Index by author
Calazel, C.
- FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBEXTRACRANIAL VASCULARYou have accessTIPIC Syndrome: Beyond the Myth of Carotidynia, a New Distinct Unclassified EntityA. Lecler, M. Obadia, J. Savatovsky, H. Picard, F. Charbonneau, N. Menjot de Champfleur, O. Naggara, B. Carsin, M. Amor-Sahli, J.P. Cottier, J. Bensoussan, E. Auffray-Calvier, A. Varoquaux, S. De Gaalon, C. Calazel, N. Nasr, G. Volle, D.C. Jianu, O. Gout, F. Bonneville and J.C. SadikAmerican Journal of Neuroradiology July 2017, 38 (7) 1391-1398; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A5214
This study included 47 patients from 10 centers presenting between January 2009 through April 2016with acute neck pain or tenderness and at least 1 cervical image showing unclassified carotid abnormalities. The authors conducted a systematic, retrospective study of their medical charts and diagnostic and follow-up imaging. All patients presented with acute neck pain, and 8 presented with transient neurologic symptoms. Imaging showed an eccentric pericarotidian infiltration in all patients. An intimal soft plaque was noted in 16 patients, and a mild luminal narrowing was noted in 16 patients. The authors conclude that this study improves the description of an unclassified, clinico-radiologic entity, which could be described by the proposed acronym: Transient Perivascular Inflammation of the Carotid artery (TIPIC) syndrome.
Carpenter, W.
- You have accessReply:F.H. Chokshi, G. Sadigh, W. Carpenter and J.W. AllenAmerican Journal of Neuroradiology July 2017, 38 (7) E50; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A5202
Carsin, B.
- FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBEXTRACRANIAL VASCULARYou have accessTIPIC Syndrome: Beyond the Myth of Carotidynia, a New Distinct Unclassified EntityA. Lecler, M. Obadia, J. Savatovsky, H. Picard, F. Charbonneau, N. Menjot de Champfleur, O. Naggara, B. Carsin, M. Amor-Sahli, J.P. Cottier, J. Bensoussan, E. Auffray-Calvier, A. Varoquaux, S. De Gaalon, C. Calazel, N. Nasr, G. Volle, D.C. Jianu, O. Gout, F. Bonneville and J.C. SadikAmerican Journal of Neuroradiology July 2017, 38 (7) 1391-1398; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A5214
This study included 47 patients from 10 centers presenting between January 2009 through April 2016with acute neck pain or tenderness and at least 1 cervical image showing unclassified carotid abnormalities. The authors conducted a systematic, retrospective study of their medical charts and diagnostic and follow-up imaging. All patients presented with acute neck pain, and 8 presented with transient neurologic symptoms. Imaging showed an eccentric pericarotidian infiltration in all patients. An intimal soft plaque was noted in 16 patients, and a mild luminal narrowing was noted in 16 patients. The authors conclude that this study improves the description of an unclassified, clinico-radiologic entity, which could be described by the proposed acronym: Transient Perivascular Inflammation of the Carotid artery (TIPIC) syndrome.
Castellani, R.
- EXTRACRANIAL VASCULARYou have accessCarotid Bulb Webs as a Cause of “Cryptogenic” Ischemic StrokeP.I. Sajedi, J.N. Gonzalez, C.A. Cronin, T. Kouo, A. Steven, J. Zhuo, O. Thompson, R. Castellani, S.J. Kittner, D. Gandhi and P. RaghavanAmerican Journal of Neuroradiology July 2017, 38 (7) 1399-1404; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A5208
Castillo, M.
- Pediatric NeuroimagingOpen AccessNonmicrocephalic Infants with Congenital Zika Syndrome Suspected Only after Neuroimaging Evaluation Compared with Those with Microcephaly at Birth and Postnatally: How Large Is the Zika Virus “Iceberg”?M.F.V.V. Aragao, A.C. Holanda, A.M. Brainer-Lima, N.C.L. Petribu, M. Castillo, V. van der Linden, S.C. Serpa, A.G. Tenório, P.T.C. Travassos, M.T. Cordeiro, C. Sarteschi, M.M. Valenca and A. CostelloAmerican Journal of Neuroradiology July 2017, 38 (7) 1427-1434; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A5216
Chan, C.
