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Dive into the research topics where Souheil F. Haddad is active.

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Neurosurgery | 1991

Pediatric pituitary tumors

Souheil F. Haddad; John C. VanGilder; Arnold H. Menezes

This retrospective review of pediatric patients with pituitary tumors causing onset of symptoms by 17 years of age was done to define their pathological distribution, clinical presentation, treatment, and prognosis. Eighteen patients were evaluated and treated from 1979 to 1989. Five had Cushings disease and 13 had prolactin-secreting tumors. The mean age at the onset of symptoms was 14.7 years, with a range of 7 to 17 years. The mean follow-up period was 4.6 years, and the series consisted of 15 girls and 3 boys. Four of the 5 patients with tumors secreting adrenocorticotropic hormone were girls. The five patients exhibited obesity, hypertension, and growth retardation. The mean age of this group of patients at diagnosis was 12.2 years, and all had intrasellar lesions removed by the transsphenoidal approach. Adenoma was documented in 4 cases by histopathology. There was complete resolution of the endocrinological and clinical abnormalities in each case. The group of patients with prolactinomas comprised 11 girls and 2 boys, and their mean age at diagnosis was 15.7 years. The girls exhibited either primary or secondary amenorrhea. Seven had macroadenomas and 4 had microadenomas. Nine of the 11 girls underwent transsphenoidal resection, and surgery failed in 6, based on hormonal or radiological data. The two boys had suprasellar tumor extension and required multiple surgical procedures plus radiation therapy for control of the tumor mass.


Neurosurgery | 1992

Treatment options in primary Ewing's sarcoma of the spine: report of seven cases and review of the literature.

Melhem J. Sharafuddin; Fuad S. Haddad; Patrick W. Hitchon; Souheil F. Haddad; George Y. El-Khoury

Primary Ewings sarcoma of the spine is reviewed, and seven cases are presented. Ewings sarcoma of the spine is a rare condition that appears with a clinical triad of local pain, neurological deficit, and a palpable mass. The clinical picture, imaging characteristics, and management are discussed. The definitive management of Ewings sarcoma of the spine, as in other locations, could include three main modalities: surgery, radiotherapy, and combination chemotherapy. In the presence of acute neurological decompensation, decompressive surgery via an appropriate approach should be performed. Because Ewings sarcoma is usually sensitive to chemotherapy, initial chemotherapy, in neurologically stable patients, could be attempted first without surgical resection. Further management could then be gauged according to the response.


Neurosurgery | 1991

Brain tumors occurring before 1 year of age: a retrospective reviews of 22 cases in an 11-year period (1977-1987).

Souheil F. Haddad; Arnold H. Menezes; William E. Bell; John C. Godersky; Adel K. Afifi; James F. Bale

Congenital brain tumors have been reported infrequently and their management remains ill defined. An 11-year review (1977-1987) of all children with brain tumors with the onset of symptoms before 1 year of age was completed. Twenty-two children with the following histological diagnoses were treated: astrocytoma (7 patients), primitive neuroectodermal tumor (6 patients), papilloma or carcinoma of the choroid plexus (3 patients), malignant teratoma (2 patients), dermoid tumor (2 patients), embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma (1 patient), and chloroma (1 patient). Fifteen tumors were supratentorial in location, and 7 were infratentorial. Initial symptoms were hydrocephalus (32%), focal neurological deficit (23%), asymptomatic increase in head circumference (18%), failure to thrive (14%), and seizures (4.5%). The goal of treatment was a radical excision when possible, with primary chemotherapy in the last 6 years of the review period. Radiation therapy was the adjunct to surgery in the initial 5-year period. All patients with papillomas of the choroid plexus and dermoid lesions underwent a total resection with no recurrence. All 7 astrocytomas were supratentorial, with 6 occurring in the diencephalon. Five of the seven patients with astrocytomas survived more than 5 years. The 6 primitive neuroectodermal tumors were located equally between the supra- and infratentorial spaces. Four of the 6 infants with these tumors received chemotherapy (2 received chemotherapy alone; 2 received chemotherapy and radiation therapy) and are tumor free 2 to 9 years later. A fifth child received radiation therapy alone early in the series and survived only 4 months. The family of the other child refused adjunctive treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology | 1992

Vascular Smooth Muscle Hyperplasia Underlies the Formation of Glomeruloid Vascular Structures of Glioblastoma Multiforme

