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Dive into the research topics where Kristina Shkirkova is active.

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Featured researches published by Kristina Shkirkova.


Stroke | 2018

Los Angeles Motor Scale to Identify Large Vessel Occlusion: Prehospital Validation and Comparison With Other Screens

Ali Reza Noorian; Nerses Sanossian; Kristina Shkirkova; David S. Liebeskind; Marc Eckstein; Samuel J. Stratton; Franklin D Pratt; Robin Conwit; Fiona Chatfield; Latisha Sharma; Lucas Restrepo; Miguel Valdes-Sueiras; May Kim-Tenser; Sidney Starkman; Jeffrey L. Saver

Background and Purpose— Prehospital scales have been developed to identify patients with acute cerebral ischemia (ACI) because of large vessel occlusion (LVO) for direct routing to Comprehensive Stroke Centers (CSCs), but few have been validated in the prehospital setting, and their impact on routing of patients with intracranial hemorrhage has not been delineated. The purpose of this study was to validate the Los Angeles Motor Scale (LAMS) for LVO and CSC-appropriate (LVO ACI and intracranial hemorrhage patients) recognition and compare the LAMS to other scales. Methods— The performance of the LAMS, administered prehospital by paramedics to consecutive ambulance trial patients, was assessed in identifying (1) LVOs among all patients with ACI and (2) CSC-appropriate patients among all suspected strokes. Additionally, the LAMS administered postarrival was compared concurrently with 6 other scales proposed for paramedic use and the full National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale. Results— Among 94 patients, age was 70 (±13) and 49% female. Final diagnoses were ACI in 76% (because of LVO in 48% and non-LVO in 28%), intracranial hemorrhage in 19%, and neurovascular mimic in 5%. The LAMS administered by paramedics in the field performed moderately well in identifying LVO among patients with ACI (C statistic, 0.79; accuracy, 0.72) and CSC-appropriate among all suspected stroke transports (C statistic, 0.80; accuracy, 0.72). When concurrently performed in the emergency department postarrival, the LAMS showed comparable or better accuracy versus the 7 comparator scales, for LVO among ACI (accuracies LAMS, 0.70; other scales, 0.62–0.68) and CSC-appropriate (accuracies LAMS, 0.73; other scales, 0.56–0.73). Conclusions— The LAMS performed in the field by paramedics identifies LVO and CSC-appropriate patients with good accuracy. The LAMS performs comparably or better than more extended prehospital scales and the full National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale.


Stroke | 2017

Paramedic Initiation of Neuroprotective Agent Infusions: Successful Achievement of Target Blood Levels and Attained Level Effect on Clinical Outcomes in the FAST-MAG Pivotal Trial (Field Administration of Stroke Therapy – Magnesium)

Kristina Shkirkova; Sidney Starkman; Nerses Sanossian; Marc Eckstein; Samuel J. Stratton; Frank Pratt; Robin Conwit; Scott Hamilton; Latisha Sharma; David S. Liebeskind; Lucas Restrepo; Miguel Valdes-Sueiras; Jeffrey L. Saver

Background and Purpose— Paramedic use of fixed-size lumen, gravity-controlled tubing to initiate intravenous infusions in the field may allow rapid start of neuroprotective therapy for acute stroke. In a large, multicenter trial, we evaluated its efficacy in attaining target serum levels of candidate neuroprotective agent magnesium sulfate and the relation of achieved magnesium levels to outcome. Methods— The FAST-MAG phase 3 trial (Field Administration of Stroke Therapy – Magnesium) randomized 1700 patients within 2 hours of onset to paramedic-initiated, a 15-minute loading intravenous infusion of magnesium or placebo followed by a 24-hour maintenance dose. The drug delivery strategy included fixed-size lumen, gravity-controlled tubing for field drug administration, and a shrink-wrapped ambulance kit containing both the randomized field loading and hospital maintenance doses for seamless continuation. Results— Among patient randomized to active treatment, magnesium levels in the first 72 hours were assessed 987 times in 572 patients. Mean patient age was 70 years (SD±14 years), and 45% were women. During the 24-hour period of active infusion, mean achieved serum level was 3.91 (±0.8), consistent with trial target. Mg levels were increased by older age, female sex, lower weight, height, body mass index, and estimated glomerular filtration rate, and higher blood urea nitrogen, hemoglobin, and higher hematocrit. Adjusted odds for clinical outcomes did not differ by achieved Mg level, including disability at 90 days, symptomatic hemorrhage, or death. Conclusions— Paramedic infusion initiation using gravity-controlled tubing permits rapid achievement of target serum levels of potential neuroprotective agents. The absence of association of clinical outcomes with achieved magnesium levels provides further evidence that magnesium is not biologically neuroprotective in acute stroke.


