53 results on '"John P. Sheehy"'
Search Results
2. Novel System of Simulation Models for Aneurysm Clipping Training: Description of Models and Assessment of Face, Content, and Construct Validity
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Michael T. Lawton, John P. Sheehy, Evgenii Belykh, Xiaochun Zhao, Irakliy Abramov, Sarah McBryan, Michael A Mooney, Rokuya Tanikawa, Brandon Ngo, Thanapong Loymak, Andrei Giovani, L. A. Bardonova, and Mark C. Preul
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,education ,Neurosurgery ,Neurosurgical Procedures ,Aneurysm ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,medicine.artery ,Surgical Stapling ,medicine ,Anterior cerebral artery ,Content validity ,Humans ,cardiovascular diseases ,Simulation Training ,Craniotomy ,Face validity ,business.industry ,Construct validity ,Intracranial Aneurysm ,Clipping (medicine) ,Cerebral Arteries ,medicine.disease ,Education, Medical, Graduate ,Basilar Artery ,cardiovascular system ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND Aneurysm clipping simulation models are needed to provide tactile feedback of biological vessels in a nonhazardous but surgically relevant environment. OBJECTIVE To describe a novel system of simulation models for aneurysm clipping training and assess its validity. METHODS Craniotomy models were fabricated to mimic actual tissues and movement restrictions experienced during actual surgery. Turkey wing vessels were used to create aneurysm models with patient-specific geometry. Three simulation models (middle cerebral artery aneurysm clipping via a pterional approach, anterior cerebral artery aneurysm clipping via an interhemispheric approach, and basilar artery aneurysm clipping via an orbitozygomatic pretemporal approach) were subjected to face, content, and construct validity assessments by experienced neurosurgeons (n = 8) and neurosurgery trainees (n = 8). RESULTS Most participants scored the model as replicating actual aneurysm clipping well and scored the difficulty of clipping as being comparable to that of real surgery, confirming face validity. Most participants responded that the model could improve clip-applier-handling skills when working with patients, which confirms content validity. Experienced neurosurgeons performed significantly better than trainees on all 3 models based on subjective (P = .003) and objective (P
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- 2021
3. Hospital use following anterior cervical discectomy and fusion
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David J. Mauler, U Kumar Kakarla, Michael A Mooney, Michael A. Bohl, and John P. Sheehy
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Adult ,Male ,Reoperation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Nausea ,Urinary system ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Anterior cervical discectomy and fusion ,Dehiscence ,Patient Readmission ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Postoperative Complications ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physiology (medical) ,medicine ,Humans ,Corpectomy ,Hospital use ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Neck Pain ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Emergency department ,Middle Aged ,Dysphagia ,Hospitals ,Surgery ,Spinal Fusion ,Neurology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cervical Vertebrae ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Deglutition Disorders ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Diskectomy - Abstract
Most existing anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF) outcome studies omit emergency department (ED) use. To our knowledge, this study on ED use following ACDF surgery is the first to use a direct patient chart review and the first to include revision patients, 1–5 levels of ACDFs, and performance of corpectomy in the analysis. This study examines the frequency and basis of hospital service use within 30 days of ACDF surgery, specifically ED visits, hospital readmissions, and returns to the operating room. A retrospective chart review was performed for 1273 consecutive patients who underwent ACDF surgery at one institution from July 2013 to June 2016. Of the 1273 patients with ACDF, 97 (7.6%) presented to the ED within 30 days after surgery. Of 43 patients with revision ACDF, 9 (20.9%) returned to the ED, compared with 88 (7.2%) of 1230 patients with primary ACDF (P = 0.001). Of the 111 ED visits by 97 patients, 40 (36%) were for cervicalgia, 13 (12%) were for dysphagia, 8 (7%) were for trauma, 7 (6%) were for nausea, 4 (4%) were for medication refill, 3 (3%) were for dehiscence, 3 (3%) were for pneumonia, and 3 (3%) were for urinary tract infection. Of the ED presentations, 8 (7%) occurred during the first 2 days after surgery, and 46 (41%) occurred within the first postoperative week.
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- 2021
4. A sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) mutant with altered carbon isotope ratio.
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Govinda Rizal, Shanta Karki, Vivek Thakur, Samart Wanchana, Hugo Alonso-Cantabrana, Jacque Dionora, John E Sheehy, Robert Furbank, Susanne von Caemmerer, and William Paul Quick
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Recent efforts to engineer C4 photosynthetic traits into C3 plants such as rice demand an understanding of the genetic elements that enable C4 plants to outperform C3 plants. As a part of the C4 Rice Consortium's efforts to identify genes needed to support C4 photosynthesis, EMS mutagenized sorghum populations were generated and screened to identify genes that cause a loss of C4 function. Stable carbon isotope ratio (δ13C) of leaf dry matter has been used to distinguishspecies with C3 and C4 photosynthetic pathways. Here, we report the identification of a sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) mutant with a low δ13C characteristic. A mutant (named Mut33) with a pale phenotype and stunted growth was identified from an EMS treated sorghum M2 population. The stable carbon isotope analysis of the mutants showed a decrease of 13C uptake capacity. The noise of random mutation was reduced by crossing the mutant and its wildtype (WT). The back-cross (BC1F1) progenies were like the WT parent in terms of 13C values and plant phenotypes. All the BC1F2 plants with low δ13C died before they produced their 6th leaf. Gas exchange measurements of the low δ13C sorghum mutants showed a higher CO2 compensation point (25.24 μmol CO2.mol-1air) and the maximum rate of photosynthesis was less than 5μmol.m-2.s-1. To identify the genetic determinant of this trait, four DNA pools were isolated; two each from normal and low δ13C BC1F2 mutant plants. These were sequenced using an Illumina platform. Comparison of allele frequency of the single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) between the pools with contrasting phenotype showed that a locus in Chromosome 10 between 57,941,104 and 59,985,708 bps had an allele frequency of 1. There were 211 mutations and 37 genes in the locus, out of which mutations in 9 genes showed non-synonymous changes. This finding is expected to contribute to future research on the identification of the causal factor differentiating C4 from C3 species that can be used in the transformation of C3 to C4 plants.
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- 2017
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5. Laparoscopic-Assisted Ventriculoperitoneal Shunt Placement and Reduction in Operative Time and Total Hospital Charges
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Andrew W Mezher, Michael A Mooney, John P. Sheehy, Kris A. Smith, Michael T. Lawton, Derrick J Wang, Joseph M. Zabramski, Joshua S Catapano, Alexander C Whiting, Joseph D. DiDomenico, Christina E. Sarris, and Michael A. Bohl
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Subset Analysis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Retrospective cohort study ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Shunt (medical) ,Hydrocephalus ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Normal pressure hydrocephalus ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neurosurgery ,Laparoscopy ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Abdominal surgery - Abstract
Objective In ventriculoperitoneal shunt (VPS) placement, distal placement of the peritoneal catheter will typically be performed by a neurosurgeon. More recently, laparoscopic-assisted (LA) placement of the distal peritoneal catheter by general surgeons has become common. The present study examined whether LA placement of a VPS (LAVPS) is associated with a reduced operative time, lower hospital costs, and fewer distal revisions. Methods A retrospective review was performed of the data from all patients who had received a new VPS at our institution from 2013 to 2016. Age, sex, diagnosis, previous abdominal surgery, operative time, anesthesia grade, incidence of 30-day shunt failure, and total hospital charges were analyzed. Results A total of 680 patients had undergone first-time VPS placement, including 199 with LAVPS and 481 with non–LAVPS placement (non-LAVPS). The mean age of the LAVPS patients was significantly older than that of the non-LAVPS patients (64.1 vs. 59.3 years; P = 0.002). The mean operative time was shorter in the LAVPS group than in the non-LAVPS group (55 vs. 75 minutes; P Conclusions Compared with non-LAVPS, LAVPS was associated with significantly shorter operative times and fewer distal shunt revisions within 30 days. The findings from a subset analysis supported a decrease in total hospital charges. Additional studies are needed; however, these data suggest that LAVPS is a safer, less-expensive alternative to non-LAVPS.
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- 2020
6. Occipital Artery to a3 Bypass and Distal Occlusion of an a2 Aneurysm: 2-Dimensional Operative Video
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Fabio A. Frisoli, Joshua S. Catapano, John P. Sheehy, Dimitri Benner, Visish M. Srinivasan, and Michael T. Lawton
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Anterior Cerebral Artery ,Humans ,Surgery ,Intracranial Aneurysm ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2021
7. Parameterization, Validation and Comparison of Three Tillering Models for Irrigated Rice in the Tropics
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Xuhua Zhong, Shaobing Peng, John E. Sheehy, Hongxian Liu, and M. Visperas
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Crop growth ,Model ,Parameterization ,Prediction ,Rice (Oryza sativa L.) ,Tillering ,Validation ,Plant culture ,SB1-1110 - Abstract
Tillering plays an important role in determining rice grain yield. Several models have been developed to predict tiller production in irrigated rice. In this paper we tested three models using data drawn from a wide range of plant densities and N inputs in two field experiments conducted at the International Rice Research Institute, Philippines during the 1997 and 1998 dry seasons. Two rice cultivars (IR64 and IR72) were used in the experiments. Plant samples were taken at intervals to determine number of tillers, leaf area index (LAI), biomass, relative growth rate (RGR) and leaf N concentration. The models were parameterized using an iteration procedure of the simplex method. Previous models (TIL and SINK) using the original values of parameters for IR64 failed to predict the number of tillers of IR64 in 1997. However, when re-parameterized, both models described the 1997 data well for both cultivars. The two models also predicted fairly well the number of tillers of different transplanting spacing and N input treatments of IR72 in 1998 using IR72 parameters derived from the 1997 experiment. A simple RGR model was comparable with the TIL and SINK models in descriptive and predictive ability. It appears that all three models could be used for predicting tiller production of irrigated rice.
