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.
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Journal Article
Abstract 2700: What Is The Expected Distribution of Ischemic Stroke Severity? Population-based Estimates of NIHSS From The Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky Stroke Study.
Mathew J. Reeves,Jane Khoury,Kathleen Alwell,Charles J Moomaw,Matthew L. Flaherty,Daniel Woo,Pooja Khatri,Opeolu Adeoye,Simona Ferioli,Brett M. Kissela,Dawn Kleindorfer +10 more
TL;DR: More than half of all ischemic stroke cases have mild symptom severity upon initial presentation, and the monitoring of NIHSS across population sub-groups and by time represents a legitimate target for population-based surveillance efforts.
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Endovascular Therapy Demonstrates Benefit over Intravenous Recombinant Tissue Plasminogen Activator Based on Repeatedly Measured National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale
Liqiong Fan,Sharon D. Yeatts,Lydia D. Foster,Pooja Khatri,Thomas A. Tomsick,Joseph P. Broderick,Yuko Y. Palesch +6 more
TL;DR: The IMS III trial demonstrated an endovascular treatment effect based on the secondary outcome of NIHSS, however, the magnitude of this treatment effect varied by the time of assessment.
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Abstract 99: Geographic Access to Acute Stroke Care in the United States
Opeolu Adeoye,Brendan G. Carr,Karen C. Albright,Catherine Wolff,Michael T. Mullen,Todd Abruzzo,Andrew J. Ringer,Pooja Khatri,Charles C. Branas,Dawn Kleindorfer +9 more
TL;DR: Most of the US population has geographic access to acute stroke care, but treatment rates remain extremely low; to optimize US stroke care systems and increase the use of acute therapies, pre- and inhospital interventions are needed.
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Recovery from brain injury: a surprising new drug target
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Blinding of outcome assessors and its association with outcome in a randomized open-label stroke trial
Nadinda A.M. van der Ende,Bob Roozenbeek,Joseph P. Broderick,Pooja Khatri,Hester F. Lingsma,Diederik W.J. Dippel +5 more
TL;DR: Assessors may not always be truly blinded for treatment allocation in clinical trials and their guesses may be associated with outcome, although causality between the assessors' guess and patient outcome cannot be determined.