26 results on '"Carlstrom, Lucas P."'
Search Results
2. Microvascular Decompression for Trigeminal Neuralgia Caused by Vascular Compression on the Trigeminal Sensory Nucleus and Descending Trigeminal Tract.
- Author
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Khaleghi, Mehdi, Carlstrom, Lucas P., Weber, Matthieu D., Biswas, Chandrima, Dalm, Brian, and Prevedello, Daniel
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NEURALGIA , *TRIGEMINAL neuralgia , *OROFACIAL pain , *LITERATURE reviews , *FACIAL pain , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *ANALGESIA - Abstract
Trigeminal neuralgia (TN) is characterized by paroxysmal episodes of severe shocklike orofacial pain typically resulting from arterial compression on the trigeminal root entry zone. However, neurovascular conflict in more proximal parts of the trigeminal pathway within the pons is extremely rare. The authors present a case of microvascular decompression for TN caused by dual arterial compression on the dorsolateral pons, along with a brief literature review. Our patient was a 74-year-old man with episodic left-sided facial stabbing pain. Brain magnetic resonance imaging revealed a dual arterial compression on dorsolateral pons, the known site of the trigeminal sensory nucleus and descending trigeminal tract. Microvascular decompression was performed via a retrosigmoid approach. Complete pain relief and partial improvement of the facial hypesthesia were achieved immediately after surgery and the Barrow Neurological Institute (BNI) pain intensity score improved from V to I, and the BNI hypesthesia score decreased from III to II within a month following surgery. The literature review identified 1 case of TN secondary to an arteriovenous malformation in root entry zone with lateral pontine extension. One month following partial coagulation of the draining vein, the patient was reportedly able to reduce medication dosage by half to achieve an improvement of BNI pain intensity score from V to IIIa. Neurovascular compression in the trigeminal tract and nucleus is a rare but potential cause of TN. A thorough investigation of the trigeminal pathway should be considered during preoperative evaluation and intraoperative inspection, particularly if no clear offending vessel is identified. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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3. Calcifying Pseudoneoplasm of the Neuraxis: An Institutional Series of Ten Cases and Review of the Literature to Date.
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Riviere-Cazaux, Cecile, Carlstrom, Lucas P., Eschbacher, Kathryn L., Raghunathan, Aditya, Graffeo, Christopher S., and Meyer, Fredric B.
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LITERATURE reviews , *NECK pain , *DISEASE relapse , *SURGICAL excision , *FACIAL pain , *PREVENTIVE medicine - Abstract
Calcified pseudoneoplasms of the neuraxis (CAPNONs) are rare, fibro-osseous lesions with an unknown cause that may present anywhere along the neuroaxis. Little is known about how intracranial CAPNONs present and about patients' long-term outcomes. A retrospective institutional review of intracranial pathology-confirmed CAPNONs was performed. Presenting clinical features, management, and clinical outcomes are highlighted. A literature review of intracranial CAPNON lesions was also performed to build on our series. Ten patients were identified who met the inclusion criteria. Most patients presented with headaches (n = 6; 60%), seizures (n = 5; 50.0%), and neck and facial pain (n = 3; 30.0%). Most lesions were supratentorial (n = 7; 70.0%), with 3 infratentorial origins. Surgical resection was the most common initial management undertaken (n = 7; 70.0%). No new permanent postoperative neurologic deficits were identified. The median clinical and/or radiographic follow-up for all patients was 6.8 years (range, 0.7–23.3 years), with no recurrence of disease for 5 patients who underwent gross total resection. Four of 5 patients with residual or nonresectable lesions showed no interval growth on radiographic follow-up; 1 patient showed progression and worsening of presenting symptoms 2 months after resection. Resection substantially improved seizures and headaches in patients presenting with these symptoms (80% and 83.3%, respectively). Intracranial CAPNONs may present with a wide variety of symptoms characteristic of the site of origin. The outcomes of these symptoms regarding survival and disease control are generally favorable, although resection does not always yield complete resolution of presenting deficits in certain patients, particularly those presenting with headaches or neck/facial pain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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4. Assessing the Impact of Shifting Enfolded Neurosurgery Fellowships to Follow the Chief Resident Experience: National Survey of Program and Fellowship Directors.
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Carlstrom, Lucas P., Millard, Kathryn, Daniels, David J., and Van Gompel, Jamie J.
