Patrick Schuss
Goethe University Frankfurt
46 Papers
53 Citations
Patrick Schuss is an academic researcher from Goethe University Frankfurt. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 17 publications.
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Papers
Cranioplasty after Decompressive Craniectomy: The Effect of Timing on Postoperative Complications
Patrick Schuss,Hartmut Vatter,Gerhard Marquardt,Lioba Imöhl,Christian T. Ulrich,Volker Seifert,Erdem Güresir +6 more
TL;DR: The present data suggest that patients who undergo late CP might benefit from a lower complication rate, and this might influence future surgical decision making regarding optimal timing of cranioplasty.
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Non-aneurysmal non-traumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage: patient characteristics, clinical outcome and prognostic factors based on a single-center experience in 125 patients
TL;DR: Patients suffering from non-aneurysmal SAH have better prognosis compared to aneurysm related SAH and poor admission status was the only independent predictor of unfavorable outcome in the multivariate analysis.
Posterior communicating artery aneurysm-related oculomotor nerve palsy: influence of surgical and endovascular treatment on recovery: single-center series and systematic review.
TL;DR: The present data indicate that ONP caused by PComA aneurysms resolves in a significantly higher portion of patients after surgical treatment compared with endovascular coiling and the spontaneous course.
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Aneurysm-related subarachnoid hemorrhage and acute subdural hematoma: single-center series and systematic review
TL;DR: The present data confirm that patients with aneurysm-related SAH and acute SDH, even when presenting in poor clinical condition, might achieve favorable outcome, but careful individual decision making is necessary for each patient.
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Influence of surgical or endovascular treatment on visual symptoms caused by intracranial aneurysms: single-center series and systematic review.
TL;DR: Aneurysm-related visual dysfunction developed from direct mechanical compression may improve after surgical clipping and endovascular coiling, but based on the present series combined with pooled analysis of data from the literature, the only factor significantly associated with improvement of visual dysfunction was surgical clipping.
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