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Dive into the research topics where Travis R. Ladner is active.

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Featured researches published by Travis R. Ladner.


Stroke | 2015

Pediatric Acute Stroke Protocol Activation in a Children’s Hospital Emergency Department

Travis R. Ladner; Jasia Mahdi; Melissa C. Gindville; Angela Gordon; Zena L.eah Harris; Kristen Crossman; Sumit Pruthi; Thomas J. Abramo; Lori C. Jordan

Background and Purpose— Pediatric acute stroke teams are a new phenomenon. We sought to characterize the final diagnoses of children with brain attacks in the emergency department where the pediatric acute stroke protocol was activated and to describe the time to neurological evaluation and neuroimaging. Methods— Clinical and demographic information was obtained from a quality improvement database and medical records for consecutive patients (age, ⩽20 years) presenting to a single institution’s pediatric emergency department where the acute stroke protocol was activated between April 2011 and October 2014. Stroke protocol activation means that a neurology resident evaluates the child within 15 minutes, and urgent magnetic resonance imaging is available. Results— There were 124 stroke alerts (age, 11.2±5.2 years; 63 boys/61 girls); 30 were confirmed strokes and 2 children had a transient ischemic attack. Forty-six of 124 (37%) cases were healthy children without any significant medical history. Nonstroke neurological emergencies were found in 17 children (14%); the majority were meningitis/encephalitis (n=5) or intracranial neoplasm (n=4). Other common final diagnoses were complex migraine (17%) and seizure (15%). All children except 1 had urgent neuroimaging. Magnetic resonance imaging was the first study in 76%. The median time from emergency department arrival to magnetic resonance imaging was 94 minutes (interquartile range, 49–151 minutes); the median time to computed tomography was 59 minutes (interquartile range, 40–112 minutes). Conclusions— Of pediatric brain attacks, 24% were stroke, 2% were transient ischemic attack, and 14% were other neurological emergencies. Together, 40% had a stroke or other neurological emergency, underscoring the need for prompt evaluation and management of children with brain attacks.


Neurosurgery | 2015

Complications and Resource Use Associated With Surgery for Chiari Malformation Type 1 in Adults: A Population Perspective.

Jacob K. Greenberg; Travis R. Ladner; Margaret A. Olsen; Chevis N. Shannon; Jingxia Liu; Chester K. Yarbrough; Jay F. Piccirillo; John C. Wellons; Matthew D. Smyth; T. S. Park; David D. Limbrick

BACKGROUND Outcomes research on Chiari malformation type 1 (CM-1) is impeded by a reliance on small, single-center cohorts. OBJECTIVE To study the complications and resource use associated with adult CM-1 surgery using administrative data. METHODS We used a recently validated International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification code algorithm to retrospectively study adult CM-1 surgeries from 2004 to 2010 in California, Florida, and New York using State Inpatient Databases. Outcomes included complications and resource use within 30 and 90 days of treatment. We used multivariable logistic regression to identify risk factors for morbidity and negative binomial models to determine risk-adjusted costs. RESULTS We identified 1947 CM-1 operations. Surgical complications were more common than medical complications at both 30 days (14.3% vs 4.4%) and 90 days (18.7% vs 5.0%) postoperatively. Certain comorbidities were associated with increased morbidity; for example, hydrocephalus increased the risk for surgical (odds ratio [OR] = 4.51) and medical (OR = 3.98) complications. Medical but not surgical complications were also more common in older patients (OR = 5.57 for oldest vs youngest age category) and male patients (OR = 3.19). Risk-adjusted hospital costs were


Journal of NeuroInterventional Surgery | 2013

Resolution of trigeminal neuralgia by coil embolization of a persistent primitive trigeminal artery aneurysm.

Travis R. Ladner; Moneeb Ehtesham; Brandon J Davis; Imad Saeed Khan; Mayshan Ghiassi; Mahan Ghiassi; Robert J. Singer

22530 at 30 days and


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2016

Chiari malformation Type I surgery in pediatric patients. Part 2: complications and the influence of comorbid disease in California, Florida, and New York

Jacob K. Greenberg; Margaret A. Olsen; Chester K. Yarbrough; Travis R. Ladner; Chevis N. Shannon; Jay F. Piccirillo; Richard C. E. Anderson; John C. Wellons; Matthew D. Smyth; T. S. Park; David D. Limbrick

24852 at 90 days postoperatively. Risk-adjusted 90-day costs were more than twice as high for patients experiencing surgical (


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2014

The vascular steal phenomenon is an incomplete contributor to negative cerebrovascular reactivity in patients with symptomatic intracranial stenosis.

Daniel F Arteaga; Megan K. Strother; Carlos C Faraco; Lori C. Jordan; Travis R. Ladner; Lindsey M. Dethrage; Robert J. Singer; J Mocco; Paul F Clemmons; Michael J Ayad; Manus J. Donahue

46264) or medical (


American Journal of Neuroradiology | 2014

Cerebrovascular Collaterals Correlate with Disease Severity in Adult North American Patients with Moyamoya Disease

Megan K. Strother; Robert J. Singer; Liping Du; Ryan Moore; Yu Shyr; Travis R. Ladner; Daniel F Arteaga; M.A. Day; Paul F Clemmons; Manus J. Donahue

65679) complications than for patients without complications (


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2015

Evaluating the relationship of the pB–C2 line to clinical outcomes in a 15-year single-center cohort of pediatric Chiari I malformation

Travis R. Ladner; Michael C. Dewan; Matthew Day; Chevis N. Shannon; Luke Tomycz; Noel Tulipan; John C. Wellons

18880). CONCLUSION Complications after CM-1 surgery are common, and surgical complications are more frequent than medical complications. Certain comorbidities and demographic characteristics are associated with increased risk for complications. Beyond harming patients, complications are also associated with substantially higher hospital costs. These results may help guide patient management and inform decision making for patients considering surgery.