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- 1999
- Full Text
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8. Neurosurgical Management of Cancer Facial Pain
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Zaman, Mirzadeh, John P, Sheehy, Sharona, Ben-Haim, and William S, Rosenberg
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Facial Pain ,Head and Neck Neoplasms ,Humans ,Cancer Pain ,Neurosurgical Procedures - Abstract
Facial pain occurs in approximately 80% of patients with head and neck cancers. Pain in these settings may result directly from the tumor, or indirectly as a side effect of oncological treatment of the tumor. Optimizing treatment for cancer pain of the face, therefore, involves a variety of diagnostic and treatment considerations, with the development of a successful treatment algorithm dependent on accurate diagnosis of the anatomical location of the pain, its relationship to the facial pain pathway, the type of pain being treated and, finally, patient's prognosis and preference for treatment modality. Beyond direct treatments to reduce tumor burden, a wide variety of neuro-ablative and neuro-augmentative approaches are available that may be tailored to a patient's specific pain syndrome and individual clinical context, taking into account the patient's treatment goals, life expectancy, other cancer-related medical problems, and end-of-life issues.
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- 2020
9. Postoperative 30-day emergency department utilization after 7294 cranial neurosurgery procedures at a tertiary neuroscience center
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Benjamin K Hendricks, Michael A Mooney, Michael A. Bohl, Joshua S Catapano, Douglas A. Hardesty, John P. Sheehy, Andrew S. Little, and Scott Brigeman
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General surgery ,Brain biopsy ,General Medicine ,Emergency department ,medicine.disease ,Logistic regression ,Institutional review board ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,medicine ,Ommaya reservoir ,Neurosurgery ,Complication ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Kidney disease - Abstract
OBJECTIVE Hospital readmission and the reduction thereof has become a major quality improvement initiative in organized medicine and neurosurgery. However, little research has been performed on why neurosurgical patients utilize hospital emergency rooms (ERs) with or without subsequent admission in the postoperative setting. METHODS This study was a retrospective, single-center review of data for all surgical cranial procedures performed from July 2013 to July 2016 in patients who survived to discharge. The study was approved by the institutional review board of the participating medical center. RESULTS The authors identified 7294 cranial procedures performed during 6596 hospital encounters in 5385 patients. The rate of postoperative ER utilization within 30 days after surgical hospitalization across all procedure types was 13.1 per 100 surgeries performed. The two most common chief complaints were pain (30.7%) and medical complication (18.2%). After identification of relevant surgical and patient factors with univariable analysis, a multivariable backward elimination logistic regression model was constructed in which Ommaya reservoir placement (OR 2.65, p = 0.0008) and cranial CSF shunt placement (OR 1.40, p = 0.0001) were associated with increased ER utilization. Deep brain stimulation electrode placement (OR 0.488, p = 0.0004), increasing hospital length of stay (OR 0.935, p < 0.0001), and increasing patient age (OR 0.988, p < 0.0001) were associated with lower rates of postoperative ER utilization. One-half (50%) of ER visit patients were readmitted to the hospital. New/worsening neurological deficit chief complaint (OR 1.99, p = 0.0088), fever chief complaint (OR 2.41, p = 0.0205), altered mentation chief complaint (OR 2.71, p = 0.0002), patient chronic kidney disease (OR 3.31, p = 0.0037), brain biopsy procedure type (OR 3.50, p = 0.0398), and wound infection chief complaint (OR 31.4, p = 0.0008) were associated with increased rates of readmission to the hospital from the ER in multivariable analysis. CONCLUSIONS The authors report the rates of and reasons for ER utilization in a large cohort of postoperative cranial neurosurgical patients. Factors identified were associated with both increased and decreased use of the ER after cranial surgery, as well as variables associated with readmission to the hospital after postoperative ER visitation. These findings may direct future quality improvement via prospective implementation of care pathways for high-risk procedures.
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- 2020
10. In Reply to the Letter to the Editor Regarding 'Laparoscopic-Assisted Ventriculoperitoneal Shunt Placement and Reduction in Operative Time and Total Hospital Charges'
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Michael T. Lawton, Michael A. Bohl, Christina E. Sarris, Kris A. Smith, Joseph M. Zabramski, Joseph D. DiDomenico, Andrew W Mezher, Michael A Mooney, Derrick J Wang, Alexander C Whiting, Joshua S Catapano, and John P. Sheehy
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Shunt placement ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Letter to the editor ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,General surgery ,Operative Time ,MEDLINE ,Hospital Charges ,Ventriculoperitoneal Shunt ,Text mining ,medicine ,Operative time ,Humans ,Surgery ,Laparoscopy ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Reduction (orthopedic surgery) ,Hydrocephalus - Published
- 2020
11. Long-Term Sinonasal Function Following Transnasal Pituitary Surgery: A Comparison of Surgical Approach
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Peter Bentivoglio, John P. Sheehy, Henry P. Barham, Mark J. Winder, Timothy Steel, Ann McCormack, Jenna M. Christensen, Jemma Cho, Richard J. Harvey, and Jessica W. Grayson
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Pituitary Diseases ,MEDLINE ,Nose ,Neurosurgical Procedures ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Paranasal Sinuses ,medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,Humans ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,Aged ,Transsphenoidal surgery ,Surgical approach ,business.industry ,Skull ,Endoscopy ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Surgery ,Term (time) ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Treatment Outcome ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Quality of Life ,Female ,Pituitary surgery ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background Surgical approaches to the pituitary have undergone significant changes from transcranial, sublabial, direct transnasal microscopic, and now endoscopic. This study compares sinonasal outcomes from patients from these techniques. Methods A cross-sectional study of patients who underwent pituitary surgery in a tertiary setting was conducted. Patients were recruited via phone, mail, e-mail, and in person. Surveys with questions on nasal function, subsequent nasal treatment, the Nasal Symptom Score (NSS), Sinonasal Outcome Test-22 (SNOT-22), Chronic Sinusitis Survey (CSS), and Short Form 36 version 2 (SF-36v2) were obtained. Results A total of 252 surveys were sent, of which 165 were returned (65.48% response rate) and 16 were excluded (3 records destroyed, 13 transcranial approach). A total of 149 patients (age 60.10 ± 13.99 years, 47.83% female) were assessed with the following breakdown: sublabial (n = 69), transnasal microscopic (n = 28), and endoscopic (n = 52) approaches. Sublabial and transnasal microscopic, compared to endoscopic, had more sinus treatment (30.43%, 39.29%, and 15.38%; P = .05), medication use (28.99%, 32.14%, and 11.54%; P = .04), and new allergy symptoms (21.74%, 7.14%, and 1.92%; P Conclusion Nasal function was superior, and further sinus therapy and medication use was lower in patients with endoscopic approaches. Disease-specific quality of life was superior and the endoscopic approach resulted in reduced long-term sinonasal morbidity.
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- 2020
12. Neurosurgical Management of Cancer Facial Pain
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John P. Sheehy, William S. Rosenberg, Zaman Mirzadeh, and Sharona Ben-Haim
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Pain syndrome ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Side effect ,business.industry ,MEDLINE ,Cancer ,Context (language use) ,Treatment goals ,medicine.disease ,medicine ,Facial pain ,Intensive care medicine ,Cancer pain ,business - Abstract
Facial pain occurs in approximately 80% of patients with head and neck cancers. Pain in these settings may result directly from the tumor, or indirectly as a side effect of oncological treatment of the tumor. Optimizing treatment for cancer pain of the face, therefore, involves a variety of diagnostic and treatment considerations, with the development of a successful treatment algorithm dependent on accurate diagnosis of the anatomical location of the pain, its relationship to the facial pain pathway, the type of pain being treated and, finally, patient's prognosis and preference for treatment modality. Beyond direct treatments to reduce tumor burden, a wide variety of neuro-ablative and neuro-augmentative approaches are available that may be tailored to a patient's specific pain syndrome and individual clinical context, taking into account the patient's treatment goals, life expectancy, other cancer-related medical problems, and end-of-life issues.
