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Dive into the research topics where Sumit Thakar is active.

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Featured researches published by Sumit Thakar.


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2009

Quality of life assessment after central corpectomy for cervical spondylotic myelopathy: comparative evaluation of the 36-Item Short Form Health Survey and the World Health Organization Quality of Life-Bref.

Sumit Thakar; Solomon Christopher; Vedantam Rajshekhar

OBJECT In this study, the authors assessed the construct validity and the reliability of the World Health Organization Quality of Life-Bref (WHOQOL-Bref) questionnaire in patients with cervical spondylotic myelopathy (CSM) and compared the performance of the WHOQOL-Bref and the 36-Item Short Form Health Survey (SF-36) in assessing quality of life (QOL) in patients with CSM. METHODS In this prospective study, 70 patients with CSM were assessed preoperatively and again 1 year after central corpectomy using the Nurick scale, the SF-36, and the WHOQOL-Bref. Construct validity and reliability of the WHOQOL-Bref, its responsiveness compared with that of the SF-36, and the correlations between the 2 scales were studied. RESULTS The WHOQOL-Bref was found to be valid (p < 0.001, Cuzick test for trend between the physical domain of the WHOQOL-Bref and Nurick grade) and reliable (Cronbach alpha > 0.7). It had smaller floor and ceiling effects (ranges 1.4-7.1% and 0-7.1%, respectively) than the SF-36 (ranges 2.9-71.4% and 0-14.1%, respectively). There was significant postoperative improvement in patient scores on all the SF-36 scales (p < 0.001) and the physical, psychological, and environment domains of the WHOQOL-Bref (p < 0.001). The SF-36 scales were more responsive to change (relative efficiency range 0.24-1) than the WHOQOL-Bref domains (relative efficiency range 0.002-0.73). Among scales measuring similar concepts, only the physical functioning and bodily pain scales of the SF-36 had a moderate correlation (r = 0.57 and 0.53, respectively; p < 0.001) with the physical domain of WHOQOL-Bref. Many of the scales of these 2 QOL instruments unexpectedly had a fair correlation with one another (r range = 0.2-0.4). CONCLUSIONS The WHOQOL-Bref, like the SF-36, is valid and reliable in assessing outcome in patients with CSM. It measures impairment in CSM in a more uniform manner than the SF-36, but its domains are less responsive to postoperative changes. Because the WHOQOL-Bref measures different constructs and has additive value, it should be used along with the SF-36 for QOL assessment in patients with CSM.


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2015

Quality of life following surgery for large and giant vestibular schwannomas: a prospective study.

Mazda K. Turel; Sumit Thakar; Vedantam Rajshekhar

OBJECT Prospective studies of quality of life (QOL) are infrequently performed in patients undergoing surgery for vestibular schwannoma (VS). The authors designed this to study to investigate health-related QOL (HR-QOL) in patients with large and giant VSs before and after surgery. METHODS Between January 2009 and December 2012, HR-QOL was measured prospectively before and after surgery, using the 36-Item Short Form Health Survey (SF-36), in 100 patients who underwent surgery for unilateral large or giant VS (tumor size≥3 cm). The Glasgow Benefit Inventory (GBI) was also used to evaluate the effect of surgery. RESULTS A total of 100 patients were included in the study (65 men and 35 women). Their mean age (±SD) was 44.2±11.5 years. The preoperative QOL was decreased in all SF-36 domains. A 1-year follow-up evaluation was conducted for all patients (mean 13.5±5.3 months after surgery). The results showed an improvement in HR-QOL compared with preoperative status in all cases, with 63%-85% of patients showing a minimum clinically important difference (MCID) in various domains. A second follow-up evaluation was performed in 51 cases (mean time after surgery, 29.0±8.3 months) and showed sustained improvement in SF-36 scores. In some domains there was further improvement beyond the first follow-up. On the GBI, 87% of patients reported improvement, 1% felt no change, and 12% of patients reported deterioration. CONCLUSIONS Patients harboring large or giant VSs score lower on all the QOL domains compared with the normative population. More than 60% showed a clinically significant improvement in HR-QOL 1 year after surgery, a result that was sustained at subsequent follow-up.


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2014

Paraspinal muscle morphometry in cervical spondylotic myelopathy and its implications in clinicoradiological outcomes following central corpectomy: clinical article.

