Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Joseph C. Maroon is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Joseph C. Maroon.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1990

A randomized, controlled trial of methylprednisolone or naloxone in the treatment of acute spinal-cord injury: Results of the second national acute spinal cord injury study

Michael B. Bracken; Mary Jo Shepard; William F. Collins; Theodore R. Holford; Wise Young; David S. Baskin; Howard M. Eisenberg; Eugene S. Flamm; Linda Leo-Summers; Joseph C. Maroon; Lawrence F. Marshall; Phanor L. Perot; Joseph M. Piepmeier; Volker K. H. Sonntag; Franklin C. Wagner; Jack E. Wilberger; H. Richard Winn

In 1990, the Second National Acute Spinal Cord Injury Study reported that high-dosage methylprednisolone improves neurologic recovery in spinal-injured humans. The study showed that patients who received the drug within 8 hr after injury improved, whereas those who received the drug later did not. The drug significantly increased recovery even in severely injured patients who were admitted with no motor or sensory function below the lesion, contradicting a long-held dogma that such patients would not recover. Some researchers, however, have questioned the stratification of the patient population, the use of summed neurologic change scores, and the absence of functional assessments. The stratification by injury severity and treatment time was planned a priori and based on objective criteria. Detailed analyses revealed no differences between groups attributable to stratification or randomization. While multivariate analyses of the summed neurologic scores were used, the conclusions were corroborated by other analytical approaches that did not rely on summed scores. For example, treatment with methylprednisolone more than doubled the probability that patients would convert from quadriplegia or paraplegia to quadriparesis or paraparesis, analgesia to hypalgesia, and anesthesia to hypesthesia. The treatment also significantly improved neurologic scores in lumbosacral segments, indicating that beneficial effects were not limited to segments close to the lesion site. The treatment did not significantly affect mortality or morbidity. The study strongly suggests that methylprednisolone has significant beneficial effects in human spinal cord injury, that these effects occur only when the drug is given within 8 hr, and that it helps even in patients with severe spinal cord injuries. These conclusions have important implications for spinal cord injury care and research.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2010

A Randomized, Controlled Trial of Methylprednisolone or Naloxone in the Treatment of Acute Spinal-Cord Injury

Mark K. Lyons; Michael D. Partington; Fredric B. Meyer; Gary M. Yarkony; Elliot J. Roth; Moris Senegor; Henry G. Stifel; Margaret Brown; Michael B. Bracken; Mary Jo Shepard; William F. Collins; Theodore R. Holford; Wise Young; Joseph M. Piepmeier; Linda Leo-Summers; David S. Baskin; Howard M. Eisenberg; Eugene S. Flamm; Lawrence F. Marshall; Joseph C. Maroon; Jack E. Wilberger; Phanor L. Perot; Volker K. H. Sonntag; Franklin C. Wagner; H. Richard Winn

Abstract Studies in animals indicate that methylprednisolone and naloxone are both potentially beneficial in acute spinal-cord injury, but whether any treatment is clinically effective remains uncertain. We evaluated the efficacy and safety of methylprednisolone and naloxone in a multicenter randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial in patients with acute spinal-cord injury, 95 percent of whom were treated within 14 hours of injury. Methylprednisolone was given to 162 patients as a bolus of 30 mg per kilogram of body weight, followed by infusion at 5.4 mg per kilogram per hour for 23 hours. Naloxone was given to 154 patients as a bolus of 5.4 mg per kilogram, followed by infusion at 4.0 mg per kilogram per hour for 23 hours. Placebos were given to 171 patients by bolus and infusion. Motor and sensory functions were assessed by systematic neurologic examination on admission and six weeks and six months after injury. After six months the patients who were treated with methylprednisolone within eigh...


