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Featured researches published by J. Jafar.


Neurosurgery | 2002

Treatment of giant intracranial aneurysms with saphenous vein extracranial-to-intracranial bypass grafting: Indications, operative technique, and results in 29 patients

Jafar J. Jafar; Stephen M. Russell; Henry H. Woo; Patrick P. Han; Robert F. Spetzler; Laligam N. Sekhar; Ramin Rak; Arthur L. Day; Stephen B. Lewis; H. Hunt Batjer

OBJECTIVE The treatment of giant intracranial aneurysms is a challenge because of the limitations and difficulty of direct surgical clipping and endovascular coiling. We describe the indications, surgical technique, and complications of saphenous vein extracranial-to-intracranial bypass grafting followed by acute parent vessel occlusion in the management of these difficult lesions. METHODS Between January 1990 and December 1999, 29 patients with giant intracranial aneurysms underwent 30 saphenous vein bypass grafts followed by immediate parent vessel occlusion. There were 11 men and 18 women with a mean follow-up period of 62 months. Twenty-five patients harbored aneurysms involving the internal carotid artery, 2 had middle cerebral artery aneurysms, and 2 had aneurysms in the basilar artery. Serial cerebral or magnetic resonance angiograms were obtained to assess graft patency and aneurysm obliteration. RESULTS All 30 aneurysms were excluded from the cerebral circulation, with 28 vein grafts remaining patent. Two patients had graft occlusions: one because of poor runoff and the other because of misplacement of a cranial pin during a bypass procedure on the contralateral side. Other surgical complications included one death from a large cerebral infarction, homonymous hemianopsia from thrombosis of an anterior choroidal artery after internal carotid artery occlusion, and temporary hemiparesis from a presumed perforator thrombosis adjacent to a basilar aneurysm. CONCLUSION With appropriate attention to surgical technique, a saphenous vein extracranial-to-intracranial bypass followed by acute parent vessel occlusion is a safe and effective method of treating giant intracranial aneurysms. A high rate of graft patency and adequate cerebral blood flow can be achieved. Thrombosis of perforating arteries caused by altered blood flow hemodynamics after parent vessel occlusion may be a continuing source of complications.


Neurosurgery | 1994

Acute Surgical Management of Intracranial Arteriovenous Malformations

Jafar J. Jafar; Ali R. Rezai

The majority of intracranial arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) do not require acute surgical intervention. Some patients, however, require emergent surgical treatment because of a profound neurological deterioration from a mass effect. We report 10 patients who underwent emergency AVM surgery after experiencing neurological deterioration from an intracranial hemorrhage. Two patients bled spontaneously, whereas eight had an intracranial hemorrhage secondary to an embolization procedure. When the patients demonstrated neurological deterioration, they were intubated, hyperventilated, and underwent osmotic diuresis. Barbiturate anesthesia was initiated, and surgery was performed within 30 minutes in most cases. The hematomas were evacuated, and an attempt was made to excise the AVMs at the same time. Postoperatively, intracranial pressure was monitored, and barbiturate coma was maintained until the intracranial pressure returned to normal. Cerebral perfusion pressure was maintained above 55 mm Hg. The operation was confined to evacuating the hematoma in two patients with inoperable AVMs. The other eight patients underwent concomitant total AVM resection. Because of the severity of neurological deterioration, one patient who bled spontaneously underwent surgery based only on a computed tomographic scan of the brain. Nine patients made a good-to-excellent recovery. One patient with a large motor-strip AVM remained hemiplegic. We conclude that in patients presenting with profound neurological deterioration after a spontaneous intracranial hemorrhage or one associated with an embolization procedure, prompt hematoma evacuation with simultaneous AVM excision as well as perioperative intracranial pressure control with mannitol and barbiturates can yield a good-to-excellent outcome.


Neurosurgery | 1998

A dissecting aneurysm of the posteroinferior cerebellar artery: case report.

Jafar J. Jafar; Toshifumi Kamiryo; Bennie W. Chiles; Peter Kim Nelson

OBJECTIVE AND IMPORTANCE We present a patient who experienced a subarachnoid hemorrhage secondary to a dissecting aneurysm of the right posteroinferior cerebellar artery (PICA). The use of an encircling clip in treating the aneurysm while preserving supply to brain stem perforators originating near the dissecting segment and the distal PICA territory was key in the operative management. CLINICAL PRESENTATION A 48-year-old patient with a history of hypertension presented with subarachnoid hemorrhage confirmed by computed tomography of the brain. Successive cerebral angiography revealed a dynamic change in the configuration of the dissection, with expansion of the associated focal ectasia. OPERATIVE MANAGEMENT At surgery, three brain stem perforators adjacent to the aneurysm were visualized. The dissecting segment was reconstructed with an encircling Sundt clip and muslin wrap, which preserved the flow through the PICA and brain stem perforators. CONCLUSION A patient suffering from a dissecting PICA aneurysm and subarachnoid hemorrhage was successfully treated with direct surgical reconstruction of the parent artery, sparing the perforators to the medulla.


