hidden pixel

Neurosurgery Information

Neurosurgery (or neurological surgery) is the medical specialty concerned with the prevention, diagnosis, treatment, and rehabilitation of disorders which affect any portion of the nervous system including the brain, spinal column, spinal cord, peripheral nerves, and extra-cranial cerebrovascular system.[1][2]

Contents

Education and training

This article contains instructions, advice, or how-to content. The purpose of Wikipedia is to present facts, not to train. Please help improve this article either by rewriting the how-to content or by moving it to Wikiversity or Wikibooks. (April 2011)

In the US

In the United States, a neurosurgeon must generally complete four years of college, four years of medical school, a year-long internship (PGY-1) that is usually affiliated with their residency program, and five to six years of neurosurgery residency (PGY-2-6).[3] Most, but not all, residency programs have some component of basic science or clinical research. Neurosurgeons may pursue an additional training in a fellowship, after residency or in some cases, as a senior resident. These fellowships include pediatric neurosurgery, trauma/neurocritical care, functional and stereotactic surgery, surgical neuro-oncology, radiosurgery, neurovascular surgery, Interventional neuroradiology, peripheral nerve, spine surgery and skull base surgery.[4] Neurosurgeons can also pursue fellowship training in neuropathology and neuro-ophthalmology.

In the UK

In the UK students must earn A*- C Grades at GCSE (General Certificate of Secondary Education), then they must also achieve A*- C at A levels in Chemistry with at least one other Science or Maths. Also a UKCAT (UK Clinical Aptitude Test) or BMAT (BioMedical Admissions Test) can be used to gain access into some Medical Schools. Students have to study medicine for 5 years and achieve an MBBS qualification (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery). Then the student must perform Foundation training lasting normally 2 years, this is a paid training job in a hospital or clinical situation setting covers a range of Medical specialties including Surgery. Then students enter the neurosurgical pathway. Unlike other surgical specialties it currently has its own independent training pathway which takes around 8 years (ST1-8) before being able to sit consultant exams.[5]

Neurosurgical methods

Neurosurgery
Intervention
ICD-10-PCS 00-01
ICD-9-CM 0105
MeSH D019635
OPS-301 code: 5-01...5-05

Neuroradiology methods are used in modern neurosurgical diagnosis and treatment, including computer assisted imaging computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), positron emission tomography (PET), magnetoencephalography (MEG), and the stereotactic surgery. Some neurosurgical procedures involve the use of MRI and functional MRI intraoperatively.

Microsurgery is utilized in many aspects of neurological surgery. Microvascular anastomosis are required when EC-IC surgery is performed. The clipping of aneurysms is performed using a microscope. Minimally invasive spine surgery utilizes these techniques. Procedures such as microdiscectomy, laminectomy, and artificial discs rely on microsurgery.[6]

Minimally invasive endoscopic surgery is utilized by neurosurgeons. Techniques such as endoscopic endonasal surgery is used for pituitary tumors, craniopharyngiomas, chordomas, and the repair of cerebrospinal fluid leaks. Ventricular endoscopy is used for colloid cysts and neurocysticercosis. Endoscopic techniques can be used to assist in the evaculation of hematomas and trigeminal neuralgia. Repair of craniofacial disorders and disturbance of cerebrospinal fluid circulation is done by neurosurgeons, and depending on the situation, plastic surgeons. Conditions such as chiari malformation, craniosynostosis, and syringomyelia are treated. This is called cranioplasty.

Neurosurgeons are involved in Stereotactic Radiosurgery along with Radiation Oncologists for tumor and AVM treatment. Radiosurgical methods such as Gamma knife, Cyberknife and Novalis Shaped Beam Surgery are used.[7]

Neurosurgeons have begun to utilize endovascular image guided procedures for the treatment of aneurysms, AVMs, carotid stenosis, strokes, and spinal malformations, and vasospasms. Also, nonvascular procedures such as Vertoplasty and Kyphoplasty are used by neurosurgeons. Techniques such as angioplasty, stenting, clot retrieval, embolization, and diagnostic angiography are utilized.[8]

Conditions

Other conditions treated by neurosurgeons include:

See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.casattexas.com/NEURObody.cfm
  2. ^ http://www.neurosurgerytoday.org/
  3. ^ http://www.abns.org/content/primary_certification_process.asp
  4. ^ http://www.aans.org/medical_students/questions.asp
  5. ^ "The society of british neurological surgeons". http://www.sbns.org.uk/site/1090/default.aspx. Retrieved 11/03/2011.
  6. ^ http://www.neurosurgery.org/cybermuseum/microneurohall/arhoton.html
  7. ^ http://neurosurgery.ucla.edu/body.cfm?id=952
  8. ^ http://www.mir.wustl.edu/neurorad/internal.asp?NavID=74
· · Medical Specialities
Specialties and subspecialties
Surgery

Cardiac surgery · Cardiothoracic surgery · Colorectal surgery · General surgery · Neurosurgery · Ophthalmology · Oral and maxillofacial surgery · Orthopedic surgery · Hand surgery · Otolaryngology (ENT) · Pediatric surgery · Plastic surgery · Surgical oncology · Thoracic surgery · Transplant surgery · Trauma surgery · Urology · Vascular surgery