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SCHOLARSHIPS , *NEUROSURGERY - Abstract
The neurosurgery chief resident year is traditionally completed during the final residency year; however, a recent directive decried that enfolded fellowships should be undertaken following completion of the chief experience for most fellowships. A national survey was distributed to U.S.-based neurosurgery residency/fellowship directors regarding these changes. We received 135 completed surveys (37% response rate). Respondents tended to feel the new post-chief enfolded fellowship mandate represented positive effects on residency training (58%) and chief experiences (54%)—overall, 47% agreed the changes are net positive, 17% neutral, and 36% negative. In addition, 66% respondents thought the enfolded fellowship was enhanced due to previous completion of the chief year. Most did not feel the directives had a negative impact on resident case minimums completion, total case volumes, or overall case mix during residency; but 64% felt it would reduce post-graduate training. Of those who said the mandate would reduce post-graduate training, 45% thought this would be positive. Throughout all questions, most respondents tended to feel strongly, although with little overall consensus across many of these questions. One area of relative agreement was a 60% preference to allow program discretion for chief/enfolded fellowship training timing—with 41% strongly supporting versus 15% strongly rejecting reversion to program-directed administration. Fervent bimodal opinions exist among residency program and fellowship directors regarding the directives for enfolded fellowships to follow successful completion of the chief resident experience. However, there was broad support for allowing greater program discretion for directing certain enfolded fellowship timing and structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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5. Streamlining the External Ventricular Drain and Intracranial Pressure Monitor Procedural Setup: A Quality Improvement Initiative.
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Rotter, Juliana, Carlstrom, Lucas P., Graffeo, Christopher S., Nesvick, Cody L., Gunnels, Marshall, Hellickson, Jodi D., Marcellino, Christopher, and Atkinson, John L.D.
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INTRACRANIAL pressure , *FISHBONE diagrams , *BRAIN injuries , *RESISTANCE to change , *CRITICAL care medicine , *CRITICALLY ill children - Abstract
External ventricular drain (EVD) and intracranial pressure (ICP) monitor placements are among the most common critical care procedures for severe brain injury. Quality improvement initiatives have streamlined similar processes. The aim of the project was to decrease the time to collect supplies for EVD or ICP monitor placement by 25% by April 1, 2021. The project followed the define-measure-analyze-improve-control 6 sigma framework. Several quality gaps were identified: equipment stored separately, delays in replacing faulty items, and wasted resources. The team defined the process using the suppliers-inputs-processes-outputs-customers + requirements method, measured time to collect supplies, and analyzed data with an Ishikawa/fishbone diagram. The improve phase included a kaizen burst to generate solutions and an impact/effort grid to evaluate options. The team concluded that the optimal plan was to stock a mobile EVD cart and an ICP monitor pole with disposable go-bags. The average time for nurses to collect EVD placement supplies decreased from 411 to 63 seconds (7–1 minute), and the average time for nurses to collect ICP monitor placement supplies decreased from 418 to 53 seconds (7–<1 minute). Residents decreased the time to obtain EVD placement supplies from 330 to 56 seconds (6–<1 minute) and ICP monitor supplies from 489 to 77 seconds (8–1 minute). Feedback was overwhelmingly positive and focused on improved process efficiency and reduced waste. The time reduction and enthusiasm are likely associated with the simplicity and comprehensiveness of the intervention design. Including key stakeholders in decision-making and succinct communications reduced resistance to change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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6. Too frail is to fail: Frailty portends poor outcomes in the elderly with type II odontoid fractures independent of management strategy.
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Carlstrom, Lucas P., Helal, Ahmed, Perry, Avital, Lakomkin, Nikita, Graffeo, Christopher S., and Clarke, Michelle J.
- Abstract
• Type-II odontoid fractures are common and highly morbid injuries among the elderly. • Frailty indices are emerging useful tools but require further study in spine trauma. • Frailty predicts mortality, independent of operative or non-operative management. Type-II odontoid fractures are common and highly morbid injuries, particularly among elderly patients. However, few risk stratification resources exist to predict outcomes and guide management decision making. Frailty indices have been increasingly utilized for these purposes in elective surgery, but have not been assessed for trauma. A single-center prospective trauma registry identified patients aged ≥ 80 years with type-II odontoid fractures. Frailty was the independent variable, using three independent indices: modified-5-item frailty (mFI-5), modified Charlson comorbidity (mCCI), and Davies. 97 patients had complete frailty data and sufficient follow up information, with median mIF-5 of 2 (range 0–4; 34 frail, mFI-5 > 2), median mCCI score of 6 (range 4–14), and median Davies score of 2 (range 0–7). For all indices, increasing score was associated with mortality, mIF-5 (HR = 1.76, 95%CI = 1.06–2.88), mCCI (HR = 1.10, 95%CI = 1.01–1.20), and Davies scores (HR = 1.21, 95%CI = 1.08–1.37). Median post-injury survival among patients with mIF-5 of ≤ 2 was 10-fold longer than patients with mIF-5 of > 2 (70 vs. 710 days, p = 0.0026). After adjusting for initial treatment strategy, frailty status remained an independent predictor of patient mortality; mIF-5 (HR = 1.72, 95%CI = 1.02–2.80), mCCI (HR = 1.10, 95%CI = 1.01–1.20), and Davies scores (HR = 1.21, 95%CI = 1.08–1.37). Among octogenarian patients with type-II odontoid fractures, frailty was associated with increased mortality, independent of treatment strategy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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7. The best neurosurgical non-required required reading: Social media.
