D
David Fiorella
Researcher at Stony Brook University
Publications - 349
Citations - 20708
David Fiorella is an academic researcher from Stony Brook University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Aneurysm & Stroke. The author has an hindex of 67, co-authored 328 publications receiving 17960 citations. Previous affiliations of David Fiorella include Emory University & State University of New York System.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Patients Prone to Recurrence after Endovascular Treatment: Periprocedural Results of the PRET Randomized Trial on Large and Recurrent Aneurysms
Jean Raymond,R. Klink,Miguel Chagnon,Stanley L. Barnwell,Avery J. Evans,J Mocco,Brian L. Hoh,Aquilla S Turk,Raymond D Turner,Hubert Desal,David Fiorella,Serge Bracard,Alain Weill,François Guilbert,Denis-Claude Roy +14 more
TL;DR: Endovascular treatment of large and recurrent aneurysms can be performed safely with platinum or hydrogel coils, and operator-assessed angiographic results from the PRET trial are reported.
Journal ArticleDOI
Proximal migration and compaction of an Enterprise stent into a coiled basilar apex aneurysm: a posterior circulation phenomenon?
Shervin R. Dashti,David Fiorella,Maria M. Toledo,Yin Hu,Cameron G. McDougall,Felipe C. Albuquerque +5 more
TL;DR: This is the first documented case in which a stent ‘compacted’ into a completed coiled aneurysm in a delayed fashion.
Journal ArticleDOI
Brain computed tomography angiographic scans as the sole diagnostic examination for excluding aneurysms in patients with perimesencephalic subarachnoid hemorrhage.
Raymond D Turner,Nancy A. Obuchowski,Vivek Gonugunta,Michael J. Kelly,Henry H. Woo,David Fiorella +5 more
Journal ArticleDOI
Balloon assisted treatment of intracranial aneurysms: the conglomerate coil mass technique
David Fiorella,H Woo +1 more
TL;DR: This review discusses the theoretical concepts underlying BAT, the potential advantages and disadvantages of this approach and finally the technical evolution of BAT in the authors' endovascular practice.
Journal ArticleDOI
Clot perviousness is associated with first pass success of aspiration thrombectomy in the COMPASS trial.
Maxim Mokin,Muhammad Waqas,Johanna T Fifi,Reade De Leacy,David Fiorella,Elad I. Levy,Elad I. Levy,Kenneth V. Snyder,Kenneth V. Snyder,Ricardo A. Hanel,Keith Woodward,Imran Chaudry,Ansaar T Rai,Donald Frei,Josser E Delgado Almandoz,Michael Kelly,Adam S Arthur,Blaise Baxter,Joey English,Italo Linfante,Kyle M Fargen,Aquilla S Turk,Adnan H. Siddiqui,Adnan H. Siddiqui,J Mocco +24 more
TL;DR: Clot perviousness is associated with first pass angiographic success in patients treated with the aspiration first approach for thrombectomy as first-line approach for large vessel occlusion in COMPASS.