Pietro Ballinari
University of Bern
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Pietro Ballinari.
Stroke | 2005
Urs Fischer; Marcel Arnold; Krassen Nedeltchev; Caspar Brekenfeld; Pietro Ballinari; Luca Remonda; Gerhard Schroth; Heinrich P. Mattle
Background and Purpose— To test the hypothesis that the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score is associated with the findings of arteriography performed within the first hours after ischemic stroke. Methods— We analyzed NIHSS scores on hospital admission and clinical and arteriographic findings of 226 consecutive patients (94 women, 132 men; mean age 62±12 years) who underwent arteriography within 6 hours of symptom onset in carotid stroke and within 12 hours in vertebrobasilar stroke. Results— From stroke onset to hospital admission, 155±97 minutes elapsed, and from stroke onset to arteriography 245±100 minutes elapsed. Median NIHSS was 14 (range 3 to 38), and scores differed depending on the arteriographic findings (P<0.001). NIHSS scores in basilar, internal carotid, and middle cerebral artery M1 and M2 segment occlusions (central occlusions) were higher than in more peripherally located, nonvisible, or absent occlusions. Patients with NIHSS scores ≥10 had positive predictive values (PPVs) to show arterial occlusions in 97% of carotid and 96% of vertebrobasilar strokes. With an NIHSS score of ≥12, PPV to find a central occlusion was 91%. In a multivariate analysis, NIHSS subitems such as “level of consciousness questions,” “gaze,” “motor leg,” and “neglect” were predictors of central occlusions. Conclusions— There is a significant association of NIHSS scores and the presence and location of a vessel occlusion. With an NIHSS score ≥10, a vessel occlusion will likely be seen on arteriography, and with a score ≥12, its location will probably be central.
American Journal of Ophthalmology | 2002
Christophe Valmaggia; Gerhard Ries; Pietro Ballinari
PURPOSE To report results of 18-month follow up of external beam radiation therapy with photons for subfoveal classic or occult choroidal neovascularization (CNV) in age-related macular degeneration (ARMD). DESIGN Randomized clinical trial. METHODS A total of 161 patients with subfoveal CNV in ARMD were recruited in a prospective double-masked study. The posterior pole of the afflicted eye was given 1 Gy (4 x 0.25 Gy) in the control group and 8 Gy (4 x 2 Gy) or 16 Gy (4 x 4 Gy) in the treatment groups. At the time of treatment, and 6, 12, and 18 months post treatment, best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA), reading ability, and CNV size were measured. RESULTS At the completion of the study 150 (93.2%), 139 (86.3%), and 137 (85.1%) patients were followed for 6, 12, and 18 months, respectively. The mean number of lines lost in the BCVA was -1.69, -2.2, and -3.23 in the 1 Gy group; -0.94, -1.25, and -1.73 in the 8 Gy group; -0.51, -0.67, and -1.93 in the 16 Gy group. The difference was significant after 12 months (P =.016 for 8 Gy vs. 1 Gy; P =.006 for 16 Gy vs. 1 Gy), and 18 months (P =.011 for 8 Gy vs. 1 Gy; P =.05 for 16 Gy vs. 1 Gy). The patients with classic CNV, or with an initial distance visual acuity >or=20/100, benefited more from treatment. A significant difference was not found between control group and treatment groups in the reading ability and in the CNV size. No radiation-associated side effects were reported thus far. CONCLUSION The number of lines lost in the BCVA was less in the 8 Gy and 16 Gy treatment groups than in the control group during the complete follow up examination. Radiation therapy with 8 Gy and 16 Gy, without showing any difference in efficacy, resulted in a near stabilization of the BCVA in patients with subfoveal classic or occult CNV in ARMD. Further studies are necessary to determine the significance of repeated radiotherapy series with a dose of 8 Gy to improve the effect on the CNV size and thereby to prolong stabilization of distance visual acuity.