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Shlobin, Nathan A., Carlstrom, Lucas P., and Graffeo, Christopher S.
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• Social media is important in neurosurgery. • We recommended a reading list on social media in neurosurgery. • Topics are history, challenges, opportunities, and pitfalls of a neurosurgeon's life online. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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8. Perioperative Tranexamic Acid for ACTH-Secreting Pituitary Adenomas: Implementation Protocol Results and Trial Prospectus.
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Graffeo, Christopher S., Carlstrom, Lucas P., Cohen, Salomon Cohen, Perry, Avital, Choby, Garret, and Van Gompel, Jamie J.
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PITUITARY tumors , *TRANEXAMIC acid , *ADRENOCORTICOTROPIC hormone , *BLOOD pressure , *PATIENT satisfaction - Abstract
Primary resection of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)-secreting pituitary adenoma has become a front-line standard-of-care treatment for Cushing disease. However, surgical intervention can be challenging because of elevated blood pressure, as well as direct cortisol impacts on endothelial cells, vascular permeability, and tissue friability—potentially resulting in increased intraoperative bleeding. Tranexamic acid (TXA) is a well-studied, widely used intravenous hemostatic; however, the potential benefit during resection of ACTH-secreting pituitary adenoma is unstudied. The purpose of this study was to define an institutional protocol for perioperative administration of TXA in patients undergoing endoscopic endonasal approach for resection of ACTH-secreting pituitary adenoma, and to study the implementation of our novel protocol in a prospective fashion. Criteria for preoperative TXA were defined by age, medical history, and risk factors. Descriptive statistics were reported for all patients receiving perioperative TXA. Thirty patients met inclusion criteria and underwent perioperative administration of TXA, using a standardized dosing protocol of a 10 mg/kg bolus in 30 minutes prior to incision, followed by maintenance infusion of 2 mg/kg/hour for the duration of the procedure. No incidence of myocardial infarction or postoperative thromboembolic events were noted. Subjective assessments indicated satisfaction with the patient selection protocol, and meaningful reduction in the extent of intraoperative bleeding. Perioperative TXA represents a potentially efficacious approach for control of intraoperative bleeding during endonasal resection of ACTH-secreting tumors. Careful preoperative patient selection is emphasized, given the potential for thromboembolic complications; however, initial experience with our institutional protocol suggests a favorable risk/benefit profile when this treatment is applied judiciously. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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9. Subarachnoid hemorrhage rebleeding in the first 24 h is associated with external ventricular drain placement and higher grade on presentation: Cohort study.
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Lu, Victor M., Graffeo, Christopher S., Perry, Avital, Carlstrom, Lucas P, Casabella, Amanda M., Wijdicks, Eelco F.M., Lanzino, Giuseppe, and Rabinstein, Alejandro A.
- Abstract
• Early rebleeding in first 24 h after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is poorly defined. • Extraventricular drain and higher SAH grade are significant predictors of early rebleeding. • Higher SAH grade prior to rebleeding is associated with unfavorable functional outcome. • Anticoagulation, aneursym size and location were not associated with early rebleeding. Rebleeding after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH) confers a poor prognosis; however, risk factors and differential outcomes associated with early rebleeding in the first 24 h after symptom presentation are incompletely understood. A retrospective cohort study of all aSAH presenting to our institution between 2001 and 2016 was performed. Early rebleeding events were defined as clinical neurologic decline with radiographically confirmed acute intracranial hemorrhage within 24 h after symptom presentation. Univariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses were used to assess clinical associations , with a specific focus on baseline Glasgow Coma Score (GCS), World Federation of Neurosurgical Societies (WFNS), and modified Fisher scores. Of 471 aSAH cases, 33 (7%) experienced early rebleeding. Multivariate regression identified extraventricular drain (EVD) placement (OR = 2.16, P = 0.04) and WFNS 3–5 (OR = 2.69, P = 0.02) as significant predictors of early rebleeding. Good functional outcomes were observed in 8 patients with early rebleeding (24%), all of whom underwent aneurysm treatment. Higher SAH grade prior to rebleeding (WFNS 3–5) was significantly associated with increased odds of an unfavorable functional outcome (OR = 8.09, P < 0.01). Anticoagulation, aneurysm size and location were not significantly associated with either early rebleeding incidence or functional outcome. Early rebleeding in aSAH is associated with unfavorable functional outcomes. EVD placement and higher SAH grade on presentation appear to be significantly and independently associated with increased risk of rebleeding within first 24 h, as well as unfavorable long-term functional outcome; however, the clinical benefit of hyper-acute aneurysm treatment requires further investigation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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10. Dark as night: Spelunking for spinal solitary fibrous tumors/hemangiopericytomas in the differential of T2 hypointensity.
