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Featured researches published by Selim Ayhan.


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2008

Surgical treatment of cervical spondylotic myelopathy with anterior compression: a review of 67 cases

Beril Gok; Daniel M. Sciubba; Gregory S. McLoughlin; Matthew J. McGirt; Selim Ayhan; Jean Paul Wolinsky; Ali Bydon; Ziya L. Gokaslan; Timothy F. Witham

OBJECT In patients with cervical spondylotic myelopathy (CSM), ventral disease and loss of cervical lordosis are considered to be relative indications for anterior surgery. However, anterior decompression and fusion operations may be associated with an increased risk of swallowing difficulty and an increased risk of nonunion when extensive decompression is performed. The authors reviewed cases involving patients with CSM treated via an anterior approach, paying special attention to neurological outcome, fusion rates, and complications. METHODS Retrospectively, 67 cases involving consecutive patients with CSM requiring an anterior decompression were reviewed: 46 patients underwent anterior surgery only (1-to3-level anterior cervical discectomy and fusion [ACDF] or 1-level corpectomy), and 21 patients who required > 3-level ACDF or > or = 2-level corpectomy underwent anterior surgery supplemented by a posterior instrumented fusion procedure. RESULTS Postoperative improvement in Nurick grade was seen in 43 (93%) of 46 patients undergoing anterior decompression and fusion alone (p < 0.001) and in 17 (81%) of 21 patients undergoing anterior decompression and fusion with supplemental posterior fusion (p = 0.0015). The overall complication rate for this series was 25.4%. Interestingly, the overall complication rate was similar for both the lone anterior surgery and combined anterior-posterior groups, but the incidence of adjacent-segment disease was greater in the lone anterior surgery group. CONCLUSIONS Significant improvement in Nurick grade can be achieved in patients who undergo anterior surgery for cervical myelopathy for primarily ventral disease or loss of cervical lordosis. In selected high-risk patients who undergo multilevel ventral decompression, supplemental posterior fixation and arthrodesis allows for low rates of construct failure with acceptable added morbidity.


Journal of Spinal Disorders & Techniques | 2010

Transthoracic surgical treatment for centrally located thoracic disc herniations presenting with myelopathy: a 5-year institutional experience.

Selim Ayhan; Clarke Nelson; Beril Gok; Rory J. Petteys; Jean Paul Wolinsky; Timothy F. Witham; Ali Bydon; Ziya L. Gokaslan; Daniel M. Sciubba

Study Design Retrospective review. Objective Review clinical outcomes for myelopathic patients undergoing transthoracic discectomies for central calcified herniations. Summary of Backround Data Ideal surgical treatment for thoracic disc herniation is controversial due to variations in patient presentation, pathology, and possible surgical approach. Although discectomy may lead to improvements in neurologic function, it can be complicated by approach-related morbidity, especially for ventral calcified disc herniations. Review of clinical outcomes for myelopathic patients undergoing transthoracic discectomies for central calcified herniations was completed, paying special attention to neurologic status and procedure-related complications. Methods Between 2002 and 2007, 27 myelopathic patients were treated with 28 transthoracic surgeries for centrally located symptomatic calcified thoracic disc herniations over the last 5 years at a single institution. Demographic data, details of surgery, preoperative and postoperative Nurick and American Spinal Injury Association scores, length of stay, complications, and follow-up data were collected in all patients. Results A total of 27 patients, 8 male (30%) and 19 female (70%) with an average age of 52.3 years (range: 19 to 72) underwent 28 thoracotomies. All had myelopathy whereas 6/27 also had radicular pain syndromes. Fourteen patients had anterior instrumentation alone, 3 had anterior and posterior instrumentation, and 1 had posterior instrumentation alone. Average Nurick grade was 2.5 preoperatively and 1.4 postoperatively. Of note, American Spinal Injury Association scores improved postoperatively in 12/27 patients (10D to 10E; 2C to 2D), remained unchanged in 13/27 (11E to 11E, 2D to 2D), and worsened in 2/27 (2D to 2C). Average length of stay was 7 days (range: 3 to 15). All patients required chest tube placement with average duration of 4 days (range: 1 to 7). Major complications occurred in 6 cases (21.4%) over an average follow-up of 12 months (range: 1 to 40 mo). Conclusions Thoracotomy for treatment of centrally located thoracic disc herniations is associated with improvement in or stabilization of myelopathic symptoms in the majority of patients with an acceptable rate of complications. Interestingly, most patients with weakness improved in strength (12/16, 75%), no patients with normal strength developed new weakness (10/10, 100%), and only 2 patients had new weakness noted postoperatively (7.4%).


