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Robert F. Keating

Researcher at Children's National Medical Center

Publications -  70
Citations -  1420

Robert F. Keating is an academic researcher from Children's National Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Syringomyelia. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 57 publications receiving 1095 citations. Previous affiliations of Robert F. Keating include Washington University in St. Louis.

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Long-term outcomes of primary craniofacial reconstruction for craniosynostosis: a 12-year experience.

TL;DR: In this experience of contemporary open craniosynostosis surgery, rates of morbidity, mortality, and reoperation were low and support the merits of surgical delay, targeting an age of 6 months or older, and may serve as a more accurate metric of comparison to current minimally invasive techniques for craniOSynostotic repair.
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Parameters of care for craniosynostosis.

Joseph G. McCarthy, +55 more
TL;DR: This is the first multidisciplinary effort to develop parameters of care for craniosynostosis and these parameters were designed to help facilitate the development of educational programs for the patient, families, and health-care professionals and stimulate the creation of a national database and registry.
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CNS germ cell tumor (CNSGCT) of childhood: presentation and delayed diagnosis.

TL;DR: D diagnosis of CNS germ cell tumor is often delayed, and presentation may include movement disorders or mimic psychiatric disease, and MRI interpretation can be challenging and may require serum/CSF markers and biopsy for diagnosis.
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Central nervous system meningiomas in the first two decades of life: a clinicopathological analysis of 87 patients.

TL;DR: Using survival data from this unique patient cohort, the authors found that recurrence-free survival time was significantly related to WHO grade (p = 0.002), but overall survival timewas not significantly linked to any of the potential prognostic factors considered in this study.
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Development of a Pediatric Neurocritical Care Service

TL;DR: The Pediatric Neurocritical Care service was asked to assist in managing almost one-quarter of the total patient census in an urban, tertiary-care, teaching hospital and the number of consults is comparable to those observed in early studies in adult NCCM team development but the admission diagnoses are distinct.