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Featured researches published by Iahn Cajigas.


Epilepsia | 2017

Laser thermal ablation for mesiotemporal epilepsy: Analysis of ablation volumes and trajectories

Walter J. Jermakowicz; Andres M. Kanner; Samir Sur; Christina Bermudez; Pierre Francois D'Haese; John Paul G. Kolcun; Iahn Cajigas; Rui Li; Carlos Millan; Ramses Ribot; Enrique Serrano; Naymee Velez; Merredith R. Lowe; Gustavo Rey; Jonathan Jagid

To identify features of ablations and trajectories that correlate with optimal seizure control and minimize the risk of neurocognitive deficits in patients undergoing laser interstitial thermal therapy (LiTT) for mesiotemporal epilepsy (mTLE).


NeuroImage: Clinical | 2017

Presurgical thalamocortical connectivity is associated with response to vagus nerve stimulation in children with intractable epilepsy

George M. Ibrahim; Priya Sharma; Ann Hyslop; Magno R. Guillen; Benjamin R. Morgan; Simeon M. Wong; Taylor J. Abel; Lior Elkaim; Iahn Cajigas; Ashish H. Shah; Aria Fallah; Alexander G. Weil; Nolan Altman; Byron Bernal; Santiago Medina; Elysa Widjaja; Prasanna Jayakar; John Ragheb; Sanjiv Bhatia

Although chronic vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) is an established treatment for medically-intractable childhood epilepsy, there is considerable heterogeneity in seizure response and little data are available to pre-operatively identify patients who may benefit from treatment. Since the therapeutic effect of VNS may be mediated by afferent projections to the thalamus, we tested the hypothesis that intrinsic thalamocortical connectivity is associated with seizure response following chronic VNS in children with epilepsy. Twenty-one children (ages 5–21 years) with medically-intractable epilepsy underwent resting-state fMRI prior to implantation of VNS. Ten received sedation, while 11 did not. Whole brain connectivity to thalamic regions of interest was performed. Multivariate generalized linear models were used to correlate resting-state data with seizure outcomes, while adjusting for age and sedation status. A supervised support vector machine (SVM) algorithm was used to classify response to chronic VNS on the basis of intrinsic connectivity. Of the 21 subjects, 11 (52%) had 50% or greater improvement in seizure control after VNS. Enhanced connectivity of the thalami to the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and left insula was associated with greater VNS efficacy. Within our test cohort, SVM correctly classified response to chronic VNS with 86% accuracy. In an external cohort of 8 children, the predictive model correctly classified the seizure response with 88% accuracy. We find that enhanced intrinsic connectivity within thalamocortical circuitry is associated with seizure response following VNS. These results encourage the study of intrinsic connectivity to inform neural network-based, personalized treatment decisions for children with intractable epilepsy.


Operative Neurosurgery | 2017

Visual deficit from laser interstitial thermal therapy for temporal lobe epilepsy: Anatomical considerations

Walter J. Jermakowicz; Michael E. Ivan; Iahn Cajigas; Ramses Ribot; Ignacio Jusué-Torres; Mehul Desai; Armando Ruiz; Pierre-François D’Haese; Andres M. Kanner; Jonathan Jagid

BACKGROUND Laser interstitial thermal therapy (LITT) is quickly emerging as an effective surgical therapy for temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). One of the most frequent complications of the procedure is postoperative visual field cuts, but the physiopathology of these deficits is unknown. OBJECTIVE To evaluate potential causes of visual deficits after LITT for TLE in an attempt to minimize this complication. METHODS This retrospective chart review compares the case of a 24-year-old male who developed homonymous hemianopsia following LITT for TLE to 17 prior patients who underwent the procedure and suffered no visual deficit. We examined both features of the surgical approach (trajectory, laser energy, ablation size) and of preoperative surgical anatomy, derived from volumetric tracings of mesiotemporal structures. RESULTS For the patient with postoperative homonymous hemianopsia imaging suggested inadvertent ablation of the lateral geniculate nucleus, although the laser was positioned entirely within the hippocampus. This patients laser trajectory, ablation number, energy delivered, and ablation size were not significantly different from the prior patients. However, the subject with the visual deficit did have significantly smaller choroidal fissure cerebrospinal fluid volume. CONCLUSION Visual deficits are the most common complication of LITT for mesiotemporal epilepsy and patients at most risk may have small cerebrospinal fluid volume in the choroidal fissure, allowing heat to spread from the hippocampal body to the lateral geniculate nucleus. When such anatomy is identified on preoperative magnetic resonance imaging, we recommend lowering laser trajectory, decreasing ablation power through the hippocampal body, and using temperature safety markers at the lower thalamic border.


