Literature DB >> 33819952

Commentary on "History of Spinal Neurosurgery and Spine Societies".

Mohamed Fawzy Khattab1, Anouar Bourghli2.   

Abstract

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 33819952      PMCID: PMC8021811          DOI: 10.14245/ns.2142208.104

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurospine        ISSN: 2586-6591


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To the editor We have read with great interest the article by Zileli et al. [1], which reported the History of Spinal Neurosurgery and Spine Societies. We appreciate the author’s effort to highlight the history of spine societies worldwide. However, we have great concerns regarding the section that was written about Egypt as it contains several inaccurate and misleading statements. It is true that Egypt is a major contributing country in Africa and the Middle East in regards to spine surgery history and early interventions. Nevertheless, spine practice in Egypt is not mostly done by neurosurgeons as stated in the study. In fact, it has been performed equally by neurosurgeons and orthopedic surgeons side by side during the past decades, similarly to the majority of the countries in the current era [2], and the role of orthopedic surgeons in spine performance cannot be overlooked and reduced to deformity correction surgeries as they also perform degenerative, traumatic and tumor pathologies including in the cervical spine which is an area that has been traditionally linked to neurosurgery in many countries in the past. A recent paper on the impact of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic on spine surgeons worldwide used a specific questionnaire including demographic information that was submitted to the surgeons, and showed that the majority of participants were spine surgeons from Egypt with detailed data revealing a higher number of orthopedic surgeons compared to neurosurgeons [3]. Apart from the spine chapter in the Egyptian orthopedic Association and the spine chapter in the Egyptian society of neurological surgeons, Egypt has two big spine societies and a simple search on Google engine with the following keywords “Egypt,” “Spine,” “Scoliosis,” “Society” would reveal them. The Egyptian spine Association (ESA), as it was mentioned in the study, that was founded in 2011 by orthopedic and neurosurgery leaders in Egypt, it has been having regular scientific activities [4] and annual meetings in collaboration with international societies since 2012 until the last one in 2020 in the hybrid form given the COVID-19 pandemic, with no interruption in its activities contrary to what was mentioned in the study, in fact the meetings calendar on the ESA website clearly demonstrate the aforementioned statement (http://esa.org.eg/meetings_calendar.asp). The official journal of ESA is the Egyptian Spine Journal. The second society is the Egyptian Scoliosis Society which was established in 2002, almost 20 years ago, by Prof. Youssry El Hawary, past head of the orthopedic department in Cairo University, it includes over 230 members and holds regular annual meetings under the name “Scoliosis Week” which includes a scientific program specifically dedicated to spine deformities ending with live surgery demonstrations performed by renowned surgeons (https://www.facebook.com/Egyspine/). Lastly, and besides the previously mentioned societies, the Egyptian Spine Study Group was founded in 2017 by Dr Mohamed Khattab. It is a spine dedicated group that has the aim to foster spinal education and research from junior to senior level of practice. With over 250 members, it organizes regular journal clubs and webinars providing up-to-date spinal knowledge and guidelines (https://egyssg.hpgportal.com). We again commend the author’s effort in presenting this interesting study but in our view, some information were inaccurate and misleading giving a wrong and unfair picture about the structure, organization and development of spine surgery in a country like Egypt.
  4 in total

1.  Does specialty matter? A survey on 176 Italian neurosurgeons and orthopedic spine surgeons confirms similar competency for common spinal conditions and supports multidisciplinary teams in comprehensive and complex spinal care.

Authors:  Matteo Pejrona; Gabriele Ristori; Jorge Hugo Villafañe; Fabrizio Ernesto Pregliasco; Pedro Berjano
Journal:  Spine J       Date:  2017-10-12       Impact factor: 4.166

2.  The short-term impact of COVID-19 pandemic on spine surgeons: a cross-sectional global study.

Authors:  Mohamed Fawzy Khattab; Tareq M A Kannan; Ahmed Morsi; Qussay Al-Sabbagh; Fadi Hadidi; Mohammed Qussay Al-Sabbagh; Muzahem M Taha; Anouar Bourghli; Ibrahim Obeid
Journal:  Eur Spine J       Date:  2020-06-26       Impact factor: 3.134

3.  History of Spinal Neurosurgery and Spine Societies.

Authors:  Mehmet Zileli; Salman Sharif; Maurizio Fornari; Premenand Ramani; Fengzeng Jian; Richard Fessler; Se-Hoon Kim; Toshihiro Takami; Nobuyuki Shimokawa; Gilbert Dechambenoit; Mahmood Qureshi; Nikolay Konovalov; Marcos Masini; Enrique Osorio-Fonseca; José António Soriano Sanchez; Abdul Hafid Bajamal; Jutty Parthiban; Ibet Marie Sih; Óscar Luis Alves; Joachim Oertel; Lukas Rasulic; Francesco Costa; Wilco C Peul; Krishna Sharma; Mohamed Mohi Eldin; Nasiru Jinjiri Ismail; Ignatius Ngene Esene; Mohammad Hossain; Svetoslav Kalevski; Oliver N Hausmann; Onur Yaman; Shahswar Arif; Zarina Brady
Journal:  Neurospine       Date:  2020-12-31
  4 in total

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