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Dive into the research topics where Darren Klass is active.

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Featured researches published by Darren Klass.


The Lancet | 2014

Prevalence of extracranial venous narrowing on catheter venography in people with multiple sclerosis, their siblings, and unrelated healthy controls: a blinded, case-control study

Anthony Traboulsee; Katherine Knox; Lindsay Machan; Yinshan Zhao; Irene Yee; Alexander Rauscher; Darren Klass; Peter Szkup; Robert Otani; David Kopriva; Shanti Lala; David Li; Dessa Sadovnick

BACKGROUND Chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency has been proposed as a unique combination of extracranial venous blockages and haemodynamic flow abnormalities that occurs only in patients with multiple sclerosis and not in healthy people. Initial reports indicated that all patients with multiple sclerosis had chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency. We aimed to establish the prevalence of venous narrowing in people with multiple sclerosis, unaffected full siblings, and unrelated healthy volunteers. METHODS We did an assessor-blinded, case-control, multicentre study of people with multiple sclerosis, unaffected siblings, and unrelated healthy volunteers. We enrolled the study participants between January, 2011 and March, 2012, and they comprised 177 adults: 79 with multiple sclerosis, 55 siblings, and 43 unrelated controls, from three centres in Canada. We assessed narrowing of the internal jugular and azygous veins with catheter venography and ultrasound criteria for chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency proposed by Zamboni and colleagues. Catheter venography data were available for 149 participants and ultrasound data for 171 participants. FINDINGS Catheter venography criteria for chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency were positive for one of 65 (2%) people with multiple sclerosis, one of 46 (2%) siblings, and one of 32 (3%) unrelated controls (p=1·0 for all comparisons). Greater than 50% narrowing of any major vein was present in 48 of 65 (74%) people with multiple sclerosis, 31 of 47 (66%) siblings (p=0·41 for comparison with patients with multiple sclerosis), and 26 of 37 (70%) unrelated controls (p=0·82). The ultrasound criteria for chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency were fulfilled in 35 of 79 (44%) participants with multiple sclerosis, 17 of 54 (31%) siblings (p=0·15 for comparison with patients with multiple sclerosis) and 17 of 38 (45%) unrelated controls (p=0·98). The sensitivity of the ultrasound criteria for detection of greater than 50% narrowing on catheter venography was 0·406 (95% CI 0·311-0·508), and specificity was 0·643 (0·480-0·780). INTERPRETATION This study shows that chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency occurs rarely in both patients with multiple sclerosis and in healthy people. Extracranial venous narrowing of greater than 50% is a frequent finding in patients with multiple sclerosis, unaffected siblings, and unrelated controls. The ultrasound criteria are neither sensitive nor specific for narrowing on catheter venography. The significance of venous narrowing to multiple sclerosis symptomatology remains unknown. FUNDING MS Society of Canada, Saskatoon City Hospital Foundation, Lotte and John Hecht Memorial Foundation, Vancouver Coastal Health Foundation, and the Wolridge Foundation.


Clinical Radiology | 2013

Hepatic embolotherapy in interventional oncology: technology, techniques, and applications.

J. Kritzinger; Darren Klass; Stephen Ho; H. Lim; Andrzej K. Buczkowski; Eric M. Yoshida; Dave M. Liu

Embolotherapy continues to play a growing role in the management of primary and secondary hepatic malignancies. In this review article, we examine the basis of therapy with a focus on neovascularization, which makes treatments via the hepatic artery possible. An overview of the three generations of embolic and therapeutic agents follows. The techniques, technologies, and complications of bland embolization, transarterial chemoembolization, drug-eluting beads, and selective internal radiotherapy are covered to give the reader an overview of this exciting field in interventional radiology.


Perspectives in Vascular Surgery and Endovascular Therapy | 2012

Hepatic Artery Transection Reconstructed With Splenic Artery Transposition Graft

Jason Faulds; Amanda Johner; Darren Klass; Andrzej K. Buczkowski; Charles H. Scudamore

INTRODUCTION Hepatic artery transection presents a technical challenge in vascular reconstruction. Formal arterial repair is indicated in patients with underlying liver disease and those undergoing bile duct reconstructions because of a higher risk of complication following hepatic artery injury. This report highlights a novel approach to hepatic artery transection with splenic artery transposition. METHODS A case of hepatic artery transection repaired with splenic artery transposition is presented with an accompanying literature review. RESULTS During elective pancreaticoduodenectomy, the common hepatic artery was injured at its origin. The splenic artery was divided and transposed to the hepatic artery, thus restoring arterial flow to the liver and bile duct. CONCLUSION Various strategies to manage a hepatic artery injury have been described, ranging from ligation to complex vascular reconstruction. In hemodynamically stable patients, arterial transposition using the splenic artery is a feasible method to ensure adequate arterial supply to the liver and biliary tract.