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Carlstrom, Lucas P., Graffeo, Christopher S., Perry, Avital, Atkinson, John D., Lanzino, Giuseppe, Meyer, Fredric B., and Morris, Jonathan M.
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• T2 hypointensity may be a predictor of indolence in SFT/hemangiopericytomas. • T2 hypointense spinal lesions are rare, encompassing an array of diseases. • Review identified T2 hypointensity in 16 focal, 5 diffuse, and 4 mixed lesions. Spinal solitary fibrous tumor/hemangiopericytoma (SFT/HPC) is a rare mesenchymal malignancy. Radiographically, SFT/HPCs have a mutable appearance, with irregular borders, heterogeneous contrast enhancement, and variable but frequently hypointense T2 signal. We report a series of 5 neurosurgically managed spinal SFT/HPCs treated at our institution, with particular attention to 3 lesions demonstrating marked T2-hypointensity and differential diagnosis for the unusual finding of a "T2 dark" spinal lesion. Retrospective chart review of prospectively maintained surgical database, queried by diagnosis and site codes, 2002–2017. Retrospective radiographic review, with initial screening via keyword search of MR reports for "T2" and "hypointense." Four primary and one metastatic spinal SFT/HPCs were operatively treated during the study period (median follow-up 12 months; range 10–92). Three demonstrated marked T2 hypointensity on preoperative MRI, underwent primary resection—GTR in two, STR in one—and have remained progression-free on routine postoperative surveillance. Two patients with isointense lesions recurred within the follow-up period. Radiographic review identified a host of predominantly rare T2-hypointense lesions, including arteriovenous malformation, disk fragmentations, calcific arachnoiditis, calcifying pseudoneoplasm of the neuraxis, cavernoma, cord hemorrhage/acute blood, desmoid, granulocytic sarcoma, pigmented villonodular synovitis, Edheim-Chester, extramedullary hematopoiesis, IgG4-negative inflammatory pseudotumor, idiopathic hypertrophic pachymeningitis, B-cell lymphoma, primary melanoma neoplasm, melanotic schwannoma, meningioma, opacification of the posterior longitudinal ligament, osteoblastoma, osteochondroma, osteosarcoma, and synovial cyst. T2 hypointensity is associated with SFT/HPC, and may be an indicator relative indolence. "Dark" T2 spinal lesions are rare, with a narrow differential populated predominantly by rare entities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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11. Middle Meningeal Artery Aneurysm in a Giant Meningioma.
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Carlstrom, Lucas P., Peters, Pierce A., and Van Gompel, Jamie J.
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INTERNAL carotid artery , *MENINGIOMA , *ANEURYSMS , *ARTERIES , *INTRACRANIAL aneurysms , *FALSE aneurysms - Abstract
Nontraumatic perilesional aneurysms are thought to occur because of high-flow demands of feeding arteries and neoangiogenesis of hypervascular lesions, most commonly in vascular malformations, but they can rarely be associated with tumors as well. Most of these perilesional aneurysms are from intracranial vasculature associated with branches off the internal carotid artery. We report the unique case of a middle meningeal artery aneurysm associated with a giant convexity meningioma seen on a preoperative angiogram. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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12. Occult infratemporal fossa neurofibroma presenting with persistent unilateral tinnitus and middle ear effusion: More than meets the eye.
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Carlstrom, Lucas P, Van Abel, Kathryn M, Carlson, Matthew L, Moore, Eric J, and Stokken, Janalee K
- Abstract
Herein, we present the case of a previously healthy 54year-old female who developed several weeks of unilateral tinnitus and aural fullness. She subsequently underwent unilateral pressure equalization tube placement at an outside institution after exam demonstrated a middle ear effusion, conductive hearing loss and normal nasopharyngoscopy. Ultimately, an MRI revealed an occult mass in the infratemporal fossa (ITF), which was successfully removed via an endoscopic transnasal ITF approach. Following resection of a histopathologically confirmed benign neurofibroma, she reported complete resolution of her symptoms. The antiquated diagnostic algorithm of unilateral effusion suggests that normal nasopharyngscopy successfully "rules out" a causative neoplastic process; however, Eustachian tube occlusion by occult skull base lesions may be missed without further investigation. This case highlights the need for additional radiological investigation of unexplained unilateral persistent middle ear effusion in the setting of normal nasopharyngoscopy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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13. Differential Role of PTEN Phosphatase in Chemotactic Growth Cone Guidance.
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Henle, Steven J., Carlstrom, Lucas P., Cheever, Thomas R., and Henley, John R.