Sumit Thakar; Dilip Mohan; Sunil V. Furtado; Narayanam Anantha Sai Kiran; Ravi Dadlani; Saritha Aryan; Arun S. Rao; Alangar S. Hegde

OBJECT The objective of this study was to assess the cross-sectional areas (CSAs) of the superficial, deep flexor (DF), and deep extensor (DE) paraspinal muscles in patients with cervical spondylotic myelopathy (CSM), and to evaluate their correlations with functional status and sagittal spinal alignment changes following central corpectomy with fusion and plating. METHODS In this retrospective study of 67 patients who underwent central corpectomy with fusion and plating for CSM, the CSAs of the paraspinal muscles were calculated on the preoperative T2-weighted axial MR images and computed as ratios with respect to the corresponding vertebral body areas (VBAs) and as flexor/extensor CSA ratios. These ratios were then compared with those in the normative population and analyzed with respect to various clinicoradiological factors, including pain status, Nurick grade, and segmental angle change at follow-up (SACF). RESULTS The mean CSA values for all muscle groups and the DF/DE ratio were significantly lower in the study cohort compared with an age- and sex-matched normative study group (p < 0.001). Among various independent variables tested in a multivariate regression analysis, increasing age and female sex significantly predicted a lower total extensor CSA/VBA ratio (p < 0.001), while a longer duration of symptoms significantly predicted a greater total flexor/total extensor CSA ratio (p = 0.02). In patients undergoing single-level corpectomy, graft subsidence had a positive correlation with SACF in all patients (p < 0.05), irrespective of the preoperative segmental angle and curvature, while in patients undergoing 2-level corpectomy, graft subsidence demonstrated such a correlation only in the subgroup with lordotic curvatures (p = 0.02). Among the muscle area ratios, the DF/DE ratio demonstrated a negative correlation with SACF in the subgroup with preoperative straight or kyphotic segmental angles (p = 0.04 in the single corpectomy group, p = 0.01 in the 2-level corpectomy group). There was no correlation of any of the muscle ratios with change in Nurick grade. CONCLUSIONS Patients with CSM demonstrate significant atrophy in all the flexor and extensor paraspinal muscles, and also suffer a reduction in the protective effect of a strong DF/DE CSA ratio. Worsening of this ratio significantly correlates with greater segmental kyphotic change in some patients. A physiological mechanism based on DF dysfunction is discussed to elucidate these findings that have implications in preventive physiotherapy and rehabilitation of patients with CSM. Considering that the influence of a muscle ratio was significant only in patients with hypolordosis, a subgroup that is known to have facetal ligament laxity, it may also be postulated that ligamentous support supersedes the influence of paraspinal muscles on postoperative sagittal alignment in CSM.


World Neurosurgery | 2014

The Impact of Telemedicine in the Postoperative Care of the Neurosurgery Patient in an Outpatient Clinic: A Unique Perspective of this Valuable Resource in the Developing World—An Experience of More Than 3000 Teleconsultations

Ravi Dadlani; Subramaniyan Mani; Jai Ganesh A.U; Dilip Mohan; Niranjana Rajgopalan; Sumit Thakar; Saritha Aryan; Alangar S. Hegde

Telemedicine has always been used as a teleconsultation tool in neurological emergencies (e.g., triage in head injuries, stroke, and cerebrovascular accidents). At Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Medical Sciences, Bangalore, India, we have been operating two teleconsultation sessions per week for the postoperative patient population, addressing routine follow-up and semiemergent conditions in this cohort of patients. At our center more than 80% of the neurosurgical procedures are conducted in patients traveling more than 1500 km. Telemedicine as a routine tool in clinical medicine has significant financial and psychosocial benefits versus routine outpatient clinics. There are very few reports of telemedicine use in routine outpatient teleconsultations in the available neurosurgical literature; those that are present do not differentiate or analyze the use in routine versus emergency neurosurgery. We discuss the role of this underused resource in the developing countries and retrospectively analyze the clinical data in more than 1500 patients and 3000 teleconsultations during a period of 6 years. We address the financial implications, psychosocial factors, and several other factors that could make this relatively modest technology an indispensible tool in current neurosurgical practice, especially in a developing country like India.


Neurosurgery | 2011

Correlation of Functional Outcome and Natural History With Clinicoradiological Factors in Surgically Managed Pediatric Chiari I Malformation

Sunil V. Furtado; Sumit Thakar; Alangar S. Hegde

BACKGROUND: Chiari I malformation occurs because of an underdeveloped posterior fossa with reduced volume that cannot accommodate the normally developed hindbrain. OBJECTIVE: To study the clinical presentation and surgical outcome of pediatric Chiari I malformation and to correlate outcome with demographic and clinical factors and radiological changes in the syrinx, spinal cord, and preoperative intracranial, posterior fossa, and foramen magnum dimensions. METHODS: This retrospective study spanning 9 years included 20 symptomatic patients who underwent foramen magnum decompression, shrinkage of tonsils, and duraplasty. Improvement at follow-up was assessed with a modified Asgari scoring system. Mean differences in the dimensions of the syrinx and cord, foramen magnum morphometry, and intracranial and posterior fossa for 2 groups (with or without improvement) were analyzed with the independent-sample Student t test. Correlation of outcome in relation to change in radiological factors and influence of variables such as age, type and duration of symptoms, and presence of syrinx were evaluated with the Pearson χ2 test. RESULTS: Sixty percent of patients showed functional improvement at follow-up. Of various demographic and radiological factors assessed, there was significant difference in mean values of change in cord diameter for the entire cohort (P = .05) and for the subgroup with preoperative syringes (P = .03). There was no correlation between change in any of these factors and functional improvement (χ2 range, 0-4.673; P > .05). CONCLUSION: More than half the pediatric patients with Chiari I malformation improve after surgery. The age at presentation, duration and type of symptoms, cranial and foramen magnum morphometry, and syrinx-related changes have no bearing on outcome at short-term follow-up. The spinal cord diameter differs significantly in patients with and without functional improvement.


