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Dive into the research topics where Lynn M. Quast is active.

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Featured researches published by Lynn M. Quast.


Neurosurgery | 1993

EsthesioneuroblastomaPrognosis and Management

Akio Morita; Michael J. Ebersold; Kerry D. Olsen; Robert L. Foote; Jean E. Lewis; Lynn M. Quast

Forty-nine patients with esthesioneuroblastoma were treated at the Mayo Clinic between 1951 and 1990. Their clinical manifestations and treatment results were reviewed to identify possible prognostic factors. The 5-year survival rate for all patients was 69%. Tumor progression occurred in 25 patients (51%; no local control in 6 and local recurrence in 19). Metastasis was found in 15 patients (31%; regional in 10 and distant in 9). Nineteen patients died directly from metastatic or intracranial tumor extension. The pathological grade of the tumor was the most significant prognostic factor identified. The 5-year survival rate was 80% for the low-grade tumors and 40% for the high-grade tumors (P = 0.0001). Surgical treatment alone is effective for low-grade tumors if tumor-free margins can be obtained. Radiation is used for low-grade tumors when margins are close, for residual or recurrent disease, and for all high-grade cancers. The poor prognosis associated with high-grade tumors may also mandate the addition of chemotherapy. Recurrent tumor and regional metastasis should be treated aggressively because this approach has been shown to be worthwhile. A craniofacial resection is now the surgical procedure performed in all cases. Because recurrence can occur after 5 or even 10 years, long-term follow-up is mandatory.


Journal of The American College of Surgeons | 2013

Colorectal Surgery Surgical Site Infection Reduction Program: A National Surgical Quality Improvement Program–Driven Multidisciplinary Single-Institution Experience

Robert R. Cima; Eugene Dankbar; Jenna K. Lovely; Rajesh Pendlimari; Kimberly C. Aronhalt; Sharon Nehring; Roxanne Hyke; Diane Tyndale; James A. Rogers; Lynn M. Quast

BACKGROUND Surgical site infections (SSI) are a major cause of morbidity in surgical patients and they increase health care costs considerably. Colorectal surgery is consistently associated with high SSI rates. No single intervention has demonstrated efficacy in reducing colorectal SSIs. The American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS NSQIP) is a nationally validated system that uses clinically abstracted data on surgical patients and their outcomes to assist participating institutions drive quality improvement. STUDY DESIGN A multidisciplinary team was assembled to develop a colorectal SSI-reduction bundle at an academic tertiary care medical center. The ACS NSQIP data were used to identify patterns of SSIs during a 2-year period. Multiple interventions across the entire surgical episode of care were developed and implemented in January 2011. Monthly ACS NSQIP data were used to track progress. RESULTS Our ACS NSQIP overall colorectal SSI rate for 2009 and 2010 was 9.8%. One year after implementation of the SSI reduction bundle, we demonstrated a significant decline (p < 0.05) in both overall and superficial SSIs, to 4.0% and 1.5%, respectively. Organ space infections declined to 2.6%, which was not a significant change (p = 0.10). During the entire analysis period (2009 to 2011), there was no change in our colorectal-specific Surgical Care Improvement Program performance. CONCLUSIONS Using our ACS NSQIP colorectal SSI outcomes, a multidisciplinary team designed a colorectal SSI reduction bundle that resulted in a substantial and sustained reduction in SSIs. Our study is not able to identify which specific elements contributed to the reduction.


World Journal of Surgery | 2001

Post-traumatic Cerebrospinal Fluid Leakage

Jonathan A. Friedman; Michael J. Ebersold; Lynn M. Quast

Posttraumatic cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leakage frequently complicates skull base fractures. While most CSF leaks will cease without treatment, patients with persistent CSF leaks may be at increased risk for meningitis, and many will require surgical intervention. We reviewed the medical records of 51 patients treated between 1984 and 1998, with CSF leaks that persisted for 24 hours or longer after head trauma. Twenty-eight patients (53%) had spontaneous resolution of the leakage at an average of 5 days. Twenty-three patients (47%) required surgery. Eight patients (16%) had occult leaks presenting with recurrent meningitis at an average of 6.5 years posttrauma. Forty-three (84%) patients with CSF leaks had an associated skull fracture, most commonly involving the frontal sinus, while only 18 patients (35%) had parenchymal brain injury or extra-axial hematoma. Eight patients (16%) had delayed leaks at an average of 13 days posttrauma. Among patients with clinically evident CSF leakage the frequency of meningitis was 10% with antibiotic prophylaxis, and 21% without antibiotic prophylaxis. Thus, prophylactic antibiotic administration halved risk of meningitis. A variety of surgical approaches was used, with minimal morbidity. Three of 23 surgically treated patients (13%) required additional surgery for continued leakage. Patients with CSF leaks that persist greater than 24 hours are at risk for meningitis, and many will require surgical intervention. Prophylactic antibiotics may be effective and should be considered in this group of patients. Patients with skull fractures involving the skull base or frontal sinus should be followed for delayed leakage. Surgical outcome is excellent.


