A 60 year old male presented with a 50+ degree curvature. He was status post lumbar fusion from L4-S1, and continued to have significant low back pain.
Case Review #6: 53 year old woman with Adult ScoliosisRobert Pashman
A 53 year old woman, with an 85° thoracic curve, and a 75° lumbar curve. Dr. Pashman treated her with an Anterior fusion followed by a Posterior Spinal Fusion from T1 to the Pelvis. Curve was a KIM/SRP Classification 3.
Case Review #9: Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis with a Double CurvatureRobert Pashman
A 54 year old female presented with Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis. In addition to lower back pain, she noticed that her height was decreasing. Her spine was significantly rotated and she required a spinal fusion.
Case Review #2: 41 year old female presented with Adult Scoliosis and Spodylo...Robert Pashman
A 41 year old female with a 50° thoracolumbar curve and Spondylolisthesis. Dr. Pashman treated the patient with an Posterior Spinal Fusion from T10-Pelvis. Her curve was a KIM/SRP Classification 2.
Case Review #43: 43 year old female with Adult Idiopathic Scoliosi requiring...Robert Pashman
1. A 43-year old female with adult idiopathic scoliosis underwent anterior spinal surgery with instrumentation from T12 to L3 to correct curves of 60° thoracic and 57° lumbar, reducing them to 41°.
2. A 48-year old female with Kim/SRP type III scoliosis underwent revision surgery with anterior lumbar interbody fusion from L4-S1 and posterior spinal fusion from T3 to S1 to correct increasing proximal thoracic curvature and subadjacent degeneration.
3. Post-operatively, the patient was well-balanced in sagittal and coronal planes with thoracic and lumbar curves reduced to 26° and 27° respectively.
Case Review #4: 31 year old woman with Adult Idiopathic ScoliosisRobert Pashman
A 31 year old woman, with Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis, 75° stiff lumbar curve, rotated 90°. Dr. Pashman treated the patient with and Anterior Spinal Fusion followed by a Posterior Spinal Fusion. KIM/SRP Classification 2.
Case Review #5: 43 year old woman with Adult Idiopathic ScoliosisRobert Pashman
A 43 year old woman, presented with Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis, 50° lumbar curve. Dr. Pashman treated her with Posterior Spinal Fusion from T9 - L5. Curve was a KIM/SRP Classification 2.
Case Review 15: Adult Scoliosis treated with Spinal Fusion and OteotomiesRobert Pashman
A 50 year old female presented with progressive Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis. The patient had severe low back pain and leg pain. She was treated with a posterior spinal fusion with spinal osteotomies.
Case Review #12: Adult Scoliosis Revision Surgery due to FlatbackRobert Pashman
A 59 year old male presented status post scoliosis surgery using Cotrel-Duboussett instrumentation. The patient had Flatback Syndrome, low back pain, leg pain, and required revision surgery.
Case Review #6: 53 year old woman with Adult ScoliosisRobert Pashman
A 53 year old woman, with an 85° thoracic curve, and a 75° lumbar curve. Dr. Pashman treated her with an Anterior fusion followed by a Posterior Spinal Fusion from T1 to the Pelvis. Curve was a KIM/SRP Classification 3.
Case Review #9: Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis with a Double CurvatureRobert Pashman
A 54 year old female presented with Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis. In addition to lower back pain, she noticed that her height was decreasing. Her spine was significantly rotated and she required a spinal fusion.
Case Review #2: 41 year old female presented with Adult Scoliosis and Spodylo...Robert Pashman
A 41 year old female with a 50° thoracolumbar curve and Spondylolisthesis. Dr. Pashman treated the patient with an Posterior Spinal Fusion from T10-Pelvis. Her curve was a KIM/SRP Classification 2.
Case Review #43: 43 year old female with Adult Idiopathic Scoliosi requiring...Robert Pashman
1. A 43-year old female with adult idiopathic scoliosis underwent anterior spinal surgery with instrumentation from T12 to L3 to correct curves of 60° thoracic and 57° lumbar, reducing them to 41°.
2. A 48-year old female with Kim/SRP type III scoliosis underwent revision surgery with anterior lumbar interbody fusion from L4-S1 and posterior spinal fusion from T3 to S1 to correct increasing proximal thoracic curvature and subadjacent degeneration.
3. Post-operatively, the patient was well-balanced in sagittal and coronal planes with thoracic and lumbar curves reduced to 26° and 27° respectively.
Case Review #4: 31 year old woman with Adult Idiopathic ScoliosisRobert Pashman
A 31 year old woman, with Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis, 75° stiff lumbar curve, rotated 90°. Dr. Pashman treated the patient with and Anterior Spinal Fusion followed by a Posterior Spinal Fusion. KIM/SRP Classification 2.
Case Review #5: 43 year old woman with Adult Idiopathic ScoliosisRobert Pashman
A 43 year old woman, presented with Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis, 50° lumbar curve. Dr. Pashman treated her with Posterior Spinal Fusion from T9 - L5. Curve was a KIM/SRP Classification 2.