Journal of NeuroInterventional Surgery | 2016

Minimizing bleeding complications in spinal tumor surgery with preoperative Onyx embolization via dual-lumen balloon catheter

Travis R. Ladner; Lucy He; Nikita Lakomkin; Brandon J. Davis; Joseph S. Cheng; Clinton J. Devin; J Mocco

The persistent primitive trigeminal artery (PTA) is a rare anastomosis between the carotid artery and basilar artery. While most PTAs are asymptomatic, lateral variants can occasionally compress the trigeminal nerve and precipitate trigeminal neuralgia. Aneurysms of the PTA are exceptionally rare in the literature and have not previously been associated with trigeminal neuralgia. We present the first case of an aneurysm of the PTA causing trigeminal neuralgia. The patient underwent coil embolization of the aneurysm which relieved her symptoms. We propose embolization as a viable therapeutic option for the resolution of trigeminal neuralgia when the condition is secondary to irritation by the high velocity pulsatile flow of an aneurysm.


Neurosurgery | 2017

Academic Productivity of US Neurosurgery Residents as Measured by H-Index: Program Ranking with Correlation to Faculty Productivity

Christopher A. Sarkiss; Kyle J. Riley; Christopher M. Hernandez; Eric K. Oermann; Travis R. Ladner; Joshua B. Bederson; Raj K. Shrivastava

OBJECTIVE Chiari malformation Type I (CM-I) is a common and often debilitating pediatric neurological disease. However, efforts to guide preoperative counseling and improve outcomes research are impeded by reliance on small, single-center studies. Consequently, the objective of this study was to investigate CM-I surgical outcomes using population-level administrative billing data. METHODS The authors used Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project State Inpatient Databases (SID) to study pediatric patients undergoing surgical decompression for CM-I from 2004 to 2010 in California, Florida, and New York. They assessed the prevalence and influence of preoperative complex chronic conditions (CCC) among included patients. Outcomes included medical and surgical complications within 90 days of treatment. Multivariate logistic regression was used to identify risk factors for surgical complications. RESULTS A total of 936 pediatric CM-I surgeries were identified for the study period. Overall, 29.2% of patients were diagnosed with syringomyelia and 13.7% were diagnosed with scoliosis. Aside from syringomyelia and scoliosis, 30.3% of patients had at least 1 CCC, most commonly neuromuscular (15.2%) or congenital or genetic (8.4%) disease. Medical complications were uncommon, occurring in 2.6% of patients. By comparison, surgical complications were diagnosed in 12.7% of patients and typically included shunt-related complications (4.0%), meningitis (3.7%), and other neurosurgery-specific complications (7.4%). Major complications (e.g., stroke or myocardial infarction) occurred in 1.4% of patients. Among children with CCCs, only comorbid hydrocephalus was associated with a significantly increased risk of surgical complications (OR 4.5, 95% CI 2.5-8.1). CONCLUSIONS Approximately 1 in 8 pediatric CM-I patients experienced a surgical complication, whereas medical complications were rare. Although CCCs were common in pediatric CM-I patients, only hydrocephalus was independently associated with increased risk of surgical events. These results may inform patient counseling and guide future research efforts.


Neurosurgery | 2015

Validation of an International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision Code Algorithm for Identifying Chiari Malformation Type 1 Surgery in Adults.

Jacob K. Greenberg; Travis R. Ladner; Margaret A. Olsen; Chevis N. Shannon; Jingxia Liu; Chester K. Yarbrough; Jay F. Piccirillo; John C. Wellons; Matthew D. Smyth; T. S. Park; David D. Limbrick

‘Vascular steal’ has been proposed as a compensatory mechanism in hemodynamically compromised ischemic parenchyma. Here, independent measures of cerebral blood flow (CBF) and blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) responses to a vascular stimulus in patients with ischemic cerebrovascular disease are recorded. Symptomatic intracranial stenosis patients (n = 40) underwent a multimodal 3.0T MRI protocol including structural (T1-weighted and T2-weighted fluid-attenuated inversion recovery) and hemodynamic (BOLD and CBF-weighted arterial spin labeling) functional MRI during room air and hypercarbic gas administration. CBF changes in regions demonstrating negative BOLD reactivity were recorded, as well as clinical correlates including symptomatic hemisphere by infarct and lateralizing symptoms. Fifteen out of forty participants exhibited negative BOLD reactivity. Of these, a positive relationship was found between BOLD and CBF reactivity in unaffected (stenosis degree <50%) cortex. In negative BOLD cerebrovascular reactivity regions, three patients exhibited significant (P < 0.01) reductions in CBF consistent with vascular steal; six exhibited increases in CBF; and the remaining exhibited no statistical change in CBF. Secondary findings were that negative BOLD reactivity correlated with symptomatic hemisphere by lateralizing clinical symptoms and prior infarcts(s). These data support the conclusion that negative hypercarbia-induced BOLD responses, frequently assigned to vascular steal, are heterogeneous in origin with possible contributions from autoregulation and/or metabolism.

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Lori C. Jordan

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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J Mocco

Vanderbilt University

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Lucy He

Vanderbilt University

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Chevis N. Shannon

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Michael T. Froehler

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Manus J. Donahue

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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