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William A Friedman, MD : Research

Neurosurgeon, Spine Surgeon

Photo of William A Friedman

Research at a glance

Top areas of exploration

  • Radiosurgery , 100 publications
  • Brain Neoplasms , 51 publications
  • Intracranial Arteriovenous Malformations , 31 publications
  • Stereotaxic Techniques , 27 publications

Research activity

211 publications

14,377 citations

Why is this important?

Focus

In 1986, Friedman began collaborative work with Francis J. Bova, Ph.D., which led to the development of the patented UF radiosurgery system. The system, known as LINAC Scalpel, assists with localizing, planning and treating intracranial tumors using computer software and a specially designed linear accelerator. The LINAC Scalpel has become one of the most popular commercial radiosurgery systems worldwide and has improved the accuracy of high-dose radiation delivered to brain tumors, with very little of the dose reaching normal brain structures. Friedman and Bova received the 1990 UF College of Medicine Clinical Research Prize in recognition of this accomplishment. Friedman is the leader of a multidisciplinary radiosurgery team, which has treated more than 4600 patients, published more than 175 papers and chapters, produced many international meetings and educated hundreds of visiting physicians.

My publications

211 publications

2013

Stereotactic radiosurgery of intracranial arteriovenous malformations.

Neurosurgery clinics of North America

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2013

The somatic genomic landscape of glioblastoma.

Cell

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2012

A recommendation for training in stereotactic radiosurgery for US neurosurgery residents.

Journal of neurosurgery

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2012

An observational study of hospital paging practices and workflow interruption among on-call junior neurological surgery residents.

Journal of graduate medical education

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2012

An observational study of junior neurosurgery resident call at a large teaching hospital.

Journal of graduate medical education

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