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Ioannis P. Fouyas

Researcher at Western General Hospital

Publications -  26
Citations -  878

Ioannis P. Fouyas is an academic researcher from Western General Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Myelopathy & Diabetes mellitus. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 25 publications receiving 716 citations. Previous affiliations of Ioannis P. Fouyas include NHS Lothian & University of Edinburgh.

Papers
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Cochrane review on the role of surgery in cervical spondylotic radiculomyelopathy.

TL;DR: The data from the reviewed trials were inadequate to provide reliable conclusions on the balance of risk and benefit from cervical spine surgery for spondylotic radiculopathy or myelopathy.
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Postoperative spinal epidural hematoma (SEH): incidence, risk factors, onset, and management.

TL;DR: It is suggested that earlier surgical intervention may result in greater neurological recovery after spinal surgery, and alcohol consumption greater than 10 units a week, multilevel procedure, and previous spinal surgery were identified as risk factors for developing symptomatic SEH.
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Influence of Intracerebral Hemorrhage Location on Incidence, Characteristics, and Outcome Population-Based Study

Neshika Samarasekera, +162 more
- 01 Feb 2015 - 
TL;DR: The baseline characteristics and outcome of lobar ICH differ from other locations, and this population-based, prospective inception cohort study of ICH identified and validated ICH diagnoses in 2010 to 2011 in an adult population of 695 335.
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Surgery for cervical radiculopathy or myelopathy

TL;DR: Whether surgical treatment of cervical radiculopathy or myelopathy is associated with improved outcome, compared with conservative management and timing of surgery (immediate or delayed pending persistence/progression of relevant symptoms and signs) has an impact on outcome is investigated.
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Efficacy, complications and cost of surgical interventions for idiopathic intracranial hypertension: a systematic review of the literature.

TL;DR: No surgical modality proved to be clearly superior to any other in IIH management, however, in certain contexts, a given approach appears more justified and a treatment algorithm has been formulated, based on the extracted evidence.