- EDITOR'S CHOICEADULT BRAINOpen AccessDiffusional Kurtosis Imaging and Motor Outcome in Acute Ischemic StrokeM.V. Spampinato, C. Chan, J.H. Jensen, J.A. Helpern, L. Bonilha, S.A. Kautz, P.J. Nietert and W. FengAmerican Journal of Neuroradiology July 2017, 38 (7) 1328-1334; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A5180
The authors evaluated 17 patients with stroke who underwent brain diffusional kurtosis imaging within 4 days after the onset of symptoms. Neurologic evaluation included the Fugl-Meyer Upper Extremity Motor scale in the acute phase and 3 months poststroke. The largest percentage signal changes of the lesioned hemisphere corticospinal tract were observed with axial kurtosis, with an average 12% increase compared with the contralateral corticospinal tract. The strongest associations between the 3-month Fugl-Meyer Upper Extremity Motor scale score and diffusion metrics were found for the lesioned/contralateral hemisphere corticospinal tract mean kurtosis and axial kurtosis ratios. They conclude that diffusion metrics related to kurtosis were found to be more sensitive than conventional diffusivity metrics to early poststroke corticospinal tract microstructural changes.
Chapman, P.R.
- Spine Imaging and Spine Image-Guided InterventionsOpen AccessDifficult Lumbar Puncture: Pitfalls and Tips from the TrenchesP.A. Hudgins, A.J. Fountain, P.R. Chapman and L.M. ShahAmerican Journal of Neuroradiology July 2017, 38 (7) 1276-1283; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A5128
Charbonneau, F.
- FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBEXTRACRANIAL VASCULARYou have accessTIPIC Syndrome: Beyond the Myth of Carotidynia, a New Distinct Unclassified EntityA. Lecler, M. Obadia, J. Savatovsky, H. Picard, F. Charbonneau, N. Menjot de Champfleur, O. Naggara, B. Carsin, M. Amor-Sahli, J.P. Cottier, J. Bensoussan, E. Auffray-Calvier, A. Varoquaux, S. De Gaalon, C. Calazel, N. Nasr, G. Volle, D.C. Jianu, O. Gout, F. Bonneville and J.C. SadikAmerican Journal of Neuroradiology July 2017, 38 (7) 1391-1398; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A5214
This study included 47 patients from 10 centers presenting between January 2009 through April 2016with acute neck pain or tenderness and at least 1 cervical image showing unclassified carotid abnormalities. The authors conducted a systematic, retrospective study of their medical charts and diagnostic and follow-up imaging. All patients presented with acute neck pain, and 8 presented with transient neurologic symptoms. Imaging showed an eccentric pericarotidian infiltration in all patients. An intimal soft plaque was noted in 16 patients, and a mild luminal narrowing was noted in 16 patients. The authors conclude that this study improves the description of an unclassified, clinico-radiologic entity, which could be described by the proposed acronym: Transient Perivascular Inflammation of the Carotid artery (TIPIC) syndrome.
Chen, J.Y.
- FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBYou have accessBaseline Survey of the Neuroradiology Work Environment in the United States with Reported Trends in Clinical Work, Nonclinical Work, Perceptions of Trainees, and Burnout MetricsJ.Y. Chen and F.J. LexaAmerican Journal of Neuroradiology July 2017, 38 (7) 1284-1291; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A5215
A voluntary survey was sent to practicing and out-of-training members of the ASNR. Four hundred thirty-two respondents across a broad range of experience reported: 93% with workdays extending at least 1 hour past expected; 71.9% reading more cases per hour compared with previous years; 79.5% sometimes-to-always interpreting cases faster than comfortable for optimal interpretation; and 67.8% sometimes or more often with inadequate time to discuss abnormal results. Burnout symptoms ranged between 49% and 75%. The trends and the correlations should be concerning to the leaders of radiology and warrant further monitoring.
Chen, M.M.
- You have accessThe Qualified Clinical Data Registry: A Pathway to Success within MACRAM.M. Chen, A.B. Rosenkrantz, G.N. Nicola, E. Silva, G. McGinty, L. Manchikanti and J.A. HirschAmerican Journal of Neuroradiology July 2017, 38 (7) 1292-1296; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A5220