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Featured researches published by B. Turak.


Neurochirurgie | 2008

Chirurgie des dysplasies corticales focales en région centrale

D. Marnet; Bertrand Devaux; Francine Chassoux; Elisabeth Landré; M. Mann; B. Turak; S. Rodrigo; Pascale Varlet; Catherine Daumas-Duport

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Taylor-type focal cortical dysplasias (TTFCD) represent a particular pathological entity responsible for severe drug-resistant epilepsy of extratemporal location. Epilepsy can be surgically cured if complete removal of the lesion can be performed. However, identification on imaging may be difficult and negative standard MRIs are not rare. The frequent location of TTFCD in the central region restrains the possibilities of complete resection. We report a series of patients operated on for intractable epilepsy associated with TTFCD in the central area. PATIENTS AND METHODS Between 2000 and 2006, of 34 consecutive patients with TTFCD, 17 had a lesion located in the central area. MRI was considered normal in eight, although in five a subtle gyral abnormality was disclosed on further analysis. A (18)FDG PET scan performed in 16 cases demonstrated focal hypometabolism in 15 that correlated with abnormalities on MRI when visible. SEEG performed in 13 cases revealed typical abnormalities for TTFCD in 10 cases. At resection, cortical and subcortical stimulations of the dysplastic cortex did not elicit a motor response. RESULTS Postoperative motor or sensory deficit was observed in 13 patients--severe in four--which subsequently resolved completely in seven. Six patients had a minor permanent, motor or sensory deficit. Four patients were reoperated for seizure recurrence and residual dysplastic tissue was found at reoperation in three cases. Average postoperative follow-up was 3.7 years. Sixteen patients (94%) were in Engel Class I (65% in Class IA). CONCLUSION This study suggests that surgical resection of central region TTFCD may be associated with favorable seizure outcome and no or minor functional permanent disability. In cases of seizure relapse, reoperation can be performed without further permanent deficit and lead to seizure-free outcome. Future techniques for intraoperative detection of these lesions could optimize their complete resection in functional areas.


Neurochirurgie | 2008

Résections en région fonctionnelle : étude d’une série de 89 cas

Bertrand Devaux; Francine Chassoux; Elisabeth Landré; B. Turak; Z. Abou-Salma; M. Mann; Johan Pallud; S. Baudouin-Chial; Pascale Varlet; S. Rodrigo; François Nataf; François-Xavier Roux

Surgical resections for intractable epilepsy are generally associated with a high risk of permanent neurological deficit and a poor rate of seizure control. We present a series of 89 patients operated on from 1992 through 2007 for drug-resistant partial epilepsy, in whom surgery was performed in a functional area of the brain: the central (sensorimotor and supplementary motor areas) region in 48 cases, posterior regions (parietal and occipital) in 27, the insula in eight, and the language areas in six. Epilepsy was cryptogenic in 12 patients, and lesion-related in 77: malformation of cortical development in 43, tumor in 17, perinatal cicatrix in 13, vascular lesion in three, and another prenatal lesion in one. Seventy patients underwent stereoelectroencephalographic (SEEG) exploration. The surgical procedure was resective (lesionectomy or SEEG-guided corticectomy) in 83 patients and multiple stereotactic thermocoagulations in six. Ten patients were reoperated because of early seizure recurrence. A postoperative complication was observed in 12 patients. Postoperative deficits were observed in 54 patients (61%) and resolved completely in 29. In 25, a permanent deficit persisted, minor in 19 and moderate to severe in six, which did not correlate with localization or etiology. With a one-year follow-up in 74 patients (mean, 3.6 years), 53 (72%) were in Engels class I, including 38 (51%) in class IA. Seizure outcome was significantly associated with etiology: 93% of Taylor-type focal cortical dysplasia, whereas only 40% of cryptogenic epilepsies were in class I (p<0.05). This suggests that resective or disconnective surgery for intractable partial epilepsy in functional areas of the brain may be followed by excellent results on seizures and a moderate risk of permanent neurological sequelae.


British Journal of Neurosurgery | 2015

Combining intraoperative carmustine wafers and Stupp regimen in multimodal first-line treatment of primary glioblastomas

Vladislav Pavlov; Philippe Page; Georges Abi-Lahoud; François Nataf; Edouard Dezamis; Audrey Robin; Pascale Varlet; B. Turak; Frédéric Dhermain; Julien Domont; Guillaume Louvel; R. Souillard-Scemama; Eduardo Parraga; Jean-François Meder; Fabrice Chrétien; Bertrand Devaux; Johan Pallud