World Neurosurgery | 2018

Surgical Treatment of Intramedullary Spinal Metastasis in Medulloblastoma: Case Report and Review of the Literature

Anshit Goyal; Iahn Cajigas; George M. Ibrahim; Carole D. Brathwaite; Ziad Khatib; Toba Niazi; Sanjiv Bhatia; John Ragheb

BACKGROUND Medulloblastomas are common childhood central nervous system tumors that are prone to leptomeningeal spread. Intramedullary dissemination is rare with very few case reports existing in the available literature. CASE DESCRIPTION The authors here present a case of a 14-year-old boy with Li-Fraumeni syndrome and medulloblastoma who underwent surgical resection of spinal intramedullary spread. Histopathology revealed the tumor to be anaplastic medulloblastoma, same as the intracranial lesions. Genetic testing of the metastatic deposit revealed loss of functions mutations in SUFU, NOTCH3, and TP53 and TERC amplification. An improvement in ambulatory function at short-term follow-up was noted before the patient died of disseminated disease. CONCLUSIONS Intramedullary metastasis of medulloblastoma remains a rare disease. Surgical resection might play a possible role in management in addition to radiation and chemotherapy.


Seizure-european Journal of Epilepsy | 2018

Presurgical hyperconnectivity of the ablation volume is associated with seizure-freedom after magnetic resonance-guided laser interstitial thermal therapy

George M. Ibrahim; Alexander G. Weil; Shaina Sedighim; Nathan Schoen; Mirriam Mikhail; Priya Sharma; Magno R. Guillen; Benjamin R. Morgan; Simeon M. Wong; Iahn Cajigas; Walter J. Jermakowicz; Carolina Sandoval-Garcia; Evan Cole Lewis; Aria Fallah; Nolan Altman; Santiago Medina; Esperanza Pacheco-Jacome; Prasanna Jayakar; Ann Hyslop; Ian Miller; John Ragheb; Sanjiv Bhatia; Byron Bernal

PURPOSE Magnetic Resonance-guided Laser Interstitial Thermal Therapy (MRgLITT) is an emerging minimally-invasive alternative to resective surgery for medically-intractable epilepsy. The precise lesioning effect produced by MRgLITT supplies opportunities to glean insights into epileptogenic regions and their interactions with functional brain networks. In this exploratory analysis, we sought to characterize associations between MRgLITT ablation zones and large-scale brain networks that portended seizure outcome using resting-state fMRI. METHODS Presurgical fMRI and intraoperatively volumetric structural imaging were obtained, from which the ablation volume was segmented. The network properties of the ablation volume within the brains large-scale brain networks were characterized using graph theory and compared between children who were and were not rendered seizure-free. RESULTS Of the seventeen included children, five achieved seizure freedom following MRgLITT. Greater functional connectivity of the ablation volume to canonical resting-state networks was associated with seizure-freedom (p < 0.05, FDR-corrected). The ablated volume in children who subsequently became seizure-free following MRgLITT had significantly greater strength, and eigenvector centrality within the large-scale brain network. CONCLUSIONS These findings provide novel insights into the interaction between epileptogenic cortex and large-scale brain networks. The association between ablation volume and resting-state networks may supply novel avenues for presurgical planning and patient stratification.


PLOS ONE | 2018

Ablation dynamics during laser interstitial thermal therapy for mesiotemporal epilepsy

Walter J. Jermakowicz; Iahn Cajigas; Lia Dan; Santiago Guerra; Samir Sur; Pierre Francois D. Haese; Andres M. Kanner; Jonathan Jagid