Mayo Clinic Proceedings | 2002

Use of Cerebrospinal Fluid Flow Rates Measured by Phase-Contrast MR to Predict Outcome of Ventriculoperitoneal Shunting for Idiopathic Normal-Pressure Hydrocephalus

Geoffrey R. Dixon; Jonathan A. Friedman; Patrick H. Luetmer; Lynn M. Quast; Robyn L. McClelland; Ronald C. Petersen; Cormac O. Maher; Michael J. Ebersold

OBJECTIVE To determine whether favorable clinical response and magnitude of improvement are associated with increased aqueductal cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) flow rates in patients who undergo ventriculoperitoneal shunting (VPS) for idiopathic normal-pressure hydrocephalus (NPH). PATIENTS AND METHODS Between January 1995 and June 2000, 49 patients (14 men and 35 women; mean age, 72.9 years; range, 54-88 years) underwent magnetic resonance quantification of aqueductal CSF flow followed by VPS for presumed idiopathic NPH at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn. Logistic regression models for the odds of any improvement in score as a function of aqueductal CSF flow and separate models for any improvement in gait, incontinence, cognition, and total score were constructed. RESULTS Forty-two patients (86%) had improvement in gait at postoperative follow-up (mean, 10 months). Of the 32 patients with incontinence, 27 (69%) improved. Of the 36 patients with cognitive impairment, 16 (44%) improved. In univariate and fully adjusted models, increased CSF flow through the aqueduct was not significantly associated with improvement or the magnitude of improvement in gait, cognition, or incontinence. Thirty-six patients underwent high-volume lumbar puncture preoperatively, of whom 5 (14%) had no response. The aqueductal CSF flow rates of these 5 patients were significantly higher than those of the patients who improved after lumbar puncture. Postoperative complications occurred in 15 patients. The aqueductal CSF flow rates in these 15 patients were not significantly different from those of patients who experienced no complications. CONCLUSION Among patients who underwent VPS for the treatment of NPH, measurement of CSF flow through the cerebral aqueduct did not reliably predict which patients would improve after shunting or the magnitude of improvement.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1998

Long-Term Outcome of Lumbar Discectomy in Children and Adolescents Sixteen Years of Age or Younger*

Panayiotis J. Papagelopoulos; William J. Shaughnessy; Michael J. Ebersold; Anthony J. Bianco; Lynn M. Quast

We retrospectively reviewed the cases of seventy-two consecutive patients who had a lumbar discectomy, between 1950 and 1983, when they were sixteen years of age or younger. There were forty boys and thirty-two girls. At the time of the lumbar discectomy, twelve patients (17 per cent) also had a spinal arthrodesis. The mean duration of follow-up was 27.8 years (range, twelve to forty-five years). Twenty patients (28 per cent) had one reoperation or more, with the first reoperation performed at a mean of 9.7 years after the initial discectomy. Fourteen patients had one reoperation, four had two reoperations, one had three, and one had five. Fifty-two patients (72 per cent) did not need a reoperation. At the time of the latest follow-up, forty-eight (92 per cent) of the fifty-two patients either had no pain or had occasional pain related to strenuous activity and fifty-one (98 per cent) could participate in daily activities with no or mild limitations. Survivorship analysis showed that the overall probability that a patient would not need a reoperation was 80 per cent at ten years and 74 per cent at twenty years after the initial operation. With the numbers available for study, we could not show that age, gender, or an arthrodesis performed at the time of the initial operation were risk factors for a reoperation. We could not detect a difference, with respect to pain or the level of activity, between the patients who had had an arthrodesis at the initial operation and those who had not or between those who had a coexisting structural abnormality of the lumbar spine and those who did not.


Contemporary neurosurgery | 1998

Cervical Spondylotic Myelopathy: Surgical Indications and Technique

William E. Krauss; Michael J. Ebersold; Lynn M. Quast

LEARNING OBJECTIVES— After reading this article, the practitioner should be able to: Describe the etiology of cervical spondylotic myelopathy. Review the various diagnostic tools and their utility for the disorder. Recall the nonoperative and operative treatment options for the disorder.


Journal of Neurosurgery | 1986

Long-term results in transsphenoidal removal of nonfunctioning pituitary adenomas

Michael J. Ebersold; Lynn M. Quast; Edward R. Laws; Berndt Scheithauer; Raymond V. Randall


Neurosurgery | 1993

Esthesioneuroblastoma: Prognosis and management

Akio Morita; Michael J. Ebersold; Kerry D. Olsen; Robert L. Foote; Jean E. Lewis; Lynn M. Quast


Journal of Neurosurgery | 1995

Surgical treatment for cervical spondylitic myelopathy

Michael J. Ebersold; Michel C. Pare; Lynn M. Quast


Journal of Neurosurgery | 1989

Surgery of spinal nerve schwannoma: Risk of neurological deficit after resection of involved root

Phyo Kim; Michael J. Ebersold; Burton M. Onofrio; Lynn M. Quast

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