Case Review 15: Adult Scoliosis treated with Spinal Fusion and OteotomiesRobert Pashman
A 50 year old female presented with progressive Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis. The patient had severe low back pain and leg pain. She was treated with a posterior spinal fusion with spinal osteotomies.
Case Review #12: Adult Scoliosis Revision Surgery due to FlatbackRobert Pashman
A 59 year old male presented status post scoliosis surgery using Cotrel-Duboussett instrumentation. The patient had Flatback Syndrome, low back pain, leg pain, and required revision surgery.
Case Review #37: 64 year old female with ScoliosisRobert Pashman
The patient presented after two scoliosis surgeries and in situ fusions. The patient's spinal curvature progressed to 80 degrees and she required revision surgery.
Case Review #10: 12 year old girl with 70 degree Scoliosis Robert Pashman
A 12 year old girl presented with a 70 degree adolescent idiopathic scoliosis discovered during a routine school screening. Dr. Pashman performed a posterior spinal fusion on the patient.
Case Review #31: 60 Year Old Female with Adult Idiopathic ScoliosisRobert Pashman
60 year old female presented with Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis and Grade 2 Isthmic Spondylolisthesis. She was treated with an anterior and posterior spinal fusion.
Case Presentation #8: 14 year old female presented with Adolescent Idiopathic...Robert Pashman
A 14 year old girl presented with 38 degree Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis. The curve progressed within a few months, and she required scoliosis surgery. Dr. Pashman performed a posterior spinal fusion on her.
Case Review #51: 59 year old Female with Collapsing ScoliosisRobert Pashman
A 59 year old female presented to Dr. Pashman with a 60 degree throacic curve, in extreme pain. She failed conservative therapy and opted to have scoliosis surgery.
Case Review #40: 45 year old woman with 75 degree ScoliosisRobert Pashman
1. A 45-year-old female presented with a 75 degree progressive idiopathic scoliosis causing significant back pain and loss of height.
2. Pre-op x-rays showed a 75 degree thoracolumbar curve with coronal and sagittal imbalance.
3. The patient underwent a two-stage surgery including anterior interbody fusion at L4-5 and L5-S1 followed by posterior spinal fusion and instrumentation from T3 to the sacrum to correct the deformity.
Case Review 4: A 58 year old female presented with Scheurmann's KyphosisRobert Pashman
A 58-year-old female with severe rigid thoracolumbar kyphosis due to Scheuermann's disease and degeneration underwent a posterior spinal fusion from T2 to the pelvis. She had a 70 degree curvature that was rigid. The surgery involved segmental spinal instrumentation, multiple osteotomies to correct the curvature, decompression of neural elements, and an 18-level posterior fusion. Post-operatively, the patient's curvature was fully corrected and she gained 2 inches in height.
Case Review #25: 39 year old female with Progressive Adult ScoliosisRobert Pashman
39 year old female presented with Progressive Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis. Dr. Pashman treated the patient with a posterior spinal fusion from T3-L4. KIM/SRP Classification 1
Case Review #8: A 29 year old female firefigher presented with Scheurmanns Ky...Robert Pashman
A 29 year old female firefighter, diagnosed with progressive Scheurmann's Kyphosis. She presented status post surgery T12-L1 for trauma. Dr. Pashman treated the patient with a Posterior Spinal Fusion from T2 to L2.
Case Review #24: 67 year old female with Degenerative ScoliosisRobert Pashman
67 year old female presented with DeNovo Scoliosis, with significant rotation due to Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis. Dr. Pashman treated the patient with a posterior spinal fusion from T10-Pelvis. KIM/SRP Classification 2.
1. A 15-year-old male athlete presented with a 70-degree thoracic kyphosis known as Scheuermann's kyphosis from T11 to L1.
2. He underwent an anterior spinal fusion from T10 to L2 using rib grafts to correct the curvature.
3. Post-operation x-rays showed the kyphosis was reduced to 50 degrees and restored normal sagittal balance, with the patient's head now plumbing over his hips rather than anteriorly.
Case Review #52: 54 Year Old Female with Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis and leg painRobert Pashman
A 54 year old female with progressive Idiopathic Scoliosis presented with low back pain and leg pain. Due to her daily function declining, the patient chose to have spinal surgery.
Case Review #29: 57 year old female with Adult Thorcolumber ScoliosisRobert Pashman
57 year old female with Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis. She presented with a 62 degree thoracolumbar curve. Dr. Pashman treated the patient with a posterior spinal fusion from T10-Pelvis. Dr. Pashman took great care with incision closure to preserve the patient's tattoo. KIM/SRP Classification 2.
Case Review#20: 64 year old female with Adult Scoliosis and Flatback SyndromeRobert Pashman
This case review summarizes the surgical treatment of a 64-year-old female patient with degenerative lumbar scoliosis, spondylolisthesis, and flatback syndrome. She presented with a 28 degree lumbar curvature, flatback deformity, and spondylolisthesis. Her condition caused severe pain and disability. The surgical strategy involved segmental spinal instrumentation from L1 to the sacrum, posterior spinal fusion from L1 to S1, osteotomies from L1 to S1 to correct the deformity, and decompression of spinal stenosis. Post-operatively, her X-rays showed excellent alignment and core exercises provided pain relief, allowing for improved function.
