Journal of neurosurgery
-
Journal of neurosurgery · Jun 1996
Case ReportsPrimary glioblastoma multiforme of the oculomotor nerve. Case report.
Tumors of the oculomotor nerve are rare and most instances reported have been schwannomas. The authors present clinical, neuroradiological, and neuropathological findings in a 70-year-old woman with a glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) growing primarily in the proximal part of the left oculomotor nerve. The patient presented with a 1-month history of transient diplopia. ⋯ Six weeks after surgery, the patient suddenly died of pulmonary thromboembolism. Postmortem examination of the brain confirmed a large leptomeningeal GBM at the left pontomesencephalic junction with complete destruction of the left oculomotor nerve. To the authors' knowledge, this represents the first case of a GBM of the oculomotor nerve, probably originating from glial cells within the most proximal part of the nerve or the adjacent leptomeninges.
-
Journal of neurosurgery · Jun 1996
Trigeminal evoked potential-monitored thermorhizotomy: a novel approach for relief of trigeminal pain.
This paper presents a complete method for performing trigeminal thermorhizotomy, guided by neurophysiological data, to relieve tic douloureux. The method involves the use of trigeminal evoked potentials (TEPs) produced by stimulation of the supraorbital, infraorbital, and mental nerves and recorded from electrodes at both the scalp and the trigeminal nerve. To perform the thermorhizotomy, a cannula is modified to produce a concentric bipolar electrode that is suitable for both recording and lesion making. ⋯ Thermolesions are made until the scalp-recorded wave W2 decreases its amplitude by 20% to 50% of the original value or until it is delayed by 0.30 msec. This procedure has the potential to enable extremely precise monitoring of the position of the trigeminal electrode relative to the activated fibers and provides very effective monitoring of the extent of the lesion. The authors have performed this procedure with very satisfactory results in 30 patients with trigeminal neuralgia in the second branch.
-
Journal of neurosurgery · Jun 1996
Case ReportsA fatal, chronically growing basilar artery: a new type of dissecting aneurysm.
A long-term follow-up study (minimum duration 2 years) was made of 13 patients with tortuous dilated basilar arteries. Of these, five patients had symptoms related to the presence of such arteries. Symptoms present at a very early stage included vertebrobasilar insufficiency in two patients, brainstem infarction in two patients, and left hemifacial spasm in one patient. ⋯ Microscopically, multiple mural dissections, fragmentation of internal elastic lamina (IEL), and degeneration of media were diffusely observed in the remarkably extended wall of the aneurysms. The substantial mechanism of pathogenesis and enlargement in the symptomatic, highly tortuous dilated artery might initially be macroscopic dissection within a thickening intima and subsequent repetitive hemorrhaging within a laminated thrombus in the pseudolumen combined with microscopic multiple mural dissections on the basis of a weakened IEL. The authors note and caution that symptomatic, tortuous dilated basilar arteries cannot be overlooked because they include a group of malignant arteries that may grow rapidly, resulting in a fatal course.
-
Journal of neurosurgery · Jun 1996
Morphological study of experimental syringomyelia with kaolin-induced hydrocephalus in a canine model.
In this morphological study the authors investigated whether spinal cord cavitation, produced in young mongrel dogs that had been rendered hydrocephalic by cisternal injection of kaolin, consists of a dilated central canal or intramedullary cavities. Hydrocephalus was noted in 50 of 56 dogs treated with kaolin. Of the 50 hydrocephalic young dogs, 29 were shown to have central canal dilation that was prominent at the thoracic level and 21 to have cervical intramedullary cavities in the posterior column and/or the posterior horn. ⋯ The latter may cause cervicomedullary compression at the foramen magnum, affecting the venous drainage of the cervical cord below that level, resulting in intramedullary cavitation. Accordingly, vascular impairment was thought to play a significant role in the development of cervical syrinx formation in our kaolin model. The current results may provide a reasonable explanation for the formation of noncommunicating cervical syringomyelia in Chiari I malformation.