Ketan Bulsara, M.D., M.B.A.

Chief of the Division of Neurosurgery at UConn Health University of Connecticut

  • Storrs CT

Dr. Ketan R. Bulsara is a world-renowned neurosurgeon with an unparalleled range of expertise in treating neurological disorders.

Contact

University of Connecticut

View more experts managed by University of Connecticut

Biography

Dr. Ketan R. Bulsara is a world-renowned neurosurgeon with an unparalleled range of expertise in treating neurological disorders. He trained with the pioneers in neurosurgery and is an author on many national and international guidelines and standards. Now he brings that expertise to UConn Health as chief of the Division of Neurosurgery

Bulsara joins UConn Health from Yale University, where he built successful programs in neurovascular and skull base surgery. He is among an elite few neurosurgeons in the world with dedicated dual fellowship training in skull base/cerebrovascular microsurgery and endovascular surgery. Bulsara is directing both of those disciplines in UConn Health’s Department of Surgery in addition to serving as chief of neurosurgery.

Areas of Expertise

Brain Surgery
Spine Surgery
Brain Aneurysms
Endovascular Surgery
Ischemic Stroke
Neurosurgery
Hemorrhagic Stroke

Education

Yale School of Management

M.B.A.

Business Administration

Duke University School of Medicine

M.D.

Medicine

Davidson College

B.S.

Biology

Languages

  • Gujarati
  • Hindi
  • French
Show All +

Affiliations

  • Congress of Neurological Surgeons/American Association of Neurological Surgeons Cerebrovascular Section Member, 2007-present
  • Society of Neurointerventional Surgery (senior member), 2007-present
  • American Association of Neurological Surgeons, 2003-present

Accomplishments

Editorial Board of Operative Neurosurgery

2016

Editorial Board of Acta Neurochirgica

2016

National Quality Forum

2016
One of only two neurosurgeons in the nation selected to develop national clinical guidelines pertaining to neurosciences.

Show All +

Social

Media

Media Appearances

A CT woman survived two aneurysms. You might be surprised by what she wanted to do next.

Hartford Courant  print

2023-02-15

Dr. Ketan Bulsara, chief of neurosurgery at UConn Health, repaired the first broken blood vessel, her vertebrobasilar artery, by strengthening it with stents.

Heeber also had four artery spasms, which restrict blood flow and are “a known, life-threatening complication of the type of bleed that she had,” Bulsara said. “With aggressive intensive care unit management, we were able to get her through these episodes.”

View More

UConn Health's reknowned Brain and Spine Institute

WFSB CT  tv

2021-03-15

Dr. Ketan Bulsara, Chief of Neurosurgery at UConn Health, talks about the Brain and Spine Institute.

View More

Articles

Brainstem melanomas presenting as a cavernous malformation

Neurochirurgie

Lu AY, Patel AR, Kuzmik GA, Atskina KK, Bronen RA, Jabbour PM, Hasan DM, Vortmeyer AO, Welch BG, Bulsara KR

Melanoma lesions in the brainstem can be difficult to distinguish radiographically and clinically from cavernous malformations. However, the treatment modalities and clinical course of these two diseases differ considerably. We report two cases of melanoma presenting as brainstem hemorrhages.

View more

Bilateral osteomas and exostoses of the internal auditory canal

American Journal of Otolaryngology

Schutt CA, Guo JN, Bagwell KA, Bulsara KR, Malhotra A, Michaelides E

Osteomas and exostoses are benign tumors of the bone that occur in the head and neck region but are rarely found within the internal auditory canal (IAC). In this report, we review the literature on bony lesions of the IAC and present two cases: one case of bilateral compressive osteomas and one case of bilateral compressive exostoses of the IAC.

View more

Safety of transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion and intervertebral recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein—2

Journal of Neurosurgery: Spine

Alan T. Villavicencio, Sigita Burneikiene, E. Lee Nelson, Ketan R. Bulsara, Mark Favors, and Jeffrey Thramann

2005

Recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein—2 (rhBMP-2) is being increasingly used for spinal fusion. There are few data regarding its clinical safety, effectiveness, and clinical outcome when applied on an absorbable collagen sponge (ACS) in conjunction with allograft for transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion (TLIF).

View more

Show All +