Laszlo Bognar Author

George Jallo, M.D. George I Jallo, M.D. received his medical degree from the University of Virginia, 1991. He then completed his residency at New York University Medical Center-Bellevue Hospital in New York City in 1998. He completed advanced fellowship training in Pediatric Neurosurgery under the tutelage of Dr. Fred Epstein at Beth Israel Medical Center. He then continued as a staff neurosurgeon until he accepted his current position. He is an Associate Professor of Neurosurgery, Pediatrics and Oncology at Johns Hopkins University where he is also the Clinical Director of Pediatric Neurosurgery. He specializes in minimally invasive surgical techniques such as endoscopy, and key-hole surgery. He is also a world authority on intramedullary spinal cord tumors and intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring. He has received numerous awards both institutionally and nationally for his recognized work in the field of pediatric neurosurgery. His research interests are brainstem and spinal cord tumors in animal models. He has developed the only animal models for these diseases in attempts of finding a cure for these tumors. He is an active participant and member of the American and International Societies of Pediatric Neurosurgeons. James Conway, M.D., Ph.D. James E. Conway, M.D., Ph.D. received his medical degree from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in 2001. He then completed his residency in neurosurgery at the Johns Hopkins Hospital in 2008. During his training he has concentrated his studies on neuro-oncology and has been an NIH funded neuro-oncology fellow. He is director of skull base neurosurgery and cerebrovascular neurosurgery at the Brain and Spine Institute at Sinai Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland. He specializes in neuro-oncology and skull base surgery. He is particularly interested in the applications of minimally invasive surgical techniques such as endoscopy to these fields. His research interests include anatomic studies of skull base approaches and their clinical applications. Laszlo Bognar, M.D. Laszlo Bognar, M.D., is Chairman and Director of the Neurosurgery Clinic and Gamma Unit at Debrecen University (DEOEC), Hungary; acts as an advisor and consultant neurosurgeon at the National Institute of Neurosurgery of Hungary; and is currently the President of the College of Hungarian Neurosurgeons. Formerly the Head of the Pediatric Neurosurgical Department in the National Institute of Neurosurgery of Hungary, he has also held positions in France, including the Hopital Foch. He is massively experienced in pediatric neurosurgery and neuro-oncology and is published extensively in these fields.