Musculoskeletal physiotherapy management in poliomyelitisSreeraj S R
This document discusses the physiotherapy management of poliomyelitis. It begins by describing the stages and symptoms of polio. It then outlines the treatment approaches, including relief of pain and spasms during the acute phase, prevention of contractures, exercises to improve strength, and use of braces. Surgery may be needed to address deformities, followed by postsurgical physiotherapy focusing on range of motion, strengthening, and retraining movements. The overall goal of physiotherapy is to aid recovery and maximize function for people affected by polio.
This is a short presentation on shoulder instability, biomechanics, pathology, diagnostic modalities, clinical picture and treatment methods available.
Case Review #4: Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis with 61 degree curvatureRobert Pashman
A 22 year old female presented with Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis. She was braced as a child, and the curve continued to progress until she required surgical intervention.
Lateral closing isosceles triangular osteotomy for the treatmentsongao
Dr. Sandeep Tripathi presented a new technique for correcting cubitus varus, or gunstock deformity of the elbow, using a lateral closing wedge isosceles triangular osteotomy. The technique was performed on 25 patients aged 6-12 with cubitus varus secondary to malunion of a supracondylar fracture. A lateral incision was made, the osteotomy performed, and fixed with K-wires. Most patients had excellent results with a mean carrying angle of 11.7 degrees. Complications included minor infection and scarring, with one revision for displacement. The author concluded the technique is practical, effective, and reliable for correcting cubitus varus.
Case Review #26: 73 year old female with KyphoscoliosisRobert Pashman
73 year old female presented with Kyphoscoliosis. Dr, Pashman, treated the patient with a posterior spinal fusion from T2-Pelvis. KIM/SRP Classification 3.
Case Review #3: 65 year old woman with 55 degree Thoracolumbar ScoliosisRobert Pashman
A 65 year old female with a 55° thoracolumbar curve, spondylolisthesis, and flatback syndrome. Treated with an Anterior/Posterior Spinal Fusion. KIM/SRP Classification 3.
Case Review #37: 64 year old female with ScoliosisRobert Pashman
The patient presented after two scoliosis surgeries and in situ fusions. The patient's spinal curvature progressed to 80 degrees and she required revision surgery.
Case Review #10: 12 year old girl with 70 degree Scoliosis Robert Pashman
A 12 year old girl presented with a 70 degree adolescent idiopathic scoliosis discovered during a routine school screening. Dr. Pashman performed a posterior spinal fusion on the patient.
Case Review #31: 60 Year Old Female with Adult Idiopathic ScoliosisRobert Pashman
60 year old female presented with Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis and Grade 2 Isthmic Spondylolisthesis. She was treated with an anterior and posterior spinal fusion.
Case Presentation #8: 14 year old female presented with Adolescent Idiopathic...Robert Pashman
A 14 year old girl presented with 38 degree Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis. The curve progressed within a few months, and she required scoliosis surgery. Dr. Pashman performed a posterior spinal fusion on her.
Case Review #51: 59 year old Female with Collapsing ScoliosisRobert Pashman
A 59 year old female presented to Dr. Pashman with a 60 degree throacic curve, in extreme pain. She failed conservative therapy and opted to have scoliosis surgery.
Case Review #40: 45 year old woman with 75 degree ScoliosisRobert Pashman
1. A 45-year-old female presented with a 75 degree progressive idiopathic scoliosis causing significant back pain and loss of height.
2. Pre-op x-rays showed a 75 degree thoracolumbar curve with coronal and sagittal imbalance.
3. The patient underwent a two-stage surgery including anterior interbody fusion at L4-5 and L5-S1 followed by posterior spinal fusion and instrumentation from T3 to the sacrum to correct the deformity.
Case Review 4: A 58 year old female presented with Scheurmann's KyphosisRobert Pashman
A 58-year-old female with severe rigid thoracolumbar kyphosis due to Scheuermann's disease and degeneration underwent a posterior spinal fusion from T2 to the pelvis. She had a 70 degree curvature that was rigid. The surgery involved segmental spinal instrumentation, multiple osteotomies to correct the curvature, decompression of neural elements, and an 18-level posterior fusion. Post-operatively, the patient's curvature was fully corrected and she gained 2 inches in height.
Case Review #25: 39 year old female with Progressive Adult ScoliosisRobert Pashman
39 year old female presented with Progressive Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis. Dr. Pashman treated the patient with a posterior spinal fusion from T3-L4. KIM/SRP Classification 1
Case Review #8: A 29 year old female firefigher presented with Scheurmanns Ky...Robert Pashman
A 29 year old female firefighter, diagnosed with progressive Scheurmann's Kyphosis. She presented status post surgery T12-L1 for trauma. Dr. Pashman treated the patient with a Posterior Spinal Fusion from T2 to L2.
