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Dive into the research topics where Brett Cucchiara is active.

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Featured researches published by Brett Cucchiara.


Stroke | 2011

Diagnosis and Management of Cerebral Venous Thrombosis A Statement for Healthcare Professionals From the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association

Gustavo Saposnik; Fernando Barinagarrementeria; Robert D. Brown; Cheryl Bushnell; Brett Cucchiara; Mary Cushman; Gabrielle deVeber; José M. Ferro; Fong Y. Tsai

Background— The purpose of this statement is to provide an overview of cerebral venous sinus thrombosis and to provide recommendations for its diagnosis, management, and treatment. The intended audience is physicians and other healthcare providers who are responsible for the diagnosis and management of patients with cerebral venous sinus thrombosis. Methods and Results— Members of the panel were appointed by the American Heart Association Stroke Councils Scientific Statement Oversight Committee and represent different areas of expertise. The panel reviewed the relevant literature with an emphasis on reports published since 1966 and used the American Heart Association levels-of-evidence grading algorithm to rate the evidence and to make recommendations. After approval of the statement by the panel, it underwent peer review and approval by the American Heart Association Science Advisory and Coordinating Committee. Conclusions— Evidence-based recommendations are provided for the diagnosis, management, and prevention of recurrence of cerebral venous thrombosis. Recommendations on the evaluation and management of cerebral venous thrombosis during pregnancy and in the pediatric population are provided. Considerations for the management of clinical complications (seizures, hydrocephalus, intracranial hypertension, and neurological deterioration) are also summarized. An algorithm for diagnosis and management of patients with cerebral venous sinus thrombosis is described.


Circulation | 2010

Part 1: Executive Summary 2010 American Heart Association Guidelines for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care

John M. Field; Mary Fran Hazinski; Michael R. Sayre; Leon Chameides; Stephen M. Schexnayder; Robin Hemphill; Ricardo A. Samson; John Kattwinkel; Robert A. Berg; Farhan Bhanji; Diana M. Cave; Edward C. Jauch; Peter J. Kudenchuk; Robert W. Neumar; Mary Ann Peberdy; Jeffrey M. Perlman; Elizabeth Sinz; Andrew H. Travers; Marc D. Berg; John E. Billi; Brian Eigel; Robert W. Hickey; Monica E. Kleinman; Mark S. Link; Laurie J. Morrison; Robert E. O'Connor; Michael Shuster; Clifton W. Callaway; Brett Cucchiara; Jeffrey D. Ferguson

The goal of therapy for bradycardia or tachycardia is to rapidly identify and treat patients who are hemodynamically unstable or symptomatic due to the arrhythmia. Drugs or, when appropriate, pacing may be used to control unstable or symptomatic bradycardia. Cardioversion or drugs or both may be used to control unstable or symptomatic tachycardia. ACLS providers should closely monitor stable patients pending expert consultation and should be prepared to aggressively treat those with evidence of decompensation.


Stroke | 1999

Reliability and Validity of Estimating the NIH Stroke Scale Score from Medical Records

Scott E. Kasner; Julio A. Chalela; Jean M. Luciano; Brett Cucchiara; Eric C. Raps; Michael L. McGarvey; Molly B. Conroy; A. Russell Localio

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE The aim of our study was to determine whether the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) can be estimated retrospectively from medical records. The NIHSS is a quantitative measure of stroke-related neurological deficit with established reliability and validity for use in prospective clinical research. Recently, retrospective observational studies have estimated NIHSS scores from medical records for quantitative outcome analysis. The reliability and validity of estimation based on chart review has not been determined. METHODS Thirty-nine patients were selected because their NIHSS scores were formally measured at admission and discharge. Handwritten notes from medical records were abstracted and NIHSS scores were estimated by 6 raters who were blinded to the actual scores. Estimated scores were compared among raters and with the actual measured scores. RESULTS Interrater reliability was excellent, with an intraclass correlation coefficient of 0.82. Scores were well calibrated among the 6 raters. Estimated NIHSS scores closely approximated the actual scores, with a probability of 0.86 of correctly ranking a set of patients according to 5-point interval categories (as determined by the area under the receiver-operator characteristic curve). Patients with excellent outcomes (NIHSS score of </=5) could be identified with sensitivity of 0.72 and specificity of 0.89. There were no significant differences between these parameters at admission and discharge. CONCLUSIONS For the purposes of retrospective studies of acute stroke outcome, the NIHSS can be abstracted from medical records with a high degree of reliability and validity.


