Journal of neurosurgery
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Journal of neurosurgery · Mar 2024
Association between county-level socioeconomic status and the incidence of and surgical treatment for pituitary adenoma.
The objective of this study was to evaluate the association between county-level socioeconomic status (SES) and the incidence of and surgical treatment for pituitary adenoma (PA). ⋯ Higher county-level SES in the US was associated with a higher incidence of PA among Black individuals, but not among White individuals, while API and AIAN individuals had a lower PA incidence with higher SES. After multivariable adjustment, higher county-level SES was associated with surgical treatment of PA, and White and API individuals were significantly more likely to undergo surgery than Black or AIAN individuals.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Feb 2024
Meta AnalysisTrigeminal neuralgia pain outcomes following microsurgical resection versus stereotactic radiosurgery for petroclival meningiomas: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
Petroclival meningiomas (PCMs) are challenging lesions to treat because of their deep location and proximity to critical neurovascular structures. Patients with these lesions commonly present because of local mass effect. A symptom that proves challenging to definitively manage is trigeminal neuralgia (TN), which occurs in approximately 5% of PCM cases. To date, there is no consensus on whether microsurgical resection or stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) leads to better outcomes in the treatment of TN secondary to PCM. In this systematic review and meta-analysis, the authors aimed to evaluate the available literature on the efficacy of microsurgical resection versus SRS for controlling TN secondary to PCM. ⋯ Microsurgical resection is associated with higher rates of TN pain resolution and lower rates of pain persistence and exacerbation than SRS in the treatment of PCM. SRS with further TN management is a viable alternative in patients who are not good candidates for microsurgical resection.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Feb 2024
ReviewOutcomes following surgical intervention for acute hemorrhage in severe traumatic brain injury: a review of the National Trauma Data Bank.
Severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a public health issue posing significant morbidity and mortality to afflicted patients. While the effect of time to surgery as the primary factor for survival has been extensively studied, long-term dispositional outcomes following intracranial hemorrhage evacuation have not been well described in the literature. Therefore, the aim of this study was to elicit potential prognostic factors in patients presenting with severe TBI that may have a significant impact on discharge disposition. ⋯ Neurosurgical evacuation of intracranial hemorrhage in severe TBI has variable long-term morbidity. Utilizing the largest collection of trauma data within the United States, the authors present quantitative evidence on discharge disposition. Understanding these tangible points can help neurosurgeons present potential outcomes to patients, promote preventative care, and generate tangible conversations with patients and their family members.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Feb 2024
Multicenter StudyGrade 3 meningioma survival and recurrence outcomes in an international multicenter cohort.
Grade 3 meningioma represents a rare meningioma subtype, for which limited natural history data are available. The objective of this study was to identify demographics and pathologic characteristics, clinical and functional status outcomes, and prognostic factors in an international cohort of grade 3 meningioma patients. ⋯ This large multicenter study provides insight into the longitudinal outcomes of grade 3 meningioma, with respect to recurrence, survival, and functional status. This study affirms the survival benefit conferred by radiotherapy in this population and suggests good functional status outcomes for patients surviving to 5 years postoperatively.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Feb 2024
Intraoperative in vivo confocal laser endomicroscopy imaging at glioma margins: can we detect tumor infiltration?
Confocal laser endomicroscopy (CLE) is a US Food and Drug Administration-cleared intraoperative real-time fluorescence-based cellular resolution imaging technology that has been shown to image brain tumor histoarchitecture rapidly in vivo during neuro-oncological surgical procedures. An important goal for successful intraoperative implementation is in vivo use at the margins of infiltrating gliomas. However, CLE use at glioma margins has not been well studied. ⋯ CLE may detect tumor infiltration at glioma margins. However, it is not currently dependable, especially in scenarios where low probability of tumor infiltration is expected. The proposed scoring system has excellent intrinsic interrater reliability, but its interrater reliability is only moderate when used with CLE images. These results suggest that this technology requires further exploration as a method for consistent actionable intraoperative guidance with high dependability across the range of tumor margin scenarios. Specific-binding and/or tumor-specific fluorophores, a CLE image atlas, and a consensus guideline for image interpretation may help with the translational utility of CLE.