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PTEN protein , *PHOSPHATASES , *CHEMOTACTIC factors , *PHOSPHOINOSITIDES , *AXONS , *GENE expression , *XENOPUS laevis - Abstract
Negatively targeting the tumor suppressor and phosphoinositide phosphatase PTEN (phosphatase and tensin homologue) promotes axon regrowth after injury. How PTEN functions in axon guidance has remained unknown. Here we report the differential role of PTEN in chemotactic guidance of axonal growth cones. Down-regulating PTEN expression in Xenopus laevis spinal neurons selectively abolished growth cone chemorepulsion but permitted chemoattraction. These findings persisted during cAMP-dependent switching of turning behaviors. Live cell imaging using a GFP biosensor revealed rapid PTEN-dependent depression of phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate levels in the growth cone induced by the repellent myelin-associated glycoprotein. Moreover, down-regulating PTEN expression blocked negative remodeling of β1-integrin adhesions triggered by myelin-associated glycoprotein, yet permitted integrin clustering by a positive chemotropic treatment. Thus, PTEN negatively regulates growth cone phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate levels and mediates chemorepulsion, whereas chemoattraction is PTEN-independent. Regenerative therapies targeting PTEN may therefore suppress growth cone repulsion to soluble cues while permitting attractive guidance, an essential feature for re-forming functional neural circuits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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14. A Puzzling Exam: Kernohan's Notch Reimaged.
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Carlstrom, Lucas P., Perry, Avital, Puffer, Ross C., Graffeo, Christopher S., Reuter, Peter J., Fogelson, Jeremy L., and Wijdicks, Eelco F.
- Abstract
• We provide a visual image of the consequeces of massive brainstem shift with oculomotor and peduncle injury. • Acute space occupying lesions may cause ipsilateral hemiparesis – and can be a false localizing sign. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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15. Welcome to #MikesCrew: Strategies for Building a Successful Resident Research Collaboration.
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Perry, Avital, Carlstrom, Lucas P., and Graffeo, Christopher S.
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TELECOMMUNICATION systems - Published
- 2020
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16. No Article an Island: Letter in Response to "Social Media in Neurosurgery: Using ResearchGate".
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Graffeo, Christopher S., Carlstrom, Lucas P., and Perry, Avital
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SOCIAL media , *MASS media use , *ESTIMATION bias - Published
- 2019
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17. Geographic Distribution of International Medical Graduate Residents in U.S. Neurosurgery Training Programs.
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Scheitler, Kristen M., Lu, Victor M., Carlstrom, Lucas P., Graffeo, Christopher S., Perry, Avital, Daniels, David J., and Meyer, Fredric B.
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RESIDENTS (Medicine) , *NEUROSURGERY , *FOREIGN physicians , *DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics - Abstract
Neurosurgery residency in the United States is highly sought after by many international medical graduates (IMGs), and the geographic distribution of IMG candidates who have successfully matched has not been quantitatively explored to date. The aim of this study was to highlight the countries in which successfully matched IMG residents obtained their medical degrees and the states of their respective residency destinations. All available resident lists of approved neurosurgical residency programs within the United States with at least 7 years of history were reviewed for IMGs in the most currently updated rosters. Demographic and geographic characteristics were summarized. A total of 1393 current neurosurgical residents in U.S. residency programs were identified from 99 programs across 39 states. Of 1393 residents, 87 were IMGs (6%). The IMG contingent originated from 39 countries, the most common of which was Lebanon (n = 14/87 [16%]). The Middle East was the most represented geographic region (n = 23/87 [26%]). The states with the highest number of IMGs were Kentucky, New York, and Texas (all n = 7/87 [8%]). IMGs constitute a small but appreciable portion of current neurosurgical residents in U.S. training programs. Particular countries have contributed more IMGs to neurosurgical programs than others, and particular states have higher counts and proportions of IMG residents than others. These outcomes are not geographically homogeneous, and the mechanisms by which IMG applicants successfully match to U.S. neurosurgery programs require more biographic granularity to elucidate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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18. Improvements in the Endoscopic Transsphenoidal Resection of Craniopharyngiomas: A Global Learning Curve.
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Webb, Kevin L., Pruter, Wyatt W., Hinkle, Mickayla L., Daniels, David J., Carlstrom, Lucas P., and Walsh, Michael T.
