UW Neurological Surgery Recent PubMed Publications

SIMPLseq: a high-sensitivity Plasmodium falciparum genotyping and PCR contamination tracking tool

1 month 2 weeks ago
CONCLUSIONS: SIMPLseq significantly extends the malaria genomic epidemiology toolkit, coupling high-sensitivity P. falciparum genotyping with PCR contamination detection in a simple laboratory protocol that uses only open-source reagents and does not require a costly pre-amplification step. Key prospective use cases for SIMPLseq include recurrent infection classification, polyclonality estimation, and genotypic infection endpoint application to intervention efficacy trials.
Philipp Schwabl

Clinical and translational results from a phase 1 trial of gemcitabine/nab-paclitaxel with nivolumab/ipilimumab or hydroxychloroquine/ipilimumab in untreated metastatic pancreatic adenocarcinoma

1 month 3 weeks ago
CONCLUSIONS: REVOLUTION cohorts A and B demonstrated encouraging antitumor activity in patients with mPDAC. In cohort B, hydroxychloroquine-related tolerability issues contributed to early discontinuations and reduced drug exposure. These findings highlight the potential and limitations of current chemoimmunotherapy approaches. Although neither cohort will be expanded, the results reinforce the continued promise of chemoimmunotherapy in mPDAC and the importance of refining these strategies.
Eileen M O'Reilly

Middle Meningeal Artery Embolization for Subdural Hematoma: CT/MRI End Points of the EMBOLISE Trial

1 month 3 weeks ago
Background Chronic subdural hematomas (cSDHs) are associated with high recurrence risks following surgical evacuation. The EMBOLISE trial demonstrated that, compared with surgery alone, adjunctive middle meningeal artery embolization (MMAE) significantly reduced reoperation rates. However, given the limitations of the clinical end points of the trial, which may be subject to interrater variability and certain biases, the quantitative imaging metrics need to be evaluated. Purpose To evaluate the...
Helge Kniep

Assessing the utility of bulbocavernosus reflex for predicting urological outcome in children with spinal dysraphism surgery

1 month 3 weeks ago
CONCLUSION: Baseline BCR has high specificity but limited sensitivity for preoperative continence. Intraoperative BCR loss is a specific but insensitive predictor of postoperative urinary dysfunction. Whilst BCR monitoring aids intraoperative decision-making, further studies are needed to optimise its role in predicting long-term bladder outcomes.
Amparo Saenz

How to manage traumatic brain injury without invasive monitoring?

1 month 4 weeks ago
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: The vast majority of severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients are managed in regions of low resources. Intracranial pressure (ICP) monitoring is, therefore, uncommon. There is insufficient literature to support evidence-based algorithm construction. We here explore current validated models for sTBI management in the absence of ICP monitoring.
Randall M Chesnut

Lumbar Foraminal Morphology Can Affect Outcomes of Indirect Decompression: A Systematic Review and Novel Classification

1 month 4 weeks ago
Study DesignSystematic review.ObjectiveTo identify and classify intervertebral foraminal morphologies associated with failed indirect decompression (IND), with the goal of developing a preoperative classification system to assess candidacy for this procedure.MethodsA systematic review of PubMed, EMBASE, and Google Scholar was conducted. All reported cases of failed indirect decompression secondary to abnormal foraminal morphology were included. Imaging findings were reviewed to identify distinct...
Rakan Bokhari

Enhanced versus standard blood pressure lowering on intracranial aneurysm rupture or growth (ChATIA-1 trial): protocol for a multi-centered, prospective, open-label randomized controlled trial

1 month 4 weeks ago
BACKGROUND: Hypertension is a common comorbidity in patients with unruptured intracranial aneurysms, which is closely related to the instability of aneurysms. Though anti-hypertension therapy has been recommended by several guidelines, the optimal blood pressure range remains unknown. This trial aims to determine the optimal range of blood pressure by comparing standard blood pressure reduction and intensive blood pressure reduction to reduce the instability of unruptured intracranial aneurysms.
Kaige Zheng