Internal medicine

Allergy/Immunology · Andrology · Angiology (Vascular Medicine) · Cardiology · Endocrinology · Gastroenterology (Hepatology) · Geriatrics · Gynaecology · Hematology · Infectious disease · Nephrology · Oncology · Pulmonology · Rheumatology

Diagnostic

Healthcare sciences (Clinical chemistry, Clinical immunology, Cytopathology, Medical microbiology, Transfusion medicine) · Radiology (Interventional radiology, Nuclear medicine) · Pathology (Anatomical, Clinical) · Clinical neurophysiology

Other specialties

Addiction medicine · Adolescent medicine · Anesthesiology · Dermatology · Disaster medicine · Emergency medicine · Family medicine · General practice · Hospital medicine · Intensive-care medicine · Medical genetics · Neurology · Obstetrics · Occupational medicine · Pain management (Algiatry) · Palliative care · Pediatrics (Neonatology) · Physical medicine and rehabilitation (Physiatry) · Preventive medicine · Psychiatry · Radiation oncology · Reproductive medicine (Reproductive endocrinology and infertility, Reproductive surgery) · Sexual medicine · Sleep medicine · Sports medicine · Transplantation medicine · Tropical medicine (Travel medicine) · Urogynecology

Others

Physician (MD/MBBS and DO) · Dentistry · Veterinary medicine

History of medicine · Medical education · Medical school · Personalized medicine

· · Surgery, Nervous system: neurosurgical and other procedures (ICD-9-CM V3 01–05+89.1, ICD-10-PCS 00-01)
Skull Craniotomy · Craniectomy (Decompressive craniectomy) · Cranioplasty
CNS
Brain

thalamus and globus pallidus: Thalamotomy · Thalamic stimulator · Pallidotomy

ventricular system: Ventriculostomy · Suboccipital puncture · Intracranial pressure monitoring

cerebrum: Psychosurgery (Lobotomy, Bilateral cingulotomy) · Hemispherectomy · Anterior temporal lobectomy

pituitary: Hypophysectomy

hippocampus: Amygdalohippocampectomy

Brain biopsy
Cerebral meninges Meningeal biopsy
Spinal cord and spinal canal

Spinal cord and roots (Cordotomy, Rhizotomy)

Vertebrae and intervertebral discs: see
Medical imaging CT head · Cerebral angiography · Pneumoencephalography · Echoencephalography/Transcranial doppler · MRI of brain and brain stem · Brain PET · SPECT of brain · Myelography
Diagnostic Electroencephalography · Lumbar puncture · Polysomnography
CPRs Glasgow Coma Scale · Mini-mental state examination · NIH stroke scale · CHADS score
PNS
Cranial and peripheral nerves Nerve block · Vagotomy
Sympathetic nerves or ganglia Ganglionectomy · Sympathectomy (Endoscopic thoracic sympathectomy)
Nerves (general) Axotomy · Neurectomy · Nerve biopsy
Diagnostic Nerve conduction study · Electromyography
Medical imaging Magnetic resonance neurography

: CNS

(////////////)//

(/////)//, /,

, drug(////////)

: PNS

(///////)/()/////

///, /,

, drug()

· · Neuroscience

Addiction · Affective neuroscience · Behavioral neurology · Behavioral genetics · Behavioral neuroscience · Brain–computer interface · Chronobiology · Clinical neurophysiology · Clinical neuroscience · Cognitive neuroscience · Computational neuroscience · Connectomics · Eating disorder · Imaging genetics · Integrative neuroscience · Molecular cellular cognition · Movement disorder · Neural development · Neural engineering · Neural network (both artificial and biological) · Neural signal processing · Neural tissue regeneration · Neuroanatomy · Neuroanthropology · Neuroaesthetics · Neurobioengineering · Neurobiology · Neurobiotics · Neurocardiology · Neurochemistry · Neurochip · Neurocriminology · Neuroculture · Neurodegeneration · Neurodevelopmental disorders · Neurodiversity · Neuroeconomics · Neuroeducation · Neuroembryology · Neuroendocrinology · Neuroepidemiology · Neuroergonomics · Neuroethics · Neuroethology · Neuroevolution · Neurogastroenterology · Neurogenetics · Neuroimaging · Neuroimmunology · Neuroinformatics · Neurointensive care · Neurolaw · Neurolinguistics · Neurology · Neuromarketing · Neurometrics · Neuromodulation · Neuromonitoring · Neurooncology · Neuro-ophthalmology · Neuropathology · Neuropharmacology · Neurophilosophy · Neurophysics · Neurophysiology · Neuroplasticity · Neuropolitics · Neuroprosthetics · Neuropsychiatry · Neuro-psychoanalysis · Neuropsychology · Neuroradiology · Neurorehabilitation · Neurorobotics · Neurosociology · Neurosurgery · Neurotechnology · Neurotheology · Neurotology · Neurotoxin · Neurotransmitter · Neurovirology · Pain · Psychiatric genetics · Psychiatry · Psychology · Sensory neuroscience · Sleep · Social neuroscience · Systems neuroscience

Categories: Neurosurgery | Surgical specialties | Medical specialties | Medical doctors by specialty

 

The above information uses material from Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Some facts may not have been fully verified for accuracy. [Disclaimers]
This page was last archived by our server on Tue Nov 22 20:41:27 2011.
Displaying this page or its contents does not use any Wikimedia Foundation's resources.
The owners of this site proudly support the Wikimedia Foundation.