Acta neurochirurgica
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The efficacy of radiosurgery in cases of surgically high risk symptomatic cavernous malformations (CMs) for reducing haemorrhagic risk and for seizure control has not been clearly documented and the radiation-induced complications of radiosurgery remain problematic. The authors present a retrospective clinical analysis of 22 cases of CMs treated by radiosurgery. ⋯ Radiosurgery may be a good alternative option for treatment of surgically high risk CMs. However, the optimal radiosurgical technique, dose adjustment, and proper delineation of the mass are prerequisites. Radiosurgery induced complications are still problematic and post-radiosurgery MR image changes need to be further elucidated.
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Acta neurochirurgica · Sep 2002
Comparative StudyFunctional MRI and 18F FDG-positron emission tomography for presurgical planning: comparison with electrical cortical stimulation.
In patients with mass lesions near "eloquent" cortical areas different preoperative mapping techniques can be used. Two of the most widely used approaches include positron emission tomography (PET) and functional MRI (fMRI). We employed both methods in the same patients undergoing presurgical evaluation and compared the results to those obtained by direct electrical cortical stimulation (DECS). ⋯ The high incidence of neighbouring results is presumably related to fMRI specific artefacts. Advantages of fMRI are: Higher spatial and temporal resolution, more and different functional runs, shorter examination time, wider availability, longitudinal examinations, non-invasiveness and cost-effectiveness, easy registration to anatomical images. Advantages of PET are: higher signal-to-noise ratio, lesser susceptibility to artefacts (motion, draining veins), evaluation of tumour metabolism. It is our opinion that the neurosurgeon has to decide on a case-by-case basis which study suits his specific needs in the presurgical evaluation of his patient.
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Acta neurochirurgica · Sep 2002
Traumatic brain injury and subarachnoid hemorrhage: in vivo occult pathology demonstrated by magnetic resonance spectroscopy may not be "ischaemic". A primary study and review of the literature.
To look for evidence of early ischaemic neurochemical changes in patients suffering severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) and severe subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH). Proton metabolite concentrations were measured in normal and abnormal areas of brain on T2 MR imaging, in regions considered particularly vulnerable to ischaemic injury. ⋯ Significant loss of normal functioning neurones was present in TBI and SAH, but no evidence of anaerobic metabolism using lactate as a surrogate marker, questioning the role of 'ischemia' as a major mechanism of damage. Increased choline and creatine were found in SAH patients suggestive of increased cell-wall turnover. Current theories of brain injury after TBI or SAH do not explain these observed neurochemical changes and further research is required.