Neurosurgery
Nationally Recognized Expertise in Neurosurgery
Loyola Medicine has one of the most comprehensive and advanced neurosurgery departments in the nation.
We take a multidisciplinary approach to your care and provide support services for patients and families. As an academic medical center, Loyola provides compassionate, exceptional care to patients and trains future leaders in neurology and neurosurgery.
Loyola’s expert neurosurgeons are highly skilled in the surgical treatment of a wide range of neurologic conditions. Through collaboration with subspecialists such as neurologists, otolaryngologists, pediatric surgeons and radiation oncologists, your Loyola healthcare team will provide you with an individualized treatment plan to address your specific condition using the most advanced techniques and technology available.
Our neurosurgeons take on the most challenging cases because of their vast experience and a reputation for multidisciplinary partnership. Our highly experienced team performs more than 1,000 cranial surgeries and collaborates on approximately 150 cranial-base operations per year, which places Loyola among the top five centers in the United States.
Loyola’s neurosurgeons also play a critical role in trauma and critical care surgeries and provide treatment for patients at any of Loyola Medicine's hospitals and Stroger Hospital of Cook County.
Loyola provides rapid transfer for patients suffering from urgent, life-threatening conditions, such as brain hemorrhage or stroke. Loyola University Medical Center's 13-bed neuro intensive care unit is a leading-edge facility that is well-equipped to treat critically ill patients.
What Conditions are Treated with Neurosurgery?
Loyola’s highly experienced neurosurgeons are leaders in their field, offering the most advanced treatment options to patients. Loyola’s expert surgeons are skilled in treating a wide range of neurosurgical disorders, including:
- Brain, skull and spinal cord tumors — Loyola’s neurosurgeons are highly skilled in treating brain, skull and spinal cord tumors and have experience with the latest technology. Treatment options may include radiation therapy, surgery and medications such as corticosteroids to reduce swelling. Loyola’s neurosurgeons collaborate with radiation oncologists as part of our leading-edge stereotactic radiosurgery program. Minimally invasive surgery is also an option for some types of tumors.
- Cerebrovascular disorders — Loyola is highly rated for its stroke prevention and treatment programs and treats a wide variety of other cerebrovascular diseases. These blood vessel conditions can be successfully treated with surgery using diagnostic tools such as intraoperative angiography, which helps neurosurgeons visualize the blood vessels at microscopic levels during surgery. Loyola offers the advantage of having a team of surgeons who have experience in cerebrovascular disease available 24 hours a day, year-round to provide treatment for our patients.
- Cranial base tumors — Loyola’s Center for Cranial Base Surgery is nationally recognized for success in treating extensive tumors of the head, neck and brain. Our neurosurgeons and otolaryngologists (ear, nose and throat doctors) use a multidisciplinary approach to skull base surgery to ensure a safe and complete removal of benign (noncancerous) and malignant (cancerous) tumors and lesions of the undersurface of the brain. We take on treatment cases that many other medical centers might consider inoperable.
- Peripheral nerve disorders – Loyola Medicine’s Peripheral Nerve Center takes a comprehensive, multidisciplinary approach to peripheral nerve injuries and disorders, such as compressive neuropathies, nerve injuries and nerve tumors. These conditions may be due to nerve damage, trauma, infection, degeneration, structural defects, tumors, autoimmune disorders or disruption of blood flow. Loyola offers a wide range of therapeutic, medical and surgical treatment options.
- Pituitary tumors — Loyola’s neurosurgeons, otolaryngologists and cranial base tumor specialists will coordinate a medical plan of action to remove your pituitary tumor. With endoscopic cranial base surgery or endonasal endoscopy, your highly skilled surgeons will access and remove your tumor through your nasal passage. This leading-edge technology allows your surgeons access to the tumor without harming other important nearby structures, such as the brain, optic nerve or carotid arteries.
- Skull disorders — Loyola’s surgeons are highly skilled in correcting bone and cartilage malformations, such as with cleft and palate conditions.
- Spinal cord disorders — Loyola’s team treats a wide variety of spinal cord disorders, including tumors, infections (such as meningitis and polio), inflammatory diseases, autoimmune conditions, spina bifida and degenerative diseases such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) or spinal muscular atrophy.
- Vertebral column disorders — Loyola’s doctors have vast experience in treating herniated disks, stenosis, ankylosing spondylitis and spine curvature disorders such as lordosis, kyphosis and scoliosis.
Neurosurgery Procedures Performed at Loyola
All of Loyola’s neurosurgeons are faculty members at the Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine and are well-known thought leaders in education and research. Loyola offers the most advanced surgical techniques to adults and children including:
- Brain mapping surgery — Loyola’s doctors are experienced in the use of brain mapping surgery to develop a highly refined brain map for patients who have tumors on or near the brain’s most important functional areas. Brain mapping surgery is used to treat several conditions, including brain tumors, cerebral aneurysms, epilepsy, glaucoma, optic nerve atrophy and vision problems.