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2008

Correlation between change in graft height and change in segmental angle following central corpectomy for cervical spondylotic myelopathy

Sumit Thakar; Aditya Vedantam; Vedantam Rajshekhar

OBJECT This study was undertaken to examine the correlation between change in graft height and change in angulation across grafted segments (segmental angle) in patients undergoing central corpectomy (CC) with autologous bone reconstruction for cervical spondylotic myelopathy (CSM). METHODS The authors performed a retrospective analysis of 70 cases in which patients with CSM underwent uninstrumented single- or multilevel CC and had evidence of osseous fusion of their grafts at follow-up. The segmental angles and heights of the grafted segments on preoperative, postoperative, and follow-up radiographs were compared. RESULTS The mean change in graft height (+/- standard deviation) was -7.3 +/- 3.8 mm (mean duration of follow-up 19.7 +/- 5.4 months, range 13-53 months). There was a mean kyphotic change in segmental angle of -7.3 +/- 3.8 degrees (p < 0.001). In patients who had a straight or kyphotic cervical spine (28 patients) or a straight or kyphotic segment (32 patients) preoperatively, there was a significant linear correlation between changes in graft height and changes in segmental angle (Pearson correlation, r = 0.40, p = 0.03; r = 0.40, p = 0.02, respectively). Such a correlation was not seen in the patients who had a lordotic cervical spine (42 patients) or a lordotic segment (38 patients) preoperatively (Pearson correlation, r = -0.04, p = 0.81; r = 0.08, p = 0.62, respectively). The change in segmental angle did not influence improvement in Nurick grade (p = 0.8). The degree of agreement between the 2 observers was almost perfect for measurement of graft height (postoperative intraclass correlation coefficient [ICC] = 0.94, follow-up ICC = 0.90) but was significantly lower for measurement of segmental angles (postoperative ICC = 0.71, follow-up ICC = 0.67). CONCLUSIONS Among patients undergoing uninstrumented CC for CSM, there is a significant correlation between postoperative settling and kyphotic change across fused segments in those who had straight or kyphotic cervical spines or segments preoperatively but not in those who had lordotic cervical spines or segments preoperatively. A more vigorous surgical correction of the segmental kyphosis than achieved in this study might have caused the kyphotic segments to behave like the lordotic segments. Paraspinal muscles and ligaments may play a role in determining the segmental angle as graft settling in patients with lordotic spines or segments is not linearly correlated with angular change.


Journal of Cranio-maxillofacial Surgery | 2012

The use of image guidance in avoiding vascular injury during trans-sphenoidal access and decompression of recurrent pituitary adenomas

Sunil V. Furtado; Sumit Thakar; Alangar S. Hegde

Repeat trans-sphenoidal surgery for pituitary adenomas is fraught with the risk of injury to the internal carotid artery that can occur either while incising scar tissue in the sphenoid sinus/sella or during tumour decompression. The ensuing complications can be devastating and difficult to manage within the limited confines of the bony sella and sphenoid sinus, and more so when the local anatomy is distorted by previous surgery. This article highlights complications involved in repeat trans-sphenoidal pituitary surgery and outlines the role of image-guided surgery in avoiding them. With the use of modalities like Doppler sonography and neuronavigation, the position of the ICA can be determined accurately in all cases.


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2011

A sacral arachnoid cyst causing holocord syringomyelia

Sumit Thakar; Narayanam Anantha Sai Kiran; Alangar S. Hegde

Spinal extradural arachnoid cysts (ACs) have an infrequent predilection for the sacrum. As with their counterparts in other regions of the spine, cysts in this location are mostly asymptomatic. Common presentations in symptomatic cases include pain in the low back or perineum, radiculopathy, and sphincteric dysfunction. The authors report a hitherto undescribed presentation in which the predominant symptoms are those related to an associated holocord syrinx. This 15-year-old boy presented with fluctuating, spastic paraparesis and a dissociated sensory loss in the trunk. Admission MR imaging of the spine showed an extradural AC from S-2 to S-4 and a holocord, nonenhancing syrinx. The patient underwent S-2 laminectomy, fenestration of the cyst, and partial excision of its wall. Intradural exploration revealed a normal-looking filum terminale and the absence of any dural communication with the cyst. At a follow-up visit 6 months after surgery, his motor and sensory deficits had resolved. Follow-up MR imaging showed complete resolution of the syrinx in the absence of the sacral AC. This is the first report of a sacral extradural AC causing holocord syringomyelia. Because conventional theories of syrinx formation were not helpful in elucidating this case, a hypothesis is postulated to explain the clinicoradiological oddity.


