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Dive into the research topics where Walter W. Whisler is active.

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Featured researches published by Walter W. Whisler.


Pain | 1977

Affective and sensory dimensions of back pain.

Frank Leavitt; David C. Garron; Walter W. Whisler; Mitchell B. Sheinkop

&NA; Pain words used to communicate suffering were analyzed to identify specific dimensions of back pain. The words were obtained from a group of 131 patients suffering from back pain who described their discomfort on a standardized 87‐item pain questionnaire. The results indicate that words descriptive of back pain are not associated in completely random ways. When patients complain of back pain, their report falls into 7 distinguishable patterns. The major pattern accounts for 38% of the variance and refers almost entirely to emotional discomfort. The second pattern accounts for 9% of the variance and is a mixed emotional and sensory factor. The remaining 5 patterns account for 29% of the variance and constitute an entirely sensory class of factors.


Spine | 1982

Organic status, psychological disturbance, and pain report characteristics in low-back-pain patients on compensation.

Frank Leavitt; David C. Garron; Thomas W. McNeill; Walter W. Whisler

The relationship between compensation and three variables—psychologic disturbance, organic status, and pain report characteristics— was assessed. Patients on compensation were clinically similar to patients not on compensation in the relative frequency of cases of psychologic disturbance and nonorganic findings in each group. Patients on compensation differed only when objective evidence of organic disease and psychologic stability was present. Under these circumstances, the compensation group used 43% more words to describe their pain and endorsed more pain qualities on five independent dimensions of pain. These results indicate that compensation primarily affects the description of low-back pain in cases where objective evidence of injury is present and leads to an intensification of sensory discomfort. Little justification was found for the atmosphere of suspicion that surrounds patients on compensation who have no evidence of organic disease.


Epilepsia | 2002

Surgical Resection for Intractable Epilepsy in “Double Cortex” Syndrome Yields Inadequate Results

Andrea Bernasconi; Victor Martinez; Pedro Rosa-Neto; D. D'Agostino; Neda Bernasconi; Samuel F. Berkovic; Mark T. Mackay; A. Simon Harvey; A. Palmini; J. Costa Da Costa; Eliseu Paglioli; Hyoung-Ihl Kim; Mary B. Connolly; André Olivier; François Dubeau; Eva Andermann; Renzo Guerrini; Walter W. Whisler; L. De Toledo-Morrell; F. Andermann

PURPOSE To analyze the results of surgical treatment of intractable epilepsy in patients with subcortical band heterotopia, or double cortex syndrome, a diffuse neuronal migration disorder. METHODS We studied eight patients (five women) with double cortex syndrome and intractable epilepsy. All had a comprehensive presurgical evaluation including prolonged video-EEG recordings and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). RESULTS All patients had partial seizures, with secondary generalization in six of them. Neurologic examination was normal in all. Three were of normal intelligence, and five were mildly retarded. Six patients underwent invasive EEG recordings, three of them with subdural grids and three with stereotactic implanted depth electrodes (SEEG). Although EEG recordings showed multilobar epileptic abnormalities in most patients, regional or focal seizure onset was recorded in all. MRI showed bilateral subcortical band heterotopia, asymmetric in thickness in three. An additional area of cortical thickening in the left frontal lobe was found in one patient. Surgical procedures included multiple subpial transections in two patients, frontal lesionectomy in one, temporal lobectomy with amygdalohippocampectomy in five, and an additional anterior callosotomy in one. Five patients had no significant improvement, two had some improvement, and one was greatly improved. CONCLUSION Our results do not support focal surgical removal of epileptogenic tissue in patients with double cortex syndrome, even in the presence of a relatively localized epileptogenic area.


Epilepsia | 1989

Magnetic resonance imaging as a sensitive and specific predictor of neoplasms removed for intractable epilepsy.

Donna Bergen; Thomas P. Bleck; Ruth Ramsey; Raymond A. Clasen; Ruzica Ristanovic; Michael C. Smith; Walter W. Whisler

Summary: Twenty‐three patients had magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computed tomography (CT) of the head prior to surgery for medically intractable epilepsy. Eleven patients had neoplasms, mostly astrocytomas. Six of the 11 tumors were seen on CT. In five of the six cases, the MRI showed a focal area of increased signal on T2‐weighted images. All 11 tumors were detected by MRI. None of the non‐neoplastic lesions produced an abnormal T2‐weighted signal area on MRI. Only one of the non‐neoplastic lesions was seen on both CT and on MRI. MRI allowed clear discrimination between tumors and non‐neoplastic lesions in patients coming to surgery for intractable epilepsy.


Neurosurgery | 1994

Recurrent intracranial epithelioid hemangioendothelioma associated with multicentric disease of liver and heart: case report.

Thomas R. Hurley; Walter W. Whisler; Raymond A. Clasen; Michael C. Smith; Thomas P. Bleck; Alexander Doolas; Mary F. Dampier

Epithelioid hemangioendothelioma is an unusual vascular neoplasm with prominent cytoplasmic vacuolization representing primitive lumen formation. A case is presented of this unique vascular neoplasm in a woman with a seizure disorder who had cardiac, hepatic, and recurrent nervous system lesions. To our knowledge, this is the third known case of intracranial epithelioid hemangioendothelioma. Emphasis is placed on the indolent course of this rare neoplasm, with a recommendation for aggressive surgical treatment and diligent follow-up.