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- 2020
13. Cost Transparency in Neurosurgery: A Single-Institution Analysis of Patient Out-of-Pocket Spending in 13 673 Consecutive Neurosurgery Cases
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Michael T. Lawton, Michael A Mooney, Andrew S. Little, Seungwon Yoon, Michael A. Bohl, Peter Nakaji, F David Barranco, Tyler S Cole, and John P. Sheehy
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Neurosurgical Procedures ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Severity of illness ,Health care ,medicine ,Humans ,Single institution ,health care economics and organizations ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,media_common ,business.industry ,Retrospective cohort study ,Health Care Costs ,Length of Stay ,Middle Aged ,Payment ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Transparency (graphic) ,Emergency medicine ,Cost sharing ,Female ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neurosurgery ,Health Expenditures ,business ,Delivery of Health Care ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
BACKGROUND Patient out-of-pocket (OOP) spending is an increasingly discussed topic; however, there is minimal data available on the patient financial burden of surgical procedures. OBJECTIVE To analyze hospital and surgeon expected payment data and patient OOP spending in neurosurgery. METHODS This is a retrospective cohort study of neurosurgical patients at a tertiary-referral center from 2013 to 2016. Expected payments, reflecting negotiated costs-of-care, as well as actual patient OOP payments for hospital care and surgeon professional fees were analyzed. A 4-tiered model of patient OOP cost sharing and a multivariate model of patient expected payments were created. RESULTS A total of 13 673 consecutive neurosurgical cases were analyzed. Patient age, insurance type, case category, severity of illness, length of stay (LOS), and elective case status were significant predictors of increased expected payments (P < .05). Craniotomy ($53 397 ± 811) and posterior spinal fusion ($48 329 ± 864) were associated with the highest expected payments. In a model of patient OOP cost sharing, nearly all neurosurgical procedures exceeded yearly OOP maximums for Healthcare Marketplace plans. Mean patient payments for hospital care and surgeon professional fees were the highest for anterior/lateral spinal fusion cases for commercially insured patients ($1662 ± 165). Mean expected payments and mean patient payments for commercially insured patients increased significantly from 2013 to 2016 (P < .05). CONCLUSION Expected payments and patient OOP spending for commercially insured patients significantly increased from 2013 to 2016, representing increased healthcare costs and patient cost sharing in an evolving healthcare environment. Patients and providers can consider this information prior to surgery to better anticipate the individual financial burden for neurosurgical care.
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- 2018
14. Thirty-Day Postoperative Emergency Department Utilization and Hospital Readmission after 559 Sequential Endonasal Operations
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Morteza Sadeh, Gabriella Paisan, Chesney Oravec, Andrew S. Little, John P. Sheehy, Michael A Mooney, Michael A. Bohl, and Douglas A. Hardesty
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hospital readmission ,business.industry ,THIRTY-DAY ,Emergency medicine ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Emergency department ,business - Published
- 2018
15. Posterior interhemispheric occipital transtentorial approach for resection of a falcotentorial meningioma
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Mohamed A. Labib, Joshua S Catapano, John P. Sheehy, Visish M Srinivasan, and Michael T. Lawton
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Meningioma ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine ,Transtentorial approach ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Radiology ,medicine.disease ,business ,Resection - Abstract
Falcotentorial meningiomas arise along the junction of the falx cerebri and the tentorium cerebelli. The authors present a woman in her 60s with an incidentally discovered falcotentorial meningioma, approximately 3 cm in diameter, resected with a torcular craniotomy and posterior interhemispheric approach. The galenic complex was dissected away from the tumor. In the final view, the bilateral internal cerebral veins and basal veins of Rosenthal were seen. A Simpson grade I resection was achieved. The patient experienced transient contralateral hemianopsia and was discharged home. At 1-year follow-up, her neurological examination findings were unremarkable, and there was no radiographic evidence of tumor. The video can be found here: https://stream.cadmore.media/r10.3171/2021.4.FOCVID2125.
- Published
- 2021
16. Overlapping Surgeries Are Not Associated With Worse Patient Outcomes: Retrospective Multivariate Analysis of 14 872 Neurosurgical Cases Performed at a Single Institution
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Michael A Bohl, Michael A Mooney, John P Sheehy, Abigail M Cantwell, Steve W Chang, Kristina M Chapple, U Kumar Kakarla, and Robert F Spetzler
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03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Published
- 2017
17. Rater Reliability of the Hardy Classification for Pituitary Adenomas in the Magnetic Resonance Imaging Era
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Andrew S. Little, Douglas A. Hardesty, Michael A Mooney, C. Roger Bird, Kristina Chapple, William L. White, and John P. Sheehy
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Radiography ,Pituitary tumors ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Intra-rater reliability ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,03 medical and health sciences ,Inter-rater reliability ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pituitary adenoma ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Reliability (statistics) ,Cohort study - Abstract
Objectives The Hardy classification is used to classify pituitary tumors for clinical and research purposes. The scale was developed using lateral skull radiographs and encephalograms, and its reliability has not been evaluated in the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) era. Design Fifty preoperative MRI scans of biopsy-proven pituitary adenomas using the sellar invasion and suprasellar extension components of the Hardy scale were reviewed. Setting This study was a cohort study set at a single institution. Participants There were six independent raters. Main Outcome Measures The main outcome measures of this study were interrater reliability, intrarater reliability, and percent agreement. Results Overall interrater reliability of both Hardy subscales on MRI was strong. However, reliability of the intermediate scores was weak, and percent agreement among raters was poor (12–16%) using the full scales. Dichotomizing the scale into clinically useful groups maintained strong interrater reliability for the sellar invasion scale and increased the percent agreement for both scales. Conclusion This study raises important questions about the reliability of the original Hardy classification. Editing the measure to a clinically relevant dichotomous scale simplifies the rating process and may be useful for preoperative tumor characterization in the MRI era. Future research studies should use the dichotomized Hardy scale (sellar invasion Grades 0–III versus Grade IV, suprasellar extension Types 0–C versus Type D).
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- 2017
18. Interrater and intrarater reliability of the Knosp scale for pituitary adenoma grading
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Douglas A. Hardesty, William L. White, Kristina Chapple, Michael A Mooney, Andrew S. Little, John P. Sheehy, and Robert Bird
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Adenoma ,medicine.medical_specialty ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Pituitary adenoma ,medicine ,Humans ,Pituitary Neoplasms ,Grading (tumors) ,Observer Variation ,business.industry ,Significant difference ,Training level ,Reproducibility of Results ,General Medicine ,Intra-rater reliability ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Inter-rater reliability ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Physical therapy ,Cavernous Sinus ,Clinical Competence ,Neoplasm Grading ,Pituitary surgery ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Grading scale - Abstract
OBJECTIVEThe goal of this study was to determine the interrater and intrarater reliability of the Knosp grading scale for predicting pituitary adenoma cavernous sinus (CS) involvement.METHODSSix independent raters (3 neurosurgery residents, 2 pituitary surgeons, and 1 neuroradiologist) participated in the study. Each rater scored 50 unique pituitary MRI scans (with contrast) of biopsy-proven pituitary adenoma. Reliabilities for the full scale were determined 3 ways: 1) using all 50 scans, 2) using scans with midrange scores versus end scores, and 3) using a dichotomized scale that reflects common clinical practice. The performance of resident raters was compared with that of faculty raters to assess the influence of training level on reliability.RESULTSOverall, the interrater reliability of the Knosp scale was “strong” (0.73, 95% CI 0.56–0.84). However, the percent agreement for all 6 reviewers was only 10% (26% for faculty members, 30% for residents). The reliability of the middle scores (i.e., average rated Knosp Grades 1 and 2) was “very weak” (0.18, 95% CI −0.27 to 0.56) and the percent agreement for all reviewers was only 5%. When the scale was dichotomized into tumors unlikely to have intraoperative CS involvement (Grades 0, 1, and 2) and those likely to have CS involvement (Grades 3 and 4), the reliability was “strong” (0.60, 95% CI 0.39–0.75) and the percent agreement for all raters improved to 60%. There was no significant difference in reliability between residents and faculty (residents 0.72, 95% CI 0.55–0.83 vs faculty 0.73, 95% CI 0.56–0.84). Intrarater reliability was moderate to strong and increased with the level of experience.CONCLUSIONSAlthough these findings suggest that the Knosp grading scale has acceptable interrater reliability overall, it raises important questions about the “very weak” reliability of the scale's middle grades. By dichotomizing the scale into clinically useful groups, the authors were able to address the poor reliability and percent agreement of the intermediate grades and to isolate the most important grades for use in surgical decision making (Grades 3 and 4). Authors of future pituitary surgery studies should consider reporting Knosp grades as dichotomized results rather than as the full scale to optimize the reliability of the scale.
