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Neurosurgery or/and neurological surgery, known in as brain surgery, is the medical specialty that focuses on the surgical treatment or rehabilitation of disorders which affect any portion of the including the , , peripheral nervous system, and cerebrovascular system. Neurosurgery as a medical specialty also includes non-surgical management of some neurological conditions.

(2025). 9781684201372, Thieme.


Education and context
In different countries, there are different requirements for an individual to legally practice neurosurgery, and there are varying methods through which they must be educated. In most countries, neurosurgeon training requires a minimum period of seven years after graduating from medical school.


United Kingdom
In the , students must gain entry into medical school. The MBBS qualification (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery) takes four to six years depending on the student's route. The newly qualified must then complete foundation training lasting two years; this is a paid training program in a hospital or clinical setting covering a range of medical specialties including surgery. Junior doctors then apply to enter the neurosurgical pathway. Unlike most other surgical specialties, it currently has its own independent training pathway which takes around eight years (ST1-8); before being able to sit for exams with sufficient amounts of experience and practice behind them. Neurosurgery remains consistently amongst the most competitive medical specialties in which to obtain entry.


United States
In the , a neurosurgeon must generally complete four years of undergraduate education, four years of medical school, and seven years of residency (PGY-1-7). Most, but not all, residency programs have some component of basic science or clinical research. Neurosurgeons may pursue additional training in the form of a fellowship after residency, or, in some cases, as a senior resident in the form of an enfolded fellowship. These fellowships include pediatric neurosurgery, trauma/neurocritical care, functional and surgery, surgical neuro-, , neurovascular surgery, skull-base surgery, peripheral nerve and complex spinal surgery. Fellowships typically span one to two years. In the U.S., neurosurgery is a very small, highly competitive specialty, constituting only 0.5 percent of all physicians.


History
Neurosurgery, or the premeditated incision into the head for pain relief, has been around for thousands of years, but notable advancements in neurosurgery have only come within the last hundred years.
(2014). 9781317744825, Psychology Press. .


Ancient
The appear to have practiced a procedure known as since before European colonization. During the in from 936 to 1013 AD, performed surgical treatments of head injuries, skull fractures, spinal injuries, , subdural effusions and headache. During the , doctors and surgeons performed neurosurgery on depressed skull fractures.
(2007). 9780387258447, Springer Science & Business Media. .
(2012). 9780737773125, Greenhaven Publishing LLC. .
Simple forms of neurosurgery were performed on King Henri II in 1559, after a accident with Gabriel Montgomery fatally wounded him. Ambroise Paré and , both experts in their field at the time, attempted their own methods, to no avail, in curing Henri. In China, Hua Tuo created the first general called mafeisan, which he used on surgical procedures on the brain.


Modern
History of tumor removal: In 1879, after locating it via neurological signs alone, Scottish surgeon (1848–1924) performed the first successful brain tumor removal. On November 25, 1884, after English physician Alexander Hughes Bennett (1848–1901) used Macewen's technique to locate it, English surgeon (1849–1925) performed the first primary brain tumor removal, which differs from Macewen's operation in that Bennett operated on the exposed brain, whereas Macewen operated outside of the "brain proper" via . On March 16, 1907, Austrian surgeon Hermann Schloffer became the first to successfully remove a tumor.

: also known as leucotomy, was a form of , a neurosurgical treatment of that involves severing connections in the brain's prefrontal cortex. The originator of the procedure, neurologist António Egas Moniz, shared the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine of 1949. Some patients improved in some ways after the operation, but complications and impairmentssometimes severewere frequent. The procedure was controversial from its initial use, in part due to the balance between benefits and risks. It is mostly rejected as a treatment now and non-compliant with patients' rights.

