Acta neurochirurgica
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Acta neurochirurgica · Jan 1999
Multicenter StudyThe European Brain Injury Consortium survey of head injuries.
To provide a picture of contemporary practice, a survey was carried out of severely and moderately head injured patients admitted to 67 'neuro' centres in 12 European countries. 1,005 adult head injuries were recruited over a three month period. Sixty items of information on demography, clinical features, investigations, management and early complications were captured on a simple, two-page questionnaire and, information on outcome at six months on a third page. The median age of the subjects was 38 years, 74% were male and 51% injured in road traffic accidents; 57% of patients were transferred to the 'neuro' centre from another hospital. ⋯ The findings in the present survey are compared with newly analysed information for three previous large series: the International Data Bank involving the UK, the Netherlands and the USA, the North American Traumatic Coma Data Bank, and data from four centres in the UK. The comparisons showed substantial similarities and also differences that may reflect variations in policy for admission of the head injury to 'neuro' units, and evolution in methods of assessment, investigation and management. The effects of these differences on outcome requires further, rigorous prospective study.
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Acta neurochirurgica · Jan 1999
Comparative StudyThe effect of implementation of guidelines for the management of severe head injury on patient treatment and outcome.
The authors retrospectively analysed two groups of consecutive patients who were similarly matched for brain injury severity. From a total of 39 severe head injury patients, 23 were treated according to the Guidelines for the Management of Severe Head Injury with intracranial pressure (ICP) monitoring ("Guidelines group"). Such an approach allowed the maintenance of ICP within normal values, especially in patients with intraventricular ICP monitoring allowing the release of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from the ventricular system. ⋯ Furthermore, there was a 32% decrease in severe neurological disabilities in those patients in the Guidelines group. It seems that the implementation of "Guidelines" in the treatment of severe head injury, based on the result of our clinical study, reduces death and disability rates in patients with severe head injury. The administration of therapy based on the "Guidelines principles" and monitoring of ICP, can minimise the application of those therapeutic modalities (barbiturate coma and prolonged hyperventilation) which, in addition to favourable effects, may also have harmful effects on patients with severe head injury.
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Acta neurochirurgica · Jan 1999
Comparative StudyThe prognostic importance of the volume of traumatic epidural and subdural haematomas revisited.
The size of a traumatic intracranial haematoma at the moment of diagnosis can be impressive. Haematoma thickness is an inaccurate estimator of haematoma volume, and association with patient outcome is controversial. In this study computerized volumetry of offline digitized CT scans was used to relate haematoma volume with both patient characteristics on admission and at the six months outcome. ⋯ Ninety eight patients operated upon for an epidural haematoma and 91 patients operated upon for an acute subdural haematoma were analyzed. The relative importance of clinical data, CT scan parameters, and calculated haematoma volumes was determined by multivariate analysis. Volume of the haematoma did not correlate with preoperative neurological condition or the six months outcome in either group, and consequently is not of additional prognostic value.
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Acta neurochirurgica · Jan 1999
Clinical TrialVagus nerve stimulation for medically refractory epilepsy; efficacy and cost-benefit analysis.
Vagus nerve stimulation is a novel treatment for patients with medically refractory epilepsy, who are not candidates for conventional epilepsy surgery, or who have had such surgery without optimal outcome. To date only studies with relatively short follow-up are available. In these studies efficacy increased with time and reached a maximum after a period of 6 to 12 months. Implantation of a vagus nerve stimulator requires an important financial investment but a cost-benefit analysis has not been published. ⋯ VNS is an effective treatment of refractory epilepsy and remains effective during long-term follow-up. Cost-benefit analysis suggests that the cost of VNS is saved within two years following implantation.
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Acta neurochirurgica · Jan 1999
Comparison between monopolar and bipolar electrical stimulation of the motor cortex.
Intra-operative neurophysiological techniques allow reliable identification of the sensorimotor region and make their anatomical and functional preservation feasible. Monopolar cortical stimulation has recently been described as a new mapping technique. In the present study this method was compared to the "traditional" technique of bipolar stimulation. ⋯ Contrary to the general clinical view, there is considerable overlapping of primary motor units over a cortical area much broader than the "classical" narrow motor strip along the CS. Bipolar cortical stimulation is more sensitive than monopolar for mapping motor function in the premotor frontal cortex. Both methods are equally sensitive for mapping the primary motor cortex.