Journal of neurosurgery
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Journal of neurosurgery · Dec 2022
Sweet spots of standard and directional leads in patients with refractory essential tremor: white matter pathways associated with maximal tremor improvement.
In patients with essential tremor (ET) treated with standard deep brain stimulation (sDBS) whose ET had progressed and who no longer received optimal benefit from sDBS, directional deep brain stimulation (dDBS) may provide better tremor control. Current steering may provide better coverage of subcortical structures related to tremor control in patients with ET and significant progression without optimal response to sDBS. ⋯ In patients with ET treated with sDBS who later had ET progression, dDBS provided better tremor control, which was related to directionality and a more ventral position. The involvement of both the cerebellothalamic and pallidofugal pathways obtained with dDBS is associated with additional improvement over the sDBS.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Dec 2022
Immediate flow-diversion characteristics of a novel primarily bioresorbable flow-diverting stent.
Flow-diverting stents with a resorbable component have significant theoretical benefits over full metal stents, although currently there are none in clinical use. In this study, the authors sought to determine the immediate flow-diversion characteristics of a novel primarily bioresorbable flow-diverting stent. ⋯ The bioresorbable stent has immediate flow-diversion characteristics that are comparable to commercially available metal stents. Longer-term studies are underway to determine the ability of the resorbable fibers to act as a neointimal scaffold and result in long-term aneurysm occlusion.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Dec 2022
Early surgical versus endovascular repair of ruptured blood-blister aneurysm of the internal carotid artery: a single-center 20-year experience.
Early repair of ruptured blood-blister aneurysms (BBAs) of the internal carotid artery (ICA) remains challenging. Although both surgical and endovascular therapies have been established, their relative superiority remains debated. The authors assessed their single-center experience and compared early deconstructive versus reconstructive repair and early reconstructive surgical versus endovascular repair of ruptured BBAs of the ICA. ⋯ From the authors' experience, both surgical and endovascular approaches permitted reconstructive repair of ruptured BBAs of the ICA, with no modality proving superior. Reconstructive treatment is preferable to ICA sacrifice, and if sacrifice is chosen, it should be accompanied with bypass surgery or delayed to the phase when cerebral vasospasm has resumed. The rare occurrence of this disease calls for prospective multicenter studies to improve treatment and delineate which modality is preferable in individual cases.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Dec 2022
Evolution of the patient-first approach: a dual-trained, single-neurosurgeon experience with 2002 consecutive intracranial aneurysm treatments.
The paradigm for intracranial aneurysm (IA) treatment is shifting toward a hybrid approach involving open and endovascular techniques. The authors chronicled the evolution of IA treatment by retrospectively examining a large series of IA cases treated by a single dual-trained neurosurgeon, focusing on evolving technology relative to the choice of treatment options, perioperative morbidity, and mortality. ⋯ This study demonstrates complementary use of open and endovascular approaches for IA treatment. By customizing treatment to the patient, comparable rates of procedural complications, mortality, and retreatment were achieved for both endovascular and microsurgical approaches.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Dec 2022
Functional connectivity between mesial temporal and default mode structures may help lateralize surgical temporal lobe epilepsy.
The most common surgically treatable epilepsy syndrome is mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (mTLE). Preoperative noninvasive lateralization of mTLE is challenging in part due to rapid contralateral seizure spread. Abnormal connections in both the mesial temporal lobe and resting-state networks have been described in mTLE, but it is unclear if connectivity between these networks may aid in lateralization. ⋯ Evaluating fMRI connectivity between mesial temporal structures and default mode network may aid in mTLE lateralization, reduce need for intracranial monitoring, and guide surgical planning.