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Dive into the research topics where Zsolt Garami is active.

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Featured researches published by Zsolt Garami.


Stroke | 2007

Site of Arterial Occlusion Identified by Transcranial Doppler Predicts the Response to Intravenous Thrombolysis for Stroke

Maher Saqqur; Ken Uchino; Andrew M. Demchuk; Carlos A. Molina; Zsolt Garami; Sergio Calleja; Naveed Akhtar; Finton O. Orouk; Abdul Salam; Ashfaq Shuaib; Andrei V. Alexandrov; for Clotbust Investigators

Background and Purpose— The objective of this study was to examine clinical outcomes and recanalization rates in a multicenter cohort of stroke patients receiving intravenous tissue plasminogen activator by site of occlusion localized with bedside transcranial Doppler. Angiographic studies with intraarterial thrombolysis suggest more proximal occlusions carry greater thrombus burden and benefit less from local therapy. Methods— Using validated transcranial Doppler criteria for specific arterial occlusion (Thrombolysis in Brain Ischemia flow grades), we compared the rate of dramatic recovery (National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score ≤2 at 24 hours) and favorable outcomes at 3 months (modified Rankin Scale ≤1) for each occlusion site. We determined the likelihood of recanalization at various occlusion sites and its predictors. Then, stepwise logistic regression was used to determine predictors of complete recanalization. Results— Three hundred thirty-five patients had a mean age 69±13 years and 48.5% were women (median baseline National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score 16 [range, 3 to 32], mean time to transcranial Doppler 140±84 minutes, and mean time to intravenous tissue plasminogen activator 145±68 minutes). Distal middle cerebral artery occlusion had an OR of 2 for complete recanalization (50 of 113 [44.2%], 95% CI: 1.1 to 3.1, P=0.005), proximal middle cerebral artery 0.7 (49 of 163 [30%], 95% CI: 0.4 to 1.1, P=0.13), terminal internal carotid artery 0.1 (one of 17 [5.9%], 95% CI: 0.015 to 0.8, P=0.015), tandem cervical internal carotid artery/middle cerebral artery 0.7 (6 of 22 [27%], 95% CI: 0.3 to 1.9, P=0.5), and basilar artery 0.96 (3 of 10 [30%], 95% CI: 0.2 to 4, P=0.9). Prerecombinant tissue plasminogen activator National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score, systolic blood pressure, glucose, and Thrombolysis in Brain Ischemia flow grade at the occlusion site were the negative independent predictors for complete recanalization in the final model. There were no associations among time to treatment, stroke mechanisms, or recanalization rate. Patients with no flow (Thrombolysis in Brain Ischemia 0) at the occlusion site had less probability of complete recanalization than patients with dampened flow (Thrombolysis in Brain Ischemia 3) (ORadj: 0.256, 95% CI: 0.11 to 0.595, P=0.002). Continuous transcranial Doppler monitoring (exposure to ultrasound) was a positive predictor for complete recanalization (ORadj: 3.02, 95% CI: 1.396 to 6.514, P=0.005). National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score ≤2 at 24 hours was achieved in 66 of 305 patients (22%): distal middle cerebral artery 33% (35 of 107), tandem cervical internal carotid artery/middle cerebral artery 24% (5 of 21), proximal middle cerebral artery 16% (24 of 155), basilar artery 25% (2 of 8), and none of the patients with terminal internal carotid artery had dramatic recovery (0%, n=14; P=0.003). Modified Rankin Scale score ≤1 was achieved in 90 of 260 patients (35%): distal middle cerebral artery 52% (50 of 96), proximal middle cerebral artery 25% (33 of 131), tandem cervical internal carotid artery/middle cerebral artery 21% (3 of 14), terminal internal carotid artery 18% (2 of 11), and basilar artery 25% (2 of 8) (P<0.001). Patients with distal middle cerebral artery occlusion were twice as likely to have a good long-term outcome as patients with proximal middle cerebral artery (OR: 2.1, 95% CI: 1.1 to 4, P=0.025). Conclusions— Clinical response to thrombolysis is influenced by the site of occlusion. Patients with no detectable residual flow signals as well as those with terminal internal carotid artery occlusions are least likely to respond early or long term.


