Jeffrey Jim
Washington University in St. Louis
59 Papers
190 Citations
Jeffrey Jim is an academic researcher from Washington University in St. Louis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Aneurysm. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 54 publications.
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Papers
Results of the ROADSTER multicenter trial of transcarotid stenting with dynamic flow reversal
Christopher J. Kwolek,Michael R. Jaff,J. Ignacio Leal,L. Nelson Hopkins,Rasesh M. Shah,Todd M. Hanover,Sumaira Macdonald,Richard P. Cambria,Angel Flores,Ignacio Leal,Antonio Orgaz,Richard P. Cambria,Mark F. Conrad,Christopher J. Kwolek,Glenn M. LaMuraglia,Elad Levy,Adnan H. Siddiqui,Kenneth Snyder,Rasesh M. Shah,Christopher L. Stout,Mark P. Androes,Bruce H. Gray,Tod Hanover,Manny Mehta,Dawn M. Coleman,Enrique Criado,Katherine A. Gallagher,Vikram S. Kashyap,Russell A. Becker,Nitin Malhotra,Robert G. Molnar,Mahmoud B. Malas,Jim G. Melton,Brian G. DeRubertis,Wes Moore,William J. Quinones-Baldrich,Peter Morton,Jeffrey M. Apple,Mazin I. Foteh,Jeffrey Jim,Brian G. Rubin,Sam S. Ahn,Robert Feldtman,Kenneth Kollenmeyer,Daniel G. Clair,Sean P. Lyden,Edward Connolly,Philip M. Meyers,Nick Morrisey,Anthony Pucillo,Gary M. Ansel,Jefferson Lyons,Mitchell Silver,Michael Jaff,Daryl R. Gress,William A. Gray +55 more
TL;DR: The ROADSTER trial demonstrate that the use of the ENROUTE Transcarotid NPS is safe and effective at preventing stroke during CAS, and the overall stroke rate of 1.4% is the lowest reported to date for any prospective, multicenter clinical trial of CAS.
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Treatment and outcomes of aortic endograft infection
Matthew R. Smeds,Audra A. Duncan,Michael P. Harlander-Locke,Peter F. Lawrence,Sean P. Lyden,Javariah Fatima,Mark K. Eskandari,Sean P. Steenberge,Tadaki M. Tomita,Mark D. Morasch,Jeffrey Jim,Lewis C. Lyons,Kristofer M. Charlton-Ouw,Harith H. Mushtaq,Samuel S. Leake,Raghu L. Motaganahalli,Peter R. Nelson,Godfrey R. Parkerson,Sherene Shalhub,Paul Bove,Gregory Modrall,Victor J. Davila,Samuel R. Money,Nasim Hedayati,Ahmed M. Abou-Zamzam,Christopher J. Abularrage,Catherine M. Wittgen +26 more
TL;DR: Aortic endograft infection can be eradicated by excision and in situ or extra-anatomic replacement but is often associated with early postoperative morbidity and mortality and occasionally with a need for late removal for reinfection.
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A multi-institutional analysis of transcarotid artery revascularization compared to carotid endarterectomy.
Vikram S. Kashyap,Alexander H. King,Mazin I. Foteh,Matthew Janko,Jeffrey Jim,Raghu L. Motaganahalli,Jeffrey M. Apple,Saideep Bose,Norman H. Kumins +8 more
TL;DR: These early data suggest that patients undergoing TCAR, even those with high-risk comorbidities, achieve broadly similar outcomes compared with patients undergoing CEA while mitigating cranial nerve injury.
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Outcome-based anatomic criteria for defining the hostile aortic neck
William D. Jordan,Kenneth Ouriel,Manish Mehta,David Varnagy,William M. Moore,Frank R. Arko,James Joye,Jean-Paul P.M. de Vries,Jean-Paul P. M. de Vries,H.H. Eckstein,Joost A. van Herwaarden,Paul Bove,William T. Bohannon,Bram Fioole,Carlo Setacci,Timothy Resch,Vicente Riambau,Dierk Scheinert,Andrej Schmidt,Daniel G. Clair,Mohammed M. Moursi,Mark A. Farber,Joerg Tessarek,Giovanni Torsello,Mark F. Fillinger,Marc H. Glickman,John P. Henretta,Kim J. Hodgson,Jeffrey Jim,Barry T. Katzen,Evan C. Lipsitz,Mitchell W. Cox,Thomas C. Naslund,Venkatesh G. Ramaiah,Marc L. Schermerhorn,Peter Schneider,Benjamin W. Starnes,Carlos E. Donayre,Burkhart Zipfel,Nitin Malhotra,William T. Moore,Nicholas J.W. Cheshire,Colin Bicknell,Martin R. Back,Bart E. Muhs,Mahmoud B. Malas,Syed M. Hussain,NavYash Gupta,Dittmar Böckler,Eric L.G. Verhoeven,Michel M.P.J. Reijnen +50 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that anatomic measures with identifiable threshold cutpoints should be considered when defining the hostile aortic neck and assessing the risk of complications after EVAR, and a limited number of independent anatomic variables are predictive of type Ia endoleak after EVar.
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Population-based analysis of inpatient vascular procedures and predicting future workload and implications for training
TL;DR: There is a dramatic increase in the predicted vascular workload for the future, and the vascular surgery training process will need to adapt to ensure an adequate number of fellowship-trained vascular surgeons is available to provide quality vascular care in the future.
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