Publications by authors named "Jan Frederick Cornelius"

Article Synopsis
  • Neurosurgeons require in-depth knowledge of cerebral arteries' anatomy for safe patient treatment, and the study aimed to create detailed 3D models of this anatomy using dissection data and incorporate it into a virtual reality (VR) environment.!* -
  • The method involved dissecting two formaldehyde-fixed heads, injecting them with colored materials, scanning them using CT, and then using a mobile app for simplified surface scanning to generate high-quality 3D models.!* -
  • The resulting 15 detailed 3D models and their VR integration allow for interactive manipulation and self-study, providing effective educational resources for understanding complex cerebral vascular anatomy.!*
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Pathophysiological processes following aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH) include upregulated underlying systemic inflammation, which is reflected by changes in different peripheral blood cells and their sub-populations. As inflammation is a crucial process that contributes to post-aSAH complications and clincal outcome, blood cell numbers and ratios in systemic circulation may predict the outcome and provide rapid and easy to quantify point of care biomarkers for these critically ill patients. To identify blood-derived cellular inflammatory parameters which allow a precise prediction of patient outcome after aSAH.

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Autoimmune vasculitides affect the cerebral vasculature significantly in a considerable number of cases. When immunosuppressive treatments fail to prevent stenosis in cerebral vessels, treatment options for affected patients become limited. In this case series, we present four cases of pharmacoresistant vasculitis with recurrent transient ischemic attacks (TIAs) or stroke successfully treated with either extracranial-intracranial (EC-IC) bypass surgery or endovascular stenting.

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Article Synopsis
  • The introduction highlights the benefits of using an endoscope in skull base surgery, particularly for pituitary neuroendocrine tumors (PitNet), allowing for better tumor resection while preserving important gland tissue, but requiring specialized skills to master the technique.* -
  • The research involved a survey with 11 neurosurgical experts from the EANS to establish a consensus on the endoscopic endonasal approach for pituitary adenoma surgery, encompassing various aspects like demographics, surgical methods, and post-operative management.* -
  • The findings present key strategies and considerations for successful endoscopic pituitary surgery, emphasizing surgical technique, understanding of anatomical variations, and collaboration with experts from related fields to minimize complications.*
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Introduction: With increasing use of robotic surgical adjuncts, artificial intelligence and augmented reality in neurosurgery, the automated analysis of digital images and videos acquired over various procedures becomes a subject of increased interest. While several computer vision (CV) methods have been developed and implemented for analyzing surgical scenes, few studies have been dedicated to neurosurgery.

Research Question: In this work, we present a systematic literature review focusing on CV methodologies specifically applied to the analysis of neurosurgical procedures based on intra-operative images and videos.

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Background: Smoking, alcohol abuse, and hypertension are - among others, potential risk factors for cardiovascular diseases. These risk factors generate oxidative stress and cause oxidative stress-induced DNA damage, resulting in cellular senescence and senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP). The SASP factors in feed-forward response exacerbate inflammation and cause tissue remodeling, resulting in atherosclerotic plaque formation and rupture.

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The cardiovascular risk factors, including smoking, ethanol, and oxidative stress, can induce cellular senescence. The senescent cells increase the expression and release of pro-inflammatory molecules and matrix metalloproteinase (MMPs). These pro-inflammatory molecules and MMPs promote the infiltration and accumulation of inflammatory cells in the vascular tissue, exacerbating vascular tissue inflammation.

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Intracranial aneurysms (IAs) are abnormal dilations of the cerebral vessels, which pose a persistent threat of cerebral hemorrhage. Inflammation is known to contribute to IA development. The nuclear factor "kappa-light-chain-enhancer" of activated B-cells (NF-κB) is the major driver of inflammation.

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Article Synopsis
  • Invasive growth of meningiomas into brain tissue is rare but important for patient outcomes, and opinions on its impact differ.
  • A survey was conducted to see how different hospitals collect samples of tumors, revealing many don’t follow a standard method.
  • The study suggests that hospitals should have a more structured way of collecting samples during surgery to better understand if the tumor has invaded brain tissue.
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Inflammaging is a potential risk factor for cardiovascular diseases. It results in the development of thrombosis and atherosclerosis. The accumulation of senescent cells in vessels causes vascular inflammaging and contributes to plaque formation and rupture.

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•OGM surgery is much more complex than a simple debate of "from above or from below" (transcranial vs endoscopic).•Lateral Sub-frontal and Superior Interhemispheric seem the most effective, superior and versatile approaches for OGM.•Minimally Invasive Transcranial approaches showed no inferiority in OGM sized <4 ​cm.

