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Dive into the research topics where Gary L. Rea is active.

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Featured researches published by Gary L. Rea.


Neurosurgery | 1998

Cervical spondylotic myelopathy: functional and radiographic long-term outcome after laminectomy and posterior fusion.

Vijay G.R. Kumar; Gary L. Rea; Lawrence J. Mervis; John M. McGregor

OBJECTIVE To evaluate the long-term efficacy of cervical laminectomy with posterior lateral mass fusion/fixation in the treatment of patients with cervical spondylotic myelopathy (CSM). METHOD Twenty-five patients treated for CSM by laminectomy and lateral mass fusion at the Division of Neurosurgery at The Ohio State University between 1989 and 1994 were studied retrospectively. Only patients with longer than 2-year postoperative follow-up durations were included. At follow-up examination, each patient completed an SF36 questionnaire, underwent a physical examination, underwent plain radiography showing the spinal curvature with plate and screw position, and underwent magnetic resonance imaging of the cervical spine, which evaluated dural sac decompression and spinal cord abnormalities. Patient-generated data were used for outcome measurements. RESULTS The mean follow-up duration was 47.5 months. Good outcome was defined by the presence of three criteria: ability to walk unassisted (Grade IIIA or better), ability to write unassisted, and ability to manage buttons and/or zippers unassisted. The inability to meet these criteria was defined as a poor outcome. Two patients (8%) experienced complications that resulted from the surgery. There was no instability or progression to significant kyphosis. Lesions that were hyperintense on magnetic resonance images did not correlate with outcome. Eighty percent of the patients achieved good outcomes, and 76% had improved myelopathy scores. None of the patients had late neurological deterioration. Patients with better neurological statuses at the time of surgery (Grade IIIA or better) were more likely to improve (P < 0.0001); the likelihood of a change in status for those starting with poorer grades (IIIB or worse) was not statistically significant (P < 0.08). CONCLUSION Cervical laminectomy with posterior fusion/fixation proved useful in the treatment of patients with CSM with straight or lordotic spines and multilevel compression. This therapy addresses the dynamic and compressive forces that are important in the pathogenesis of CSM, resulting in minimal complications and possible improvement in long-term outcomes.


Neurosurgery | 1983

Barbiturate therapy in uncontrolled intracranial hypertension

Gary L. Rea; Gaylan L. Rockswold

From July 1978 to September 1981, 27 patients from a group of 210 patients with severe head injuries developed uncontrolled intracranial hypertension despite intensive medical and surgical management. These 27 patients were considered appropriate candidates for barbiturate therapy. Abnormal posturing or flaccidity was present in 70% of the patients, and 41% had bilaterally fixed pupils. Twenty-five of 27 patients had mass lesions requiring operation. Of the 15 patients who responded to barbiturate therapy with normalization of intracranial pressure for 24 hours, 5 died (33% mortality). Nine of the 12 patients who did not respond to the barbiturate therapy died (75% mortality). The total mortality in this group of 27 patients was 52%. Of the survivors, 69% had a recovery classified as good recovery/moderate disability, and 31% were in a severe disability/vegetative state. The morbidity and mortality in these patients is high, but comparisons with previous studies show that this is a selected group of severe head injuries with a high percentage of poor prognostic indicators. Our experience suggests that barbiturates can be effective in lowering intracranial pressure in patients with otherwise unresponsive intracranial hypertension, and, by doing so, may decrease the mortality in a group of patients considered untreatable by the usual therapeutic modalities.


Surgical Neurology | 1992

Surgical treatment of the spontaneous spinal epidural abscess

Gary L. Rea; John M. McGregor; Carole A. Miller; Michael E. Miner

Seven cases of spontaneous epidural abscess are reviewed. Three patients had posterior abscesses and no evidence of vertebral body osteomyelitis. These patients had excellent outcomes with laminectomies and antibiotics. Because of significant vertebral destruction, two patients with vertebral osteomyelitis required posterior fixation after laminectomy. Two other patients with vertebral osteomyelitis had complete destruction of the vertebral body and required anterior decompression and fusion in addition to posterior fixation. In the four patients with vertebral osteomyelitis, morbidity was high, reflecting their age and significant medical problems. This review supports the contention that medically stable patients with posterior epidural abscesses can be treated with laminectomy and antibiotics with little risk of progressive instability. The proper surgical treatment of anterior epidural abscesses secondary to osteomyelitis requires knowledge about the amount of destruction of the supporting columns, the amount of neural compression secondary to the purulence, and the patients general medical condition.