Stroke | 2005

Early Recanalization Rates and Clinical Outcomes in Patients With Tandem Internal Carotid Artery/Middle Cerebral Artery Occlusion and Isolated Middle Cerebral Artery Occlusion

Yo Sik Kim; Zsolt Garami; Robert Mikulik; Carlos A. Molina; Andrei V. Alexandrov

Background— Patients with isolated middle cerebral artery (MCA) and tandem MCA/internal carotid artery (ICA) obstruction have similar presenting symptoms and stroke severity. We aimed to investigate early recanalization of MCA and clinical outcomes in patients with tandem ICA/MCA obstructions and isolated MCA occlusion. Methods— Patients with MCA occlusion on pretreatment transcranial Doppler were treated with intravenous tissue plasminogen activator. ICA lesions were detected with carotid duplex. Early neurological improvement (ENI) was defined by reduction of National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) ≥10 points or total NIHSS ≤3 points. Good outcome at 3 months was a modified Rankin score of ≤2. Results— Among 104 patients, 31% had tandem lesions and 69% had isolated MCA occlusions. Complete recanalization rate was 39% in isolated MCA occlusion group and 9% in tandem group (P=0.002). ENI at 24 hours occurred in 46% of the isolated MCA occlusion group and in 25% of the tandem group (P=0.045). Good outcome was achieved by 30% and 39% respective patients (NS). Conclusion— The tandem lesion group showed lower early recanalization rate and ENI rate than the isolated MCA occlusion group. Despite this, good outcomes were similar in both groups.


Neurology | 2005

Heads down: flat positioning improves blood flow velocity in acute ischemic stroke.

Anne W. Wojner-Alexander; Zsolt Garami; Oleg Y. Chernyshev; Andrei V. Alexandrov

Background: Acute stroke patients are routinely positioned with the head of the bed (HOB) elevated at 30° despite lack of evidence for increased intracranial pressure. Objectives: To determine the effect of HOB positions in real time on residual blood flow velocity in acutely occluded arteries causing stroke and whether resistance to residual flow increased with lower HOB positions. Methods: In a repeated-measures quasi-experiment, the effect of 30, 15, and 0° HOB on middle cerebral artery (MCA) mean flow velocity (MFV) in patients with acute (<24 hours) ischemic stroke was measured with transcranial Doppler using MFV and pulsatility index (PI) of the residual flow signals at the site of persisting acute occlusion. Results: Twenty patients were evaluated (mean age 60 ± 15 years; median NIH Stroke Scale [NIHSS] score 14 points). MCA MFV increased in all patients with lowering head position (maximum absolute MFV value increase 27 cm/s, range 5 to 96% from baseline values at 30°). On average, MCA MFV increased 20% (12% from 30 to 15° and 8% from 15 to 0°; p ≤ 0.025). Mean arterial pressure and heart rate were unchanged throughout the intervention. PI remained unchanged (mean values 0.89 at 30° elevation, 0.91 at 15° elevation, and 0.83 at 0° elevation) at each HOB position, indicating no increase in resistance to blood flow. Immediate neurologic improvement (average 3 NIHSS motor points) occurred in three patients (15%) after lowering head position. Conclusion: Acute ischemic stroke patients may benefit from lower head-of-the-bed positions to promote residual blood flow to ischemic brain tissue.


Stroke | 2007

Clinical Deterioration After Intravenous Recombinant Tissue Plasminogen Activator Treatment A Multicenter Transcranial Doppler Study

Maher Saqqur; Carlos A. Molina; Abdul Salam; Muzaffar Siddiqui; Marc Ribo; Ken Uchino; Sergio Calleja; Zsolt Garami; Khaurshid Khan; Naveed Akhtar; Finton O'Rourke; Ashfaq Shuaib; Andrew M. Demchuk; Andrei V. Alexandrov

Background and Purpose— Patients may experience clinical deterioration (CD) after treatment with intravenous recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rt-PA). We evaluated the ability of flow findings on transcranial Doppler to predict CD and outcomes on modified Rankin Scale. Methods— Patients with acute stroke received intravenous rt-PA within 3 hours of symptom onset at four academic centers. CD was defined as an increase in the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score by 4 points or more within 24 hours. Poor long-term outcome was defined by modified Rankin Scale ≥2 at 3 months. Transcranial Doppler findings were interpreted using the Thrombolysis in Brain Ischemia flow grading system as persistent arterial occlusion, reocclusion, or complete recanalization. Multiple regression analysis was used to identify transcranial Doppler flow as a predictor for CD after controlling for age, sex, baseline NIHSS, hypertension, and glucose. Results— A total of 374 patients received intravenous rt-PA at 142±60 minutes (median pretreatment NIHSS score 16 points). At the end of intravenous rt-PA infusion, transcranial Doppler showed persistent arterial occlusion in 219 patients (59%), arterial reocclusion in 54 patients (14%), and complete recanalization in 101 patients (27%). CD occurred in 44 patients: 36 had persistent arterial occlusion or reocclusion (82%), 13 symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage (29%), and both persistent occlusion/reocclusion and symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage in 10 patients (23%). After adjustment, patient risk for CD with persistent occlusion was OR 1.7 (95% CI: 0.7 to 4) and with arterial reocclusion 4.9 (95% CI: 1.7 to 13) (P=0.002). Patient risk for poor long-term outcomes with persistent occlusion, partial recanalization, or reocclusion was OR 5.2 (95% CI: 2.7 to 9, P=0.001). Conclusions— Inability to achieve or sustain vessel patency at the end of rt-PA infusion correlates with the likelihood of clinical deterioration and poor long-term outcome. Early arterial reocclusion on transcranial Doppler is highly predictive of CD and poor outcome.


