"BEAST" at the University Of Virginia: Demographic and Phenotypic Data of Patients Contributing to a Biorepository to Establish the Etiology Of Sinovenous Thrombosis (P6.260)

Conclusions:Understanding the association between genetic determinants of CVST and phenotype has the potential to advance the diagnosis and management of this challenging entity. Enrollment in BEAST continues, with a replication cohort GWAS anticipated.Disclosure: Dr. Chiota-McCollum has nothing to disclose. Dr. Ehrlich has nothing to disclose. Dr. Johansen has received research support from the Graduate Medical Office at the University of Virginia for a quality improvement project investigating stroke in the setting of cardiac catheterization. . Dr. Rahman has nothing to disclose. Dr. Chapman has nothing to disclose. Dr. Worrall has received personal compensation in an editorial capacity for the Neurology journal. Dr. Worrall has received royalty payments from Merritt's Neurology.
Source: Neurology - Category: Neurology Authors: Tags: Non-Atherosclerotic Angiopathies and Cerebral Venous Thrombosis Source Type: research