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Dive into the research topics where Gideon Findler is active.

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Featured researches published by Gideon Findler.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 1994

Perioperative prophylactic cephazolin in spinal surgery. A double-blind placebo-controlled trial

Ethan Rubinstein; Gideon Findler; Pnina Amit; Itzhak Shaked

We investigated the efficacy of a single dose of 1 g of cephazolin in reducing postoperative infections in patients undergoing clean operations on the lumbar spine. In a double-blind, randomised, trial there were 21 wound or urinary infections in the 71 patients who received placebo and nine in the 70 who received cephazolin (p < 0.05). Nine of the placebo patients (12.7%) developed wound infections (complicated by bacteraemia in two) compared with three (4.3%) in the cephazolin group (p = 0.07). Hospital stay was longer for infected patients than for non-infected patients (p < 0.05). Cephazolin-resistant pathogens were isolated more frequently from patients who received cephazolin than from those who received placebo.


Cancer | 1988

Cerebral germinomas and klinefelter syndrome. A review

Raanan Arens; Daniel Marcus; Santiago Engelberg; Gideon Findler; R. M. Goodman; Justen H. Passwell

Patients with Klinefelter syndrome appear to be predisposed to the development of extragonadal cerebral germinomas. A case of a pineal region germinoma in a boy 15 years of age with Klinefelter syndrome is documented in this article. In view of three other cases of cerebral germinomas associated with Klinefelter syndrome in the literature, a hypothesis for this predisposition is suggested.


Ophthalmology | 1986

Sixth Nerve Palsy and Unilateral Horner's Syndrome

Itzhak Gutman; S. Levartovski; Y. Goldhammer; Rina Tadmor; Gideon Findler

Anatomic reports have demonstrated that the sympathetic fibers leave the carotid plexus to join the abducens nerve in the posterior part of the cavernous sinus. A lesion in this area may cause both an abducens nerve palsy and ipsilateral Horners syndrome. This article details two additional cases of this uncommon occurrence.


Surgical Neurology | 1986

Brain metastasis: A rare manifestation of adenoid cystic carcinoma of the breast

Moshe Koller; Zvi Ram; Gideon Findler; Meir Lipshitz

Adenoid cystic carcinoma of the breast is a rare neoplasm that usually has a benign biological behavior. A patient who was operated upon for removal of this tumor developed metastases to the lungs and brain 12 years after mastectomy. This is probably the first report in the literature of brain metastasis from adenoid cystic carcinoma of the breast. Radiological and histological evidence of both primary breast tumor and the metastasis to the brain are presented.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 1987

Ventriculoperitoneal shunt malfunction due to migration of the abdominal catheter into the scrotum

Zvi Ram; Gideon Findler; Itzhak Guttman; Rami Cherniak; Nachshon Knoller; Itzhak Shacked

A case is reported in which the peritoneal portion of a ventriculoperitoneal shunt migrated into the scrotum via an indirect inguinal hernia and caused cerebrospinal fluid hydrocele with shunt malfunction.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 1992

Fibrothorax associated with a ventriculopleural shunt in a hydrocephalic child

Alon Yellin; Gideon Findler; Zohar Barzllay; David Simansky; Yair Lieberman

Ventriculopleural (VPL) shunts are considered a safe alternative to peritoneal shunts in the management of hydrocephalus. Occasionally, however, they are associated with persistent pleural effusion. We report a child, aged 3 1/2 years, who developed severe fibrothorax following the use of a VPL shunt. The shunt was removed and decortication had to be performed to alleviate his respiratory symptoms. This serious complication, never reported previously, should be borne in mind when the pleural cavity is chosen for deviation of the cerebrospinal fluid in hydrocephalic children.


Childs Nervous System | 1992

Delayed intraventricular tension pneumocephalus complicating posterior fossa surgery for cerebellar medulloblastoma

Zvi Ram; Nachshon Knoller; Gideon Findler; Abraham Sahar

A child is described in whom intraventricular tension pneumocephalus developed 10 days after removal of a cerebellar medulloblastoma and 1 day after suture removal. The tension pneumocephalus was associated with hydrocephalus and CSF leakage from the suture line. The symptoms of the pneumocephalus were rapidly progressing loss of consciousness and hemiplegia which were promptly reversed upon aspiration of the intracranial air. A large amount of intraventricular air present in the immediate postoperative period was, however, clinically silent. The characteristics of this unusual presentation, its relation to asymptomatic pneumocephalus. hydrocephalus and the preventive and therapeutic measures required to deal with such conditions are discussed.


Neurosurgery | 1987

Visual Hallucinations Associated with Pituitary Adenoma

Zvi Ram; Gideon Findler; Itzhak Gutman; Rina Tadmor; Abraham Sahar

Visual hallucinations were the presenting symptom in three patients with pituitary adenoma. One patient reported only simple unformed hallucinations, which are a well-documented phenomenon occurring in lesions compressing the optic nerves and chiasm. The other two patients, however, experienced complex formed visual hallucinations believed to be of the release type. No evidence of seizure activity responsible for the hallucinations was found; the mechanism producing them is discussed with correlation to operative findings and electrophysiological studies.


Surgical Neurology | 1985

Importance of early radiologic diagnosis of congenital anomalies of the spine

Rina Tadmor; M. Ravid; Gideon Findler; Abraham Sahar

Manifest or occult spinal dysraphism in the absence of neurological symptoms is likely to remain undetected. Therefore, accurate and early diagnosis of such underlying anomalies is of prime importance for early surgical intervention in order to avoid late irreparable damage. During a period of just over 1 year, 17 such cases of spinal congenital anomalies were diagnosed by myelography with metrizamide and computed tomography-myelography. There were 16 cases of tethered cord, six with myelomeningocele, two with diastematomyelia, two with a split spinal cord, three with a lipoma, and the remaining three with vertebral anomalies. Scoliosis was present in 60%, weakness of both legs in 45%, and asymmetry of the feet in 25%. Some of these patients were initially brought to the orthopedic department for corrective surgery before undergoing a complete neurological evaluation; thus the radiologist was acting as the link between patient and neurosurgeon. Clinical experience has shown that surgical treatment can be successful and can thereby obviate further progression of neurological symptoms.


Journal of Laryngology and Otology | 1993

Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) otorhinorrhoea following vestibular schwannoma surgery treated by extended subtotal petrosectomy with obliteration

Jona Kronenberg; Erez Bendet; Gideon Findler; Yehudah Roth

Extended subtotal petrosectomy as a treatment for persistent cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) otorhinorrhoea is presented. Four patients were successfully operated on by this technique, all previously having undergone suboccipital removal of vestibular schwannoma: other interventions used had failed to seal the fistulae. The internal auditory canal was the usual pathway for CSF leakage as well as retrosigmoid, retrolabyrinthine, retro- or perifacial cells. Total exenteration of middle ear and mastoid cell tracts, skeletonization of sigmoid sinus, jugular bulb and facial nerve, drilling out of semicircular canals, vestibule, and cochlea, and skeletonization of the internal auditory canal, followed by obliteration, are the main steps of this approach.

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Zvi Ram

Sheba Medical Center

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Ethan Rubinstein

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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