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Patientโs Corner
Introducing Patientโs Corner, a place for you, the patient, to share your stories. If you have a story you would like to share please contact us below.
PNA Spotlight: Dr. Jonathan Breshears
This month the PNA Spotlight focuses on Dr. Jonathan Breshears, a neurosurgeon at St. Lukeโs Hospital in Kansas City, Missouri and a Clinical Assistant Professor in the Department of Surgery at the University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Medicine. Dr. Breshears did his undergraduate work and earned his M.D. at Washington University in St. Louis. He did a residency at UCSF Medical center and a fellowship in open and endoscopic skull base surgery at MD Anderson Cancer Center. He specializes in the treatment of benign and malignant tumors involving the brain and skull base, particularly pituitary tumors, acoustic neuromas, and meningiomas. He was kind enough to answer a series of questions from the PNA. Here are his answers, lightly edited for clarity.
Please Tell Us About Your Practice
I did my neurosurgery training at UCSF, and there I had the good fortune to be exposed to some really excellent pituitary surgeons including Sandeep Kunwar, Manish Aghi, and also Louis Blevins. They are my early mentors in pituitary surgery, and how I got exposure to the PNA. From there, I did a skull base fellowship at MD Anderson and had more specialized training in taking care of lesions on the base of the skull, and pituitary tumors as a part of that. My practice now is in Kansas City, Missouri, at the St Lukeโs Hospital at the Marion Bloch Neuroscience Institute. Iโve been here five years, and weโve built up a multi-disciplinary team, including endocrinologists, neuropathologists, neuroradiologists, a neuro ophthalmologist as well as my anterior skull base partner, Dr. Vidur Bhalla, whoโs a rhinologist trained in skull based surgery. We have a multi-disciplinary program to help take care of patients with pituitary tumors, because those tumors require a team of highly trained specialists. We have all those people in place, part of a specialized program to help take care of these patients. We also have a nurse navigator for our program, so when we get referrals or when people call in, especially if thereโs an acute symptom like vision loss, we really try to expedite their care. This way they are able to see multiple specialists and get the labs and the imaging they need as a part of the workup, all in the same day. This minimizes the number of trips the patient has to make.

โItโs something where you really want to be treated by people who are dedicated to doing this and do a lot of it. โ
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The Pituitary Patient Resource Guide Sixth Edition is now available! Be one of the first to have the most up-to-date information.
The Pituitary Patient Resource Guide a one of a kind publication intended as an invaluable source of information not only for patients but also their families, physicians, and all health care providers.
It contains information on symptoms, proper testing, how to get a diagnosis, and the treatment options that are available. It also includes Pituitary Network Associationโs patient resource listings for expert medical care.
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We don't know because funding for benign brain tumor research is virtually nonexistent. That's about to change. In October 2002, Congress passed the Benign Brain Tumor Cancer Registries Amendment...
Why Are Mental Health Symptoms Connected With Pituitary Disorders?
This is a complex and not completely understood area of pituitary medicine. Of course it is very logical and reasonable for anyone who has physical limitations, pain, discomfort to feel sad about a...
What Happens After A Tumor Is Removed/Treated?
There may be permanent loss of some or all pituitary hormones, an imbalance that can be treated with Hormone Replacement Therapy, which has been inaccurately associated with only one group of...
