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Dive into the research topics where Michael Kushner is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael Kushner.


Cancer | 1988

Positron emission tomography in patients with glioma. A predictor of prognosis.

Jane B. Alavi; Abass Alavi; J. Chawluk; Michael Kushner; John Powe; William F. Hickey; Martin Reivich

Positron emission tomography (PET) studies have been performed using 18‐F‐fluorodeoxyglucose in 29 adult subjects with primary brain tumors. Seventy‐two percent of the patients were treated previously. The glucose metabolic state in the lesions was increased in 16 patients, and was normal or decreased in 13 patients. The hypermetabolic tumors tended to behave in a more malignant fashion. Patients with hypermetabolic tumors had a median survival of 7 months after PET scan, compared to 33 months for those with hypometabolic lesions. Among the high‐grade glioma patients, the PET results separated them into a good prognosis group (hypometabolic, with 78% 1‐year survival) and a poor prognosis group (hypermetabolic, with a 29% 1‐year survival after PET). These results suggest that glucose metabolic studies may provide an independent measure of the aggressiveness of a brain tumor, and may supplement pathologic grading.


Stroke | 1990

Clinical and laboratory findings in patients with antiphospholipid antibodies and cerebral ischemia

Viken L. Babikian; Robin L. Brey; Bruce M. Coull; L. Dana Dewitt; William M. Feinberg; Edward Feldmann; Richard A. Furie; E. Nigel Harris; David C. Hess; Steven J. Kittner; Michael Kushner; Steven R. Levine

We reviewed the clinical and laboratory data of 128 patients with cerebrovascular disease and antiphospholipid antibodies. Cases were evenly divided between men and women, and the mean age of the study group was 46 years. Cerebral infarction occurred in 97 patients, and transient hemispheric ischemic attacks without stroke were recorded in 19; 12 suffered ocular ischemia. Systemic lupus erythematosus was diagnosed in 16% of all cases. Histories of systemic thromboembolic events and recurrent miscarriages were noted in 14% of the patients and in 19% of the women, respectively. Evidence of cerebral infarction preceding the index event was present in 30% of cases. During a mean follow-up of 16 months, nine of 96 (9%) patients sustained new cerebral infarctions. Of 72 echocardiographic studies, 16 (22%) showed valvular abnormalities. Cerebral angiography detected intracranial lesions in 24 of 49 patients (49%). These data indicate that antiphospholipid antibodies can be identified in stroke patients without known autoimmune disorders. They also suggest that antiphospholipid antibody-associated cerebrovascular ischemia may be recurrent and often occurs in patients with systemic thromboembolic events. Our findings should help design a prospective clinical trial that will assess the risk of recurrent thromboembolism in this population, identify stroke risk factors, and address therapy.


Archives of General Psychiatry | 1987

Regional brain function in schizophrenia: II. Repeated evaluation with positron emission tomography.

Raquel E. Gur; Susan M. Resnick; Ruben C. Gur; Abass Alavi; Stanley N. Caroff; Michael Kushner; Martin Reivich

Cerebral glucose metabolism was measured twice in a sample of 15 schizophrenics and eight controls, using positron emission tomography (PET) with 18-F-fluorodeoxyglucose. Studies were separated by three to 33 weeks. Patients were unmedicated during the first study, and the majority were receiving neuroleptics during the second study. There were no changes from study 1 to study 2 in average whole-brain metabolic rates, regional cortical activity, or the gradient of subcortical to cortical activity. The steeper subcortical to cortical gradient in schizophrenics, present in the first study, persisted in the second. Changes in this gradient were uncorrelated with changes in clinical status. Laterality (right-left) was stable across studies, and changes toward higher right relative to left hemispheric metabolism were correlated with clinical improvement. The results support the hypothesis of abnormal hemispheric activity in schizophrenia and implicate the subcortical-cortical gradient as another dimension that merits further exploration.


