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Specialty: Neurology
Infectious Disease: Pandemics

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Total 594 results found since Jan 2013.

Mechanical thrombectomy in COVID-19-associated ischaemic stroke: patient characteristics and outcomes in a single-centre study
CONCLUSION: In AIS patients treated with MT, concomitant SARS-CoV2 infection did not affect the outcome. Our observations need to be confirmed in larger, and preferably multicentre, studies.PMID:35315928 | DOI:10.5603/PJNNS.a2022.0026
Source: Neurologia i Neurochirurgia Polska - March 22, 2022 Category: Neurology Authors: Katarzyna Sawczy ńska Pawe ł Wrona Tomasz K ęsek Marcin Wnuk Robert Chrzan Tomasz Homa Roman Pu łyk Jeremiasz Jagie łła Tadeusz Popiela Agnieszka S łowik Source Type: research

Differential Influence of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Mechanical Thrombectomy and Bridging Therapy for Acute Ischemic Stroke
ConclusionFor patients with MT, both short- and long-term functional outcomes were not significantly affected due to the mild condition of patients admitted to hospital in 2020. For patients with BT, the COVID-19 pandemic has prolonged the green channel time of stroke, leading to a poor short-term functional prognosis of patients with stroke in the pandemic period. There was no difference in the effectiveness of direct MT and BT during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Source: Frontiers in Neurology - March 22, 2022 Category: Neurology Source Type: research

Impact of COVID-19 Pandemic on Treatment Management and Clinical Outcome of Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage – A Single-Center Experience
ConclusionThere was a relative decrease in the number of patients with aSAH during the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite the extremely different conditions of hospitalization, there was no impairing significant effect on the treatment and outcome of admitted patients with aSAH. A past COVID infection seemed to be an irrelevant limiting factor concerning favorable outcomes.
Source: Frontiers in Neurology - March 21, 2022 Category: Neurology Source Type: research

Electroencephalography at the height of a pandemic: EEG findings in patients with COVID-19
CONCLUSIONS: Most COVID-19 patients who underwent VEEG monitoring had severe COVID-19 and over one-third had acute cerebral injury (e.g., stroke, anoxia). Seizures were uncommon. VEEG findings were nonspecific.SIGNIFICANCE: VEEG findings in this cohort of hospitalized COVID-19 patients were those often seen in critical illness. Seizures were uncommon and occurred in the setting of common seizure risk factors.PMID:35305494 | PMC:PMC8901228 | DOI:10.1016/j.clinph.2022.03.001
Source: Clinical Neurophysiology - March 19, 2022 Category: Neurology Authors: Gabriela B Tantillo Nathalie Jett é Kapil Gururangan Parul Agarwal Lara Marcuse Anuradha Singh Jonathan Goldstein Churl-Su Kwon Mandip S Dhamoon Allison Navis Girish N Nadkarni Alexander W Charney James J Young Leah J Blank Madeline Fields Ji Yeoun Yoo Source Type: research