Case Review #24: 67 year old female with Degenerative ScoliosisRobert Pashman
67 year old female presented with DeNovo Scoliosis, with significant rotation due to Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis. Dr. Pashman treated the patient with a posterior spinal fusion from T10-Pelvis. KIM/SRP Classification 2.
1. A 15-year-old male athlete presented with a 70-degree thoracic kyphosis known as Scheuermann's kyphosis from T11 to L1.
2. He underwent an anterior spinal fusion from T10 to L2 using rib grafts to correct the curvature.
3. Post-operation x-rays showed the kyphosis was reduced to 50 degrees and restored normal sagittal balance, with the patient's head now plumbing over his hips rather than anteriorly.
Case Review #52: 54 Year Old Female with Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis and leg painRobert Pashman
A 54 year old female with progressive Idiopathic Scoliosis presented with low back pain and leg pain. Due to her daily function declining, the patient chose to have spinal surgery.
Case Review #29: 57 year old female with Adult Thorcolumber ScoliosisRobert Pashman
57 year old female with Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis. She presented with a 62 degree thoracolumbar curve. Dr. Pashman treated the patient with a posterior spinal fusion from T10-Pelvis. Dr. Pashman took great care with incision closure to preserve the patient's tattoo. KIM/SRP Classification 2.
Case Review#20: 64 year old female with Adult Scoliosis and Flatback SyndromeRobert Pashman
This case review summarizes the surgical treatment of a 64-year-old female patient with degenerative lumbar scoliosis, spondylolisthesis, and flatback syndrome. She presented with a 28 degree lumbar curvature, flatback deformity, and spondylolisthesis. Her condition caused severe pain and disability. The surgical strategy involved segmental spinal instrumentation from L1 to the sacrum, posterior spinal fusion from L1 to S1, osteotomies from L1 to S1 to correct the deformity, and decompression of spinal stenosis. Post-operatively, her X-rays showed excellent alignment and core exercises provided pain relief, allowing for improved function.
Musculoskeletal physiotherapy management in poliomyelitisSreeraj S R
This document discusses the physiotherapy management of poliomyelitis. It begins by describing the stages and symptoms of polio. It then outlines the treatment approaches, including relief of pain and spasms during the acute phase, prevention of contractures, exercises to improve strength, and use of braces. Surgery may be needed to address deformities, followed by postsurgical physiotherapy focusing on range of motion, strengthening, and retraining movements. The overall goal of physiotherapy is to aid recovery and maximize function for people affected by polio.
This is a short presentation on shoulder instability, biomechanics, pathology, diagnostic modalities, clinical picture and treatment methods available.
Case Review #4: Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis with 61 degree curvatureRobert Pashman
A 22 year old female presented with Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis. She was braced as a child, and the curve continued to progress until she required surgical intervention.
Lateral closing isosceles triangular osteotomy for the treatmentsongao
Dr. Sandeep Tripathi presented a new technique for correcting cubitus varus, or gunstock deformity of the elbow, using a lateral closing wedge isosceles triangular osteotomy. The technique was performed on 25 patients aged 6-12 with cubitus varus secondary to malunion of a supracondylar fracture. A lateral incision was made, the osteotomy performed, and fixed with K-wires. Most patients had excellent results with a mean carrying angle of 11.7 degrees. Complications included minor infection and scarring, with one revision for displacement. The author concluded the technique is practical, effective, and reliable for correcting cubitus varus.
Case Review #26: 73 year old female with KyphoscoliosisRobert Pashman
73 year old female presented with Kyphoscoliosis. Dr, Pashman, treated the patient with a posterior spinal fusion from T2-Pelvis. KIM/SRP Classification 3.
Case Review #3: 65 year old woman with 55 degree Thoracolumbar ScoliosisRobert Pashman
A 65 year old female with a 55° thoracolumbar curve, spondylolisthesis, and flatback syndrome. Treated with an Anterior/Posterior Spinal Fusion. KIM/SRP Classification 3.
Case Review #22: 50 year old female presented with Scoliosis and spondylolis...Robert Pashman
50 year old female presented with Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis and Spondylolisthesis. She suffered from low back pain and leg pain. Dr. Pashman performed a spinal fusion on the patient.
Case Review #45: 35 year old male with Junctional KyphosisRobert Pashman
35 year old male status post T4-L1 fusion for Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis, presented with junctional kyphosis. The patient was treated with a posterior spinal fusion from T2-L4. KIM/SRP Classification 1.
Case Review #6: 45 year old woman with flatback syndrome after several surger...Robert Pashman
A 45-year old female with a flat back due to multiple spine surgeries for scoliosis underwent surgery to correct her sagittal imbalance. The surgical strategy included a T10 to sacrum fusion with pedicle subtraction osteotomy at L3 to induce lordosis. Post-operatively, sagittal balance was restored but a slight coronal imbalance remained due to prior fusion in a shifted position. Good functional outcomes are expected with less than 4cm of coronal imbalance.
