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E-raamat: Evidence for Neurosurgery

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  • Formaat: 504 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Oct-2012
  • Kirjastus: TFM Publishing Ltd
  • ISBN-13: 9781908986757
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  • Formaat: 504 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Oct-2012
  • Kirjastus: TFM Publishing Ltd
  • ISBN-13: 9781908986757
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Neurosurgery represents one of the most specialised arenas in modern medicine. Today, more than ever, patients with neurological disorders seek opinions from a variety of specialists and are often treated by teams of physicians. While consensus is often reached within institutions, regional variation is found between institutions. The lack of high quality clinical evidence contributes to this problem. This textbook aims to examine some of the most controversial areas of neurological surgery by applying the current evidence to illuminate our understanding of the pathophysiology of each disease and the outcomes from surgical and non-surgical treatments. Today's neurosurgeon must be able to apply current evidence in the clinic to determine, for example: Which aneurysm should be treated with endovascular or open vascular techniques? Which degenerative lumbar spine should be fused, decompressed, or both and which spine's deformity should be corrected and to what extent? Whether an acoustic neuroma should be treated, followed, removed, or irradiated? This is a textbook that will challenge current dogmas in many instances, provide an organised framework for understanding where current evidence can be applied clinically, and illustrate where gaps in the evidence exist and how these deficiencies may be filled in the future. In the first chapter, "Clinical Evidence", the reader will gain an understanding of the levels of clinical evidence and will learn what types of study designs are appropriate and in which situations. The textbook is then divided into six sections: Spine, Vascular, Tumour, Paediatrics, Functional, and Trauma. Each section's editors have provided a brief synopsis of the specific challenges within each field followed by chapters that provide the current evidence in areas where clinical uncertainty lies.
Abbreviations xii
Foreword xvii
Section 1 Clinical evidence
1(10)
Chapter 1 Clinical evidence
1(10)
Zoher Ghogawala
Bob S Carter
Fred G Barker
Section 2 Spinal neurosurgery
11(126)
Introduction
11(2)
Michael P Steinmetz
Chapter 2 Lumbar spondylolisthesis
13(14)
Vartan S Tashjian
Michael Y Wang
Chapter 3 Cervical spondylotic myelopathy
27(12)
Zoher Ghogawala
Chapter 4 Lumbar fusion for low back pain without neurologic symptoms or spinal deformity
39(8)
Daniel K Resnick
Chapter 5 Thoracolumbar spine fractures
47(10)
George M Ghobrial
Harminder Singh
James Harrop
Chapter 6 Transpedicular instrumentation for lumbar fusion
57(10)
Thomas E Mroz
Kalil G Abdullah
Chapter 7 Graft extenders in spinal surgery
67(18)
Andrea F Douglas
Chapter 8 Orthoses
85(14)
Fred C Lam
Michael W Groff
Chapter 9 Osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures
99(14)
Robert G Whitmore
Zoher Ghogawala
Richard Schlenk
Chapter 10 Metastatic tumors of the spine
113(16)
Ran Harel
Lilyana Angelov
Chapter 11 Motion-preservation strategies for the cervical spine
129(8)
Jau-Ching Wu
Cheerag D Upadhyaya
Praveen V Mummaneni
Section 3 Functional neurosurgery
137(54)
Introduction
137(2)
Kenneth P Vives
Dennis D Spencer
Chapter 12 Temporal lobectomy for mesial temporal sclerosis
139(8)
Alexander M Papanastassiou
Kenneth P Vives
Dennis D Spencer
Chapter 13 Surgical outcomes in non-lesional epilepsy
147(8)
Juan Torres-Reveron
Kenneth P Vives
