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Dive into the research topics where Jake Timothy is active.

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Featured researches published by Jake Timothy.


Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery | 2006

Post-traumatic epilepsy: An overview

Amit Agrawal; Jake Timothy; Lekha Pandit; Murali Manju

Post-traumatic epilepsy (PTE) is a recurrent seizure disorder secondary to brain injury following head trauma. PTE is not a homogeneous condition and can appear several years after the head injury. The mechanism by which trauma to the brain tissue leads to recurrent seizures is unknown. Cortical lesions seem important in the genesis of the epileptic activity, and early seizures are likely to have a different pathogenesis than late seizures. Anti-epileptic drugs available for treatment are phenytoin, sodium valproate, and carbamazepine. Newer anti-epileptics are helpful, particularly in patients with associated post-traumatic stress disorders; however, no randomized controlled studies are available to prove that one of these drugs is better than the other. Current evidence is that the treatment of early post-traumatic seizures does not influence the incidence of post-traumatic epilepsy. Routine preventive anticonvulsants are not indicated for patients with head injuries, and treatment in the acute phase does not reduce death or disability rates.


The Spine Journal | 2009

Preliminary biomechanical evaluation of prophylactic vertebral reinforcement adjacent to vertebroplasty under cyclic loading

Robert J. Oakland; Navin R. Furtado; Ruth K. Wilcox; Jake Timothy; Richard M. Hall

BACKGROUND CONTEXT Percutaneous vertebroplasty has become a favored treatment option for reducing pain in osteoporotic patients with vertebral compression fractures (VCFs). Short-term results are promising, although longer-term complications may arise from accelerated failure of the adjacent vertebral body. PURPOSE To provide a preliminary biomechanical assessment of prophylactic vertebral reinforcement adjacent to vertebroplasty using a three-vertebra cadaveric segment under dynamic loads that represent increasing activity demands. In addition, the effects of reducing the elastic modulus of the cement used in the intact vertebrae were also assessed. STUDY DESIGN/SETTING Three-vertebra cadaveric segments were used to evaluate vertebroplasty with adjacent vertebral reinforcement as an intervention for VCFs. METHODS Nine human three-vertebra segments (T12-L2) were prepared and a compression fracture was generated in the superior vertebrae. Vertebroplasty was performed on the fractured T12 vertebra. Subsequently, the adjacent intact L1 vertebra was prophylactically augmented with cement of differing elastic moduli (100-12.5% modulus of the base cement value). After subfailure quasi-static compression tests before and after augmentation, these specimens were subjected to an incrementally increasing dynamic load profile in proportion to patient body weight (BW) to assess the fatigue properties of the construct. Quantitative computed tomography assessments were conducted at several stages in the experimental process to evaluate the vertebral condition and quantify the gross dimensions of the segment. RESULTS No significant difference in construct stiffness was found pre- or postaugmentation (t=1.4, p=.19). Displacement plots recorded during dynamic loading showed little evidence of fracture under normal physiological loads or moderate activity (1-2.5x BW). A third of the specimens continued to endure increasing load demands and were confirmed to have no fracture after testing. In six specimens, however, greater loads induced 11 fractures: 7 in the augmented vertebra (2xT12, 5xL5) and 4 in the adjacent L2 vertebra. A strong correlation was observed between the subsidence in the segmental unit and the incidence of fracture after testing (r(Spearmans)=-0.88, p=.002). Altering the modulus of cement in the intact vertebra had no effect on level of segmental compromise. CONCLUSIONS These preliminary findings suggest that under normal physiological loads associated with moderate physical activity, prophylactic augmentation adjacent to vertebroplasty showed little evidence of inducing fractures, although loads representing more strenuous activities may generate adjacent and peri-augmentation compromise. Reducing the elastic modulus of the cement in the adjacent intact vertebrae appeared to have no significant effect on the incidence or location of the induced fracture or the overall height loss of the vertebral segment.


British Journal of Neurosurgery | 2012

Cervical arthroplasty: the beginning, the middle, the end?

O. Richards; David Choi; Jake Timothy

Abstract Cervical arthroplasty has developed as an alternative to spinal fusion for the treatment of cervical radiculopathy and myelopathy. The popularity of artificial discs has grown as the evidence of complications following arthrodesis has increased, making the theoretical advantages (motion preservation, altering the natural history of disease, prevention of adjacent segment disease) of disc replacement more attractive. However, as more discs are implanted and the length of follow-up increases, reported complications such as heterotopic ossification, device migration and spontaneous fusion of arthroplasty devices are growing. As a result, surgeons and patients face a challenge when deciding between motion-preserving or fusion surgery. Currently, there is inadequate evidence to promote extensive use of artificial discs for cervical spondylosis, despite promising short-term and intermediate clinical outcomes. However, there is also insufficient evidence to cease using them completely. The use of arthroplasty over fusion in the long term can only be justified if the incidence of adjacent segment disease decreases as a result. Despite the level of investment and research into arthroplasty outcomes, long-term follow-up has yet to be completed and has not convincingly demonstrated the effect of artificial discs on adjacent segment disease. Further long-term randomised trials are necessary to determine whether cervical arthroplasty is able to reduce the incidence of adjacent segment disease and, in doing so, replace arthrodesis as the gold standard treatment for cervical spondylosis.