Circulation | 2010

Part 1: Executive Summary

John M. Field; Mary Fran Hazinski; Michael R. Sayre; Leon Chameides; Stephen M. Schexnayder; Robin Hemphill; Ricardo A. Samson; John Kattwinkel; Robert A. Berg; Farhan Bhanji; Diana M. Cave; Edward C. Jauch; Peter J. Kudenchuk; Robert W. Neumar; Mary Ann Peberdy; Jeffrey M. Perlman; Elizabeth Sinz; Andrew H. Travers; Marc D. Berg; John E. Billi; Brian Eigel; Robert W. Hickey; Monica E. Kleinman; Mark S. Link; Laurie J. Morrison; Robert E. O'Connor; Michael Shuster; Clifton W. Callaway; Brett Cucchiara; Jeffrey D. Ferguson

Mary Fran Hazinski, Co-Chair*; Jerry P. Nolan, Co-Chair*; John E. Billi; Bernd W. Böttiger; Leo Bossaert; Allan R. de Caen; Charles D. Deakin; Saul Drajer; Brian Eigel; Robert W. Hickey; Ian Jacobs; Monica E. Kleinman; Walter Kloeck; Rudolph W. Koster; Swee Han Lim; Mary E. Mancini; William H. Montgomery; Peter T. Morley; Laurie J. Morrison; Vinay M. Nadkarni; Robert E. O’Connor; Kazuo Okada; Jeffrey M. Perlman; Michael R. Sayre; Michael Shuster; Jasmeet Soar; Kjetil Sunde; Andrew H. Travers; Jonathan Wyllie; David Zideman


Lancet Neurology | 2010

Addition of brain and carotid imaging to the ABCD² score to identify patients at early risk of stroke after transient ischaemic attack: a multicentre observational study.

Áine Merwick; Gregory W. Albers; Pierre Amarenco; Ethem Murat Arsava; Hakan Ay; David Calvet; S B Coutts; Brett Cucchiara; Andrew M. Demchuk; Karen L. Furie; Matthew F. Giles; Julien Labreuche; Philippa C. Lavallée; Jean-Louis Mas; Jean Marc Olivot; Francisco Purroy; Peter M. Rothwell; Jeffrey L. Saver; Órla Sheehan; John Stack; Cathal Walsh; Peter J. Kelly

