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Dive into the research topics where Eric C. Raps is active.

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Featured researches published by Eric C. Raps.


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.


Muscle & Nerve | 1997

Direct muscle stimulation in acute quadriplegic myopathy

Mark M. Rich; Shawn J. Bird; Eric C. Raps; Leo McCluskey; James W. Teener

We have previously found that muscle is electrically inexcitable in severe acute quadriplegic myopathy (AQM). In contrast, muscle retains normal electrical excitability in peripheral neuropathy. To study the relationship between muscle electrical excitability and all types of flaccid weakness occurring in the intensive care unit, we identified 14 critically ill, weak patients and measured the amplitude of compound muscle action potentials (CMAPs) obtained with direct muscle stimulation (dmCMAP) and with nerve stimulation (neCMAP). In 11 of 14 patients dmCMAP amplitudes were reduced and the ratio of the neCMAP amplitude to the dmCMAP amplitude (nerve/muscle ratio) was indicative of loss of muscle electrical excitability. In 2 other patients, the nerve/muscle ratio indicated neuropathy. Direct muscle stimulation may allow differentiation of AQM from neuropathy even in comatose or encephalopathic critically ill patients. AQM may be more common than has previously been appreciated.


Neurology | 1996

Muscle is electrically inexcitable in acute quadriplegic myopathy

Mark M. Rich; James W. Teener; Eric C. Raps; Donald L. Schotland; Shawn J. Bird

We directly stimulated muscle in three patients with acute quadriplegic myopathy to determine whether paralyzed muscle in this syndrome is electrically excitable. Two of the patients had been treated with neuromuscular blocking agents and corticosteroids, and one patient had been treated with corticosteroids alone. We found that paralyzed muscle is electrically inexcitable in affected patients. Muscle regained electrical excitability over weeks to months. The recovery of muscle excitability paralleled the clinical recovery of patients, suggesting that paralysis in this syndrome is secondary to electrical inexcitability of muscle membrane.


Neurology | 1994

Cardiac injury associated with neurogenic pulmonary edema following subarachnoid hemorrhage

Stephan A. Mayer; Matthew E. Fink; Shunichi Homma; David G. Sherman; Giuseppe Limandri; Laura Lennihan; Robert A. Solomon; Louise M. Klebanoff; Avis Beckford; Eric C. Raps

Objective: To describe the clinical features of cardiac injury associated with neurogenic pulmonary edema (NPE) in patients with acute subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). Background: NPE is generally viewed as a form of noncardiogenic pulmonary edema related to massive sympathetic discharge. Methods: Case series. Results: We found echocardiography evidence of reduced global and segmental left ventricular (LV) systolic function in five women (mean age, 44; range, 36 to 57) with SAH and NPE. None had a history of heart disease. Four patients were Hunt/Hess grade III and one was grade IV. All five patients experienced (1) sudden hypotension (systolic blood pressure <110 mm Hg) following initially elevated blood pressures, (2) transient lactic acidosis, (3) borderline (2 to 4%) creatine kinase MB elevations, and (4) varied acute (< 24 hours) electrocardiographic changes followed by widespread and persistent T wave inversions. Pulmonary artery wedge pressures were normal in 3/3 patients at the onset of pulmonary edema but reached high levels (>16 mm Hg) in all four patients studied beyond this period. Reduced cardiac output and LV stroke volume were identified in three patients; the fourth patient demonstrated normal values on high doses of intravenous pressors. Cerebral infarction due to vasospasm occurred in four patients and resulted in two deaths. Follow-up echocardiography performed 2 to 6 weeks after SAH revealed normal LV function in all three survivors. Conclusions: A reversible form of cardiac injury may occur in patients with NPE following SAH and is associated with characteristic clinical findings. Impaired LV hemodynamic performance in this setting may contribute to cardiovascular instability, pulmonary edema formation, and complications from cerebral ischemia.


Neurology | 1992

Acute quadriplegic myopathy: A complication of treatment with steroids, nondepolarizing blocking agents, or both

Michio Hirano; Brian R. Ott; Eric C. Raps; C. Minetti; L. Lennihan; N. P. Libbey; Eduardo Bonilla; Arthur P. Hays

We studied two patients who were given high-dose intravenous steroid therapy and were intubated for status asthmaticus. Both became quadriplegic and wasted within 2 weeks. EMG had myopathic abnormalities. Muscle biopsy revealed severe atrophy of most muscle fibers, with disorganization of myofibrils and selective loss of thick (myosin) filaments. Immunohistologic stains for myosin isoforms confirmed the decrease or absence of this protein. Both patients clinically improved over several months.


Neurology | 1995

Spinal dural arteriovenous fistula The pathology of venous hypertensive myelopathy

Robert W. Hurst; L. C. Kenyon; Ehud Lavi; Eric C. Raps; P. Marcotte

Spinal dural arteriovenous fistulas (SDAVFs) are the most common type of spinal vascular malformation. The arteriovenous shunts, located entirely outside the spinal cord, cause a clinical picture of chronic progressive myelopathy believed to arise from the effects of increased venous pressure and impaired venous drainage on the spinal cord. Despite their well-described clinical and angiographic features, no reports have documented the spinal cord pathology in a case of angiographically or pathologically proven SDAVF. We report such a patient in whom a spinal cord biopsy supported increased venous pressure as a mechanism of neurologic dysfunction.