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- 2017
19. Rater Reliability of the Hardy Classification for Pituitary Adenomas in the MRI Era
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Roger Bird, Kristina Chapple, Douglas A. Hardesty, John P. Sheehy, Michael A Mooney, Andrew S. Little, and William L. White
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Gerontology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Medicine ,Medical physics ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Reliability (statistics) - Published
- 2017
20. Proposal and Validation of a Simple Grading Scale (TRANSSPHER Grade) for Predicting Gross-Total Resection of Nonfunctioning Pituitary Macroadenomas after Transsphenoidal Surgery
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Andrew Litttle, Michael A Mooney, John P. Sheehy, Douglas A. Hardesty, William L. White, James J Zhou, and Christina E. Sarris
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Transsphenoidal surgery ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Simple (abstract algebra) ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,Radiology ,business ,Gross Total Resection ,Grading scale - Published
- 2019
21. Patient OUT of Pocket Spending Following Endonasal Surgery for Skull Base and Pituitary Lesions in the United States
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James Yoon, Peter Nakaji, Michael A. Bohl, Michael T. Lawton, Andrew S. Little, Michael A Mooney, and John P. Sheehy
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Skull ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,business.industry ,medicine ,business ,Base (exponentiation) ,Surgery - Published
- 2019
22. Controversies in Skull Base Surgery
- Author
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Ching-Jen Chen, Andrew F. Ducruet, Anil Nanda, Alaa S. Montaser, Justin R. Mascitelli, Kerry L. Knievel, Douglas A. Hardesty, Steven B. Carr, Maria Fleseriu, Christina E. Sarris, Michael E. Sughrue, Marvin Bergsneider, James J. Zhou, Marilene B. Wang, Kathryn Y. Noonan, David S. Xu, Leland Rogers, Jason P. Sheehan, James T. Rutka, Carl H. Snyderman, Daniel M. Prevedello, Thomas A. Ostergard, Edward R. Laws, Shuli Brammli-Greenberg, Scott Brigeman, Robert S. Heller, Randall W. Porter, Nathan T. Zwagerman, James J. Evans, Steven L. Giannotta, Andrew S. Little, Eric P. Wilkinson, Rachel Blue, Paul A. Gardner, Chad A. Glenn, Rami O. Almefty, Justin L. Hoskin, Engelbert J. Knosp, Theodore H. Schwartz, Felipe C. Albuquerque, John P. Sheehy, Jeffrey Janus, Marc R. Rosen, Shirley McCartney, Hideyuki Kano, Christopher Storey, Gabriel Zada, Andrew J. Meeusen, Charles Teo, David William Hsu, Kyle VanKoevering, Kaith K. Almefty, Christopher H. Le, Brooke K. Leachman, Emad Youssef, Jean Anderson Eloy, Mark E. Whitaker, Arnau Benet, Omar Arnaout, L. Dade Lunsford, Neil Majmundar, Sheri K. Palejwala, Rick A. Friedman, Kevin A. Peng, Taylor J. Abel, Sirin Gandhi, Hai Sun, Eric W. Wang, Stephanie E. Weiss, Jonathan A. Forbes, Daniel F. Kelly, Andrew Faramand, Ajay Niranjan, S. Harrison Farber, Farshad Nassiri, Garni Barkhoudarian, Carl B. Heilman, Pamela S. Jones, Suganth Suppiah, Colin J. Przybylowski, Christine Oh, Justin S. Cetas, Zaman Mirzadeh, Tracy M. Flanders, Jonathan J. Russin, Gabriella Paisan, Vijay K. Anand, Ahmed Jorge, Jacob F Baranoski, Kevin C. J. Yuen, David L. Penn, Brooke Swearingen, John Y K Lee, Erin K. Reilly, Yoko Fujita, Alexandre B. Todeschini, Anne E. Cress, Salvatore Lettieri, Alexander S.G. Micko, Mindy R. Rabinowitz, Ziv Gil, Michael T. Lawton, Ricardo L. Carrau, Dale Ding, Gill E. Sviri, Gelareh Zadeh, Jai Deep Thakur, G. Michael Lemole, Michelle Lin, Winnie Liu, Brian H. Song, Elena V. Varlamov, William L. Harryman, Gregory K. Hong, Bradley A. Otto, Jamie J. Van Gompel, Gregory P. Lekovic, William H. Slattery, Juan C. Fernandez-Miranda, Ben A. Strickland, Ben K. Hendricks, James K. Liu, Daniel A. Donoho, Ruth E. Bristol, Nader Sanai, and Michael A. Mooney
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Skull base surgery ,Medicine ,business ,Surgery - Published
- 2019
23. Accuracy in Deep Brain Stimulation Electrode Placement: A Single-Surgeon Retrospective Analysis of Sterotactic Error in Overlapping and Non-Overlapping Surgical Cases
- Author
-
Zaman Mirzadeh, John P. Sheehy, Francisco A. Ponce, Michael A. Bohl, Michael A Mooney, and Tsinsue Chen
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Movement disorders ,Deep brain stimulation ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Deep Brain Stimulation ,Length of hospitalization ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Stereotaxic Techniques ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,Deep brain stimulation electrode ,medicine ,Retrospective analysis ,Humans ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Surgeons ,Movement Disorders ,business.industry ,Brain ,Middle Aged ,Overlapping surgery ,Single surgeon ,Surgery ,Electrodes, Implanted ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Lead Placement ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background: Many surgeons utilize assistants to perform procedures in more than one operating room at a given time using a practice known as overlapping surgery. Debate has continued as to whether overlapping surgery improves the efficiency and access to care or risks patient safety and outcomes. Objective: To examine effects of overlapping surgery in deep brain stimulation (DBS) for movement disorders. Methods: In this retrospective analysis of overlapping and non-overlapping cases, we evaluated stereotactic accuracy, operative duration, length of hospital stay, and the presence of hemorrhage, wound-related complications, and hardware-related complications requiring revision in adults with movement disorders undergoing DBS. Results: Of 324 cases, 141 (43.5%) were overlapping and 183 (56.5%) non-overlapping. Stereotactic error, number of brain penetrations, and postoperative length of hospitalization did not differ significantly (p ≥ 0.08) between the overlapping and non-overlapping groups. Mean operative duration was significantly longer for overlapping (81/141 [57.4%], 189.5 ± 10.8 min) than for non-overlapping cases (79/183 [43.2%], 169.9 ± 7.6 min; p = 0.004). There were no differences in rates of wound-related complications or hemorrhages, but overlapping cases had a significantly higher rate of hardware-related complications requiring revision (7/141 [5.0%] vs. 0/183 [0%]; p = 0.002). Conclusions: Overlapping and non-overlapping cases had comparable DBS lead placement accuracy. Overlapping cases had a longer operative duration and had a higher rate of hardware-related complications requiring revision.
- Published
- 2018
24. Proposal and Validation of a Simple Grading Scale (TRANSSPHER Grade) for Predicting Gross Total Resection of Nonfunctioning Pituitary Macroadenomas After Transsphenoidal Surgery
- Author
-
Michael A, Mooney, Christina E, Sarris, James J, Zhou, Garni, Barkhoudarian, Michael R, Chicoine, Juan C, Fernandez-Miranda, Paul A, Gardner, Douglas A, Hardesty, Heidi, Jahnke, Daniel F, Kelly, Brandon D, Liebelt, Marc R, Mayberg, Daniel M, Prevedello, John, Sfondouris, John P, Sheehy, James P, Chandler, Kevin C J, Yuen, William L, White, Andrew S, Little, and Timothy R, Smith
- Subjects
Adenoma ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Microsurgery ,Sphenoid Sinus ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Pituitary neoplasm ,Preoperative care ,Risk Assessment ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pituitary adenoma ,medicine ,Humans ,Pituitary Neoplasms ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Aged ,Transsphenoidal surgery ,Aged, 80 and over ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,Margins of Excision ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Tumor Burden ,Neuroendoscopy ,Surgery ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cohort study - Abstract
BACKGROUND A simple, reliable grading scale to better characterize nonfunctioning pituitary adenomas (NFPAs) preoperatively has potential for research and clinical applications. OBJECTIVE To develop a grading scale from a prospective multicenter cohort of patients that accurately and reliably predicts the likelihood of gross total resection (GTR) after transsphenoidal NFPA surgery. METHODS Extent-of-resection (EOR) data from a prospective multicenter study in transsphenoidal NFPA surgery were analyzed (TRANSSPHER study; ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02357498). Sixteen preoperative radiographic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) tumor characteristics (eg, tumor size, invasion measures, tumor signal characteristics, and parameters impacting surgical access) were evaluated to determine EOR predictors, to calculate receiver-operating characteristic curves, and to develop a grading scale. A separate validation cohort (n = 165) was examined to assess the scale's performance and inter-rater reliability. RESULTS Data for 222 patients from 7 centers treated by 15 surgeons were analyzed. Approximately one-fifth of patients (18.5%; 41 of 222) underwent subtotal resection (STR). Maximum tumor diameter > 40 mm; nodular tumor extension through the diaphragma into the frontal lobe, temporal lobe, posterior fossa, or ventricle; and Knosp grades 3 to 4 were identified as independent STR predictors. A grading scale (TRANSSPHER grade) based on a combination of these 3 features outperformed individual variables in predicting GTR (AUC, 0.732). In a validation cohort, the scale exhibited high sensitivity and specificity (AUC, 0.779) and strong inter-rater reliability (kappa coefficient, 0.617). CONCLUSION This simple, reliable grading scale based on preoperative MRI characteristics can be used to better characterize NFPAs for clinical and research purposes and to predict the likelihood of achieving GTR.