BACKGROUND The ABCD² score improves stratification of patients with transient ischaemic attack by early stroke risk. We aimed to develop two new versions of the score: one that was based on preclinical information and one that was based on imaging and other secondary care assessments. METHODS We analysed pooled data from patients with clinically defined transient ischaemic attack who were investigated while in secondary care. Items that contribute to the ABCD² score (age, blood pressure, clinical weakness, duration, and diabetes), other clinical variables, carotid stenosis, and abnormal acute diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) were recorded and were included in multivariate logistic regression analysis of stroke occurrence at early time intervals after onset of transient ischaemic attack. Scores based on the findings of this analysis were validated in patients with transient ischaemic attack from two independent population-based cohorts. FINDINGS 3886 patients were included in the study: 2654 in the derivation sample and 1232 in the validation sample. We derived the ABCD³ score (range 0-9 points) by assigning 2 points for dual transient ischaemic attack (an earlier transient ischaemic attack within 7 days of the index event). C statistics (which indicate discrimination better than chance at >0·5) for the ABCD³ score were 0·78 at 2 days, 0·80 at 7 days, 0·79 at 28 days, and 0·77 at 90 days, compared with C statistics for the ABCD² score of 0·71 at 2 days (p=0·083), 0·71 at 7 days (p=0·012), 0·71 at 28 days (p=0·021), and 0·69 at 90 days (p=0·018). We included stenosis of at least 50% on carotid imaging (2 points) and abnormal DWI (2 points) in the ABCD³-imaging (ABCD³-I) score (0-13 points). C statistics for the ABCD³-I score were 0·90 at 2 days (compared with ABCD² score p=0·035), 0·92 at 7 days (p=0·001), 0·85 at 28 days (p=0·028), and 0·79 at 90 days (p=0·073). The 90-day net reclassification improvement compared with ABCD² was 29·1% for ABCD³ (p=0·0003) and 39·4% for ABCD³-I (p=0·034). In the validation sample, the ABCD³ and ABCD³-I scores predicted early stroke at 7, 28, and 90 days. However, discrimination and net reclassification of patients with early stroke were similar with ABCD³ compared with ABCD². INTERPRETATION The ABCD³-I score can improve risk stratification after transient ischaemic attack in secondary care settings. However, use of ABCD³ cannot be recommended without further validation. FUNDING Health Research Board of Ireland, Irish Heart Foundation, and Irish National Lottery.


Stroke | 2003

Utility of the NIH Stroke Scale as a Predictor of Hospital Disposition

Daniel Schlegel; Stephen J. Kolb; Jean M. Luciano; Jennifer M. Tovar; Brett Cucchiara; David S. Liebeskind; Scott E. Kasner

Background and Purpose— Early identification of stroke patients in need of rehabilitation or long-term nursing facility (NF) care may promote more efficient use of health care resources and lead to better outcomes. The NIH Stroke Scale (NIHSS) is an attractive candidate predictor of disposition because it is widely used, is easily learned, and can be performed rapidly on admission. Methods— We present a retrospective study of stroke patients admitted within 24 hours of symptom onset to a university hospital from March through June 2000. Medical records were reviewed for demographic information, stroke type, prestroke living arrangement and independence, initial NIHSS, and medical complications during hospitalization. Results— Among 94 patients evaluated during the study period, 59% were discharged home, 30% to rehabilitation, and 11% to NF. In multivariate analyses, disposition was associated only with initial NIHSS. For each 1-point increase in NIHSS, the likelihood of going home was significantly reduced (odds ratio, 0.79; 95% CI, 0.70 to 0.89, P <0.001). Categorization of NIHSS was also predictive of disposition, with NIHSS ≤5 being most strongly associated with discharge home, NIHSS 6 to 13 with rehabilitation, and NIHSS >13 with NF (P <0.001). Although no other baseline characteristics predicted disposition, major medical complications during hospitalization tended to reduce the odds of going home (odds ratio, 0.30; 95% CI, 0.08 to 1.0, P =0.07). Conclusion— The NIHSS predicts postacute care disposition among stroke patients. Predicting disposition on the first day of admission may facilitate the time-consuming and costly process of securing a bed at rehabilitation or NF, and perhaps decrease unnecessary length of stay in acute care settings.


Stroke | 2008

Hematoma Growth in Oral Anticoagulant Related Intracerebral Hemorrhage

Brett Cucchiara; Steven R. Messé; Lauren H. Sansing; Scott E. Kasner; Patrick D. Lyden

