12 results on '"Mari, Groves"'
Search Results
2. Underreporting of Traumatic Brain Injuries in Pediatric Craniomaxillofacial Trauma: A 20-Year Retrospective Cohort Study
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Helen, Xun, Christopher D, Lopez, Jonlin, Chen, Erica, Lee, Amir H, Dorafshar, Paul N, Manson, Mari, Groves, Richard J, Redett, and Joseph, Lopez
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Male ,Skull Fractures ,Child, Preschool ,Brain Injuries, Traumatic ,Skull ,Humans ,Female ,Surgery ,Prospective Studies ,Child ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Despite clinical concerns associated with pediatric traumatic brain injuries (TBIs), they remain grossly underreported. This is the first retrospective study to characterize concomitant pediatric TBIs and craniomaxillofacial (CMF) trauma patients, including frequency, presentation, documentation, and outcomes.An institutional review board-approved retrospective cohort study was performed to identify all pediatric patients presenting with CMF fractures at a high-volume, tertiary trauma center between the years 1990 and 2010. Patient charts were reviewed for demographic information, presentation, operative management, length of stay, mortality at 2 years, dentition, CMF fracture patterns, and concomitant TBIs. Data were analyzed using two-tailed t tests and chi-square analysis. A value of P≤ 0.05 was considered statistically significant.Of the 2966 pediatric CMF trauma patients identified and included for analysis [mean age, 7 ± 4.7 years; predominantly White (59.8%), and predominantly male (64.0%)], 809 had concomitant TBI (frequency, 27.3%). Only 1.6% of the TBI cases were documented in charts. Mortality at 2 years, length of stay in the hospital, and time to follow-up increased significantly from mild to severe TBIs. Concomitant TBIs were more common with skull and upper third fractures than CMF trauma without TBIs (81.8% versus 61.1%; P0.05).Concomitant TBIs were present in a significant number of pediatric CMF trauma cases but were not documented for most cases. CMF surgeons should survey all pediatric CMF trauma patients for TBI and manage with neurology and/or neurosurgery teams. Future prospective studies are necessary to characterize and generate practice-guiding recommendations.Risk, II.
- Published
- 2022
3. Representation of female neurosurgeons as abstract authors at neurological surgery conferences
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Gabrielle W, Johnson, Alison, Almgren-Bell, Alexander, Skidmore, Dhvanii, Raval, Gretchen, Blow, Hongjie, Gu, Kimberly, Mackey, Mari, Groves, Hedwig, Lee, and Jennifer M, Strahle
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education ,General Medicine - Abstract
OBJECTIVE Female neurosurgeon representation has increased, but women still represent only 8.4% of neurosurgeons in the US. Women are significantly underrepresented as authors in neurosurgical and spine journals, a key indicator of professional success in academic medicine. In this study, the authors aimed to assess the gender diversity of first and last authors of accepted abstracts at neurosurgical conferences in 2015 and 2019. METHODS Annual meeting abstracts for 2015 and 2019 of the American Association of Neurological Surgeons (AANS), Congress of Neurological Surgeons (CNS), and pediatrics, spine, stereotactic and functional surgery, and cerebrovascular AANS/CNS subspecialty sections were obtained and analyzed for gender. Partial data were obtained for tumor and pain sections. Composite gender data were obtained from the societies. Percentage differences were calculated using comparison of proportions testing. RESULTS Overall, female neurosurgeons accounted for only 8.3% of first and 5.8% of last authors, and 7.2% of authors overall. The pediatrics section had the highest proportion of female neurosurgeons as first (13.7%) and last (12.4%) abstract authors, while the spine section had the lowest proportions of female neurosurgeon first (4.6%) and last (2.0%) authors. Qualitatively, a higher proportion of women were first authors, while a higher proportion of men were last authors. Overall, there was no significant change in female neurosurgeon authorship between 2015 and 2019. With regard to society demographics, female neurosurgeons accounted for only 6.3% of AANS membership. The pediatrics section had the highest proportion of female neurosurgeons at 18.1% and the stereotactic and functional surgery section had the lowest of the subspecialty sections (7.6%). While female neurosurgeons represented 12.6% of spine section membership, they represented only 4.7% of first authors (−7.9% difference; p < 0.0001) and 2.4% of last authors (−10.2% difference; p < 0.0001). For the 2019 cerebrovascular section, female neurosurgeons were underrepresented as presenting authors (5.8%) compared with their membership representation (14.8%, −9.0% difference; p = 0.0018). CONCLUSIONS Despite an increase in the number of female neurosurgeons, there has not been a corresponding increase in the proportion of female neurosurgeons as abstract authors at annual neurosurgery conferences, and female neurosurgeons remain underrepresented as authors compared with their male colleagues.