Neurosurgery | 1997

Quantitative Outcome and Radiographic Comparisons between Laminectomy and Laminotomy in the Treatment of Acquired Lumbar Stenosis

Nicholas W.M. Thomas; Gary L. Rea; Brian K. Pikul; Lawrence J. Mervis; Ronald Irsik; John M. McGregor

OBJECTIVE The objective of this study was to conduct a comparative quantitative analysis of outcomes, radiographic findings, and magnetic resonance imaging results after laminectomy or laminotomy was performed for patients with lumbar stenosis. Such as analysis had not previously been conducted. METHODS Twenty-six patients with no exclusion criteria who were treated surgically for acquired stenosis at the Division of Neurological Surgery at The Ohio State University from 1990 to 1993 were studied retrospectively. At follow-up examinations, each patient completed a detailed questionnaire that included visual analog scales, functional assessments, and the medical outcome study short form health survey, SF-36. Each patient underwent plain static and dynamic radiography that detailed vertebral body sagittal listhesis and rotation and magnetic resonance imaging that evaluated dural sac compression. RESULTS The mean follow-up duration was 36.7 months. Good outcome was defined by the presence of three criteria: no greater than mild leg pain (Grades 0-4), the ability to walk more than one block without developing lower extremity pain, and the ability to walk without assistance devices. Fifty-eight percent of the patients who had undergone laminectomies and 50% of the patients who had undergone laminotomies had good outcomes. All were judged to have had adequate decompression. The average maximum postoperative listhesis was 17.3 +/- 9.9% in the laminectomy group and 17.6 +/- 12.5% in the laminotomy group. In contrast to some previous studies, pre- or postoperative listhesis was not statistically related to outcome in either group. Patients in each poor outcome category seemed to have worse comorbid medical conditions than did patients in the good outcome category. The SF-36 measurements of poor functioning because of health factors and bodily pain correlated somewhat with poor outcomes in the patients who had undergone laminectomies. In patients who had undergone laminotomies, the only statistically significant finding among the outcome groups was the effect of poor emotional health on activity for the patients with poor outcomes. CONCLUSION This study indicates that laminotomy can adequately decompress lumbar canal stenosis, that laminectomy and laminotomy have the same degree of postoperative listhesis, and that the quantitative outcome of any treatment for lumbar stenosis is dependent not only on surgical factors but also on comorbid physical and psychological factors.


Spine | 1992

Magnetic resonance imaging of trauma to the thoracic and lumbar spine. The importance of the posterior longitudinal ligament

Rebecca P. Brightman; Carole A. Miller; Gary L. Rea; Donald W. Chakeres; William E. Hunt

Magnetic resonance imaging was used to evaluate 24 patients with injuries to the thoracic, thoracolumbar (T12-L1), or lumbar spine. Correlation of the magnetic resonance imaging findings to surgical therapy and outcome was evaluated, with particular attention to the longitudinal ligaments. The ability of the magnetic resonance imaging to detect the extent of trauma to the spinal cord parenchyma and to the anterior and posterior longitudinal ligaments was found to be important in guiding the surgical approach to these spine fractures.


Journal of Spinal Disorders | 1996

The effect of postlaminectomy spinal instability on the outcome of lumbar spinal stenosis patients.

Bradford B. Mullin; Gary L. Rea; Ronald Irsik; Mark Catton; Michael E. Miner

Between 1986 and 1990, 37 of 72 patients undergoing decompressive lumbar laminectomy with medial facetectomy for lumbar stenosis at The Ohio State University were seen in follow-up at a mean of 31 months (range, 14-63 months) after their laminectomy and were evaluated by questionnaire, detailed neurologic examination, and static and dynamic lumbar radiographs. Thirteen patients who had undergone fusion or who had extenuating medical circumstances were excluded, leaving 24 patients for whom laminectomy was the sole treatment for lumbar stenosis. Postoperatively, normal walking improved from 4 to 45% of patients, sensory deficits decreased from 63 to 25%, and ability to perform most or all desired activities increased from 25 to 70%. Urinary function was unchanged. Thirteen patients (54%) showed radiographic signs of instability. All patients who were declared radiographically stable could walk without a prosthetic aid or normally; 62% of the unstable patients required aid for walking. All of the patients with a poor ambulatory outcome were radiographically unstable. Compared with stable patients, unstable patients had a significant (p < 0.01) decrease in their ambulatory ability. There was a clear correlation between the degree of listhesis and postoperative ambulatory status (p < 0.01). The unstable patients with a poor ambulatory outcome followed one of three clinical courses: improvement with later deterioration, improvement with a plateau at a poor functional level, or failure to improve from a poor functional level. In conclusion, (a) although instability did not necessarily preclude a good outcome, a poor ambulatory outcome was always associated with instability; (b) laminectomy can effectively ameliorate the symptoms of lumbar stenosis; however, there is a subset of patients in whom laminectomy is associated with instability and a poor clinical course.