Cost-effectiveness of a peer-delivered behavioral intervention for adherence to antiretroviral therapy and alcohol and drug use in South African HIV care

2 months ago
Cost-effective approaches for integrating behavioral interventions for problematic alcohol and other drug (AOD) use into HIV care is needed, as problematic AOD is a primary barrier to adherence of antiretroviral therapy (ART). Thus, we investigated the cost-effectiveness of a recently completed pilot trial in South Africa, that showed promising findings in improved adherence of antiretroviral therapy (ART). The trial compared a task-shared, peer-delivered behavioral intervention (known as...
Thanh Lu

Hemispherectomy in infants: an institutional experience with 21 patients

2 months ago
CONCLUSIONS: An institutional experience demonstrated that functional hemispherectomy is a safe and well-tolerated procedure in infants and offers excellent seizure control outcomes in hemispheric-onset epilepsies. The surgical technique, a focus on minimizing operative blood loss, and multidisciplinary care of these patients are critical elements in ensuring the safety and success of this procedure. Future studies are needed to better characterize long-term functional and neurodevelopmental...
Dominic Nistal

Long-term visual outcomes after surgical management for intracranial idiopathic hypertension

2 months ago
CONCLUSIONS: Surgical intervention for IIH achieved high rates of papilledema resolution and visual improvement, with low long-term failure rates. Each modality showed distinct strengths, limitations, and temporal failure patterns. Papilledema resolution and time to resolution may serve as meaningful clinical endpoints in future multicenter IIH studies.
Zachary A Abecassis

Tachykinergic signaling mediated by NK1 receptors in the respiratory parafacial region drives respiratory output and contributes to the chemoreflex response to CO<sub>2</sub>

2 months ago
The respiratory parafacial region (pFRG) contributes critically to central chemoreception, CO(2)/H^(+) homeostasis and the regulation of all major components of the respiratory rhythm. The respiratory rhythm is also modulated by the neuropeptide substance P which is released by tachykinin-1 (Tac1)- expressing neurons. However, how tachykinergic signaling modulates the pFRG region remains incompletely understood. Here we show that substance P (1 µM, 30 nL) microinjected into the ventral pFRG...
Octávio A C Maia

Traumatic Microhemorrhages Are Not Synonymous With Axonal Injury

2 months ago
Diffuse axonal injury (DAI) is caused by acceleration-deceleration forces during trauma that shear white matter tracts. Susceptibility-weighted MRI (SWI) identifies microbleeds that are considered the radiologic hallmark of DAI and are used in clinical prognostication. However, this assumption is limited by a lack of systematic radiologic-pathologic correlation studies. Here, we performed ex vivo SWI on three brains from patients who died after severe TBI and assessed axonal injury around SWI...
Karinn Sytsma

Acute UV response of early erythema and late edema in SKH1 mice

2 months ago
In human skin, erythema assessed 24 h after ultraviolet (UV) exposure is a non-invasive method for determining the acute UV response. Although erythema is often reported in murine models as a measure of acute UV response, the most informative timepoint after UV exposure is unclear because of variability in mouse strain, sex, and light source. Our current work addresses this critical gap by elucidating the development of erythema and edema over time after acute UV irradiation with solar-simulator...
Szabolcs Bozsányi

HCN channels reveal conserved and divergent physiology in supragranular pyramidal neurons in primate species

2 months ago
The physiological properties of human and rodent neurons differ, yet the extent to which these differences reflect human specializations is often unclear. Compared with their rodent counterparts, human supragranular pyramidal neurons possess enriched Hyperpolarization-activated Cyclic Nucleotide-gated channel (HCN channel)-dependent intrinsic membrane properties and a related sensitivity to synaptic inputs containing delta/theta band frequencies. Here we test whether other primate species...
Cristina Radaelli
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