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- 2022
4. QS2: The Underreporting Of Traumatic Brain Injuries In Pediatric Craniomaxillofacial Trauma - A 20 Year Retrospective Cohort Study
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Helen Xun, BS, Christopher D. Lopez, MD, Erica Lee, MA, Paul N. Manson, MD, Mari Groves, MD, Richard J. Redett, MD, and Joseph Lopez, MD, MBA
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Surgery ,RD1-811 - Abstract
Purpose: Despite clinical concerns associated with traumatic brain injuries (TBIs), they remain grossly underreported: 46% of TBIs in adult craniomaxillofacial (CMF) trauma patients remained unrecorded at discharge. This has not been studied in the pediatric CMF trauma population. Consequently, this is the first retrospective study to characterize concomitant pediatric TBI and CMF trauma patients, including incidence, presentation, documentation, and outcomes. The authors hypothesize that TBI in pediatric CMF trauma is associated with worse prognosis and remains under-recorded. Methods: An IRB-approved retrospective cohort study was performed to identify all pediatric patients presenting with CMF fractures at a high volume, tertiary trauma center between January 1st, 1990 to December 31st, 2010. Patients were included if they were (1) age younger than 15 years and (2) confirmed presence of CMF injury by means of imaging, radiology report, and physical examination. Patient charts were reviewed for demographic information, dentition stage, CMF fracture patterns, mechanism of injury, presentation, need for operative management, length of stay, and mortality at 2 years. Charts were reviewed to identify concomitant TBIs, defined as intracranial injury, cerebral hemorrhage, brain concussion, epilepsy or seizures (post-traumatic), and traumatic brain injury (documented). Data was analyzed using two-tailed Student’s t-tests and chi square analysis. Point-biserial correlation coefficients were calculated between a continuous and dichotomous variable; Pearson correlation coefficients were calculated between continuous variables. A P value ≤ 0.05 was considered statistically significant. Results: Of the 2966 pediatric CMF trauma patients identified and included for analysis (mean age of 7 +/- 4.7 years old, predominantly white, 59.8%, and male, 64.0%), 809 had concomitant TBI (frequency of 27.3%). Only 13 of the 809 TBI cases were documented in charts (1.6%). Concomitant TBI with CMF trauma patients were more likely to be male (69.1% vs 62%, P < 0.05), and be caused by blunt injury (98.9% vs. 95.5%, P < 0.05), compared to CMF trauma patients without TBI. TBI patients had a higher mortality rate at two years (8.0% vs 4.8%, P < 0.05). Mortality at two years, length of stay in hospital, and time to follow up significantly increased from mild to severe TBIs. Concomitant TBI and CMF trauma patients were also more likely to present with skull & upper third fractures than CMF trauma without TBI (81.8% vs 61.1%, P < 0.05). Conclusion: In this 20-year retrospective review, concomitant TBI injuries were present in a significant number of pediatric CMF trauma cases (27.3%) but was not documented for most cases. Given the importance of initial management and long-term care in TBI patients, it is critical for clinicians to remain vigilant for and manage TBIs in pediatric CMF trauma patients in collaboration with appropriate neurology and/or neurosurgery teams. Future prospective studies are necessary to better characterize TBI patient injury patterns and outcomes to generate practice guiding recommendations for this patient population.
