2023
Suboptimal Sleep Duration Is Associated With Poorer Neuroimaging Brain Health Profiles in Middle‐Aged Individuals Without Stroke or Dementia
Clocchiatti‐Tuozzo S, Rivier C, Renedo D, Lopez V, Geer J, Miner B, Yaggi H, de Havenon A, Payabvash S, Sheth K, Gill T, Falcone G. Suboptimal Sleep Duration Is Associated With Poorer Neuroimaging Brain Health Profiles in Middle‐Aged Individuals Without Stroke or Dementia. Journal Of The American Heart Association 2023, 13: e031514. PMID: 38156552, PMCID: PMC10863828, DOI: 10.1161/jaha.123.031514.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsSuboptimal sleep durationWhite matter hyperintensitiesMiddle-aged individualsLong sleep durationLarger WMH volumeSleep durationMiddle-aged adultsHealth profileWMH volumeAmerican Heart Association's LifeAsymptomatic middle-aged adultsWMH presenceVolume of WMHOptimal sleepSelf-reported sleep durationModifiable risk factorsWhite matter tractsProspective magnetic resonanceSimple 7Cardiovascular healthRisk factorsShort sleepMatter hyperintensitiesHigh riskEarly interventionImprovement in the Prediction of Cerebrovascular Events With White Matter Hyperintensity
de Havenon A, Smith E, Sharma R, Falcone G, Bangad A, Prabhakaran S, Sheth K. Improvement in the Prediction of Cerebrovascular Events With White Matter Hyperintensity. Journal Of The American Heart Association 2023, 12: e029374. PMID: 37345754, PMCID: PMC10356061, DOI: 10.1161/jaha.123.029374.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsWhite matter hyperintensitiesIncident strokePrimary outcomeHypertensive individualsMatter hyperintensitiesAtherosclerotic cardiovascular disease risk scoreCognitive impairmentCardiovascular disease risk scoreVascular risk factorsCurrent cigarette smokingDisease risk scoreMagnetic resonance imagingLogistic regression modelsRandomization armCerebrovascular eventsVascular riskCigarette smokingPrognostic informationRisk factorsPrognostic abilityRisk scoreCognitive declineResonance imagingDeLong testStrokeIdentification of White Matter Hyperintensities in Routine Emergency Department Visits Using Portable Bedside Magnetic Resonance Imaging
de Havenon A, Parasuram N, Crawford A, Mazurek M, Chavva I, Yadlapalli V, Iglesias J, Rosen M, Falcone G, Payabvash S, Sze G, Sharma R, Schiff S, Safdar B, Wira C, Kimberly W, Sheth K. Identification of White Matter Hyperintensities in Routine Emergency Department Visits Using Portable Bedside Magnetic Resonance Imaging. Journal Of The American Heart Association 2023, 12: e029242. PMID: 37218590, PMCID: PMC10381997, DOI: 10.1161/jaha.122.029242.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsWhite matter hyperintensitiesMagnetic resonance imagingSevere white matter hyperintensitiesConventional magnetic resonance imagingResonance imagingRetrospective cohortEmergency departmentMatter hyperintensitiesVascular risk factorsProspective observational studyVascular cognitive impairmentTesla magnetic resonance imagingArea Deprivation IndexProspective cohortAdult patientsAcute careRisk factorsCardiovascular diseaseObservational studyCognitive impairmentPatientsCare magnetic resonance imagingIntermodality agreementCohortDeprivation index
2022
Racial/Ethnic Variation in White Matter Hyperintensity Progression in the ACCORDION MIND Study
Herman AL, de Havenon A, Falcone GJ, Prabhakaran S, Sheth KN. Racial/Ethnic Variation in White Matter Hyperintensity Progression in the ACCORDION MIND Study. The Neurologist 2022, 28: 157-159. PMID: 35834785, DOI: 10.1097/nrl.0000000000000454.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsWMH progressionWhite matter hyperintensitiesLow-density lipoproteinCardiovascular riskWhite patientsBlack patientsWMH volumeSystolic blood pressure levelsWhite matter hyperintensity progressionBlack diabetic patientsBlood pressure levelsExclusion of patientsMagnetic resonance imagingDiabetes (ACCORD) trialDiabetic patientsMean SBPPrimary outcomePatient raceMultivariate regression modelMatter hyperintensitiesA1c measurementHigh riskPatientsNormal rangeCognitive decline
2015
Common variation in COL4A1/COL4A2 is associated with sporadic cerebral small vessel disease
Rannikmäe K, Davies G, Thomson PA, Bevan S, Devan WJ, Falcone GJ, Traylor M, Anderson CD, Battey TW, Radmanesh F, Deka R, Woo JG, Martin LJ, Jimenez-Conde J, Selim M, Brown DL, Silliman SL, Kidwell CS, Montaner J, Langefeld CD, Slowik A, Hansen BM, Lindgren AG, Meschia JF, Fornage M, Bis JC, Debette S, Ikram MA, Longstreth WT, Schmidt R, Zhang CR, Yang Q, Sharma P, Kittner SJ, Mitchell BD, Holliday EG, Levi CR, Attia J, Rothwell PM, Poole DL, Boncoraglio GB, Psaty BM, Malik R, Rost N, Worrall BB, Dichgans M, Van Agtmael T, Woo D, Markus HS, Seshadri S, Rosand J, Sudlow CL. Common variation in COL4A1/COL4A2 is associated with sporadic cerebral small vessel disease. Neurology 2015, 84: 918-926. PMID: 25653287, PMCID: PMC4351667, DOI: 10.1212/wnl.0000000000001309.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsDeep intracerebral hemorrhageSmall vessel diseaseCerebral small vessel diseaseIntracerebral hemorrhageWhite matter hyperintensitiesVessel diseaseIschemic strokeSingle nucleotide polymorphismsMatter hyperintensitiesSymptomatic small vessel diseaseSporadic cerebral small vessel diseaseWhite matter hyperintensity volumeLacunar ischemic strokeIschemic stroke patientsPopulation-based studySymptomatic ischemic stroke patientsCOL4A1/COL4A2Common single nucleotide polymorphismsDirection of associationCommon variationStroke patientsHyperintensity volumeSporadic formsHemorrhageCerebrovascular phenotypes