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Dive into the research topics where Joshua Kornbluth is active.

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Featured researches published by Joshua Kornbluth.


Neurocritical Care | 2011

Evaluation of Coma: A Critical Appraisal of Popular Scoring Systems

Joshua Kornbluth; Anish Bhardwaj

Numerous scoring scales have been proposed and validated to evaluate coma for rapid pre-hospital assessment and triage, disease severity, and prognosis for morbidity and mortality. These scoring systems have been predicated on core features that serve as a basis for this review and include ease of use, inter-rater reliability, reproducibility, and predictive value. Here we review the benefits and limitations of the most popular coma scoring systems. The methods include search of Medline, databases, and manual review of article bibliographies. Few of the many available coma scales have gained widespread approval and popularity. The best known and widely accepted scale is the Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS). The Reaction Level Scale (RLS85) has utility and proven benefit, but little acceptance outside of Scandinavia. The newer Full Outline of UnResponsiveness (FOUR) score provides an attractive replacement for all patients with fluctuating levels of consciousness and is gradually gaining wide acceptance.


Journal of Critical Care | 2013

Changing trends in the use of seizure prophylaxis after traumatic brain injury: A shift from phenytoin to levetiracetam

Rachel Kruer; Lindsay H. Harris; Haley Goodwin; Joshua Kornbluth; Katherine P. Thomas; Leigh A. Slater; Elliott R. Haut

PURPOSE Current guidelines for traumatic brain injury (TBI) recommend antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) for 7 days after injury to decrease posttraumatic seizure risk. Phenytoin decreases seizure risk 73% vs placebo during this time. Levetiracetam (LEV) is an alternative; however, no published data validate comparable efficacy. Our objective was to evaluate seizure incidence 7 days after TBI in patients treated with phenytoin (PHT) vs LEV and to characterize practice of AED selection. METHODS A retrospective observational study was conducted using a Trauma Registry (Collector Trauma Registry; Digital Innovation, Inc, Forrest Hill, Md) to evaluate patients with TBI. Patients with an initial Head/Neck Abbreviated Injury Scale score of 3 or higher and a Glasgow Coma Scale of 8 or less were included. RESULTS Of 109 patients, 89 received PHT, and 20, LEV. Two patients experienced posttraumatic seizure, 1 in each group. Sixty-eight patients survived to hospital discharge; 65% received prophylactic AED greater than 7 days. Ninety-eight percent of 81 patients admitted between 2000 and 2007 received PHT, whereas 64% of 28 patients admitted between 2008 and 2010 received LEV. CONCLUSION Only 2 patients experienced posttraumatic seizure after receiving AED, indicating low incidence. Most surviving to hospital discharge received AED prophylaxis greater than 7 days despite guideline recommendations. After approval of intravenous LEV, a trend favoring LEV was observed.


Stroke | 2015

Accuracy of the ABC/2 Score for Intracerebral Hemorrhage: Systematic Review and Analysis of MISTIE, CLEAR-IVH, and CLEAR III

Alastair J.S. Webb; Natalie Ullman; Timothy C. Morgan; John Muschelli; Joshua Kornbluth; Issam A. Awad; Stephen Mayo; Michael Rosenblum; Wendy C. Ziai; Mario Zuccarrello; Francois Aldrich; Sayona John; Sagi Harnof; George A. Lopez; William C. Broaddus; Christine A.C. Wijman; Paul Vespa; Ross Bullock; Stephen J. Haines; Salvador Cruz-Flores; Stan Tuhrim; Michael D. Hill; Raj K. Narayan; Daniel F. Hanley