Dennis D Spencer
Chapter 14 Neuromodulation procedures for movement disorders
155(10)
Kenneth P Vives
Chapter 15 Neuromodulation procedures for medical and psychiatric conditions
165(16)
Matthew K Mian
Sameer A Sheth
Emad N Eskandar
Chapter 16 Stimulation of the central nervous system for chronic pain
181(10)
Ryder Gwinn
Section 4 Tumors
191(62)
Introduction
191(4)
Fred G Barker II
Chapter 17 Brain metastases
195(16)
Sanjay Patra
Steven N Kalkanis
Chapter 18 Pituitary tumors
211(16)
Michael C Oh
Manish K Aghi
Chapter 19 Surgery for glioblastoma
227(8)
Nader Sanai
Chapter 20 Stereotactic radiosurgery versus microsurgical resection for patients with vestibular schwannomas
235(8)
Brian D Milligan
Michael J Link
Bruce E Pollock
Chapter 21 Surgical resection of low-grade gliomas
243(10)
Jason Beiko
Daniel P Cahill
Section 5 Pediatric neurosurgery
253(58)
Introduction
253(2)
Edward R Smith
Chapter 22 Chiari I malformation in children
255(10)
Todd C Hankinson
R Shane Tubbs
John C Wellons III
Chapter 23 Surgical treatment of hydrocephalus in children
265(18)
Shobhan Vachhrajani
James M Drake
Abhaya V Kulkami
Chapter 24 Myelomeningocele
283(14)
Jeffrey P Blount
Chapter 25 Medulloblastoma
297(14)
Paul Klimo Jr
Samuel Adediran
Nicholas Wetjen
Corey Raffel
Section 6 Vascular neurosurgery
311(126)
Introduction
311(4)
H Hunt Batjer
Rudy J Rahme
Bernard R Bendok
Chapter 26 Unruptured cerebral aneurysms: observe, clip, or coil?
315(16)
Andrew F Ducruet
Robert A Solomon
Chapter 27 Ruptured cerebral aneurysms: clip or coil?
331(8)
Raqeeb Haque
Jonathan Yun
Celina M Crisman
Brian Y Hwang
E Sander Connolly
Robert A Solomon
Chapter 28 Intracranial arteriovenous malformations: epidemiology, natural history, and management
339(20)
Rudy J Rahme
Salah G Aoun
Stephen F Shafizadeh
Isaac Josh Abecassis
Bernard R Bendok
H Hunt Batjer
Chapter 29 Extracranial carotid artery stenosis
359(16)
Rudy J Rahme
Salah G Aoun
H Hunt Batjer
Bernard R Bendok
Chapter 30 Symptomatic intracranial arterial disease: medical therapy, stent, or bypass?
375(16)
Andria L Ford
Jin-Moo Lee
Colin P Derdeyn
Gregory J Zipfel
Chapter 31 Cerebral vasospasm following aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage
391(22)
Gregory J Velat
Matthew Kimball
Brian L Hoh
Chapter 32 Deep intracranial hemorrhage
413(24)
Hamad Farhat
Jacques J Morcos
Section 7 Neurotrauma
437
Introduction
437(2)
Alex Valadka
Chapter 33 Use of intracranial pressure and ventriculostomy in traumatic brain injury
439(22)
Randall M Chesnut
Chapter 34 The role of decompressive hemicraniectomy in traumatic brain injury
461(10)
Rajiv Saigal
Atsuhiro Nakagawa
Geoffrey T Manley
Chapter 35 Timing of surgery for spinal cord injury
471
David W Cadotte
Julio C Furlan
Michael G Fehlings
Edward C Benzel, MD is Chairman, Department of Neurosurgery, Director, Center for Spine Health, Neurological Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio, USA. Zoher Ghogawala, MD, FACS Attending Physician, Neurosurgery, Greenwich Hospital, Clinical Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery, Yale University Director, Wallace Clinical Trials Center, Greenwich Hospital Greenwich Neurosurgery, Greenwich, Connecticut, USA. Ajit A Krishnaney, MD is Associate Staff, Department of Neurosurgery, Associate Staff, Center for Spine Health, Associate Staff, Cerebrovascular Center, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio, USA. Michael P Steinmetz, MD is Associate Staff, Department of Neurosurgery, Associate Staff, Center for Spine Health, Associate Staff, Cerebrovascular Center, Associate Staff, Department of Neurosciences, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio, USA. H Hunt Batjer, MD, FACS is Professor & Chair, Neurological Surgery, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois, USA.