Journal of Neuroimaging | 2012

Practice Standards for Transcranial Doppler (TCD) Ultrasound. Part II. Clinical Indications and Expected Outcomes

Andrei V. Alexandrov; Michael A. Sloan; Charles H. Tegeler; David N. Newell; Alan B. Lumsden; Zsolt Garami; Christopher R. Levy; Lawrence K.S. Wong; Colleen M. Douville; Manfred Kaps; Georgios Tsivgoulis

Transcranial Doppler (TCD) is a physiological ultrasound test with established safety and efficacy. Although imaging devices may be used to depict intracranial flow superimposed on structural visualization, the end‐result provided by imaging duplex or nonimaging TCD is sampling physiological flow variables through the spectral waveform assessment.


Stroke | 2005

Yield and Accuracy of Urgent Combined Carotid/Transcranial Ultrasound Testing in Acute Cerebral Ischemia

Oleg Y. Chernyshev; Zsolt Garami; Sergio Calleja; Joon K. Song; Morgan S. Campbell; Elizabeth A. Noser; Hashem Shaltoni; Chin I. Chen; Yasuyuki Iguchi; James C. Grotta; Andrei V. Alexandrov

Background and Purpose— We routinely perform an urgent bedside neurovascular ultrasound examination (NVUE) with carotid/vertebral duplex and transcranial Doppler (TCD) in patients with acute cerebral ischemia. We aimed to determine the yield and accuracy of NVUE to identify lesions amenable for interventional treatment (LAITs). Methods— NVUE was performed with portable carotid duplex and TCD using standardized fast-track (<15 minutes) insonation protocols. Digital subtraction angiography (DSA) was the gold standard for identifying LAIT. These lesions were defined as proximal intra- or extracranial occlusions, near-occlusions, ≥50% stenoses or thrombus in the symptomatic artery. Results— One hundred and fifty patients (70 women, mean age 66±15 years) underwent NVUE at median 128 minutes after symptom onset. Fifty-four patients (36%) received intravenous or intra-arterial thrombolysis (median National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score 14, range 4 to 29; 81% had NIHSS ≥10 points). NVUE demonstrated LAITs in 98% of patients eligible for thrombolysis, 76% of acute stroke patients ineligible for thrombolysis (n=63), and 42% in patients with transient ischemic attack (n=33), P<0.001. Urgent DSA was performed in 30 patients on average 230 minutes after NVUE. Compared with DSA, NVUE predicted LAIT presence with 100% sensitivity and 100% specificity, although individual accuracy parameters for TCD and carotid duplex specific to occlusion location ranged 75% to 96% because of the presence of tandem lesions and 10% rate of no temporal windows. Conclusions— Bedside neurovascular ultrasound examination, combining carotid/vertebral duplex with TCD yields a substantial proportion of LAITs in excellent agreement with urgent DSA.


Alzheimers & Dementia | 2009

Intracranial atherosclerosis as a contributing factor to Alzheimer's disease dementia.

Alex E. Roher; Suzanne L. Tyas; Chera L. Maarouf; Ian D. Daugs; Tyler A. Kokjohn; Mark R. Emmerling; Zsolt Garami; Marek Belohlavek; Marwan N. Sabbagh; Lucia I. Sue; Thomas G. Beach

A substantial body of evidence collected from epidemiologic, correlative, and experimental studies strongly associates atherosclerotic vascular disease (AVD) with Alzheimers disease (AD). Depending on the precise interrelationship between AVD and AD, systematic application of interventions used to maintain vascular health and function as a component of standard AD therapy offers the prospect of mitigating the presently inexorable course of dementia. To assess this hypothesis, it is vital to rigorously establish the measures of AVD that are most strongly associated with an AD diagnosis.


