20 results on '"Ahmed Toma"'
Search Results
2. Prognostic Significance Of Cerebrospinal Fluid Production Rate In Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension & Cerebrospinal Fluid Leak And The Impact Of Medical Therapy
- Author
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Kanza Tariq, Ahmed Toma, Sogha Khawari, Lewis Thorne, and Laurence Watkins
- Subjects
Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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3. Theophylline, a drug efficient to increase intracranial pressure. Case report and review of literature
- Author
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Aoife Curran, Ahmed Toma, Laurence Watkins, and Lucia Darie
- Subjects
Intracranial pressure ,Theophylline ,Hydrocephalus ,Low pressure CSF states ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Introduction: Limited information is available regarding the direct effect of drugs prescribed to elevate intracranial pressure (ICP) in contrast to the abundance of evidence in support of medication utilized to lower ICP. Theophylline is a methylxanthine derivate used in the treatment of respiratory diseases with only a few randomized control trials or case reports describing pain improvement in low CSF pressure states or spontaneous intracranial hypotension (SIH). We present the case of a recorded increase in intracranial pressure under theophylline. Case report: A 23-year-old female with a complex history of hydrocephalus and syringomyelia was experiencing debilitating symptoms due to refractory intracranial hypotension. Medical management with oral theophylline was attempted for a period of three months. Intracranial pressure measurements were obtained via the telemetric pressure sensor reservoir (Miethke®, M.scio®) incorporated in the patient's ventriculoperitoneal shunt system. Results: A significant increase in intracranial pressure was recorded at therapeutic drug levels. Conclusion: This is the first report of an increase in intracranial pressure under oral theophylline medication.
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- 2023
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4. Novel telemetric pressure monitoring in lumbar theca
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Sogha Khawari, Kanza Tariq, Lucia Darie, Eleanor Moncur, Ahmed Toma, and Laurence Watkins
- Subjects
Lumboperitoneal shunt ,Telemetric sensor ,Telesensor ,Thecal pressure ,Cerebrospinal fluid pressure ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Introduction: There is no previous literature on the use of telemetric sensors (telesensor) in the lumbar theca. We aim to provide novel data on telemetric pressure monitoring of the lumbar theca via lumboperitoneal shunts. Research question: Primary outcome is telemetric sensor malfunction of lumboperitoneal shunt. The secondary outcome is post-operative complications. Materials and methods: A single centre retrospective case series of patients with telemetric sensor in LP shunt system, between 2015 and 2021, consisting of 5 patients. Review of indications for use, duration of function of telemetric sensor and associated complications. Results: There was no procedural complications of LP shunt insertion with telemetric sensor. The patient with highest body weight patient had retraction of distal tubing which required distal resiting 3 times. Four out of five patients had no complications. In all cases, telemetric sensor functioned satisfactorily with no dysfunction. The duration of documentation was 1–40 months. Pressure readings were satisfactorily carried out in variety of positions. Discussion and conclusion: This is the first report of telemetric sensor use in the lumbar theca. It can provide a valuable way of measuring cerebrospinal fluid pressures, particularly in patients avoiding cranial surgery. More research is indicated to assess what pressure values would mean clinically.
