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Albert J Yoo

Researcher at Harvard University

Publications -  275
Citations -  15328

Albert J Yoo is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Stroke & Modified Rankin Scale. The author has an hindex of 48, co-authored 238 publications receiving 11975 citations.

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Cerebral Blood Flow Thresholds for Tissue Infarction in Patients with Acute Ischemic Stroke Treated with Intra-Arterial Revascularization Therapy Depend on Timing of Reperfusion

TL;DR: The authors found CBF thresholds for tissue infarction in patients with acute stroke are lower in tissue that reperfused at earlier time points, so these thresholds may be useful in selecting patients who may benefit from thrombolysis.
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Future directions in IAT: better studies, better selection, better timing and better techniques

TL;DR: High-quality data from single-center studies or multicenter registries that include natural history data are needed to answer the numerous clinical questions that cannot be addressed in an RCT setting, and to provide data to refine trial selection criteria.
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Application of a Novel Brain Arteriovenous Malformation Endovascular Grading Scale for Transarterial Embolization.

TL;DR: Validation of a brain arteriovenous malformationendovascular grading scale demonstrated that endovascular grades of ≤II were associated with endov vascular cure, while endoviological grades of ≥III wereassociated with multimodal cure or significant lesion reduction and favorable outcome.
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Delayed Endovascular Coil Extrusion following Internal Carotid Artery Embolization

TL;DR: The multidisciplinary operative management of this case of endovascular coil extrusion is described to increase awareness of this potentially life-threatening complication of internal carotid artery injury.
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Predictors of poor outcome despite successful endovascular treatment for ischemic stroke: results from the MR CLEAN Registry

TL;DR: In this paper, the importance of individual predictors in the most extensive model was expressed by the proportion of unique added χ2 to the model of that individual predictor, which indicated that prevention of postprocedural adverse events has the greatest potential to further improve outcomes in these patients.