Case Review #7: 42 year old male with KyphoscoliosisRobert Pashman
A 42-year-old male with congenital kyphoscoliosis and neck pain underwent a 17-level posterior spinal fusion from T2 to the pelvis. The surgery included vertebrectomies at T9, T11 and T10, with a vertebral column resection at T10 to correct his 90 degree kyphosis. Post-operatively, his spine was realigned to 35 degrees with resolution of his neurological symptoms and pain managed conservatively.
Case Review #38: 22 year old female status post spinal fusion with pseudoarth...Robert Pashman
A 22 year old female presented status post a posterior spinal fusion for Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis. Following a car accident, she experienced back pain. A pseudoarthrosis, or failure of fusion, was found on CT scan. Dr. Pashman did the revision surgery from T4-L2.
Case Review #39: 55 year old male with Progressive ScoliosisRobert Pashman
A 55 year old male presented with Progressive Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis. While he was preparing for surgery, he lifted a heavy item, and had neck pain and pain going down his arm. The patient was found to have myeloradiculopathy and spinal cord effacement and required an Anterior Cervical Fusion prior to scoliosis surgery. The following year he had a posterior spinal fusion for Scoliosis.
Case Review #16: 59 year old woman with 25 year history of Adult Idiopathic S...Robert Pashman
59 year old female presented with 25 year history of scoliosis progression. 68° thoracic curve, 42° lumbar curve. Dr. Pashman treated her with a fusion T3-L4. KIM/SRP Classification 1.
Case Presentation #54: 60 year old female failed minimally invasive scoliosis...Robert Pashman
A 60 year old woman presented after a failed minimally invasive XLIF surgery for Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis. The patient had multiple complications, and required extensive revision surgery.
Case Review #42: 39 year old female with Adult Congenital ScoliosisRobert Pashman
A 39 year old female with Congenital Scoliosis presented to Dr. Pashman. The patient had a fusion at age six, and her spinal curve continued to progress. Dr. Pashman treated the patient with a posterior spinal fusion from T3-Pelvis. KIM/SRP Classification 3.
Case Review: 42 year old woman with Grade 3 Isthmic SpondylolisthesisRobert Pashman
A 42 year old very athletic woman presented with Grade 3 Isthmic Spondylolisthesis. She had a long history of back pain. Dr. Pashman performed an anterior and posterior spinal fusion.
Case Review #34: 44 Year Old Woman with Adult Idiopathic ScoliosisRobert Pashman
A 44 year old woman presented with Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis. She wore a brace as a child, and the curvature progressed to the point she required surgery.
Case Review #22: 21 year old with Progressive Adolescent Idiopathic ScoliosisRobert Pashman
A 21 year old female presented to Dr. Pashman with Progressive Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis. The patient had been followed for scoliosis, and was compliant wearing her brace. Her spinal curvature progressed despite physical therapy and bracing. Dr. Pashman treated her with a Posterior Spinal Fusion T3-L1.
Case Review #18: 79 year old female with Degenerative scoliosisRobert Pashman
1) A 79-year-old female with adult degenerative scoliosis, herniated discs, and spondylolisthesis underwent spinal fusion surgery.
2) The surgery involved segmental spinal instrumentation from L1 to the pelvis, a pedicle subtraction osteotomy at L3 to create lordosis, and posterior spinal fusion from L1 to the pelvis.
3) Post-operatively, the patient's sagittal balance was normalized, with 5 degrees of lordosis achieved compared to 20 degrees of kyphosis pre-operatively, improving her ability to walk with less pain.
Case Review #33: 49 year old Dancer presented with Idiopathic ScoliosisRobert Pashman
A 49 year old male with Adult Scoliosis presented with low back pain and leg pain. The patient is a professional dancer. He failed conservative therapy and was seeking a surgical opinion.
Case Review #35: 43 year old female with Adult Scoliosis and a Transitional V...Robert Pashman
1. This case review summarizes the treatment of a 43-year-old female patient with adult scoliosis and a lumbar sacral transitional vertebra.
2. She had a 40 degree lumbar curve and a fused L5-S1 region on the right side.
3. Her treatment plan involved an anterior interbody fusion at L4-5 and L5-S1 followed by posterior segmental spinal instrumentation, spinal osteotomies, and posterior spinal fusion to correct her deformities and relieve her pain.
Case Review #5: 67 year old woman with flatback syndrome following 5 spinal s...Robert Pashman
A 67 year old female presented to Dr. Pashman with severe Flat back Syndrome after 5 previous spine surgeries for Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis. Dr. Pashman treated her with a Posterior Spinal Fusion from T8 to S1.
Case Review #1: 39 year old female with Congenital Scoliosis Robert Pashman
A 39-year-old female with progressive congenital scoliosis underwent spinal fusion from T3 to the pelvis. She had a previous fusion at age 6 but her curvature had worsened. The surgery included multiple osteotomies and instrumentation to correct her frontal and sagittal plane deformities. Post-operatively, her curvature was reduced from 31 to 18 degrees and she had improved balance and pain relief.
