Michael A. Bohl
Virginia Mason Medical Center
5 Papers
5 Citations
Michael A. Bohl is an academic researcher from Virginia Mason Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Extravasation & Blood transfusion. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 5 publications. Previous affiliations of Michael A. Bohl include St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center.
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Papers
Incidence and Clinical Risk of Cement Extravasation in Adult Patients Undergoing Prophylactic Vertebroplasty During Surgical Spine Reconstruction.
TL;DR: Although no patients in this study experienced known long-term consequences of prophylactic vertebroplasty, 26.5% of patients had cement extravasation that threatened end-organs or neural elements, prompting a change in practice from cementing upper thoracic VBs to using hooks instead.
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Is there bias in the treatment of degenerative spine disease? Analysis of anonymous voting via a multidisciplinary conference.
Michael A. Bohl,Michael A. Bohl,Anna K. Wright,Terrence F. Holekamp,Robert S. Mecklenburg,Farrokh Farrokhi,Jean-Christophe Leveque,Andrew S. Friedman,Rajiv K. Sethi +8 more
TL;DR: To determine who is contributing to the decision-making process in a multidisciplinary spine conference and to what extent treatment biases exist among the surgical and nonsurgeon members of this conference, voting data were collected during weekly multidis disciplinary spine conferences.
Outcomes Surrounding Perioperative Transfusion Rates and Hemoglobin Nadir Values Following Complex Spine Surgery.
Josiah J. Perez,Vijay Yanamadala,Anna K. Wright,Michael A. Bohl,Jean-Christophe Leveque,Rajiv K. Sethi,Rajiv K. Sethi +6 more
TL;DR: In patients with adult spinal deformity undergoing complex spine surgery, earlier targeted blood transfusions during surgery, rather than in the postoperative period, may lead to improved postoperative outcomes.
Postoperative Development of Desmoid Tumor After Surgical Correction of Adult Spinal Deformity: Case Report and Review of Literature.
TL;DR: This report is the first to describe the occurrence of a paraspinal desmoid tumor after the surgical correction of a spinal deformity, and the 7th reported case in the spine literature.
Utility of a Novel Biomimetic Spine Model in Surgical Education: Case Series of Three Cervicothoracic Kyphotic Deformities.
Michael A. Bohl,Michael A. Bohl,Sarah McBryan,U Kumar Kakarla,Jean-Christophe Leveque,Rajiv K. Sethi,Rajiv K. Sethi +6 more
TL;DR: The models appeared to accurately replicate the gross anatomy and biomechanical performance of the patients’ spines, resulting in a custom model that provides an invaluable learning platform for surgical education.