World Neurosurgery | 2017

Cervical En-Plaque Extradural Meningioma Involving Brachial Plexus

Laxminadh Sivaraju; Sumit Thakar; Nandita Ghosal; Alangar S. Hegde

BACKGROUND Meningioma is one of the commonest spinal tumors, with a predilection for intradural occurrence. Its occurrence as an extradural, en plaque variety with extension into the brachial plexus is unusual. CASE DESCRIPTION A 50-year-old male patient presented with progressive spastic quadriparesis. Magnetic resonance imaging showed an en plaque, epidural soft tissue tumor at C5-C7 levels on the right side with extraforaminal extension into the paraspinal region and the brachial plexus laterally. The patient underwent a C5-7 laminectomy and partial excision of the tumor. Histopathology was reported as psammomatous meningioma (World Health Organization grade I). CONCLUSIONS An extradural spinal meningioma should be considered in the differential diagnosis of an exclusively extradural spinal tumor. Its occurrence as an en plaque variety is uncommon. We report an unusual case of the en plaque form of extradural cervical meningioma with diffuse involvement of the brachial plexus.


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2016

Lumbar paraspinal muscle morphometry and its correlations with demographic and radiological factors in adult isthmic spondylolisthesis: a retrospective review of 120 surgically managed cases

Sumit Thakar; Laxminadh Sivaraju; Saritha Aryan; Dilip Mohan; Narayanam Anantha Sai Kiran; Alangar S. Hegde

OBJECTIVE The objective of this study was to assess the cross-sectional areas (CSAs) of lumbar paraspinal muscles in adults with isthmic spondylolisthesis (IS), to compare them with those in the normative population, and to evaluate their correlations with demographic factors and MRI changes in various spinal elements. METHODS The authors conducted a retrospective study of patients who had undergone posterior lumbar interbody fusion for IS, and 2 of the authors acting as independent observers calculated the CSAs of various lumbar paraspinal muscles (psoas, erector spinae [ES], multifidus [MF]) on preoperative axial T2-weighted MR images from the L-3 to L-5 vertebral levels and computed the CSAs as ratios with respect to the corresponding vertebral body areas. These values were then compared with those in an age- and sex-matched normative population and were analyzed with respect to age, sex, duration of symptoms, grade of listhesis, and various MRI changes at the level of the listhesis (pedicle signal change, disc degeneration, and facetal arthropathy). RESULTS Compared with values in normative controls, the mean CSA value for the ES muscle was significantly higher in the study cohort of 120 patients (p = 0.002), whereas that for the MF muscle was significantly lower (p = 0.009), and more so in the patients with PSC (p = 0.002). Magnetic resonance imaging signal change in the pedicle was seen in half of the patients, all of whom demonstrated a Type 2 change. Of the variables tested in a multivariate analysis, age independently predicted lower area values for all 3 muscles (p ≤ 0.001), whereas female sex predicted a lower mean psoas area value (p < 0.001). None of the other variables significantly predicted any of the muscle area values. A decrease in the mean MF muscle area value alone was associated with a significantly increased likelihood of a PSC (p = 0.039). CONCLUSIONS Compared with normative controls, patients with IS suffer selective atrophy of their MF muscle, whereas their ES muscle undergoes a compensatory hypertrophy. Advancing age has a detrimental effect on the areas of the lumbar PSMs, whereas female sex predisposes to a decreased psoas muscle area. Multifidus muscle atrophy correlates with PSC, indicating the role of this deep stabilizer in the biomechanical stability of spondylolisthetic spines. This may be of clinical significance in targeted physiotherapy programs during the conservative management of IS.

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Dive into the Sumit Thakar's collaboration.

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Alangar S. Hegde

Sri Jayadeva Institute of Cardiovascular Sciences and Research

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Nandita Ghosal

All India Institute of Medical Sciences

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Narayanam Anantha Sai Kiran

All India Institute of Medical Sciences

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Ravi Dadlani

Australian School of Advanced Medicine

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Anita Mahadevan

National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences

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Rakshith Srinivasa

Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research

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Aniruddha T. Jagannatha

M. S. Ramaiah Institute of Technology

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Dilip Jethwani

National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences

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