March 7, 2012 8:00 — 0 Comments
Clinical Trial Examines Non-invasive Surgery Options for Epileptic Patients
Medications do not effectively control epilepsy and stop seizures for about 25 percent of patients who suffer from the disease. Instead, surgery is the answer for some epileptic patients. In the past, this meant a craniotomy, which requires a surgeon to open the patient’s skull and remove the brain lesion-causing epilepsy.
University of Virginia School of Medicine neurologist Mark S. Quigg, MD, is helping to lead an international clinical trial examining the effectiveness of Gamma Knife radiosurgery as a non-invasive alternative for treating patients with a certain type of epilepsy — mesial temporal lobe epilepsy. The Gamma Knife delivers focused beams of radiation guided by MRI to the brain lesion in hopes of damaging the lesion and preventing it from causing epileptic seizures. For more information, click here to read the full release.


Calendar/Courses
106th Meeting of the Senior Society of Neurological Surgeons
June 6-9, 2015; Miami
Neuromonitoring in Neurosurgery
European Association of Neurosurgical Societies (EANS)
June 14-16, 2015; Verona, Italy
Rocky Mountain Neurosurgical Society 50th Annual Meeting
June 20-24, 2015; Colorado Springs, Colo.
CARS 2015 - 29th International Congress and Exhibition
June 24-27, 2015; Barcelona, Spain
Neurotrauma 2015
June 28-July 01, 2015; Santa Fe, N.M.
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