Journal of neurosurgery
-
Journal of neurosurgery · May 2017
Long-term risk of recurrence and regrowth after gross-total and subtotal resection of sporadic vestibular schwannoma.
The management of vestibular schwannoma (VS) remains controversial. One commonly cited advantage of microsurgery over other treatment modalities is that tumor removal provides the greatest chance of long-term cure. However, there are very few publications with long-term follow-up to support this assertion. The purpose of the current study is to report the very long-term risk of recurrence among a large historical cohort of patients who underwent microsurgical resection. ⋯ Long-term surveillance is required following microsurgical resection of VS even after GTR. Subtotal resection alone should not be considered a definitive long-term cure. These data emphasize the importance of long-term follow-up when reporting tumor control outcomes for VS.
-
Journal of neurosurgery · May 2017
Case ReportsConcurrence of chromosome 6 chromothripsis and glioblastoma metastasis.
The authors report an unusual case of a widely metastatic glioblastoma. DNA copy number microarray profile of the resected specimen revealed complex rearrangements found throughout chromosome 6, a phenomenon known as chromothripsis. ⋯ This TCGA patient died within 6 months of undergoing tumor resection. Implications of these findings are reviewed in the context of the current literature.
-
Journal of neurosurgery · May 2017
Stagnation and complex flow in ruptured cerebral aneurysms: a possible association with hemostatic pattern.
OBJECT Histopathological examination has revealed that ruptured cerebral aneurysms have different hemostatic patterns depending on the location of the clot formation. In this study, the authors investigated whether the hemostatic patterns had specific hemodynamic features using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) analysis. METHODS Twenty-six ruptured middle cerebral artery aneurysms were evaluated by 3D CT angiography and harvested at the time of clipping. ⋯ Mann-Whitney U-tests showed that lower dome volume (0.04 cm3 vs 0.12 cm3, p = 0.014), gradient oscillatory number (0.0234 vs 0.0289, p = 0.023), invariant Q (-0.801 10-2/sec2 vs -0.124 10-2/sec2, p = 0.045) and higher aneurysm formation indicator (0.986 vs 0.963, p = 0.041) were significantly related to inside-pattern aneurysms when compared with outside-pattern aneurysms. CONCLUSIONS Inside-pattern aneurysms may have simpler flow patterns and less flow stagnation than outside-pattern aneurysms. CFD may be useful to characterize the hemostatic pattern of ruptured cerebral aneurysms.
-
Journal of neurosurgery · May 2017
Multicenter StudyGamma Knife radiosurgery for hemangioma of the cavernous sinus.
OBJECTIVE Cavernous sinus hemangiomas (CSHs) are rare vascular tumors. A direct microsurgical approach usually results in massive hemorrhage and incomplete tumor resection. Although stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) has emerged as a therapeutic alternative to microsurgery, outcome studies are few. ⋯ Four (66.7%) of the 6 patients with orbital symptoms had symptomatic relief at the last follow-up. CONCLUSIONS Stereotactic radiosurgery was effective in reducing the volume of CSH and attaining long-term tumor control in all patients at a median of 40 months. The authors' experience suggests that SRS is a reasonable primary and adjuvant treatment modality for patients in whom a CSH is diagnosed.