Background and Purpose— Limited data suggest that intracerebral hemorrhage related to oral anticoagulant therapy (OAT ICH) is associated with more hemorrhage expansion and a worse prognosis than spontaneous ICH (SICH). Methods— We examined patients enrolled in the placebo arm of the CHANT study, a prospective randomized trial of a putative neuroprotectant in patients with ICH. All patients had neuroimaging within 6 hours of symptom onset and at 72 hours. Initial ICH volume and hemorrhage expansion were determined by a central reader. Multivariable logistic regression was used to determine factors associated with ICH expansion and mortality at 90 days. Results— Of 303 patients included, 21 (6.9%) had OAT ICH. Baseline median ICH volume was greater in patients with OAT ICH compared to SICH (30.6 versus 14.4 mL, P=0.03). Hemorrhage expansion (defined as >33% increase in ICH volume) occurred in 56% of patients with OAT ICH compared to 26% of SICH (P=0.006). Mortality was substantially higher in OAT ICH (62% versus 17%, P<0.001). In multivariable analysis, time to neuroimaging and oral anticoagulant use were independently associated with hemorrhage expansion, and age, gender, and oral anticoagulant use were independently associated with mortality. Conclusions— These findings confirm that OAT ICH is associated with more hemorrhage expansion and greater mortality than SICH.


Stroke | 2010

Addition of Brain Infarction to the ABCD2 Score (ABCD2I) A Collaborative Analysis of Unpublished Data on 4574 Patients

Matthew F. Giles; Greg Albers; Pierre Amarenco; Murat M. Arsava; Andrew W. Asimos; Hakan Ay; David Calvet; Shelagh B. Coutts; Brett Cucchiara; Andrew M. Demchuk; S. Claiborne Johnston; Peter J. Kelly; Anthony S. Kim; Julien Labreuche; Philippa C. Lavallée; Jean Louis Mas; Áine Merwick; Jean Marc Olivot; Francisco Purroy; Wayne D. Rosamond; Rossella Sciolla; Peter M. Rothwell

Background and Purpose— The ABCD system was developed to predict early stroke risk after transient ischemic attack. Incorporation of brain imaging findings has been suggested, but reports have used inconsistent methods and been underpowered. We therefore performed an international, multicenter collaborative study of the prognostic performance of the ABCD2 score and brain infarction on imaging to determine the optimal weighting of infarction in the score (ABCD2I). Methods— Twelve centers provided unpublished data on ABCD2 scores, presence of brain infarction on either diffusion-weighted imaging or CT, and follow-up in cohorts of patients with transient ischemic attack diagnosed by World Health Organization criteria. Optimal weighting of infarction in the ABCD2I score was determined using area under the receiver operating characteristic curve analyses and random effects meta-analysis. Results— Among 4574 patients with TIA, acute infarction was present in 884 (27.6%) of 3206 imaged with diffusion-weighted imaging and new or old infarction was present in 327 (23.9%) of 1368 imaged with CT. ABCD2 score and presence of infarction on diffusion-weighted imaging or CT were both independently predictive of stroke (n=145) at 7 days (after adjustment for ABCD2 score, OR for infarction=6.2, 95% CI=4.2 to 9.0, overall; 14.9, 7.4 to 30.2, for diffusion-weighted imaging; 4.2, 2.6 to 6.9, for CT; all P<0.001). Incorporation of infarction in the ABCD2I score improved predictive power with an optimal weighting of 3 points for infarction on CT or diffusion-weighted imaging. Pooled areas under the curve increased from 0.66 (0.53 to 0.78) for the ABCD2 score to 0.78 (0.72 to 0.85) for the ABCD2I score. Conclusions— In secondary care, incorporation of brain infarction into the ABCD system (ABCD2I score) improves prediction of stroke in the acute phase after transient ischemic attack.


Stroke | 2006

Is the ABCD Score Useful for Risk Stratification of Patients With Acute Transient Ischemic Attack

Brett Cucchiara; Steve R. Messe; Robert A. Taylor; James Pacelli; Douglas Maus; Qaisar A. Shah; Scott E. Kasner

