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Dive into the research topics where Jason Siegel is active.

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Featured researches published by Jason Siegel.


Neuroimmunology and Neuroinflammation | 2017

Striking basal ganglia imaging abnormalities in LGI1 ab faciobrachial dystonic seizures

A. Sebastian López Chiriboga; Jason Siegel; William O. Tatum; Jerry J. Shih; Eoin P. Flanagan

Autoimmune encephalitis associated with antibodies targeting the neuronal surface antigen leucine-rich, glioma-inactivated 1 (LGI1) protein is accompanied by faciobrachial dystonic seizures (FBDS) in up to half of patients. These hallmark episodes can be mistaken for psychiatric disorders, particularly as the ictal episodes are usually not detectable with surface EEG electrodes. Accompanying imaging abnormalities help exclude psychiatric etiologies, localize the seizures, and improve our understanding of the pathogenesis. Herein, we present striking imaging abnormalities in a patient with FBDS from LGI1-antibody encephalitis.


Neurology | 2016

Hand postures in primary and secondary generalized tonic-clonic seizures

Jason Siegel; William O. Tatum

Objective: To evaluate and identify the frequency of hand postures during generalized convulsions in patients with genetic generalized epilepsy (GGE), localization-related epilepsy (LRE), and nonepileptic attacks (NEA). Methods: We retrospectively analyzed 98 consecutive videos of generalized convulsions in 62 patients who were admitted for diagnostic video-EEG monitoring. Demographics were recorded, and hand postures were subdivided into fanning, fisting, index-finger pointing (IFP), clawing, and flaccid posturing. Hand postures were then compared between patients with GGE, LRE, and NEA for each stage of the convulsion and for the whole event. Results: In patients with LRE, 96% had IFP, where fanning occurred in 91.3% of GGE (and only at onset), and the flaccid hand posture occurred in 56.0% of NEA. Fisting, fanning, and IFP postures all occurred significantly more frequently during epileptic seizures than during NEA (74.0% vs 32.0%, p = 0.0003; 60.3% vs 20.0%, p = 0.0005; 83.6% vs 12.0%, p < 0.0001). The claw hand posture was present only during NEA, and the flaccid posture occurred significantly more frequently during NEA than during epileptic seizures (56.0% vs 15.1%, p = 0.0001). Conclusions: Distinct ictal hand or finger posturing is present in patients with GGE, LRE, and NEA. The presence of any fisting, fanning, clawing, IFP, or flaccid hand posturing can help distinguish epileptic seizures from NEA. IFP suggests LRE while fanning with evolution suggests GGE. Overall, hand posturing during seizures provides unique information and aids in the differential diagnosis and classification of epilepsy.


Expert Review of Neurotherapeutics | 2016

Precision medicine of aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage, vasospasm and delayed cerebral ischemia

Christian J. Burrell; Nicole Avalon; Jason Siegel; Michael A. Pizzi; Tumpa Dutta; M. Cristine Charlesworth; William D. Freeman

ABSTRACT Introduction: Precision medicine provides individualized treatment of diseases through leveraging patient-to-patient variation. Aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage carries tremendous morbidity and mortality with cerebral vasospasm and delayed cerebral ischemia proving devastating and unpredictable. Lack of treatment measures for these conditions could be improved through precision medicine. Areas covered: Discussed are the pathophysiology of CV and DCI, treatment guidelines, and evidence for precision medicine used for prediction and prevention of poor outcomes following aSAH. A PubMed search was performed using keywords cerebral vasospasm or delayed cerebral ischemia and either biomarkers, precision medicine, metabolomics, proteomics, or genomics. Over 200 peer-reviewed articles were evaluated. The studies presented cover biomarkers identified as predictive markers or therapeutic targets following aSAH. Expert commentary: The biomarkers reviewed here correlate with CV, DCI, and neurologic outcomes after aSAH. Though practical use in clinical management of aSAH is not well established, using these biomarkers as predictive tools or therapeutic targets demonstrates the potential of precision medicine.


