Publications by authors named "Patrick Salvaris"

Article Synopsis
  • Hyperglycemia in acute ischemic stroke negatively impacts treatment effectiveness and outcomes, leading researchers to explore exenatide, a GLP-1 receptor agonist, as a potential alternative.
  • The TEXAIS trial involved 350 patients, comparing the effects of exenatide versus standard care on stroke recovery over a 5-day period, focusing on improvements in the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) scores.
  • Results showed slightly better recovery outcomes in the exenatide group, with no instances of hypoglycemia noted, though the differences were not statistically significant, and recruitment was halted early due to COVID-19 challenges.
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Background: Intravenous infusion of alteplase is used for thrombolysis before endovascular thrombectomy for ischemic stroke. Tenecteplase, which is more fibrin-specific and has longer activity than alteplase, is given as a bolus and may increase the incidence of vascular reperfusion.

Methods: We randomly assigned patients with ischemic stroke who had occlusion of the internal carotid, basilar, or middle cerebral artery and who were eligible to undergo thrombectomy to receive tenecteplase (at a dose of 0.

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Background And Purpose: Clinical triage scales for prehospital recognition of large vessel occlusion (LVO) are limited by low specificity when applied by paramedics. We created the 3-step ambulance clinical triage for acute stroke treatment (ACT-FAST) as the first algorithmic LVO identification tool, designed to improve specificity by recognizing only severe clinical syndromes and optimizing paramedic usability and reliability.

Methods: The ACT-FAST algorithm consists of (1) unilateral arm drift to stretcher <10 seconds, (2) severe language deficit (if right arm is weak) or gaze deviation/hemineglect assessed by simple shoulder tap test (if left arm is weak), and (3) eligibility and stroke mimic screen.

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Background: It is uncertain whether particular clones causing invasive community-onset methicillin-resistant and methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus (cMRSA/cMSSA) infection differ in virulence.

Methods: Invasive cMRSA and cMSSA cases were prospectively identified. Principal component analysis was used to derive an illness severity score (ISS) from clinical data, including 30-day mortality, requirement for intensive hospital support, the presence of bloodstream infection, and hospital length of stay.

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