Christian B Kaufman

University of Rochester, Rochester, NY, USA

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Publications (2)5.93 Total impact

  • Article: Bilateral deep brain stimulation for treatment of medically refractory paroxysmal nonkinesigenic dyskinesia.
    Christian B Kaufman, Jonathan W Mink, Jason M Schwalb
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    ABSTRACT: The authors present the case of a 26-year-old man with a 10-15-year history of worsening bilateral dystonia and baseline chorea occurring up to 20 times per day that was exacerbated by stress and anxiety and was refractory to medical management. Paroxysmal nonkinesigenic dyskinesia was diagnosed, which is a rare, hyperkinetic movement disorder that is episodic and does not respond to nonbenzodiazepine antiepileptics. The patient was significantly debilitated by his disease, lived in a group home, and suffered from frequent falls, necessitating the wearing of a protective helmet and face mask at all times. The patient underwent implantation of bilateral deep brain stimulation quadripolar electrodes in the globus pallidus internus with the aid of image-guided stereotactic neurosurgery and microelectrode recording without complication. At his 1-month postoperative follow-up, the patient reported a subjective 90% improvement in his symptoms; the only notable side effect was a slight increased slurring in his baseline dysarthria. Objective reporting and recording forms maintained by the patient's caretakers over the following 18 months suggested a significant and sustained improvement in his overall balance, ambulation, and gross motor function with a substantial decrease in the incidence of reported falls. The authors conclude that pallidal deep brain stimulation may be successfully applied to patients suffering from refractory paroxysmal nonkinesigenic dyskinesia with promising results. This treatment strategy deserves further prospective investigation, clinical consideration, and refinement.
    Journal of Neurosurgery 10/2009; 112(4):847-50. · 2.96 Impact Factor
  • Article: The "clamshell" craniotomy technique in treating sagittal craniosynostosis in older children.
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    ABSTRACT: Although most patients with sagittal craniosynostosis are recognized and treated in infancy, some children are not referred to craniofacial centers until later in childhood. In this paper the authors describe a novel operative technique for calvarial reconstruction in older children with previously untreated sagittal craniosynostosis. The authors report a clinical series of eight patients who were treated using novel single-stage calvarial reconstruction, and they assess the complications and outcomes. The patient is placed supine for the procedure, which consists of a coronal incision, bifrontal craniotomy without orbital osteotomy, and multiple interlocking midline parietooccipital osteotomies and recontouring. Fixation is achieved using a bioabsorbable plate system. Cranial indices were calculated from measurements obtained before and after the reconstructive procedures. Preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative photographs and three-dimensional computed tomography scans are presented for review. Between November 2003 and April 2005, the authors treated seven boys (age range approximately 1-10 years, mean age 4.2 years) with uncorrected sagittal craniosynostosis and one with bicoronal and sagittal synostosis. The mean operating time was 5.13 hours (range 4.3-8 hours), with a mean blood loss of 425 ml (range 200-800 ml). As a percentage of the estimated circulating blood volume, the mean operative blood loss was 33.5% (range 17-57%). The mean hospital stay was 4.9 days. The cranial index significantly improved from a mean of 65.6 to 71.3% (p = 0.001). No acute or delayed complications have been noted. Follow-up examinations performed at an average of 12 months (range 1-17 months) have confirmed early patient and family satisfaction. An approach of aggressive calvarial reconstruction with multiple interleaving osteotomies crossing the midline achieves improvements in biparietal narrowing. Combined with a bifrontal reconstruction, early outcomes are excellent, with an acceptable amount of intraoperative blood loss and no significant complications.
    Journal of Neurosurgery 11/2006; 105(4 Suppl):245-51. · 2.96 Impact Factor

Institutions

  • 2009
    • University of Rochester
      • Department of Neurosurgery
      Rochester, NY, USA