Background and Purpose— A 6-point scoring system (ABCD) was described recently for stratifying risk after transient ischemic attack (TIA). This score incorporates age (A), blood pressure (B), clinical features (C), and duration (D) of TIA. A score <4 reportedly indicates minimal short-term stroke risk. We evaluated this scoring system in an independent population. Methods— This was a prospective study of TIA patients (diagnosed by a neurologist using the classic <24-hour definition) hospitalized <48 hours from symptom onset. The primary outcome assessment consisted of dichotomization of patients into 2 groups. The high-risk group included patients with stroke or death within 90 days, ≥50% stenosis in a relevant artery, or a cardioembolic source warranting anticoagulation. All others were classified as low risk. Findings on diffusion-weighted MRI (DWI) were also evaluated when performed and patients classified as DWI+ or DWI−. Results— Over 3 years, 117 patients were enrolled. Median time from symptom onset to enrollment was 25.2 hours (interquartile range 19.8 to 30.2). Overall, 26 patients (22%) were classified as high risk, including 2 strokes, 2 deaths, 15 with ≥50% stenosis, and 10 with cardioembolic source. The frequency of high-risk patients increased with ABCD score (0 to 1 13%; 2 8%; 3 17%; 4 27%; 5 26%; 6 30%; P for trend=0.11). ABCD scores in the 2 patients with stroke were 3 and 6. Of those who underwent MRI, 15 of 61 (25%) were DWI+, but this correlated poorly with ABCD score (0 to 1 17%; 2 10%; 3 36%; 4 24%; 5 13%; 6 60%; P for trend=0.24). Conclusions— Although the ABCD score has some predictive value, patients with a score <4 still have a substantial probability of having a high-risk cause of cerebral ischemia or radiographic evidence of acute infarction despite transient symptoms.


Stroke | 2011

Decompressive Surgery in Cerebrovenous Thrombosis A Multicenter Registry and a Systematic Review of Individual Patient Data

Jose M. Ferro; Isabelle Crassard; Jonathan M. Coutinho; Patrícia Canhão; Fernando Barinagarrementeria; Brett Cucchiara; Laurent Derex; Christoph Lichy; J. Masjuan; Ayrton Massaro; Gonzalo Matamala; Sven Poli; Mohammad Saadatnia; Erwin Stolz; Miguel Viana-Baptista; Jan Stam; Marie-Germaine Bousser; Dural Sinus Thrombosis (Iscvt ) Investigators

Background and Purpose— Herniation attributable to unilateral mass effect is the major cause of death in cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT). Decompressive surgery may be lifesaving in these patients. Methods— Retrospective registry of cases of acute CVT treated with decompressive surgery (craniectomy or hematoma evacuation) in 22 centers and systematic review of all published cases of CVT treated with decompressive surgery. The primary outcome was the score on the modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score at last follow-up, dichotomized between favorable (mRS score, 0–4) and unfavorable outcome (mRS score, 5 or death). Secondary outcomes were complete recovery (mRS score 0–1), independence (mRS score, 0–2), severe dependence (mRS score, 4–5), and death at last available follow-up. Results— Sixty-nine patients were included and 38 were from the registry. Decompressive craniectomy was performed in 45 patients, hematoma evacuation was performed in 7, and both interventions were performed in 17 patients. At last follow-up (median, 12 months) only 12 (17.4%) had un unfavorable outcome. Twenty-six (37.7%) had mRS score 0 to 1, 39 (56.5%) had mRS score 0 to 2, 4 (5.8%) were alive with mRS score 4 to 5, and 11 (15.9%) patients died. Three of the 9 patients with bilateral fixed pupils recovered completely. Comatose patients were less likely to be independent (mRS score 0–2) than noncomatose patients (45% versus 84%; P=0.003). Patients with bilateral lesions were more likely to have unfavorable outcomes (50% versus 11%; P=0.004) and to die (42% versus 11%; P=0.025). Conclusions— In CVT patients with large parenchymal lesions causing herniation, decompressive surgery was lifesaving and often resulted in good functional outcome, even in patients with severe clinical conditions.

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Scott E. Kasner

University of Pennsylvania

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Steven R. Messé

University of Pennsylvania

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Michael T. Mullen

University of Pennsylvania

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John A. Detre

University of Pennsylvania

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Koto Ishida

University of Pennsylvania

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Patrick D. Lyden

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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