Neurosurgery

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Neurosurgery

Neurosurgery is a medical specialty concerned with the prevention, diagnosis, treatment, and rehabilitation of disorders affecting all parts of the nervous system, including the brain, spinal cord, peripheral nerves and extracranial cerebral vasculature. Surgery of the nervous system, especially the brain and spinal cord. Treating diseases that affect the central nervous system is a surgical specialty. Neurosurgical Focus is dedicated to reducing the number and severity of adverse events associated with neurosurgery in a variety of conditions. Neurosurgeons are beginning to use endovascular image-guided procedures to treat aneurysms, AVMs, carotid artery stenosis, stroke, spinal deformities and vasospasm. Neurosurgeons also perform nonvascular procedures such as vertebroplasty and kyphoplasty. Techniques such as angioplasty, stenting, thrombectomy, embolization, and diagnostic angiography are used. Neurosurgery is constantly changing. In recent years there have been significant organizational changes in the way the unit operates. For example, the proliferation of subspecialties among consultants and the use of interdisciplinary team approach to problems. Research plays an important role in neurosurgery, as innovations and discoveries can guide clinical practice. Research results are also an important indicator of academic productivity. High-quality research can guide clinical practice and, as a result, improve patient care. Global neurosurgery has gained momentum in recent years, impacting clinical and public health practice of neurosurgery and improving equitable access to neurosurgical care worldwide. As a result, global neurosurgical research has increased dramatically over the past decade. The future of neuropsychiatric surgery can be viewed from two different perspectives. Near future and distant future. Both are promising, but treatment strategies for psychiatric disorders and the technologies used in these separate periods will likely differ dramatically. It is expected to build on advances in neuroimaging and stereotaxic alignment while adapting surgical techniques to this individualized approach has already shown promise when applied to deep brain stimulation in treatment-resistant depression and obsessive-compulsive disorder. If the efficacy of these strategies is confirmed by well-designed, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trials, further technological advances will continue into the distant future, possibly using wireless technology to enable precise detection at the cellular level. No closed-loop design, which may involve significant neuromodulation. This approach is theoretically less invasive and less risky and may ultimately push psychiatric neurosurgery to the forefront of the psychiatric treatment algorithm. Despite significant advances in non-invasive treatment options such as stereotactic radiosurgery and transcranial magnetic resonance-guided focused ultrasound, there is likely to continue to be a need for surgical treatment of patients with the most severe psychiatric disorders.

Case reports in surgery and invasive procedures is an open access, peer reviewed journal in this published work is freely available for the readers, journal publishing high quality articles related fields for those researching, or practicing in the fields of Medical and Invasive surgeries.

Manuscripts can be submitted via us an e-mail attachment to the Editorial Office at surgery@journalres.org

Regards,
Journal Coordinator
Case reports in surgery and invasive procedures