N
Nader Sanai
Researcher at Barrow Neurological Institute
Publications - 192
Citations - 14551
Nader Sanai is an academic researcher from Barrow Neurological Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Glioma. The author has an hindex of 48, co-authored 170 publications receiving 12559 citations. Previous affiliations of Nader Sanai include St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center & University of California, San Francisco.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Unique astrocyte ribbon in adult human brain contains neural stem cells but lacks chain migration
Nader Sanai,Anthony D. Tramontin,Alfredo Quiñones-Hinojosa,Nicholas M. Barbaro,Nalin Gupta,Sandeep Kunwar,Michael T. Lawton,Michael W. McDermott,Andrew T. Parsa,José Manuel García Verdugo,Mitchel S. Berger,Arturo Alvarez-Buylla +11 more
TL;DR: A ribbon of SVZ astrocytes lining the lateral ventricles of the adult human brain that proliferate in vivo and behave as multipotent progenitor cells in vitro is described.
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An extent of resection threshold for newly diagnosed glioblastomas.
TL;DR: For patients with newly diagnosed GBMs, aggressive EOR equates to improvement in overall survival, even at the highest levels of resection, and stepwise improvement in survival was evident even in the 95%-100% EOR range.
Journal ArticleDOI
Glioma extent of resection and its impact on patient outcome.
Nader Sanai,Mitchel S. Berger +1 more
TL;DR: Despite persistent limitations in the quality of data, mounting evidence suggests that more extensive surgical resection is associated with longer life expectancy for both low- and high-grade gliomas.
Journal ArticleDOI
Neural stem cells and the origin of gliomas.
TL;DR: It is argued that gliomas arise from neural stem cells and the clinical implications of this concept are discussed.
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Functional Outcome after Language Mapping for Glioma Resection
TL;DR: The composite language maps generated in this study suggest that current models of human language organization insufficiently account for observed language function, and allow most gliomas to be aggressively resected without language deficits.