Brain Surgery
Brain Surgery at Hunter Neurosurgery, Newcastle
Some of the common conditions and procedures:
- Hydrocephalus
- Cranial Surgery
- Trauma
- Paediatric Neurosurgery
- Pituitary Tumours
- Neuroendoscopy
- Vascular Neurosurgery
- Trigeminal Neuralgia
- Carotid stenosis – narrowing of the arteries supplying the brain, possible leading to stroke or a warning ‘TIA’
- Vascular malformations – which can bleed. Some are congenital (meaning we are born with them), and some develop later in life
- Brain tumours – both benign (often curable with surgery) and malignant (sadly often incurable, but sometimes controllable with surgery)
- Acoustic neuromas – a kind of tumour at the base of the brain, related to the hearing nerves
- Trigeminal neuralgia – terrible ‘spasms’ of facial pain that are often curable with surgery
- Hemifacial spasm – involuntary twitching on one side of the face – often curable with surgery
- Hydrocephalus – a build up of fluid in the brain – sometimes treatable with an endoscope (a surgical camera) or with a shunt (to divert the fluid)
- Head injury – blood clots (haematomas) can develop after a head injury and some need to be removed with surgery
A neurosurgeon has unique training to be able to treat many of these potentially life altering, or life threatening, problems. Dr Spittaler welcomes all new enquiries and referrals.