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- 2021
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5. Minimally invasive intraventricular ultrasound: design and instrumentation towards a miniaturized ultrasound-guided focused ultrasound probe.
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Micah Belzberg, Francisco Chavez, Kah Timothy Xiong, Kyle Morrison, Nao Gamo, Stephen Restaino, Rajiv Iyer, Mari Groves, Nitish V. Thakor, Henry Brem, Alan Cohen, and Amir Manbachi
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- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Management of Musculoskeletal Malformations
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Mari Groves
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- 2023
7. How and When to Use Hooks to Improve Deformity Correction
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Jonathon Lentz, Frederick Mun, Krishna Suresh, Mari Groves, and Paul Sponseller
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Hooks play an important role in helping to achieve fixation during posterior spinal fusion (PSF) in patients with spinal deformity. This article reviews the different types of hooks used in PSF, advantages and disadvantages, indications, and multiple surgical techniques for insertion based on hook type.
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- 2021
8. Dehydrated human amnion/chorion membrane allografts for myelomeningocele and wound reconstruction
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Jonlin, Chen, Christopher D, Lopez, Alisa O, Girard, Mya, Abousy, Richard J, Redett, Mari, Groves, and Robin, Yang
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Adult ,Wound Healing ,Meningomyelocele ,Pregnancy ,Placenta ,Humans ,Female ,Amnion ,Chorion ,Allografts ,Child - Abstract
A growing body of literature demonstrates the clinical promise of dehydrated human amnion/chorion membrane (dHACM), a cryopreserved tissue product derived from placental amniotic membrane, to enhance post-operative wound healing. The purpose of this study is to review the potential of dHACM to facilitate post-surgical and myelomeningocele wound repair. A comprehensive literature search of PubMed was conducted to identify studies investigating dHACM use in pediatric and surgical wound care published from inception to October 2020. For each study, patient characteristics, wound characteristics, and outcomes following dHACM application were documented and assessed. Of the 190 articles reviewed, 15 publications were included in the final analysis. Results demonstrated that the average wound healing time varied across clinical indications (e.g., 14 days for trauma reconstruction to 116 days for Moh's surgery repair). Across indications, pediatric patients had shorter healing periods compared to adults (P 0.01). Chronic wounds ( four weeks old) were documented in both adult (n = 3) and pediatric (n = 2) wound repair publications; all chronic surgical wounds demonstrated complete wound closure with dHACM. No complications from dHACM use were reported. Advantages of dHACM included increased patient satisfaction, cost-savings, and faster wound healing. We then present two cases of myelomeningocele wound repair facilitated successfully by dHACM. Overall, dHACM proves to successfully expedite wound repair in pediatric patients with chronic or complicated wounds such as those from myelomeningocele repair. It is important for surgeons to consider wound duration, size, and patient age to better predict graft success in enhancing wound repair.
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- 2021
9. Surgical considerations in Labrune syndrome
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Andrew, Kobets, David, Oriko, Mari, Groves, Shenandoah, Robinson, and Alan, Cohen
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Adolescent ,Leukoencephalopathies ,Calcinosis ,Humans ,Female ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,Central Nervous System Cysts ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging - Abstract
Labrune syndrome (LS) is a rare white matter disease characterized by leukoencephalopathy with intracranial calcification and cysts (LCC). While the intracranial cyst characteristics of LS are for the most part stable, some may require surgical intervention when they develop associated hemorrhage and/or mass effect. To date, no review of the surgical outcomes of cyst decompression in LS has been performed.We report the case of a 16-year-old girl with LS who presented with progressive right hemiparesis from an enlarging hemorrhagic left thalamic cyst. The patient underwent frameless stereotactic cyst aspiration and Ommaya reservoir placement and her hemiparesis subsequently improved. Serial monitoring demonstrated stable decompression of the cyst.The pathophysiology of LS is thought to be diffuse cerebral microangiopathy and it is thought that these microhemorrhages contribute to the formation of intracranial cysts as well as diffuse calcifications. Indications for surgical intervention in LS are not well established and the heterogeneity of lesions compels them to be managed on a case-by-case basis. Based on our literature review, surgery is the standard treatment of choice for patients with progressive symptoms and growing lesions on imaging studies, with outcomes favoring less-invasive stereotactic approaches with contingencies of reservoir placement when cysts recur.
