Shadowing-Übung: Balloon Angioplasty for Intracranial Atherosclerotic Stenosis - Englisch Sprechen Lernen mit YouTube

C2
[Automatically generated] From the JAMA  Network, this is JAMA Author Interviews.
⏸ Pausiert
86 Sätze
Wenn Sätze zu kurz oder zu lang sind, klicke auf Edit, um sie anzupassen.
1
[Automatically generated] From the JAMA  Network, this is JAMA Author Interviews.
2
Conversations with authors exploring  the latest clinical research, reviews, and opinion featured in JAMA.
3
Hello, I'm Dr. Christopher Muth, Deputy Editor at  JAMA, and I'm here today with Dr. Zhongrong Miao, Professor of Neurology at Beijing Tiantan Hospital  at Capital Medical University in Beijing, China.
4
We will be discussing an original research  article published in JAMA, and authored by Dr.
5
Miao and his colleagues titled, Balloon  Angioplasty versus Aggressive Medical Management for Symptomatic Intracranial Artery  Stenosis, the basis randomized clinical trial.
6
Thank you for joining us today, Dr. Miao.
7
Thank you. It's my pleasure.
8
I want to start by talking about  intracranial artery stenosis.
9
So can you tell us how common is intracranial  artery stenosis as a cause of transient ischemic attack or stroke, and what types of  symptoms do patients usually present with?
10
Thank you for your question.
11
ICAST is the most ischemic stroke  worldwide, especially in Asian population.
12
According to the Chinese intracranial  atherosclerotic study, the CCASA study, the prevalence of ICAST was nearly 15 percent.
13
Patients with ICAST had a more  severe stroke at the beginning and they stayed alone in hospitals compared  with those without intracranial stenosis.
14
In the ANGEL-ACT study, which was a national wide  prospective registry, including 1,793 consecutive large vessel occlusion patients treated with  EVT at 111 hospitals from 26 provinces in China.
15
The incidence of large vessel occlusion due to  underlying ICAST was 51 percent in posterior circulation and nearly 30 percent in  anterior circulation respectively.
16
Okay. So, as you say ICAST or intracranial  artery stenosis is certainly a fairly common problem in Asian patients, but  also I think in patients worldwide.
17
And I know it can be particularly  challenging to manage.
18
It's a very challenging condition.
19
Previous clinical trials have looked at  percutaneous transluminal angioplasty and stenting for the treatment  of intracranial stenosis.
20
These studies demonstrated either  harm or no benefit of angioplasty when combined with stenting, compared  with aggressive medical management alone.
21
In particular, the SAMPRAS trial over 10 years ago showed a higher stroke risk  early after the procedure.
22
And more recently, the CASIS study published  in JAMA in 2022 improved patient selection and operator training, but still showed  no benefit of stenting when looking at the primary composite endpoint of  stroke or death within 30 days or stroke in the qualifying artery  beyond 30 days through one year.
23
So the basis trial that we're  talking about today looked at balloon angioplasty, but without stenting.
24
So this is a little bit different  than some of the previous studies in the intracranial stenosis population.
25
Can you tell us about the rationale  for studying balloon angioplasty alone without stenting in this patient population?
26
The basis trial studied at the  end of 2017, after some pre- and visit studies.
27
The experimental group of some pre- and visit trial were balloon  dilation followed by the stenting.
28
For the some pre-trial, use  the self-expanding study, and the visit trial used the  balloon expanded stent respectively.
29
And both of them were under aggressive medical management was superior to  under-vascular treatment.
30
However, the subgroup analysis of some pre- and real-world studies all suggest  low risk of peri-acetyl completions, length stenting, and a high probability of  being effective for secondary stroke prevention.
31
During clinical practice, we found that balloon angioplasty may reduce the proper  rate of event arrest and complication.
32
Moreover, although balloon  angioplasty may not achieve complete revascularization as easily as stenting.
33
Additionally, balloon angioplasty along  with the dedicated intracranial balloon without stenting implantation, with  easy navigation and the technique.
34
And the short procedure  duration compared to stenting.
35
And so now to talk a little bit  about your particular study.
36
This was an open-label, randomized clinical  trial with blinded endpoint adjudication, with over 500 patients at over 30 sites in China.
37
Patients had to have a TIA or a stroke due to  intracranial vessel stenosis, and they were already receiving antithrombotic drugs and  or standard vascular risk factor management.
38
They also had to be at least 14  days out from a recent stroke, if that was the reason that  they qualified for the study.
39
And then they were randomized to  balloon angioplasty plus medical management versus medical management alone.
40
The composite primary outcome was  stroke or death within 30 days, or ischemic stroke or revascularization of the  qualifying artery from 30 days to one year.
41
Can you tell us what the main study findings were?
42
Impatients with symptomatic ICAS,  balloon angioplasty plus aggressive medical management compared with aggressive medical management alone significantly  lowered the risk of composite outcome.
43
The findings suggested that balloon  angioplasty plus medical management may be an effective treatment for symptomatic  ICAS, although the risk of stroke or death within 13 days of balloon angioplasty  should be considered in clinical practice.
44
Yes, as you mentioned, the rate of the  composite primary outcome occurred in 4.4% in the balloon angioplasty plus  medical management group compared with 13.5% in the medical management alone  group, with a hazard ratio of 0.32.
45
So that outcome was in favor  of the angioplasty group.
46
But as you mentioned, the composite included  risk of stroke or death within 30 days, and that occurred in 3.2% in the angioplasty group  versus 1.6% in the medical management alone group.