Souheil F. Haddad; Steven A. Moore; Robert L. Schelper; James A. Goeken

The origin of the vascular hyperplasia seen in glioblastoma multiforme is a matter of debate. To test the predominant hypothesis that these glomeruloid structures are of endothelial origin the following study was undertaken. Seven glioblastomas containing prominent glomeruloid vascular structures were stained with Ulex europaeus agglutinin I (UEA-1) and with antibodies against factor VIII/related antigen (fVIII/RAg), glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), S-100 protein, muscle specific a-actin (MSA) and smooth muscle specific a-actin (SMSA). The GFAP and S-100 antibodies stained the neoplastic glial component of each tumor but did not bind to vascular cells. Endothelial cells lining the lumina of normal vessels and the lumina of glomeruloid vascular structures stained positively with both UEA-1 and fVIII/RAg antibody. No other cells were found to be stained by UEA-1 or by fVIII/RAg antibody. Smooth muscle cells of the normal vasculature stained positively exclusively with anti-MSA and anti-SMSA antibodies. The same pattern of positive actin antibody staining was seen in the majority of cells forming the glomeruloid structures; however, the cells lining the vascular lumina did not bind the MSA and SMSA antibodies. These data strongly suggest that the vascular proliferation resulting in glomeruloid structures is due in large measure to smooth muscle hyperplasia.


Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology | 1992

Smooth muscle can comprise the sarcomatous component of gliosarcomas.

Souheil F. Haddad; Steven A. Moore; Robert L. Schelper; James A. Goeken

The sarcomatous component of gliosarcomas is thought by many to originate from the vascular proliferation seen in glioblastoma multiforme and has, therefore, been assumed to be endothelial. Immunohistochemical staining of four gliosarcomas has led us to an alternate theory. Pathologically all four tumors were composed of at least two cell types; the first had a stellate, glial appearance and the second was either spindled or polygonal in shape. Polygonal cells were associated with glomeruloid vascular structures in some areas. Both components of each neoplasm were cytologically malignant. Glial fibrillary acidic protein and S-100 antibodies stained most of the glial-appearing cells and some of the spindled cells, but not the polygonal cells. Muscle specific a-actin and smooth muscle specific a-actin antibodies stained only the malignant spindled and polygonal cells and normal vascular smooth muscle. Ulex europaeus agglutinin I and anti-factor VIII/related antigen antibody stained only cells lining vascular lumina. The staining results suggest that the malignant mesenchymal component of these tumors is of smooth muscle origin. Having demonstrated elsewhere that glomeruloid vascular structures of glioblastoma multiforme contain smooth muscle cells, we propose here that gliosarcomas can represent one end of the spectrum of glioma-induced vascular smooth muscle proliferation.


Journal of Spinal Disorders | 1993

Herniated thoracic disks: treatment and outcome.

Todd Ridenour; Souheil F. Haddad; Patrick W. Hitchon; John G. Piper; Vincent C. Traynelis; John C. VanGilder

The optimal surgical approach for thoracic disk herniation is controversial, and long-term follow-up is poorly documented. We retrospectively reviewed the records of 31 patients who underwent surgery for herniated thoracic disks at our institution during a 17-year period (1975-1992). Two patients had multiple disk herniations; 16 of 33 herniated disks occurred at or below the T10-11 level. There were three surgical approaches to diskectomy: laminectomy in four patients, transpedicular surgery in 12, and costotransversectomy in 15. Weakness resolved postsurgery in nine of 18 patients. One patient transiently deteriorated neurologically after a laminectomy, three had wound infections, and two required second operations for their herniated disks. Postsurgery half the patients with symptoms continued to have pain or weakness.


Neurosurgery | 1992

Ganglioglioma: 13 years of experience.

Souheil F. Haddad; Steven A. Moore; Arnold H. Menezes; John C. VanGilder


Journal of Neurosurgery | 1991

Idiopathic and glucocorticoid-induced spinal epidural lipomatosis

Souheil F. Haddad; Patrick W. Hitchon; John C. Godersky


Modern Pathology | 1991

Oncogene abnormalities in astrocytomas: EGF-R gene alone appears to be more frequently amplified and rearranged compared with other protooncogenes.

Burgart Lj; Robinson Ra; Souheil F. Haddad; Steven A. Moore


Neurosurgery | 1992

Treatment Options in Primary Ewing's Sarcoma of the Spine

Melhem J. Sharafuddin; Fuad S. Haddad; Patrick W. Hitchon; Souheil F. Haddad; George Y. El-Khoury

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Patrick W. Hitchon

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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Steven A. Moore

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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Arnold H. Menezes

University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics

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John C. VanGilder

University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics

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George Y. El-Khoury

University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics

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Melhem J. Sharafuddin

University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics

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