Hypertension | 2004

Cardiovascular Risk Factors and Sequelae in Hypertensive Children Identified by Referral Versus School-Based Screening

Jonathan M. Sorof; Jennifer Turner; David S. Martin; Kathleen Garcia; Zsolt Garami; Andrei V. Alexandrov; Fiona Wan; Ronald J. Portman

Abstract—To determine whether systematic differences exist between hypertensive children referred for evaluation by primary care providers and children identified through community-based screening, cardiovascular risk factors and surrogate markers of hypertensive injury were compared based on subject source (referral versus screening). Children referred to a hypertension clinic for persistently elevated blood pressure were compared with children identified as hypertensive during school screening of 5102 students in Houston public schools. M-mode echocardiography of the left ventricle was performed and subsequently reviewed by 2 independent sonographers blinded to identifying subject information. Subsets of subjects also underwent carotid artery ultrasound for measurement of intimal-medial thickness, overnight urine collections for microalbuminuria, and fasting serum cholesterol, triglycerides, and glucose. Ninety-seven total subjects (54 screening and 43 referral) met inclusion criteria and had technically adequate echocardiography performed. The prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) was 37%. Referral subjects demonstrated significantly greater left ventricular mass index (38.8 versus 34.2 g/m2.7; P <0.01) and a higher prevalence of LVH (49% versus 28%; P <0.05). Among subjects who underwent carotid ultrasound (n=75), carotid intimal-medial thickness was significantly higher in referral subjects (0.61 versus 0.57, P <0.05). When controlling for BMI z score, which was significantly higher in referral subjects, systematic differences by subject source did not persist. These findings suggest that hypertensive children who are predominantly overweight, independent of the manner in which patients come to medical attention, will manifest evidence of more severe cardiovascular disease assessed by surrogate markers such as left ventricular mass index or carotid artery intimal medial thickness.


European Neurology | 2005

Intravenous TPA for Very Old Stroke Patients

Chin I. Chen; Yasuyuki Iguchi; James C. Grotta; Zsolt Garami; Ken Uchino; Hashem Shaltoni; Andrei V. Alexandrov

Background: Although thrombolysis in patients with advanced age is considered more risky, some may benefit from TPA treatment. We studied safety and recanalization/recovery in patients older than 80 years treated with TPA and compared them with younger stroke patients. Methods: We studied patients treated with intravenous TPA and divided them into younger (<80 years) and older (≧80 years) groups for comparison. Diagnostic transcranial Doppler was completed before bolus, and patients were consequently monitored for up to 2 h when feasible. Clinical data included NIH Stroke Scale score, symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) and discharge disposition. Results: We studied 127 younger (mean 63 years, range 31–79) and 56 older patients (mean 84 years, range 80–93). Median baseline NIH Stroke Scale score was higher in the older group (18 vs. 14 points, NS). Occlusion locations, onset to needle time (median 130 vs. 120 min) as well as improvement at 24 h (median 5 vs. 4 points) were similar in both groups. Transcranial Doppler monitoring showed similar partial or complete recanalization rates (66 vs. 66%), onset to recanalization time (median 160 vs. 158 min) and reocclusion rates (26 vs. 25%). Symptomatic and fatal ICH was not higher in the older group (7.1 and 3.5% vs. 6.3 and 3.9%, NS). There was higher mortality among older patients (20 vs. 11%, NS). At discharge, 23% of older patients went home, 41% underwent rehabilitation and 16% were transferred to skilled nursing facilities, compared with 31, 43 and 15% respectively, in the younger group. Conclusion: After intravenous TPA treatment, patients over 80 years of age have similar recanalization, short-term improvement and symptomatic ICH rates compared with younger patients. However, older patients tend to have higher in-hospital mortality.


Alzheimers & Dementia | 2011

Transcranial Doppler ultrasound blood flow velocity and pulsatility index as systemic indicators for Alzheimer’s disease

Alex E. Roher; Zsolt Garami; Suzanne L. Tyas; Chera L. Maarouf; Tyler A. Kokjohn; Marek Belohlavek; Linda Vedders; Donald J. Connor; Marwan N. Sabbagh; Thomas G. Beach; Mark R. Emmerling

Multiple lines of evidence suggest that cardiovascular co‐morbidities hasten the onset of Alzheimers disease (AD) or accelerate its course.

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Andrei V. Alexandrov

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Levente Littvay

Central European University

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Emanuela Medda

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Fabrizio Fanelli

Sapienza University of Rome

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