Annals of Vascular Surgery | 2014

A Practical Guide to Magnetic Resonance Vascular Imaging: Techniques and Applications

Ellen L. Vessie; David M. Liu; Bruce B. Forster; Sebastian Kos; Keith Baxter; Joel Gagnon; Darren Klass

Magnetic resonance angiography is a technique used to image both central and peripheral arteries using contrast and noncontrast techniques. These techniques are similar in that a bright signal, which appears white within blood vessels, is generated and the background tissues, veins, and stationary tissues are dark. This allows for assessment of anatomy and vascular disease. Extracellular gadolinium-based contrast agents allow for excellent visualization of both central and peripheral arteries. Acquiring images during first pass is required for high-contrast images within arteries, thereby limiting contamination with contrast enhancement of veins and soft tissue. Contrast-enhanced techniques using time-resolved angiography and blood pool contrast agents minimize this temporal limitation. Noncontrast techniques eliminate the uncommon but potentially fatal complications associated with gadolinium contrast agents, such as nephrogenic systemic fibrosis. These techniques including phase contrast and time-of-flight sequences have inferior contrast resolution compared with contrast-enhanced techniques and are susceptible to artifacts, which can limit interpretation. The advantage, however, is the ability to assess vascular disease in patients with severe renal failure without the added risks of gadolinium contrast media. The aim of this review is to outline the different techniques available for imaging both the arterial and venous systems, their advantages and disadvantages, and the indications in vascular disease.


World Journal of Gastroenterology | 2013

Magnetic resonance venography and liver transplant complications

Evgeny Strovski; Dave M. Liu; Charles H. Scudamore; Stephen Ho; Eric M. Yoshida; Darren Klass

Hepatic vein stenosis is a rare but serious complication following liver transplantation. Multiple modalities can be utilized to image the hepatic vasculature. Magnetic resonance venography (MRV) provides certain advantages over ultrasound, computed tomography angiography and digital subtraction venography. MRV utilizes the same imaging principles of magnetic resonance angiography in order to image the venous system. Blood pool contrast agents, specifically gadofosveset trisodium, allow for steady state imaging up to 1 h following injection, with improved visualisation of vital venous structures by utilising delayed steady state imaging. Additionally, the inherent physics properties of magnetic resonance imaging also provide excellent soft tissue detail and thus help define the extent of complications that often plague the post-liver transplant patient. This case report describes the use of gadofosveset trisodium in a patient with hepatic venous stenosis following liver transplantation. Initial venography failed to outline the stenoses and thus MRV using a blood pool contrast agent was utilised in order to delineate the anatomy and plan a therapeutic endovascular procedure.


Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Radiation Therapy | 2011

Interventional Oncology - Avoiding Common Pitfalls to Reduce Toxicity in Hepatic Radioembolization

David M. Liu; David Cade; Darren Klass; C.T. Loh; Justin P. McWilliams; David Valenti

Within the setting of hepatic neoplasia [primary and secondary], selective internal radiation therapy [SIRT], also known as radioembolization has become an accepted procedure, incorporated into the armamentarium of multidisciplinary oncologic care. The procedure itself requires understanding of mesenteric anatomy, tumor vascular patterns, liver metabolism, and chemotherapy. Given the complex nature of the treatment, unique toxicities, and complications may develop from multiple etiologies. Reduction of toxicities and complications as they relate to this procedure can be stratified into two broad categories: factors involving vascularity/vascularization, and factors involving compromise to the underlying liver parenchyma. The purpose of this manuscript is to provide the reader with a systematic review of the most commonly presented toxicities, their etiologies, prevention strategies, and suggested therapeutic options in a practical, and concise manner. A brief discussion on the common misconceptions regarding toxicities will be included.


Clinical Radiology | 2015

The use of cone-beam CT in assisting percutaneous translumbar catheter placement into the inferior vena cava

Avnesh S. Thakor; J. Chung; Roshni Patel; R. Cormack; Gerald M. Legiehn; Darren Klass

• Provides a 3D map to check the pathway of the access needle and its planned trajectory.


