Publications by authors named "F Nahab"

Background: ARCADIA compared apixaban to aspirin for secondary stroke prevention in patients with cryptogenic stroke and atrial cardiopathy. One possible explanation for the neutral result is that biomarkers used did not optimally identify atrial cardiopathy. We examined the relationship between biomarker levels and subsequent detection of AF, the hallmark of atrial cardiopathy.

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Introduction: Essential tremor is a common movement disorder. Numerous validated clinical rating scales exist to quantify essential tremor severity by employing rater-dependent visual observation but have limitations, including the need for trained human raters and the lack of precision and sensitivity compared to technology-based objective measures. Other continuous objective methods to quantify tremor amplitude have been developed, but frequently provide unitless measures (e.

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Background: Visual outcomes of acute central and branch retinal artery occlusions (CRAO/BRAO) are poor and acute treatment options are limited by delayed diagnosis. In the hyper-acute setting, the ocular fundus may appear "normal", making recognition challenging, but is facilitated by retinal optical coherence tomography (OCT), which is seldom available in emergency departments (ED). We evaluated the use of non-mydriatic ocular fundus photographs (NMFP) combined with OCT to facilitate ultra-rapid remote diagnosis and stroke alert for patients with acute vision loss presenting to the ED.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study looked at strokes caused by a neck problem called carotid artery web (CaW) in young patients, who often don't have typical stroke risk factors.
  • Researchers used a score called RoPE to see how many patients had high-risk profiles related to CaW, and found that many had high scores.
  • The results suggest that doctors need to look for CaW in stroke patients, even if they have a condition called patent foramen ovale (PFO), to figure out the real cause of their strokes.
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Objectives: Early cerebral arterial imaging is currently only recommended in the subgroup of acute ischemic stroke (AIS) patients suspected of having large vessel occlusion (LVO). There is limited data on the impact of early cerebrovascular imaging in all suspected AIS patients presenting within 24 h of symptom onset and the impact on door in-door out (DIDO) time.

Materials And Methods: In January 2020, our Primary Stroke Center implemented a protocol to perform upfront head and neck CT angiography (CTA) with initial non-contrast CT head for all suspected ischemic stroke patients screening positive for BE-FAST stroke symptoms within 24 h from last known normal time.

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