- Carotid artery surgery — The carotid arteries provide blood to the brain. When a patient’s carotid arteries have 70% blockage (carotid stenosis) or more, there is an increased risk of stroke. To prevent this, a carotid endarterectomy often is performed to remove plaque blocking the artery. With carotid artery surgery, an incision is made in the carotid artery to access the plaque-heavy artery. Your surgeon may also use a patch to enlarge the artery, which will allow more blood to flow through.
- Cranial base surgery — Loyola’s Center for Cranial Base Surgery is nationally recognized for success in treating extensive tumors of the head, neck and brain. Our neurosurgeons and otolaryngologists (ear, nose and throat doctors) use a multidisciplinary approach to skull base surgery to ensure a safe and complete removal of benign (noncancerous) and malignant (cancerous) tumors and lesions of the undersurface of the brain. We take on treatment cases that many other medical centers might consider inoperable.
- Deep brain stimulation (DBS) — Loyola’s neurosurgeons and neurologists are widely known for their expertise in deep brain stimulation, an innovative surgical treatment in which a “brain pacemaker” is implanted to alleviate the symptoms of treatment-resistant movement disorders such as Parkinson’s disease. It uses electrical impulses to interrupt abnormal signals. It is not a cure, but it can improve a patient’s quality of life through symptom management.
- Kyphoplasty — Kyphoplasty treats vertebral compression fractures of the spine in patients with osteoporosis and other brittle bone conditions. A balloon-tipped catheter is inserted into the fracture and inflated to restore the height and shape. Then, a medical cement is injected into the cavity to provide stability and pain relief. This procedure can reduce the risk of subsequent fractures by improving the angle, height and stability of the spine.
- Minimally invasive computer-assisted spinal fusion — Patients heal faster and with less pain using this approach to correct degenerative disk disorders, herniated or ruptured disks, spinal stenosis or scoliosis. Computer-assisted X-ray technology guides the surgeons during placement of medical screws and rods.
- Neuro-endovascular procedures — Neurosurgeons and radiologists collaborate to treat disorders affecting the brain’s blood supply (such as carotid occlusion, among other disorders) without surgery.
- Pediatric neurosurgery — Loyola’s highly skilled pediatric neurosurgeons offer a complete range of integrated services to treat conditions in children that require neurosurgery, such as brain disorders and spinal disorders. We also perform minimally invasive surgery for pediatric brain tumors, which allows pediatric patients to recover with less pain and time in the hospital.
- Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) — With vagus nerve stimulation (VNS), a medical device much like a pacemaker is implanted in the chest and delivers regular electrical impulses to the vagus nerve, which helps to ease epileptic seizures.
Your Loyola doctor will explore a range of options for your particular case, presenting you with a treatment approach that reflects the expertise of our multidisciplinary physician team. Our goal is to improve your quality of life through the most effective and least invasive treatments possible.
Expertise in Unique Neurosurgical Techniques
In addition to Loyola’s vast array of treatment options for neurosurgical disorders, Loyola is also at the forefront of imaging for brain surgery, as well as radiation therapy for brain, skill and spinal cord tumors. Loyola takes pride in these specialized services:
- Center for Cranial Base Surgery — Loyola is nationally recognized for success in treating extensive tumors of the head, neck and brain. The Center for Cranial Base Surgery's neurosurgeons and otolaryngologists (ear, nose and throat doctors) use a multidisciplinary approach to skull base surgery to ensure a safe and complete removal of benign (noncancerous) and malignant (cancerous) tumors and lesions of the undersurface of the brain. We take on treatment cases that many other medical centers might consider inoperable.
- Computer-assisted brain surgery — Loyola’s surgeons use imaging technology such as MRI, CT and PET scans to provide the most precise treatment possible. This system allows your Loyola surgeon to visualize the area of the brain requiring treatment while avoiding functional areas of the brain, making advanced techniques such as deep brain stimulation (DBS) for epilepsy and awake brain surgery for brain tumors possible. This technology can also be used to achieve highly targeted radiation therapy for brain tumors, AVMs and other lesions.
- Stereotactic radiotherapy (SBRT) — With stereotactic radiotherapy (SBRT), high doses of radiation target small, well-defined and cancerous tumors with submillimeter accuracy. This treatment eliminates the abnormal mass with minimal damage to surrounding healthy tissue.
Advanced Research to Improve Neurological Surgery
Loyola’s expert neurological surgery program is actively pursuing new research with a focus on patient-centered outcomes including studies on:
- Calcium regulation of neoplastic cell growth
- Cranial base team approach to giant lesions of the cranial base
- Frameless stereotactic applications to cranial base surgery
- Gene therapy for brain tumors
- High-dose chemotherapy for oligodendrogliomas
- Innovative cranial reconstruction techniques
- Multimodality chemotherapy and hormonal therapy for residual/unresectable meningiomas (tumors)
- Thalamic stimulation for movement disorders
As an academic medical center, Loyola is dedicated to improving future treatments by conducting research on new diagnostics and treatments. Loyola’s patients benefit from research discoveries made here.
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Our Locations
Office
Loyola Medicine Burr Ridge
6800 N Frontage Rd
Burr Ridge, IL 60527
Phone: (888)584-7888
Office
Loyola University Medical Center
2160 S First Ave
Maywood, IL 60153
Phone: (888)584-7888