Background and Purpose— The ABC/2 score estimates intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) volume, yet validations have been limited by small samples and inappropriate outcome measures. We determined accuracy of the ABC/2 score calculated at a specialized reading center (RC-ABC) or local site (site-ABC) versus the reference-standard computed tomography–based planimetry (CTP). Methods— In Minimally Invasive Surgery Plus Recombinant Tissue-Type Plasminogen Activator for Intracerebral Hemorrhage Evacuation-II (MISTIE-II), Clot Lysis Evaluation of Accelerated Resolution of Intraventricular Hemorrhage (CLEAR-IVH) and CLEAR-III trials. ICH volume was prospectively calculated by CTP, RC-ABC, and site-ABC. Agreement between CTP and ABC/2 was defined as an absolute difference up to 5 mL and relative difference within 20%. Determinants of ABC/2 accuracy were assessed by logistic regression. Results— In 4369 scans from 507 patients, CTP was more strongly correlated with RC-ABC (r2=0.93) than with site-ABC (r2=0.87). Although RC-ABC overestimated CTP-based volume on average (RC-ABC, 15.2 cm3; CTP, 12.7 cm3), agreement was reasonable when categorized into mild, moderate, and severe ICH (&kgr;=0.75; P<0.001). This was consistent with overestimation of ICH volume in 6 of 8 previous studies. Agreement with CTP was greater for RC-ABC (84% within 5 mL; 48% of scans within 20%) than for site-ABC (81% within 5 mL; 41% within 20%). RC-ABC had moderate accuracy for detecting ≥5 mL change in CTP volume between consecutive scans (sensitivity, 0.76; specificity, 0.86) and was more accurate with smaller ICH, thalamic hemorrhage, and homogeneous clots. Conclusions— ABC/2 scores at local or central sites are sufficiently accurate to categorize ICH volume and assess eligibility for the CLEAR-III and MISTIE III studies and moderately accurate for change in ICH volume. However, accuracy decreases with large, irregular, or lobar clots. Clinical Trial Registration— URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: MISTIE-II NCT00224770; CLEAR-III NCT00784134.


Neurocritical Care | 2012

Gastrointestinal Prophylaxis in Neurocritical Care

Clemens M. Schirmer; Joshua Kornbluth; Carl B. Heilman; Anish Bhardwaj

The aim of this study is to review and summarize the relevant literature regarding pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic methods of prophylaxis against gastrointestinal (GI) stress ulceration, and upper gastrointestinal bleeding in critically ill patients. Stress ulcers are a known complication of a variety of critical illnesses. The literature regarding epidemiology and management of stress ulcers and complications thereof, is vast and mostly encompasses patients in medical and surgical intensive care units. This article aims to extrapolate meaningful data for use with a population of critically ill neurologic and neurosurgical patients in the neurological intensive care unit setting. Studies were identified from the cochrane central register of controlled trials and NLM PUBMED for english articles dealing with an adult population. We also scanned bibliographies of relevant studies. The results show that H2A, sucralfate, and PPI all reduce the incidence of UGIB in neurocritically ill patients, but H2A blockers may cause encephalopathy and interact with anticonvulsant drugs, and have been associated with higher rates of nosocomial pneumonias, but causation remains unproven and controversial. For these reasons, we advocate against routine use of H2A for GI prophylaxis in neurocritical patients. There is a paucity of high-level evidence studies that apply to the neurocritical care population. From this study, it is concluded that stress ulcer prophylaxis among critically ill neurologic and neurosurgical patients is important in preventing ulcer-related GI hemorrhage that contributes to both morbidity and mortality. Further, prospective trials are needed to elucidate which methods of prophylaxis are most appropriate and efficacious for specific illnesses in this population.