Neurosurgery | 2008

Surgical resection plus adjuvant radiotherapy is superior to surgery or radiotherapy alone in the prevention of neurological decline in a rat metastatic spinal tumor model.

Beril Gok; Matthew J. McGirt; Daniel M. Sciubba; Selim Ayhan; Ali Bydon; Timothy F. Witham; Jean Paul Wolinsky; Ziya L. Gokaslan

OBJECTIVEThe optimal management of spinal column metastatic disease is controversial. Furthermore, the literature lacks an accurate animal model to study the efficacy of surgical treatment options for spinal column metastases. We compared the efficacy of surgery, radiotherapy, or surgery plus adjuvant radiotherapy in a rat model of metastatic epidural spinal cord compression. METHODSThirty-two Fischer 344 rats underwent a transabdominal approach for implantation of a CRL-1666 breast adenocarcinoma cell line within the vertebral body of L6. Animals were randomly assigned to receive one of four treatments (n = 8 per group) 7 days after tumor implantation: 1) control: no treatment; 2) external beam radiation therapy (XRT) (total 20 Gy in 400-cGy daily fractions); 3) surgery: L6 vertebral corpectomy, tumor resection, and polymethyl methacrylate reconstruction; and 4) surgery + XRT: corpectomy and tumor resection followed by XRT (total 20 Gy in 400-cGy daily fractions) 72 hours after surgery. Hind-limb function was tested daily after treatment using the Basso-Beattie-Bresnahan (BBB) scale (range, 1–21). RESULTSAll animals (n = 32) demonstrated normal hind-limb function (BBB score, 21) on posttreatment Day 1. The XRT, surgery, and surgery + XRT groups all experienced a delay in onset of paresis versus the control group. Compared to the XRT group, the surgery group demonstrated greater median BBB scores on Days 3 (21 versus 20, P = 0.02) through 9 (12 versus 8, P = 0.002) after treatment. Compared with the surgery group, the surgery + XRT group demonstrated even greater median BBB scores on Days 6 (21 versus 19, P = 0.0008) through 11 (16 versus 8, P = 0.0001) after treatment. Median time to loss of ambulation (BBB ≤ 7) was greatest in the surgery + XRT group (15 d) when compared with the surgery (12 d, P = 0.001), XRT (9 d, P = 0.001), or control groups (7 d, P = 0.0005). CONCLUSIONIn a rat model of metastatic epidural spinal cord compression, decompressive surgery followed by radiotherapy yielded the greatest efficacy in the prevention of neurological decline when compared with surgery or radiotherapy alone. Radiotherapy alone attenuated neurological decline but was the least efficacious treatment in this model. These results support this animal model as an effective platform to investigate novel interventions for metastatic spine tumors.


Neurosurgery | 2008

Revision surgery for cervical spondylotic myelopathy: surgical results and outcome.

Beril Gok; Daniel M. Sciubba; Gregory S. McLoughlin; Matthew J. McGirt; Selim Ayhan; Jean Paul Wolinsky; Ali Bydon; Ziya L. Gokaslan; Timothy F. Witham

OBJECTIVEThe role of additional or revision surgery in patients with cervical spondylotic myelopathy (CSM) is challenging. Postoperative pseudoarthrosis, instability, hardware failure, and recurrent cervical stenosis are conditions that require detailed clinical and radiographic assessment to define the pathology and assess the need for surgical decompression and fusion. The purpose of this study is to assess the neurological outcome, radiological outcome, and complications of patients undergoing additional or revision surgery for CSM. METHODSBetween 2002 and 2006, 30 patients with CSM and postoperative pseudoarthrosis, instability, hardware failure, or recurrent stenosis underwent surgical decompression and stabilization. The specific procedure was selected according to each patients medical condition, cervical sagittal alignment, and extent of stenosis. All patients underwent an anterior, posterior, or combined anterior and posterior decompression and instrumented fusion. The charts of these patients were reviewed to assess neurological and radiographic outcomes. RESULTSTwenty-five patients (83%) improved postoperatively as measured by the Nurick Myelopathy Scale over a mean follow-up period of 19 months (range, 2–64 mo). The overall complication rate was 27%, consisting of transient monoradiculopathy (7%), dysphagia (10%), and infection (7%). The incidence of nonunion during the follow-up period was 3%. CONCLUSIONAlthough patients with CSM and postoperative pseudoarthrosis, instability, hardware failure, or junctional stenosis who require revision surgery may risk a substantial likelihood of surgical complications (25% in this series), a significant proportion of patients may experience improved neurological outcomes. In our experience, the cervical sagittal alignment and the extent of stenosis are critical factors to consider when selecting the eventual procedure.


