Aitziber Aleu
University of Pittsburgh
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Aitziber Aleu.
Stroke | 2004
Joan Martí-Fàbregas; Meritxell Gomis; A. Arboix; Aitziber Aleu; Javier Pagonabarraga; Robert Belvis; Dolores Cocho; Jaume Roquer; Ana Rodríguez; María Dolores. Pena García; Laura Molina-Porcel; Jordi Díaz-Manera; Josep-Lluis Martí-Vilalta
Background and Purpose— Statins may be beneficial for patients with acute ischemic stroke. We tested the hypothesis that patients pretreated with statins at the onset of stroke have less severe neurological effects and a better outcome. Methods— We prospectively included consecutive patients with ischemic stroke of <4-hour duration. We recorded demographic data, vascular risk factors, Oxfordshire Classification, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score, admission blood glucose and body temperature, cause (Trial of Org 10172 in Acute Treatment [TOAST] criteria), neurological progression at day 3, previous statin treatment, and outcome at 3 months. We analyzed the data using univariate methods and a logistic regression with the dependent variable of good outcome (modified Rankin Scale [mRS] 0 to 1, Barthel Index [BI] 95 to 100). Results— We included 167 patients (mean age 70.7±12 years, 94 men). Thirty patients (18%) were using statins when admitted. In the statin group, the median NIHSS score was not significantly lower and the risk of progression was not significantly reduced. Favorable outcomes at 3 months were more frequent in the statin group (80% versus 61.3%, P =0.059 with the mRS; 76.7% versus 51.8%, P =0.015 with the BI). Predictors of favorable outcome with the BI were: NIHSS score at admission (OR: 0.72; CI: 0.65 to 0.80; P <0.0001), age (OR: 0.96; CI: 0.92 to 0.99; P =0.017), and statin group (OR: 5.55; CI: 1.42 to 17.8; P =0.012). Conclusions— Statins may provide benefits for the long-term functional outcome when administered before the onset of cerebral ischemia. However, randomized controlled trials will be required to evaluate the validity of our results.
Stroke | 2010
Mouhammad Jumaa; Fan Zhang; Gerardo Ruiz-Ares; Theresa A. Gelzinis; Amer M. Malik; Aitziber Aleu; Jennifer Oakley; Brian Jankowitz; Ridwan Lin; Vivek Reddy; Syed Zaidi; Maxim Hammer; Lawrence R. Wechsler; Michael B. Horowitz; Tudor G. Jovin
Background and Purpose— There is considerable heterogeneity in practice patterns between sedation in the intubated state vs nonintubated state during endovascular acute stroke therapy. We sought to compare clinical and radiographic outcomes between these 2 sedation modalities. Methods— Consecutive patients with acute stroke due to middle cerebral artery–M1 segment occlusion treated with endovascular therapy between January 2006 and July 2009 were identified in our interventional acute stroke database. Level of sedation was determined as intubated (IS) vs nonintubated (NIS) state. Final infarct volumes on follow-up imaging and clinical outcomes at 3 to 6 months were obtained. Results— A total of 126 patients were included (73 [58%] NIS vs 53 [42%] IS). In IS patients, intensive care unit length of stay was longer (6.5 vs 3.2 days, P=0.0008). Intraprocedural complications were lower in NIS patients compared with IS patients (5/73 [6%] vs 8/53 [15%], respectively), but the difference was not significant (P=0.13). In univariate and multivariate analyses, NIS was significantly associated with in-hospital mortality (odds ratio=0.32, P=0.011), good clinical outcome (odds ratio=3.06, P=0.042), and final infarct volume (odds ratio=0.25, P=0.004). Conclusion— In endovascular acute stroke therapy, treatment of patients in NIS appears to be as safe as treatment in IS and may result in more favorable clinical and radiographic outcomes. Our preliminary observations derived from this retrospective study await confirmation from prospective trials.