- Published
- 2018
25. Patient out-of-pocket spending in cranial neurosurgery: single-institution analysis of 6569 consecutive cases and literature review
- Author
-
John P. Sheehy, Michael A Mooney, Michael T. Lawton, Michael A. Bohl, Andrew S. Little, Peter Nakaji, and Seungwon Yoon
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Patient demographics ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Insurance Coverage ,Neurosurgical Procedures ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Health insurance ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Single institution ,Craniotomy ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,General surgery ,Univariate ,General Medicine ,Surgical procedures ,Middle Aged ,Cerebrospinal Fluid Shunts ,Cost sharing ,Surgery ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neurosurgery ,Health Expenditures ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
OBJECTIVEWith drastic changes to the health insurance market, patient cost sharing has significantly increased in recent years. However, the patient financial burden, or out-of-pocket (OOP) costs, for surgical procedures is poorly understood. The goal of this study was to analyze patient OOP spending in cranial neurosurgery and identify drivers of OOP spending growth.METHODSFor 6569 consecutive patients who underwent cranial neurosurgery from 2013 to 2016 at the authors’ institution, the authors created univariate and multivariate mixed-effects models to investigate the effect of patient demographic and clinical factors on patient OOP spending. The authors examined OOP payments stratified into 10 subsets of case categories and created a generalized linear model to study the growth of OOP spending over time.RESULTSIn the multivariate model, case categories (craniotomy for pain, tumor, and vascular lesions), commercial insurance, and out-of-network plans were significant predictors of higher OOP payments for patients (all p < 0.05). Patient spending varied substantially across procedure types, with patients undergoing craniotomy for pain ($1151 ± $209) having the highest mean OOP payments. On average, commercially insured patients spent nearly twice as much in OOP payments as the overall population. From 2013 to 2016, the mean patient OOP spending increased 17%, from $598 to $698 per patient encounter. Commercially insured patients experienced more significant growth in OOP spending, with a cumulative rate of growth of 42% ($991 in 2013 to $1403 in 2016).CONCLUSIONSEven after controlling for inflation, case-mix differences, and partial fiscal periods, OOP spending for cranial neurosurgery patients significantly increased from 2013 to 2016. The mean OOP spending for commercially insured neurosurgical patients exceeded $1400 in 2016, with an average annual growth rate of 13%. As patient cost sharing in health insurance plans becomes more prevalent, patients and providers must consider the potential financial burden for patients receiving specialized neurosurgical care.
- Published
- 2018
26. The Barrow Innovation Center: A Novel Program in Neurosurgery Resident Education and Medical Device Innovation
- Author
-
Michael J Donovan, John P. Sheehy, Andrew S. Little, Michael A. Bohl, Peter Nakaji, Michael A Mooney, and Clinton D. Morgan
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Sociology of scientific knowledge ,Medical device ,020205 medical informatics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Neurosurgery ,interdisciplinary training ,02 engineering and technology ,Intellectual property ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Institution ,medicine ,Center (algebra and category theory) ,media_common ,business.industry ,General Engineering ,Resident education ,innovation ,Medical Education ,Capital (economics) ,Engineering ethics ,business ,resident education ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Medical innovation is the application of scientific knowledge and problem solving for the betterment of the human condition. Every great advancement in the field of neurosurgery can be traced back to a novel surgical procedure or technology that challenged existing standards of care. Considering the critical importance of innovation to the advancement of neurosurgery, and a surprising lack of formal training in innovation among residency programs, we sought to create a residency training program in neurosurgical innovation. Neurosurgery residents at the authors' institution envisioned the creation of a program that contained all the necessary equipment, personnel, and information required to bring their ideas from theoretical concepts to functional devices implemented in a clinical setting. The Barrow Innovation Center was established as a result. The center currently comprises a rapid prototyping laboratory and several collaborative partnerships between neurosurgery residents, patent law students, and biomedical engineering students. The creation of this model was guided by an overarching mission to educate the next generation of neurosurgical innovators. With modest start-up capital and strong faculty and institutional support, the center has grown from a simple idea to a multistate, multidisciplinary collaboration in just 18 months; it has generated substantial intellectual property, educational opportunities, and a new business entity. We hope that by continuing to advance the Barrow Innovation Center and its core mission of innovation education, we will advance the field of neurosurgery by providing the next generation of surgeon-scientists with the skills, knowledge, and opportunity needed to revolutionize the field.
- Published
- 2018
27. Book Review: Essentials of Interventional Techniques in Managing Chronic Pain
- Author
-
Zaman Mirzadeh and John P. Sheehy
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine ,Chronic pain ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Intensive care medicine ,business ,medicine.disease - Published
- 2018
28. Book Review
- Author
-
John P. Sheehy and Zaman Mirzadeh
- Subjects
Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2018
29. 344 Deep Brain Stimulation in Multiple Rooms
- Author
-
John P. Sheehy, Michael A. Bohl, Zaman Mirzadeh, Michael A Mooney, Francisco A Ponce, and Tsinsue Chen
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Movement disorders ,Deep brain stimulation ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Single surgeon ,law.invention ,law ,Medicine ,Artificial cardiac pacemaker ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,medicine.symptom ,business - Published
- 2018
30. Unchanged safety outcomes in deep brain stimulation surgery for Parkinson disease despite a decentralization of care
- Author
-
Andrew K Chan, Brad E. Zacharia, Blair Ford, Guy M. McKhann, Robert A. McGovern, and John P. Sheehy
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Deep brain stimulation ,Practice patterns ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,MEDLINE ,Disease ,Logistic regression ,Emergency medicine ,Health care ,medicine ,Physical therapy ,business ,Deep brain stimulation surgery ,Primary procedure - Abstract
Object Early work on deep brain stimulation (DBS) surgery, when procedures were mostly carried out in a small number of high-volume centers, demonstrated a relationship between surgical volume and procedural safety. However, over the past decade, DBS has become more widely available in the community rather than solely at academic medical centers. The authors examined the Nationwide Inpatient Sample (NIS) to study the safety of DBS surgery for Parkinson disease (PD) in association with this change in practice patterns. Methods The NIS is a stratified sample of 20% of all patient discharges from nonfederal hospitals in the United States. The authors identified patients with a primary diagnosis of PD (332.0) and a primary procedure code for implantation/replacement of intracranial neurostimulator leads (02.93) who underwent surgery between 2002 and 2009. They analyzed outcomes using univariate and hierarchical, logistic regression analyses. Results The total number of DBS cases remained stable from 2002 through 2009. Despite older and sicker patients undergoing DBS, procedural safety (rates of non-home discharges, complications) remained stable. Patients at low-volume hospitals were virtually indistinguishable from those at high-volume hospitals, except that patients at low-volume hospitals had slightly higher comorbidity scores (0.90 vs 0.75, p < 0.01). Complications, non-home discharges, length of hospital stay, and mortality rates did not significantly differ between low- and high-volume hospitals when accounting for hospital-related variables (caseload, teaching status, location). Conclusions Prior investigations have demonstrated a robust volume-outcome relationship for a variety of surgical procedures. However, the present study supports safety of DBS at smaller-volume centers. Prospective studies are required to determine whether low-volume centers and higher-volume centers have similar DBS efficacy, a critical factor in determining whether DBS is comparable between centers.
- Published
- 2013
31. Inferior Short-term Safety Profile of Endoscopic Third Ventriculostomy Compared With Ventriculoperitoneal Shunt Placement for Idiopathic Normal-Pressure Hydrocephalus
- Author
-
Brad E. Zacharia, Sam Bruce, Guy M. McKhann, Kathleen Kelly, John P. Sheehy, Charles B. Mikell, Robert A. McGovern, and Andrew K Chan
- Subjects
Ventriculostomy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Endoscopic third ventriculostomy ,Retrospective cohort study ,Perioperative ,medicine.disease ,Comorbidity ,Hydrocephalus ,Surgery ,Endoscopy ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Complication ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND: In small series, endoscopic third ventriculostomy (ETV) has been shown to potentially have efficacy similar to that of ventriculoperitoneal shunting (VPS) for idiopathic normal-pressure hydrocephalus (iNPH). Therefore, some clinicians have advocated for ETV to avoid the potential long-term complications associated with VPS. Complication rates for these procedures vary widely based on limited small series data. OBJECTIVE: We used a nationwide database that provides a comprehensive investigation of the perioperative safety of ETV for iNPH compared with VPS. METHODS: We identified discharges with the primary diagnosis of iNPH (International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision code 331.5 [ICD-9]) with ICD-9 primary procedure codes for VPS (02.34) and ETV (02.2) from 2007 to 2010. We analyzed short-term safety outcomes using univariate and hierarchical logistic regression analyses. RESULTS: There were a total of 652 discharges for ETV for iNPH and 12 845 discharges for VPS for iNPH over the study period. ETV was associated with a significantly higher mortality (3.2% vs 0.5%) and short-term complication (17.9% vs 11.8%) rates than VPS despite similar mean modified comorbidity scores. On multivariate analysis, ETV alone predicted increased mortality and increased length of stay when adjusted for other patient and hospital factors. CONCLUSION: This is the first study that robustly assesses the perioperative complications and safety outcomes of ETV for iNPH. Compared with VPS, ETV is associated with higher perioperative mortality and complication rates. This consideration is important to weigh against the potential benefit of ETV: avoiding long-term shunt dependence. Prospective, randomized studies are needed.