Abstract Background. The study investigated if intraoperative use of carmustine wafers, particularly in combination with Stupp regimen, is a viable and safe first-line treatment option of glioblastomas. Methods. Eighty-three consecutive adult patients (50 men; mean age 60 years) with newly diagnosed supratentorial primary glioblastomas that underwent surgical resection with intraoperative carmustine wafers implantation (n = 7.1 ± 1.7) were retrospectively studied. Results. The median overall survival (OS) was 15.8 months with 56 patients dying over the course of the study. There was no significant association between the number of implanted carmustine wafers and complication rates (four surgical site infections, one death). The OS was significantly longer in Stupp regimen patients (19.5 months) as compared with patients with other postoperative treatments (13 months; p = 0.002). In addition patients with eight or more implanted carmustine wafers survived longer (24.5 months) than patients with seven or less implanted wafers (13 months; p = 0.021). Finally, regardless of the number of carmustine wafers, median OS was significantly longer in patients with a subtotal or total resection (21.5 months) than in patients with a partial resection (13 months; p = 0.011). Conclusions. The intraoperative use of carmustine wafers in combination with Stupp regimen is a viable first-line treatment option of glioblastomas. The prognostic value of this treatment association should be evaluated in a multicenter trial, ideally in a randomized and placebo-controlled one.


Neurochirurgie | 2008

Stimulation chronique du nerf vague dans le traitement del’épilepsie pharmacorésistante

François-Xavier Roux; B. Turak; Elisabeth Landré

Proposed as an additive symptomatic treatment of refractory epilepsy, vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) has proven to be effective and well-tolerated in patients presenting with refractory epilepsy for whom cortical resection is not indicated. After two years of treatment, the overall reduction of seizure frequency averaged 40%. In 50% of the patients, the frequency of seizures decreased by at least 50%. Moreover, even in absence of a significant reduction of seizures, patients who undergo this treatment reported an improvement in their quality of life. Economic surveys also demonstrate a favorable impact of VNS on the management of refractory epilepsy. Since 1988, 65,000 patients with refractory epilepsy throughout the world have been treated by VNS for this indication (1000 in France). The surgical implantation technique used in our department, the effects of vagus nerve stimulation reported in the literature, and our experience with a cohort of 70 patients with refractory epilepsy who received implants over the last 10 years are described.


Journal of Biophotonics | 2017

Multimodal optical analysis of meningioma and comparison with histopathology.

Marc Zanello; Fanny Poulon; Pascale Varlet; Fabrice Chrétien; Felipe Andreiuolo; Mélanie Pagès; A. Ibrahim; Johan Pallud; Edouard Dezamis; Georges Abi-Lahoud; François Nataf; B. Turak; Bertrand Devaux; Darine Abi-Haidar

Meningioma is the most frequent primary central nervous system tumor. The risk of recurrence and the prognosis are correlated with the extent of the resection that ideally encompasses the infiltrated dura mater and, if required, the infiltrated bone. No device can deliver real-time intraoperative histopathological information on the tumor environment to help the neurosurgeon to achieve a gross total removal. This study assessed the abilities of nonlinear microscopy to provide relevant and real-time data to help resection of meningiomas. Nine human meningioma samples (four World Health Organization Grade I, five Grade II) were analyzed using different optical modalities: spectral analysis and imaging, lifetime measurements, fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy, fluorescence emitted under one- and two-photon excitation and the second-harmonic generation signal imaging using a multimodal setup. Nonlinear microscopy produced images close to histopathology as a gold standard. The second-harmonic generation signal delineated the collagen background and two-photon fluorescence underlined cell cytoplasm. The matching between fluorescence images and Hematoxylin and Eosin staining was possible in all cases. Grade I meningioma emitted less autofluorescence than Grade II meningioma and Grade II meningioma exhibited a distinct lifetime value. Autofluorescence was correlated with the proliferation rates and seemed to explain the observed differences between Grade I and II meningiomas. This preliminary multimodal study focused on human meningioma samples confirms the potential of tissue autofluorescence analysis and nonlinear microscopy in helping intraoperatively neurosurgeons to reach the actual boundaries of the tumor infiltration. Correspondence between H&E staining (top pictures) and the two-photon fluorescence imaging (bottom pictures).


Neurochirurgie | 2005

Oligodendrogliomes supratentoriels de l’adulte: Traitement chirurgical : indications et techniques

Bertrand Devaux; B. Turak; T. Roujeau; Philippe Page; Cioloca C; A.-C. Ricci; P. Bret; François Nataf; François-Xavier Roux

