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1 regulation during recanalization therapy for vertebrobasilar and TBA occlusion deserves further atten
2 s the atherosclerotic plaque in the carotid, vertebrobasilar, and intracranial arteries, or the aorti
3 as ipsilateral or contralateral, cortical or vertebrobasilar, and ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke.
4 anial CT scans of 169 patients with ruptured vertebrobasilar aneurysms (44 cases of posteroinferior c
5 ttern of subarachnoid hemorrhage in ruptured vertebrobasilar aneurysms was 7.1% (48 of 676 readings)
6 d a high predilection for the brain stem and vertebrobasilar arterial system and was associated with
7 roved methods of non-invasive imaging of the vertebrobasilar arterial tree have been used in recent p
8 ry (23%), internal carotid artery (13%), and vertebrobasilar arteries (13%).
9 rigins of parasympathetic innervation of the vertebrobasilar arteries, activation of this system unde
10 es of the parasympathetic innervation of the vertebrobasilar arteries.
11 cular therapy remains uncertain for patients vertebrobasilar artery occlusion presenting with mild st
12 her endovascular treatment is beneficial for vertebrobasilar artery occlusion remains unknown.
13 l haemorrhage risk, endovascular therapy for vertebrobasilar artery occlusion was associated with a s
14 fit of endovascular therapy in patients with vertebrobasilar artery occlusion with moderate to severe
15 dovascular treatment of acute strokes due to vertebrobasilar artery occlusion.
16 ical benefit across a range of patients with vertebrobasilar artery occlusion.
17                                          The vertebrobasilar circulation was symptomatic in 67% of th
18 minantly due to dilative arteriopathy of the vertebrobasilar circulation, frequently recur, and porte
19 s region, and atherosclerotic plaques in the vertebrobasilar confluence can progress with catastrophi
20 symptomatic disease, two ADPKD patients with vertebrobasilar dolichoectasia had posterior circulation
21  6.5% of eyes; hypoglycemia in 2.8% of eyes; vertebrobasilar insufficiency in 2.8% of eyes; non-AMD c
22 teal").Subclavian steal may also manifest as vertebrobasilar insufficiency or,most commonly, arm clau
23  neuritis, Meniere's syndrome, migraine, and vertebrobasilar insufficiency.
24 sient neurological attacks (TNAs) are due to vertebrobasilar ischaemia, then they should be common du
25 ata from trials that recruited patients with vertebrobasilar ischaemic stroke who were randomly assig
26 aimed to assess the frequency of TNAs before vertebrobasilar ischaemic stroke.
27                                              Vertebrobasilar lesion (n = 5) success rates for complet
28 ent use of sympathomimetic drugs compared to vertebrobasilar occlusion (p = 0.008 and p = 0.041, resp
29 bectomy in patients presenting within 8 h of vertebrobasilar occlusion at 28 centres in China.
30 The use of thrombolytics in the treatment of vertebrobasilar occlusion holds promise but the benefits
31  patients underwent endovascular therapy for vertebrobasilar occlusion strokes during the study perio
32 , matched, case-control study of consecutive vertebrobasilar occlusion strokes treated with endovascu
33  anesthesia (GA) in patients presenting with vertebrobasilar occlusion strokes.
34 wn regarding the optimal anesthesia type for vertebrobasilar occlusion strokes.
35 troke, particularly when there is associated vertebrobasilar stenosis.
36 d brainstem TNAs were more frequent before a vertebrobasilar stroke (45 of 275 events) than before a
37         This is the first documented case of vertebrobasilar stroke occurring as a late complication
38                                 Furthermore, vertebrobasilar stroke syndromes may mimic peripheral di
39 hire, UK and compared rates of TNA preceding vertebrobasilar stroke versus carotid stroke.
40 02-2010) and compared rates of TNA preceding vertebrobasilar stroke versus carotid stroke.
41 ing the preceding 2 days (22 of 252 before a vertebrobasilar stroke vs two of 751 before a carotid st
42  59 TNAs preceding (median 4 days, IQR 1-30) vertebrobasilar stroke, only five (8%) fulfilled the Nat
43                    In patients with definite vertebrobasilar stroke, preceding transient isolated bra
44  categorisable in 1034 (91%) cases, with 275 vertebrobasilar strokes and 759 carotid strokes.
45                                          The vertebrobasilar system (VBS) is unique in human anatomy
46                            Thrombosis of the vertebrobasilar system is a highly fatal disease and sho
47  coil was intravascularly guided through the vertebrobasilar system under C-arm fluoroscopy to occlud
48 mportance of anastomosis between ECA and the vertebrobasilar system, both in recurrence of significan
49 flow during taNRP through collaterals to the vertebrobasilar system.
50 to identify different geometrical classes of vertebrobasilar systems (n = 12) of healthy adult subjec
51  binocular visual disturbance as TNAs in the vertebrobasilar territory; atypical amaurosis fugax and
52 ltidisciplinary approach to the patient with vertebrobasilar thrombosis can improve outcome.
53 e intervention and outcome in the therapy of vertebrobasilar thrombosis were reviewed.
54                              Atherosclerotic vertebrobasilar (VB) occlusive disease is a significant
55                                              Vertebrobasilar (VB) territory transient ischaemic attac