,
Aneurysm, Ruptured - physiopathology
2021
BackgroundBlebs are important secondary structures of intracranial aneurysms associated with increased rupture risk and can affect local wall stress and hemodynamics. Mechanisms of bleb development and evolution are not clearly understood. We investigate the relationship between blebs with different wall characteristics and local hemodynamics and rupture sites.MethodsBlebs with different wall appearances in intra-operative videos were analyzed with image-based computational fluid dynamics. Thin red blebs were compared against thick atherosclerotic/hyperplastic white/yellow blebs. Rupture points were identified in videos of ruptured aneurysms harboring blebs.ResultsThin blebs tended to be closer to the inflow than atherosclerotic blebs of the same aneurysm (P=0.0234). Blebs near the inflow had higher velocity (P=0.0213), vorticity (P=0.0057), shear strain rate (P=0.0084), wall shear stress (WSS) (P=0.0085), and WSS gradient (P=0.0151) than blebs far from the inflow. In a subset of 12 ruptured aneurysms harboring blebs, rupture points were associated with thin blebs in 42% of aneurysms, atherosclerotic blebs in 25%, and were away from blebs in the remaining 33%.ConclusionsNot all blebs are equal; some have thin translucent walls while others have thick atherosclerotic walls. Thin blebs tend to be located closer to the inflow than atherosclerotic blebs. Blebs near the inflow are exposed to stronger flows with higher and spatially variable WSS than blebs far from the inflow which tend to have uniformly lower WSS. Aneurysms can rupture at thin blebs, atherosclerotic blebs, and even away from blebs. Further study of wall failure in aneurysms with different bleb types is needed.
Journal Article
Prediction of bleb formation in intracranial aneurysms using machine learning models based on aneurysm hemodynamics, geometry, location, and patient population
by
Mut, Fernando
,
Frosen, Juhana
,
Rezai Jahromi, Behnam
in
aneurysm
,
Aneurysm, Ruptured - epidemiology
,
Aneurysms
2022
BackgroundBleb presence in intracranial aneurysms (IAs) is a known indication of instability and vulnerability.ObjectiveTo develop and evaluate predictive models of bleb development in IAs based on hemodynamics, geometry, anatomical location, and patient population.MethodsCross-sectional data (one time point) of 2395 IAs were used for training bleb formation models using machine learning (random forest, support vector machine, logistic regression, k-nearest neighbor, and bagging). Aneurysm hemodynamics and geometry were characterized using image-based computational fluid dynamics. A separate dataset with 266 aneurysms was used for model evaluation. Model performance was quantified by the area under the receiving operating characteristic curve (AUC), true positive rate (TPR), false positive rate (FPR), precision, and balanced accuracy.ResultsThe final model retained 18 variables, including hemodynamic, geometrical, location, multiplicity, and morphology parameters, and patient population. Generally, strong and concentrated inflow jets, high speed, complex and unstable flow patterns, and concentrated, oscillatory, and heterogeneous wall shear stress patterns together with larger, more elongated, and more distorted shapes were associated with bleb formation. The best performance on the validation set was achieved by the random forest model (AUC=0.82, TPR=91%, FPR=36%, misclassification error=27%).ConclusionsBased on the premise that aneurysm characteristics prior to bleb formation resemble those derived from vascular reconstructions with their blebs virtually removed, machine learning models can identify aneurysms prone to bleb development with good accuracy. Pending further validation with longitudinal data, these models may prove valuable for assessing the propensity of IAs to progress to vulnerable states and potentially rupturing.
Journal Article
Somatic Activating KRAS Mutations in Arteriovenous Malformations of the Brain
by
Rezai Jahromi, Behnam
,
Nikolaev, Sergey I
,
Herman, Alexander M
in
Adult
,
Angiogenesis
,
Arteries
2018
Tissue samples of arteriovenous malformations of the brain were obtained from 72 patients. The majority of the samples had an activating mutation in
KRAS,
a gene previously implicated in tumorigenesis.