Neurosurgery | 1991

The Relationship between Survival and the Extent of the Resection in Patients with Supratentorial Malignant Gliomas

Matthew R. Quigley; Joseph C. Maroon

Current neurosurgical opinion favors the radical surgical removal of supratentorial gliomas, when feasible, in the belief that this optimizes patient survival. Although bolstered by the results of some early investigators, the efficacy of this approach remains debatable. Therefore, we undertook a review of the English language literature of the past 30 years for a series of surgically treated malignant gliomas. Twenty reports comprising 5691 patients were identified. Only 4 found the extent of the surgical resection related to survival. In 2 of these, it followed age, histological findings, and performance status in importance. The 2 other studies did not rank the prognostic variables at all. On closer inspection, however, there does appear to be a subgroup of young patients with favorable histological findings and good performance status for whom surgery is beneficial. Future reporting of surgical results of patients with gliomas will require stratification by the known prognostic variables of age, histological findings, and performance status to characterize better this subgroup for whom surgery is beneficial.


American Journal of Ophthalmology | 1988

The Management of Optic Nerve Sheath Meningiomas

John S. Kennerdell; Joseph C. Maroon; Mark Malton; Floyd A. Warren

Thirty-eight patients (39 eyes) with optic nerve sheath meningiomas were entered into a treatment plan and were followed up for at least three years. Eighteen eyes were simply observed because they had minimal functional deficit or the eye was blind. Radiation was used on six eyes with documented progressive visual loss that still had useful vision. Surgery was initially used in an attempt to remove optic nerve sheath meningiomas but was abandonded except in exceptional cases. Total surgical removal of the tumor was carried out in ten eyes with loss of vision and in which the meningioma was growing. Surgery for subtotal or complete removal of the tumor followed by radiation was carried out in five eyes exhibiting aggressive growth of the tumor. This treatment plan has helped us to treat patients with optic nerve sheath meningiomas in an orderly way.


Neurological Research | 1999

Association between peridural scar and persistent low back pain after lumbar discectomy

Joseph C. Maroon; Adnan Abla; Jeffrey Bost

The purpose of this study was to investigate the correlation between low back pain persisting six months after first surgery for herniated lumbar intervertebral disc and the extent of peridural fibrosis present at the surgical site, as defined by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The 298 patients who underwent first-time, single-level unilateral discectomy for lumbar disc herniation were evaluated in a controlled, randomized, double-blind multicenter clinical trial to test the effectiveness of the scar-inhibiting device ADCON-L. Clinical assessments were conducted pre-operatively and at 1, 3, and 6-month intervals post-operatively, and included MRI scar assessment and the assessment of low back pain by visual analog scales. There were 267 patients available for low back pain assessments. The data obtained at the 6-month follow-up visit were statistically analyzed for the association between the presence of peridural scar and the persistence of low back pain. Those patients treated with ADCON-L at surgery had significantly less scar than did control patients (p = 0.007), and had less low back pain than did control patients when the pain was most severe (p = 0.047) and when the pain was assessed at the end of the day (p = 0.044). Patients with extensive scar reported continuing and debilitating low back pain more frequently than those with no or minimal scar. These findings demonstrate a direct correlation between persistent low back pain and extensive scar, since patients with increased amounts of scar had increased low back pain, regardless of their treatment group (p = 0.0003).


Neurological Research | 1992

Cryosurgery re-visited for the removal and destruction of brain, spinal and orbital tumours.

Joseph C. Maroon; Gary Onik; Matthew R. Quigley; Julian E. Bailes; Jack E. Wilberger; John S. Kennerdell

Advances in neuroimaging and cryosurgical techniques have prompted us to re-evaluate the potential of cryosurgical techniques for the removal and the destruction of various neoplasms. We have used cryosurgical instrumentation to remove tumours in the brain, spine and orbit in 71 patients without complications. Cryosurgery was used to facilitate removal and extraction in 64 and to destroy residual neoplasms when removal was incomplete in 7. Intraoperative real time ultrasonic imaging permitted precise delimitation of tumours from surrounding tissues and allowed monitoring during the production of cryosurgical lesions thus permitting heretofore unavailable visualization of the production of cryogenic lesions in the central nervous system. New cryosurgical instrumentation was used to produce lesions up to three times larger than similar sized probes previously available. Our results reconfirm that cryosurgery facilitates the removal of tumours in the brain, spinal cord and orbit, reduces blood loss in vascular tumours, and is effective in ablating residual neoplasms involving the superior sagittal sinus, torcula and parasagittal areas. A Doppler flowmeter proved useful for monitoring sagittal sinus blood flow during the production of cryosurgical ablation of residual tumour attached to the walls of the sagittal sinus. Recent advances in ultrasonic and neuroimaging coupled with stereotactic techniques and improvements in cryosurgical instrumentation may prove useful in the future percutaneous destruction of selective intracranial neoplasms.


