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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences
Nanomedicine In The Treatment Of Glioblastoma, Syeda Kubra Kishwar Jafri, Syed Sarmad Bukhari, Muhammad Shahzad Shamim
Nanomedicine In The Treatment Of Glioblastoma, Syeda Kubra Kishwar Jafri, Syed Sarmad Bukhari, Muhammad Shahzad Shamim
Section of Neurosurgery
The current standard of care in glioblastoma management is surgery followed by chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Temozolomide is an alkylating agent most commonly used with a few other second line options. The efficacy of systemic chemotherapy in brain malignancies is limited due to the nature of the blood-brain barrier. Nanomedicine offers one avenue of improving drug delivery to these tumours in a more focussed and effective way in higher doses than currently possible, while simultaneously reducing systemic toxicity.
Post-Operative Seizure Control In Patients With Glioblastoma, Ummey Hani, Muhammad Ammar Haider, Saqib Kamran Bakhshi, Muhammad Shahzad Shamim
Post-Operative Seizure Control In Patients With Glioblastoma, Ummey Hani, Muhammad Ammar Haider, Saqib Kamran Bakhshi, Muhammad Shahzad Shamim
Section of Neurosurgery
While the median survival in patients with glioblastoma has not improved significantly over the past decade, aggressive attempts have been made on palliation and improving quality of life in these patients. A confluence of two debilitating pathologies which massively distorts the normal day-to-day functioning of the patients who experience it, seizures in glioblastoma patients portends a poor prognosis. There exists a paucity of reported seizure outcomes after glioblastoma treatment in neurosurgical literature. Herein we present a review examining post-operative seizure control in patients with glioblastoma.
Role Of Intra-Operative Ultrasound In Brain Tumour Surgeries, Mohammad Hamza Bajwa, Saqib Kamran Bakhshi, Muhammad Shahzad Shamim
Role Of Intra-Operative Ultrasound In Brain Tumour Surgeries, Mohammad Hamza Bajwa, Saqib Kamran Bakhshi, Muhammad Shahzad Shamim
Section of Neurosurgery
The use of intra-operative ultrasound remains a largely underutilized option in brain tumour surgeries. The widespread availability of neuronavigation may be the reason why such a useful modality has become less popular even though recent advances in ultrasound technology have greatly improved its utility. The available literature also clearly shows that it offers additional advantages especially when used with neuronavigation. Herein the authors have briefly touched upon the available literature on the role of intraoperative ultrasound in brain tumour surgeries.