History of electrodes in the brain: In 1878, discovered that electrical signals transmitted through an animal's brain. In 1950 Jose Delgado invented the first electrode that was implanted in an animal's brain (bull), using it to make it run and change direction. In 1972 the , a neurological that allowed deaf people to hear was marketed for commercial use. In 1998 researcher Philip Kennedy implanted the first Brain Computer Interface (BCI) into a human subject.http://biomed.brown.edu/Courses/BI108/BI108_2005_Groups/03/hist.htm

A survey done in 2010 on 100 most cited works in neurosurgery shows that the works mainly cover clinical trials evaluating surgical and medical therapies, descriptions of novel techniques in neurosurgery, and descriptions of systems classifying and grading diseases.


Modern surgical instruments
The main advancements in neurosurgery came about as a result of highly crafted tools. Modern neurosurgical tools, or instruments, include , curettes, dissectors, distractors, elevators, forceps, hooks, impactors, probes, suction tubes, power tools, and robots. Most of these modern tools have been in medical practice for a relatively long time. The main difference of these tools in neurosurgery, were the precision in which they were crafted. These tools are crafted with edges that are within a millimeter of desired accuracy. Other tools, such as handheld power saws and robots, have only recently been commonly used inside of a neurological operating room. As an example, the University of Utah developed a device for computer-aided design / computer-aided manufacturing (CAD-CAM) which uses an image-guided system to define a cutting tool path for a robotic .


Organised neurosurgery
The World Federation of Neurosurgical Societies (WFNS), founded in 1955 in , as a , , non governmental organization, is composed of 130 member societies: consisting of 5 Continental Associations (AANS, AASNS, CAANS, EANS and FLANC), 6 Affiliate Societies, and 119 National Neurosurgical Societies, representing some 50,000 worldwide. It has a consultative status in the . The official Journal of the Organization is World Neurosurgery. The other global organisations being the World Academy of Neurological Surgery (WANS) and the World Federation of Skull Base Societies (WFSBS).


Main divisions
General neurosurgery involves most neurosurgical conditions including neuro-trauma and other neuro-emergencies such as intracranial hemorrhage. Most level 1 hospitals have this kind of practice.

Specialized branches have developed to cater to special and difficult conditions. These specialized branches co-exist with general neurosurgery in more sophisticated hospitals. To practice advanced specialization within neurosurgery, additional higher fellowship training of one to two years is expected from the neurosurgeon. Some of these divisions of neurosurgery are:

  1. Vascular neurosurgery includes clipping of and performing carotid endarterectomy (CEA).
  2. Stereotactic neurosurgery, functional neurosurgery, and (the latter includes partial or total corpus callosotomy – severing part or all of the to stop or lessen seizure spread and activity, and the surgical removal of functional, physiological and/or anatomical pieces or divisions of the brain, called epileptic foci, that are operable and that are causing seizures, and also the more radical and rare partial or total , or even – the removal of part or all of one of the lobes, or one of the cerebral hemispheres of the brain; those two procedures, when possible, are also very, very rarely used in oncological neurosurgery or to treat very severe neurological trauma, such as stab or gunshot wounds to the brain)
  3. Oncological neurosurgery also called neurosurgical oncology; includes pediatric oncological neurosurgery; treatment of benign and malignant central and peripheral nervous system cancers and pre-cancerous lesions in adults and children (including, among others, glioblastoma multiforme and other , brain stem cancer, , , , , tumors of the meninges and intracranial spaces, secondary metastases to the brain, spine, and nerves, and peripheral nervous system tumors)
  4. Skull base surgery
  5. Spinal neurosurgery
  6. surgery
  7. Pediatric neurosurgery (for cancer, seizures, bleeding, stroke, cognitive disorders or congenital neurological disorders)


Commonly performed surgeries
According to an analysis by the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP), the most common surgeries performed by neurosurgeons in between 2006 and 2014 were the following:


Neuropathology
is a specialty within the study of focused on the disease of the brain, spinal cord, and neural tissue. This includes the central nervous system and the peripheral nervous system. Tissue analysis comes from either surgical or post mortem . Common tissue samples include muscle fibers and nervous tissue. Common applications of neuropathology include studying samples of tissue in patients who have Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease, , Huntington's disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, mitochondria disease, and any disorder that has neural deterioration in the brain or spinal cord.