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- 2022
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5. UK Chiari 1 Study: protocol for a prospective, observational, multicentre study
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Joseph Merola, Julie Woodfield, Linda D’Antona, Richard Edwards, Jothy Kandasamy, Paul Leach, Mano Shanmuganathan, Saurabh Sinha, Dominic Thompson, Lewis Thorne, Ahmed Toma, Shungu Ushewokunze, Laurence Watkins, James Stewart, Angelos G Kolias, Jayaratnam Jayamohan, Pasquale Gallo, Navneet Singh, Ashwin Kumaria, Rhannon Lobo, Marianne Hare, Louise Young, Ardalan Zolnourian, Rory J Piper, Daniel Thompson, Greg James, Georgios Tsermoulas, Rosa Sun, William B Lo, Wai Cheong Soon, Babar Vaqas, Muhammad Kamal, Fardad T Afshari, Edward W Dyson, Rodney Laing, Aabir Chakraborty, Adrian Casey, Adriana Baritchii, Alexandros Vyziotis, Ali Nader-Sephai, Alistair Jenkins, Amin Andalib, Anan Shtaya, Andrew Alalade, Andrew Brodbelt, Arup Ray, Asfand Baig Mirza, Aswin Chari, Barrie White, Benedetta Pettorini, Chandrasekaran Kaliaperumal, Danyal Khan, Dardis Ronan, David Choi, David Rowland, Edward Jerome St George, Eleni Maratos, Grainne McKenna, Hani Marcus, Hasan Asif, Hugo Layard Horsfall, Ian Kamaly-Asl, Ibrahim Jalloh, Jawad Naushahi, Joe M Das, John Duddy, Jonathan Funnell, Justyna Ekert, Kevin Tsang, Lizkerry Odeh, Makinah Haq, Mansoor Foroughi, Mark Nowell, Matthew Boissaud-Cooke, Melissa Gough, Menaka Paranathala, Micaela Uberti, Michael Cearns, Milan Makwana, Milo Hollingworth, Ming Yao Chong, Musa China, Nadia Salloum, Nicholas Haden, Nikolaos Tzerakis, Oscar MacCormac, Peter McGarrity, Rudrajit Kanjilal, Ryan Waters, Saeed Kayhanian, Samuel Jeffery, Setthasorn Zhi Yang Ooi, Shabin Joshi, Shady Elsayed, Shafqat Bukhari, Shailendra Magdum, Siddharth Sinha, Simon Lammy, Stana Bojanic, Stewart Griffiths, Teresa Scott, Thomas Carroll, Vasileios Raptopoulos, Vivek Josan, Yasir Chowdhury, and Zubair Tahir
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Medicine - Abstract
Introduction Chiari 1 malformation (CM1) is a structural abnormality of the hindbrain characterised by the descent of the cerebellar tonsils through the foramen magnum. The management of patients with CM1 remains contentious since there are currently no UK or international guidelines for clinicians. We therefore propose a collaborative, prospective, multicentre study on the investigation, management and outcome of CM1 in the UK: the UK Chiari 1 Study (UKC1S). Our primary objective is to determine the health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in patients with a new diagnosis of CM1 managed either conservatively or surgically at 12 months of follow-up. We also aim to: (A) determine HRQoL 12 months following surgery; (B) measure complications 12 months following surgery; (C) determine the natural history of patients with CM1 treated conservatively without surgery; (D) determine the radiological correlates of presenting symptoms, signs and outcomes; and (E) determine the scope and variation within UK practice in referral patterns, patient pathways, investigations and surgical decisions.Methods and analysis The UKC1S will be a prospective, multicentre and observational study that will follow the British Neurosurgical Trainee Research Collaborative model of collaborative research. Patients will be recruited after attending their first neurosurgical outpatient clinic appointment. Follow-up data will be collected from all patients at 12 months from baseline regardless of whether they are treated surgically or not. A further 12-month postoperative follow-up timepoint will be added for patients treated with decompressive surgery. The study is expected to last three years.Ethics and dissemination The UKC1S received a favourable ethical opinion from the East Midlands Leicester South Research Ethics Committee (REC reference: 20/EM/0053; IRAS 269739) and the Health Research Authority. The results of the study will be published in peer-reviewed medical journals, presented at scientific conferences, shared with collaborating sites and shared with participant patients if they so wish.
- Published
- 2021
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6. Lumboperitoneal shunt insertion without fluoroscopy guidance: Accuracy of placement in a series of 107 procedures [version 2; referees: 1 approved, 2 approved with reservations]
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Sabah Al-Rashed, Haider Kareem, Neeraj Kalra, Linda D'Antona, Mouness Obeidat, Bhavesh Patel, and Ahmed Toma
- Subjects
Health Systems & Services Research ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Background: Lumboperitoneal (LP) shunts were the mainstay of cerebrospinal fluid diversion therapy for idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH). The traditionally cited advantage of LP shunts over ventriculoperitoneal (VP) shunts is the ease of insertion in IIH. This needs to be placed at the level of L3/4 to be below the level of the spinal cord. The objective of this study was to analyse the position of LP shunts inserted without portable fluoroscopy guidance. Methods: A retrospective analysis of radiology was performed for patients who underwent lumboperitoneal shunts between 2006 and 2016 at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery. Patients who had insertion of a LP shunt without fluoroscopy guidance were selected. Patients without post-procedural imaging were excluded. A retrospective analysis of the clinical notes was also performed. Results: Between 2006 and 2016, 163 lumboperitoneal shunts were inserted in 105 patients. A total of 56 cases were excluded due to lack of post-procedural imaging; therefore, 107 post-procedural x-rays were reviewed. In 17 (15.8%) cases the proximal end of the LP shunt was placed at L1/L2 level or above. Conclusions: Insertion of LP shunts without portable fluoroscopy guidance gives a 15.8% risk of incorrect positioning of the proximal end of the catheter. We suggest that x-ray is recommended to avoid incorrect level placement. Further investigation could be carried out with a control group with fluoroscopy against patients without.
