P
Pooja Khatri
Researcher at University of Cincinnati
Publications - 331
Citations - 17544
Pooja Khatri is an academic researcher from University of Cincinnati. The author has contributed to research in topics: Stroke & Population. The author has an hindex of 54, co-authored 276 publications receiving 13834 citations. Previous affiliations of Pooja Khatri include Charité & Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.
Papers
More filters
Sex-specific stroke incidence over time in the Greater Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky Stroke Study
Tracy E. Madsen,Jane C. Khoury,Kathleen Alwell,Charles J Moomaw,Eric Rademacher,Eric Rademacher,Matthew L. Flaherty,Daniel Woo,Jason Mackey,Felipe De Los Rios La Rosa,Sharyl Martini,Simona Ferioli,Opeolu Adeoye,Pooja Khatri,Joseph P. Broderick,Brett M. Kissela,Dawn Kleindorfer +16 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors found that women were older than men (mean ± SE 72.4 ± 0.34 vs 68.2± 0.32, p p pp p = 0.15).
Journal ArticleDOI
Alteplase for the treatment of acute ischemic stroke in patients with low National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale and not clearly disabling deficits (Potential of rtPA for Ischemic Strokes with Mild Symptoms PRISMS): Rationale and design.
Sharon D. Yeatts,Joseph P. Broderick,Anjan Chatterjee,Edward C. Jauch,Steven R. Levine,Jose G. Romano,Jeffrey L. Saver,Achala Vagal,Barbara Purdon,Jenny Devenport,Pooja Khatri +10 more
TL;DR: PRISMS was designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of intravenous alteplase for the treatment of acute ischemic stroke with National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale 0–5 and without clearly disabling deficits, and found favorable functional outcome.
Journal ArticleDOI
Minor ischemic stroke: Triaging, disposition, and outcome
TL;DR: Outpatient evaluation of patients with nondisabling minor stroke is potentially cost-effective after excluding large artery atherosclerosis and ensuring a rapid access outpatient evaluation.
Journal ArticleDOI
International stroke genetics consortium recommendations for studies of genetics of stroke outcome and recovery
Arne Lindgren,Robynne Braun,Jennifer J. Majersik,Philip Clatworthy,Shraddha Mainali,Colin P. Derdeyn,Jane Maguire,Christina Jern,Christina Jern,Jonathan Rosand,John W. Cole,John W. Cole,Jin-Moo Lee,Pooja Khatri,Paul A. Nyquist,Stéphanie Debette,Loo Keat Wei,Tatjana Rundek,Dana Leifer,Vincent Thijs,Robin Lemmens,Laura Heitsch,K. Prasad,Jordi Jimenez Conde,Martin Dichgans,Natalia S. Rost,Steven C. Cramer,Julie Bernhardt,Bradford B. Worrall,Israel Fernandez-Cadenas +29 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a group of expert stroke and rehabilitation clinicians and researchers with knowledge in genetics of stroke recovery presented recommendations for harmonizing phenotype data with focus on measures suitable for multicenter genetic studies of ischemic stroke brain injury and recovery.
Journal ArticleDOI
ICD9 Codes Cannot Reliably Identify Hemorrhagic Transformation of Ischemic Stroke
Michael T. Mullen,Charles J Moomaw,Kathleen Alwell,Jane Khoury,Brett M. Kissela,Daniel Woo,Matthew L. Flaherty,Pooja Khatri,Opeolu Adeoye,Simona Ferioli,Dawn Kleindorfer +10 more
TL;DR: This study aimed to determine the accuracy of ICD9 coding for HT after ischemic stroke using the Greater Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky Stroke Study, a 5-county region that includes Cincinnati.