this guy is a joke.
Wait a second, you're at Jefferson, and you're talking about ? Rosenwasser ?? being famous? Alex Vaccaro and Todd Albert would have a good chuckle at that one. I wonder who at Jefferson publishes all those articles...Oh yeah...Rosenwasser. Right. Ortho spine rules the academic spine world. So if you want prestige, why don't you use your BRAIN and do ortho.
Your reasons for wanting to do neurosurg sound like they came out of a high school journal: I want to be important, I want to be famous, I want to be prestigious, I want people to think I'm smart.
Arthur12...before posting a response, i did a quick background check on your previous posts. i find it ironic you think i'm a high-schooler when you asked if women in urology have penis envy and why any heterosexual male would even consider a field like that...i don't think i even need to mention maturity much more than the following, semi-adequate sum-up...
but beyond your maturity, your skills of reading are more impressive. ignore the research, the operations, the techniques, the technology, and go straight to the prestige. nice one.
but i believe the clearest indication of your knowledge on this material is your lack of knowledge of...well, i guess everything you said.
Rosenwasser is endovascular; i have never seen him do a spine case, and frankly, i don't think he bothers. yes, alex vaccaro and todd albert are the big spine guys; most spine cases in philly go straight to the Rothman institute. but comparing endovascular to spine is like comparing apples and oranges. if you remember from algebra 1, which i'm assuming you must've taken second year undergrad, x+y DOES NOT NECESSARILY equal 2x or 2y or xy; x and y are like apples and oranges.
any neurosurgeon in the country...even world knows of rosenwasser. the guy who he trained under, the guys who trained with him (their names evade me, they have a discussion on nsmatch) are all pretty darn famous. look him up.
also, the neurosurgeons do their spine cases with...guess who? vaccaro. as a matter of fact, my research is mostly spine, and while my papers are published under Neurosurgery, i see and work with vaccaro on nearly a daily basis. come to think of it, vaccaro's name is on most...wait...all my papers too.
lastly, im going to assume (and i know, assuming makes an ass out of you and me, but you already proved yourself worthy of the title), that you think i'm into spine; or you are. well as an orthopod, you're going to need a spine fellowship. neurosurgery doesn't, and if you get into jeff's, you'll work with vaccaro and albert whilst on your spine rotations anyway. hmm.
give me some credit. as a med student, who would like neurosurgery, i'm not getting face time with the chairman (Rosenwasser). but i get plenty with vaccaro and his team of spine docs and neurosurg-spines. and they publish a lot too. so guess where i targeted my research?
in summation:
1. Rosenwasser is very famous...for endovascular. anyone who has spent any time even researching neurosurgical fields know that
2. albert and vaccaro are famous...for spine.
3. spine does not equal endovascular
4. my reasons for neurosurgery are delineated above, and i think a nested list in a list would be too much for you. the prestige, however, is an added plus. you know what's even more prestigious? working side by side with albert, vaccaro, and rosenwasser. try doing that in ortho. sweet deal.
5. you misinterpreted my desires for challenge and achievement as desire for prestige and fame, and that is high schoolish. what's more high schoolish is asking if women in urology have penis-envy.
a word of advice...research before your interviews to residency. if you're in one, thank your lucky stars, because its dangerous to shoot off without solidifying the ground you soften with your own BS.