104 research outputs found

    sj-jpg-1-ves-10.1177_15385744211046245 – Supplemental Material for Catastrophic Antiphospholipid Syndrome Following Lower Extremity Arterial Bypass Surgery: Case Report and Evidence Review

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    Supplemental Material, sj-jpg-1-ves-10.1177_15385744211046245 for Catastrophic Antiphospholipid Syndrome Following Lower Extremity Arterial Bypass Surgery: Case Report and Evidence Review by Ahmed A. Sorour, Levester Kirksey, Sarah Keller, Michael S. O’Connor and Sean P. Lyden in Vascular and Endovascular Surgery</p

    Supplemental Material—Hypogastric artery luminal diameter predicts common-external iliac stent patency and major adverse limb events in patients with aortoiliac occlusive disease

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    Supplementary Material for Hypogastric artery luminal diameter predicts common-external iliac stent patency and major adverse limb events in patients with aortoiliac occlusive disease by Andrew H Smith, Siddhartha Dash, Sean Steenberge, Jon Quatromoni, Jarrad W Rowse, Francis J Caputo, Levester Kirksey, Linda M Graham, Sean P Lyden, and Christopher J Smolock in Vascular.</p

    sj-docx-1-jet-10.1177_15266028211034862 – Supplemental material for Percutaneous Femoropopliteal Bypass: 2-Year Results of the DETOUR System

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-jet-10.1177_15266028211034862 for Percutaneous Femoropopliteal Bypass: 2-Year Results of the DETOUR System by Grzegorz Halena, Dainis K. Krievins, Dierk Scheinert, Janis Savlovskis, Piotr Szopiński, Albrecht Krämer, Kenneth Ouriel, Andrej Schmidt, Michal Zdunek and Sean P. Lyden in Journal of Endovascular Therapy</p

    sj-eps-2-jet-10.1177_15266028231195771 – Supplemental material for The Impact of Proximal Neck Anatomy on the 5-Year Outcomes Following Endovascular Aortic Aneurysm Repair With the Ovation Stent Graft

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    Supplemental material, sj-eps-2-jet-10.1177_15266028231195771 for The Impact of Proximal Neck Anatomy on the 5-Year Outcomes Following Endovascular Aortic Aneurysm Repair With the Ovation Stent Graft by Rens R. B. Varkevisser, Priya B. Patel, Nicholas J. Swerdlow, Chun Li, Vinamr Rastogi, Hence J. M. Verhagen, Sean P. Lyden and Marc L. Schermerhorn in Journal of Endovascular Therapy</p

    sj-docx-1-jet-10.1177_15266028231195771 – Supplemental material for The Impact of Proximal Neck Anatomy on the 5-Year Outcomes Following Endovascular Aortic Aneurysm Repair With the Ovation Stent Graft

    No full text
    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-jet-10.1177_15266028231195771 for The Impact of Proximal Neck Anatomy on the 5-Year Outcomes Following Endovascular Aortic Aneurysm Repair With the Ovation Stent Graft by Rens R. B. Varkevisser, Priya B. Patel, Nicholas J. Swerdlow, Chun Li, Vinamr Rastogi, Hence J. M. Verhagen, Sean P. Lyden and Marc L. Schermerhorn in Journal of Endovascular Therapy</p

    Thrombolysis is associated with consistent functional improvement across baseline stroke severity: a comparison of outcomes in patients from the Virtual International Stroke Trials Archive (VISTA)

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    &lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Background and Purpose:&lt;/b&gt; Baseline stroke severity predicts outcomes among thrombolysed patients. The baseline National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) thresholds are sometimes used to select patients for thrombolysis, clinical trial enrollment, or both. Using data lodged with Virtual International Stroke Trials Archive, we compared adjusted outcomes between thrombolysed and nonthrombolysed patients enrolled in neuroprotection trials (1998-2007) to assess the influence of various levels of baseline NIHSS.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Method:&lt;/b&gt; We assessed the association of treatment with outcome, measured across the modified Rankin scale score distribution, in patients categorized by baseline NIHSS in increments of 4. We used an age and baseline NIHSS adjusted Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel test followed by proportional odds logistic regression analysis. We report the Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel P values and estimated odds ratios (OR) for improved modified Rankin scale score distribution with treatment for patients within each baseline NIHSS category.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Results:&lt;/b&gt; Data were available for 5817 patients (1585 thrombolysed and 4232 nonthrombolysed). Baseline severity was greater among thrombolysed than nonthrombolysed (median baseline NIHSS, 14 vs 13; P&lt;0.05). An association of treatment with outcome was seen independently and was of similar magnitude within each of the baseline NIHSS categories 5 to 8 (P=0.04; OR, 1.25; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.0-1.6; N=278/934 thrombolysed/nonthrombolysed), 9 to 12 (P=0.01; OR, 1.3; 95% CI, 1.1-1.6; N=404/942), 13 to 16 (P&lt;0.05; OR, 1.6; 95% CI, 1.3-2.1; N=342/814), 17 to 20 (P&lt;0.05; OR, 1.7; 95% CI, 1.3-2.1; N=311/736), and 21 to 24 (P&lt;0.05; OR, 1.6; 95% CI, 1.1-2.1; N=178/466). No association was observed within baseline NIHSS categories 1 to 4 (P=0.8; OR, 1.1; 95% CI, 0.3-4.4; N=8/161) or &gt;= 25 (P=0.08; OR, 1.1; 95% CI, 0.7-1.9; N=64/179).&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Conclusions:&lt;/b&gt; In this nonrandomized comparison, outcomes after thrombolysis were significantly better than in untreated comparators across baseline NIHSS 5 to 24. The significant association was lost only at extremes of baseline NIHSS when sample sizes were small and confidence limits were wide.&lt;/p&gt

    Immunotherapy

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    A chapter covering metastasis immunotherapy in multi-author volume devoted to all aspects of cancer metastasis

    sj-eps-2-jet-10.1177_15266028231195771 – Supplemental material for The Impact of Proximal Neck Anatomy on the 5-Year Outcomes Following Endovascular Aortic Aneurysm Repair With the Ovation Stent Graft

    No full text
    Supplemental material, sj-eps-2-jet-10.1177_15266028231195771 for The Impact of Proximal Neck Anatomy on the 5-Year Outcomes Following Endovascular Aortic Aneurysm Repair With the Ovation Stent Graft by Rens R. B. Varkevisser, Priya B. Patel, Nicholas J. Swerdlow, Chun Li, Vinamr Rastogi, Hence J. M. Verhagen, Sean P. Lyden and Marc L. Schermerhorn in Journal of Endovascular Therap

    Techniques and outcomes for endovascular treatment in the tibial arteries

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    Interventional therapy for tibial arteries is a key part of the vascular specialist armamentarium. Tibial artery interventional therapy has been proven to lead to limb salvage with low morbidity and mortality in patients with critical limb ischemia and should be used as a first line treatment mode in the majority of patients, especially in those with significant medical comorbidities. The exceptions are the patients with extensive tissue loss and infection, where endovascular therapy may not restore enough flow to achieve rapid healing and limb salvage, and those patients with tissue loss in the setting extensive, multi-level, occlusive disease, where patency to the completion of wound healing will be unlikely. However, differences in outcome between available devices are unknown and ways to increase long term patency remain poorly defined
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