Opinion Article - Journal of Neurology and Neurorehabilitation Research (2022) Volume 7, Issue 2
Vascular and interventional neurology is announcing a new collaborative.
Chun Cheih*
Department of Urology, Hualien Tzu Chi Hospital, Buddhist Tzu Chi Medical Foundation and Tzu Chi University, Hualien, Taiwan
*Corresponding Author:
- Chun Cheih
Department of Urology Hualien Tzu Chi Hospital
Buddhist Tzu Chi Medical Foundation and Tzu Chi University
Hualien
Taiwan
E-mail: chuncheih@tzuchi.com.tw
Received: 14-Mar-2022, Manuscript No. AAJNNR-22-108; Editor assigned: 15-Mar-2022, Pre QC No. AAJNNR-22-108(PQ); Reviewed: 21-Mar-2022, QC No. AAJNNR-22-108; Revised: 24-Mar-2022, Manuscript No. AAJNNR-22-108(R); Published: 30-Mar-2022, DOI: 10.35841/aajnnr- 7.2.108
Citation: Cheih C. Vascular and interventional neurology is announcing a new collaborative. J Neurol Neurorehab Res. 2022;7(2):108
Introduction
Embolization and interventional techniques were always a crucial aspect of acute ischemic stroke. Angiography demonstrating moving emboli in stroke patients, pathognomonic for the diagnosis of arterial blockage with distant, backward auxiliary flow, was first described by Liebeskind. For decades, these angiographic abnormalities were the therapeutic goal of thrombolytic techniques before articles on effective based on inter therapies became available. In 2015, mechanical thrombectomy was approved as the primary treatment for acute ischemic stroke with major artery obstruction after another 20 years. Endovascular treatment and similar procedures have quickly become the emphasis for a wide range of cerebrovascular illnesses, and they are currently indicated in scientific proof policies. Featuring studies representing various levels of team science and multidisciplinary, real-world data on interventional stroke therapy, that interventional stroke literature has dramatically expanded. While Stroke continued to publish a number of high-quality studies from this developing field, many key interventional submissions were unable to be published, prompting a request for a new journal [1].
Interventional and vascular neurosurgery
Interventional techniques, procedures, and indications are rapidly evolving in the field of stroke, and such advancements will not be announced during an annual meeting. Interventional procedures have progressed from acute ischemic stroke to haemorrhagic diatheses, cerebral arterial and venous sores, and chronic management with revascularization for stroke prevention, tumour embolization, neuromodulation, cerebrospinal fluid manipulation, and a variety of neurological diseases Endovascular therapy consensus statements resulting from collaborations between academics, industry, and regulatory authorities must be widely disseminated and published. With computer science in endovascular therapy to machine learning for neuroimaging to virtual reality, robotics, and telemedicine in angiographic procedures, technology and innovation will surely continue to accelerate and flourish in various facets of interventional stroke care [2].
Interventional and vascular tomography in stroke
The magazine grew out of the multidisciplinary collaboration needed for better care provision, which includes no interventional vascular neurologists, anaesthesia, neurosurgery, interventional neuroradiology, nursing, and many other significant contributors to effective endovascular treatment in attack [3]. While Stroke will continue to examine interventional stroke manuscripts, the new paper's strong collaboration will speed up the process and ensure success. Whereas, being a historically descendent and subspecialty of neurologic organisations concerned in stroke, such as the American Academy of Neurology and the American Neurological Society. Vascular and Interventional Neurology must embrace new dimensions of stroke intervention, including active worldwide and varied engagement, not merely a global audience [4].
Discussion
Clinical, population-based, basic, and translational research on interventional, endovascular, medicinal, and surgical therapy of stroke and vascular disorders of the brain, spinal cord, head, and neck will be the emphasis of Neurology. Despite the fact here that field of interventional stroke medicine is quickly expanding in various places, where inequities abound, finances differ, and experience differ, a current journal will take these aspects into consideration [5].
Conclusion
A research of interventional neuroscience necessitates the publication of basic, translational, clinical, and population discoveries, as well as reports from cutting-edge clinical trials and the exchange of developing clinical experience on interventional therapy techniques. These comprises imaging and clinical management teams' research on minimally invasive and creative techniques to providing clinical, neuroendovascular, and neurosurgical care. Imagery, film illustrations, case analysis, novel procedures, angiographic anatomy, clinicopathological correlation, medicinal gadgets, technical advances, and review papers are all invited.
References
- Thompson A, Ciccarelli O. Towards treating progressive multiple sclerosis. Nat. Rev. Neurol. 2020
- Stoll G, Pham M. Beyond recanalization a call for action in acute stroke. Nat. Rev. Neurol. 2020
- Farrar MA, Kiernan MC. Spinal muscular atrophy the dawning of a new era. Nat. Rev. Neurol. 2020
- Lerche H. Drug-resistant epilepsy time to target mechanisms. Nat. Rev. Neurol. 2020
- Author A, Rafii MS, Aisen PS. The search for Alzheimer disease therapeutics same targets, better trials? Nat. Rev. Neurol. 202
Indexed at, Google Scholar, Crossref
Indexed at, Google Scholar, Crossref
Indexed at, Google Scholar, Crossref
Indexed at, Google Scholar, Crossref