- Published
- 2013
32. Interrater Reliability of Intermediate Knosp Grades for Pituitary Adenoma Grading Is Poor
- Author
-
John P. Sheehy, William L. White, Andrew S. Little, Douglas A. Hardesty, Robert Bird, Michael A Mooney, and Kristina Chapple
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Inter-rater reliability ,Pituitary adenoma ,business.industry ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,medicine.disease ,business ,Grading (tumors) - Published
- 2016
33. 112 Patient Out-of-Pocket Spending for Neurosurgical Operations is Increasing
- Author
-
Peter Nakaji, Michael T. Lawton, John P. Sheehy, Seungwon Yoon, Michael A Mooney, Tyler S Cole, Michael A. Bohl, Andrew S. Little, and Frank Barranco
- Subjects
business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine.disease ,Healthcare payer ,Patient referral ,Private practice ,Spinal fusion ,Medicine ,Cost sharing ,Referral center ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Medical emergency ,business ,Range of motion ,Economic Inflation - Published
- 2018
34. Radiation Necrosis Secondary to Trigeminal Nerve TomoTherapy: A Cautionary Case Study
- Author
-
Robert F. Spetzler, Hasan A. Zaidi, Andrew Montoure, John P. Sheehy, and Andrew G. Shetter
- Subjects
Trigeminal nerve ,medicine.medical_specialty ,trigeminal neuralgia ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Neurosurgery ,tomotherapy ,General Engineering ,radiation necrosis ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,medicine.disease ,Radiosurgery ,Tomotherapy ,Temporal lobe ,Surgery ,Lesion ,Trigeminal neuralgia ,medicine ,Radiology ,Headaches ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
New radiation delivery modalities have recently challenged Gamma Knife surgery as the historic gold standard in the treatment of trigeminal neuralgia (TN). TomoTherapy, a relative newcomer, has been approved by the U.S. FDA for various intracranial pathologies but is currently off label for the treatment of TN. A 73-year-old female presented with gait instability, intermittent headaches, and confusion. She was treated with TomoTherapy for refractory TN at an outside facility, which failed to reduce her symptoms. Magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated a lesion in the right mesial temporal lobe. A standard right anterior temporal lobectomy was performed and the final pathological report was notable for necrosis, gliosis, and edema consistent with a remote radiation injury. The patient improved postoperatively, but at her two-year follow up, she continued to have persistent bilateral TN and new onset seizures. Imaging revealed no new mass in the resection field. Stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) is an evolving field with broadening indications, which makes it ever more important for physicians to be aware of differences between various SRS modalities. This case report highlights a cautionary example, and emphasizes the need for a more systematic evaluation of novel SRS methods before clinical application.
- Published
- 2015
35. Galanin in human pituitary adenomas: frequency and clinical significance
- Author
-
Kin-Chuen Leung, Tiina P. Lismaa, Jennifer Turner, Ken K. Y. Ho, John P. Sheehy, Yvonne J. Hort, and Betty Leung
- Subjects
endocrine system ,Pituitary gland ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Somatotropic cell ,Adenoma ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Adrenocorticotropic hormone ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Prolactin ,Cushing syndrome ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Corticotropic cell ,Galanin ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists - Abstract
Summary objectives Galanin (GAL) is a neuropeptide widely expressed in the central and peripheral nervous system and in neuroendocrine tissue, including the adenohypophysis where, in humans, it is expressed in corticotrophs and in ACTH-producing adenomas. Previous analyses of human tissue have used antiserum against porcine GAL for detection of GAL immunoreactivity (GAL-IR) and no pathophysiological correlates have been reported. Given significant differences between the sequence of porcine and human GAL peptides, the aim of this study was to use antiserum raised against synthetic human GAL to investigate GAL-IR in non tumorous pituitaries and in pituitary adenomas, and to correlate GAL-IR with the clinical and hormonal characteristics of patients with Cushing’s disease. patients Six nontumorous pituitaries were obtained from autopsy and 151 pituitary adenomas, comprising 62 functioning (16 corticotroph, 26 somatotroph, 19 lactotroph and one thyrotroph) and 89 nonfunctioning adenomas, were obtained by surgery. results All non tumorous pituitary glands showed GAL-IR in corticotrophs, in basophil cells within the neurohypophysis and in nerve fibres of the neurohypophysis. GAL-IR was found in a subset (10 of 16) of patients with ACTH-secreting tumours causing Cushing’s syndrome. GAL-IR was rarely expressed in somatotroph adenomas and prolactinomas, but was expressed in approximately one-third of nonfunctioning tumours. GAL-IR was found in almost 90% of nonfunctioning tumours that were positive for ACTH. There were no significant differences in sex ratio, age at presentation or 24-h urinary free cortisol secretion in the subset of patients with Cushing’s disease positive (n = 10) or negative (n = 6) for GAL-IR. However, Cushing’s patients positive for GAL-IR tended to have smaller tumours and achieved a higher cure rate than those without (100 vs. 50%, P = 0·017). conclusions Galanin is present in normal and tumorous human pituitaries. In addition, GAL colocalizes exclusively in corticotrophs of normal pituitaries and is coexpressed almost exclusively in corticotrophs from functioning and nonfunctioning tumours. The finding that corticotroph adenomas can function irrespective of the presence of GAL suggests that GAL may not play a pathophysiological role in Cushing’s disease. However, the better surgical outcome observed in patients with Cushing’s disease who had tumours positive for GAL-IR suggests that the expression of GAL confers a less aggressive tumour phenotype.
- Published
- 2002
36. Intraoperative wound infiltration with bupivacaine in patients undergoing lumbar spine surgery
- Author
-
Timothy Steel, John P. Sheehy, John Crossman, Malcolm Pell, Peter Bentivoglio, and Robert Jones
- Subjects
Bupivacaine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Chemotherapy ,Local anesthetic ,medicine.drug_class ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Surgical wound ,General Medicine ,Placebo ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Neurology ,Physiology (medical) ,Anesthesia ,Statistical significance ,medicine ,Morphine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Infiltration (medical) ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We conducted a randomized double-blind trial to evaluate the effect of intraoperative wound infiltration with bupivacaine 0.25% (1 ml/kg) compared to placebo (NaCl 0.9% 1 ml/kg) in patients undergoing lumbar spine surgery. Fifty-two patients were entered in the trial and 50 completed it. Two methods of wound infiltration were assessed: (a) infiltration after partial wound closure and (b) infiltration prior to wound closure. Postoperatively patients received morphine sulfate on demand. Visual analog pain scores were recorded every 2 h for 12 h after the operation. Analgesia requirements were recorded over the duration of the study for each patient. The patients who received bupivacaine infiltration prior to wound closure had significantly reduced pain scores in the recovery room and used significantly less morphine in the first 2 h following the procedure. They also had reduced pain scores and reduced morphine demand in the first 10 h but this did not reach statistical significance. No difference was noted between the placebo group and those receiving infiltration after partial wound closure. It is concluded that infiltration of bupivacaine is a simple and safe aid in obtaining analgesia in patients undergoing lumbar spine surgery provided that it is infiltrated prior to wound closure.
- Published
- 1998
37. Unchanged safety outcomes in deep brain stimulation surgery for Parkinson disease despite a decentralization of care
- Author
-
Robert A, McGovern, John P, Sheehy, Brad E, Zacharia, Andrew K, Chan, Blair, Ford, and Guy M, McKhann
- Subjects
Hospitals, Low-Volume ,Deep Brain Stimulation ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,Politics ,Humans ,Parkinson Disease ,Patient Safety ,Registries ,Hospitals, High-Volume ,Patient Discharge ,United States - Abstract
Early work on deep brain stimulation (DBS) surgery, when procedures were mostly carried out in a small number of high-volume centers, demonstrated a relationship between surgical volume and procedural safety. However, over the past decade, DBS has become more widely available in the community rather than solely at academic medical centers. The authors examined the Nationwide Inpatient Sample (NIS) to study the safety of DBS surgery for Parkinson disease (PD) in association with this change in practice patterns.The NIS is a stratified sample of 20% of all patient discharges from nonfederal hospitals in the United States. The authors identified patients with a primary diagnosis of PD (332.0) and a primary procedure code for implantation/replacement of intracranial neurostimulator leads (02.93) who underwent surgery between 2002 and 2009. They analyzed outcomes using univariate and hierarchical, logistic regression analyses.The total number of DBS cases remained stable from 2002 through 2009. Despite older and sicker patients undergoing DBS, procedural safety (rates of non-home discharges, complications) remained stable. Patients at low-volume hospitals were virtually indistinguishable from those at high-volume hospitals, except that patients at low-volume hospitals had slightly higher comorbidity scores (0.90 vs 0.75, p0.01). Complications, non-home discharges, length of hospital stay, and mortality rates did not significantly differ between low- and high-volume hospitals when accounting for hospital-related variables (caseload, teaching status, location).Prior investigations have demonstrated a robust volume-outcome relationship for a variety of surgical procedures. However, the present study supports safety of DBS at smaller-volume centers. Prospective studies are required to determine whether low-volume centers and higher-volume centers have similar DBS efficacy, a critical factor in determining whether DBS is comparable between centers.