Journal Article
Burr-hole drainage with or without irrigation for chronic subdural haematoma (FINISH): a Finnish, nationwide, parallel-group, multicentre, randomised, controlled, non-inferiority trial
2024
Chronic subdural haematoma is a common surgically treated intracranial emergency. Burr-hole drainage surgery, to evacuate chronic subdural haematoma, involves three elements: creation of a burr hole for access, irrigation of the subdural space, and insertion of a subdural drain. Although the subdural drain has been established as beneficial, the therapeutic effect of subdural irrigation has not been addressed.
The FINISH trial was an investigator-initiated, pragmatic, multicentre, nationwide, randomised, controlled, parallel-group, non-inferiority trial in five neurosurgical units in Finland that enrolled adults aged 18 years or older with a chronic subdural haematoma requiring burr-hole drainage. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1) by computer-generated block randomisation with block sizes of four, six, or eight, stratified by site, to burr-hole drainage either with or without subdural irrigation. All patients and staff were masked to treatment assignment apart from the neurosurgeon and operating room staff. A burr hole was drilled at the site of maximum haematoma thickness in both groups, and the subdural space was either irrigated or not irrigated before inserting a subdural drain, which remained in place for 48 h. Reoperations, functional outcome, mortality, and adverse events were recorded for 6 months after surgery. The primary outcome was the reoperation rate within 6 months. The non-inferiority margin was set at 7·5%. Key secondary outcomes that were also required to conclude non-inferiority were the proportion of participants with unfavourable functional outcomes (ie, modified Rankin Scale score of 4–6, where 0 indicates no symptoms and 6 indicates death) and mortality rate at 6 months. The primary and key secondary analyses were done in both the intention-to-treat and per-protocol populations. The trial was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04203550) and is completed.
From Jan 1, 2020, to Aug 17, 2022, we assessed 1644 patients for eligibility and 589 (36%) patients were randomly assigned to a treatment group and treated (294 assigned to drainage with irrigation and 295 assigned to drainage without irrigation; 165 [28%] women and 424 [72%] men). The 6-month follow-up period extended until Feb 14, 2023. In the intention-to-treat analysis, 54 (18·3%) of 295 participants required reoperation in the group assigned to receive no irrigation versus 37 (12·6%) of 294 in the group assigned to receive irrigation (difference of 6·0 percentage points, 95% CI 0·2–11·7; p=0·30; adjusted for study site). There were no significant between-group differences in the proportion of people with modified Rankin Scale score of 4–6 (37 [13·1%] of 283 in the no-irrigation group vs 36 [12·6%] of 285 in the irrigation group; p=0·89) or mortality rate (18 [6·1%] of 295 in the no-irrigation group vs 21 [7·1%] of 294 in the irrigation group; p=0·58). The findings of the primary intention-to-treat analysis were not materially altered in the per-protocol analysis. There were no significant between-group differences in the number of adverse events, and the most frequent severe adverse events were systemic infections (26 [8·8%] of 295 participants who did not receive irrigation vs 22 [7·5%] of 294 participants who received irrigation), intracranial haemorrhage (13 [4·4%] vs seven [2·4%]), and epileptic seizures (five [1·7%] vs nine [3·1%]).
We could not conclude non-inferiority of burr-hole drainage without irrigation. The reoperation rate was 6·0 percentage points higher after burr-hole drainage without subdural irrigation than with subdural irrigation. Considering that there were no differences in functional outcome or mortality between the groups, the trial favours the use of subdural irrigation.
State Fund for University Level Health Research (Helsinki University Hospital), Finska Läkaresällskapet, Medicinska Understödsföreningen Liv och Hälsa, and Svenska Kulturfonden.