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- 2020
10. Atlantoaxial Rotatory Subluxation: A Rare Complication of Craniofacial Surgery
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Mari Groves, Scott P. Bartlett, Viren Patel, Sameer Shakir, and Robin Yang
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Joint Dislocations ,Neck Injuries ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Goldenhar Syndrome ,medicine ,Humans ,Craniofacial ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,Child ,Craniofacial surgery ,Torticollis ,Retrospective Studies ,Subluxation ,Neck pain ,Neck Pain ,business.industry ,Skull ,Retrospective cohort study ,030206 dentistry ,General Medicine ,Grisel syndrome ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Atlanto-Axial Joint ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Complication ,business - Abstract
Introduction Neck pain is common in the post-operative period after craniofacial procedures. If patients present with neck pain and torticollis, it could be a manifestation of atlantoaxial rotatory subluxlation (AARS), which describes a rare condition in which there is lateral displacement of C1 relative to C2. When this occurs in the post-operative patient, it is termed Grisel syndrome. In this case series, we report on 3 patients diagnosed with Grisel syndrome after a craniofacial procedure. Methods A retrospective chart review of a single craniofacial surgeon at a pediatric hospital was conducted over the last 3 decades. Demographics, procedures performed, and management strategies of AARS were included for review. Results Three patients were identified who were diagnosed with Grisel syndrome after a craniofacial procedure and required inpatient cervical traction. All patients presented with torticollis within 1 week of their operation. Conservative management was ineffective, and all 3 patients were admitted for inpatient cervical traction, for an average of 13 days followed by an average of 47 days of outpatient therapy. No patients showed any signs of recurrence after removal of outpatient traction device. Conclusion Grisel syndrome is a rare, but serious complication of craniofacial procedures. Physicians caring for these patients must have a high degree of suspicion if a patient with a recent craniofacial procedure presents with torticollis. Delaying the initiation of therapy has been shown to lead to higher rates of recurrence and increases the likelihood that patients will require surgical intervention.
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- 2019
11. Screening neuroimaging and polysomnography (PSG) in children <5 years of age with achondroplasia: a single multidisciplinary clinic experience
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Mari Groves, Laura M. Sterni, RaeLynn Forsyth, and Julie Hoover-Fong
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Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Polysomnography ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry ,Endocrinology ,Neuroimaging ,Multidisciplinary approach ,Genetics ,Medicine ,Achondroplasia ,business ,Molecular Biology - Published