- Published
- 2013
38. Features and timing of the response of single neurons to novelty in the substantia nigra
- Author
-
Andrew K Chan, Robert R. Goodman, John P. Sheehy, Seth L. Pullman, Teresa Wojtasiewicz, Charles B. Mikell, Brett E. Youngerman, Catherine A. Schevon, Guy M. McKhann, Robert A. McGovern, and Qiping Yu
- Subjects
Deep brain stimulation ,Time Factors ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Neuroscience(all) ,Clinical Neurology ,Neurophysiology ,Action Potentials ,Substantia nigra ,Novelty detection ,Dopamine neurons ,Neuroimaging ,Dopamine ,medicine ,Humans ,Wakefulness ,Molecular Biology ,Aged ,Neurons ,Principal Component Analysis ,Human substantia nigra ,General Neuroscience ,Novelty ,Parkinson Disease ,Middle Aged ,Electrophysiology ,Substantia Nigra ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Time Perception ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neuron ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,medicine.drug ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Substantia nigra neurons are known to play a key role in normal cognitive processes and disease states. While animal models and neuroimaging studies link dopamine neurons to novelty detection, this has not been demonstrated electrophysiologically in humans. We used single neuron extracellular recordings in awake human subjects undergoing surgery for Parkinson disease to characterize the features and timing of this response in the substantia nigra. We recorded 49 neurons in the substantia nigra. Using an auditory oddball task, we showed that they fired more rapidly following novel sounds than repetitive tones. The response was biphasic with peaks at approximately 250ms, comparable to that described in primate studies, and a second peak at 500ms. This response was primarily driven by slower firing neurons as firing rate was inversely correlated to novelty response. Our data provide human validation of the purported role of dopamine neurons in novelty detection and suggest modifications to proposed models of novelty detection circuitry.
- Published
- 2013
39. Low pressure hydrocephalus acutely following sepsis and cardiovascular collapse
- Author
-
Guy M. McKhann, John P. Sheehy, and Robert A. McGovern
- Subjects
Male ,Neurologic Examination ,business.industry ,Shock ,General Medicine ,Low pressure hydrocephalus ,medicine.disease ,Ventriculoperitoneal Shunt ,Sepsis ,Electrocardiography ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,Humans ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Myocardial infarction ,medicine.symptom ,Nervous System Diseases ,business ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Collapse (medical) ,Aged ,Hydrocephalus - Published
- 2013
40. Paraganglioma of the cauda equina with associated syringomyelia: Case report
- Author
-
John P. Sheehy, Timothy Steel, and Paull Botterill
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Cord ,Cauda Equina ,Central nervous system disease ,Paraganglioma ,medicine ,Back pain ,Humans ,Syrinx (medicine) ,Spinal Cord Neoplasms ,Recent onset ,Paraganglioma, Extra-Adrenal ,business.industry ,Cauda equina ,Middle Aged ,Thorax ,medicine.disease ,Syringomyelia ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Neck - Abstract
We present an association not previously described in which the rare entity of paraganglioma of the cauda equina was found in association with syringomyelia of the cervico-thoracic cord. The patient, a 50-year-old woman presented with a long history of lower back pain with recent onset of sciatic pain and altered sensation in the right leg. Surgical resection of the tumor with intraoperative syringostomy of the syrinx has led to eradication of all symptoms and at 5 months shows no evidence of residual pathology.
- Published
- 1994
41. Meningioma of the Posterior Skull Base
- Author
-
Bruce D. Doust, John Tonkin, John P. Sheehy, Peter Bentivoglio, Michael T. Biggs, and Paul A. Fagan
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Cranial nerves ,Articles ,Anatomy ,Spinal cord ,medicine.disease ,Cerebellopontine angle ,nervous system diseases ,Meningioma ,Skull ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Posterior skull base ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,neoplasms - Abstract
Combined intratemporal and cerebellopontine angle meningiomas are rejatively rare. There are unsolved problems with the stability of the skull and spine and the lower cranial nerves and there is a marked tendency for the tumor to involve the spinal cord. This article reports on five cases of combined intratemporal and cerebellopontine angle meningiomas.
- Published
- 1991
42. Human substantia nigra neurons encode decision outcome and are modulated by categorization uncertainty in an auditory categorization task
- Author
-
Andrew K Chan, Vincent P. Ferrera, Robert A. McGovern, John P. Sheehy, Guy M. McKhann, and Charles B. Mikell
- Subjects
Physiology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Dopaminergic ,Substantia nigra ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,substantia nigra ,nervous system ,Categorization ,perceptual categorization ,Dopamine ,Physiology (medical) ,Perception ,medicine ,Premovement neuronal activity ,Neuron ,dopamine ,single neuron recording ,Temporal difference learning ,Psychology ,Decision making ,Neuroscience ,Original Research ,media_common ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The ability to categorize stimuli - predator or prey, friend or foe - is an essential feature of the decision-making process. Underlying that ability is the development of an internally generated category boundary to generate decision outcomes. While classic temporal difference reinforcement models assume midbrain dopaminergic neurons underlie the prediction error required to learn boundary location, these neurons also demonstrate a robust response to nonreward incentive stimuli. More recent models suggest that this may reflect a motivational aspect to performing a task which should be accounted for when modeling dopaminergic neuronal behavior. To clarify the role of substantia nigra dopamine neurons in uncertain perceptual decision making, we investigated their behavior using single neuron extracellular recordings in patients with Parkinson's disease undergoing deep brain stimulation. Subjects underwent a simple auditory categorical decision-making task in which they had to classify a tone as either low- or high-pitched relative to an explicit threshold tone and received feedback but no reward. We demonstrate that the activity of human SN dopaminergic neurons is predictive of perceptual categorical decision outcome and is modulated by uncertainty. Neuronal activity was highest during difficult (uncertain) decisions that resulted in correct responses and lowest during easy decisions that resulted in incorrect responses. This pattern of results is more consistent with a "motivational" role with regards to perceptual categorization and suggests that dopamine neurons are most active when critical information - as represented by uncertainty - is available for learning decision boundaries.
- Published
- 2015
43. A rare tumour of cauda equina: a case report
- Author
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Adrienne Morey, Tint T. Shein, and John P. Sheehy
- Subjects
musculoskeletal diseases ,Ependymoma ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Nerve root ,business.industry ,Cauda equina ,Anatomy ,Schwannoma ,Lipoma ,Spinal cord ,medicine.disease ,Low back pain ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,Neurofibroma ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Aims Description of a rare case of cauda equina: Capillary haemangioma. Method Review of histopathology, imaging and literature. Result A 44-year-old lady presented with recent-onset left-sided low back pain radiating to anterior thigh. She had a back injury nine years prior; magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) then showed a low termination of spinal cord at L2/3 level and a small intraspinal lipoma. The recent MRI showed an intraspinal enhancing mass at L2/3 with nerve root displacement to the right. In light of significant progression in size over the nine-year period, the intradural red fleshy tumour adherent to multiple nerve roots of the cauda equina was subsequently removed. A 22 × 10 × 5 mm dark-brown lobulated tumour was received. Histologically, there was a circumscribed pseudoencapsulated CH arising within a substantial nerve trunk. Variably sized vascular spaces were arranged in lobular pattern and lined by bland endothelial cells (ERG-positive and S100-negative). Discussion CHs are commonly seen as cutaneous and mucosal lesions. CHs of the cauda equina are extremely rare and clinically simulate schwannoma, ependymoma, or neurofibroma. To our knowledge, only 19 cases have been previously described since publication of the earliest report in 1987. It should be considered as a differential diagnosis in middle-aged patients with enhancing lesions of the cauda equina.
- Published
- 2015
44. An intracranial vagal schwannoma without jugular foramen erosion or vagal dysfunction
- Author
-
John P. Sheehy, Paul A. Fagan, and David Flint
- Subjects
Vagus Nerve Diseases ,business.industry ,Anatomy ,Schwannoma ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Otorhinolaryngology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Medicine ,Humans ,Surgery ,Cranial Nerve Neoplasms ,Female ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,business ,Jugular foramen ,Neurilemmoma - Published
- 2005
45. Evolution of the Management of Hydrocephalus Associated with Acoustic Neuroma
- Author
-
John P. Sheehy, James A. Cook, Juan Ramon V. Perez de Tagle, Marcus D. Atlas, and Paul A. Fagan
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Decompression ,Acoustic neuroma ,Cerebellopontine Angle ,Central nervous system disease ,Cerebrospinal fluid ,medicine ,Humans ,Cerebellar Neoplasms ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Neuroma, Acoustic ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Neuroma ,Cerebellopontine angle ,Surgery ,Hydrocephalus ,Shunting ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Female ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business - Abstract
The management of hydrocephalus in association with a cerebellopontine angle tumor is controversial. There is a widely held belief that initial therapy should always be directed toward treatment of hydrocephalus before definitive surgery. The potential problems of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) shunting and drainage have to led to an evolution in the management of hydrocephalus at St. Vincent's Hospital. There is growing evidence that complete removal of cerebellopontine angle tumors will result in resolution of hydrocephalus without requiring other methods of CSF decompression. The authors present their experience of 14 patients with hydrocephalus found in a recent series of 104 consecutive cases of acoustic neuroma. This study has detected a significant correlation between hydrocephalus and increasing tumor size (P = .0234). The mean tumor size in this series was 3.8 cm. The series has also demonstrated that successful. safe, and complete tumor removal can be achieved without CSF drainage before surgery.
