Eric Aldrich
Johns Hopkins University
9 Papers
2 Citations
Eric Aldrich is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Stroke & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 9 publications. Previous affiliations of Eric Aldrich include Howard County General Hospital.
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Papers
Local intraarterial fibrinolysis administered in aliquots for the treatment of central retinal artery occlusion: The Johns Hopkins hospital experience
Eric Aldrich,Andrew Lee,Celia S. Chen,Rebecca F. Gottesman,Mona N. Bahouth,Phillipe Gailloud,Kieran Murphy,Robert J. Wityk,Neil R. Miller +8 more
TL;DR: LIF administered in aliquots is associated with an improvement in visual acuity compared with standard therapy and has few side effects.
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•Journal Article
Combined stent placement and thrombolysis in acute vertebrobasilar ischemic stroke.
Doris D. M. Lin,Philippe Gailloud,Norman J. Beauchamp,Eric Aldrich,Robert J. Wityk,Kieran Murphy +5 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that, in the setting of acute stroke, stent placement in combination with revascularization and thrombolysis is practical and allows quick access to a clot and simultaneously increases perfusion through collaterals during the throm bolytic process.
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Neural Correlates of Modality-specific Spatial Extinction
Argye E. Hillis,Shannon Chang,Jennifer Heidler-Gary,Melissa Newhart,Jonathan T. Kleinman,Cameron Davis,Peter B. Barker,Eric Aldrich,Lynda Ken +8 more
TL;DR: Results demonstrated that tactile extinction is associated with inferior parietal dysfunction, and visual extinction isassociated with dysfunction of the visual association cortex.
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Clinical characteristics and outcome of current standard management of central retinal artery occlusion
TL;DR: This study aims to investigate the visual outcomes in acute central retinal artery occlusion (CRAO) with current standard therapy at two university teaching hospitals.
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Isolated Posterior Cerebral Artery Dissection: Report of Three Cases
TL;DR: In 2 patients, an association with minor axial head trauma was documented, suggesting shearing injury of the PCA as it crosses over the free edge of the tentorium.
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