J
John A. Jane
Researcher at University of Virginia Health System
Publications - 461
Citations - 32175
John A. Jane is an academic researcher from University of Virginia Health System. The author has contributed to research in topics: Transsphenoidal surgery & Glasgow Coma Scale. The author has an hindex of 84, co-authored 451 publications receiving 30420 citations. Previous affiliations of John A. Jane include University of Toronto & University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The International Cooperative Study on the Timing of Aneurysm Surgery. Part 1 Overall management results
TL;DR: The International Cooperative Study on the Timing of Aneurysm Surgery evaluated the results of surgical and medical management in 3521 patients between December, 1980, and July, 1983.
Journal ArticleDOI
The role of secondary brain injury in determining outcome from severe head injury.
Randall M. Chesnut,Lawrence F. Marshall,Melville R. Klauber,Barbara A. Blunt,Nevan Baldwin,Howard M. Eisenberg,John A. Jane,Anthony Marmarou,Mary A. Foulkes +8 more
TL;DR: The increased morbidity and mortality related to severe trauma to an extracranial organ system appeared primarily attributable to associated hypotension, and improvements in trauma care delivery over the past decade have not markedly altered the adverse influence of hypotension.
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A new classification of head injury based on computerized tomography
Lawrence F. Marshall,Sharon Bowers Marshall,Melville R. Klauber,Marjan van Berkum Clark,Howard M. Eisenberg,John A. Jane,Thomas G. Luerssen,Anthony Marmarou,Mary A. Foulkes +8 more
TL;DR: A new classification of head injury based primarily on information gleaned from the initial computerized tomography (CT) scan is described, which utilizes the status of the mesencephalic cisterns, the degree of midline shift in millimeters, and the presence or absence of one or more surgical masses.
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The International Cooperative Study on the Timing of Aneurysm Surgery. Part 2: Surgical results.
TL;DR: Overall, early surgery was neither more hazardous nor beneficial than delayed surgery, and the postoperative risk following early surgery is equivalent to the risk of rebleeding and vasospasm in patients waiting for delayed surgery.
Journal ArticleDOI
Impact of ICP instability and hypotension on outcome in patients with severe head trauma
Anthony Marmarou,Randy L. Anderson,John D. Ward,Sung C. Choi,Harold F. Young,Howard M. Eisenberg,Mary A. Foulkes,Lawrence F. Marshall,John A. Jane +8 more
TL;DR: The relationship between raised intracranial pressure (ICP), hypotension, and outcome from severe head injury is described and a stepwise ordinal logistic regression was used to determine outcome.