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Introduction: SARS-CoV-2 virus infection causes a dysbalanced and severe inflammatory response, including hypercytokinemia and immunodepression. Systemic inflammation triggered by a viral infection can potentially cause vascular damage, which may lead to cardiovascular and neurovascular events.

Research Question: The aim was to investigate whether CNS complications are related to COVID-19.

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Robust preclinical models are inevitable for researchers to unravel pathomechanisms of subarachnoidal hemorrhage (SAH). For the mouse perforation model of SAH, the goal of this meta-review was the determination of variances in mortality, SAH severity grade, and vasospasm, and their experimental moderators, as many researchers are facing with incomparable results. We searched on the databases PubMed, Embase, and Web of Science for articles describing in vivo experiments using the SAH perforation mouse model and measuring mortality, SAH grade, and/or vasospasm.

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Introduction: Cushing's disease is a state of chronic and excessive cortisol levels caused by a pituitary adenoma.

Research Question: CD is a complex entity and often entails difficulties in its diagnosis and management. For that reason, there are still controversial points to that respect.

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Background: SARS-CoV virus infection results in a dysbalanced and severe inflammatory response with hypercytokinemia and immunodepression. Viral infection triggers systemic inflammation and the virus itself can potentially cause vascular damage, including blood-brain barrier (BBB) disruption and alterations in the coagulation system, which may result in cardiovascular and neurovascular events. Here, we review the literature and present a case of COVID-19 infection leading to an aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage (aSAH).

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Aggressive pituitary neuroendocrine tumors (APT) account for 10% of pituitary tumors. Their management is a rapidly evolving field of clinical research and has led pituitary teams to shift toward a neuro-oncological-like approach. The new terminology "Pituitary neuroendocrine tumors" (PitNet) that was recently proposed to replace "pituitary adenomas" reflects this change of paradigm.

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Background: Chordoma are uncommon aggressive tumors of the skeleton. Surgical resection is often subtotal and adjuvant treatment possibilities are limited as chordomas are highly chemo- and radioresistant. In the present study we examined the impact of 5-ALA PDT on different human chordoma cell lines.

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5-ALA fluorescence-guided surgery (FGS) is a major advance in neuro-oncological surgery. So far, Protoporphyrin IX (PpIX)-fluorescence has been observed in about half of cerebral metastases resected with routinely equipped microscopes during 5-ALA FGS. The aim of the present pilot study was to quantify PpIX-induced fluorescence of cerebral metastases with a spectrometer.

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Objective: With the introduction of the 5-aminolevulinic acid (5-ALA) technique, surgical neuro-oncology has made a major advance. 5-ALA fluorescence-guided resection of malignant glioma results in more complete surgical resections and subsequently prolonged survival. However, it remains uncertain how light intensities of the blue light source and 5-ALA-derived fluorescence intensities of the illuminated tissue are connected.

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Intracranial metastases are the most frequent brain tumor with recurrence rates after treatment of around 40-60%. Age is still considered a determinant of treatment and prognosis in this pathology. Recent studies analyzing the impact of metastasectomy in elderly patients focused on reporting perioperative mortality and morbidity rates but not on the evaluation of oncological outcome parameters.

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Compression syndromes of the vertebral artery that occur at the craniocervical junction are extremely rare causes of haemodynamic insufficiency of the posterior cerebral circulation. The aetiology of the compression syndrome may be a malformation, trauma, tumour, infection or degenerative pathology. This may lead to dynamic vertebral artery occlusion where the vessel courses around the atlas and the axis-the so-called V3 segment.

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Background: 5-Aminolevulinic acid (5-ALA) fluorescence-guided resection technique was first introduced for malignant glioma. However, the impact of the 5-ALA fluorescence behaviour of cerebral metastases is still unclear. Aim of this study was to determine the impact of PpIX-fluorescence on the local progression-free and overall survival.

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Background: Minimally invasive surgery of small skull base meningiomas is technically challenging. We report the role of endoscopic 5-aminolevulinic acid fluorescence guidance (e-5-ALA-FGS) for small and deep-seated anterior skull base meningiomas.

Methods: We report the cases of 2 patients.

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Bow hunter's syndrome is a rare clinical condition. It is caused by dynamic compression of the vertebral artery (VA) either at the level of the transverse foramina (V2 segment) or at the atlantoaxial level (V3 segment). We report a 54-year-old man with typical bow hunter's syndrome caused by compression at the level of C6/C7.

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