Journal of neurosurgery
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Journal of neurosurgery · Nov 1996
Clinical significance of diffuse dural enhancement detected by magnetic resonance imaging.
This study was performed to determine the clinical significance of diffuse dural enhancement (DDE) detected by magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and to typify enhancing patterns related to inflammatory or metastatic causes. The authors retrospectively evaluated the clinical, imaging, and laboratory characteristics of 20 consecutive patients with DDE. Those with DDE and an underlying neoplastic disease (13 patients) were compared to 11 consecutive patients with cytological evidence of neoplastic leptomeningeal metastasis evaluated by MR imaging. ⋯ The findings indicate that DDE is not a radiographic hallmark of leptomeningeal metastasis in spite of the similarities in clinical manifestations (for example, headache and cranial polyneuropathy). Nonetheless, DDE is most frequently associated with metastatic malignancies and particularly with skull metastases and CSF leak. Special MR techniques can discern the underlying cause and elucidate the disparity in the pathophysiological mechanisms leading to DDE.
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Diffuse cerebral swelling after severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) develops more commonly in children than adults; however, models of diffuse brain injury in immature animals are lacking. The authors developed a new model of diffuse severe TBI in immature rats by modifying a recently described closed head injury model for adult rats. A total of 105 Sprague-Dawley immature rats (17 days old; average weight 38.5 +/- 5.46 g) were subjected to head impact using variable weights (0 g (sham), 75 g, 100 g, or 125 g) delivered from a height of 2 m onto a metal disk cemented to the intact cranium. ⋯ Weight loss, acute physiological instability, and acute neurological deficits were also indicative of an SI. Mortality was eliminated when ventilatory support was used during the peritrauma period. This model should be useful in studying the response of the immature rat to diffuse severe TBI.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Nov 1996
Cerebral blood flow and vasoresponsivity within and around cerebral contusions.
There is increasing evidence that regional ischemia plays a major role in secondary brain injury. Although the cortex underlying subdural hematomas seems particularly vulnerable to ischemia, little is known about the adequacy of cerebral blood flow (CBF) or the vasoresponsivity within the vascular bed of contusions. The authors used the xenon-enhanced computerized tomography (CT) CBF technique to define the CBF and vasoresponsivity of contusions, pericontusional parenchyma, and the remainder of the brain 24 to 48 hours after severe closed head injury in 10 patients: six patients with one contusion and four with two contusions, defined as mixed or high-density lesions on CT scanning. ⋯ Intracontusional CBF is significantly reduced relative to surrounding brain parenchyma, and CO2 vasoresponsivity is usually present. In the contusion and the surrounding parenchyma, vasoresponsivity may be nearly three times normal, suggesting hypersensitivity to hyperventilation therapy. Given this possible hypersensitivity and relative hypoperfusion within and around cerebral contusions, these lesions are particularly vulnerable to secondary injury such as that which may be caused by hypotension or aggressive hyperventilation.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Nov 1996
Decompressive craniectomy in a rat model of "malignant" cerebral hemispheric stroke: experimental support for an aggressive therapeutic approach.
Acute ischemia in the complete territory of the carotid artery may lead to massive cerebral edema with raised intracranial pressure and progression to coma and death due to uncal, cingulate, or tonsillar herniation. Although clinical data suggest that patients benefit from undergoing decompressive surgery for acute ischemia, little data about the effect of this procedure on experimental ischemia are available. In this article the authors present results of an experimental study on the effects of decompressive craniectomy performed at various time points after endovascular middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion in rats. ⋯ The results suggest that use of decompressive craniectomy in treating cerebral ischemia reduces mortality and significantly improves outcome. If performed early after vessel occlusion, it also significantly reduces infarction size. By performing decompressive craniectomy neurosurgeons will play a major role in the management of stroke patients.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Oct 1996
Moderate hypothermia in patients with severe head injury: cerebral and extracerebral effects.
Cerebral and extracerebral effects of moderate hypothermia (core temperature 32.5 degrees C-33.0 degrees C) were prospectively studied in 10 patients with severe closed head injury (Glasgow Coma Scale score < 7) in the intensive care unit of a university hospital. Hypothermia was induced by cooling the patient's body surface with water-circulating blankets. Before cooling, a conventional intracranial pressure (ICP) reduction therapy was applied, which remained unchanged throughout the study. ⋯ Seven patients made a good recovery; one survived severely disabled; and two patients died. Moderate hypothermia is effective in preventing secondary brain damage while reducing cerebral ischemia. However, there are potentially hazardous side effects that require additional monitoring.