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- 2017
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7. Aneurysm management in patients over 80 years old with good grade subarachnoid haemorrhage
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Frederick Ewbank, Samuel Hall, Benjamin Gaastra, Benjamin Fisher, Laura Coe, James Booker, Antony Kaldas, Ian Anderson, Giles Critchley, Mario Teo, Ahmed Toma, Rikin Trivedi, Chris Uff, Raghu Vindlacheruvu, Louise Dulhanty, Mohsen Javadpour, Daniel Walsh, James Galea, Hiren Patel, and Diederik Bulters
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Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,General Medicine - Published
- 2023
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8. The benefits of automated CSF drainage in normal pressure hydrocephalus
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Sogha Khawari, Maria Kneizeh, Mohamed Elborady, Lewis Thorne, Ahmed Toma, and Laurence Watkins
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Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2023
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9. ICP during head movement: significance of the venous system
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Sogha Khawari, Alaa Al-Mohammad, Anand Pandit, Eleanor Moncur, Matthew James Bancroft, Kanza Tariq, Peter Cowley, Laurence Watkins, and Ahmed Toma
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Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2023
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10. Regional Scalp Blockade for Painless Removal ofIntracranial Pressure Bolts: Technical Note and Patient-Reported Outcomes
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Aimee Goel, Hasan Asif, Claudia Craven, Linda D’Antona, Pranoy Das, Lewis Thorne, and Ahmed Toma
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Pain, Postoperative ,Scalp ,Anesthesia, Conduction ,Humans ,Surgery ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,Neurology (clinical) ,Anesthetics, Local ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Elective insertion of intracranial pressure (ICP) monitoring bolts is useful for the diagnosis and treatment of disorders of cerebrospinal fluid dynamics. Patients typically report severe discomfort on bolt removal, which negatively impacts overall patient satisfaction of ICP monitoring. We assessed the efficacy and safety of using supratrochlear and supraorbital nerve block-a commonly used form of scalp anesthesia-alongside oral analgesia before bolt removal.We compared the efficacy and safety of regional scalp block anesthesia alongside oral analgesia versus oral analgesia alone in a cohort of 85 patients undergoing removal of diagnostic ICP bolts between June 2017 and April 2019 using retrospective patient questionnaires, as well as electronic admission documentation.We found that scalp block alongside oral analgesia improved bolt removal experience (4/5 vs. 3/5 on a 1-5 point Likert scale) and that a majority (70.6%) of patients would have preferred local anesthetic before removal in the oral analgesia-only group. Only 2 patients experienced mild and localized side effects: mild bruising and temporary facial and eyelid swelling following regional scalp block.We conclude that regional supraorbital and supratrochlear nerve block is a simple, safe, and effective adjunct to minimizing discomfort during bolt removal and improving overall patient satisfaction of ICP monitoring.