History
While pathology has been studied for millennia only within the last few hundred years has medicine focused on a tissue- and organ-based approach to tissue disease. In 1810, started to look at the damaged tissue for the cause. This was conjoined with the emergence of microscopy and started the current understanding of how the tissue of the human body is studied.


Neuroanesthesia
Neuroanesthesia is a field of which focuses on neurosurgery. Anesthesia is not used during the middle of an "awake" brain surgery. Awake brain surgery is where the patient is conscious for the middle of the procedure and sedated for the beginning and end. This procedure is used when the tumor does not have clear boundaries and the surgeon wants to know if they are invading on critical regions of the brain which involve functions like talking, , vision, and hearing. It will also be conducted for procedures which the surgeon is trying to combat epileptic seizures.


History
The physician (460–370 BCE) made accounts of using different wines to patients while trepanning. In 60 CE, Dioscorides, a physician, pharmacologist, and botanist, detailed how , , , and alcohol were used to put patients to sleep during trepanning. In 972 CE, two brother surgeons in , now India, used "samohine" to sedate a patient while removing a small tumor, and awoke the patient by pouring onion and vinegar in the patient's mouth. The combination of carbon dioxide, hydrogen, and nitrogen, was a form of neuroanesthesia adopted in the 18th century and introduced by .


Neurosurgery methods
Various Imaging methods are used in modern neurosurgery diagnosis and treatment. They include computer assisted imaging computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), positron emission tomography (PET), magnetoencephalography (MEG), and stereotactic radiosurgery. Some neurosurgery procedures involve the use of intra-operative MRI and functional MRI.

In conventional neurosurgery the neurosurgeon opens the skull, creating a large opening to access the brain. Techniques involving smaller openings with the aid of microscopes and endoscopes are now being used as well. Methods that utilize small in conjunction with high-clarity microscopic visualization of neural tissue offer excellent results. However, the open methods are still traditionally used in trauma or emergency situations.

Microsurgery is utilized in many aspects of neurological surgery. Microvascular techniques are used in EC-IC bypass surgery and in restoration carotid endarterectomy. The clipping of an aneurysm is performed under microscopic vision. Minimally-invasive spine surgery utilizes microscopes or endoscopes. Procedures such as microdiscectomy, , and artificial disc replacement rely on microsurgery.

Using stereotaxy neurosurgeons can approach a minute target in the brain through a minimal opening. This is used in functional neurosurgery where electrodes are implanted or is instituted with high level of accuracy as in the case of Parkinson's disease or Alzheimer's disease. Using the combination method of open and stereotactic surgery, intraventricular hemorrhages can potentially be evacuated successfully. Conventional surgery using image guidance technologies is also becoming common and is referred to as surgical navigation, computer-assisted surgery, navigated surgery, stereotactic navigation. Similar to a car or mobile Global Positioning System (GPS), image-guided surgery systems, like Curve Image Guided Surgery and StealthStation, use cameras or electromagnetic fields to capture and relay the patient's anatomy and the surgeon's precise movements in relation to the patient, to computer monitors in the operating room. These sophisticated computerized systems are used before and during surgery to help orient the surgeon with three-dimensional images of the patient's anatomy including the tumor. Real-time functional brain mapping has been employed to identify specific functional regions using electrocorticography (ECoG)

Minimally invasive endoscopic surgery is commonly utilized by neurosurgeons when appropriate. Techniques such as endoscopic endonasal surgery are used in pituitary tumors, craniopharyngiomas, chordomas, and the repair of cerebrospinal fluid leaks. Ventricular endoscopy is used in the treatment of intraventricular bleeds, hydrocephalus, and neurocysticercosis. Endonasal endoscopy is at times carried out with neurosurgeons and ENT surgeons working together as a team.

Repair of craniofacial disorders and disturbance of cerebrospinal fluid circulation is done by neurosurgeons who also occasionally team up with maxillofacial and plastic surgeons. Cranioplasty for is performed by pediatric neurosurgeons with or without plastic surgeons.