- 2021
12. Contributors
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Frank L. Acosta, P. David Adelson, John R. Adler, ., Kamran V. Aghayev, Manish K. Aghi, Basheal M. Agrawal, Manmeet S. Ahluwalia, Faiz Ahmad, Ellen Air, Pablo Ajler, Felipe C. Albuquerque, Arun P. Amar, Luca Amendola, Christopher Ames, Beejal Y. Amin, Sepideh Amin-Hanjani, Joshua M. Ammerman, William S. Anderson, Ronald I. Apfelbaum, Michael L.J. Apuzzo, Rocco Armonda, Paul M. Arnold, Harel Arzi, Ashok R. Asthagiri, Kurtis Auguste, Tariq E. Awad, Khaled M. Aziz, Tipu Aziz, Joachim M. Baehring, Mirza N. Baig, Roy Bakay, Perry A. Ball, Stefano Bandiera, Nicholas M. Barbaro, Frederick G. Barker, Daniel L. Barrow, Sachin Batra, Joshua Bederson, Kimon Bekelis, Carlo Bellabarba, Lorenzo Bello, Allan J. Belzberg, Bernard R. Bendok, Ludwig Benes, Edward C. Benzel, Helmut Bertalanffy, Chetan Bettegowda, Ravi Bhatia, Sanjay Bhatia, Allen T. Bishop, Keith L. Black, Lewis S. Blevins, George T. Blike, Ari Blitz, Göran C. Blomstedt, Benjamin Blondel, Kofi Boahene, Bernardo Boleaga, Markus Bookland, Stefano Boriani, Christopher M. Boxell, Henry Brem, Albino Bricolo, Jason A. Brodkey, Jacques Brotchi, Jeffrey N. Bruce, Michael Bruneau, Bradley R. Buchbinder, Kim J. Burchiel, Timothy G. Burke, Ali Bydon, Francesco Cacciola, Kevin Cahill, Paolo Cappabianca, Anthony J. Caputy, Francesco Cardinale, Ricardo L. Carrau, Benjamin S. Carson, Bob S. Carter, Giuseppe Casaceli, Laura Castana, Gabriel Castillo, Luigi M. Cavallo, C. Michael Cawley, Aabir Chakraborty, Edward F. Chang, Eric C. Chang, Steven D. Chang, Jens R. Chapman, E. Thomas Chappell, Neeraj Chaudhary, Douglas Chen, James Chen, Linda C. Chen, Boyle C. Cheng, Joshua J. Chern, John H. Chi, Wade W. Chien, E. Antonio Chiocca, Rohan Chitale, Bhupal Chitnavis, Lana D. Christiano, Ray M. Chu, Elisa F. Ciceri, Michelle J. Clarke, Alan Cohen, Annamaria Colao, Geoffrey P. Colby, Massimo Collice, Daniel Condit, Alexander L. Coon, Cassius Vinícius Corrêa Dos Reis, G. Rees Cosgrove, Massimo Cossu, William T. Couldwell, William T. Curry, Guilherme Dabus, Teodoro Forcht Dagi, Giuseppe D'Aliberti, Moise Danielpour, Mark J. Dannenbaum, Ronan M. Dardis, Hormuzdiyar H. Dasenbrock, Reza Dashti, Arthur L. Day, John Diaz Day, Vedran Deletis, Ramiro Del-Valle, Franco DeMonte, Francesco Dimeco, Robert Dodd, Francesco Doglietto, Lutz Dörner, Michael J. Dorsi, Gaby D. Doumit, James M. Drake, Doniel Drazin, Rose Du, Thomas B. Ducker, Hugues Duffau, Bradley S. Duhon, Paula Eboli, Mohamed Samy Elhammady, Pamela Ely, Nancy E. Epstein, Kadir Erkmen, Thomas Errico, Emad N. Eskandar, Clifford J. Eskey, Felice Esposito, Camilo E. Fadul, Gilbert J. Fanciullo, Kyle M. Fargen, Gidon Felsen, Dong Xia Feng, Richard G. Fessler, Aaron G. Filler, John C. Flickinger, John R. Floyd, Kevin T. Foley, Kostas N. Fountas, Howard Francis, James L. Frazier, Kai Frerichs, David