Daniela Brenda Renedo, MD
Clinical Fellow - NeurosurgeryDownloadHi-Res Photo
About
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Clinical Fellow - Neurosurgery
Biography
Daniela Renedo MD is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Falcone Lab in the Department of Neurology, Yale University. She completed his MD at the Austral University and her neurosurgery training at the Hospital de Clinicas Jose de San Martin in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Then she emigrated to the United States to pursue advanced research training in population genetics, genomic medicine, data sciences, and single-cell analysis. Dr. Renedo’s work focuses on understanding the socioeconomic and biological underpinnings of neurovascular disease.
Appointments
Education & Training
- MD
- Universidad Austral
Research
Research at a Glance
Yale Co-Authors
Frequent collaborators of Daniela Brenda Renedo's published research.
Publications Timeline
A big-picture view of Daniela Brenda Renedo's research output by year.
Kevin Sheth, MD
Guido J. Falcone, MD, ScD, MPH
Cyprien Rivier, MD, MSc
Adam de Havenon, MD, MSCI
Andrew Koo, MD
Charles Matouk, MD
44Publications
90Citations
Publications
2024
Is Clot Composition Associated With Cause of Stroke? A Systematic Review and Meta‐Analysis
Sujijantarat N, Templeton K, Antonios J, Renedo D, Koo A, Haynes J, Fathima B, Amllay A, Nowicki K, Huttner A, Giles J, Navaratnam D, Sansing L, Hebert R, King J, Matouk C. Is Clot Composition Associated With Cause of Stroke? A Systematic Review and Meta‐Analysis. Stroke Vascular And Interventional Neurology 2024 DOI: 10.1161/svin.124.001426.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAltmetricConceptsCause of strokeRed blood cellsWhite blood cellsBlood cellsMechanical thrombectomyCardioembolic groupHistological compositionMeta-analysisLow red blood cellQuantity of red blood cellsRandom-effects meta-analysisAcute ischemic strokeEffects meta-analysisEnglish-language articlesMean percentage differenceAdult patientsMEDLINE databaseCochrane LibraryClinical utilityIschemic strokeLanguage articlesPatientsPercentage differenceArteryCellular compositionImprovement in Cranial Nerve Palsies Following Treatment of Intracranial Aneurysms with Flow Diverters: Institutional Outcomes, Systematic Review and Study-Level Meta-Analysis
Sujijantarat N, Antonios J, Renedo D, Koo A, Haynes J, Fathima B, Jiang J, Hengartner A, Shekhar A, Amllay A, Nowicki K, Hebert R, Gilmore E, Sheth K, King J, Matouk C. Improvement in Cranial Nerve Palsies Following Treatment of Intracranial Aneurysms with Flow Diverters: Institutional Outcomes, Systematic Review and Study-Level Meta-Analysis. Clinical Neurology And Neurosurgery 2024, 108555. DOI: 10.1016/j.clineuro.2024.108555.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsStudy-level meta-analysisRate of improvementCN deficitsMeta-analysisIntracranial aneurysmsCN palsySystematic reviewFactors associated with recoveryPooled rateRandom-effects meta-analysisCranial nervesManual citation searchingEffects meta-analysisRate of clinical improvementCranial nerve palsyMechanism of injuryIncreased rate of improvementFlow diversionRare presenting symptomSymptomatic intracranial aneurysmsTreatment of intracranial aneurysmsCitation searchingPalsyNerve palsyRetrospective reviewHigher proceduralist stroke thrombectomy volume is associated with reduced inpatient mortality
Koo A, Renedo D, Ney J, Amllay A, Kanzler M, Stogniy S, Alawieh A, Sujijantarat N, Antonios J, Al Kasab S, Malhotra A, Hebert R, Matouk C, de Havenon A. Higher proceduralist stroke thrombectomy volume is associated with reduced inpatient mortality. Journal Of NeuroInterventional Surgery 2024, jnis-2024-022021. PMID: 39214687, DOI: 10.1136/jnis-2024-022021.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAltmetricConceptsIn-hospital deathIn-hospital mortalityAcute ischemic strokeCut-pointsAbsolute risk of deathAssociated with lower oddsState Inpatient DatabasesFlorida State Inpatient DatabaseIn-hospital moralityRates of in-hospital mortalityDiagnosis of acute ischemic strokePrimary study outcomeRisk of deathStroke careOptimal cut-pointAssociated with reduced inpatient mortalityEndovascular thrombectomyRetrospective cohort studyLower oddsPotential confoundersAbsolute riskAcute ischemic stroke patientsInpatient mortalityCohort studyInpatient DatabaseSex Differences in Case-Fatality Rates of Stroke—Reply
Renedo D, Sheth K. Sex Differences in Case-Fatality Rates of Stroke—Reply. JAMA Neurology 2024, 81 PMID: 39158922, DOI: 10.1001/jamaneurol.2024.2599.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchO-035 Higher endovascular thrombectomy procedural volume is associated with reduced inpatient mortality
