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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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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.
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Diabetes Mellitus A Risk Factor for Ischemic Stroke in a Large Biracial Population

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.
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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.
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Distribution of National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale in the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky Stroke Study

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.
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Analyses of thrombi in acute ischemic stroke: A consensus statement on current knowledge and future directions

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.