C W Tang

Taipei Veterans General Hospital, Taipei, Taipei, Taiwan

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Publications (2)5.28 Total impact

  • Article: Stenting versus medical treatment for severe symptomatic intracranial stenosis.
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    ABSTRACT: Intracranial atherosclerosis is especially prevalent in Asians, but intracranial stent placement and medical treatment for severe intracranial stenosis are controversial. Thus, we compared long-term outcomes of these 2 therapeutic approaches in an Asian population. Patients with angiographically proved severe (≥70%) symptomatic intracranial atherosclerosis, with or without stent placement, were retrospectively reviewed at a single center between 2002 and 2009, with adjustments for age, sex, vascular risk factors, degree of baseline stenosis, and baseline functional status. Of the 114 patients followed from 3 to 36 months (mean, 17.3 months) after initial diagnosis, 53 received 56 stents in addition to medical treatment (stent-placement group), and 61 matched patients received only medical treatment (medical group). Total clinical events, including stroke, TIA, and vascular death, were 12 (22.6%) and 15 (24.6%) in the stent-placement and medical groups, respectively (P = .99). The stent-placement group had significantly better functional outcomes than the medical group (94.3% versus 78.7% for mRS scores of 0-3, P = .045). Most events in the stent-placement group occurred within the first week of the periprocedural period (17.0%) as minor embolic or perforator infarctions, and the rate of events decreased thereafter (5.7%, P = .07). Stent placement over the perforator-rich MCA and BA independently predicted periprocedural events on multivariate regression analysis. In the medical group, events increased in frequency (21.7%) and severity with time. Although the total ischemic event rate was similar in the 2 groups during a 3-year follow-up, the stent-placement group had a more favorable functional outcome despite minor periprocedural strokes.
    American Journal of Neuroradiology 03/2011; 32(5):911-6. · 2.93 Impact Factor
  • Article: Microscopic polyangiitis presenting with capsular warning syndrome and subsequent stroke.
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    ABSTRACT: A 55-year-old man developed ischemic stroke after three episodes of transient dysarthria and left hemiplegia, a typical manifestation of capsular warning syndrome. Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain showed bilateral basal ganglionic infarction. The patient had no significant risk of stroke. However, the systemic manifestations, an elevated titer of perinuclear anti-neutrophilic cytoplasmic antibody and a skin biopsy revealing leukocytoclastic venulitis confirmed the undrlying microscopic polyangiitis.
    Journal of the Neurological Sciences 12/2008; 277(1-2):174-5. · 2.35 Impact Factor