Neurosurgery | 1992

Intramedullary abscess associated with a spinal cord ependymoma: case report.

Ramesh Babu; Jafar J. Jafar; Paul P. Huang; Gleb N. Budzilovich; Joseph Ransohoff

Intramedullary spinal cord abscesses are relatively uncommon. We report the first case of an intramedullary spinal cord abscess in a preexisting spinal cord ependymoma. The clinical features and pathogenesis are discussed. Salient features of the management of intramedullary spinal cord abscesses are outlined.


Surgical Neurology | 1994

Traumatic posterior cerebral artery aneurysm secondary to an intracranial nail: Case report

Ali R. Rezai; Mark Lee; Charles Kite; Dennis Smyth; Jafar J. Jafar

We present the case of a traumatic posterior cerebral artery aneurysm from a self-inflicted pneumatic nail-gun missile injury through the roof of the mouth. The patient presented to us in a coma with subarachanoid and intraventricular hemorrhage. Cerebral angiography revealed an aneurysm of the left posterior cerebral artery with no distal filling. The patient died 6 days after admission. At autopsy, a pseudoaneurysm of the posterior cerebral artery was seen. This aneurysm resulted from direct disruption of the arterial wall by the intracranial nail.


Neurosurgery | 2006

Recent Steps Toward A Reconstructive Endovascular Solution for the Orphaned, Complex-Neck Aneurysm

Peter Kim Nelson; Daniel H. Sahlein; Maksim Shapiro; Tibor Becske; Brian-Fred Fitzsimmons; Paul P. Huang; Jafar J. Jafar; David I. Levy

OBJECTIVE:The purposes of this article are to summarize recent developments and concerns in endovascular aneurysm therapy leading to the adjunctive use of endoluminal devices, to review the published literature on stent-supported coil embolization of cerebral aneurysms, and to describe our experience with this technique in a limited subgroup of problematic complex aneurysms over a medium-term follow-up period. METHODS:Between January 2003 and June 2004, 28 individuals among 157 patients with cerebral aneurysms we evaluated were identified as harboring aneurysms with exceptionally broad necks. Out of these 28 patients, 16 were treated with a combination of stents and detachable coils, preserving the parent artery. Recorded data included patient demographics, the clinical presentation, aneurysm location and characteristics, procedural details, and clinical and angiographic outcome. RESULTS:Over an 18-month period, 16 patients with large cerebral aneurysms additionally characterized by neck sizes between 7 and 14 mm were treated, using combined coil embolization of the aneurysm with stent reconstruction of the aneurysm neck. Thirteen out of the 16 aneurysms were occluded at angiographic reevaluation between 11 and 24 months (mean angiographic follow-up, 17.5 mo). There were no treatment-related deaths or clinically evident neurological complications. Thirteen patients experienced excellent clinical outcomes, with good outcomes in two patients and a poor visual outcome in one patient (mean clinical follow-up, 29 mo). A single technical complication occurred, involving transient nonocclusive stent-associated thrombus, which was treated uneventfully with abciximab. CONCLUSION:Stent-supported coil embolization of large, complex-neck cerebral aneurysms seems to provide superior medium-term anatomic reconstruction of the parent artery compared with historic series of aneurysms treated exclusively with endosaccular coils. In the near future, increasingly sophisticated endoluminal devices offering higher coverage of the neck defect will likely enable more definitive endovascular treatment of complex cerebral aneurysms and further expand our ability to manipulate the vascular biology of the parent artery.


Neurosurgery | 2002

Role of frameless stereotaxy in the surgical treatment of cerebral arteriovenous malformations : Technique and outcomes in a controlled study of 44 consecutive patients

Stephen M. Russell; Henry H. Woo; Seth S. Joseffer; Jafar J. Jafar

OBJECTIVE To describe a frameless stereotactic technique used to resect cerebral arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) and to determine whether frameless stereotaxy during AVM resection could decrease operative times, minimize intraoperative blood losses, reduce postoperative complications, and improve surgical outcomes. METHODS Data for 44 consecutive patients with surgically resected cerebral AVMs were retrospectively reviewed. The first 22 patients underwent resection without stereotaxy (Group 1), whereas the next 22 patients underwent resection with the assistance of a frameless stereotaxy system (Group 2). RESULTS The patient characteristics, AVM morphological features, and percentages of preoperatively embolized cases were statistically similar for the two treatment groups. The mean operative time for Group 1 was 497 minutes, compared with 290 minutes for Group 2 (P = 0.0005). The estimated blood loss for Group 1 was 657 ml, compared with 311 ml for Group 2 (P = 0.0008). Complication rates, residual AVM incidences, and clinical outcomes were similar for the two groups. CONCLUSION Frameless stereotaxy allows surgeons to 1) plan the optimal trajectory to an AVM, 2) minimize the skin incision and craniotomy sizes, and 3) confirm the AVM margins and identify deep vascular components during resection. These benefits of stereotaxy were most apparent for small, deep AVMs that were not visible on the surface of the brain. Frameless stereotaxy reduces the operative time and blood loss during AVM resection.