47
So at some level, do you see these  findings as sort of a trade-off between what might be perceived as an up-front  periprocedural risk related to the procedure, which may involve slightly increased  risk, but then perhaps a lower risk of stroke down the line due to secondary  stroke prevention from the intervention?
48
First, the doctors must have a very  experienced technique to try to decrease the risk of the manipulation  and the periprocedural complication.
49
Second, the result is a balloon  angiococci group of the balloon angiococci significantly decrease  the periprocedural complication and the risk low the thumb crease and the  visage and similar with the CASSIS trial.
50
The second day is the under-vascular  treatment improves the blood flow of the vessels to prevent the stroke risk.
51
Third day is the way to select  the high-risk patients to avoid the low-risk patients to treatment  with the under-vascular technique.
52
What are some of the more common or  important adverse events that were seen and how often did they occur in the study?
53
In the study, there were eight periprocedural  complications in 249 patients who were treated with alone angioplasty, many still are  perforating, infarction and bleeding from vessel rupture, including one case  of death caused by vessel rupture, which is the most serious procedure-related  risk during the periprocedure period.
54
And these risks do occur more often in centers  that are not skilled in operating techniques, including the management of  some post-dilation dissection.
55
It still requires more clinical experience,  and this is the area that needs more attention, and the most standardized training in the  operation of intracranial atherosclerosis.
56
I believe the rates of symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage were about 1.2 percent  in the balloon angioplasty group.
57
And then as you mentioned, the  experience of the clinician, the neurointerventionalist performing the  procedure seems to be quite important.
58
I'm wondering if you could talk about the training  of the proceduralists involved in this study, and how that might relate to the  generalizability of these findings from your study, and whether there might need  to be additional studies in other settings, different hospitals and different  patient populations to understand the generalizability of the findings,  and whether or not balloon angioplasty could be something that's done more routinely  for symptomatic intracranial artery stenosis.
59
Enrollment in the basis trial  was competitive enrollment.
60
Although more than half the  subjects were enrolled at one site.
61
It's our hospital, Beijing Tiantan Hospital.
62
The site has eight medical groups  to treat the symptomatic eye cuts.
63
The operators were different  among the eight medical groups.
64
However, each operator of all participating  centers performed more than 15 eye cuts procedures per year and received the interventional  operating training of Beijing Tiantan Hospital.
65
Whether it was the offline refresher training or  online operation training lectures, at the same time, most of them participated in the Tiantan  Hospital intracranial stenosis intervention registry study, which provided homogeneous  training on the management of the procedure.
66
The selection of the patients and  the clinical operation techniques.
67
And in addition, several academic conferences was conducted on intracranial balloon dilation  alone, especially patient selection, sub-satisfactory dilation concepts,  and the operation specifications.
68
And the Chinese consensus on  the interventional treatment of intracranial artery stenosis was  published during the study period, which detailed the concept of balloon  dilation alone and the operation details.
69
We believe that standardize the regular  training system, assessment system, and the consensus promotion will be a great  help in technical balance and standardization.
70
I would say that this is certainly an  important trial, testing the strategy of balloon angioplasty for treatment of patients  with symptomatic intracranial artery stenosis.
71
And although there is some  upfront risk to the procedure, the balloon angioplasty  group fared better overall.
72
It seems that these findings will  need to be confirmed in other populations and assessed when they're  performed by other interventionalists.
73
But overall, it seems that balloon angioplasty  may represent an important potential treatment strategy for this challenging condition  that can cause stroke and TIAs.
74
Do you have any final comments  for our listeners, Dr. Miao?
75
Okay, thank you very much.
76
In the more than 10 years since the publication  of this important study, our sample rates, there has been a better understanding of the  treatment of patients with ICARs, especially aggressive medical management, which is very  important for the second reprievation of ICARs.
77
The basis study is the first study  to find positive findings comparing endovascular treatment with  aggressive medical management.
78
We need to try our best to find  the patients who could benefit from endovascular treatment and to  perform more studies on different and new devices such as drug codeine  balloon or the drug eluting stent.
79
We believe that it is the new starting  point of endovascular treatment for ICARs.
80
More studies with positive findings  will be presented in the future.
81
Thank you very much.
82
I'm Dr. Christopher Muth and I've  been speaking with Dr. Zhongrong Miao about his article reporting the  results of the BASIS trial of balloon angioplasty for intracranial stenosis  that was recently published in JAMA.
83
You can find a link to the article  in this episode's description.
84
To follow this and other JAMA Network  podcasts, please visit us online at jamanetworkaudio.com or search for JAMA  Network wherever you get your podcasts.
85
This episode was produced by Shelly  Steffens at the JAMA Network.
86
Thanks for listening.