Resume La chirurgie represente la premiere etape du traitement des oligodendrogliomes (OLG) supratentoriels de l’adulte. Mais le role de l’exerese chirurgicale sur le pronostic, le meilleur moment de la chirurgie dans l’histoire naturelle des OLG, la meilleure strategie d’exerese demeurent debattues et les courbes de survie apres exerese varient beaucoup d’une etude a l’autre. La confusion qui regne encore sur l’identification et la classification des OLG expliquent en partie ces divergences de resultats. Premiere des techniques chirurgicales, la biopsie –– chirurgicale ou stereotaxique –– permet de confirmer un diagnostic pose sur l’imagerie, d’examiner l’extension de l’infiltration tumorale par rapport aux limites des anomalies d’imagerie et de realiser les examens de biologie moleculaire actuels. Elle peut etre le seul geste chirurgical chez des patients porteurs d’une tumeur profonde sans effet de masse important, ou en prealable a une exerese ou lorsqu’une confirmation histologique est demandee avant une surveillance radio-clinique. Dans les autres cas, c’est l’exerese tumorale qui est indiquee. Mais il n’a pas ete montre que son moment dans l’evolution de la tumeur avait une influence sur la survie, en dehors des tumeurs evolutives responsables de signes deficitaires et d’une hypertension intracrânienne qui requierent une exerese chirurgicale rapide a defaut d’etre large. La surveillance clinique et en imagerie d’une tumeur dont l’aspect est celui d’un OLG de grade A est donc justifiee et l’exerese peut etre decidee a tout moment ulterieur. Au plan technique, la tendance actuelle est celle d’une exerese maximale possible, dans le respect des zones cerebrales fonctionnelles puisqu’une exerese complete au plan carcinologique n’est qu’exceptionnellement possible. Toutefois, les resultats contradictoires ne permettent pas d’affirmer qu’une exerese large ou complete sur l’imagerie soit associee a une survie significativement plus longue. Dans l’optique d’une exerese maximale possible et de respect des regions cerebrales fonctionnelles, l’utilisation des outils chirurgicaux actuels –– instruments de neuronavigation, imageurs operatoires, techniques de stimulation corticale per-operatoire, est d’une aide precieuse au chirurgien.


Neurochirurgie | 2017

Surgery for dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumors and gangliogliomas in eloquent areas. Functional results and seizure control

Bertrand Devaux; Francine Chassoux; Elisabeth Landré; B. Turak; A. Laurent; Marc Zanello; C. Mellerio; Pascale Varlet

INTRODUCTION Dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumors and gangliogliomas are developmental glioneuronal tumors usually revealed by partial epilepsy. High epileptogenicity, childhood epilepsy onset, drug-resistance, temporal location, and seizure freedom after complete resection are common characteristics of both tumors. We report the specificity of surgical management, functional results and seizure outcome in cases of a tumor location in eloquent areas. METHODS Among 150 patients (88 males, 3-55 years) operated on for refractory epilepsy due to a glioneuronal tumor (1990-2015), 30 (20%, dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumors=21; gangliogliomas=9) had a tumor located in an eloquent cortex (sensory-motor, insular or language areas). Surgery was performed after a preoperative work-up, including stereo-electroencephalography in 48 patients (26%) and functional MRI in 100 (67%). MRI-guided lesionectomy was mainly performed in extra-temporal location, whereas an additional corticectomy was performed in a temporal location. Tumor microsurgical resections were guided using neuronavigation and cortical/subcortical electrical stimulations. Multiple stereotactic thermocoagulations were performed in two insular tumors. RESULTS New motor/language deficits related to eloquent areas occurred postoperatively in 6/30 patients (20%) without any major permanent disability. Minor sensorimotor (n=2) and moderate language disturbance (n=1) persisted in three of them. Postoperative seizure-free outcome (mean follow-up>5 years) was obtained in 81% of the entire series, but significantly decreased to 60% in eloquent areas. Incomplete tumor resection was the main cause of surgical failure. However, unfavorable seizure outcome was also observed despite complete tumor resection. Malignant transformation occurred in one ganglioglioma. CONCLUSION Epilepsy surgery for benign glioneuronal tumors in eloquent areas provides acceptable results regarding the functional risks. Complete tumor resection is crucial for long-term favorable outcome.


Neurochirurgie | 1996

The Codman Medos programmable shunt valve. Evaluation of 53 implantations in 50 patients

Belliard H; François-Xavier Roux; B. Turak; François Nataf; Bertrand Devaux; Cioloca C


Neurochirurgie | 1998

L'extension intra-caverneuse des macro-adénomes hypophysaires : Infiltration ou invagination ?

François-Xavier Roux; C. Obreja; R. Moussa; Bertrand Devaux; François Nataf; B. Turak; Philippe Page; Jean-François Meder


Neurochirurgie | 1998

Controverses dans la prise en charge des résidus de macro-adénomes hypophysaires opérés

R. Moussa; François-Xavier Roux; François Nataf; Bertrand Devaux; C. Obreja; Philippe Page; B. Turak

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Bertrand Devaux

Paris Descartes University

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François Nataf

Paris Descartes University

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Elisabeth Landré

Paris Descartes University

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Francine Chassoux

Paris Descartes University

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Johan Pallud

Paris Descartes University

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Philippe Page

Paris Descartes University

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Pascale Varlet

Paris Descartes University

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M. Mann

Paris Descartes University

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