Neurosurgeons are involved in stereotactic radiosurgery along with radiation oncologists in and AVM treatment. Radiosurgical methods such as , Cyberknife and Novalis Radiosurgery are used as well.

Endovascular neurosurgery utilize endovascular image guided procedures for the treatment of , AVMs, carotid stenosis, strokes, and spinal malformations, and vasospasms. Techniques such as , stenting, clot retrieval, embolization, and diagnostic angiography are endovascular procedures.

A common procedure performed in neurosurgery is the placement of ventriculo-peritoneal shunt (VP shunt). In pediatric practice this is often implemented in cases of congenital . The most common indication for this procedure in adults is normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH). New York: Nova Medical. 2016

Neurosurgery of the spine covers the cervical, thoracic and lumbar spine. Some indications for spine surgery include spinal cord compression resulting from trauma, arthritis of the spinal discs, or spondylosis. In cervical cord compression, patients may have difficulty with gait, balance issues, and/or numbness and tingling in the hands or feet. is the condition of spinal disc degeneration and arthritis that may compress the spinal canal. This condition can often result in bone-spurring and disc herniation. Power drills and special instruments are often used to correct any compression problems of the spinal canal. Disc herniations of spinal vertebral discs are removed with special . This procedure is known as a discectomy. Generally once a disc is removed it is replaced by an implant which will create a bony fusion between vertebral bodies above and below. Instead, a mobile disc could be implanted into the disc space to maintain mobility. This is commonly used in cervical disc surgery. At times instead of disc removal a Laser discectomy could be used to decompress a nerve root. This method is mainly used for lumbar discs. Laminectomy is the removal of the lamina of the vertebrae of the spine in order to make room for the compressed nerve tissue.

Surgery for chronic pain is a sub-branch of functional neurosurgery. Some of the techniques include implantation of deep brain stimulators, spinal cord stimulators, peripheral stimulators and pain pumps.

Surgery of the peripheral nervous system is also possible, and includes the very common procedures of carpal tunnel decompression and peripheral nerve transposition. Numerous other types of nerve entrapment conditions and other problems with the peripheral nervous system are treated as well.


Conditions
Conditions treated by neurosurgeons include, but are not limited to:
(2010). 9781604063264, Greenberg Graphics.
  • and other central nervous system infections including
  • Spinal disc herniation
  • Cervical spinal stenosis and Lumbar spinal stenosis
  • (brain hemorrhages, skull fractures, etc.)
  • Spinal cord trauma
  • of peripheral nerves
  • of the spine, and peripheral nerves
  • Intracerebral hemorrhage, such as subarachnoid hemorrhage, interdepartmental, and intracellular
  • Some forms of drug-resistant epilepsy
  • Some forms of movement disorders (advanced Parkinson's disease, )this involves the use of specially developed minimally invasive techniques (functional, stereotactic neurosurgery) such as and deep brain stimulation surgery
  • Intractable pain of or patients and cranial/peripheral nerve pain
  • Some forms of intractable disorders
  • Vascular malformations (i.e., arteriovenous malformations, venous angiomas, cavernous angiomas, capillary telangectasias) of the brain and spinal cord


Recovery

Postoperative pain
Pain following brain surgery can be significant and may lengthen recovery, increase the amount of time a person stays in the hospital following surgery, and increase the risk of complications following surgery. Severe acute pain following brain surgery may also increase the risk of a person developing a chronic post- headache. Approaches to treating pain in adults include treatment with nonsteroidal anti‐inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), which have been shown to reduce pain for up to 24 hours following surgery. Low-quality evidence supports the use of the medications , or to reduce post-operative pain. Low-quality evidence also supports scalp blocks and scalp infiltration to reduce postoperative pain. or may also decrease and following surgery, based on very low-quality medical evidence.