Clinical Anatomy | 2016

Anatomic variation and orgasm: Could variations in anatomy explain differences in orgasmic success?

E. Emhardt; Jason Siegel; L. Hoffman

Though the public consciousness is typically focused on factors such as psychology, penis size, and the presence of the “G‐spot,” there are other anatomical and neuro‐anatomic differences that could play an equal, or more important, role in the frequency and intensity of orgasms. Discovering these variations could direct further medical or procedural management to improve sexual satisfaction. The aim of this study is to review the available literature of anatomical sexual variation and to explain why this variation may predispose some patients toward a particular sexual experience. In this review, we explored the available literature on sexual anatomy and neuro‐anatomy. We used PubMed and OVID Medline for search terms, including orgasm, penile size variation, clitoral variation, Grafenberg spot, and benefits of orgasm. First we review the basic anatomy and innervation of the reproductive organs. Then we describe several anatomical variations that likely play a superior role to popular known variation (penis size, presence of g‐spot, etc). For males, the delicate play between the parasympathetic and sympathetic nervous systems is vital to achieve orgasm. For females, the autonomic component is more complex. The clitoris is the primary anatomical feature for female orgasm, including its migration toward the anterior vaginal wall. In conclusions, orgasms are complex phenomena involving psychological, physiological, and anatomic variation. While these variations predispose people to certain sexual function, future research should explore how to surgically or medically alter these. Clin. Anat. 29:665–672, 2016.


Current Cardiology Reports | 2017

Update on Neurocritical Care of Stroke

Jason Siegel; Michael A. Pizzi; J. Brent Peel; David Alejos; Nnenne Mbabuike; Benjamin L. Brown; David O. Hodge; W. David Freeman

Purpose of ReviewThis review will highlight the recent advancements in acute ischemic stroke diagnosis and treatment, with special attention to new features and recommendations of stroke care in the neurocritical care unit.Recent FindingsNew studies suggest that pre-hospital treatment of stroke with mobile stroke units and telestroke technology may lead to earlier stroke therapy with intravenous tissue plasminogen activator (tPA), and recent studies show tPA can be given in previously contraindicated situations. More rapid automated CT perfusion and angiography may demonstrate a vascular penumbra for neuroendovascular intervention. Further, the greatest advance in acute stroke treatment since 2014 is the demonstration that neuroendovascular catheter-based thrombectomy with stent retrievers recanalizing intracranial large vessel occlusion (LVO) improves both recanalization and long-term outcomes in several trials. Hemorrhagic transformation and severe large infarct cerebral edema remain serious post-stroke challenges, with new guidelines describing who and when patients should get medical or surgical intervention.SummaryThe adage “time is brain” directs the most evidence-based approach for rapid stroke diagnosis for tPA eligible and LVO recanalization using an orchestrated team approach. The neurocritical care unit is the appropriate location to optimize stroke outcomes for the most severely affected stroke patients.


mHealth | 2016

A feasibility pilot using a mobile personal health assistant (PHA) app to assist stroke patient and caregiver communication after hospital discharge

Jason Siegel; Emily Edwards; Lesia Mooney; Christina C. Smith; J. Brent Peel; Adam Dole; Paul Maler; W. David Freeman

BACKGROUND Recent advancements have lowered national acute stroke mortality, yet posthospital care and readmission rates remain challenges. A personal health assistant (PHA) may help manage the spectrum of posthospital care. We hypothesized that a PHA application (app) would be associated with high poststroke patient care satisfaction and might prevent hospital readmission. METHODS This is a case series of acute stroke patients admitted to a single, tertiary care, comprehensive stroke center (Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, Florida) who were offered a personal health assistance through a smart phone app. Patients were screened based on having a cerebrovascular event and the ability to use a necessary device. All patients received the standard poststroke discharge protocol, the PHA app, and the 30-day Likert scale survey. RESULTS We screened 21 patients and enrolled 3 (14%) before premature financial closure. Two of the 3 patients rated the app highly, and the third patient had not started using it. Of the ineligible patients, 4 had no device, 3 declined enrollment, and 2 were not able to use the device. One of the 2 patients who used the PHA app was readmitted for new stroke symptoms. CONCLUSIONS Both patients who used the app were very satisfied with the PHA and their posthospital care coordination. This study had an enrollment rate of about 14% due to various factors, including limited access or utilization of necessary technology. Though limited by final patient sample size and early termination from funding, this study provides useful information about developing future mobile health apps for acute stroke patients.