Neurosurgery | 1993

Fibrosing Pseudotumor of the Sella and Parasellar Area Producing Hypopituitarism and Multiple Cranial Nerve Palsies

Pablo R. Olmos; James M. Falko; Gary L. Rea; Carl P. Boesel; Donald W. Chakeres; David B. McGhee

We present an unusual patient with a medical history of a fibrosing pseudotumor of the left orbit that had been stable for 8 years who presented with acute anterior hypophyseal failure. During the next 10-month period, sequential magnetic resonance scans showed a rapid growth of a plaque-like sellar and parasellar mass extending into the right cavernous sinus, right Meckels cave, along the dural surfaces of the clivus, dens, and body of the second cervical vertebra. A transsphenoidal biopsy revealed sphenoid and intrasellar pseudotumor that invaded the adenohypophysis and had microscopic features identical to those of the previously excised orbital pseudotumor. Rapid growth of the pseudotumor continued despite a course of radiotherapy. Palsies of cranial nerves V and VI and of the sensory root of the cranial nerve VII developed on the right side. Steroid therapy was associated with improvement of the cranial nerve palsies. This is the first report of the sellar fibrosing pseudotumor producing not only anterior hypophyseal failure, but also cranial nerve dysfunction secondary to plaque-like extension into the cavernous sinus, Meckels cave, and cranial base dura. This intracranial plaque-like extension of a fibrous pseudotumor corresponds to a hypertrophic intracranial pachymeningitis, which is a rare, previously described phenomenon associated to the syndrome of multifocal fibrosclerosis.


Neurosurgery | 1986

Intrathecal morphine during lumbar spine operation for postoperative pain control.

Blacklock Jb; Gary L. Rea; Robert E. Maxwell

The analgesic requirements and bladder function of 5 patients who received 1 mg of intrathecal morphine during lumbar spine operation are compared to those of 10 control patients. No analgesics were used by the treatment group for the first 24 hours postoperatively. The test group subsequently required twice the amount of analgesics during the 2nd through 5th days after operation compared to controls. All 5 patients who received intrathecal morphine developed urinary retention for 24 to 36 hours. The brief duration of analgesia, the increased narcotic use after the effects of the morphine dissipated, and urinary retention after a single intraoperative dose of intrathecal morphine suggest caution in using this technique.


Journal of Neuro-oncology | 1996

Lhermitte's sign as a presenting symptom of primary spinal cord tumor

Herbert B. Newton; Gary L. Rea

SummaryWe describe a previously healthy 29 year-old man who developed Lhermittes sign, a shock-like or electric sensation, transmitted down the spine, which occurred during neck flexion or rotation. Evaluation demonstrated an intrinsic, fusiform mass extending from c5 to c7. At operation, the mass was completely removed and found to be a low-grade ependymoma. The sensory phenomena of Lhermittes sign were most likelycaused by tumor-induced distortion and demyelination of cervical dorsal column sensory axons. Lhermittes sign is most prevalent in patients with multiple sclerosis, cervical spondylotic myelopathy, cisplatin neurotoxicity, cervical radiation injury, and neck trauma. Rarely, Lhermittes sign occurs with spinal cord compression from epidural or subdural tumor. This patient is the first reported case of an intrinsic spinal cord tumor to present with Lhermittes sign.


Surgical Neurology | 1993

Occipitocervical fixation in nontraumatic upper cervical spine instability

Gary L. Rea; Bradford B. Mullin; Lawrence J. Mervis; Carole Lewis Miller

Ten patients requiring occipitocervical fixation were reviewed: five were unstable secondary to rheumatoid arthritis, one had Klippel-Feil, and four had neoplastic disease. Patients with nonneoplastic disease improved, having decreased pain, decreased paresthesias, and increased ambulation. Patients with neoplastic disease improved significantly after the surgery, but eventually died from different tumors. The technique found to be most efficient was the placement of an intraoperatively contoured Luque rectangle wired from the occiput to appropriate cervical spine levels.

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Gaylan L. Rockswold

Hennepin County Medical Center

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