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- 2022
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11. Contributors
- Author
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Mitchell W. Couldwell, Helle H. Damkier, Aaron S. Dumont, Graham Dupont, Uduak-Obong I. Ekanem, Kathrine A. Friis, Christian Humpel, Laura Ø. Johnsen, Jweria Khan, Mahitha M. Koduri, Vladimir Korzh, Wolfgang Lederer, Tarik F. Massoud, Mansour Mathkour, Isabella G. McCormack, Grace Posey, Parisa Saboori, Jonathan Shapey, Ahmed Toma, Austin Trinh, R. Shane Tubbs, Cassidy Werner, and Lu Xu
- Published
- 2023
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12. Cerebrospinal fluid physiology
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Jonathan Shapey and Ahmed Toma
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- 2023
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13. Lumboperitoneal shunt insertion without fluoroscopy guidance: Accuracy of placement in a series of 107 procedures [version 2; referees: 3 approved]
- Author
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Sabah Al-Rashed, Haider Kareem, Neeraj Kalra, Linda D’Antona, Mouness Obeidat, Bhavesh Patel, and Ahmed Toma
- Subjects
Research Article ,Articles ,Health Systems & Services Research ,Lumboperitoneal shunt ,LP shunt ,fluoroscopy - Abstract
Background: Lumboperitoneal (LP) shunts were the mainstay of cerebrospinal fluid diversion therapy for idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH). The traditionally cited advantage of LP shunts over ventriculoperitoneal (VP) shunts is the ease of insertion in IIH. This needs to be placed at the level of L3/4 to be below the level of the spinal cord. The objective of this study was to analyse the position of LP shunts inserted without portable fluoroscopy guidance. Methods: A retrospective analysis of radiology was performed for patients who underwent lumboperitoneal shunts between 2006 and 2016 at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery. Patients who had insertion of a LP shunt without fluoroscopy guidance were selected. Patients without post-procedural imaging were excluded. A retrospective analysis of the clinical notes was also performed. Results: Between 2006 and 2016, 163 lumboperitoneal shunts were inserted in 105 patients. A total of 56 cases were excluded due to lack of post-procedural imaging; therefore, 107 post-procedural x-rays were reviewed. In 17 (15.8%) cases the proximal end of the LP shunt was placed at L1/L2 level or above. Conclusions: Insertion of LP shunts without portable fluoroscopy guidance gives a 15.8% risk of incorrect positioning of the proximal end of the catheter. We suggest that x-ray is recommended to avoid incorrect level placement. Further investigation could be carried out with a control group with fluoroscopy against patients without.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Lumboperitoneal shunt insertion without fluoroscopy guidance: Accuracy of placement in a series of 107 procedures [version 1; referees: 3 approved with reservations]
- Author
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Sabah Al-Rashed, Haider Kareem, Neeraj Kalra, Linda D’Antona, Mouness Obeidat, Bhavesh Patel, and Ahmed Toma
- Subjects
Research Article ,Articles ,Health Systems & Services Research ,Lumboperitoneal shunt ,LP shunt ,fluoroscopy - Abstract
Background: Lumboperitoneal (LP) shunts were the mainstay of cerebrospinal fluid diversion therapy for idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH). The traditionally cited advantage of LP shunts over ventriculoperitoneal (VP) shunts is the ease of insertion in IIH. This needs to be placed at the level of L3/4 to be below the level of the spinal cord. The objective of this study was to analyse the position of LP shunts inserted without portable fluoroscopy guidance. Methods: A retrospective analysis of radiology was performed for patients who underwent lumboperitoneal shunts between 2006 and 2016 at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery. Patients who had insertion of a LP shunt without fluoroscopy guidance were selected. Patients without post-procedural imaging were excluded. A retrospective analysis of the clinical notes was also performed. Results: Between 2006 and 2016, 163 lumboperitoneal shunts were inserted in 105 patients. A total of 56 cases were excluded due to lack of post-procedural imaging; therefore, 107 post-procedural x-rays were reviewed. In 17 (15.8%) cases the proximal end of the LP shunt was placed at L1/L2 level or above. Conclusions: Insertion of LP shunts without portable fluoroscopy guidance gives a 15.8% risk of incorrect positioning of the proximal end of the catheter. We suggest that x-ray is recommended to avoid incorrect level placement. Further investigation could be carried out with a control group with fluoroscopy against patients without.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. 326 Sleep Stages Variation in Intracranial Pressure and Pulse Amplitude
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Lucia Darie, Matthew Bancroft, Dolora Glorioso, Anand Pandit, Eleanor Moncur, Lewis Thorne, Jeremy Radcliffe, Sofia Eriksson, Laurence Dale Watkins, and Ahmed Toma
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Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. An AI-Enabled Predictive Analytics Dashboard for Acute Neurosurgical Referrals
- Author
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Anand Pandit, Arif Jalal, Ahmed Toma, and Parashkev Nachev
- Abstract
Healthcare dashboards make key information about service and clinical outcomes available to staff in an easy-to-understand format. Most dashboards are limited to providing insights based on group-level inference, rather than individual prediction. Here, we evaluate a dashboard which could analyze and forecast acute neurosurgical referrals based on 10,033 referrals made to a large volume tertiary neurosciences center in central London, U.K., from the start of the Covid-19 pandemic lockdown period until October 2021. As anticipated, referral volumes significantly increased in this period, largely due to an increase in spinal referrals. Applying a range of validated time-series forecasting methods, we found that referrals were projected to increase beyond this time-point. Using a mixed-methods approach, we determined that the dashboard was usable, feasible, and acceptable to key stakeholders. Dashboards provide an effective way of visualizing acute surgical referral data and for predicting future volume without the need for data-science expertise.
