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Ed Note: The following is a press release
issued by the Mayfield Clinic
September 22, 2011 -
NEW MAYFIELD
CHIARI CENTER ANSWERS REGIONAL NEED
FOR EXPERT DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT OF
CHALLENGING CONDITION
CINCINNATI --
Mayfield Clinic
officials today announced the launch of the
Mayfield Chiari Center,
which will offer expert diagnosis and treatment of a neurological condition
that is often misunderstood and misdiagnosed and that often goes untreated.
The Mayfield Chiari Center is affiliated with the Mayfield Spine Institute.
John M. Tew, Jr., MD,
a Mayfield Clinic neurosurgeon, is a leader of the Chiari Center. Dr. Tew is
a nationally recognized expert in the treatment of Chiari malformation, a
condition in which a portion of the brain pushes through the opening at the
base of the skull, causing an array of symptoms that range from mild to
severe. Symptoms can include headaches, fatigue, difficulty swallowing,
muscle weakness and balance problems.
"The Mayfield Clinic is proud to announce
the formation of a new Chiari Center," said
Ronald E. Warnick, MD,
Chairman of the Mayfield Clinic. "Patients with Chiari come to Mayfield from
all over the United States, and every year our team of experts evaluates and
treats more patients with Chiari than the year before. We are now dedicating
additional resources and talent in a focused, concerted effort so that more
patients can benefit from this multidisciplinary approach to a complex
disease."
The Mayfield Chiari Center team includes
neurosurgeons, neuroradiologists, and a nurse care coordinator. The team
will be assisted by consulting specialists in neuropsychology, rheumatology,
spine deformity, headache disorders, and sleep disorders.
The Chiari Center's Community Advisory
Board is headed by Ray D'Alonzo, a former Chiari patient and the author of
Contents Under Pressure: One Man’s Triumph Over Chiari Syndrome. Mr.
D'Alonzo is a retired Procter & Gamble executive.
Chiari (pronounced kee-AR-ee) malformation
is named after Hans Chiari, an Austrian pathologist who first described it
in the late 19th century. It affects one in every 1,000 to 1,200 individuals
and is classified as Chiari I, II, III or IV. Chiari I, the least severe
form, is also the most common.
Chiari I malformation is a disorder in
which the bony space enclosing the lower part of the brain (the cerebellum)
is smaller than normal, causing two small portions of the cerebellum (the
cerebellar tonsils) to migrate into the spinal canal. If the cerebellar
tonsils obstruct the opening of the skull that connects the brain to the
spinal cord, the flow of cerebrospinal fluid can be blocked. Instead of
moving in an easy, pulsating movement through this opening, the fluid can
begin to force its way through -– like a water hammer -– pushing the
cerebellar tonsils down even farther and exerting pressure on the lower stem
of the brain.
Symptoms can appear at birth or late in
life. The first symptom, which is often headache, emerges once the blockage
is sufficiently severe. A Chiari I malformation often goes undiagnosed until
adulthood, because symptoms are delayed. Confusing or ambiguous symptoms are
frequently misinterpreted.
"Some of our most satisfying work involves
treating people with Chiari malformation," Dr. Tew said. "Patients come to
us in search of someone who will listen. Often they have sought help from
one doctor after another, trying to find someone who will understand their
problem and help them find a solution.
"Some have been told they have migraines or
fibromyalgia," Dr. Tew continued. "Some have been told their discomfort is
'all in their head.' It is a true privilege to be able to help these
patients, who have sought relief from their pain for so long."
Each year the Mayfield Clinic evaluates
more than 90 people affected by Chiari malformation. Some patients require
monitoring only, but most need decompression surgery to enlarge the bony
opening, to restore normal fluid circulation around the brain, and to
prevent a syrinx, a cyst that results from the accumulation of cerebrospinal
fluid in the spinal canal. (This condition, called syringomyelia, can damage
the spinal cord, thereby causing its own cascade of neurological problems.)
Mayfield works closely with Cincinnati
Children's Hospital Medical Center, one of the most highly regarded
pediatric hospitals in the world. Adult and adolescent Chiari I cases are
treated by Mayfield neurosurgeons; infants and children younger than 13 are
referred to Cincinnati Children's.
* * *
The Mayfield Clinic is recognized as one of
the nation's leading physician organizations for clinical care, education,
and research of the spine and brain. Supported by 21 neurosurgeons, six
neurointensivists, an interventional radiologist, and a pain specialist, the
Clinic treats 20,000 patients from 35 states and 13 countries in a typical
year. Mayfield's physicians have pioneered surgical procedures and
instrumentation that have revolutionized the medical art of neurosurgery for
brain tumors and neurovascular diseases and disorders.
CONTACT: Cindy
Starr
cstarr@mayfieldclinic.com
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