Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.Frequency and Determinants for Hemorrhagic Transformation of Cerebral Infarction
Valeria Terruso et al.
NEUROEPIDEMIOLOGY (2009)
Prior Statin Use, Intracranial Hemorrhage, and Outcome After Intra-Arterial Thrombolysis for Acute Ischemic Stroke
Niklaus Meier et al.
STROKE (2009)
Patterns and Predictors of Blood-Brain Barrier Permeability Derangements in Acute Ischemic Stroke
Oh Young Bang et al.
STROKE (2009)
Low Levels of Low-Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol Increase Hemorrhagic Transformation but Not Parenchimal Hematoma in Large Artery Atherothrombosisis
Maurizio Paciaroni et al.
STROKE (2009)
Low Level of Low-Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol Increases Hemorrhagic Transformation in Large Artery Atherothrombosis but Not in Cardioembolism
Beom Joon Kim et al.
STROKE (2009)
Lipid profile, statin use, and outcome after intravenous thrombolysis for acute ischaemic stroke
M. Uyttenboogaart et al.
JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY (2008)
Early hemorrhagic transformation of brain infarction: Rate, predictive factors, and influence on clinical outcome - Results of a prospective multicenter study
Maurizio Paciaroni et al.
STROKE (2008)
Cholesterol measured before stroke thrombolysis is not associated with tissue plasminogen activator-related hemorrhagic transformation
Joan Montaner
STROKE (2008)
Risk factors for intracerebral hemorrhage in a pooled prospective study
Jared D. Sturgeon et al.
STROKE (2007)
Prediction of hemorrhagic transformation after recanalization therapy using T2*-: Permeability magnetic resonance imaging
Oh Young Bang et al.
ANNALS OF NEUROLOGY (2007)
Initial microbleeds at MR imaging can predict recurrent intracerebral hemorrhage
Sang-Beom Jeon et al.
JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY (2007)
Cholesterol level and symptomatic hemorrhagic transformation after ischemic stroke thrombolysis
O. Y. Bang et al.
NEUROLOGY (2007)
Serum lipid levels and in-hospital mortality in patients with intracerebral hemorrhage
J Roquer et al.
NEUROLOGY (2005)
Low concentration of serum total cholesterol is associated with multifocal signal loss lesions on gradient-echo magnetic resonance imaging - Analysis of risk factors for multifocal signal loss lesions
SH Lee et al.
STROKE (2002)