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- 2022
- Full Text
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17. Predicting neurosurgical referral outcomes in patients with chronic subdural hematomas using machine learning algorithms – A multi-center feasibility study
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Sayan Biswas, Joshua Ian MacArthur, Anand Pandit, Lareyna McMenemy, Ved Sarkar, Helena Thompson, Mohammad Saleem Saleemi, Julian Chintzewen, Zahra Rose Almansoor, Xin Tian Chai, Emily Hardman, Christopher Torrie, Maya Holt, Thomas Hanna, Aleksandra Sobieraj, Ahmed Toma, and K. Joshi George
- Subjects
Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
Background: Chronic subdural hematoma (CSDH) incidence and referral rates to neurosurgery are increasing. Accurate and automated evidence-based referral decision-support tools that can triage referrals are required. Our objective was to explore the feasibility of machine learning (ML) algorithms in predicting the outcome of a CSDH referral made to neurosurgery and to examine their reliability on external validation. Methods: Multicenter retrospective case series conducted from 2015 to 2020, analyzing all CSDH patient referrals at two neurosurgical centers in the United Kingdom. 10 independent predictor variables were analyzed to predict the binary outcome of either accepting (for surgical treatment) or rejecting the CSDH referral with the aim of conservative management. 5 ML algorithms were developed and externally tested to determine the most reliable model for deployment. Results: 1500 referrals in the internal cohort were analyzed, with 70% being rejected referrals. On a holdout set of 450 patients, the artificial neural network demonstrated an accuracy of 96.222% (94.444–97.778), an area under the receiver operating curve (AUC) of 0.951 (0.927–0.973) and a brier score loss of 0.037 (0.022–0.056). On a 1713 external validation patient cohort, the model demonstrated an AUC of 0.896 (0.878–0.912) and an accuracy of 92.294% (90.952–93.520). This model is publicly deployed: https://medmlanalytics.com/neural-analysis-model/. Conclusion: ML models can accurately predict referral outcomes and can potentially be used in clinical practice as CSDH referral decision making support tools. The growing demand in healthcare, combined with increasing digitization of health records raises the opportunity for ML algorithms to be used for decision making in complex clinical scenarios.
- Published
- 2023
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18. Hydrocephalus in Adults
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Ahmed Toma
- Subjects
congenital, hereditary, and neonatal diseases and abnormalities ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Disease entity ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,nervous system diseases ,Hydrocephalus ,Cerebrospinal fluid ,Normal pressure hydrocephalus ,medicine ,Etiology ,business ,Ventriculomegaly - Abstract
The term hydrocephalus is a modern latin adaptation from greek hudrokephalon, from hudōr “water” + kephalē “head.” 1 Hydrocephalus is not a single disease entity. It is rather a spectrum of conditions where there is a disturbance in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) dynamics. 2 The practice of hydrocephalus in adults is different from that of paediatrics. It involves managing patients with newly developed high-pressure hydrocephalus of various etiologies. A significant proportion involves patients with normal/low-pressure hydrocephalic conditions, like normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH), or long-standing overt ventriculomegaly in adults (LOVA). It also includes caring for patients transiting from pediatrics practice to adult practice with hydrocephalus treated during childhood. Although not strictly a hydrocephalus condition, idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH) is often managed as part of the adult hydrocephalus practice.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Contributors
- Author