- Published
- 1996
46. Xanthomatous pituitary lesions: a report of two cases and review of the literature
- Author
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Ken K. Y. Ho, Adrienne Morey, Malcolm Pell, John P. Sheehy, Morton G. Burt, and Jenny Turner
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hypophysitis ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Pituitary Diseases ,Hypopituitarism ,Endocrinology ,Fibrosis ,Posterior pituitary ,medicine ,Xanthomatosis ,Humans ,Pathological ,Inflammation ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Giant cell ,Vomiting ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
We describe two young men with cystic pituitary enlargement on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) causing hypopituitarism. The first patient presented acutely unwell with headache and vomiting associated with anterior and posterior pituitary dysfunction. The second patient presented with hypopituitarism after a long history of hypogonadism. In both cases yellow/brown fluid was found at surgery and histological examination revealed inflammatory infiltrate with foamy histiocytes, lymphocytes and multinucleated giant cells containing cholesterol clefts. Full recovery of pituitary function occurred after surgery in the first but not the second patient. The first case is the first documented case of xanthomatous hypophysitis with recovery of pituitary function following surgery. The cases differed in duration of disease, as indicated by the long history of symptoms, the histological finding of marked fibrosis and the lack of recovery of pituitary function in the second. Xanthomatous pituitary lesions categorized in the literature as xanthomatous hypophysitis, xanthogranulomatous hypophysitis and xanthogranuloma of the sellar region have overlapping histological features. Our two cases revealed histological features that do not fit completely into any of the categories but share features of all three. These findings suggest that the various xanthomatous lesions of the sellar region may be a spectrum of a common inflammatory process rather than distinct pathological entities.
- Published
- 2004
47. Galanin in human pituitary adenomas: frequency and clinical significance
- Author
-
Betty, Leung, Tiina P, Iisma, Kin-Chuen, Leung, Yvonne J, Hort, Jennifer, Turner, John P, Sheehy, Ken K Y, Ho, and Tiina P, Lismaa
- Subjects
Adenoma ,Adult ,Male ,Galanin ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,Immunoenzyme Techniques ,Adrenocorticotropic Hormone ,Pituitary Gland ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Humans ,Female ,Pituitary Neoplasms ,Cushing Syndrome - Abstract
Galanin (GAL) is a neuropeptide widely expressed in the central and peripheral nervous system and in neuroendocrine tissue, including the adenohypophysis where, in humans, it is expressed in corticotrophs and in ACTH-producing adenomas. Previous analyses of human tissue have used antiserum against porcine GAL for detection of GAL immunoreactivity (GAL-IR) and no pathophysiological correlates have been reported. Given significant differences between the sequence of porcine and human GAL peptides, the aim of this study was to use antiserum raised against synthetic human GAL to investigate GAL-IR in non tumorous pituitaries and in pituitary adenomas, and to correlate GAL-IR with the clinical and hormonal characteristics of patients with Cushing's disease.Six nontumorous pituitaries were obtained from autopsy and 151 pituitary adenomas, comprising 62 functioning (16 corticotroph, 26 somatotroph, 19 lactotroph and one thyrotroph) and 89 nonfunctioning adenomas, were obtained by surgery.All non tumorous pituitary glands showed GAL-IR in corticotrophs, in basophil cells within the neurohypophysis and in nerve fibres of the neurohypophysis. GAL-IR was found in a subset (10 of 16) of patients with ACTH-secreting tumours causing Cushing's syndrome. GAL-IR was rarely expressed in somatotroph adenomas and prolactinomas, but was expressed in approximately one-third of nonfunctioning tumours. GAL-IR was found in almost 90% of nonfunctioning tumours that were positive for ACTH. There were no significant differences in sex ratio, age at presentation or 24-h urinary free cortisol secretion in the subset of patients with Cushing's disease positive (n = 10) or negative (n = 6) for GAL-IR. However, Cushing's patients positive for GAL-IR tended to have smaller tumours and achieved a higher cure rate than those without (100 vs. 50%, P = 0.017).Galanin is present in normal and tumorous human pituitaries. In addition, GAL colocalizes exclusively in corticotrophs of normal pituitaries and is coexpressed almost exclusively in corticotrophs from functioning and nonfunctioning tumours. The finding that corticotroph adenomas can function irrespective of the presence of GAL suggests that GAL may not play a pathophysiological role in Cushing's disease. However, the better surgical outcome observed in patients with Cushing's disease who had tumours positive for GAL-IR suggests that the expression of GAL confers a less aggressive tumour phenotype.
- Published
- 2002
48. The cerebellopontine angle: does the translabyrinthine approach give adequate access?
- Author
-
John P. Sheehy, Paul A. Fagan, Darragh Coakley, Marcus D. Atlas, Phillip Chang, and Bruce D. Doust
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Translabyrinthine approach ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Posterior fossa ,Cerebellopontine Angle ,Neuroma, Acoustic ,Cerebellopontine angle ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Surgical access ,Surgery ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Ear, Inner ,Retrosigmoid approach ,Methods ,Medicine ,Humans ,business ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Craniotomy - Abstract
A long-standing but unfounded criticism of the translabyrinthine approach is the misperception that this approach does not give adequate access to the cerebellopontine angle. Because of what is perceived as limited visualization and operating space within the cerebellopontine angle, some surgeons still believe that the translabyrinthine approach is inappropriate for large acoustic tumors. In this study, the surgical access to the cerebellopontine angle by virtue of the translabyrinthine approach is measured and analyzed. The parameters are compared with those measured for the retrosigmoid approach. This series objectively confirms that the translabyrinthine approach offers the neurotologic surgeon a shorter operative depth to the tumor, via a similar-sized craniotomy. This permits superior visualization by virtue of a wider angle of surgical access. Such access is achieved with the merit of minimal cerebellar retraction.
- Published
- 1998
49. Petrous apex meningiomas: an alternative surgical approach
- Author
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Paul A. Fagan, L.H Raj Wijetunga, and John P. Sheehy
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Surgical approach ,business.industry ,Petrous Apex ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Posterior fossa ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Middle fossa ,Surgery ,Apex (geometry) ,Meningioma ,Neurology ,Petrous bone ,Physiology (medical) ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Craniotomy - Abstract
The literature describes a variety of surgical approaches to deal with meningiomas that involve the apex of the petrous bone and lie predominantly in the posterior fossa, e.g. the transpetrosal (translabyrinthine and transcochlear), the combined supra- and infratentorial, the subtemporal with or without pyramid resection, the suboccipital and the orbitozygomatic approaches. This study presents an alternative surgical approach, namely a modification of the occipital craniotomy with or without tentorial division. This approach was used for the removal of three petrous bone apex meningiomas which were medium to large in size and located predominantly in the posterior fossa with extension into the middle fossa. Complete tumour excision was achieved with no morbidity and no mortality.
- Published
- 1996
50. Myonecrosis of the middle cerebral artery with thrombosis and cerebral infarction following resection of meningioma
- Author
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Jennifer Turner, John P. Sheehy, Claire Cooke-Yarborough, and Malcolm Pell
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Cerebral arteries ,Muscle, Smooth, Vascular ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Meningioma ,Necrosis ,Postoperative Complications ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Meningeal Neoplasms ,Humans ,Cerebral infarction ,business.industry ,Brain Neoplasms ,Vasospasm ,Thrombosis ,Cerebral Infarction ,Cerebral Arteries ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Neurosurgical Procedure ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Middle cerebral artery ,Female ,Radiology ,business ,Artery - Abstract
The authors report the clinical, radiological and pathological findings in a case of myonecrosis of the right middle cerebral artery following resection of a right temporal lobe meningioma. Postoperatively, the 64 yr old female patient developed a left hemiplegia and died with a massive pulmonary embolus on the eighth day. At postmortem examination the right middle cerebral artery showed recent necrosis of the wall in the area of previous surgery, with thrombosis of the artery and a large right parietal lobe cerebral infarct. Although myonecrosis of arteries has been described in a variety of settings, we know of no previous reported case following a routine neurosurgical procedure. We propose a dual pathogenesis of vasospasm plus damage to the external layers of the arterial wall at surgery and discuss the possible mechanisms based on a review of the literature.
- Published
- 1993
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