C
Cameron G. McDougall
Researcher at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Publications - 282
Citations - 17269
Cameron G. McDougall is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Aneurysm & Embolization. The author has an hindex of 62, co-authored 278 publications receiving 15177 citations. Previous affiliations of Cameron G. McDougall include Barrow Neurological Institute & Cameron International.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
New frontiers in venous sinus stenting: Illustrative cases
TL;DR: Two patients with variant IIH successfully treated with venous sinus stenting are reported, with the first patient having improved cognition, and the second patient also had improved headaches.
Book
Ischemia and Loss of Vascular Autoregulation in Ocular and Cerebral Diseases: A New Perspective
Philip M. Meyers,H. C. Schumacher,Michael J. Alexander,Colin P. Derdeyn,Anthony J. Furlan,Randall T. Higashida,Christopher J. Moran,Robert W Tarr,Donald V. Heck,Joshua A Hirsch,Mary E. Jensen,Italo Linfante,Cameron G. McDougall,Gary M. Nesbit,Peter A. Rasmussen,Thomas A. Tomsick,Lawrence R. Wechsler,Jeffrey R. Wilson,O. O. Zaidat +18 more
TL;DR: What constitutes adequate training to perform neuroendovascular procedures in patients with acute ischemic stroke and what performance standards should be adopted to assess outcomes are defined.
Journal ArticleDOI
Intradural vertebral endarterectomy with nonautologous patch angioplasty for refractory vertebrobasilar ischemia: Case report and literature review.
TL;DR: The case of a 56-year-old male with progressive vertebrobasilar ischemia due to tandem lesions in the right vertebral artery at the origin and intracranially in the V4 segment is presented, and V4EA is considered for carefully selected patients.
Book ChapterDOI
Endovascular management of arteriovenous malformations.
TL;DR: This chapter will review patient selection, technical nuances, and published results for AVM embolization to discuss the targeting of associated aneurysms in the setting of a ruptured lesion, regardless of the subsequent therapeutic modality.
Journal ArticleDOI
Postembolization neurological deficits in cerebral arteriovenous malformationsstratification by arteriovenous malformation grade
TL;DR: Endovascular treatment carries a procedural risk related to AVM grade and number of branches treated and should be weighed carefully in the context of overall treatment morbidity/mortality.