JAMA Neurology | 2018

Frequency, Predictors, and Outcomes of Prehospital and Early Postarrival Neurological Deterioration in Acute Stroke: Exploratory Analysis of the FAST-MAG Randomized Clinical Trial

Kristina Shkirkova; Jeffrey L. Saver; Sidney Starkman; Gregory Wong; Julius Weng; Scott Hamilton; David S. Liebeskind; Marc Eckstein; Samuel J. Stratton; Frank Pratt; Robin Conwit; Nerses Sanossian

Importance Studies of neurological deterioration in stroke have focused on the subacute period, but stroke treatment is increasingly migrating to the prehospital setting, where the neurological course has not been well delineated. Objective To describe the frequency, predictors, and outcomes of neurological deterioration among patients in the ultra-early period following ischemic stroke or intracranial hemorrhage. Design, Settings, and Participants Exploratory analysis of the prehospital, randomized Field Administration of Stroke Therapy-Magnesium (FAST-MAG) Trial conducted from 2005 to 2013 within 315 ambulances and 60 stroke patient receiving hospitals in Southern California. Participants were consecutively enrolled patients with suspected acute stroke who were transported by ambulance within 2 hours of stroke onset. Main Outcomes and Measures The main outcome was neurological deterioration, defined as a worsening of 2 or more points on the Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), a level of consciousness scale ranging from 3 to 15, with higher scores indicating more alertness. Imaging outcomes were ischemic or hemorrhagic injury extent identified during the first brain imaging scan. Outcomes at 3 months included global disability level (assessed using the modified Rankin Scale [mRS]; range, 0-6, with higher numbers indicating greater disability) and mortality. Results Among the 1690 patients (99.4%), the mean (SD) age was 69.4 (13.5) years, and 43% were female. Final diagnoses were acute cerebral ischemia in 1237 patients (73.2%), intracranial hemorrhage in 386 patients (22.8%), and neurovascular mimic in 67 patients (4.0%). The median (interquartile range [IQR]) minutes between the last well-known time and GCS assessments were 23 (14-42) minutes for prehospital, 58 (46-79) minutes for ED arrival, and 149 (120-180) minutes for early ED course assessments. From prehospital to early postarrival, ultra-early neurological deterioration (U-END) occurred in 200 of 1690 patients (11.8%), more often among patients with intracranial hemorrhage than among those with acute cerebral ischemia (119 of 386 [30.8%] vs 75 of 1237 [6.1%], P < .001). Patterns of U-END were prehospital U-END without early recovery in 30 of 965 patients (3.1%), stable prehospital course but early ED deterioration in 49 of 965 patients (5.1%), and continuous deterioration in both prehospital and early ED phases in 27 of 965 patients (2.8%). Ultra-early neurological deterioration was associated with worse 3-month outcomes, including increased global disability (mRS score, 4.6 vs 2.4; P < .001), reduced functional independence (mRS score 0-2, 32 of 200 [16.0%] vs 844 of 1490 [56.6%]; P < .001), and increased mortality (87 of 200 [43.5%] vs 176 of 1490 [11.8%]; P < .001). Conclusions and Relevance Ultra-early neurological deterioration occurs in 1 in 8 ambulance-transported patients with acute cerebrovascular disease, including 1 in 3 patients with intracranial hemorrhage and 1 in 16 patients with acute cerebral ischemia, and is associated with markedly reduced functional independence and increased mortality. Averting U-END may be a target for future prehospital therapeutics. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00059332


International Journal of Stroke | 2017

Feasibility and utility of an integrated medical imaging and informatics smartphone system for management of acute stroke

Kristina Shkirkova; Eftitan Y Akam; Josephine Huang; Sunil A Sheth; May Nour; Conrad W Liang; Michael L. McManus; Van Trinh; G Duckwiler; Jason Tarpley; Fernando Vinuela; Jeffrey L. Saver