Mayo Clinic Proceedings: Innovations, Quality & Outcomes | 2018

Reducing Door-to-Reperfusion Time for Mechanical Thrombectomy With a Multitiered Notification System for Acute Ischemic Stroke

Eric D. Goldstein; Lynda Schnusenberg; Lesia Mooney; Carol Raper; Sheila McDaniel; Dallas Thorpe; Michelle T. Franke; Linda K. Anderson; Lynnae L. McClure; Misty M. Oglesby; Catina Y. Lewis; Cammi Velichko; Belinda G. Bradley; William W. Horn; Ashley N. Reid; Jason Siegel; Rocco Cannistraro; Perry S. Bechtle; Maria Thereza Barbosa; Scott Silvers; Benjamin L. Brown; William D. Freeman; David A. Miller; Kevin M. Barrett; Josephine F. Huang

Objective To reduce door-to-angiographic reperfusion (DTR) time to 120 minutes for patients presenting with acute ischemic stroke attributed to anterior circulation large-vessel occlusion amenable to endovascular mechanical thrombectomy. Patients and Methods Patients treated with mechanical thrombectomy before (April 10, 2015, through April 11, 2016) and after (April 12, 2016, through May 10, 2017) implementation of a multitiered notification system were studied. Lean process mapping was used to assess inefficiencies with multidisciplinary triage. A 3-tiered paging platform, which rapidly alerts essential personnel of the acute ischemic stroke team at advancing decision points, was introduced. Results Sixty-two patients were analyzed before and after implementation (34 vs 28, respectively). Following intervention, DTR time was reduced by 43 minutes (mean DTR, 170 minutes vs 127 minutes; P=.02). At 90-day follow up, 5 of the 28 patients in the postintervention cohort (19%) had excellent neurologic outcomes, defined as a modified Rankin Scale score of 0, compared to 0 of 34 (0%) in the preintervention cohort (P=.89). Reductions were also seen in the length of stay on the neurocritical care service (mean, 6 vs 3 days; P=.006), and total hospital charges for combined groups (mean,


Journal of Stroke & Cerebrovascular Diseases | 2018

Granulomatous Angiitis of the Central Nervous System Associated with Hodgkin's Lymphoma: Case Report and Literature Review

A. Sebastian Lopez-Chiriboga; Jang W. Yoon; Jason Siegel; Andrea M. Harriott; Stephen M. Pirris; Benjamin H. Eidelman; William D. Freeman

100,083 vs


Neurology | 2017

Author response: Hand postures in primary and secondary generalized tonic-clonic seizures

Jason Siegel

161,458; P<.001). Conclusion The multitiered notification system was a feasible solution for improving DTR within our institution, resulting in reductions of overall DTR time, neurocritical care service length of stay, and total hospital charges.


Neurology | 2017

Clinical Reasoning: A 45-year-old man with weakness and myalgia after orthopedic surgery.

Rocio Vazquez do Campo; Jason Siegel; Eric D. Goldstein; Elliot L. Dimberg

Granulomatous angiitis of the central nervous system (GACNS) is a rare cerebrovascular disorder. It usually presents with multifocal neurologic symptoms symptoms including stroke, encephalopathy, and headache. A limited number of case reports describe neurological deficits resulting from GACNS as the manifesting symptoms of Hodgkins lymphoma (HL). We describe the case of a patient with neurological symptoms from GACNS that led to the diagnosis of HL, as well as a literature review focusing on the association between GACNS and HL.

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