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2008

The biomechanical effectiveness of prophylactic vertebroplasty: a dynamic cadaveric study.

Robert J. Oakland; Navin R. Furtado; Ruth K. Wilcox; Jake Timothy; Richard M. Hall

OBJECT The purpose of the study was to investigate the segmental effects of prophylactic vertebroplasty under increasingly demanding loading conditions and to assess the effect of altered cement properties on the construct biomechanics. METHODS Twelve human cadaveric 3-vertebral functional spinal units (T12-L2) were prepared such that the intact L-1 vertebra was prophylactically augmented with cements of differing elastic moduli (100, 50, 25, and 12.5% modulus of the base cement). These specimens were subjected to quasistatic subfailure compression pre- and postaugmentation to 50% of the predicted failure strength and then cyclic loading in a fatigue rig (115,000 cycles) to characterize the high-stress, short-cycle fatigue properties of the construct. Loading was increased incrementally in proportion to body weight to a maximum of 3.5 x body weight. Quantitative computed tomography assessment was conducted pre- and postaugmentation and following cyclic testing to assess vertebral condition, cement placement, and fracture classification. RESULTS Adjacent and periaugmentation fractures were induced in the prophylactically augmented segments. However, it appeared that these fractures mainly occurred when the specimens were subjected to loads beyond those that may commonly occur during most normal physiological activities. CONCLUSIONS Lowering the elastic modulus of the cement appeared to have no significant effect on the frequency or severity of the induced fracture within the vertebral segment.


Acta Neurochirurgica | 1999

Olfactory groove schwannoma revisited.

Jake Timothy; Aruna Chakrabarty; A. Rice; Paul Marks

Schwannomas are benign, slowly growing nerve sheath tumours. They can arise from any peripheral nerve containing Schwann cells including distal portions of cranial nerves. The optic and olfactory nerves do not have a Schwann cell layer and therefore do not develop schwannomas. We report a very unusual case of a young woman who presented with partial seizures and had radiological and operative features of an olfactory groove meningioma. However, subsequent histological analysis revealed the tumour was in fact a schwannoma.


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2008

The biomechanics of vertebroplasty in multiple myeloma and metastatic bladder cancer: a preliminary cadaveric investigation

Robert J. Oakland; Navin R. Furtado; Jake Timothy; Richard M. Hall

OBJECT The vertebral column is the most common site for secondary bone metastases and lesions arising from hematological malignancies such as multiple myeloma (MM). These infiltrations can be lytic in nature and cause severe weakening of the vertebral body, an increased risk of fracture, and spinal cord compression leading to neurological deficit. Qualitatively it is apparent that increasing infiltration of these lytic lesions will have a deleterious effect on the mechanical behavior of the vertebrae. However, there is little quantitative information about the relationship between tumor deposits and the impact on the mechanical behavior of the vertebrae. In addition, there have been limited biomechanical assessments of the use of vertebroplasty in the management of these malignancies. The purpose of this preliminary study was to evaluate the mechanical behavior of lesion-infiltrated vertebrae from 2 malignant cancers and to investigate the effectiveness of vertebroplasty with and without tumor debulking. METHODS Individual vertebrae from 2 donor spines--one with MM and another with bone metastases secondary to bladder cancer-were fractured under an eccentric flexion load, from which failure strength and stiffness were derived. Alternate vertebrae defined by spinal level were assigned to 2 groups: Group 1 involved removal of lesion material with Coblation (ArthroCare Corp.) preceding vertebroplasty; Group 2 received no Coblation prior to augmentation. All vertebrae were fractured postaugmentation under the same loading protocol. Micro-CT assessments were undertaken to investigate vertebral morphology, fracture patterns, and cement distribution. RESULTS Multiple myeloma involvement was characterized by several small lesions, severe bone degradation, and multiple areas of vertebral shell compromise. In contrast, large focal lesions were present in the vertebrae with metastatic bladder cancer, and the shell generally remained intact. The mean initial failure strength of the vertebrae with metastases secondary to MM was significantly lower than in vertebrae with bone metastases secondary to bladder cancer (Load = 950 +/- 300 N vs 2200 +/- 750 N, p < 0.0001). A significant improvement in relative fracture strength was found postaugmentation for both lesion types (1.4 +/- 0.5, p < 0.001). Coblation provided a marginally significant increase in the same parameter postaugmentation (p = 0.08) and qualitatively improved the ease of injection and guidance of cement. CONCLUSIONS In the vertebral column, metastatic lesions secondary to bladder cancer and MM showed variations in the pattern of infiltration, both of which led to significant reductions in fracture strength. Account should be taken of these differences to optimize the vertebroplasty intervention in terms of the cement formulation, delivery, and any additional surgical procedure.


