Edward J. Kosnik
Ohio State University
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Featured researches published by Edward J. Kosnik.
Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1991
Ann M. Dietrich; Mary Jo Bowman; Margaret E. Ginn-Pease; Edward J. Kosnik; Denis R. King
STUDY OBJECTIVE To assess clinical features that might reliably predict the need for computed tomography (CT) imaging in pediatric head trauma. DESIGN/SETTING/TYPE OF PARTICIPANT: Prospective cohort of 324 head CT scans performed on 322 consecutive trauma patients at an urban childrens hospital. RESULTS Sixty-two percent of patients were male. The mean age was 7.1 years (10 days to 20.6 years); half were less than 5 years of age. The two most frequent mechanisms of injury were falls (32%) and motor vehicle accidents (25%). Abnormalities were detected in 74 scans. Intracranial injuries were apparent in 39 patients (12%); 16 had a concomitant fracture. An isolated cranial abnormality was observed on 35 scans (11%). Loss of consciousness, amnesia for the event, a Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) of less than 15, and the presence of a neurologic deficit were more common in children with intracranial injury (P < .05). Vomiting, seizures, and headache were not discriminating clinical features. No single characteristic consistently identified the children with an intracranial injury. Of the 195 children who were neurologically intact (GCS, 15) at the time of presentation, 11 (5%) had evidence of intracranial pathology on CT scan. CONCLUSION This study demonstrates a poor correlation between the clinical symptoms of significant traumatic brain injury and findings on CT.
Pediatrics in Review | 1984
Stephen A. Hill; Carole A. Miller; Edward J. Kosnik; William E. Hunt
This review of pediatric neck injuries includes patients admitted to Childrens Hospital of Columbus, Ohio, during the period 1969 to 1979. The 122 patients with neck injuries constituted 1.4% of the total neurosurgical admissions during this time. Forty-eight patients had cervical strains; 74 had involvement of the spinal column; and 27 had neurological deficits. The injuries reached their peak incidence during the summer months, with motor-vehicle accidents accounting for 31%, diving injuries and falls from a height 20% each, football injuries 8%, other sports 11%, and miscellaneous 10%. There is a clear division of patients into a group aged 8 years or less with exclusively upper cervical injuries, and an older group with pancervical injuries. In the younger children, the injuries involved soft tissue (subluxation was seen more frequently than fracture), and tended to occur through subchondral growth plates, with a more reliable union than similar bone injuries. In the older children, the pattern and etiology of injury are the same as in adults. The entire cervical axis is at risk, and there is a tendency to fracture bone rather than cartilaginous structures.
Pediatric Neurosurgery | 1999
Jin Wang; Amir Vokshoor; Stanley H. Kim; Scott Elton; Edward J. Kosnik; Henry Bartkowski
Sixteen pediatric patients (age range 3–15 years; mean 9.4 years) with atlantoaxial instability underwent screw fixation at Columbus Children’s Hospital between 1992 and 1998. Three patients with type II odontoid fractures underwent odontoid screw fixation. The remaining group of 13 patients had posterior C1-2 transarticular screw fixation and Sonntag C1-2 fusion. The group included 3 patients with rotatory C1-2 fixation, 4 patients with os odontoideum, 4 patients with congenital atlantoaxial instability and 2 patients with traumatic C1-2 instability. Postoperatively, all patients were placed in a Miami-J collar only. At 3 months follow-up, all patients achieved fusion. Bony fusion across the fracture line was clearly evident in patients with odontoid screws. The only complications in this series were a transient swallowing difficulty that resolved spontaneously in 2 weeks, and another patient’s C1-2 fusion had extended to C2-3 at 9 months follow-up. This study demonstrates that children at 3 years of age and older, who sustain a type II odontoid fracture with an intact transverse ligament, can be safely managed with odontoid screws if the fracture is less than 4 weeks old. Posterior C1-2 transarticular screw fixation can be done safely and results in a high fusion rate in children older than 4 years of age. The technical difficulties of screw fixation in children are discussed.
Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1995
Christine R. Curran; Ann M. Dietrich; Mary Jo Bowman; Margaret E. Ginn-Pease; Denis R. King; Edward J. Kosnik
This study was designed to evaluate prospectively the ability of current spine-immobilization devices to achieve radiographic-neutral positioning of the cervical spine in pediatric trauma patients. All trauma patients who required spinal immobilization and a lateral cervical spine radiograph were included in the study. A lateral cervical spine radiograph was obtained while the child was immobilized. The Cobb angle (C2-C6) was measured using a handheld goniometer. The method of immobilization, age at injury, and Cobb angle were compared. One hundred and eighteen patients with an average age of 7.9 years were enrolled. The majority were males (71%). The most frequent mechanisms of injury included motor vehicle accidents (35%) and falls (32%). The average Glascow Coma Scale score was 14. Although 31% of the children complained of neck pain, 92% were without neurologic deficits. The Cobb angles ranged from 27 degree kyphosis to 27 degree lordosis, and only 12 of the patients presented in a neutral position (0 degrees). Greater than 5 degrees of kyphosis or lordosis was observed in 60% of the children. Thirty-seven percent of the patients had 10 degrees or greater angulation. The most frequent methods of immobilization included a collar, backboard, and towels (40%), and a collar, backboard, and blocks (20%), but these techniques provided < 5 degrees kyphosis or lordosis in only 45% and 26% of the children respectively. No single method or combination of methods of immobilization consistently placed the children in the neutral position.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Human Pathology | 1989
David L. Zwick; Kim Livingston; Larry Clapp; Edward J. Kosnik; Allen J. Yates
Rhabdomyomas are rare tumors that usually arise within the heart, orocervical, or vulvovaginal regions. The cardiac tumors have a characteristic immature morphology, occur often in association with tuberous sclerosis, and are regarded as hamartomas rather than true neoplasms. The histogenesis of the extracardiac tumors and their true neoplastic nature are matters of controversy. We report the first case of a rhabdomyoma located inside the cranium. The intimate association with the mandibular division of the trigeminal nerve, the normal embryogenesis of the craniofacial muscles, and animal homograft and xenograft experiments provide a framework for considering this tumor, and possibly other rhabdomyomas, as a choristoma/hamartoma rather than a true neoplasm.
Pediatric Neurosurgery | 1997
Stanley H. Kim; Edward J. Kosnik; Christopher Madden; Jerome A. Rusin; Diana Wack; Henry Bartkowski
Infarction due to vertebral dissection is a rarely reported event in children. We describe the clinical presentation, radiological findings and surgical treatment of a child with cerebellar infarction resulting from a traumatic vertebral artery dissection. Review of the literature on stroke due to a vertebral artery dissection in the pediatric population shows that trauma is a common preceding event. Although the most common site of traumatic vertebral artery dissection is at C1-2 level, our case illustrates that the vertebral artery dissection may also involve the lower cervical segment. We emphasize that vertebral artery dissection should be considered in a child with acute symptoms and signs of posterior circulation ischemia and that MRI and MR angiography may be helpful in the diagnosis of infarction and vertebral artery dissection.
Pediatric Neurosurgery | 1977
Edward J. Kosnik; Stephen E. Paul; Charles W. Rossel; Martin P. Sayers
One of the unusual signs of sudden increase in intracranial pressure is central neurogenic pulmonary edema. This pulmonary edema produces a capillary-aveolar block resulting in hypoxia complicating the underlying neurologic condition. Good success in treating this problem has been obtained with controlled ventilation and positive end expiratory pressure respiration.
Pediatric Neurosurgery | 1998
Stanley H. Kim; Edward J. Kosnik; Christopher Madden; Stacy Morran; Jerome A. Rusin; Timothy J. Gordon; Daniel R. Boué
We present a case of solitary lytic skull metastasis from a follicular thyroid carcinoma in a child. Salient clinical features, radiological findings, and histological distinctions of the metastatic skull tumor are described. Excision of the skull tumor followed by total thyroidectomy and 131I-radioablation therapy has resulted in good short-term outcome. This is the first published report of a metastatic skull lesion from a follicular thyroid carcinoma in a child. Such a malignant lesion can radiologically mimic a benign skull tumor and should be considered in the differential diagnosis of a solitary lytic skull lesion with a sclerotic margin.
Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology | 2008
David S. Bachman; Edward J. Kosnik; Carl P. Boesel; Juan F. Sotos
A 14‐year‐old boy with anophthalmia presented evidence of hypothalamic dysfunction. He was found to have a third‐ventricular germinoma, probably pineal. This case is interesting in view of a previous case report of the association of anophthalmia and a germ‐cell tumor (teratoma), and suggests a possible causal relationship between this malformation and germ‐cell neoplasms, both of which probably arise early in development.
Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology | 2008
Edward J. Kosnik; Grant Gilbert; Martin P. Sayers
Five members of three families with premature fusion of the coronal sutures are briefly reported. The pedigrees of these patients are presented. In each case the mode of inheritance was autosomal dominant with reduced penetrance.