Neurology | 1998

Noninvasive MRI evaluation of cerebral blood flow in cerebrovascular disease

John A. Detre; David C. Alsop; L. R. Vives; L. Maccotta; James W. Teener; Eric C. Raps

Previous studies have demonstrated that cerebral blood flow (CBF) can be assessed noninvasively by MRI using magnetic labeling of arterial water as a diffusible flow tracer. The purpose of this study was to assess the quality of CBF images obtained from patients with cerebrovascular disease using this method, and to begin to evaluate the potential clinical role for this technique. We recruited 14 patients who presented with stroke, TIA, or severe carotid stenosis and were likely to have altered CBF based on clinical assessment. In many of these patients, CBF imaging disclosed both focal and hemispheric hypoperfusion, either in vascular territories or in watershed regions. In 11 patients with significant proximal arterial stenosis, hemispheric CBF abnormalities localized to the side of most significant stenosis for the anterior circulation distribution. In several patients watershed hypoperfusion was even more pronounced. Our results suggest that good-quality MR CBF images can be obtained reliably from patients with cerebrovascular disease. CBF imaging can be combined with standard structural imaging within a single MRI examination, and provides clinically meaningful information. The capability of measuring CBF easily provides a potentially useful tool for clinical assessment and further investigation of stroke pathophysiology.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 1999

Noninvasive magnetic resonance imaging evaluation of cerebral blood flow with acetazolamide challenge in patients with cerebrovascular stenosis.

John A. Detre; Owen B. Samuels; David C. Alsop; Scott E. Kasner; Eric C. Raps

To evaluate the utility of using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of cerebral blood flow (CBF) in conjunction with pharmacologic flow augmentation, the authors imaged 14 patients with ischemic symptoms referable to large artery cerebrovascular stenosis of the anterior circulation. CBF was measured by using continuous arterial spin labeling (CASL) both at rest and 10 minutes after 1 g intravenous acetazolamide on a commercial 1.5 Tesla scanner. Quantitative CBF images were calculated along with augmentation images showing the effects of acetazolamide. Interpretable studies were obtained from all patients. Based on the image data as well as a region of interest analysis of CBF changes in middle cerebral artery distributions, varying patterns of augmentation were observed that suggested differing mechanisms of ischemic symptomatology. The ability to obtain this information in conjunction with a structural MRI examination extends the diagnostic potential for MRI in cerebrovascular disease and allows the value of augmentation testing in clinical management to be assessed more widely. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 1999;10:870–875.


Stroke | 1998

Acute Stroke Teams Results of a National Survey

Mark J. Alberts; Seemant Chaturvedi; Glenn D. Graham; Richard L. Hughes; Dara G. Jamieson; Frank Krakowski; Eric C. Raps; Phillip A. Scott

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE The sensitivity of the brain to brief periods of profound ischemia or prolonged periods of modest ischemia mandates an aggressive approach to acute stroke care. Past studies have shown that many stroke patients do not receive acute care in an urgent and timely fashion. The formation of acute stroke teams (AST) is one approach that can be used to accelerate the delivery of acute stroke care. METHODS We conducted a survey of major stroke program directors and neurovascular experts throughout the United States. The survey focused on issues related to the presence of AST, their staffing, operational features, and utilization at the surveyed programs and hospitals. RESULTS Surveys were returned from 45 of 60 centers. Ninety-one percent of the respondents indicated that they currently had an AST, with 66% formed between 1995 and 1997. Staffing of ASTs consisted of attending physicians (95%), nurses or study coordinators (73%), fellows (49%), and residents (46%). In almost all cases (98%), the AST was led by a neurologist or neurosurgeon, and 98% of the ASTs operated on a 24-hours-per-day, 7-days-per-week basis. The most common call frequency was 2 to 3 times per week (41%), followed by >5 calls per week (29%). In 59% of the cases, the teams cost </=


Neurosurgery | 1993

Ocular tilt reaction resulting from vestibuloacoustic nerve surgery.

Gil I. Wolfe; Carolyn L. Taylor; Eugene S. Flamm; Lawrence G. Gray; Eric C. Raps; Steven L. Galetta

5000 per year to operate. The vast majority (78%) of ASTs responded within 10 minutes of receiving a call. CONCLUSIONS The formation of ASTs is quite common at the surveyed programs. Although staffing patterns vary, most teams are led by neurologists or neurosurgeons. The utilization of ASTs varies by facility, but they appear to be useful, with only a modest incremental financial cost. The use of ASTs may assist in providing more rapid medical care to stroke patients and increase the use of some acute therapies. Extension of the AST concept to nonacademic hospitals appears feasible.

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Eugene S. Flamm

University of Pennsylvania

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Robert W. Hurst

University of Pennsylvania

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Grant T. Liu

University of Pennsylvania

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James W. Teener

University of Pennsylvania

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Shawn J. Bird

University of Pennsylvania

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Eric L. Zager

University of Pennsylvania

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David Solomon

Johns Hopkins University

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