Journal Article
Serum Amyloid A Is Present in Human Saccular Intracranial Aneurysm Walls and Associates With Aneurysm Rupture
by
Niemelä, Mika
,
Netti, Eliisa
,
Kovanen, Petri T
in
Aneurysm - metabolism
,
Aneurysm - pathology
,
Aneurysm, Ruptured - metabolism
2021
Abstract
Saccular intracranial aneurysm (sIA) rupture leads to a disabling subarachnoid hemorrhage. Chronic inflammation and lipid accumulation in the sIA wall contribute to wall degenerative remodeling that precedes its rupture. A better understanding of the pathobiological process is essential for improved future treatment of patients carrying sIAs. Serum amyloid A (SAA) is an acute-phase protein produced in response to acute and chronic inflammation and tissue damage. Here, we studied the presence and the potential role of SAA in 36 intraoperatively resected sIAs (16 unruptured and 20 ruptured), that had previously been studied by histology and immunohistochemistry. SAA was present in all sIAs, but the extent of immunopositivity varied greatly. SAA immunopositivity correlated with wall degeneration (p = 0.028) and rupture (p = 0.004), with numbers of CD163-positive and CD68-positive macrophages and CD3-positive T lymphocytes (all p < 0.001), and with the expression of myeloperoxidase, matrix metalloproteinase-9, prostaglandin E-2 receptor, and cyclo-oxygenase 2 in the sIA wall. Moreover, SAA positivity correlated with the accumulation of apolipoproteins A-1 and B-100. In conclusion, SAA occurs in the sIA wall and, as an inflammation-related factor, may contribute to the development of a rupture-prone sIA.
Journal Article
Inflammation and neutrophil extracellular traps in cerebral cavernous malformation
by
Sundell, Veronica
,
Herre, Melanie
,
Rezai Jahromi, Behnam
in
Ablation
,
abnormal development
,
adhesion
2022
Cerebral Cavernous Malformation (CCM) is a brain vascular disease with various neurological symptoms. In this study, we describe the inflammatory profile in CCM and show for the first time the formation of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) in rodents and humans with CCM. Through RNA-seq analysis of cerebellum endothelial cells from wild-type mice and mice with an endothelial cell-specific ablation of the
Ccm3
gene (
Ccm3
iECKO
), we show that endothelial cells from
Ccm3
iECKO
mice have an increased expression of inflammation-related genes. These genes encode proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines, as well as adhesion molecules, which promote recruitment of inflammatory and immune cells. Similarly, immunoassays showed elevated levels of these cytokines and chemokines in the cerebellum of the
Ccm3
iECKO
mice. Consistently, both flow cytometry and immunofluorescence analysis showed infiltration of different subsets of leukocytes into the CCM lesions. Neutrophils, which are known to fight against infection through different strategies, including the formation of NETs, represented the leukocyte subset within the most pronounced increase in CCM. Here, we detected elevated levels of NETs in the blood and the deposition of NETs in the cerebral cavernomas of
Ccm3
iECKO
mice. Degradation of NETs by DNase I treatment improved the vascular barrier. The deposition of NETs in the cavernomas of patients with CCM confirms the clinical relevance of NETs in CCM.
Journal Article
Recurrence of brain arteriovenous malformations in pediatric patients: a long-term follow-up study
2023
Background
Previously thought to be congenital, AVMs have shown evidence of de-novo formation and continued growth, thus shifting thoughts on their pathophysiology. Pediatric AVM patients have been reported to be more prone to develop AVM recurrence after a seemingly complete cure. Therefore, we assessed the risk of AVM treated in childhood to recur in adulthood after a long-term follow-up in our own cohort.
Methods
Control DS-angiography was arranged during 2021–2022 as part of a new protocol for all AVM patients who were under 21 years of age at the time of their treatment and in whom the treatment had occurred at least five years earlier. Angiography was offered only to patients under 50 years of age at the time of the new protocol. The complete eradication of AVM after the primary treatment had been originally confirmed with DSA in every patient.
Results
A total of 42 patients participated in the late DSA control, and 41 of them were included in this analysis after excluding the patient diagnosed with HHT. The median age at the time of admission for AVM treatment was 14.6 (IQR 12–19, range 7–21 years) years. The median age at the time of the late follow-up DSA was 33.8 years (IQR 29.8–38.6, range 19.4–47.9 years). Two recurrent sporadic AVMs and one recurrent AVM in a patient with hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT) were detected. The recurrence rate was 4.9% for sporadic AVMs and 7.1% if HHT-AVM was included. All the recurrent AVMs had originally bled and been treated microsurgically. The patients with sporadic AVM recurrence had been smoking their whole adult lives.