Stroke | 2011
Amer M. Malik; Nirav A. Vora; Ridwan Lin; Syed Zaidi; Aitziber Aleu; Brian Jankowitz; Mouhammad Jumaa; Vivek Reddy; Maxim Hammer; Lawrence R. Wechsler; Michael B. Horowitz; Tudor G. Jovin
Background and Purpose— Acute ischemic stroke due to tandem occlusions of the extracranial internal carotid artery and intracranial arteries has a poor natural history. We aimed to evaluate our single-center experience with endovascular treatment of this unique stroke population. Methods— Consecutive patients with tandem occlusions of the internal carotid artery origin and an intracranial artery (ie, internal carotid artery terminus, M1 middle cerebral artery, or M2 middle cerebral artery) were studied retrospectively. Treatment consisted of proximal revascularization with angioplasty and stenting followed by intracranial intervention. Endpoints were recanalization of both extracranial and intracranial vessels (Thrombolysis In Myocardial Ischemia ≥2), parenchymal hematoma, and good clinical outcome (modified Rankin Scale ⩽2) at 3 months. Results— We identified 77 patients with tandem occlusions. Recanalization occurred in 58 cases (75.3%) and parenchymal hematoma occurred in 8 cases (10.4%). Distal embolization occurred in 3 cases (3.9%). In 18 of 77 patients (23.4%), distal (ie, intracranial) recanalization was observed after proximal recanalization, obviating the need for distal intervention. Good clinical outcomes were achieved in 32 patients (41.6%). In multivariate analysis, Thrombolysis In Myocardial Ischemia ≥2 recanalization, baseline National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score, baseline Alberta Stroke Programme Early CT score, and age were significantly associated with good outcome. Conclusions— Endovascular therapy of tandem occlusions using extracranial internal carotid artery revascularization as the first step is technically feasible, has a high recanalization rate, and results in an acceptable rate of good clinical outcome. Future randomized, prospective studies should clarify the role of this approach.
Stroke | 2009
Ridwan Lin; Nirav A. Vora; Syed Zaidi; Aitziber Aleu; Brian Jankowitz; Ajith J. Thomas; Rishi Gupta; Michael B. Horowitz; Susan Kim; Vivek Y. Reddy; Maxim Hammer; Ken Uchino; Lawrence R. Wechsler; Tudor G. Jovin
Background and Purpose— Acute stroke attributable to internal carotid artery terminus occlusion carries a poor prognosis. Vessel recanalization is crucial to improve clinical outcome. Historically, pharmacological thrombolysis alone has low recanalization rates. We sought to determine whether adjunctive mechanical approaches achieve better vessel recanalization and functional outcome. Methods— We retrospectively reviewed 75 consecutive endovascular cases of acute internal carotid artery terminus occlusions treated at our center between 1998 and 2008. Mechanical approaches (MERCI retrieval/angioplasty/stent) with and without adjunctive intra-arterial pharmacological therapy (urokinase or tissue plasminogen activator) was compared to intra-arterial lytics alone. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed to determine predictors of recanalization (thrombolysis in myocardial infarction grades 2 to 3) and favorable functional outcome (modified Rankin score ≤2) at 3 months. Results— Lowest recanalization rates were observed with intra-arterial lytics alone (3/17, 17.6%). MERCI embolectomy combined with intra-arterial lytics was associated with the highest recanalization rates (18/21, 85.7%; P<0.0001). MERCI embolectomy alone achieved 46.2% recanalization rates (6/13; P=0.23). Angioplasty or stenting and intra-arterial lytics achieved 25% (2/8; P=0.65) and 40% (4/10; P=0.085) recanalization, respectively. In multivariate analysis, combination of MERCI embolectomy with intra-arterial lytics (OR, 16.2; CI, 4.6–77.6), or any mechanical technique with intra-arterial lytics (OR, 6.7; CI, 2.5–19.5) independently predicted thrombolysis in myocardial infarction 2 to 3 recanalization. Clinically significant parenchymal hemorrhage rates were 7.5% with combination (3/38) and 12.5% with pharmacological therapies (2/16; P=0.46). Using stepwise logistic regression, age (OR, 0.95; CI, 0.90–0.995), baseline NIHSS (OR, 0.82; CI, 0.70–0.96), and thrombolysis in myocardial infarction 2 to 3 recanalization (OR, 4.0; CI, 1.1–14.4) were associated with favorable functional outcome. Conclusions— Combined mechanical and intra-arterial pharmacological therapy is associated with higher recanalization rates than either intervention alone in acute internal carotid artery terminus occlusion revascularization.