Brain Injury | 2006
Charlotte Sadowski-Cron; Jörg Schneider; Pascal Senn; Bogdan P. Radanov; Pietro Ballinari; Heinz Zimmermann
Background: Mild traumatic brain injury (MTBI) defined as Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) 14 or 15 has shown contradictory short- and long-term outcomes. The objective of this study was to correlate intra-cranial injuries (ICI) on CT scan to neurocognitive tests at admission and to complaints after 1 year. Methods: Two hundred and five patients with MTBI underwent a CT scan and were examined with neurocognitive tests. After 1 year complaints were assessed by phone interviews. Results: The neurocognitive tests in 51% of the patients showed significant deficits; there was no difference for patients with GCS 14–15, nor was there a difference between patients with ICI to patients without. After 1 year patients with ICI had significantly more complaints than patients without ICI, the most frequent complaint was headache and memory deficits. Conclusions: No correlation was found between GCS or ICI and the neurocognitive tests upon admission. After 1 year, patients with ICI have significantly more complaints than patients without ICI. No cost savings resulted by doing immediate CT scan on all.
Stroke | 2011
Hakan Sarikaya; Marcel Arnold; Stefan T. Engelter; Philippe Lyrer; Heinrich P. Mattle; Dimitrios Georgiadis; Leo H. Bonati; Felix Fluri; Urs Fischer; Oliver Findling; Pietro Ballinari; Ralf W. Baumgartner
Background and Purpose— Intravenous thrombolysis is an approved treatment for anterior (ACS) and posterior (PCS) circulation stroke. However, no randomized controlled trial has investigated safety and efficacy of intravenous thrombolysis according to stroke territory, although PCS is assumed to differ from ACS in many ways. We aimed to compare the safety and clinical outcome of intravenous thrombolysis applied to patients with PCS and ACS. Methods— Prospectively collected data of 883 consecutive patients with acute ischemic stroke (788 ACS, 95 PCS) treated with intravenous thrombolysis in 3 Swiss stroke centers were analyzed. Presenting characteristics, symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage, mortality, and favorable outcome (modified Rankin scale 0 or 1) at 3 months were compared between patients with PCS and ACS. Results— As compared with patients with ACS, those with PCS were younger (mean age, 63 versus 67 years, P=0.012) and had a lower mean baseline National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score (9 versus 12, P<0.001). Patients with PCS less often had symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (0% versus 5%, P=0.026) and had more often a favorable outcome (66% versus 47%, P<0.001). Mortality was similar in the 2 groups (PCS, 9%; ACS, 13%; P=0.243). After multivariable adjustment, PCS was an independent predictor of lower symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage frequency (P=0.001), whereas stroke territory was not associated either with favorable outcome (P=0.177) or with mortality (P=0.251). Conclusions— Our study suggests that PCS is associated with a lower risk of symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage after intravenous thrombolysis as compared with ACS, whereas favorable outcome and mortality were similar in the 2 stroke territories.
Schizophrenia Research | 2012
Andor E. Simon; Miriam Grädel; Katja Cattapan-Ludewig; Kerstin Gruber; Pietro Ballinari; Binia Roth; Daniel Umbricht
BACKGROUND Cognitive impairment is prevalent in at-risk mental states (ARMS) for psychosis. METHOD We studied cognitive functioning at baseline in ARMS individuals and investigated its power to predict ARMS persistence and remission at 2-year follow-up. RESULTS 196 patients were recruited. At baseline the ARMS population included 26 subjects meeting basic symptom (BS) criteria and 73 subjects fulfilling ultra-high risk (UHR) criteria. Two control groups were defined: 48 patients in a first episode of psychosis (FE), and 49 help-seeking patient controls (PCO). In 144 patients follow-up data were obtained. The 2-year risk of conversion to psychosis was 20%. Remission from an initial UHR state occurred in two thirds of the follow-up sample. UHR patients that converted to psychosis or did not remit during the follow-up (UHR(n-rem)) showed similar impairment in global cognitive functioning at baseline as the FE group, whereas global cognitive functioning in UHR patients with subsequent remission (UHR(rem)) approximated performances of the BS and PCO groups. UHR(n-rem) and UHR(rem) patients differed significantly on immediate verbal memory, but showed similarly impaired executive functions. Normal immediate verbal memory uniquely predicted remission from an at-risk state with a positive predictive value of 82%. CONCLUSIONS Cognitive deficits are a characteristic feature of true ARMS patients. Verbal memory function appears critical in determining outcome.