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Isaac Josh Abecassis, Vijay Agarwal, Pankaj K. Agarwalla, Christopher S. Ahuja, Andrew Folusho Alalade, Saira Alli, Kristian Aquilina, Rocco A. Armonda, Lissa Baird, James W. Bales, Nicholas C. Bambakidis, Daniel L. Barrow, David F. Bauer, Jeffrey S. Beecher, Randy S Bell, Antonio Belli, Edward C. Benzel, Robert H. Bonow, Umberto Marcello Bracale, Samuel R. Browd, Ketan Bulsara, David W. Cadotte, Paolo Cappabianca, Luigi Maria Cavallo, Alvin Y. Chan, Roc Peng Chen, Peter A. Chiarelli, Omar Choudhri, Michelle Chowdhary, Jason Chu, Michael J. Cirivello, Pablo Picasso de Araújo Coimbra, Kelly L. Collins, Juliane Daartz, Oreste de Divitiis, Wolfgang Deinsberger, Simone E. Dekker, Michael C. Dewan, Salvatore Di Maio, Dale Ding, Richard G. Ellenbogen, Chibawanye Ene, Michael Fehlings, Flávio Leitão de Carvalho, James R. Fink, Kathleen R. Tozer Fink, Jared Fridley, George M. Ghobrial, Michael Gleeson, Atul Goel, Ziya L. Gokaslan, James Tait Goodrich, Gerald A. Grant, Bradley A. Gross, Joseph Gruss, Lia Halasz, Brian W. Hanak, Todd C. Hankinson, James S. Harrop, Carl B. Heilman, Robert S. Heller, S. Alan Hoffer, Christoph P. Hofstetter, Jonathan A. Hyam, Kate Impastato, Semra Isik, Greg James, R. Tushar Jha, Kristen E. Jones, Patrick K. Jowdy, Samuel Kalb, Robert F. Keating, Cory M. Kelly, Neil D. Kitchen, Andrew L. Ko, Matthew J. Koch, Douglas Kondziolka, Chao-Hung Kuo, A. Noelle Larson, Michael T. Lawton, Amy Lee, Michael R. Levitt, Elad I. Levy, Jay S. Loeffler, Timothy H Lucas, Suresh N. Magge, Edward M. Marchan, Henry Marsh, Alexander M. Mason, Panagiotis Mastorakos, D. Jay McCracken, Rajiv Midha, Ryan P. Morton, Kyle Mueller, Jeffrey P. Mullin, Mustafa Nadi, Peter Nakaji, John D. Nerva, Toba N. Niazi, Jeffrey G. Ojemann, Adetokunbo Oyelese, Nelson M. Oyesiku, Anoop P. Patel, Eric C. Peterson, David W. Polly, Helen Quach, Shobana Rajan, Ali Ravanpay, Leslie C. Robinson, Ricardo Rocha, Trevor J. Royce, James T. Rutka, Laligam N. Sekhar, Warren Selman, Ashish H. Shah, Hussain Shallwani, Deepak Sharma, Mohan Raj Sharma, Daniel L. Silbergeld, Dulanka Silva, Harley Brito da Silva, Luke Silveira, Edward Smith, Domenico Solari, Hesham Soliman, Teresa Somma, Robert M. Starke, David C. Straus, Charles Teo, Ahmed Toma, Yolanda D. Tseng, R. Shane Tubbs, Kunal Vakharia, Alessandro Villa, Scott D. Wait, Brian P. Walcott, Connor Wathen, John C. Wellons, Mark Wilson, Amparo Wolf, Linda Xu, Tong Yang, Christopher C. Young, and Ludvic Zrinzo
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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20. A novel robust approach for image copyright protection based on concentric rectangles
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Haider Ismael Shahadi, Ahmed Toman Thahab, and Hameed R. Farhan
- Subjects
Watermarking ,Concentric rectangles ,Attacks ,Robustness ,Padding, lifted wavelet transform, potential embedding positions ,Electronic computers. Computer science ,QA75.5-76.95 - Abstract
This paper presents an adaptive and robust method for image copyright protection to control ownership and prevent unauthorized usage of image property. The image is transformed into a wavelet domain using a multi-level of lifting wavelet transform; the lowest frequency band is globally divided into several concentric rectangles to withstand cropping. Pixels of a user-selected rectangle are designated for embedding flag bits to protect against rotational attacks. The proposed embedding operation takes into consideration the coefficient of high energy to be identified as potential positions for the embedding process. This procedure reduces the total error presented by the embedding process and protects hidden data against noise and jpeg-compression attacks. A reversible scrambling is applied to a pre-defined region from the watermarked image to prevent unauthorized users from attaining a high quality watermarked image. Experimental results show that the proposed algorithm achieves a range of PSNR (44–50) dB and a normalized correlation range of (1–0.9) for the watermarked image and reconstructed logo. Results also demonstrate the robustness against various attacks, such as rotation, cropping, noise adding, and JPEG-compression.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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