Neurosurgery | 1994

Intramedullary Abscess: A Report of Two Cases and a Review of the Literature

Richard W. Byrne; von Roenn Ka; Walter W. Whisler

Two cases of chronic spinal cord abscess are reported, and the relevant literature is reviewed with emphasis on the last 20 cases. Presentation, cause, modern diagnostic testing, operative findings, treatment choices, and prognosis are all discussed. Significant changes in the presentation, management, and outcome in these more recent cases are emphasized.


Seizure-european Journal of Epilepsy | 2011

Medically intractable temporal lobe epilepsy in patients with normal MRI: surgical outcome in twenty-one consecutive patients.

Adam P. Smith; Sepehr Sani; Andres M. Kanner; Travis R. Stoub; Matthew Morrin; Susan Palac; Donna Bergen; Antoaneta Balabonov; Michael C. Smith; Walter W. Whisler; Richard W. Byrne

INTRODUCTION Abnormal MRI findings localizing to the mesial temporal lobe predict a favorable outcome in temporal lobe epilepsy surgery. The purpose of this study is to summarize the surgical outcome of patients who underwent a tailored antero-temporal lobectomy (ATL) with normal 1.5 T MRI. Specifically, factors that may be associated with favorable post-surgical seizure outcome are evaluated. METHODS A retrospective analysis of the Rush University Medical Center surgical epilepsy database between 1992 and 2003 was performed. Patients who underwent an ATL and had a normal MRI study documented with normal volumetric measurements of hippocampal formations and the absence of any other MRI abnormality were selected for this study. Demographic information was collected on all patients. Seizure outcomes were evaluated using Engels classification. A two-sided Fisher exact test with Bonferroni correction was performed in statistical analyses. RESULTS Twenty-one (21) patients met the inclusion criteria of normal 1.5 T MRI and underwent a tailored temporal lobectomy. Mean age at time of surgery was 28 years (SD=8.1, range 11-44) and mean duration of the seizure disorder was 13.4 years (range 2-36). Risk factors for epilepsy included head injury (n=4), encephalitis (n=3), febrile seizures (n=2), and 12 patients had no risk factors. Pathological evaluation of resected tissue revealed no abnormal pathology in 12/21 patients (57%). After a mean 4.8 years follow-up post-surgical period, 15/21 (71%) patients were free of disabling seizures (Engel I outcome). At 8.3 years follow-up, 13/21 (62%) patients had similar results. Absence of prior epilepsy risk factors was the only statistically significant predictor of an Engel class I outcome (p<0.0022). CONCLUSION Patients with medically intractable epilepsy and normal MRI appear to benefit from epilepsy surgery. Absence of prior epilepsy risk factors may be a positive prognostic factor.


Neurosurgery | 1994

Intramedullary AbscessA Report of Two Cases and a Review of the Literature

Richard W. Byrne; Kelvin A. Von Roenn; Walter W. Whisler

Two cases of chronic spinal cord abscess are reported, and the relevant literature is reviewed with emphasis on the last 20 cases. Presentation, cause, modern diagnostic testing, operative findings, treatment choices, and prognosis are all discussed. Significant changes in the presentation, management, and outcome in these more recent cases are emphasized.


Epilepsia | 1987

Infarction After Surgery for Focal Epilepsy: Manipulation Hemiplegia Revisited

Cathy M. Helgason; Donna Bergen; Thomas P. Bleck; Walter W. Whisler

Summary: The success of surgery for seizure focus resection depends on postoperative reduction or disappearance in number of seizures, improvement in psychosocial functioning, and low morbidity and mortality. Permanent neurologic sequelae are most often not discussed in this context. Deficits more than a superior quadrantanopsia are not expected after temporal lobectomy. Four cases of ischemic stroke after seizure focus resection, each distant from the site of tissue removal, are reported. These are the first such radiologically documented reports of “manipulation hemiplegia.” The permanent neurologic deficits are not attributed to resected tissue or edema.


Anesthesia & Analgesia | 1982

Methohexital anesthesia in the surgical treatment of uncontrollable epilepsy.

Erica W. Ford; Walter W. Whisler

Twenty-five patients (aged 3 to 39 years) were anesthetized with methohexital for electrocorticographic mapping and resection of epileptogenic foci. These patients have been compared with 11 patients (aged 11 to 40 years) who had the same surgical procedure performed while they were awake because their epileptogenic foci were near the speech or motor areas. All patients received morphine and droperidol to produce analgesia and sedation, and a field block was established with local anesthetics. In the 25 patients, general anesthesia was induced with methohexital, 1.5 mg/kg, and maintained with a 0.1% infusion. After intubation, ventilation to a Paco2 of 30 mm Hg was maintained with O2/air. A resectable abnormal electroencephalogram focus was localized in every case. All but two of the patients awoke promptly in the operating room, allowing extubation and participation in neurologic assessment. None remembered the procedure. The incidence of improvement of seizures in patients given methohexital was similar to that in patients who had surgery while awake. Unlike many general anesthetics that depress epileptogenic activity, methohexital activates seizure activity and can therefore be used for the dual purpose of producing general anesthesia and enhancing eiectrocorticographic delineation of epileptogenic foci.

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Michael C. Smith

Rush University Medical Center

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Donna Bergen

Rush University Medical Center

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Thomas P. Bleck

Rush University Medical Center

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Ruzica Ristanovic

Rush University Medical Center

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David C. Garron

Rush University Medical Center

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Frank Leavitt

Rush University Medical Center

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Kirk W. Jobe

Rush University Medical Center

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