Cerebrovascular Diseases | 2012
Marie-Luise Mono; Lorenz Romagna; Simon Jung; Marcel Arnold; Aekaterini Galimanis; Urs Fischer; Adrian Kohler; Pietro Ballinari; Caspar Brekenfeld; Jan Gralla; Gerhard Schroth; Heinrich P. Mattle; Krassen Nedeltchev
Background: It is unclear whether octogenarians benefit from intra-arterial thrombolysis (IAT) for the treatment of acute ischemic stroke (AIS). The aim of the present study was to compare baseline characteristics, clinical outcome and complications of patients aged ≧80 with those of patients aged <80 years. Methods: Forty-three octogenarians and 524 younger patients with AIS were treated with IAT. The modified Rankin scale (mRS) score was used to assess 3-month outcome. Results: There was a female preponderance among octogenarians (63 vs. 37%, p = 0.015). Stroke severity, occlusion site, and time from stroke onset to IAT did not differ between the groups. Good recanalization (TIMI 2–3) was achieved in 65% of older and in 71% of younger patients (p = 0.449). Rates of symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) were 6% in patients <80 years and 2% in octogenarians (p = 0.292). Favorable outcome (mRS 0–2) was less frequent among octogenarians (28 vs. 46%, p = 0.019), while mortality was higher (40 vs. 22%, p = 0.008). Octogenarians died more often from extracerebral complications than younger patients (59 vs. 27%, p = 0.008). Conclusions: Compared with younger patients, octogenarians did not have a significantly increased risk of symptomatic ICH after IAT. Although favorable outcome was less frequent and mortality rates were higher, IAT appeared to be safe in octogenarians. It seems reasonable to include octogenarians in randomized clinical trials to assess the balance of risk and benefit of IAT in this patient group.
NeuroImage | 2009
Claus Kiefer; Lisa Brockhaus; Katja Cattapan-Ludewig; Pietro Ballinari; Yuliya Burren; Gerhard Schroth; Roland Wiest
Multi-parametric and quantitative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques have come into the focus of interest, both as a research and diagnostic modality for the evaluation of patients suffering from mild cognitive decline and overt dementia. In this study we address the question, if disease related quantitative magnetization transfer effects (qMT) within the intra- and extracellular matrices of the hippocampus may aid in the differentiation between clinically diagnosed patients with Alzheimer disease (AD), patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and healthy controls. We evaluated 22 patients with AD (n=12) and MCI (n=10) and 22 healthy elderly (n=12) and younger (n=10) controls with multi-parametric MRI. Neuropsychological testing was performed in patients and elderly controls (n=34). In order to quantify the qMT effects, the absorption spectrum was sampled at relevant off-resonance frequencies. The qMT-parameters were calculated according to a two-pool spin-bath model including the T1- and T2 relaxation parameters of the free pool, determined in separate experiments. Histograms (fixed bin-size) of the normalized qMT-parameter values (z-scores) within the anterior and posterior hippocampus (hippocampal head and body) were subjected to a fuzzy-c-means classification algorithm with downstreamed PCA projection. The within-cluster sums of point-to-centroid distances were used to examine the effects of qMT- and diffusion anisotropy parameters on the discrimination of healthy volunteers, patients with Alzheimer and MCIs. The qMT-parameters T2(r) (T2 of the restricted pool) and F (fractional pool size) differentiated between the three groups (control, MCI and AD) in the anterior hippocampus. In our cohort, the MT ratio, as proposed in previous reports, did not differentiate between MCI and AD or healthy controls and MCI, but between healthy controls and AD.
Stroke | 2006
Krassen Nedeltchev; Urs Fischer; Marcel Arnold; Pietro Ballinari; Tobias Haefeli; Liliane Kappeler; Caspar Brekenfeld; Luca Remonda; Gerhard Schroth; Heinrich P. Mattle
Background and Purpose— Thrombolysis has been shown to improve the 3-month outcome of patients with ischemic stroke, but knowledge of the long-term effect of thrombolysis is limited. Methods— The present study compares the long-term outcome of stroke patients who were treated with intra-arterial thrombolysis (IAT) using urokinase with the outcome of patients treated with aspirin. The modified Rankin Scale (mRS) was used to assess the outcome; 173 patients treated with IAT and 261 patients treated with aspirin from the Bernese Stroke Data Bank were eligible for the study. A matching algorithm taking into account patient age and stroke severity on admission (as measured by the National Institute of Health Stroke Scale [NIHSS]) was used to assemble an IAT and an aspirin group. Results— One hundred and forty-four patients treated with IAT and 147 patients treated with aspirin could be matched and included in the comparative analysis. The median NIHSS score was 14 in each group. At 2 years, 56% of the patients treated with IAT and 42% of the patients treated with aspirin achieved functional independence (mRS, 0 to 2; P=0.037). Clinical outcome was excellent (mRS, 0 to 1) in 40% of the IAT and in 24% of the aspirin patients (P=0.008). Mortality was 23% and 24%, respectively. Conclusions— The present study provides evidence for a sustained effect of IAT when assessed 2 years after the stroke.