M. Frim, Sebastien Froelich, Takanori Fukushima, Philippe Gailloud, Sergio Maria Gaini, Chirag D. Gandhi, Dheeraj Gandhi, Gale Gardner, Paul Gardner, Mark Garrett, Tomás Garzón-Muvdi, Alessandro Gasbarrini, Fred H. Geisler, Joseph J. Gemmete, Massimo Gerosa, Atul Goel, Ziya L. Gokaslan, L. Fernando Gonzalez, C. Rory Goodwin, Takeo Goto, Grahame C. Gould, M. Sean Grady, Andrew W. Grande, Ramesh Grandhi, Alexander L. Green, Jeffrey P. Greenfield, Bradley A. Gross, Rachel Grossman, Mari Groves, Gerardo Guinto, Richard Gullan, Gaurav Gupta, Nalin Gupta, Todd C. Hankinson, Ake Hansasuta, James S. Harrop, Griffith R. Harsh, Alia Hdeib, Stefan Heinze, John Heiss, Dieter Hellwig, Juha Hernesniemi, Roberto C. Heros, Todd Hillman, Jose Hinojosa, Girish K. Hiremath, Brian L. Hoh, L. Nelson Hopkins, Wesley Hsu, Yin C. Hu, Jason H. Huang, Judy Huang, Peter J. Hutchinson, Jonathan A. Hyam, Adriana G. Ioachimescu, Pascal M. Jabbour, Juan Jackson, George I. Jallo, Ivo P. Janecka, Mohsen Javadpour, Andrew Jea, Sunil Jeswani, David H. Jho, Diana H. Jho, Hae-Dong Jho, Bowen Jiang, Tae-Young Jung, M. Yashar S. Kalani, Hideyuki Kano, Silloo B. Kapadia, Michael G. Kaplitt, Christoph Kappus, Eftychia Z. Kapsalaki, Yuval Karmon, Amin B. Kassam, Sudhir Kathuria, Takeshi Kawase, Alexander A. Khalessi, Kathleen Khu, Daniel H. Kim, Matthias Kirsch ., Riku Kivisaari, Angelos G. Kolias, Douglas Kondziolka, Marcus C Korinth, Dietmar Krex, Mark D. Krieger, Kartik G. Krishnan, Ajit A. Krishnaney, Maureen Lacy, Santosh D. Lad, Jose Alberto Landeiro, Frederick F. Lang, Shih-Shan Lang, Françoise LaPierre, Paul S. Larson, Michael T. Lawton, Marco Lee, Martin Lehecka, Allan Levi, Elad I. Levy, Robert E. Lieberson, Michael Lim, Ning Lin, Göran Lind, Bengt Linderoth, Timothy Lindley, Antoine Listrat, Charles Y. Liu, James K. Liu, John C. Liu, Giorgio Lo Russo, Christopher M. Loftus, Russell R. Lonser, Daniel C. Lu, Yi Lu, L. Dade Lunsford, M. Mason Macenski, Jaroslaw Maciaczyk, Joseph R. Madsen, Subu N. Magge, Giulio Maira, Martijn J.A. Malessy, David G. Malone, Allen Maniker, Geoffrey T. Manley, Jotham Manwaring, Mitchell Martineau, Robert L. Martuza, Marlon S. Mathews, Nestoras Mathioudakis, Paul McCormick, Michael W. McDermott, Cameron G. McDougall, H. Maximilian Mehdorn, Vivek A. Mehta, Arnold Menezes, Patrick Mertens, Frederic B. Meyer, Matthew K. Mian, Rajiv Midha, Diego San Millán Ruíz, Jonathan Miller, Neil R. Miller, Zaman Mirzadeh, Ganpati Prasad Mishra, Symeon Missios, James B. Mitchell, Alim Mitha, J. Mocco, Abhay Moghekar, Jacques J. Morcos, Chad J. Morgan, John F. Morrison, Henry Moyle, Carrie R. Muh, Debraj Mukherjee, Arya Nabavi, Michael J. Nanaszko, Dipankar Nandi, Raj Narayan, Sabareesh K. Natarajan, Edgar Nathal, Vikram V. Nayar, Audumbar Shantaram Netalkar, C. Benjamin Newman, Trang Nguyen, Laura B. Ngwenya, Antonio Nicolato, Mika Niemelä, Guido Nikkhah, Anitha Nimmagadda, John K. Niparko, Ajay Niranjan, Richard B. North, José María Núñez, W. Jerry Oakes, Christopher S. Ogilvy, Kenji Ohata, Jeffrey