Case Review #27: 59 Year Old Female with Progressive Adult ScoliosisRobert Pashman
59 year old female presented with Progressive Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis, Spondylolisthesis, Flatback Deformity, and Stenosis. The patient was treated with a spinal fusion,
Case Review #46: 56 year old female with Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis and Burst...Robert Pashman
56 year old female with Idiopathic Scoliosis, status post burst fracture, presented with junctional kyphosis. Dr. Pashman treated the patient with a posterior spinal fusion from T2-pelvis. Spinal curvature was a KIM/SRP Classification 3.
Case Review #44: 64 male presented with Denovo Scoliosis and InfectionRobert Pashman
A 64 year old male presented with collapsing denova scoliosis, after several failed back surgeries. The patient was found to have an infection and required salvage surgery.
Case Review #7: 51 year old female with severe flatback after multiple surge...Robert Pashman
A 51 year old female status post multiple spine surgeries presented to Dr. Pashman with severe Flatback Syndrome and psueoarthrosis. Dr. Pashman treated the patient with a Posterior Spinal Fusion T4-Pelvis.
Case Review #17: 63 year old female with Denovo ScoliosisRobert Pashman
63 year old female with Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis, Spondylolisthesis, and facet screws at L4-L5. Dr. Pashman treated the patient with a posterior spinal fusion from T10 to Pelvis. KIM/SRP Classification 2
Case Review #2: 66 year old female with severe Flatback SyndromeRobert Pashman
A 66 year old female presented with severe Flat back Syndrome, Kyphosis, and critical stenosis. Dr. Pashman treated the patient with a posterior spinal fusion T2 to the pelvis. The patient was able to stand up straight following surgery.
Case Presentation #21: 17 year old female with Adolescent Idiopathic ScoliosisRobert Pashman
A 17 year old female consulted with Dr. Pashman for a second opinion on scoliosis surgery. The patient presented with a 50 degree curve despite wearing her brace as instructed. She had a posterior spinal fusion.
Case Review #53: 58 year old female with Adult Scoliosis and low back painRobert Pashman
A 58 year old female presented with severe, progressive, Lumbar Scoliosis. The patient failed conservative therapy and had unrelenting leg pain. She was treated with a posterior spinal fusion from T11-pelvis.
Case Review #14: 16 year old female with progressive adolescent scoliosisRobert Pashman
A 16-year-old female presented with progressive adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. Her curve had increased from 40 degrees to 46 degrees over two years while wearing a brace. Pre-op x-rays showed a 46 degree thoracic curve. The indications for surgery were a progressive curve, pain, and deformity. The surgical strategy involved segmental spinal instrumentation from T2 to L1 using pedicle screws, multiple osteotomies from T5 to T10 including Smith-Peterson osteotomies, and posterior spinal fusion from T3 to L1. Post-op films showed the patient was well-balanced in the coronal and sagittal planes, and her symptoms resolved following surgery.
Case Review #1: 27 year old female presents with foot drop after 3rd lumbar s...Robert Pashman
A 27 year old female presented status post three microdiscectomies. The patient had a sudden onset of foot drop. Dr. Pashman performed a posterior spinal fusion on the patient.
Case Review #36: 34 year old female with Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis and a bro...Robert Pashman
This patient is a 34-year-old female with idiopathic scoliosis who previously had spinal fusion with Luque instrumentation at age 13. The Luque rod had broken and was protruding from her skin. She now has a residual thoracic curve of over 86 degrees without a solid fusion. The surgery involved removing the failed hardware, performing multiple osteotomies, installing new segmental spinal instrumentation from T2 to the sacrum with pelvic fixation, and posterior spinal fusion. Post-operatively, the patient was perfectly balanced in the sagittal and coronal planes.
Case Review #9: 19 year old female with Scheuermann's DiseaseRobert Pashman
A 19 year old female from Las Vegas traveled to Los Angeles for treatment. She presented with progressive Scheurmann's Kyphosis. The patient is an equestrian rider and model. Dr. Pashman treated the patient with a Posterior Spinal Fusion from T3 to L1. She returned to modeling a few months post-op, and returned to horseback riding at 6 months post-op.
Similar to Case Review #11: Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis (18)
Case Review #50: 29 year old woman presents with dislodged instrumentation fo...Robert Pashman
A 29-year old woman presented with dislodged hardware from three previous surgeries for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. She had retained loose instrumentation from her past operations that posed a medical risk. The surgical strategy was to remove the retained hardware through osteotomies, perform spinal fusions from T4 to L3, and place new segmental instrumentation from L2 to L3.
Case Review #11: Progressive Adolescent Idiopathic ScoliosisRobert Pashman
A 17 year old female with Progressive Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis presented to Dr. Pashman for a surgical opinion. The patient presented with a 36° thoracic curve which progressed to 48°. Dr. Pashman treated the patient with a posterior fusion T3-L1.
Case Review #B: Spondylolisthesis Surgery Robert Pashman
A 16-year-old female presented with lower back and left leg pain following a motor vehicle accident. Imaging showed spondylolisthesis at L5 from fractures of the pars interarticularis. She underwent microscopic bilateral L5 laminotomy, foraminotomy, and repair of the L5 pars fractures with bone grafting and instrumentation. Post-operatively, her symptoms resolved and she was able to return to normal activities.