Seminars in Nuclear Medicine | 1986

Positron emission tomography imaging of regional cerebral glucose metabolism

Abass Alavi; Robert Dann; J. Chawluk; Jane B. Alavi; Michael Kushner; Martin Reivich

The (F-18) fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) technique to measure local cerebral metabolic rate for glucose (LCMRglu) is well accepted and widely used by many institutions around the world. A large number of studies has been carried out in normal volunteers and patients with a variety of CNS disorders. Several investigators have noted that no significant age-related changes in cerebral glucose use occur with normal aging. Some important and interesting findings have been revealed following sensory, motor, visual, and auditory stimulations. Functional imaging with FDG in certain neurologic disorders has dramatically improved our understanding of their underlying pathophysiologic phenomena. Some abnormalities detected on the positron emission tomography (PET) images have no corresponding changes on either x-ray computed tomograms (XCT) or magnetic resonance images (MRI). In patients with Alzheimers disease, primary sensorimotor, visual, and cerebellar metabolic activity appears relatively preserved. In contrast, parietal, temporal, and to some degree, frontal glucose metabolism is significantly diminished even in the early stages of the disease. Patients with Huntingtons disease and those at risk of developing this disorder have a typical pattern of diminished CMRglu in the caudate nuclei and putamen. In patients with stroke, PET images with FDG have demonstrated abnormal findings earlier than either XCT or MRI and with a wider topographic distribution. FDG scans have revealed interictal zones of decreased LCMRglu in approximately 70% of patients with partial epilepsy. The location of the area of hypometabolism corresponds to the site of the epileptic focus as determined by electroencephalography and microscopic examination of the resected tissue. Ictal scans during partial seizures demonstrate areas of hypermetabolism corresponding to the sites of seizure onset and spread. Several investigators have reported relative hypofrontal CMRglu in patients with schizophrenia. In our center, FDG scans from patients with schizophrenia were successfully differentiated from those obtained in normal controls. Finally, our preliminary data (using PET, XCT, and MRI) in patients with CNS disorders indicate that MRI provides excellent delineation of the structural abnormalities. It may prove to be superior to XCT in the evaluation of certain diseases such as cerebral ischemia and infarcts, head injury, tumors, and white matter lesions. Metabolic imaging with FDG provides functional information not obtainable with either MRI or NMR spectroscopy. Therefore, PET studies will play a complementary role to the anatomic imaging in the management of patients with CNS disorders.


Neurology | 1987

Metabolic and clinical correlates of acute ischemic infarction.

Michael Kushner; Martin Reivich; C. Fieschi; F. Silver; J. Chawluk; M. Rosen; Joel H. Greenberg; Allan M. Burke; Abass Alavi

We studied cerebral metabolism, anatomy, and clinical status in 36 patients with acute cerebral ischemia. Results from FDG-PET were compared with CT to find the relationships between the metabolic, anatomic, and clinical findings. Metabolic abnormalities seen on PET frequently were more extensive than the corresponding CT findings. The pattern of metabolic abnormality was significantly related to both the type of clinical syndrome and the degree of eventual recovery. No such relationships were found for the CT results. We conclude that studies of cerebral metabolism are of value in establishing prognosis after acute cerebral ischemia. Also, knowledge of the patterns of cerebral dysmetabolism provides a powerful means for the localization of clinical function.


Neurology | 1981

Frontal lobe astrocytoma following radiotherapy for medulloblastoma

Michael S. Cohen; Michael Kushner; Steven Dell

A young woman had a frontal lobe astrocytoma 14 years after successful treatment of a posterior fossa medulloblastoma by surgery and whole-neuraxis irradiation. The association of these two tumors is rare, and it is unlikely that the second tumor was the result of metastasis and differentiation of residual or recurrent medulloblastoma. We review the evidence supporting this view and also the likelihood that the astrocytoma was induced by the prior radiation.