Neurosurgery | 1987

Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Intraoperative Neurosonography in Syringomyelia

James E. Wilberger; Joseph C. Maroon; Prostko Er; Baghai P; Beckman I; Ziad L. Deeb

Treatment of syringomyelia remains a difficult and controversial problem. However, the recent advent of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and intraoperative ultrasound allows a more precise approach to the diagnosis and management of this disorder. Experience with 27 cases of syringomyelia has shown that MRI is superior to all other forms of diagnostic imaging for the exact anatomical delineation of syrinxes and other spinal cavities. One-third of the syrinxes demonstrated by MRI were either not adequately visualized or missed by myelography and/or computed tomographic scanning. Intraoperative ultrasound has been used to allow more precise operative approaches to the syrinx as well as to guide the exact placement of shunt tubes into syrinx cavities. A method has also been developed to allow intraoperative ultrasound of the spinal cord with patients in the sitting position.


Neurosurgery | 1992

Lumbar Surgery in the Elderly

Matthew R. Quigley; Ricky Kortyna; Colleen Goodwin; Joseph C. Maroon

By virtue of modern neuroimaging, neurosurgeons are increasingly confronted by patients once deemed too old for lumbar corrective procedures. Management of these patients is problematic, as the literature is relatively mute in regard to results and complications within this elderly cohort. We, therefore, reviewed all surgical procedures for benign lumbar disease at two large metropolitan hospitals from January 1986 to June 1988 for patients greater than or equal to 70 years of age. There were 155 procedures performed on 143 patients (male:female, 48:95); the average age of the patients was 74.9 +/- 8.8 years; there were 32 cases of herniated disc, 29 cases of disc plus hypertrophic ligament/bone, and 94 cases of lateral recess/stenosis alone. Hospital stay averaged 7.5 +/- 3.5 days, and increasing age did not correlate with an extended admission. Major morbidity was low (6.9%), and there were no deaths. At follow-up, an average of 34.3 +/- 12.2 months postoperatively, 66.6% (56 of 84) of the patients reported no or minimal discomfort, whereas 15.4% (13 of 84) had not improved at all. Overall, 77.3% (65/84) were pleased with their procedure. These data represent the most comprehensive review in the literature of lumbar procedures in the elderly and indicate that these operations may be undertaken in this population with acceptable morbidity and a reasonable expectation of clinical improvement.


Neurosurgery | 1992

Cauda equina syndrome secondary to an improperly placed nucleotome probe.

Gary Onik; Joseph C. Maroon; Richard H. Jackson

Automated percutaneous lumbar discectomy has been shown to be a low morbidity procedure in the treatment of contained herniated lumbar discs. Described in this paper is a complication, i.e., a cauda equina syndrome secondary to a Nucleotome probe improperly placed in the thecal sac. The authors reemphasize the landmarks for the thecal sac, i.e., the medial border of the pedicles, and discuss the preventable nature of this type of complication.


Journal of Spinal Disorders | 1990

Occult posttraumatic cervical ligamentous instability.

Jack E. Wilberger; Joseph C. Maroon

Posttraumatic progressive cervical ligamentous instability and spinal deformity may occur in spite of initially apparently normal spine radiographs. Patients at risk for the development of this problem are generally under 25 years of age and have greater than 1.5 mm of horizontal displacement and greater than 5 degrees of angular displacement on initial cervical roentgenograms. Recent experience with this entity at our institution has led to a reevaluation of the currently existing radiographic criteria for determining ligamentous stability.

Collaboration


Dive into the Joseph C. Maroon's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Adnan Abla

Allegheny General Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jack E. Wilberger

Allegheny General Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gary Onik

Allegheny General Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ziad L. Deeb

Allegheny General Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eugene S. Flamm

University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge