Filtered By:
Specialty: Neurosurgery
Source: Journal of Neurosurgery

This page shows you your search results in order of date.

Order by Relevance | Date

Total 581 results found since Jan 2013.

Long-term outcomes after conservative and EDAS treatment for 111 elderly patients with moyamoya disease: longitudinal and cross-sectional study
CONCLUSIONS: The postoperative long-term stroke rate among elderly patients with MMD was lower in the EDAS group than in the conservative treatment group. Long-term stroke events were associated with advanced age, aneurysm, and initial ischemia after conservative treatment and only initial hemorrhage after EDAS.PMID:37724788 | DOI:10.3171/2023.7.JNS231060
Source: Journal of Neurosurgery - September 19, 2023 Category: Neurosurgery Authors: Jing-Jie Li Xiao-Peng Wang Qian-Nan Wang Xiang-Yang Bao Qing-Bao Guo Zi-Qing Kong Gan Gao Min-Jie Wang Si-Meng Liu He-Guan Fu Qian Zhang Lian Duan Source Type: research

Emergency decompressive surgery in patients with transtentorial brain herniation and pupillary abnormalities: the importance of improved pupillary response after osmotherapy and surgery
CONCLUSIONS: With aggressive medical and surgical management, patients with transtentorial brain herniation, including those with bilaterally fixed and dilated pupils, may have considerable rates of survival and functional recovery. Young age, less midline shift, and improved pupillary response following osmotic therapy or decompressive surgery are favorable prognosticators.PMID:37548576 | DOI:10.3171/2023.5.JNS23163
Source: Journal of Neurosurgery - August 7, 2023 Category: Neurosurgery Authors: Daniel W Griepp Aaron Miller Sahar Sorek Komal Naeem Stephanie Moawad David Klein Joseph A DeMattia Ralph Rahme Source Type: research

Traumatic vertebral artery injury: Denver grade, bilaterality, and stroke risk. A systematic review and meta-analysis
CONCLUSIONS: VAI complicates a small yet nontrivial fraction of blunt trauma cases, with Denver grade IV lesions being the most common. This is the first study to document a significantly higher stroke prevalence among grade III and IV VAIs compared with grade I and II VAIs independently from bilaterality. Bilateral VAIs carry a significantly higher stroke rate.PMID:37548568 | DOI:10.3171/2023.5.JNS222818
Source: Journal of Neurosurgery - August 7, 2023 Category: Neurosurgery Authors: Giorgos D Michalopoulos Zach Pennington Peter Bambakidis A Yohan Alexander Nikita Lakomkin Charalampos Charalampous Sally El Sammak Leslie C Hassett Stephen Graepel Fredric B Meyer Mohamad Bydon Source Type: research

Emergency decompressive surgery in patients with transtentorial brain herniation and pupillary abnormalities: the importance of improved pupillary response after osmotherapy and surgery
CONCLUSIONS: With aggressive medical and surgical management, patients with transtentorial brain herniation, including those with bilaterally fixed and dilated pupils, may have considerable rates of survival and functional recovery. Young age, less midline shift, and improved pupillary response following osmotic therapy or decompressive surgery are favorable prognosticators.PMID:37548576 | DOI:10.3171/2023.5.JNS23163
Source: Journal of Neurosurgery - August 7, 2023 Category: Neurosurgery Authors: Daniel W Griepp Aaron Miller Sahar Sorek Komal Naeem Stephanie Moawad David Klein Joseph A DeMattia Ralph Rahme Source Type: research

Traumatic vertebral artery injury: Denver grade, bilaterality, and stroke risk. A systematic review and meta-analysis
CONCLUSIONS: VAI complicates a small yet nontrivial fraction of blunt trauma cases, with Denver grade IV lesions being the most common. This is the first study to document a significantly higher stroke prevalence among grade III and IV VAIs compared with grade I and II VAIs independently from bilaterality. Bilateral VAIs carry a significantly higher stroke rate.PMID:37548568 | DOI:10.3171/2023.5.JNS222818
Source: Journal of Neurosurgery - August 7, 2023 Category: Neurosurgery Authors: Giorgos D Michalopoulos Zach Pennington Peter Bambakidis A Yohan Alexander Nikita Lakomkin Charalampos Charalampous Sally El Sammak Leslie C Hassett Stephen Graepel Fredric B Meyer Mohamad Bydon Source Type: research

Emergency decompressive surgery in patients with transtentorial brain herniation and pupillary abnormalities: the importance of improved pupillary response after osmotherapy and surgery
CONCLUSIONS: With aggressive medical and surgical management, patients with transtentorial brain herniation, including those with bilaterally fixed and dilated pupils, may have considerable rates of survival and functional recovery. Young age, less midline shift, and improved pupillary response following osmotic therapy or decompressive surgery are favorable prognosticators.PMID:37548576 | DOI:10.3171/2023.5.JNS23163
Source: Journal of Neurosurgery - August 7, 2023 Category: Neurosurgery Authors: Daniel W Griepp Aaron Miller Sahar Sorek Komal Naeem Stephanie Moawad David Klein Joseph A DeMattia Ralph Rahme Source Type: research

Traumatic vertebral artery injury: Denver grade, bilaterality, and stroke risk. A systematic review and meta-analysis
CONCLUSIONS: VAI complicates a small yet nontrivial fraction of blunt trauma cases, with Denver grade IV lesions being the most common. This is the first study to document a significantly higher stroke prevalence among grade III and IV VAIs compared with grade I and II VAIs independently from bilaterality. Bilateral VAIs carry a significantly higher stroke rate.PMID:37548568 | DOI:10.3171/2023.5.JNS222818
Source: Journal of Neurosurgery - August 7, 2023 Category: Neurosurgery Authors: Giorgos D Michalopoulos Zach Pennington Peter Bambakidis A Yohan Alexander Nikita Lakomkin Charalampos Charalampous Sally El Sammak Leslie C Hassett Stephen Graepel Fredric B Meyer Mohamad Bydon Source Type: research

Timing of microsurgical resection for ruptured brain arteriovenous malformations: a propensity score-matched analysis using prospective single-center registry data
CONCLUSIONS: Early and delayed resection of ruptured AVMs had similar long-term neurological outcomes. Delayed resection can lead to a higher complete obliteration rate, although the risk of rerupture during the resection waiting period should be vigilantly monitored.PMID:37439476 | DOI:10.3171/2023.5.JNS222666
Source: Journal of Neurosurgery - July 13, 2023 Category: Neurosurgery Authors: Yukun Zhang Yu Chen Heze Han Li Ma Ruinan Li Zhipeng Li Debin Yan Haibin Zhang Kexin Yuan Ke Wang Yang Zhao Weitao Jin Hengwei Jin Xiangyu Meng Runting Li Fa Lin Qiang Hao Hao Wang Xun Ye Shuai Kang Dezhi Gao Shibin Sun Ali Liu Youxiang Li Xiaolin Chen Sh Source Type: research