Acta neurochirurgica
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Acta neurochirurgica · Jan 2012
Three years of neurosurgical experience in a multinational field hospital in northern Afghanistan.
Since July 2007, neurosurgical services have been continuously available in a multinational Role 3 field hospital in Mazar-e-Sharif (MeS), Afghanistan. In this paper, we analyse a 3-year neurosurgical caseload experience. ⋯ The primary mission of the field hospital is to provide sick, injured or wounded ISAF personnel with medical and surgical care, the outcome of which must correspond to standards prevailing in Germany. Only a very small number of neurosurgical operations performed in MeS met the criteria established by this mission statement and by the modern principles of damage-control wartime surgery. This is completely different from the experience reported by other ISAF nations in eastern and southern Afghanistan.
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Acta neurochirurgica · Jan 2012
Ventral compression in adult patients with Chiari 1 malformation sans basilar invagination: cause and management.
A small subset of patients with adult Chiari I malformation without basilar invagination (BI) and instability show ventral cervicomedullary distortion/compression and have symptoms pertaining to that. The cause of this ventral compression remains speculative. Additionally, it is unclear if these patients would require ventral decompression with posterior fusion or only posterior decompression would suffice. ⋯ VCMC in adult patients with Chiari I malformation in the absence of BI and/or AAD is due to periodontoid tissue (crown) or retroverted dens. Though a long-term study is required, it appears that all patients with Chiari I malformation, irrespective of the VCMC, can be given a chance with posterior decompression alone. Transoral decompression with posterior fusion may be required in a small subset of patients who fail to improve or worsen following posterior decompression only.
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Acta neurochirurgica · Jan 2012
Advantages of intra-capsular micro-enucleation of schwannoma arising from extremities.
Schwannoma is the most common tumor of the peripheral nerves, with surgical enucleation being the established treatment modality. However, some schwannomas cannot be easily enucleated and this sometimes results in iatrogenic nerve injury even with atraumatic procedures. Here we present a retrospective review of the management of schwannoma in the extremities and compare clinical outcomes from the two techniques of extra-capsular and intra-capsular enucleation. ⋯ These results support intra-capsular micro-enucleation as a safe and reliable treatment for every type of schwannoma. To minimize the risk of nerve injury, en bloc resection should not be used because the main purpose of schwannoma surgery is the relief of symptoms, not tumor resection. Thorough pre-operative counseling of patients to inform them of the potential occurrence of neurological deficit is important.
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Acta neurochirurgica · Jan 2012
The effect of common carotid artery occlusion on delayed brain tissue damage in the rat double subarachnoid hemorrhage model.
Delayed ischemic brain tissue damage in the time course of cerebral vasospasm in the rat double-subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) model has been described before. However, in order to enhance hemodynamic insufficiency during cerebral vasospasm (CVS), we performed-in a modification to the standard double-hemorrhage model-an additional unilateral common carotid artery occlusion (CCAO), expecting aggravation of brain-tissue damage in areas particularly sensitive to hypoxia. ⋯ CCAO leads to an aggravation of CVS-related delayed brain tissue damage in the modified rat double-SAH model.