European Spine Journal | 2018

The Global Spine Care Initiative: a consensus process to develop and validate a stratification scheme for surgical care of spinal disorders as a guide for improved resource utilization in low- and middle-income communities

Emre Acaroglu; Tiro Mmopelwa; Selcen Yüksel; Selim Ayhan; Margareta Nordin; Kristi Randhawa; Scott Haldeman

AbstractPurposeThe purpose of this study was to develop a stratification scheme for surgical spinal care to serve as a framework for referrals and distribution of patients with spinal disorders.MethodsWe used a modified Delphi process. A literature search identified experts for the consensus panel and the panel was expanded by inviting spine surgeons known to be global opinion leaders. After creating a seed document of five hierarchical levels of surgical care, a four-step modified Delphi process (question validation, collection of factors, evaluation of factors, re-evaluation of factors) was performed.ResultsOf 78 invited experts, 19 participated in round 1, and of the 19, 14 participated in 2, and 12 in 3 and 4. Consensus was fairly heterogeneous for levels of care 2–4 (moderate resources). Only simple assessment methods based on the clinical skills of the medical personnel were considered feasible and safe in low-resource settings. Diagnosis, staging, and treatment were deemed feasible and safe in a specialized spine center. Accurate diagnostic workup was deemed feasible and safe for lower levels of care complexity (from level 3 upwards) compared to non-invasive procedures (level 4) and the full range of invasive procedures (level 5).ConclusionThis study introduces a five-level stratification scheme for the surgical care of spinal disorders. This stratification may provide input into the Global Spine Care Initiative care pathway that will be applied in medically underserved areas and low- and middle-income countries.Graphical Abstract These slides can be retrieved under Electronic Supplementary Material.


Journal of Craniofacial Surgery | 2011

Spontaneous nonpulsatile aneurysm of the superficial temporal artery mimicking a subcutaneous mass lesion.

Gökhan Bozkurt; Selim Ayhan; Nazli Cakici; Özgür İlhan Çelik; Ibrahim M. Ziyal

True superficial temporal artery (STA) aneurysms are extremely rare and usually atherosclerotic in origin. Here the authors report a 62-year-old man with a nonpulsatile mass lesion at the trace of the right STA that was surgically excised with a preoperative diagnosis of subcutaneous mass lesion, preoperatively and histopathologically found out to be a thrombosed true STA aneurysm. Preoperative evaluation, differential diagnosis, and management of such lesions are discussed.


Acta Orthopaedica et Traumatologica Turcica | 2017

Decision analysis to identify the ideal treatment for adult spinal deformity: What is the impact of complications on treatment outcomes?

Emre Acaroglu; Ümit Özgür Güler; Aysun Cetinyurek-Yavuz; Selcen Yüksel; Yasemin Yavuz; Selim Ayhan; Montse Domingo-Sabat; Ferran Pellisé; Ahmet Alanay; Francesco Sanchez Perez Grueso; Frank Kleinstück; Ibrahim Obeid

Objective The aim of this study was to analyze the impact of treatment complications on outcomes in adult spinal deformity (ASD) using a decision analysis (DA) model. Methods The study included 535 ASD patients (371 with non-surgical (NS) and 164 with surgical (S) treatment) from an international multicentre database of ASD patients. DA was structured in two main steps; 1) Baseline analysis (Assessing the probabilities of outcomes, Assessing the values of preference -utilities-, Combining information on probability and utility and assigning the quality adjusted life expectancy (QALE) for each treatment) and 2) Sensitivity analysis. Complications were analyzed as life threatening (LT) and nonlife threatening (NLT) and their probabilities were calculated from the database as well as a thorough literature review. Outcomes were analyzed as improvement, no change and deterioration. Death/complete paralysis was considered as a separate category. Results All 535 patients were analyzed in regard to complications. Overall, there were 78 NLT and 12 LT complications and 3 death/paralysis. Surgical treatment offered significantly higher chances of clinical improvement but also was significantly more prone to complications (31.7% vs. 11.1%, p < 0.001). Conclusion Surgical treatment of ASD is more likely to cause complications compared to NS treatment. On the other hand, surgery has been shown to provide a higher likelihood of improvement in HRQoL scores. So, the decision on the type of treatment in ASD needs to take both chances of improvement and burden associated with S or NS treatments and better be arrived by the active participation of patients and physicians equipped with the present information. Level of evidence Level II, Decision analysis.


Neuroimaging Clinics of North America | 2015

Neurosurgical Approaches to Spinal Infections

Derya Burcu Hazer; Selim Ayhan; Selcuk Palaoglu

Spinal infection is rare. Clinical suspicion is important in patients with nonmechanical neck and/or back pain to make the proper diagnosis in early disease. Before planning surgery, a thorough evaluation of the spinal stability, alignment, and deformity is necessary. Timing of surgery, side of approach, appropriate surgical technique, and spinal instruments used are crucial. Biomechanical preservation of the spinal column during and after the infection is a significant issue. Postoperative spine infection is another entity of which spinal surgeons should be aware of. Proper septic conditions with meticulous planning of surgery are essential for successful spine surgery and better outcome.