Background Rapid dissemination and coordination of clinical and imaging data among multidisciplinary team members are essential for optimal acute stroke care. Aim To characterize the feasibility and utility of the Synapse Emergency Room mobile (Synapse ERm) informatics system. Methods We implemented the Synapse ERm system for integration of clinical data, computerized tomography, magnetic resonance, and catheter angiographic imaging, and real-time stroke team communications, in consecutive acute neurovascular patients at a Comprehensive Stroke Center. Results From May 2014 to October 2014, the Synapse ERm application was used by 33 stroke team members in 84 Code Stroke alerts. Patient age was 69.6 (±17.1), with 41.5% female. Final diagnosis was: ischemic stroke 64.6%, transient ischemic attack 7.3%, intracerebral hemorrhage 6.1%, and cerebrovascular-mimic 22.0%. Each patient Synapse ERm record was viewed by a median of 10 (interquartile range 6–18) times by a median of 3 (interquartile range 2–4) team members. The most used feature was computerized tomography, magnetic resonance, and catheter angiography image display. In-app tweet team, communications were sent by median 1 (interquartile range 0–1, range 0–13) users per case and viewed by median 1 (interquartile range 0–3, range 0–44) team members. Use of the system was associated with rapid treatment times, faster than national guidelines, including median door-to-needle 51.0 min (interquartile range 40.5–69.5) and median door-to-groin 94.5 min (interquartile range 85.5–121.3). In user surveys, the mobile information platform was judged easy to employ in 91% (95% confidence interval 65%–99%) of uses and of added help in stroke management in 50% (95% confidence interval 22%–78%). Conclusion The Synapse ERm mobile platform for stroke team distribution and integration of clinical and imaging data was feasible to implement, showed high ease of use, and moderate perceived added utility in therapeutic management.


Stroke | 2018

Abstract 56: Frequency, Determinants, and Outcomes of Distal Emboli Related to Mechanical Thrombectomy for Acute Ischemic Stroke

Gregory J Wong; Bryan Yoo; Reza Jahan; Viktor Szeder; David S. Liebeskind; Latisha Sharma; Gary Duckwiler; Satoshi Tateshima; May Nour; Kristina Shkirkova; Jin-Moo Lee; Sidney Starkman; Jeffrey L. Saver; Ucla Thrombectomy Investigators


Stroke | 2017

Abstract 118: Paramedic-Administered Los Angeles Motor Scale identifies Ischemic Stroke with Large Vessel Occlusion and Intracranial Hemorrhage for Routing to Comprehensive Stroke Centers and Compares Favorably to Other Screening Methods

Ali Reza Noorian; Nerses Sanossian; Kristina Shkirkova; David S. Liebeskind; Marc Eckstein; Samuel J. Stratton; Franklin D Pratt; Robin Conwit; Fiona Chatfield; Latisha Sharma; Sidney Starkman; Jeffrey L. Saver


Stroke | 2017

Abstract TP235: Deterioration and Improvement in the Field: Comparative Detection by Los Angeles Motor Scale and Glasgow Coma Scale in Acute, EMS-transported Stroke Patients

Anita Tipirneni; Kristina Shkirkova; Nerses Sanossian; Sidney Starkman; Scott Hamilton; David S. Liebeskind; Samuel J. Stratton; Franklin D Pratt; Latisha Sharma; Lucas Restrepo; May Kim-Tenser; Miguel Valdes-Sueiras; Robin Conwit; Jeffrey L. Saver


Stroke | 2017

Abstract 149: Patterns, Determinants and Outcomes of Ultra-early Neurological Deterioration (U-END) in Intracranial Hemorrhage

Kristina Shkirkova; Gregory Wong; Julius Weng; Jeffrey L. Saver; Sidney Starkman; Scott Hamilton; David S. Liebeskind; Mark Eckstein; Samuel J. Stratton; Frank Pratt; Robin Conwit; Nerses Sanossain


Stroke | 2017

Abstract TP233: Patterns, Determinants and Outcomes of Ultra-Early Neurological Deterioration (U-END) in Acute Ischemic Stroke

Kristina Shkirkova; Gregory Wong; Julius Weng; Jeffrey L. Saver; Sidney Starkman; Scott Hamilton; David S. Liebeskind; Mark Eckstein; Samuel J. Stratton; Frank Pratt; Robin Conwit; Nerses Sanossain


Stroke | 2016

Abstract WMP68: Smartphone Support System for Mobile Imaging Display and Management of Acute Stroke

Kristina Shkirkova; Eftitan Y Akam; Josephine F Huang; Sunil Sheth; May Nour; Conrad Liang; Michael McManus; Van D Trinh; Gary Duckwiler; Jason Tarpley; Fernando Vinuela; Jeffrey L. Saver

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Robin Conwit

National Institutes of Health

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Nerses Sanossian

University of Southern California

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Marc Eckstein

New York City Fire Department

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Frank Pratt

New York City Fire Department

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Latisha Sharma

University of California

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