Aaron A. Cohen-Gadol
Indiana University
529 Papers
1.6K Citations
Aaron A. Cohen-Gadol is an academic researcher from Indiana University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Aneurysm. The author has an hindex of 48, co-authored 469 publications. Previous affiliations of Aaron A. Cohen-Gadol include University of Mississippi Medical Center & Indiana University Health.
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Papers
The oblique occipital sinus: a review of anatomy and imaging characteristics
R. Shane Tubbs,Anand N. Bosmia,Mohammadali Mohajel Shoja,Marios Loukas,Joel K. Curé,Aaron A. Cohen-Gadol +5 more
TL;DR: The present paper reviews this anatomy and offers illustrations of the cadaveric and imaging findings seen with this venous variation, the oblique occipital sinus.
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Ossification of the petrosphenoidal ligament: unusual variation with the potential for abducens nerve entrapment in Dorello’s canal at the skull base
TL;DR: Clinicians might consider ossification of the petrosphenoidal ligament (also called Gruber’s ligament) in patients with unexplained cases of abducens nerve palsy.
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Utility of neurological smears for intrasurgical brain cancer diagnostics and tumour cell percentage by DESI-MS
Valentina Pirro,Alan K. Jarmusch,Clint M. Alfaro,Eyas M. Hattab,Aaron A. Cohen-Gadol,R. Graham Cooks +5 more
TL;DR: Analysis of neurological smears by desorption electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (DESI-MS) is an emerging diagnostic strategy for intraoperative consultation in brain tumor resection and allows rapid sampling while providing accurate diagnostic information.
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Non-enhancing de novo glioblastoma: report of two cases
Aaron A. Cohen-Gadol,Aaron A. Cohen-Gadol,Michael L. DiLuna,Sergei I. Bannykh,Joseph M. Piepmeier,Dennis D. Spencer +5 more
TL;DR: The cases of two patients with new-onset seizures are described to illustrate the proposition that de novo malignant gliomas can originate as non-enhancing tumors and rapidly progress to a pattern of ring enhancement characteristic of a glioblastoma.
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Modified skin incision for avoiding the lesser occipital nerve and occipital artery during retrosigmoid craniotomy: potential applications for enhancing operative working distance and angles while minimizing the risk of postoperative neuralgias and intraoperative hemorrhage
R. Shane Tubbs,R. Shane Tubbs,Fabian N. Fries,Charles G. Kulwin,Martin M. Mortazavi,Marios Loukas,Aaron A. Cohen-Gadol +6 more
TL;DR: Based on findings, the inverted U incision would be less likely to injure the type II nerves but would necessarily cross over type I nerves, especially more cranially on the nerve at the apex of the incision.
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