Case Review #2: Isthmic Spondylolisthesis Grade IVRobert Pashman
Case review: A 58 year old female with Isthmic Spondylolisthesis status post surgery. She continued to experience back pain and leg pain, and was treated with spinal surgery.
Case Review #A: Major League Baseball Player has a Spinal FusionRobert Pashman
25 year old Major League Baseball Player presented with low back pain. Upon review of CT scans, he was discovered to have a pars fracture and require surgery,
Case Review #12: 14 Year Old Female with Adolescent Idiopathic ScoliosisRobert Pashman
A 14 year old female presented with Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis. The patient was non-compliant with bracing. The Scoliosis curvature and Kyphosis curvature progressed, and she required surgery.
Case Review #7: Progressive Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis with a 75 degree curva...Robert Pashman
The patient, a 19-year-old female, presented with a progressive 75° thoracic scoliosis that had increased 21° over four years and was causing her significant pain. Pre-operative images showed the curvature was rigid. The surgical plan was to perform segmental spinal instrumentation from T3 to L1, posterior spinal fusion from T3 to L2, and spinal osteotomies from T4 to T9 to correct the rigid curvature. Post-operatively, a 43° correction was achieved, reducing the curvature to 27°, and the patient was able to resume her normal activities with no restrictions after one year.
Case Review #C: Adolescent Idiopathic ScoliosisRobert Pashman
A 14 year old female presented with Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis with a Thoracolumbar Curve. She was treated with an anterior throaco-abdominal approach.
Case Review #19: 40 year old Male with Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis with Flatba...Robert Pashman
A 40 year old male presented after scoliosis surgery at age 14. He presented with Flatback Syndrome and increasing low back pain and required revision surgery.
Case Review #13: 13 year old female softball player with Adolescent Idiopathi...Robert Pashman
A 13 year old female softball player presented with Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis. The degree of her scoliosis curve progressed to 48 degrees and she required a spinal fusion.
Case Review #28: Patient with Lumbar Scoliosis status post surgery with Harr...Robert Pashman
A 37 year old female presented status post posterior spinal fusion for Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis. She had Harrington Rods and the lumbar curve continued to progress, requiring surgical intervention.
Case Review #15: 13 year old female with Profressive Adolescent Idiopathic Sc...Robert Pashman
A 13 year old female presented with thoracic and lumbar pain from Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis. The patient had a significant rib hump due to the spinal curvature. She was treated with a posterior spinal fusion.
Allopurinol, a uric acid synthesis inhibitor acts by inhibiting Xanthine oxidase competitively as well as non- competitively, Whereas Oxypurinol is a non-competitive inhibitor of xanthine oxidase.
Nano-gold for Cancer Therapy chemistry investigatory projectSIVAVINAYAKPK
chemistry investigatory project
The development of nanogold-based cancer therapy could revolutionize oncology by providing a more targeted, less invasive treatment option. This project contributes to the growing body of research aimed at harnessing nanotechnology for medical applications, paving the way for future clinical trials and potential commercial applications.
Cancer remains one of the leading causes of death worldwide, prompting the need for innovative treatment methods. Nanotechnology offers promising new approaches, including the use of gold nanoparticles (nanogold) for targeted cancer therapy. Nanogold particles possess unique physical and chemical properties that make them suitable for drug delivery, imaging, and photothermal therapy.
Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis - Pathogenesis , Clinical Features & Manage...Jim Jacob Roy
In this presentation , SBP ( spontaneous bacterial peritonitis ) , which is a common complication in patients with cirrhosis and ascites is described in detail.
The reference for this presentation is Sleisenger and Fordtran's Gastrointestinal and Liver Disease Textbook ( 11th edition ).
Nutritional deficiency Disorder are problems in india.
It is very important to learn about Indian child's nutritional parameters as well the Disease related to alteration in their Nutrition.
Selective alpha1 blockers are Prazosin, Terazosin, Doxazosin, Tamsulosin and Silodosin majorly used to treat BPH, also hypertension, PTSD, Raynaud's phenomenon, CHF
As the world population is aging, Health tourism has become vitally important and will be increased day by day. Because
of the availability of quality health services and more favorable prices as well as to shorten the waiting list for medical
services regionally and internationally. There are some aspects of managing and doing marketing activities in order for
medical tourism to be feasible, in a region called as clustering in a region with main stakeholders groups includes Health
providers, Tourism cluster, etc. There are some related and affecting factors to be considered for the feasibility of medical
tourism within this study such as competitiveness, clustering, Entrepreneurship, SMEs. One of the growth phenomenon
is Health tourism in the city of Izmir and Turkey. The model of five competitive forces of Porter and The Diamond model
that is an economical model that shows the four main factors that affect the competitiveness of a nation and its industries
in this study. The short literature of medical tourism and regional clustering have been mentioned.