Stroke | 2007
Aitziber Aleu; Patricio Mellado; Christoph Lichy; Martin Köhrmann; Peter D. Schellinger
Background and Purpose— Only 2% to 4% of patients with acute ischemic stroke receive thrombolytic therapy resulting from the current strict inclusion criteria among other issues. Safety of intravenous and intraarterial thrombolysis in off-label situations is controversially discussed. We sought to review the reports on such patients regarding intra- and extracranial hemorrhage. Summary of Review— A MEDLINE search for off-label uses of thrombolysis revealed reports on 273 patients treated with intraarterial or intravenous thrombolysis for ischemic stroke. Symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage occurred in 19 of 273 patients (6.95%) and extracranial hemorrhage in 17 of 273 (6.22%). Conclusions— These data suggest that the overall bleeding risk in off-label thrombolysis may not be as high as presumed. However, the small number of patients in each group and the likely underreporting of worse outcomes preclude drawing any conclusion as to specific treatment recommendations. Selected patients might benefit, however, from thrombolysis in situations not currently considered in the inclusion criteria. To obtain a meaningful database, a registry for off-label thrombolysis should be created.
Stroke | 2014
Sònia Abilleira; Pere Cardona; Marc Ribo; Monica Millan; Víctor Obach; Jaume Roquer; David Cánovas; Joan Martí-Fàbregas; Francisco Rubio; José Alvarez-Sabín; Antoni Dávalos; Ángel Chamorro; Maria Angeles de Miquel; Alejandro Tomasello; Carlos Castaño; Juan Macho; Aida Ribera; Miquel Gallofré; Jordi Sanahuja; Francisco Purroy; Joaquín Serena; Mar Castellanos; Yolanda Silva; Cecile van Eendenburg; Anna Pellisé; Xavier Ustrell; Rafael Marés; Juanjo Baiges; Moisés Garcés; Júlia Saura
Background and Purpose— We sought to assess outcomes after endovascular treatment/therapy of acute ischemic stroke, overall and by subgroups, and looked for predictors of outcome. Methods— We used data from a mandatory, population-based registry that includes external monitoring of completeness, which assesses reperfusion therapies for consecutive patients with acute ischemic stroke since 2011. We described outcomes overall and by subgroups (age ⩽ or >80 years; onset-to-groin puncture ⩽ or >6 hours; anterior or posterior strokes; previous IV recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator or isolated endovascular treatment/therapy; revascularization or no revascularization), and determined independent predictors of good outcome (modified Rankin Scale score ⩽2) and mortality at 3 months by multivariate modeling. Results— We analyzed 536 patients, of whom 285 received previous IV recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator. Overall, revascularization (modified Thrombolysis In Cerebral Infarction scores, 2b and 3) occurred in 73.9%, 5.6% developed symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhages, 43.3% achieved good functional outcome, and 22.2% were dead at 90 days. Adjusted comparisons by subgroups systematically favored revascularization (lower proportion of symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhages and death rates and higher proportion of good outcome). Multivariate analyses confirmed the independent protective effect of revascularization. Additionally, age >80 years, stroke severity, hypertension (deleterious), atrial fibrillation, and onset-to-groin puncture ⩽6 hours (protective) also predicted good outcome, whereas lack of previous disability and anterior circulation strokes (protective) as well as and hypertension (deleterious) independently predicted mortality. Conclusions— This study reinforces the role of revascularization and time to treatment to achieve enhanced functional outcomes and identifies other clinical features that independently predict good/fatal outcome after endovascular treatment/therapy.
Neurosurgery | 2010
Hilal Kanaan; Brian T. Jankowitz; Aitziber Aleu; Dean Kostov; Ridwan Lin; Kimberly Lee; Narendra Panipitiya; Yakov Gologorsky; Emir Sandhu; Lauren Rissman; Elizabeth Crago; Yuefang Chang; Seong-Rim Kim; Tudor G. Jovin; Michael Horowitz
BACKGROUND: Intrinsic thrombosis and stenosis are complications associated with the use of neck-remodeling devices in the treatment of intracranial aneurysms. OBJECTIVE: To examine the technical and anatomic factors that predict short- and long-term stent patency. METHODS: We undertook a retrospective review of 161 patients who underwent coil embolization of 168 ruptured and unruptured aneurysms assisted by the use of a neck-remodeling device. One hundred twenty-seven patients had catheter-based angiographic follow-up to evaluate 133 stent-coil constructs (mean, 15.4 months; median, 12.7 months). The technique of microcatheter jailing was used in a majority of patients; nonstandard stent configurations were also used. RESULTS: Clinical follow-up for all patients who had catheter-based angiograms demonstrated that among 133 stent constructs, a total of 9 (6.8%) had an in-stent event: 6 acute or subacute thrombosis (4.5%) and 3 delayed stenosis or occlusion (2.3%). Seven of these constructs were associated with a symptomatic event (5.3%). A significantly higher rate of in-stent events was seen with the use of constructs to treat anterior communicating artery aneurysms. When all patients are considered, including those who did not receive catheter-based follow-up imaging, 2 of 168 procedures (1.2%) resulted in the death of a patient, and procedural morbidity was 14.9%. CONCLUSION: From these results and those in the published literature, in-stent complication rates are low in carefully selected patients. The use of dual antiplatelet therapy, sensitivity assays, and glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors may decrease the rate of acute and chronic in-stent complications.