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GLOBAL method of teaching , *ENDOSCOPIC surgery , *CRANIOPHARYNGIOMA , *CEREBROSPINAL fluid leak , *HUMAN Development Index , *TRANSURETHRAL prostatectomy - Abstract
Surgical management of craniopharyngiomas is nuanced and has varied in terms of the selected approach and aggressiveness of resection over time. In the past several decades, the endoscopic transsphenoidal approach has become commonly used for craniopharyngioma resection. There is a well characterized institutional 'learning curve' regarding endoscopic transsphenoidal approaches for craniopharyngiomas at specialized centers; however, the broader global learning curve remains to be characterized. Clinical outcome data following endoscopic transsphenoidal craniopharyngioma resection were obtained from a previously published meta-analysis, including data published during or after the year 1990. Additionally, the year of publication, the country where procedures were performed, and the human development index of the country at time of publication were abstracted. Meta-regressional analyses were used to determine the significance of year and human development index as a covariate of the logit event rate of clinical outcomes. Statistical analyses were performed using the Comprehensive Meta-Analysis with a priori significance set as P < 0.05. A total of 100 studies (8230 patients) were examined, representing data from 19 countries. There was a significant increase in the achieved gross total resection rate (P = 0.0002) and a decrease in the achieved partial resection rate (P < 0.0001) across the time studied. Additionally, the rate of visual worsening (P = 0.025), postoperative cerebrospinal fluid leaks (P = 0.007), and development of meningitis (P = 0.032) decreased across time. This work suggests the existence of a global learning curve when examining clinical outcomes following endoscopic transsphenoidal craniopharyngioma resection. Globally, these findings highlight a general improvement in clinical outcomes across time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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19. The Early Bird Gets the Worm: Introducing Medical Students to Microsurgical Technique via a Low-Cost, User-Friendly, Reusable Simulation System.
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Jensen, Michael A., Bhandarkar, Archis R., Riviere-Cazaux, Cecile, Bauman, Megan M.J., Wang, Kimberly, Carlstrom, Lucas P., Graffeo, Christopher S., and Spinner, Robert J.
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MEDICAL students , *SURGICAL equipment , *SIMULATION methods & models , *MICROSURGERY , *WORMS - Abstract
Mastery of microsurgical technique requires thousands of hours of deliberate practice, often with equipment that is not accessible to medical students. This study aimed to develop, test, and report a novel simulation system for providing medical students with early access to microsurgical technique. Low-cost, user-friendly, reusable microsurgery kits were iteratively developed using excess surgical supplies, such as catheter tubing and vessel loops. Students were tested on 2 separate tasks, with grading via a standardized performance scale incorporating aspects of alignment, leak, and anastomotic patency. Twelve medical students were tested on standardized microsurgery kits at 2 different time points 6 weeks apart with no additional training received in between. Median change in total score on the vessel loop suturing task after 6 weeks was +2.6 points (range, −1.7 to +5 points); median change in completion time was −1.9 minutes (range, −3.5 to +2.7 minutes). Median change in total score on the red rubber anastomosis task was +5.8 points (range, −2.6 to +9.6 points) with a median improvement of −4.3 minutes (range, −9.6 to +2.6 minutes). Reusable microsurgery kits designed with excess surgical supplies are educationally impactful tools that introduce medical students to microsurgical techniques early in their training, while also providing objective measures for skills acquisition over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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20. Identifying the Geographic Profile of International Visitors to the United States for Neurosurgical Education: A Single Institution's Experience.
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Lu, Victor M., Scheitler, Kristen, Perry, Avital, Graffeo, Christopher S., Carlstrom, Lucas P., Daniels, David J., and Meyer, Fredric B.
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INTERNATIONAL visitors , *EDUCATION policy , *MEDICAL students , *GRADUATE students , *CHI-squared test , *EXCHANGE of persons programs - Abstract
Departments of neurosurgery in the United States have had a long history of hosting international visitors for the advancement of their neurosurgical education. The goal of the present study was to determine the existence of a geographic profile of international visitors for education purposes, both students and graduates, to the United States through the anecdotal experience of 1 department to explore the reach and worth of hosting such opportunities. Administrative records were retrospectively reviewed for international visitors over the preceding 10 years, 2009–2019, were surveyed at 1 institution. Visitors were grouped as either medical students or graduates, visiting for clinical or research purposes. Geographic trends were compared using the Pearson chi-squared test. We identified 128 visitors from 33 countries during the study period. The most common home countries were Italy (10%), China (9%), and India (7%). The cohort involved 62 (48%) students and 66 (52%) graduates, and 59 (46%) and 69 (54%) visited for clinical and research purposes, respectively. The geographic distribution of student versus graduate visitors was statistically significant by region (P < 0.01). However, the geographic distribution of clinical versus research visitors was not statistically different by region (P = 0.62). There appears to be international appeal worldwide to participate in neurosurgical education in the United States. At our institution, every geographic region was represented in our most recent decade of experience. International visitor profiles appear to be associated with particular geographic patterns depending on their status as either a medical student or graduate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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21. Beyond the Learning Curve: Comparison of Microscopic and Endoscopic Incidences of Internal Carotid Injury in a Series of Highly Experienced Operators.
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Perry, Avital, Graffeo, Christopher S., Meyer, Jenna, Carlstrom, Lucas P., Oushy, Soliman, Driscoll, Colin L.W., and Meyer, Fredric B.
