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
Journal ArticleDOI
Ninety-Day Outcome Rates of a Prospective Cohort of Consecutive Patients With Mild Ischemic Stroke
TL;DR: Patients with mild ischemic stroke have substantial rates of disability at 90 days, and early worsening and acute infarct growth from baseline to 5 days were more common among those with poor outcome.
Journal ArticleDOI
Diabetes Mellitus A Risk Factor for Ischemic Stroke in a Large Biracial Population
Jane C. Khoury,Dawn Kleindorfer,Kathleen Alwell,Charles J Moomaw,Daniel Woo,Opeolu Adeoye,Matthew L. Flaherty,Pooja Khatri,Simona Ferioli,Joseph P. Broderick,Brett M. Kissela +10 more
TL;DR: The rates and risk ratios for 1999 and 2005, although similar to those previously reported for the mid-1990s, take on increased significance, given the epidemic of diabetes mellitus and metabolic syndrome throughout the US and the world.
Journal ArticleDOI
US Geographic Distribution of rt-PA Utilization by Hospital for Acute Ischemic Stroke
TL;DR: It is found that 64% of US hospitals did not report giving rt-PA at all within the MEDPAR database within a 2-year period, and such national-based resource-utilization data is important for planning at the local and national level, especially for such initiatives as telemedicine, to reach underserved areas.
Journal ArticleDOI
Distribution of National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale in the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky Stroke Study
Mathew J. Reeves,Jane C. 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 on initial presentation (ie, rNIHSS⩽3), which represents a legitimate target for population-based surveillance efforts.
Journal ArticleDOI
Analyses of thrombi in acute ischemic stroke: A consensus statement on current knowledge and future directions
Simon F. De Meyer,Tommy B. Andersson,Tommy B. Andersson,Tommy B. Andersson,Blaise Baxter,Martin Bendszus,Patrick A. Brouwer,Waleed Brinjikji,Bruce C.V. Campbell,Vincent Costalat,Antoni Dávalos,Andrew M. Demchuk,Diederik W.J. Dippel,Jens Fiehler,Urs Fischer,Michael Gilvarry,Matthew J. Gounis,Jan Gralla,Olav Jansen,Tudor G Jovin,David F. Kallmes,Pooja Khatri,Kennedy R. Lees,Elena López-Cancio,Charles B. L. M. Majoie,Henk A. Marquering,Ana Paula Narata,Raul G Nogueira,Peter A. Ringleb,Adnan H. Siddiqui,István Szikora,David Vale,Rüdiger von Kummer,Albert J Yoo,Werner Hacke,David S Liebeskind +35 more
TL;DR: Improved pathophysiological characterization of clot types, their properties and how these properties change over time, together with clinical correlates from ongoing studies, may facilitate revascularization with thrombolysis and thrombectomy.