scispace - formally typeset
Z

Zsolt Zador

Researcher at St. Michael's Hospital

Publications -  61
Citations -  2263

Zsolt Zador is an academic researcher from St. Michael's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Disease. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 56 publications receiving 1862 citations. Previous affiliations of Zsolt Zador include St. Michael's GAA, Sligo & University of Manchester.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Increased seizure duration and slowed potassium kinetics in mice lacking aquaporin-4 water channels.

TL;DR: The results implicate AQP4 in the expression and termination of seizure activity and support the hypothesis that AQP 4 is coupled to potassium homeostasis in vivo.
Book ChapterDOI

Role of Aquaporin-4 in Cerebral Edema and Stroke

TL;DR: The role of AQP4 in the development of cerebral edema is discussed with emphasis on its contribution to ischemic edema, and the potential of AQp4 as a therapeutic target in edema associated with stroke is examined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bypass surgery for complex brain aneurysms: an assessment of intracranial-intracranial bypass.

Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Bypass surgery for brain aneurysms is evolving from extracranial-intracranial (EC-IC) to intracranial-intracranial (IC-IC) bypasses that reanastomose parent arteries, revascularize efferent branches with in situ donor arteries or reimplantation, and reconstruct bifurcated anatomy with grafts that are entirely intracranial. We compared results with these newer IC-IC bypasses to conventional EC-IC bypasses. METHODS: During a 10-year period, 82 patients underwent bypass surgery as part of their aneurysm management. A quarter of the patients presented with ruptured aneurysms and two-thirds presented with compressive symptoms from unruptured aneurysms. Most aneurysms (82%) had non-saccular morphology and 56% were giant sized. Common locations included the cavernous internal carotid artery (23%), middle cerebral artery (20%), and posteroinferior cerebellar artery (12%). RESULTS: Forty-seven patients (57%) received EC-IC bypasses and 35 patients (43%) received IC-IC bypasses, including 9 in situ bypasses, 6 reimplantations, 11 reanastomoses, and 9 intracranial grafts. Aneurysm obliteration rates were comparable in EC-IC and IC-IC bypass groups (97.9% and 97.1%, respectively), as were bypass patency rates (94% and 89%, respectively). Three patients died (surgical mortality, 3.7%), and 4 patients were permanently worse as a result of bypass occlusions (neurological morbidity, 4.9%). At late follow-up (mean duration, 41 months), good outcomes (Glasgow Outcome Scale score 5 or 4) were measured in 68 patients (90%) overall, and were similar in EC-IC and IC-IC bypass groups (91% and 89%, respectively). Changes in Glasgow Outcome Scale score were slightly more favorable with IC-IC bypass (6% worse or dead after IC-IC bypass versus 14% with EC-IC bypass). CONCLUSION: IC-IC bypasses compare favorably to EC-IC bypasses in terms of aneurysm obliteration rates, bypass patency rates, and neurological outcomes. IC-IC bypasses can be more technically challenging to perform, but they do not require harvest of extracranial donor arteries, spare patients a neck incision, shorten interposition grafts, are protected inside the cranium, use caliber-matched donor and recipient arteries, and are not associated with ischemic complications during temporary arterial occlusions. IC-IC bypass can replace conventional EC-IC bypass with more anatomic reconstructions for selected aneurysms involving the middle cerebral artery, posteroinferior cerebellar artery, anterior cerebral artery, and basilar apex.
Journal ArticleDOI

Glial Cell Aquaporin-4 Overexpression in Transgenic Mice Accelerates Cytotoxic Brain Swelling

TL;DR: Aquaporin-4 expression is rate-limiting for brain water accumulation, and thus, that altered AQP4 expression can be functionally significant, and the deduced increase in brain water content correlated linearly with brain AQP 4 protein expression.
Book ChapterDOI

Aquaporins: role in cerebral edema and brain water balance.

TL;DR: These studies indicate that AQP4 plays significant role in the development of cytotoxic edema and the absorption of excess brain water resulting from vasogenic edema, and the role of AQP1 in CSF production and maintenance of steady-state ICP.