Recent Progress in Neurosurgery and Neuroanatomy Research

A special issue of Anatomia (ISSN 2813-0545).

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (25 April 2025) | Viewed by 1640

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Guest Editor
Department of Anatomy, University of Opole, ul. Oleska 48, 45-052 Opole, Poland
Interests: neurodegeneration surgery; cardiovascular system; cardiology; neurology; macrophage; autoimmunity; multiple sclerosis; neurological diseases; inflammation
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Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Over the last two decades, significant progress in the treatment of neurological pathologies has been observed, particularly regarding endovascular arterial and venous interventions, in addition to other neurosurgical procedures. This progress would not be possible without simultaneous research in the field of neuroanatomy. All invasive treatments within the central nervous system need extensive anatomical knowledge, especially regarding anatomical variability.

I invite authors who investigate neuroanatomical problems that could be applied in the clinical setting to submit their papers to this Special Issue of the journal Anatomy. Neuroimaging and clinical studies are especially welcome. This Special Issue will accept both original research articles and reviews. Submission of case studies describing relevant anatomical problems is also encouraged.

Dr. Marian Simka
Guest Editor

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Keywords

  • cerebral arteries
  • cerebral veins
  • cerebrospinal fluid
  • neurovascular interventions
  • glymphatic system

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Published Papers (1 paper)

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Review

32 pages, 8260 KiB  
Review
Morphological Research Directions at Neuroscience-Related Institutes of the German Max Planck Society, 1948–2002
by Frank W. Stahnisch
Anatomia 2024, 3(4), 301-332; https://doi.org/10.3390/anatomia3040024 - 18 Dec 2024
Viewed by 944
Abstract
This article explores the continuation of the pathological morphology research program at neuroscience-related institutes from the Kaiser Wilhelm Society after World War II. It covers the research tradition in the brain sciences, which can be described by an emphasis on gross anatomy, the [...] Read more.
This article explores the continuation of the pathological morphology research program at neuroscience-related institutes from the Kaiser Wilhelm Society after World War II. It covers the research tradition in the brain sciences, which can be described by an emphasis on gross anatomy, the functional implications of morphological substrates, and the analysis of neurohistological research paths of the human brain in comparative contexts. To enable examination of the assimilation processes of the Kaiser Wilhelm Society’s legacy, the decisions and developments of the newly created Max Planck Society in Germany and its early brain science facilities will be assessed for the time period from 1948 to 2002. Pertaining to these overall developments in the Max Planck Society, a persistence of the “morphological paradigm” (microanatomy, pathology, comparative anatomy, etc.) can be identified as lasting until the 1960s. The newer “functional paradigm” (neurophysiology, electroencephalography, cybernetics, and behavioral studies) only became more visible when the first generations of the scientific leaders left their positions in this national research society. It is of note that many directors and scientific members, including Detlev Ploog (1920–2005), Dieter Lux (1924–1995), Georg W. Kreutzberg (1932–2019), Otto Detlev Creutzfeldt (1927–1992), Hans Thönen (1928–2012), Manfred Eigen (1927–2019), Erwin Neher (b. 1944), Hartmut Wekerle (b. 1944), Albert Hertz (1921–2018), Bert Sakmann (b. 1942), and Wolf Singer (b. 1943) were part of the American Neuroscience Research Program as associates, members, conference chairs, or trainees. Likewise, they joined the Society for Neuroscience early on, after it had emerged from the Neuroscience Research Program’s steering committee in 1969. This article seeks to clarify the context of the reorganization of the brain research-related Max Planck Institutes during the postwar period after World War II. Its trajectory includes the location of the institutes, their previous involvement in applied research, and personal continuities in scientific leadership positions, contributing to debates during the first decades of the Max Planck Society. The lens of pathological brain research emerges here as an important viewpoint to aid the understanding of the continued impact and concerns over the dominant morphological approaches in postwar West German neurology and psychiatry. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Progress in Neurosurgery and Neuroanatomy Research)
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