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Featured researches published by Cuong J. Bui.


Neurosurgical Focus | 2007

Tethered cord syndrome in children: a review.

Cuong J. Bui; R. Shane Tubbs; W. J Erry Oakes

The treatment of a patient with symptoms of a tethered spinal cord and in whom a fatty infiltrated terminal filum is found is controversial. The authors review their experience and the literature regarding this aspect of occult spinal dysraphism. From experience, transection of a fatty terminal filum in patients with symptoms related to excessive caudal cord tension is a minor procedure that generally yields good results. The most problematic issue in the literature is what patients and symptoms are best suited to surgical treatment.


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2007

Institutional experience with cranial vault encephaloceles

Cuong J. Bui; R. Shane Tubbs; Chevis N. Shannon; Leslie Acakpo-Satchivi; John C. Wellons; Jeffrey P. Blount; W. Jerry Oakes

OBJECT There is scant literature regarding the long-term outcome in patients with cranial vault encephaloceles, and what literature there is may underestimate long-term deficits. The goal of this study was to address this lack of information. METHODS The authors performed a retrospective chart review of cranial vault encephaloceles performed at our institution between 1989 and 2003. Fifty-two total patients were identified and 44 of these cases were reviewed. Additionally, 34 of the 44 patients were contacted and given an outcome survey (Hydrocephalus Outcome Questionnarie [HOQ]) to evaluate physical, emotional, cognitive, and overall health outcomes. RESULTS The mean age for patients in this cohort was 9.6 years (range 4-17 years) and the mean follow-up time was 9.2 years. There was an equal sex distribution and there were no deaths. Hydrocephalus was found in 60% of occipital and 14% of frontal encephaloceles, and epilepsy was confirmed in 17% of occipital and 7% of frontal lesions. Outcome assessments performed using the HOQ showed that 50% of the patients with occipital encephaloceles had overall HOQ health scores of 0.5 or less and 55% had HOQ cognitive scores of 0.3 or less, compared with 0% of patients in both categories who had frontal encephaloceles. It was also found that the presence of hydrocephalus and epilepsy independently and significantly lowered the overall health scores. CONCLUSIONS Occipital encephaloceles carry a worse prognosis than frontal encephaloceles, with higher rates of hydrocephalus and seizure. Based on this study, the presence of hydrocephalus and epilepsy are significant additive adverse prognostic factors. Approximately half of the patients with occipital encephaloceles will be severely debilitated and will probably be unable to live and function independently in society. These data may be useful to clinicians in counseling patients and predicting long-term outcome following repair of cranial vault encephaloceles.


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2007

Infections of pediatric cerebrospinal fluid shunts related to fundoplication and gastrostomy

Cuong J. Bui; R. Shane Tubbs; Gigi Pate; Traci L. Morgan; Douglas C. Barnhart; Leslie Acakpo-Satchivi; John C. Wellons; W. Jerry Oakes; Jeffrey P. Blount

OBJECT There is conflicting information in the literature regarding the increased risk of ventriculoperitoneal (VP) shunt infection after abdominal surgical procedures such as gastrostomy tube (GT) placement and Nissen fundoplication (NF) in the young patient. To further elucidate this potential association, the authors reviewed their institutional experience with such cases. METHODS The authors retrospectively reviewed the records of all patients with shunted hydrocephalus who also underwent NF procedures and/or GT placements over a 9-year period. RESULTS During this 9-year period, 3065 cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) shunts were placed and 1630 NF procedures/GT placements were performed. Ninety-six patients were identified who received both a CSF shunt and NF procedures/GT placements. Seventy-nine patients had a functioning VP shunt (without recent [< 6 months] CSF infection or shunt revision) at the time of their abdominal procedure (NF procedure or GT placement). Of this latter cohort, there were 38 males and 41 females with a mean age of 6.4 months; 12.7% of these patients developed a shunt infection and 60% of these infections were due to Staphylococcus species. CONCLUSIONS Based on this study, an NF procedure/GT placement in a child with a VP shunt appears to carry approximately the same risk of shunt infection as a shunt placement operation. Moreover, the microbiology observed in these patients with infection did not differ significantly from the usual microorganisms responsible for VP shunt infections in infants/neonates. Finally, but not conclusively, an open NF procedure/GT placement may carry a higher infection risk than a laparoscopic-assisted NF procedure/GT placement.


