Decorative neurosurgery refers to:
A style of neurosurgical practice or publication that prioritizes visual sophistication, technical complexity, or aesthetic appeal over clinical necessity, patient outcomes, or evidence-based justification.
“Supramarginal resection of a well-circumscribed brain metastasis in an eloquent area is not oncological rigor — it’s decorative neurosurgery.”
Synonyms: surgical vanity, aesthetic neurosurgery, technological maximalism
Opposite: Purposeful, evidence-based, outcome-driven surgery.