Wake Forest Neurosurgery

Gamma Knife Radiosurgery Center
Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center
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Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center has obtained a Leksell Gamma Knife to treat a variety of brain lesions without an incision including:

Since the Gamma Knife is ideal for small to medium size lesions because of its incredible accuracy, the Medical Center also continues to make available its linear-accelerator based radiosurgery system (LINAC-Scalpel) for larger lesions, those located outside of the range of the Gamma Knife, or those that will benefit from fractionated stereotactic radiotherapy. This makes Wake Forest one of the few Centers in the world to offer both technologies. This combination offers the potential to ideally treat lesions of any size and location in the head.

Wake Forest University's Gamma Knife team is part of its Comprehensive Brain Tumor Program offering a multidisciplinary approach to treating people in a way that emphasizes aggressive lesion irradication and quality-of-life. For brain arteriovenous malformations (AVM) this goal is achieved by close collaboration with experts in the departments of Neurosurgery and Interventional Neuroradiology and uses the resources of the Wake Forest AVM Center.


Edward G. Shaw, M.D., Professor and Chair of Radiation Oncology and J. Daniel Bourland, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Radiation Oncology, and head of the Radiation Physics Section, helped establish a Gamma Knife Program at the Mayo Clinic in 1990. Stephen B. Tatter, M.D., Ph.D. a neurosurgeon and co-director of the Gamma Knife Center, was recruited from Harvard Medical School to oversee the new unit.

Denise Sprinkle, BSRT-CT is the Wake Forest University Medical Center Stereotactic Coordinator. Her telephone is 1(866)713-3228 or (336)713-3228. Her email is dsprinkl@wfubmc.edu. She can be contacted with questions and to help make arrangements.

In addition, the Medical Center’s Gamma Knife team includes , Charles L. Branch Jr., M.D., Professor of Neurosurgery , Kenneth E. Ekstrand, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Radiation Oncology, Allan F. deGuzman, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Radiation Oncology, and Joyce Moser, R.N., N.P.-C, a certified nurse practitioner in the Department of Neurosurgery, Denise Sprinkle, R.T.-C. the Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center Stereotactic Coordinator, and Mr. Rodney Rogers, stereotactic technician.


For more information

For more information, call Health On-Call at (336) 716-2255 or 1-800-446-2255. Physicians may call the PAL line at 1-800-277-7654 to make a referral.

Other sources of information about treatment of brain tumors and arteriovenous malformations (AVM) and movement disorders including Parkinson's Disease and tremor:



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990504 Stephen B. Tatter, M.D., Ph.D.