Neurophotonics | 2016

Cerebral blood flow and autoregulation: current measurement techniques and prospects for noninvasive optical methods

Sergio Fantini; Angelo Sassaroli; Kristen T. Tgavalekos; Joshua Kornbluth

Abstract. Cerebral blood flow (CBF) and cerebral autoregulation (CA) are critically important to maintain proper brain perfusion and supply the brain with the necessary oxygen and energy substrates. Adequate brain perfusion is required to support normal brain function, to achieve successful aging, and to navigate acute and chronic medical conditions. We review the general principles of CBF measurements and the current techniques to measure CBF based on direct intravascular measurements, nuclear medicine, X-ray imaging, magnetic resonance imaging, ultrasound techniques, thermal diffusion, and optical methods. We also review techniques for arterial blood pressure measurements as well as theoretical and experimental methods for the assessment of CA, including recent approaches based on optical techniques. The assessment of cerebral perfusion in the clinical practice is also presented. The comprehensive description of principles, methods, and clinical requirements of CBF and CA measurements highlights the potentially important role that noninvasive optical methods can play in the assessment of neurovascular health. In fact, optical techniques have the ability to provide a noninvasive, quantitative, and continuous monitor of CBF and autoregulation.


Radiology | 2017

Early Functional Connectome Integrity and 1-Year Recovery in Comatose Survivors of Cardiac Arrest

Haris I. Sair; Yousef Hannawi; Shanshan Li; Joshua Kornbluth; Athena Demertzi; Carol Di Perri; Russell Chabanne; Betty Jean; Habib Benali; Vincent Perlbarg; James J. Pekar; Charles-Edouard Luyt; Damien Galanaud; Lionel Velly; Louis Puybasset; Steven Laureys; Brian Caffo; Robert D. Stevens

Purpose To assess whether early brain functional connectivity is associated with functional recovery 1 year after cardiac arrest (CA). Materials and Methods Enrolled in this prospective multicenter cohort were 46 patients who were comatose after CA. Principal outcome was cerebral performance category at 12 months, with favorable outcome (FO) defined as cerebral performance category 1 or 2. All participants underwent multiparametric structural and functional magnetic resonance (MR) imaging less than 4 weeks after CA. Within- and between-network connectivity was measured in dorsal attention network (DAN), default-mode network (DMN), salience network (SN), and executive control network (ECN) by using seed-based analysis of resting-state functional MR imaging data. Structural changes identified with fluid-attenuated inversion recovery and diffusion-weighted imaging sequences were analyzed by using validated morphologic scales. The association between connectivity measures, structural changes, and the principal outcome was explored with multivariable modeling. Results Patients underwent MR imaging a mean 12.6 days ± 5.6 (standard deviation) after CA. At 12 months, 11 patients had an FO. Patients with FO had higher within-DMN connectivity and greater anticorrelation between SN and DMN and between SN and ECN compared with patients with unfavorable outcome, an effect that was maintained after multivariable adjustment. Anticorrelation of SN-DMN predicted outcomes with higher accuracy than fluid-attenuated inversion recovery or diffusion-weighted imaging scores (area under the receiver operating characteristic curves, respectively, 0.88, 0.74, and 0.71). Conclusion MR imaging-based measures of cerebral functional network connectivity obtained in the acute phase of CA were independently associated with FO at 1 year, warranting validation as early markers of long-term recovery potential in patients with anoxic-ischemic encephalopathy.


American Journal of Neuroradiology | 2015

Early Quantification of Hematoma Hounsfield Units on Noncontrast CT in Acute Intraventricular Hemorrhage Predicts Ventricular Clearance after Intraventricular Thrombolysis.

Joshua Kornbluth; Saman Nekoovaght-Tak; Natalie Ullman; J.R. Carhuapoma; Daniel F. Hanley; Wendy C. Ziai