Koo A, Renedo D, Ney J, Amllay A, Kanzler M, Stogniy S, Nowicki K, Alawieh A, Sujijantarat N, Antonios J, Al Kasab S, Hebert R, Matouk C, de Havenon A. O-035 Higher endovascular thrombectomy procedural volume is associated with reduced inpatient mortality. 2024, a27.2-a28. DOI: 10.1136/jnis-2024-snis.35.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAPOE epsilon variants and composite risk of dementia, disability, and death in the health and retirement study
Clocchiatti‐Tuozzo S, Szejko N, Rivier C, Renedo D, Huo S, Sheth K, Gill T, Falcone G. APOE epsilon variants and composite risk of dementia, disability, and death in the health and retirement study. Journal Of The American Geriatrics Society 2024 PMID: 38946154, DOI: 10.1111/jgs.19043.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricConceptsRisk of dementiaOutcome of dementiaAssociated with lower riskOlder adultsRetirement StudySecondary analysisEffects of tested interventionsHealth and Retirement StudyClinical trials of older adultsApo E4Composite outcomePrimary analysisHigh riskLow riskCox proportional hazards modelsProportional hazards modelMultivariate Cox proportional hazards modelDementiaAPOE genotypeClinical trialsHazards modelDisabilityParticipantsFunctional outcomesHeart diseaseUse of a dedicated open transcarotid access system for neurovascular disease
Sujijantarat N, Renedo D, Antonios J, Koo A, Amllay A, Nowicki K, Cord B, Hebert R, de Havenon A, Sheth K, Petersen N, Matouk C. Use of a dedicated open transcarotid access system for neurovascular disease. Journal Of NeuroInterventional Surgery 2024, jnis-2024-021599. PMID: 38719442, DOI: 10.1136/jnis-2024-021599.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAltmetricConceptsExtracranial carotid stenosisTranscarotid artery revascularizationNeurovascular diseasesCarotid stenosisDatabase of consecutive patientsNeurovascular pathologyTreatment of neurovascular diseasesAccess-related complicationsTreatment of neurovascular pathologiesOff-label useCarotid flow reversalConsecutive patientsRetrospective reviewIntracranial atherosclerotic diseasePeriprocedural complicationsEndovascular treatmentArtery revascularizationProcedural characteristicsArterial sheathCarotid diseaseAcademic centersIntracranial aneurysmsPatientsTranscarotid approachTransradial approachIn Reply to the Letter to the Editor Regarding “Risk Factors Related to Transient Diabetes Insipidus Development Following Transsphenoidal Pituitary Adenoma Resection: A Multicentric Study”
Yasuda M, Renedo D, Recalde R, Zaninovich R, Gonzalez Abbati S, Cervio A, Giovannini S, Villalonga J, Ulloque-Caamaño L, Reddy K, Socolovsky M, Campero A. In Reply to the Letter to the Editor Regarding “Risk Factors Related to Transient Diabetes Insipidus Development Following Transsphenoidal Pituitary Adenoma Resection: A Multicentric Study”. World Neurosurgery 2024, 185: 484. PMID: 38741317, DOI: 10.1016/j.wneu.2024.01.175.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH Keywords and ConceptsAngiographic evidence of an inadvertent cannulation of the marginal sinus following central line migration: illustrative case
Amllay A, Owolo E, Nowicki K, Sujijantarat N, Koo A, Antonios J, Renedo D, Matouk C, Hebert R. Angiographic evidence of an inadvertent cannulation of the marginal sinus following central line migration: illustrative case. Journal Of Neurosurgery Case Lessons 2024, 7: case23607. PMID: 38684119, PMCID: PMC11058405, DOI: 10.3171/case23607.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAltmetricConceptsCentral venous catheterInternal jugular veinCatheter tip migrationTip migrationMalpositioned cathetersAbsence of contrast extravasationSinus cannulationTriple-lumen central venous catheterAortic valve replacementInadvertent cannulationCatheter malpositionContrast extravasationValve replacementSigmoid sinusImprove patient outcomesPosterior fossaEndovascular managementSevere complicationsVenous cathetersWeeks postinsertionPrompt managementAngiographic evidenceCatheter exchangeReduce morbidityInterventional suiteBrain Health Outcomes in Sexual and Gender Minority Groups (S14.002)
Huo S, Rivier C, Clocchiatti-Tuozzo S, Renedo D, Sunmonu N, De Havenon A, Sheth K, Falcone G. Brain Health Outcomes in Sexual and Gender Minority Groups (S14.002). Neurology 2024, 102 DOI: 10.1212/wnl.0000000000205825.Peer-Reviewed Original Research
Academic Achievements & Community Involvement
honor Stroke Basic Science Award
National AwardAmerican Heart AssociationDetails02/08/2023United Stateshonor Junior Investigators Travel Award
National AwardAmerican Heart AssociationDetails02/09/2022United States