Global Spine Journal | 2018

The Influence of Diagnosis, Age, and Gender on Surgical Outcomes in Patients With Adult Spinal Deformity

Selim Ayhan; Selcen Yüksel; Vugar Nabiyev; Prashant Adhikari; Alba Villa-Casademunt; Ferran Pellisé; Francisco Sanchez Perez-Grueso; Ahmet Alanay; Ibrahim Obeid; Frank Kleinstueck; Emre Acaroglu

Study Design: Retrospective review of prospectively collected data from a multicentric database. Objectives: To determine the clinical impact of diagnosis, age, and gender on treatment outcomes in surgically treated adult spinal deformity (ASD) patients. Methods: A total of 199 surgical patients with a minimum follow-up of 1 year were included and analyzed for baseline characteristics. Patients were separated into 2 groups based on improvement in health-related quality of life (HRQOL) parameters by minimum clinically important difference. Statistics were used to analyze the effect of diagnosis, age, and gender on outcome measurements followed by a multivariate binary logistic regression model for these results with statistical significance. Results: Age was found to affect SF-36 PCS (Short From-36 Physical Component Summary) score significantly, with an odds ratio of 1.017 (unit by unit) of improving SF-36 PCS score on multivariate analysis (P < .05). The breaking point in age for this effect was 37.5 years (AUC = 58.0, P = .05). A diagnosis of idiopathic deformity would increase the probability of improvement in Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) by a factor of 0.219 and in SF-36 PCS by 0.581 times (P < .05). Gender was found not to have a significant effect on any of the HRQOL scores. Conclusions: Age, along with a diagnosis of degenerative deformity, may have positive effects on the likelihood of improvement in SF-36 PCS (for age) and ODI (for diagnosis) in surgically treated patients with ASD and the breaking point of this effect may be earlier than generally anticipated. Gender does not seem to affect results. These may be important in patient counseling for the anticipated outcomes of surgery.


Global Spine Journal | 2016

Cognitive Impairment Following Adult Spinal Deformity Surgery

Vugar Nabiyev; Selim Ayhan; Selcem Yuksel; Tiro Mmopelwa; Montse Domingo Sabat; Ferran Pellisé; Ahmet Alanay; Francisco Javier Sanchez Perez-Grueso; Frank Kleinstück; Ibrahim Obeid; Emre Acaroglu

Introduction Elderly patients undergoing major surgery may experience cognitive deterioration due to lesser plasticity in their brain tissue. This so called postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) syndrome is characterized with non-specific dysfunction in memory, concentration and analysis skills. It is not known whether adult spinal deformity (ASD) surgery is associated with POCD. Purpose of this study is to analyze the cognitive abilities of older patients undergoing spinal deformity surgery before and after the surgery so as to understand whether ASD surgery is associated with POCD. Material and Methods A prospective longitudinal study was performed on surgical patients older than 50 years enrolled in a prospective multi-centric database. Mini mental state examination (MMSE) was performed to assess cognitive functions in addition to the health related quality of life (HRQOL) tests (SF-36, ODI and SRS-22) at preoperative, post-operative 6th week and 6th month points. Demographics, preoperative health status, comorbidities, surgical characteristics were also analyzed. Descriptive statistics and repeated measures of variance analysis were performed. Results A total of 90 patients with a mean age of 67.4 ± 8.2 were enrolled in the study; all had 6th week and 58 had both 6th week and 6th month follow-up MMSE evaluations. Averages (standard deviation) of surgical time, estimated blood loss (EBL), number of screws used and hospital stay were 240.1 (111.9)min, 1621.2 (1058.7)ml, 11.2 (4.4) and 14.2 (11.45)days respectively. On analysis, it was seen that there was even a slight increase in mean MMSE score (p > 0.05) between time points (Table 1). There was a decrease of > 2 points (3 or 4 points) in 6 patients (6.7%) at both time points. Conclusion Although ASD surgery in older patients is recognized as challenging, this study suggests that it is not necessarily associated with a significant deterioration in the cognitive abilities of patients undergoing it. These results are different compared with those reported for other major surgical interventions. This may be due to the relatively minor influence of ASD itself on the cognitive abilities of the patients involved as well as to the relatively stable hemodynamic conditions obtainable during modern ASD surgery.

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Ferran Pellisé

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Ali Bydon

Johns Hopkins University

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Beril Gok

Johns Hopkins University

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