App herunterladen

KI-Bewertung für jeden gesprochenen Satz

TRENDING

Beliebt

Über diese Lektion

In dieser Lektion werden Sie wichtige medizinische Begriffe und Redewendungen rund um das Thema der ballonartigen Angioplastie bei intrakranieller Atherosklerose kennenlernen. Diese Lektion eignet sich hervorragend, um Ihr Englisch sprechen üben zu verbessern, insbesondere wenn Sie an medizinischen Themen interessiert sind. Durch das Üben von shadow speech können Sie nicht nur Ihr Hörverständnis, sondern auch Ihre Aussprache und Intonation verfeinern, während Sie dem Diskurs zwischen erfahrenen Ärzten folgen.

Wichtige Vokabeln & Phrasen

  • intracranial artery stenosis - intrakranielle Arterienstenose
  • transient ischemic attack - vorübergehender ischämischer Anfall
  • balloon angioplasty - ballonartige Angioplastie
  • medical management - medizinische Behandlung
  • primary composite outcome - primäres Komposit-Ergebnis
  • periprocedural risk - perioperatives Risiko
  • stroke prevention - Schlaganfallprävention
  • hazard ratio - Hazard Ratio

Übungstipps

Um Ihr Englisch Shadowing zu verbessern, empfehle ich, das Video mehrmals anzusehen. Achten Sie darauf, den Klang der Stimmen zu imitieren und die Intonation und den Rhythmus der Sprecher abzupassen. Beginnen Sie mit langsameren Abschnitten und wiederholen Sie dann schnellere Passagen, um Ihr Gehör und Ihre Sprechfähigkeit zu schulen. Nutzen Sie die Technik des shadowing, um sich mit medizinischem Vokabular vertraut zu machen und gleichzeitig an Ihrer Sprachflüssigkeit zu arbeiten. Wenn Sie feststellen, dass einige Phrasen schwierig sind, isolieren Sie sie und wiederholen Sie sie mehrfach, um Ihr Selbstvertrauen zu stärken.

Besuchen Sie eine shadowing site, um weitere Übungen zu finden, die Ihnen helfen, Ihre Fähigkeiten zu festigen. Es ist wichtig, regelmäßig zu üben und den Austausch mit anderen Lernenden zu suchen, um in einem unterstützenden Umfeld Englisch zu sprechen. Ihren Wortschatz zu erweitern und sicherer in der Konversation zu werden, wird Ihnen nicht nur für medizinische Themen, sondern auch in vielen Lebensbereichen zugutekommen.

Was ist die Shadowing-Technik?

Shadowing ist eine wissenschaftlich fundierte Sprachlerntechnik, die ursprünglich für die professionelle Dolmetscherausbildung entwickelt und durch den Polyglotten Dr. Alexander Arguelles populär gemacht wurde. Die Methode ist einfach aber wirkungsvoll: Du hörst englisches Audio von Muttersprachlern und wiederholst es sofort laut — wie ein Schatten, der dem Sprecher mit nur 1–2 Sekunden Verzögerung folgt. Anders als passives Hören oder Grammatikübungen zwingt Shadowing dein Gehirn und deine Mundmuskulatur, gleichzeitig echte Sprachmuster zu verarbeiten und zu reproduzieren. Studien zeigen, dass es Aussprachegenauigkeit, Intonation, Rhythmus, verbundene Sprache, Hörverständnis und Sprechflüssigkeit signifikant verbessert — was es zu einer der effektivsten Methoden für die IELTS Speaking-Vorbereitung und reale englische Kommunikation macht.

Kauf uns einen Kaffee