Infectious Diseases in Clinical Practice | 2007

A Review of Subdural Empyema and Its Management

Amit Agrawal; Jake Timothy; Lekha Pandit; Lathika Shetty; J.P. Shetty

Subdural empyema is a collection of purulent material between the dura mater and the arachnoid mater. It is a life-threatening complication of paranasal sinusitis, otitis media, or mastoiditis. The classic clinical syndrome is characterized by acute febrile illness that is punctuated by rapid progressive neurological deterioration, and, if left untreated, it will eventually lead to coma with fatal outcome. High-resolution contrast-enhanced computed tomographic scanning has revolutionized the diagnosis of subdural empyema; however, gadolinium-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging provides greater clarity of morphological detail. Treatment of patients with subdural empyema consists of immediate surgical evacuation only in rare circumstances where there are contraindications to surgery or significant mortality risks avoided; conservative treatment is advised. The antibiotics should be given for a period of 3 to 6 weeks with close monitoring of clinical status. Aggressive management of subdural empyema has reduced the mortality rate; still, it is associated with the high incidence of morbidity (ie, neurological deficits) because very ill patients who would have died in the past now survive with deficits. We discuss the etiopathology and diagnosis of subdural empyema and its management.


Australian & New Zealand Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology | 1999

A Case of Delayed Diagnosis of the Cauda Equina Syndrome in Pregnancy

Jake Timothy; Richard Anthony; Atul Tyagi; David Porter; Philip van Hille

Cauda equina syndrome is caused by compression of the lumbosacral nerve roots commonly presenting with back pain, sacral anaesthesia and urinary dysfunction. Similar symptoms can occur in late pregnancy. There exists therefore a potential for misdiagnosis and consequent delay in treatment. We report a case of a cauda equina lesion occurring during pregnancy where a delay in the diagnosis led to persistent neurological problems despite surgical treatment.


Acta Neurochirurgica | 2006

Cervical spine metastasis from adrenal pheochromocytoma

E. Kheir; Debasish Pal; P. Mohanlal; A. Shivane; A. Chakrabarty; Jake Timothy

SummaryMetastatic tumours are the most common type of tumours in the spine of which only 10% occur in the cervical spine. We report a rare presentation of metastatic pheochromocytoma of the cervical spine which was successfully treated operatively. Adequate precautions should be taken during surgery as the tumour is very vascular. Radiotherapy is useful in the treatment of residual tumour.


Global Spine Journal | 2016

Cadaveric Spinal Surgery Simulation: A Comparison of Cadaver Types.

James Tomlinson; Marina Yiasemidou; Anna Watts; Dave Roberts; Jake Timothy

Study Design Single-blinded study. Objective To assess the suitability of three types of cadaver for simulating pedicle screw insertion and establish if there is an ideal. Methods Three types of cadaver—Thiel-embalmed, Crosado-embalmed, and formaldehyde-embalmed—were draped and the spines exposed. Experienced surgeons were asked to place pedicle screws in each cadaver and give written questionnaire feedback using a modified Likert scale. Soft tissue and bony properties were assessed, along with the role of simulation in spinal surgery training. Results The Thiel cadaver rated highest for soft tissue feel and appearance with a median score of 6 for both (range 2 to 7). The Crosado cadaver rated highest for bony feel, with a median score of 6 (range 2 to 7). The formaldehyde cadaver rated lowest for all categories with median scores of 2, 2.5, and 3.5, respectively. All surgeons felt pedicle screw insertion should be learned in a simulated setting using human cadavers. Conclusion Thiel and Crosado cadavers both offered lifelike simulation of pedicle screw insertion, with each having advantages depending on whether the focus is on soft tissue approach or technical aspects of bony screw insertion. Both cadaver types offer the advantage of long life span, unlike fresh frozen tissue, which means cadavers can be used multiple times, thus reducing the costs.

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Paul Marks

Leeds General Infirmary

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Amit Agrawal

B.P. Koirala Institute of Health Sciences

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Debasish Pal

Leeds General Infirmary

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Gerry Towns

Leeds General Infirmary

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Chris Derham

Leeds General Infirmary

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David Choi

University College London

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Deb Pal

Leeds General Infirmary

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