Cerebrovascular Diseases | 2008
Urs Fischer; Diana Anca; Marcel Arnold; Krassen Nedeltchev; Liliane Kappeler; Pietro Ballinari; Gerhard Schroth; Heinrich P. Mattle
Background: We aimed to assess quality of life (QOL) and its predictors in stroke survivors after local intra-arterial thrombolysis (IAT) as well as to measure QOL according to the site of pretreatment vessel occlusion. Methods: From January 2000 to April 2004, 175 consecutive patients underwent IAT for acute ischemic stroke. Clinical and radiological data were collected prospectively. We contacted 135 stroke survivors after a mean of 923 (±431) days, 132 responded. QOL, assessed with EuroQol (EQ-5D), and functional abilities, measured with the modified Rankin Scale (mRS) and the Barthel Index, were compared, and predictors of QOL were analyzed. Results: Measured with EQ-5D, 56% of the patients reported a good QOL (EQ-5D Index ≥70). Low mRS and high Barthel Index scores at follow-up were associated with better overall QOL (Kendall’s tau >0.5). Nevertheless, 25% of the functionally independent patients (mRS 0–2) indicated a markedly impaired QOL (EQ-5D Index <70) and 10% of disabled patients indicated good QOL. QOL was significantly lower in patients with occlusion of the internal carotid artery compared to patients with occlusion of the basilar artery or the M1, M2 or M3/4 segment of the middle cerebral artery (EQ-5D Index: p = 0.005). A high National Institute of Health Stroke Scale score on admission and occlusion of the internal carotid artery were independent predictors of impaired QOL (p < 0.05). Conclusion: More than half of the stroke survivors treated with IAT reported a good QOL, mostly survivors with mild disabilities. QOL assessment gives information that is not provided by traditional outcome scores. Our results support guidelines to measure QOL in stroke research.
Stroke | 2011
Hakan Sarikaya; Marcel Arnold; Stefan T. Engelter; Philippe Lyrer; Patrik Michel; Céline Odier; Bruno Weder; Barbara Tettenborn; Felix Mueller; Lucka Sekoranja; Roman Sztajzel; Pietro Ballinari; Heinrich P. Mattle; Ralf W. Baumgartner
Background and Purpose— Demographic changes will result in a rapid increase of patients age ≥90 years (nonagenarians), but little is known about outcomes in these patients after intravenous thrombolysis (IVT) for acute ischemic stroke. We aimed to assess safety and functional outcome in nonagenarians treated with IVT and to compare the outcomes with those of patients age 80 to 89 years (octogenarians). Methods— We analyzed prospectively collected data of 284 consecutive stroke patients age ≥80 years treated with IVT in 7 Swiss stroke units. Presenting characteristics, favorable outcome (modified Rankin scale [mRS] 0 or 1), mortality at 3 months, and symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (SICH) using the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) and Safe Implementation of Thrombolysis in Stroke-Monitoring Study (SITS-MOST) criteria were compared between nonagenarians and octogenarians. Results— As compared with octogenarians (n=238; mean age, 83 years), nonagenarians (n=46; mean age, 92 years) were more often women (70% versus 54%; P=0.046) and had lower systolic blood pressure (161 mm Hg versus 172 mm Hg; P=0.035). Patients age ≥90 years less often had a favorable outcome and had a higher incidence of mortality than did patients age 80 to 89 years (14.3% versus 30.2%; P=0.034; and 45.2% versus 22.1%; P=0.002; respectively), while more nonagenarians than octogenarians experienced a SICH (SICHNINDS, 13.3% versus 5.9%; P=0.106; SICHSITS-MOST, 13.3% versus 4.7%; P=0.037). Multivariate adjustment identified age ≥90 years as an independent predictor of mortality (P=0.017). Conclusions— Our study suggests less favorable outcomes in nonagenarians as compared with octogenarians after IVT for ischemic stroke, and it demands a careful selection for treatment, unless randomized controlled trials yield more evidence for IVT in very old stroke patients.