Conclusions
Pediatric and adolescent patients are prone to develop recurrent AVMs, even after complete AVM obliteration verified by angiography. Therefore, imaging follow-up is recommended.
Journal Article
Are Fetal-Type Posterior Cerebral Arteries Associated With an Increased Risk of Posterior Communicating Artery Aneurysms?
by
Niemelä, Mika
,
Kozyrev, Danil A
,
Jahromi, Behnam Rezai
in
Aneurysms
,
Arteries
,
Care and treatment
2019
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Fetal-type posterior cerebral arteries (F-PCAs) might result in alterations in hemodynamic flow patterns and may predispose an individual to an increased risk of posterior communicating artery aneurysms (PCoAAs).
OBJECTIVE
To determine the association between PCoAAs and the presence of ipsilateral F-PCAs.
METHODS
We retrospectively reviewed the radiographic findings from 185 patients harboring 199 PCoAAs that were treated at our institution between 2005 and 2015. Our study population consisted of 4 cohorts: (A) patients with 171 internal carotid arteries (ICAs) harboring unilateral PCoAAs; (B) 171 unaffected ICAs in the same patients from the first group; (C) 28 ICAs of 14 patients with bilateral PCoAAs; and (D) 180 ICAs of 90 patients with aneurysms in other locations. We then determined the presence of ipsilateral F-PCAs and recorded all aneurysm characteristics.
RESULTS
Group A had the highest prevalence of F-PCAs (42%) compared to 19% in group B, 3% in group C, and 14% in group D (odds ratio A : B = 3.041; A : C = 19.626; and A : D = 4.308; P < .001). PCoAAs were associated with larger diameters of the posterior communicating arteries (median value 1.05 vs 0.86 mm; P = .001). The presence of F-PCAs was associated with larger sizes of the aneurysm necks (median value 3.3 vs 3.0 mm; P = .02).
CONCLUSION
PCoAAs were associated with a higher prevalence of ipsilateral F-PCAs. This variant was associated with larger sizes of the aneurysm necks but was not associated with the sizes of the aneurysm domes or with their rupture statuses.
Journal Article
Clinical outcome after microsurgical resection of intraventricular trigone meningiomas: a single-centre analysis of 20 years and literature overview
2021
Background
Outcome and treatment-associated morbidity analysis of trigone meningioma surgery.
Methods
We retrospectively assessed 27 neurosurgically treated patients (median age 63 years, range 15–84) between 1999 and 2019. The median preoperative Karnofsky Performance Scale (KPS) was 80 (range 20–100), and the majority (78%) suffered from tumour-specific symptoms. The most frequent symptoms were aphasia (
n
= 6), visual field deficits (
n
= 5), and increased intracranial pressure (
n
= 5). The median tumour volume was 11.2 cm
3
(range 3.9–220.5). The most common approaches were the transtemporal (
n
= 17) and transparietal routes (
n
= 5).
Results
At last follow-up (median follow-up 35 months, range 3–127), the median KPS was 90 (range 30–100); eleven (42%) patients had improved, nine (35%) were unchanged, six (23%) had worsened, and one was lost to follow-up. One year after surgery, 18/21 (86%) patients had retained an activity level similar or improved compared with preoperatively. No surgery-related mortality was recorded. Postoperative new neurological deficits were seen in 13 (48%) patients; eight suffered from permanent, most commonly motor deficits (
n
= 4), and five of transient deficits. Permanent new motor deficits improved in the majority of affected patients (3/4) over time. New deficits were more often seen for transtemporal (8/17) than transparietal approaches (1/5). Patients with postoperative permanent new deficits had a significantly worse KPS at last follow-up (
p
< 0.001).
Conclusions
The transtemporal and transparietal approaches provide good access, but the latter might provide for a better risk profile. Patients show favourable outcome, but there is a considerable risk for new neurological deficits. This must be taken into consideration for oligosymptomatic patients.
Journal Article