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2007

Urgent surgical intervention in pediatric patients with Chiari malformation Type I

John C. Wellons; R. Shane Tubbs; Cuong J. Bui; Paul A. Grabb; W. Jerry Oakes

Patients with Chiari malformation Type I (CM-I) most commonly present with chronic symptoms. A search of the current medical literature revealed scant information regarding acute presentations of CM-I in either pediatric or adult patients. The authors report on two children who presented with rapidly worsening neurological symptoms attributable to a previously undiagnosed CM-I. One patient became profoundly hypopneic with dysphagia and right hemiparesis over a less than 48-hour period. The second patient presented with a few days of worsening right hemiparesis, gait disturbance, and anisocoria. In addition to a CM-I, magnetic resonance imaging in the second patient revealed a holocord syrinx. Following urgent posterior fossa decompression, both patients rapidly improved in the 24 hours immediately following surgery and continued to improve in the subsequent weeks. Few reports detail acute symptoms due to CM-I and those that do exist almost exclusively involve adult patients. Although seemingly rare, the clinician should consider CM-I in the differential diagnosis in pediatric patients presenting with acute brainstem or long tract signs.


Neurosurgical Focus | 2007

The horizontal sacrum as an indicator of the tethered spinal cord in spina bifida aperta and occulta.

R. Shane Tubbs; Cuong J. Bui; Marios Loukas; Mohammadali M. Shoja; W. Jerry Oakes

OBJECT The authors report on symptomatic patients with myelomeningocele (MMC) and lipomyelomeningocele (LMMC) who were found to have changes in their lumbosacral angle (LSA) corresponding to the onset of symptoms indicative of a tethered spinal cord. METHODS The authors review data obtained in these two cohorts of patients and compare the LSAs measured in the perinatal period with those seen when the patients presented with symptoms of a tethered spinal cord. RESULTS Children with LMMC, roughly one third of studied cases, were symptomatic due to a tethered spinal cord at their most recent follow-up. In children in whom the MMC was the closed form at birth, 20 of 30 had symptoms that could be indicative of a tethered spinal cord at their most recent follow-up. The LSA was altered in both groups with symptoms. CONCLUSIONS Signs and symptoms indicative of a tethered spinal cord appear to correspond to increases in the LSA.


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2007

An unusual complication of a ventriculopleural shunt. Case illustration.

Blake Pearson; Cuong J. Bui; R. Shane Tubbs; John C. Wellons


World Neurosurgery | 2017

Short- and Long-Term Outcomes of Deep Brain Stimulation in Patients 70 Years and Older with Parkinson Disease

Mansour Mathkour; Juanita Garces; Tyler Scullen; Joshua Hanna; Edison Valle-Giler; Lora Kahn; Teresa Arrington; David J. Houghton; Georgia Lea; Erin Biro; Cuong J. Bui; Olawale A.R. Sulaiman; Roger Smith


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2007

Partial dorsal rhizotomy for spasticity in children with congenital brain malformations. Report of two cases.

R. Shane Tubbs; Cuong J. Bui; Marios Loukas; Mohammadali M. Shoja; W. Jerry Oakes


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2018

Comparison of elderly and young patient populations treated with deep brain stimulation for Parkinson’s disease: long-term outcomes with up to 7 years of follow-up

Joshua A. Hanna; Tyler Scullen; Lora Kahn; Mansour Mathkour; Edna E. Gouveia; Juanita Garces; Leah M. Evans; Georgia Lea; David J. Houghton; Erin Biro; Cuong J. Bui; Olawale A.R. Sulaiman; Roger Smith


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2007

Craniopharyngioma marsupialization : Case illustration

Leslie Acakpo-Satchivi; R. Shane Tubbs; Audie L. Woolley; Cuong J. Bui; Peter Liechty; Yuki Hammers; John C. Wellons; Jeffrey P. Blount; W. Jerry Oakes

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R. Shane Tubbs

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Jeffrey P. Blount

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Leslie Acakpo-Satchivi

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Erin Biro

Tulane Medical Center

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Lora Kahn

Tulane Medical Center

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