Neurology | 1984

Cerebral hernodynamics in the diagnosis of normal pressure hydrocephalus

Michael Kushner; Donald Younkin; Jesse Weinberger; Howard I. Hurtig; Herbert I. Goldberg; Martin Reivich

We studied the effect of CSF drainage on cerebral blood flow (CBF) in normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH) and non-NPH dementia using the 133Xenon inhalation technique. Dementia patients had lower CBF than matched elderly normals. Flow values for NPH and non-NPH patients did not differ before or after CSF drainage. CBF did not increase after lumbar puncture, and these measurements were not useful in predicting the outcome of ventricular shunt surgery. Postoperative CBF didnot increase after successful shunting.


Neurology | 1988

Atherosclerotic carotid artery disease in patients with retinal ischemic syndromes

J. Chawluk; Michael Kushner; William J. Bank; F. Silver; Dara G. Jamieson; Thomas M. Bosley; D. J. Conway; D. Cohen; Peter J. Savino

The extracranial carotid systems of 105 patients with retinal ischemia were examined using B-mode ultrasonography with integrated pulsed Doppler. Sixty-four patients had amaurosis fugax (AF), 17 central retinal artery occlusions (CRAO), and 21 branch retinal artery occlusions (BRAO). The prevalence of carotid stenosis (≥60%) ipsilateral to the symptomatic eye was low (16%). Eighty-six percent of AF patients had either no plaque or plaque causing less than a 60% stenosis. A significant proportion of subjects with normal duplex scans had alternative explanations for their retinal ischemia (eg, migraine, cardiac embolus). Patients with Hollenhorst plaques were more likely to have stenotic or ulcerated plaque (p = 0.04). The degree of carotid stenosis correlated significantly with the number of vascular risk factors identified in individual patients (p = 0.02). The presence of risk factors was more common in CRAO and BRAO patients compared with the AF group. Combined ultrasound-Doppler investigations of the carotid bifurcation are valuable noninvasive tools for the screening of patients with retinal ischemia.


Neurology | 1985

Ischemic lesions of the occipital cortex and optic radiations Positron emission tomography

Thomas M. Bosley; Alan C. Rosenquist; Michael Kushner; Allan M. Burke; Alan Stein; Robert Dann; Walter Cobbs; Peter J. Savino; Norman J. Schatz; Abass Alavi; Martin Reivich

We used 18-F-fluoro-2-deoxyglucose positron emission tomography (PET) and computed tomography (CT) to study eight patients with homonymous hemianopias or quadrantanopias due to ischemic lesions of the visual pathways. Four patients with ischemic damage to all or part of the occipital lobe had decreased glucose metabolism in the affected region. Three patients with ischemic damage limited to the optic radiations had decreased glucose metabolism in the portion of striate cortex appropriate for the visual field defect. Changes in glucose metabolism frequently occurred in the undamaged ipsilateral thalamus and visual association areas.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 1985

Cerebral blood flow with the continuous infusion of oxygen-15-labeled water

Stephen C. Jones; Joel H. Greenberg; Robert Dann; Gerald Robinson; Michael Kushner; Abass Alavi; Martin Reivich

This work describes the determination of CBF in eight normal human subjects with positron emission tomographic (PET) imaging using the continuous intravenous infusion of H215O. A whole-brain CBF model is described that permits the comparison of the CBF values determined using PET with those obtained using other methods. This model includes a correction for whole-brain recovery coefficient, a correction for the underestimation of flow due to the nonlinearity of the CBF model when considering tissue that includes both gray and white matter, the use of in vitro-determined brain–blood partition coefficients for gray and white matter, and a variation of the equilibrium model that permits the arterial concentration to vary. CBF values using this method compare well with values determined previously. Regional determinations using a brain overlay atlas are presented. Radiation dosimetry for the continuous infusion of H215O is also included.

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Martin Reivich

University of Pennsylvania

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Abass Alavi

Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania

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J. Chawluk

University of Pennsylvania

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Robert Dann

University of Pennsylvania

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M. Rosen

University of Pennsylvania

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Howard I. Hurtig

University of Pennsylvania

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Joel H. Greenberg

University of Pennsylvania

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Allan M. Burke

University of Pennsylvania

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F. Silver

University of Pennsylvania

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Herbert I. Goldberg

Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania

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