Notable neurosurgeons
  • as one of the founders of modern neurosurgery.
  • as one of the founders of modern neurosurgery.
  • as the first neurosurgeon.
  • as the first woman neurosurgeon. As a medical student at the University of Bucharest, she performed her first neurosurgical procedure in 1944, under the supervision of Dumitru Bagdasar, and saved the life of an 8-year old comatose boy with an epidural hematoma (during the WWII bombardment of Bucharest).
  • Hermann Schloffer invented transsphenoidal surgery in 1907.
  • as one of the founding fathers of modern neurosurgery, and pioneer of Neurosurgery.
  • neurosurgeon who developed the .
  • neurosurgeon at Melbourne's Royal Children's Hospital. Primarily known for separating conjoined twins, Trishna and Krishna.
  • – developed "awake" craniotomy for complex aneurysms and vascular malformations.
  • John R. AdlerStanford University neurosurgeon who invented the Cyberknife.
  • Alim-Louis Benabidknown as one of the developers of deep brain stimulation surgery for movement disorder.
  • pediatric neurosurgeon from Johns Hopkins Hospital, pioneer in , and pioneer in the separation of craniopagus twins (joined at the head); former 2016 Republican Party presidential candidate, and former United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development under the Presidency of Donald Trump.
  • Henry Marsh – leading English neurosurgeon and pioneer of neurosurgical advancements in Ukraine
  • Frank Henderson Mayfieldinvented the Mayfield skull clamp.
  • B. K. Misra – First neurosurgeon in the world to perform image-guided surgery for aneurysms, first in South Asia to perform stereotactic radiosurgery, first in India to perform and spine surgery.
  • woman to occupy a chair of neurosurgery at an American medical school (University of Michigan).
  • Hirotaro Narabayashia pioneer of stereotactic Neurosurgery.
  • Ayub K. Ommayainvented the Ommaya reservoir.
  • Christopher Duntsch – Former neurosurgeon who killed or maimed nearly every patient he operated on before being incarcerated.

  • as one of the founding fathers of modern neurosurgery, world's first professor of neurosurgery.
  • for his pioneering use of and in neurosurgery, and for founding the first neurosurgery intensive care unit.
  • of cerebello-pontine angle tumor surgery. World Federation of Neurosurgical Societies coined a medal of honor bearing Samii's name which would be given to outstanding neurosurgeons every two years.
  • Juliet Sekabunga Nalwanga – Uganda's first woman neurosurgeon.
  • Robert Wheeler Rand among the first to introduce the surgical microscope into neurosurgical procedures in 1957 and published first textbook on Microneurosurgery in 1969.
  • Robert J. White – Established the Vatican's Commission on Biomedical Ethics in 1981 after his appointment to the Pontifical Academy of Sciences and was famous for his head transplants on living monkeys.
  • Gazi Yaşargilknown as the father of microneurosurgery.


Bioethics in neurosurgery
Neurosurgery is a part of practical and the only specialty that involves invasive intervention in the activity of the living brain. The brain ensures the structural and functional integrity of the body and the implementation of all the main life processes of the body. Therefore, neurosurgery faces a wide range of bioethical issues and a significant selection of the latest treatment technologies.
(2025). 9789666153336, Akademperiodyka.

Neurosurgery has the following applied scientific and ethical problems:

  • Ethical and legal aspects of clinical research;
  • Αxiological deficit due to professional deformation and professional burnout;
  • Limited access to expensive medical services;
  • The industry-specific problem of "" due to the complexity of neurosurgical and the huge number of possible technologies and tools for their treatment;
  • Controversial bioethical and legal issues of surgery for the treatment of psychiatric diseases;
  • Bioethical discussions regarding the instrumentation of reconstructive surgery, through the use of experimental technologies;
  • Debatable bioethical issues of improving human brain activity with the help of artificial implants, for instance neurocomponents (artificial impulse quasi-);
  • in meaning;
  • Ethical issue of of research protocols for testing means of nerve tissue regeneration in order to improve the of experimental research results in clinical practice.


See also
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