Archive for the ‘LITT’ Category

Revolutionary Laser Surgery Technique Offers New Hope to Brain Tumor Patients

LITT, brain tumor treatment, news, press release | Posted by visualase July 21st, 2010

Press Release

New Brunswick, NJ – A leading neurosurgeon has performed the nation’s first laser-assisted brain surgery for a specific type of resistant brain tumor using technology so advanced that the patient went home the next day.

Danish_Shabbar_2010_JEShabbar F. Danish, M.D., Director, Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery and Assistant Professor at UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School (RWJMS) and Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital (RWJUH), used the Visualase, Inc., laser-assisted thermal ablation technique to operate on a patient with a recurring brain tumor after two previous surgeries and radiation did not permanently destroy the growth.

The technology is the latest addition to RWJUH and RWJMS’s growing expertise in the division of neuroscience. Dr. Danish specializes in the latest in stereotactic neurosurgery, which involves targeting small areas in the brain with techniques used to treat everything from Parkinson’s disease to brain tumors.

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50 year anniversary of laser timeline includes Visualase!

LITT, brain tumor treatment | Posted by visualase June 1st, 2010

A brief laser timeline includes the use of the Visualase laser (last entry)

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- 1917: Einstein proposes the theory of “stimulated emission,” by which a photon, or light particle, induces an atom to emit an identical photon.

- 1953: American physicist Charles Townes builds forerunner of the laser, a “maser,” for Microwave Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation

- 1957: Gordon Gould, a doctoral student under Townes, coins the term “laser,” theorizing that light could be used to excite atoms into making a coherent beam of light. Later files a patent; legal dispute lasts nearly three decades.

- 1960: First laser, built by Theodore Maiman of Hughes Research Laboratories in California, becomes operational.

- 1961: Laser used for first time in surgery, to destroy retinal tumor.

- 1962: Invention of the semi-conducting diode laser, the mainstay of small commercial lasers today.

- 1969: Laser’s use in telemetry makes headlines. A beam bounced back by a mirror deployed by the Apollo 11 crew measures the distance between Earth and the Moon to within a few yards.

- 1971: Lasers enter the arts, with light shows and the awarding of the Nobel Prize to Dennis Gabor, a British-Hungarian, for holography.

- 1982: First Compact Disc player. First CD to be pressed is “52nd Street” by Billy Joel.

- 1991: First laser surgery to correct short-sightedness. Gulf War sees first use of laser-guided munitions.

- 1996: Toshiba sells first digital versatile disc (DVD) player.

- 2008: French neurosurgeons use fiberoptic laser and keyhole surgery to destroy brain cancer.

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More on Dr. Alexandre Carpentier

Full article:
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/house-and-home/laser-a-timeline-1973907.html

Revolutionary Techniques in Neurosurgery

LITT, brain tumor treatment, news | Posted by visualase April 19th, 2010

In the news – article excerpt

Revolutionary Techniques in Neurosurgery:
A Q&A with Ravish Patwardhan, MD

Ravish Patwardhan, MD

Published Online: April 15, 2010 – 3:03:03 PM (CDT)
Ravish Patwardhan, MD, is the founder and director of the Comprehensive Neurosurgery Network (www.brainandspinecare.com), which “specializes in minimally invasive techniques for treating brain and spine problems.” Patwardhan has more than 12 years of experience in the neurosurgery industry and has published several peer reviewed studies on brain trauma, tumors, epilepsy, and spinal procedures. He is also a frequent speaker on the latest treatments and advances in brain and spinal surgeries.

What are the benefits of the Visualase laser probe technique, and do you believe it will become the standard for brain tumor eradication?

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FDA Grants Marketing Clearance For PhoTex30 Diode Laser System

LITT, press release | Posted by visualase November 14th, 2009

visualase photes 30vHouston, Texas October 6, 2009. The U.S. FDA granted 510(k) clearance (K092197) for the PhoTex30 Diode Laser Series, Model 980nm, 810nm, 940nm. The PhoTex30 Diode Laser Series, distributed by Visualase, Inc. received broad clearance for use in surgical applications requiring ablation and coagulation of soft tissue including general surgery, urology, neurosurgery, and other surgical specialties.

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First case in San Antonio; Dr. Floyd, neurosurgery department, UTHSC

LITT, brain tumor treatment, news, video | Posted by visualase October 15th, 2009

Article Excerpt

New surgical technique uses laser energy to destroy brain tumors

Novel approach is minimally invasive and precise
04:20 PM CDT on Wednesday, October 7, 2009
Wendy Rigby / KENS 5

Perez has had one surgery to remove the tumor, but now the cancer has returned. This time, Dr. John Floyd, a U.T. Health Science Center neurosurgeon, is trying something different.

floyd-san-ant-1

In an operating room at St. Luke’s Baptist Hospital, the doctor secured an anchor in the outside of the skull. Then, using what’s called neuro-navigation for precision, he slid a catheter several inches inside the head. That catheter houses a laser that can zap the cells growing out of control and threatening Perez’ life.

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Visualase at CNS 2009

LITT, brain tumor treatment, news, press release | Posted by visualase August 27th, 2009

Visualase will be holding a seminar for physicians interested in the Visualase technology. Neurosurgeons that have used Visualase will present case studies and will be available for QnA. Please RSVP if you like to attend. There is limited capacity for this event.

Laser brain surgery at MUSC

LITT, brain tumor treatment, news, video | Posted by visualase May 22nd, 2009

brain-cancer-treatment-uscmLester Beck was the first patient to undergo laser brain surgery at MUSC and is just the 30th person in the world to have it done.

Ray Turner, 33, a Medical University of South Carolina neurosurgeon, performed the first laser brain surgery in the hospital’s history, only the 10th performed in the United States and the 30th in the world. “It’s exhilarating,” he said Thursday. “This is what we want to do in medicine, stay on the cutting edge.”

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