Neurosurgery | 2012

Long-term outcomes after staged-volume stereotactic radiosurgery for large arteriovenous malformations.

P. Huang; Stephen Rush; Bernadine Donahue; Ashwatha Narayana; Becske T; Nelson Pk; Han K; Jafar J. Jafar

BACKGROUND Stereotactic radiosurgery is an effective treatment modality for small arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) of the brain. For larger AVMs, the treatment dose is often lowered to reduce potential complications, but this decreases the likelihood of cure. One strategy is to divide large AVMs into smaller anatomic volumes and treat each volume separately. OBJECTIVE To prospectively assess the long-term efficacy and complications associated with staged-volume radiosurgical treatment of large, symptomatic AVMs. METHODS Eighteen patients with AVMs larger than 15 mL underwent prospective staged-volume radiosurgery over a 13-year period. The median AVM volume was 22.9 mL (range, 15.7-50 mL). Separate anatomic volumes were irradiated at 3- to 9-month intervals (median volume, 10.9 mL; range, 5.3-13.4 mL; median marginal dose, 15 Gy; range, 15-17 Gy). The AVM was divided into 2 volumes in 10 patients, 3 volumes in 5 patients, and 4 volumes in 3 patients. Seven patients underwent retreatment for residual disease. RESULTS Actuarial rates of complete angiographic occlusion were 29% and 89% at 5 and 10 years. Five patients (27.8%) had a hemorrhage after radiosurgery. Kaplan-Meier analysis of cumulative hemorrhage rates after treatment were 12%, 18%, 31%, and 31% at 2, 3, 5, and 10 years, respectively. One patient died after a hemorrhage (5.6%). CONCLUSION Staged-volume radiosurgery for AVMs larger than 15 mL is a viable treatment strategy. The long-term occlusion rate is high, whereas the radiation-related complication rate is low. Hemorrhage during the lag period remains the greatest source of morbidity and mortality.


Neurosurgery | 1992

Intramedullary Abscess Associated with a Spinal Cord Ependymoma

Ramesh Babu; Jafar J. Jafar; Paul P. Huang; Gleb N. Budzilovich; Joseph Ransohoff

Intramedullary spinal cord abscesses are relatively uncommon. We report the first case of an intramedullary spinal cord abscess in a preexisting spinal cord ependymoma. The clinical features and pathogenesis are discussed. Salient features of the management of intramedullary spinal cord abscesses are outlined.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2012

Extracranial-intracranial bypass: Resurrection of a nearly extinct operation

Ryan M. Gobble; Han Hoang; Jafar J. Jafar; Mark A. Adelman

BACKGROUND Giant intracranial artery aneurysms (GIAAs) are often not amenable to neurosurgical clipping or endovascular coiling. Extracranial-intracranial (EC-IC) bypass, a procedure that has been essentially abandoned for the treatment of intracranial ischemic disease, followed by parent vessel occlusion, is often successful in treating these aneurysms. Vascular surgeons should be familiar with this operation, especially in centers with neurosurgical capability. METHODS A retrospective review of patients treated from 1990 to 2010 at New York University Medical Center was performed. Office and hospital records of all patients identified were reviewed with attention to the age and sex of the patient, presenting symptoms, preoperative testing, procedure performed, type of bypass conduit, graft patency, intraoperative and postoperative complications, length of follow-up, and overall outcome. EC-IC bypass was performed using a graft of great saphenous vein (GSV) or radial artery (RA). The vascular surgeon harvested the vascular conduit, tunneled the graft, and performed the extracranial anastomosis, and the intracranial anastomosis was performed by the neurosurgeon. RESULTS A total of 36 patients (14 men, 22 women) underwent 37 EC-IC bypasses with 34 GSV and three RA grafts. The median age was 57 years (interquartile range, 49-66 years), and the median follow-up was 53 months (interquartile range, 29-77 months). Aneurysm location was the internal carotid artery in 30 patients, the basilar artery in three, and the middle cerebral artery in four. All 37 aneurysms were excluded from the cerebral circulation, with 33 grafts remaining patent at follow-up, as determined by serial cerebral or magnetic resonance angiogram. At follow-up, 33 of 34 of the GSV grafts (88%) and three of three (100%) of the RA grafts were patent. There were two deaths (5.6%), despite patent grafts. Postoperative graft occlusion led to homonymous hemianopsia in one patient and temporary hemiparesis in another (5.6%). Graft occlusions were asymptomatic in two patients. CONCLUSIONS EC-IC bypass is a safe and effective treatment for GIAAs, with acceptable rates of morbidity (5.6%), mortality (5.6%), and graft patency (89.2%). We suggest that the technique described in this report should be routinely used for treatment of GIAAs in centers where neurosurgery and vascular surgery services are available and should be considered a standard procedure in the armamentarium of the vascular surgeon.

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