Canadian Association of Radiologists Journal-journal De L Association Canadienne Des Radiologistes | 2014

Pulmonary Ablation: A Primer

Benjamin J. Roberton; David Liu; M. Power; John M.C. Wan; Sam Stuart; Darren Klass; John Yee

Percutaneous image-guided thermal ablation is safe and efficacious in achieving local control and improving outcome in the treatment of both early stage non–small-cell lung cancer and pulmonary metastatic disease, in which surgical treatment is precluded by comorbidity, poor cardiorespiratory reserve, or unfavorable disease distribution. Radiofrequency ablation is the most established technology, but new thermal ablation technologies such as microwave ablation and cryoablation may offer some advantages. The use of advanced techniques, such as induced pneumothorax and the popsicle stick technique, or combining thermal ablation with radiotherapy, widens the treatment options available to the multidisciplinary team. The intent of this article is to provide the reader with a practical knowledge base of pulmonary ablation by concentrating on indications, techniques, and follow-up.


Canadian Association of Radiologists Journal-journal De L Association Canadienne Des Radiologistes | 2016

Hepatocellular Carcinoma Post Embolotherapy: Imaging Appearances and Pitfalls on Computed Tomography and Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Rita Y.W. Chiu; Wan W. Yap; Roshni Patel; David Liu; Darren Klass; Alison C. Harris

Embolotherapies used in the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) include bland embolization, conventional transarterial chemoembolization (cTACE) using ethiodol as a carrier, TACE with drug-eluting beads and super absorbent polymer microspheres (DEB-TACE), and selective internal radiation therapy (SIRT). Successfully treated HCC lesions undergo coagulation necrosis, and appear as nonenhancing hypoattenuating or hypointense lesions in the embolized region on computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance. Residual or recurrent tumours demonstrate arterial enhancement with portal venous phase wash-out of contrast, features characteristic of HCC, in and/or around the embolized area. Certain imaging features that result from the procedure itself may limit assessment of response. In conventional TACE, the high-attenuating retained ethiodized oil may obscure arterially-enhancing tumours and limit detection of residual tumours; thus a noncontrast CT on follow-up imaging is important post-cTACE. Hyperenhancement within or around the treated zone can be seen after cTACE, DEB-TACE, or SIRT due to physiologic inflammatory response and may mimic residual tumour. Recognition of these pitfalls is important in the evaluation embolotherapy response.


Canadian Association of Radiologists Journal-journal De L Association Canadienne Des Radiologistes | 2017

Transradial Access for Interventional Radiology: Single-Centre Procedural and Clinical Outcome Analysis

Avnesh S. Thakor; Mohammed T. Alshammari; David M. Liu; J. Chung; Stephen Ho; Gerald M. Legiehn; Lindsay Machan; A. Fischman; R. Patel; Darren Klass

Purpose The study sought to describe a single centres technical approach to transradial intervention and report on clinical outcomes and safety. Methods A total of 749 transradial access (TRA) procedures were performed at a single hospital in 562 patients (174 women and 388 men). Procedures included 445 bland embolizations or chemoembolizations of the liver, 88 uterine artery embolizations, and 148 procedures for Selective Internal Radiation Therapy (Y90), which included mapping and administration. The mean age of the patients was 62 years (range 27–96 years). Results Four cases (0.5%) required crossover to transfemoral (tortuous anatomy, inability to secure a stable position for embolization, vessel spasm and base catheter not being of a sufficient length). A single asymptomatic, short-segment radial artery occlusion occurred (0.3%), 3 patients (0.4%) developed small hematomas postprocedurally, and 2 patients (0.7%) had transient neurological pain, which was resolved within a week without treatment. It was found that 98% of patients who had a previous femoral access procedure would choose radial access for subsequent procedures. Conclusions Transradial access is a safe, effective technique, with a learning curve; however, this procedure has the potential to significantly improve departmental workflow and cost savings for the department and patient experience.

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David M. Liu

University of British Columbia

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J. Chung

University of British Columbia

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Stephen Ho

University of British Columbia

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Lindsay Machan

University of British Columbia

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Charles H. Scudamore

University of British Columbia

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D. Liu

Vancouver General Hospital

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David Liu

University of British Columbia

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Peter L. Munk

University of British Columbia

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Andrzej K. Buczkowski

University of British Columbia

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