Neurology | 2005
Joan Martí-Fàbregas; Montserrat Borrell; Dolores Cocho; Roberto Belvís; Mar Castellanos; Joan Montaner; J. Pagonabarraga; Aitziber Aleu; Laura Molina-Porcel; Jordi Díaz-Manera; Yolanda Bravo; José Alvarez-Sabín; A. Dávalos; Jordi Fontcuberta; Josep-Lluis Martí-Vilalta
Objective: To determine whether pretreatment markers of coagulation and fibrinolysis are related to recanalization and functional outcome. Methods: The authors included patients treated with IV rt-PA with occlusion on baseline transcranial Doppler (Thrombolysis in Brain Ischemia [TIBI] criteria) in whom recanalization within 6 hours was monitored. At baseline, the authors recorded data about demographics, vascular risk factors, the NIH Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score, early CT signs, etiology, blood glucose, and time to rt-PA. The authors also measured plasmatic markers of coagulation (fibrinogen, prothrombin fragments 1 + 2, Factor XIII, Factor VII) and fibrinolysis (α2-antiplasmin, Plasminogen Activator Inhibitor, Functional Thrombin Activatable Fibrinolysis Inhibitor [fTAFI]). A favorable outcome was defined as a modified Rankin score < 2 at 3 months. Results: The authors studied 63 patients with a mean age of 67.3 ± 12.5 years. The median NIHSS score was 16. Patients who recanalized had lower concentrations of α2-antiplasmin (87.5 ± 18% vs 96.5 ± 12.5%, p = 0.023) and fTAFI (91.7 ± 26.7% vs 104.4 ± 21%, p = 0.039). A multivariant logistic regression analysis showed that the level of α2-antiplasmin was the only predictive variable of recanalization (OR 0.95, 95% CI 0.91, 0.99, p = 0.038), while the NIHSS score was the only predictive variable of functional outcome (OR 0.81, 95% CI 0.72, 0.92, p = 0.001). Conclusion: Baseline levels of α2-antiplasmin were predictive of recanalization but were not related to the long-term outcome in patients treated with rt-PA within the first 3 hours.
Journal of NeuroInterventional Surgery | 2010
Brian T. Jankowitz; Aitziber Aleu; Ridwan Lin; Mouhammad Jumaa; Hilal Kanaan; Dean Kostov; Maxim Hammer; Ken Uchino; Larry Wechsler; Michael Horowitz; Tudor G. Jovin
Background and purpose Basilar artery occlusion remains one of the most devastating subtypes of stroke. Intravenous and intra-arterial therapy have altered the natural history of this disease; however, clinical results remain poor. Therefore, exploring more aggressive and innovative management is warranted. Methods Six consecutive patients presenting with a basilar artery occlusion were treated with the same general algorithm of intra-arterial tissue plasminogen activator and mechanical thrombectomy with the Merci retrieval system. If complete recanalization was not achieved after two passes, manual syringe aspiration through a 4.3F catheter was employed. Results All interventions utilizing aspiration thrombectomy resulted in recanalization, with five out of six cases displaying TIMI3/TICI3 flow and one patient resulting in complete recanalization of the basilar artery with persistent thrombus in one P2 segment (TIMI2/TICI2B). All patients survived, with five out of six independent in activities of daily living at 3 months (mRS 0–2). Conclusions Our small case series indicates that aspiration thrombectomy performed manually through a 4.3F catheter can facilitate recanalization of basilar artery occlusion with acceptable clinical outcomes.
Journal of Neuroimaging | 2014
María Hernández-Pérez; Natalia Pérez de la Ossa; Aitziber Aleu; Monica Millan; Meritxell Gomis; Laura Dorado; Elena López-Cancio; Tudor G. Jovin; Antoni Dávalos
The natural history of acute ischemic stroke (AIS) due to anterior circulation large artery occlusion is not well established. This information is essential for assessment of clinical benefit derived from recanalization therapies.