G. Ojemann, Steven Ojemann, David O. Okonkwo, Edward H. Oldfield, Brent O'Neill, Nelson M. Oyesiku, Roberto Pallini, Aditya S. Pandey, Dachling Pang, Kyriakos Papadimitriou, José María Pascual, Aman Patel, Anoop P. Patel, Toral R. Patel, Vincenzo Paterno, Rana Patir, Alexandra R. Paul, Sanjay J. Pawar, Richard Penn, Erlick A.C. Pereira, Mick J. Perez-Cruet, Eric C. Peterson, Mark A. Pichelmann, Joseph M. Piepmeier, Marcus O. Pinsker, Lawrence H. Pitts, Rick J. Placide, Willem Pondaag, Kalmon Post, Matthew B. Potts, Lars Poulsgaard, Gustavo Pradilla, Charles J. Prestigiacomo, Daniel M. Prevedello, Ruth Prieto, Alfredo Quiñones-Hinojosa, Leonidas M. Quintana, Scott Y. Rahimi, Rudy J. Rahme, Rodrigo Ramos-Zúñiga, Nathan J. Ranalli, Shaan M. Raza, Pablo F. Recinos, Violette Renard Recinos, Shrikant Rege, Thomas Reithmeier, Katherine Relyea, Daniel Resnick, Daniele Rigamonti, Philippe Rigoard, Jaakko Rinne, Jon H. Robertson, Shimon Rochkind, Jack P. Rock, Rossana Romani, Guy Rosenthal, Robert H. Rosenwasser, Nathan C. Rowland, James T. Rutka, Samuel Ryu, Francesco Sala, Roberto Salvatori, Kari Sammalkorpi, Nader Sanai, Thomas Santarius, Amar Saxena, Gabriele Schackert, Uta Schick, Thomas A. Schildhauer, Alexandra Schmidek, Henry H. Schmidek, Meic H. Schmidt, Paul Schmitt, Johannes Schramm, Joseph Schwab, Theodore H. Schwartz, Patrick Schweder, Daniel M. Sciubba, R. Michael Scott, Raymond F. Sekula, Patrick Senatus, Amjad Shad, Ali Shaibani, Manish S. Sharma, Rewati Raman Sharma, Sameer A. Sheth, Alexander Y. Shin, Ali Shirzadi, Adnan H. Siddiqui, Roberto Leal Silveira, Nathan E. Simmons, Marc Sindou, Marco Sinisi, Timothy Siu, Edward Smith, Joseph R. Smith, Patricia Smith, Matthew Smyth, Domenico Solari, David Solomon, Adam M. Sonabend, Mark M. Souweidane, Edgardo Spagnuolo, Robert F. Spetzler, Robert J. Spinner, Andreas M. Stark, Philip A. Starr, Ladislau Steiner, Michael P. Steinmetz, Shirley I. Stiver, Prem Subramanian, Michael E. Sughrue, Ian Suk, Daniel Q. Sun, Ulrich Sure, Oszkar Szentirmai, Alexander Taghva, Giuseppe Talamonti, Rafael J. Tamargo, Richard J. Teff, John M. Tew, Nicholas Theodore, Philip V. Theodosopoulos, B. Gregory Thompson, Wuttipong Tirakotai, Stavropoula I. Tjoumakaris, James H. Tonsgard, David Trejo, Michael Trippel, R. Shane Tubbs, Luis M. Tumialan, Andreas Unterberg, Michael S. Vaphiades, T. Brooks Vaughan, Anand Veeravagu, Ana Luisa Velasco, Francisco Velasco, Gregory J. Velat, Angela Verlicchi, Frank D. Vrionis, Michel Wager, M. Christopher Wallace, Gary S. Wand, Benjamin C. Warf, Michael F. Waters, Joseph Watson, Martin H. Weiss, Nirit Weiss, William Welch, J. Kent Werner, Louis A. Whitworth, Christopher Winfree, Timothy F. Witham, Jean-Paul Wolinsky, Judith M. Wong, Shaun Xavier, Bakhtiar Yamini, Claudio Yampolsky, Michael J. Yaremchuk, Reza Yassari, Chun-Po Yen, John Yianni, Alexander K. Yu, Eric L. Zager, Bruno Zanotti, Marco Zenteno, Mehmet Zileli, and Alexandros D. Zouzias
- Published
- 2012
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