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INTERNAL carotid artery , *PITUITARY tumors , *SKULL base , *WOUNDS & injuries - Abstract
As the endoscopic endonasal approach (EEA) has gained popularity as an alternative to microsurgery (MS) for transsphenoidal resection (TSR), numerous studies have attempted to assess the differential risk of internal carotid artery (ICA) injury between the techniques, yet results have been equivocal and contradictory. The aim of this study was to evaluate ICA injury in MS versus EEA among highly experienced neurosurgeons. We performed a systematic literature review of publications from 2002–2017 reporting ICA injury outcomes in ≥250 cases using MS or EEA. Seventeen series reporting 11,149 patients were included: 3 MS series, 13 EEA series, and 1 series with adequate samples for each. ICA injury incidences were 0.0%–1.6% in cohorts of 275–3000. MS series documented 5 ICA injuries in 2672 operations, for an overall incidence of 0.2% (range, 0.0%–0.4%), and EEA series reported 30 ICA injuries in 8477 operations, for a 0.4% injury rate (range, 0.0%–1.6%); the difference was nonsignificant (P = 0.25). Increased operative experience was associated with decreased incidence of ICA injury, a finding preserved in the overall study cohort and within discretely examined MS and EEA subgroups (overall r 2 = 0.08, MS r 2 = 0.23, EEA r 2 = 0.07). ICA injury is the most serious complication of TSR of pituitary neoplasms. Operator inexperience may be a more important risk factor than choice of surgical technique, given the comparably low rates of injury obtained by highly experienced surgeons independent of technique. This emphasizes the need for consolidated care in pituitary centers of excellence, improvement of high-fidelity simulators, and skull base mentorship between senior and junior staff. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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22. Small Stories: In Defense of the Humble Case Report.
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Graffeo, Christopher S., Perry, Avital, Carlstrom, Lucas P., Copeland, William R., Van Abel, Kathryn M., and Link, Michael J.
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FICTION - Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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23. Emergent Decompression of Intracranial Abscess in Eisenmenger Syndrome.
- Author
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Casabella, Amanda Munoz, Perry, Avital, Graffeo, Christopher S., Marcellino, Christopher R., Carlstrom, Lucas P., and Rabinstein, Alejandro A.
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EISENMENGER syndrome , *BRAIN abscess , *VENTRICULAR septal defects , *CONGENITAL heart disease , *PULMONARY hypertension , *STEREOTAXIC techniques , *CYANOSIS - Abstract
Eisenmenger syndrome is a rare sequela of uncorrected congenital heart disease complicated by pulmonary hypertension, from which reversal of the pathologic left-to-right cardiovascular shunt and cyanosis follow. Right-to-left shunting can lead to paradoxical cerebral emboli—increasing the risk of spontaneous or iatrogenic stroke and cerebral abscess. A 38-year-old man presented with new focal seizures due to a brain abscess. Ventricular septal defect and pulmonary hypertension were identified. Despite dexamethasone and broad-spectrum antibiotics, he developed hemiparesis and altered mental status and required emergent stereotactic abscess drainage. Despite the anesthetic hazards of Eisenmenger syndrome, the procedure was successful and the patient recovered completely. Noncardiac perioperative mortality in Eisenmenger syndrome is historically reported up to 19%, and risks are further increased with prolonged case duration or hypotension, mandating vigilant attention to volume status. Correspondingly, shorter- or lower-risk procedures such as stereotactic drainage are recommended. Procedures should be performed only at centers with expertise in management of Eisenmenger syndrome and cardiac-specialized anesthesiologists whenever possible. Although a conservative approach with early, aggressive medical management is preferred, operative intervention may be required in the setting of progressive deterioration and excellent postoperative outcomes are achievable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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24. Little Insights from Big Data: Cerebrospinal Fluid Leak After Skull Base Surgery and the Limitations of Database Research.
- Author
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Perry, Avital, Kerezoudis, Panagiotis, Graffeo, Christopher S., Carlstrom, Lucas P., Peris-Celda, Maria, Meyer, Fredric B., Bydon, Mohamad, and Link, Michael J.