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Thrombolytic efficacy of intraventricular rtPA for acute intraventricular hemorrhage may depend on hematoma composition. We assessed whether hematoma Hounsfield unit quantification informs intraventricular hemorrhage clearance after intraventricular rtPA. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Serial NCCT was performed on 52 patients who received intraventricular rtPA as part of the Clot Lysis Evaluation of Accelerated Resolution of Intraventricular Hemorrhage trial and 12 controls with intraventricular hemorrhage, but no rtPA treatment. A blinded investigator calculated Hounsfield unit values for intraventricular hemorrhage volumes on admission (t0), days 3–4 (t1), and days 6–9 (t2). Controls were matched uniquely to 12 rtPA-treated patients for comparison. RESULTS: Median intraventricular hemorrhage volume on admission for patients treated with intraventricular rtPA was 31.9 mL (interquartile range, 34.1 mL), and it decreased to 4.9 mL (interquartile range, 14.5 mL) (t2). Mean (±standard error of the mean) Hounsfield unit for intraventricular hemorrhage was 52.1 (0.59) at t0 and decreased significantly to 50.1 (0.63) (t1), and to 45.1 (0.71) (t2). Total intraventricular hemorrhage Hounsfield unit count was significantly correlated with intraventricular hemorrhage volume at all time points (t0: P = .002; t1: P < .001; t2: P < .001). On serologic and CSF analysis at t0, only higher CSF protein was positively correlated with intraventricular hemorrhage Hounsfield units (P = .03). In 24 matched patients treated with rtPA and controls, total intraventricular hemorrhage Hounsfield units were significantly lower in patients treated with rtPA at t2 (P = .02). Higher Hounsfield unit quantification of fourth ventricle hematomas independently predicted slower clearance of this ventricle (95% CI, 0.02–0.14; P = .02), along with higher intraventricular hemorrhage volume (95% CI, 0.02–0.41; P = .03) and lower CSF protein levels (95% CI, −0.003 to −0.002; P < .001). CONCLUSIONS: Intraventricular hemorrhage Hounsfield unit counts decrease significantly in the acute phase and to a greater extent with intraventricular rtPA treatment. Intraventricular hemorrhage Hounsfield units are correlated significantly with CSF protein and not with serum erythrocyte or platelet concentrations. Hounsfield unit counts may reflect intraventricular hemorrhage clot composition and rtPA sensitivity.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2017

Coherent hemodynamics spectroscopy: initial applications in the neurocritical care unit

Kristen T. Tgavalekos; Angelo Sassaroli; Xuemei Cai; Joshua Kornbluth; Sergio Fantini

We used coherent hemodynamics spectroscopy (CHS) and near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) to measure the absolute cerebral blood flow (CBF) and cerebral autoregulation efficiency of a patient with intraventricular hemorrhage in the neurocritical care unit. Mean arterial pressure oscillations were induced with cyclic thigh cuff inflations at a super-systolic pressure. The oscillations in oxyhemoglobin ([HbO2]) and deoxyhemoglobin ([Hb]) cerebral concentrations were used to compute CHS amplitude and phase spectra that were fit with the frequency-domain equations of our hemodynamic model. From the fitted parameters, we obtained measures of local autoregulation efficiency (cutoff frequency: 0.07 ± 0.02 Hz) and absolute regional CBF (33 ± 9 ml/100g/min). We introduce a new approach for computing CHS spectra using coherence criteria and time-varying transfer function analysis. We show that with this approach we can maximize the number of frequency points in the CHS spectra for more effective fitting with our hemodynamic model. Finally, we show how absolute measurements of the cerebral concentrations of [HbO2] and [Hb] at baseline can be used to further enhance the fitting procedure.


CONTINUUM: Lifelong Learning in Neurology | 2012

Treatment of refractory headache: potential conflicts of interest in coding.

Joshua Kornbluth; James A. Russell

Issues directly or indirectly related to the increasing costs of health care services have the potential to adversely affect physicians’ fiduciary responsibilities to their patients. Coding deception in response to perceived unfairness in reimbursement practices represents one of these potential adverse influences. This case discussion addresses the potential motivations underlying coding deception and the reasons it cannot be supported from either a legal or ethical perspective.


Animal Genetics | 2009

At least two loci encode polymorphic class I MHC antigens in the horse

W.L. Donaldson; A. L. Crump; C.H. Zhang; Joshua Kornbluth; Malek Kamoun; W. Davis; Douglas F. Antczak

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Natalie Ullman

Johns Hopkins University

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Wendy C. Ziai

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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John Muschelli

Johns Hopkins University

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