Introduction The recent emergence of laser interstitial thermal therapy (LITT) as a frontline surgical tool in the management of brain tumors and epilepsy is a result of advances in MRI thermal imaging. A limitation to further improving LITT is the diversity of brain tissue thermoablative properties, which hinders our ability to predict LITT treatment-related effects. Utilizing the mesiotemporal lobe as a consistent anatomic model system, the goal of this study was to use intraoperative thermal damage estimate (TDE) maps to study short- and long-term effects of LITT and to identify preoperative variables that could be helpful in predicting tissue responses to thermal energy. Methods For 30 patients with mesiotemporal epilepsy treated with LITT at a single institution, intraoperative TDE maps and pre-, intra- and post-operative MRIs were co-registered in a common reference space using a deformable atlas. The spatial overlap of TDE maps with manually-traced immediate (post-ablation) and delayed (6-month) ablation zones was measured using the dice similarity coefficient (DSC). Then, motivated by simple heat-transfer models, ablation dynamics were quantified at amygdala and hippocampal head from TDE pixel time series fit by first order linear dynamics, permitting analysis of the thermal time constant (τ). The relationships of these measures to 16 independent variables derived from patient demographics, mesiotemporal anatomy, preoperative imaging characteristics and the surgical procedure were examined. Results TDE maps closely overlapped immediate ablation borders but were significantly larger than the ablation cavities seen on delayed imaging, particularly at the amygdala and hippocampal head. The TDEs more accurately predicted delayed LITT effects in patients with smaller perihippocampal CSF spaces. Analyses of ablation dynamics from intraoperative TDE videos showed variable patterns of lesion progression after laser activation. Ablations tended to be slower for targets with increased preoperative T2 MRI signal and in close proximity to large, surrounding CSF spaces. In addition, greater laser energy was required to ablate mesial versus lateral mesiotemporal structures, an effect associated with laser trajectory and target contrast-enhanced T1 MRI signal. Conclusions Patient-specific variations in mesiotemporal anatomy and pathology may influence the thermal coagulation of these tissues. We speculate that by incorporating demographic and imaging data into predictive models we may eventually enhance the accuracy and precision with which LITT is delivered, improving outcomes and accelerating adoption of this novel tool.


Operative Neurosurgery | 2017

Intraoperative imaging in traumatic peripheral nerve lesions: Correlating histologic cross-sections with high-resolution ultrasound

S. Shelby Burks; Iahn Cajigas; Jean Jose; Allan D. Levi

BACKGROUND Intraoperative ultrasound (US) has been used as a guide during surgery to better identify deep neuroanatomical structures. OBJECTIVE To correlate histologic cross-sections from nerve samples taken at the time of surgery with axial, high-resolution US images at similar locations and validate this important tool for intraoperative guidance in nerve surgery. METHODS Three subjects undergoing nerve repair procedures after traumatic nerve injuries were enrolled prospectively. US images captured at the time of surgery were later matched with gross anatomic cross-sections and fascicular anatomy compared across modalities. RESULTS In cases 1 and 3, neuromatous tissue spanned the entire cross-section of the common peroneal and upper trunk of the brachial plexus, respectively. In case 2, only a portion of the sciatic nerve was involved with neuroma. Intraoperative US aided in differentiating normal peripheral nerve from neuroma in all 3 cases and helped minimize the disruption of healthy peripheral nerve tissue. CONCLUSION Intraoperative US correlates well with anatomic sections removed at the time of surgery. The ability to noninvasively image the peripheral nerve along with compound nerve action potentials can greatly assist in determining the extent of neurolysis, resection, and grafting and is a useful adjunct for intraoperative decision-making. This report serves to highlight the role of US and validate its use in peripheral nerve surgery for trauma.


Case Reports in Medicine | 2015

Allergy to Prolene Sutures in a Dural Graft for Chiari Decompression

Iahn Cajigas; S. Shelby Burks; Joanna E. Gernsback; Lauren M. Fine; Baharak Moshiree; Allan D. Levi

Allergy to Prolene suture is exceedingly rare with only 5 cases reported in the literature. There have been no such cases associated with neurosurgical procedures. Diagnosis is nearly always delayed in spite of persistent symptomatology. A 27-year-old girl with suspected Ehlers-Danlos, connective tissue disorder, underwent posterior fossa decompression for Chiari Type 1 malformation. One year later, the patient presented with urticarial rash from the neck to chest. Cerebrospinal fluid and blood testing, magnetic resonance imaging, and intraoperative exploration did not suggest allergic reaction. Eventually skin testing proved specific Prolene allergy. After suture material was removed, the patient no longer complained of pruritus or rash. This single case highlights the important entity of allergic reaction to suture material, namely, Prolene, which can present in a delayed basis. Symptomatology can be vague but has typical allergic characteristics. Multidisciplinary approach is helpful with confirmatory skin testing as a vital part of the workup.


World Neurosurgery | 2018

Prospective Study of Nonbeneficial Care in Neurocritical Care Unit

Simon Buttrick; Iahn Cajigas; Justin K. Achua; Kristine O'Phelan; Kenneth W. Goodman; Ronald J. Benveniste


Neurosurgery | 2017

215 Laser Thermal Ablation for Mesiotemporal Epilepsy: Relation of Ablation Cavities to Seizure and Neurocognitive Outcomes

Walter J. Jermakowicz; Samir Sur; Iahn Cajigas; Pierre Francois D. Haese; Jonathan Jagid

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John Ragheb

Boston Children's Hospital

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Sanjiv Bhatia

Boston Children's Hospital

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Ann Hyslop

Boston Children's Hospital

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Aria Fallah

University of California

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Byron Bernal

Boston Children's Hospital

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