- Subjects
- *
SKULL surgery , *SKULL base , *CEREBROSPINAL fluid , *BIG data , *OBSTRUCTIVE lung diseases , *TRIGEMINAL neuralgia - Abstract
Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leak is a frustrating complication of skull base surgery. Published methodologies using national surgical databases to assess CSF leak have not accounted for variability between skull base operations. Our goal was to attempt the development of a novel framework for adapting big data techniques to skull base surgery and assess the reliability of corresponding data manipulations. A retrospective nested case-control analysis was performed using patients from the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP) registry, 2012–2015. Current Procedural Terminology and International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision codes identified possible skull base operations, which were systematically grouped by anatomic location. Meningioma, schwannoma, pituitary adenoma, and trigeminal neuralgia (TN) were included. Of 2918 patients, 84 (2.9%) were readmitted/reoperated on within 30 days for CSF leak. Operations involving the anterior fossa, both middle/posterior fossas in 1 approach, or the orbitocranial zygomatic approach were significantly associated with CSF leak, as were schwannomas and meningiomas in any location (8.5%, 3.1%, 10.2%, 4.1%, and 3.0%; all P < 0.0001). Multivariate analysis of only middle/posterior fossa lesions identified schwannoma (odds ratio [OR], 2.7; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.3–5.6; P = 0.008), TN (OR, 5.4; 95% CI, 2–14.7; P = 0.008), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (OR, 3.9; 95% CI, 1.1–14; P = 0.03), and increased operative time (OR, 4.0; 95% CI, 1.7–9.5; P = 0.009) as significant CSF leak risk factors. Based on NSQIP data analyzed using a rational skull base/anatomic framework, risk factors for postoperative CSF leak include chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, operative time, anterior fossa meningioma, and middle/posterior fossa schwannoma or TN. Although databases such as NSQIP can be extensively manipulated to generate surrogate results that may provide limited insight, applications beyond their design should be approached carefully. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Fusion, Failure, Fatality: Long-term Outcomes After Surgical Versus Nonoperative Management of Type II Odontoid Fracture in Octogenarians.
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Perry, Avital, Graffeo, Christopher S., Carlstrom, Lucas P., Chang, Wendy, Mallory, Grant W., Puffer, Ross C., and Clarke, Michelle J.
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SPINAL injuries , *BACK injuries , *VERTEBRAL fractures , *COMPRESSION fractures , *SPINAL instability - Abstract
Background Type II odontoid fracture is a highly morbid injury among octogenarians, with 41% 1-year mortality. Our objective was to assess long-term fusion, complication, and survival rates. Methods Retrospective review of prospective trauma registry and blinded review of follow-up radiographs. Results Follow-up cohort included 94 nonoperative and 17 operative patients (median, 52 and 79 months). The operative group had significantly higher rates of repeated surgery for primary treatment failure or complication (1% vs. 18%; P = 0.01) and dysphagia, aspiration events, or tracheostomy (29% vs. 78%, P = 0.002; 6% vs. 30%, P = 0.04; 1% vs. 18%, P = 0.01). Three-year all-cause mortalities were 71% and 76%, respectively ( P = 0.78). No delayed myelopathy was observed. One-year postinjury radiographs were available for 13 and 6 patients in the nonoperative and operative groups ( P = 0.9); bony union was observed in 3 and 5 patients (23% vs. 83%; P = 0.04). Retrolisthesis greater than 2 mm was observed in 2 and 1 patients (15% vs. 17%; P = 1.0). Two patients in the operative group underwent repeated surgery for primary treatment failure. Dysphagia was diagnosed in 3 and 5 operative patients (23% vs. 83%; P = 0.04), whereas aspiration events occurred in 0 and 3 patients (0% vs. 50%; P = 0.02). Three-year mortalities in this cohort were 38% and 67% ( P = 0.35). Conclusions Radiographic union is significantly associated with operative management, but the corresponding clinical benefit is unclear. Complications were significantly more common after surgery. Long-term survival in octogenarians following type II odontoid fracture is poor, independent of management. Frequent complications without a proven survival benefit suggest that most patients are better managed conservatively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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26. Acute Sialadenitis After Skull Base Surgery: Systematic Review and Summative Practice Recommendations.
- Author
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Naylor, Ryan M., Graffeo, Christopher S., Ransom, Ryan C., Carlstrom, Lucas P., May, Matthew M., Carlson, Matthew L., and Van Gompel, Jamie J.
- Subjects
- *
SKULL base , *SKULL surgery , *SIALADENITIS , *SUBMANDIBULAR gland , *RESPIRATORY obstructions , *TRACHEOTOMY , *PATIENTS' attitudes - Abstract
Sialadenitis is a rare complication of skull base neurosurgery, in which the submandibular gland undergoes acute inflammation with edema after surgery. Although attributable to transient obstruction or manual compression, presentation may be rapidly life-threatening as a result of airway obstruction. Understanding risk factors is limited at present, and no practical management guidelines have been reported. Our objective was to survey the literature and to characterize the associated risk factors, treatment considerations, and overall trends in outcomes for patients experiencing post skull base neurosurgery sialadenitis. A search of the Ovid EMBASE, SCOPUS, and PubMed databases from inception through August 2020 was performed via Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. Systematic review identified 13 publications describing 18 cases of acute sialadenitis after skull base surgery. We describe the 19th reported case. Commonalities include the need for aggressive respiratory support as intubation or emergent tracheostomy is almost universally required. Risk factors are poorly understood but may include extreme flexion and/or rotation of the head and neck. Outcomes are favorable overall, although secondary complications have been described. Sialadenitis is a rare but potentially life-threatening complication of skull base neurosurgery, owing to acute loss of airway and the potential for a diverse array of secondary complications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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