- Video recording of this lecture in English language: https://youtu.be/RvdYsTzgQq8
- Video recording of this lecture in Arabic language: https://youtu.be/ECILGWtgZko
- Link to download the book free: https://nephrotube.blogspot.com/p/nephrotube-nephrology-books.html
- Link to NephroTube website: www.NephroTube.com
- Link to NephroTube social media accounts: https://nephrotube.blogspot.com/p/join-nephrotube-on-social-media.html
Storyboard on Acne-Innovative Learning-M. pharm. (2nd sem.) CosmeticsMuskanShingari
Acne is a common skin condition that occurs when hair follicles become clogged with oil and dead skin cells. It typically manifests as pimples, blackheads, or whiteheads, often on the face, chest, shoulders, or back. Acne can range from mild to severe and may cause emotional distress and scarring in some cases.
**Causes:**
1. **Excess Oil Production:** Hormonal changes during adolescence or certain times in adulthood can increase sebum (oil) production, leading to clogged pores.
2. **Clogged Pores:** When dead skin cells and oil block hair follicles, bacteria (usually Propionibacterium acnes) can thrive, causing inflammation and acne lesions.
3. **Hormonal Factors:** Fluctuations in hormone levels, such as during puberty, menstrual cycles, pregnancy, or certain medical conditions, can contribute to acne.
4. **Genetics:** A family history of acne can increase the likelihood of developing the condition.
**Types of Acne:**
- **Whiteheads:** Closed plugged pores.
- **Blackheads:** Open plugged pores with a dark surface.
- **Papules:** Small red, tender bumps.
- **Pustules:** Pimples with pus at their tips.
- **Nodules:** Large, solid, painful lumps beneath the surface.
- **Cysts:** Painful, pus-filled lumps beneath the surface that can cause scarring.
**Treatment:**
Treatment depends on the severity and type of acne but may include:
- **Topical Treatments:** Such as benzoyl peroxide, salicylic acid, or retinoids to reduce bacteria and unclog pores.
- **Oral Medications:** Antibiotics or oral contraceptives for hormonal acne.
- **Procedures:** Such as chemical peels, extraction of comedones, or light therapy for more severe cases.
**Prevention and Management:**
- **Cleanse:** Regularly wash skin with a gentle cleanser.
- **Moisturize:** Use non-comedogenic moisturizers to keep skin hydrated without clogging pores.
- **Avoid Irritants:** Such as harsh cosmetics or excessive scrubbing.
- **Sun Protection:** Use sunscreen to prevent exacerbation of acne scars and inflammation.
Acne treatment can take time, and consistency in skincare routines and treatments is crucial. Consulting a dermatologist can help tailor a treatment plan that suits individual needs and reduces the risk of scarring or long-term skin damage.
Demystifying Fallopian Tube Blockage- Grading the Differences and Implication...
Case Review #11: Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis
1. Case Review:
Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis treated
with a spinal fusion from
T2 to Pelvis
70°
Robert S Pashman, MD
Scoliosis and Spinal Deformity Surgery
www.eSpine.com
2. Patient History
60-year-old female.
Adult Idiopathic Scoliosis, 50+ degree curvature.
Status post anterior interbody fusion at L4-5 and L5-S1.
The patient has significant thoracic kyphosis and
thoracolumbar kyphosis. She reports increased pain
over this area.
The patient has significant left lumbar fullness. She is
decompensated to the left.
The patient is losing height.
Intermittent radiculopathy
3. Pre-op X-rays
She has a severe kyphoscoliosis
with a 70° thoracolumbar curve.
It is a fixed deformity including
frontal and sagittal plane
70° decompensation.
4. Indications for Surgery
1. Adult idiopathic scoliosis, thoracolumbar curve greater
than 70 degrees.
2. Fixed lumbosacral kyphosis.
3. Degeneration obliquity.
4. Thoracic kyphosis due to kyphoscoliosis.
5. Severe low back pain, leg pain due to the above
diagnoses with lateral recess stenosis, L1-2 to L5-S1,
due to curvature.
6. Failed conservative therapy.
7. Status post anterior abdominal retroperitoneal fusion, L4-
5, L5-S1
5. Surgical Strategy
1. Segmental spinal instrumentation, T2 to sacral pelvis. This is
a 16- level fusion using Cotrel-Dubousset Legacy 5.5
stainless steel screw rod construct with pelvic fixation.
2. Sacropelvic fixation.
3. Posterior spinal fusion, T2 to the pelvis, using locally
harvested autogenous bone as well as RHBMP.
4. Spinal osteotomy for mobilization of rigid kyphoscoliosis,
including Smith-Peterson osteotomies, T4 to L3, with bilateral
facet removal and interlaminar decompression. This is an 11-
level osteotomy.
5. Interlaminar decompression, T1 to L5-S1 bilaterally.
6. Interlaminar decompression for stenosis using Loup
magnification.
7. Intraoperative motor evoked potentials and somatosensory
evoked potentials.
8. Intraoperative fluoroscopy.
6. Post-Op Films
At 7 months post-op the
patient is doing very
well. No specific pain
but she has some
fatigue which is normal.
38°
7. Pre-Op/Post-op
Comparison
The patient’s curvature
was reduced by 84%
70° 38°