Acta neurochirurgica
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Acta neurochirurgica · Jan 2006
Case ReportsCT perfusion imaging for childhood moyamoya disease before and after surgical revascularization.
Moyamoya disease is a progressive occlusive disease of the circle of Willis with prominent collateral arterial formation. We report on a 12-year-old girl with moyamoya disease presenting with transient ischemic attacks (TIAs). Surgical indirect revascularization was performed. ⋯ Furthermore, the area of decreased vascular reserve in SPECT with acetazolamide corresponded to areas of increased cerebral blood volume in CT perfusion imaging. CT perfusion imaging was equivalent to SPECT in accuracy, and superior in spatial resolution. CT perfusion imaging is likely to become more widely available as an easy-to-perform technique for assessing cerebral perfusion in a patients with moyamoya disease.
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Acta neurochirurgica · Jan 2006
Retrospective study of 77 patients harbouring lumbar synovial cysts: functional and neurological outcome.
Synovial cysts represent an uncommon and probably underestimated pathological entity of the degenerative lumbar spine. The authors report a retrospective analysis of the clinical presentation, radiological studies and operative findings in 77 patients surgically treated for symptomatic lumbar synovial cysts at their institution. ⋯ Surgical resection of lumbar synovial cysts is an effective treatment associated with very low morbidity. Synovial cysts are associated with increased grade and frequency of facet joint asteoarthritis but not with increased grade or frequency of degenerative disc disease compared with patients without cysts. In the author's opinion, at the present time, there is no reliable criterion which allows the development of a symptomatic spinal instability to be predicted in patients with a preoperative spondylolisthesis and therefore fusion as a first line procedure is still debatable.
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Acta neurochirurgica · Jan 2006
Outcome after decompressive craniectomy in patients with severe ischemic stroke.
Decompressive craniectomy after space occupying infarction of the middle cerebral artery (MCA) tends to decrease mortality and increase functional outcome. The aim of this retrospective study was to evaluate mortality rates and functional outcome in our centre and to identify predictors of prognosis. The charts of 30 consecutive patients (6 women, 24 men, mean age 59.3 +/- 11.0 years) who underwent craniectomy after space occupying MCA-infarction from 1996 to 2002 were analyzed. ⋯ Mortality was related to age and the number of risk factors/comorbidity, and functional outcome was dependent on the number of risk factors/comorbidity. Our small observational, retrospective study suggests that hemicraniectomy in patients with space occupying MCA-infarction decreases mortality rate and increases functional outcome. Further randomized trials may prove useful to better define the indications, timing and prognosis for this procedure.